{"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9759608507156372,"wiki_prob":0.9759608507156372,"text":"U.S., Russia make progress toward resolving diplomats spat -State Dept\nSaturday, 04 Dec 2021\nTechnology 21h ago\nRussia detains six more suspected REvil group members\nWorld 19h ago\nRussia strikes tough, pessimistic line on chances for talks with U.S\nFILE PHOTO: Vehicles drive past the embassy of the U.S. in Moscow, Russia August 21, 2017. REUTERS/Grigory Dukor//File Photo\nWASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States and Russia have made progress toward resolving a stand-off over staffing at their respective embassies, resulting in Washington ending a policy that allowed family members of embassy staff in Moscow to leave Russia, a State Department spokesperson said on Friday.\nThe progress, first reported by the Washington Post, came during a meeting with Russian officials in Vienna by a U.S. delegation led by Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian affairs Christopher Robinson.\nThe policy known as authorized departure had been implemented by the U.S. embassy in Moscow in August to allow family members to leave the country voluntary, amid a diplomatic row between the two nations over how long diplomats can remain at their bilateral missions.\nFollowing the Vienna meeting, authorized departure has been ended, a State Department spokesperson said in an email on Friday. \"These are ongoing issues, which we continue to engage on. We have made progress in recent days on bilateral issues and hope to continue to move in that direction.\"\nThe tussle over diplomats comes as tensions are heightened over what Washington and its allies say are provocative troop movements by Russia near its border with Ukraine.\nRussia said on Wednesday it was ordering U.S. Embassy staff who have been in Moscow for more than three years to fly home by Jan. 31, a retaliatory move for a U.S. decision to limit the terms of Russian diplomats.\nThe step came after Russia's ambassador to the United States said last week that 27 Russian diplomats and their families were being expelled from the United States and would leave on Jan. 30. Washington said the diplomats were not expelled but had been in the country for longer than a new three-year limit.\n\"We need to have open channels of communication particularly during times of heightened tension. A functioning Embassy is critical to diplomacy and why we continue the hard work of addressing this issue,\" the State Department spokesperson added.\n(Reporting by Simon Lewis)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line552198"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9873961210250854,"wiki_prob":0.9873961210250854,"text":"Mercy Me to make stop at Evansville's Ford Center\nNathan Cohran was playing guitar and singing in a band in his Missouri hometown when a friend called to say a band he was in was looking for a bass player.\n\"I said, 'I think I know how to do that,' and hopped in a car with Robby (Shaffer), drove to Texas and never came back,\" the Mercy Me bassist said. \"There was a need and I filled it. All these years later, here I am, still playing bass.\"\nThat decision is one Cochran has never regretted as he's spent the last 23 years with the contemporary Christian band making a stop at the Ford Center Oct. 12.\nThe group will be leaning heavily on their new album, \"Lifer,\" released at the end of March but will play their older hits as well including, \"I Can Only Imagine,\" which helped their debut album reach double platinum status. Other classics include “Flawless” and “Greater.”\nMore:Fiesta Evansville to celebrate Evansville's growing diversity\nMore:Avenged Sevenfold to perform at Ford Center\nMore:No cars but plenty of slithering on Southern Illinois' \"Snake Road\"\n\"We want to welcome people to our new stuff,\" Cochran said. \"We're having too much fun to backtrack. We want to keep moving forward with our new stuff, of course still playing the older stuff people want to hear.\"\nThe band's never shied away from being honest about why they are writing thing things they are writing about.\n\"For the band, our life has always revolved around and been consumed with our relationship with Christ,\" Cochran said. \"We want to be honest with fans that sometimes we are writing about great things and other times writing about how we deal with tragedies or things we don’t understand or enjoy. We've actually written about that quite a bit -- 'I Can Only Imagine' was about wondering about loss. There are songs about being homesick, written specifically after losing a loved one -- we are honest and real about that.\"\nBut don't expect the band to have the answers. Like everyone else, Cochran says they are all trying to figure it out too.\n\"That's a rare form of piety everyone needs to see,\" he said. \"We are trying to be honest about it. And people have responded to that over the years. Our songs mean a lot to a lot of people. That’s rare today as so often people listen to music to be entertained. Our songs have a deep meaning for people; we take that seriously. We don't want to take that flippantly.\"\nWhile they take their responsibility to their fans seriously, Cochran said that family wins every time for the band when it comes to finding balance, it has to, he said.\n\"We've tried to be smart about what we do as a band,\" he said. \"Four years ago we cut our shows in half. We used to do anywhere from 130 to170 a year; now we do 60 to 70 a year. Our families are growing, our kids are getting older. We didn't want to be absent husbands and fathers. It's been the best decision I've ever made.\"\nBand members have 16 kids, five of them Cochran's ranging from 15 to 1 1/2. His older sons have toured with him in the past, but he joked if all the kids came along they'd need three other busses on tour.\n\"They love coming out; they don't know any different since they've grown up doing this,\" Cochran said.\nIn many ways, he doesn't know any different either.\n\"I've been doing this, being a part of Mercy Me, longer than I haven't been, which is weird,\" Cochran joked. \"But its still exciting. I still love it. There's always something -- anew record, new tour, something we are new and excited about.\n\"But standing in front of an audience showcasing something that meant something truly deep to us, even night after night, never gets old. If there comes a day where I feel like what I'm doing, the songs I'm writing aren't connecting and don't mean something to people anymore then I'll stop.\"\nThe sacrifice, Cochran explained, isn't worth it if he isn't impacting audiences.\n\"Evansville's show is going to be a fun one,\" he said. \"We had a blast getting songs ready over the course of the year for this tour. I'm feeling settled in with everything. It'll be a great show and people can expect a great time.\"\nWhat: Mercy Me\nWhen: 7 p.m. Oct. 12\nWhere: Ford Center, tickets start at $23 with additional fees.Avaialble at all Ticketmaster locations and the Ford Center box office.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line61052"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5178080797195435,"wiki_prob":0.48219192028045654,"text":"In the coming decades, India's economic growth, if it wants to maintain the current level of development, will have to deal with the shortage of trained people, as reported by the Wall Street Journal. The solution, says a recent study by the Center for Work Life Policy in New York, is to be found in the thing that the Country (most of the time) tends to overlook and overshadow: the female potential.\nEach year, about five million Indian instructed women enter into the world of work, but the problem is to make sure that them remain into, because of gender discrimination and traditional family culture. A survey about 1000 women showed that 51% of them have given up their jobs after marriage and 52% once them have children.\nPromote education and female employment will have a catalytic effect in all fields of development and will lead to raise the female figure giving dignity and respect. The Indian government is encouraging these types of intervention, the goal is to promote an active role of women, through the work as an instrument of social emancipation.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line851286"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7780852317810059,"wiki_prob":0.7780852317810059,"text":"South Bay News\nNorth County News\nSan Diego News\nEast County News\nPodcast: Today's Headlines\nQuick links... South Bay News North County News San Diego News East County News Podcast: Today's Headlines\nActivists rally to support the U.S. Postal Service\nMatt Rourke/AP\nIn this Wednesday, May 6, 2020, photo, United States Postal Service carrier Henrietta Dixon gets into her truck to deliver mail in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)\nSAN DIEGO (CNS) - A coalition of activists led by MoveOn.org held a \"day of action\" Saturday aimed at saving the U.S. Postal system, with nearly 700 nationwide rallies -- including many in the San Diego area.\nThe rallies were held outside various postal facilities.\n\"... we will show up at local post offices across the country for \"Save the Post Office Saturday\" to save the post office from (President Donald) Trump and declare that Postmaster General Louis DeJoy must resign,\" said a statement on the MoveOn.org website.\nSan Diego County rallies included Oceanside, Carlsbad, Vista, Encinitas, Pacific Beach, Ocean Beach, Hillcrest, Normal Heights, Carmel Mountain, Lakeside, University City, College Grove, Otay Mesa, San Ysidro, El Cajon and Escondido.\nDeJoy, who became postmaster general June 16, has been accused of tampering with the nation's postal service by banning overtime, removing mail sorting equipment and prohibiting extra trips by postal workers to collect mail and parcels that arrive later in the day under the auspices of cutting costs.\nThe U.S. Postal Service lost $8.8 billion in the 2019 fiscal year, more than twice the amount of the previous year, and DeJoy has said the changes are necessary to save money.\nCritics have said the changes have slowed mail delivery at a time when more people are relying on the service amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, and to vote by mail ahead of the Nov. 3 election.\nDeJoy attempted to defend his leadership during a hearing Friday before the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee and said operational changes would be put on hold until after the election. He also vowed post offices will be able to handle mail-in ballots.\nHe is expected to testify Monday before the Democrat-led House Oversight Committee.\nTrump described DeJoy last Saturday as \"a very talented man\" and \"a brilliant business person.\" He was chairman and CEO of the North Carolina- based contract logistics firm New Breed Logistics from 1983 until 2014.\nWhite House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany said at a briefing Wednesday that the Postal Service \"does have sufficient funding through 2021, and they do currently have cash on hand. They've been given that $10 billion line of credit through the CARES Act,\" referring to the federal coronavirus relief bill.\nMcEnany said the Trump administration is \"certainly open to\" increased Postal Service funding.\nOn Tuesday, Trump called for Amazon to pay more for shipping packages through the Postal Service.\n\"Amazon is paying an ancient price, and they shouldn't be,\" Trump said. \"And they shouldn't be allowed to pass it on to their customer.\"\nTrump also said \"we shouldn't get rid of any of our postal workers.\"\nRuth Y. Goldway, a commissioner of the U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission from 1998-2015 and its chair from 2009-14, urged \"everyone to be calm,\" in an op-ed published Tuesday by The New York Times.\n\"Don't fall prey to the alarmists on both sides of this debate,\" wrote Goldway, a Democrat appointed to the commission by then-President Bill Clinton and reappointed in 2002 and 2008 by then-President George W. Bush. \"The Postal Service is not incapacitated. It is still fully capable of delivering the mail.\"\nGoldway wrote that \"while the agency indeed has financial problems, as a result of a huge increase in packages being sent through the system and a credit line through the CARES Act, it has access to about $25 billion in cash. Its own forecasts predict that it will have enough money to operate into 2021.\"\nGoldway attributed the Postal Service's \"shaky financial situation\" largely to the approximately 30% drop in first-class mail, typically used for letters, from 10 years ago.\n\"The service's expensive, overbuilt infrastructure can absorb the addition of more mail in 2020, including election mail that is mailed to and sent back by every voter in every state,\" Goldway wrote.\nThe U.S. House of Representatives, in a rare Saturday evening vote, passed a bill that would provide $25 billion in funding for the Postal Service and requires the agency to return to prior operations levels.\nThe vote was 257-150, with 26 Republicans joining all House Democrats voting in favor.\nSenate Republicans have said that they would not pass the bill, and President Trump has said he would veto it anyway.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line280181"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7430592179298401,"wiki_prob":0.2569407820701599,"text":"Pageants to Pars\n\"My father-in-law calls me a natural at golf. There's nothing better to me.\"\nAbout a year before I got married, my soon-to-be father-in-law, Steve Leslie, invited me to play golf. He plays all the time, but I had only been playing for a couple of years so I was a little nervous about it. I learned how to swing while working as an office manager at Ipswich (Mass.) Country Club, but I never seemed to hit the ball solidly or very far.\nSo now we're on the course and he's giving me all kinds of tips like keeping my knees bent and my eyes on the ball. Some people don't like to get pointers when they're playing, but there was something really nurturing about it. He never had a daughter and I never really had a father so we clicked, and it helped me relax. Next thing I know, I'm making the perfect swing and the ball is going where I want it to. It was the first time I actually felt what it was like to hit good shots—I was hooked. And after that day, he was, too. I'd be shocked if he didn't tell my husband, \"Matt, you have to go marry this girl.\"\nABOUT SUSIE CASTILLO\nThe 34-year-old from Methuen, Mass., is the face of the Oxygen Network, appearing on many of its programs. She lives in Los Angeles and has been on Tyler Perry's \"House of Payne\" and MTV's \"Total Request Live.\" Her golf claim to fame? \"At a pro-am, Andy Garcia once told me 'Nice shot,' after seeing me hit one out of the rough. Now that's pretty cool.\"","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1088445"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8609050512313843,"wiki_prob":0.8609050512313843,"text":"Stretch & Bobbito: Now All the Hot Rappers Are Hooks & No Lyricism\nThe legendary radio duo say current hip-hop is almost a different genre from \"classic hip-hop,\" are they right?\nNathan Slavik\nThe Combat Jack show has grown from a podcast to something more like a hip-hop Rosetta Stone, a catalog of hip-hop culture that future generations will be able to use as a guide to the past. And so of course I listened to Combat's new episode with the legendary hip-hop radio duo Stretch and Bobbito, and in the course of their conversation it was this quote that really struck me:\n\"When you think of classic hip-hop, which is made from sampled beats and mining old records, that is really almost a different genre from what they call hip-hop now. Stylistically, it's so different. Right now, all of the hot rappers -- their records are four minutes of hooks. That's it, there's no lyricism.\" - The Combat Jack Show, The Stretch & Bobbito Episode\nI have no real interest in playing the old guys vs. young guys game, that's more tired than ScHoolboy Q listening to Kendrick freestyle. Stretch, Bob and Combat are making an observation more than a judgement, they address much of this in the full interview, but regardless, it's every teenager's job to create a new culture their parents don't understand and don't like. That's the cultural circle of life that's been in place for centuries and that life cycle's working just fine. Far beyond this conversation, in the age of the internet some young folks will go out of their way to provoke older heads, some older heads will go out of their way to smack down younger folks, but the vast majority of us are perfectly capable of taking the good with the bad without over-reacting either way.\nNo, I'm far more interested in asking questions here than pointing fingers. Are they right? If so, why?\nFirst, it is true that in terms of song structure, songs have far more hooks than ever before. And as always, we can blame the internet. When most music is being consumed via YouTube, SoundCloud, Spotify, etc., you just have a few seconds to capture someone's attention before they click away. We're living in an attention based economy, where songs aren't just competing with other songs, they're competing with viral Vine videos and memes.\nSo now successful songs start with the hook; the first \"verse\" on \"Panda\" doesn't even come until two minutes into the song. Before that, it's all hook, and the more hooks, pre-hooks and post hooks you can build into a song, the better chance you have. That's true in hip-hop, and it's true in indie folk rock. I see that less as any statement on the music getting better or worse and more of an evolution in the literal definition of that word, an adaption to a new environment.\nSimilarly, it's just flat our harder for producers to sample than in the \"classic hip-hop\" days. The Grand Upright decision in 1991 opened the door for the music industry to treat sampling more like a crime than the art it is, and so of course a lot of producers decided they'd rather just hunker down with some 808s than try to navigate the extraordinarily complex, convoluted and expensive sample clearance system.\nAdd those two forces together, throw in the explosion of festivals that reward artists with big hooks thousands of people can sing along to, mix in a bunch of other cultural factors and what do you get? You get four minute songs packed with hooks over sample-free beats.\nIn that sense Stretch and Bobbito are absolutely right, stylistically the times have changed, but it's that \"all\" word in \"all of the hot rappers\" that rings false to me. A lot of artists are making music like I've described above, but certainly not all, and in fact you could more accurately say that \"all of the most popular rappers\" are actually making heavily sampled, heavily lyrical hip-hop. The best selling albums of the last two years from younger artists have come from the likes of J. Cole, Kendrick Lamar, Meek Mill and Big Sean, all of whom rely heavily on samples and writing. And while Drake's certainly no stranger to hooks, even his albums are packed with samples and four-minute, hook free songs. While the big singles may be more \"shallow\" and grab the most attention, overall I think hip-hop's actually going through one of the more lyrically-driven periods of the last few years.\nCultural changes, music changes, hip-hop changes. Change is the only constant. So it was, so it is, and so it always will be.\nBy Nathan S, the managing editor of DJBooth and a hip-hop writer. His beard is awesome. This is his Twitter. Photo Credit to Jonathan Mena.\nOpinionEditors Picks\nPaying for the Priceless: Why Hip-Hop Owes Stretch & Bobbito\nYou need to watch this documentary from the legendary radio duo that blew up Jay Z, Big L, ODB and more.\nStretch & Bobbito: Radio That Changed My Life\nWe sat down with the legendary radio duo and realized just how much they influenced modern hip-hop journalism.\nRare JAY-Z Freestyles Unearthed by Stretch & Bobbito\nThe legendary radio duo dug deep into their radio show archives to pull out some gems from Hov.\nHow I Fell in Love With A Tribe Called Quest's Classic \"Midnight Marauders\" Album\nThe true story of love and hip-hop on the 22nd anniversary of a hip-hop classic\nStretch & Bobbito Bless Rap Nerds with Heat from Radio Show Crates\nThe greatest hip-hop radio show opens their vaults.\nHot 97, Major Labels & The Big Money Truth Behind Mainstream Radio\nWant mainstream radio to play your music? Sign to a major label. End of story.\nA Tribute to Mos Def, the Greatest Rapper That Never Was (1998 - 2016)\nMos Def is the reason I fell in love with hip-hop, and now his music career is officially over.\nDRAM's Videos Are Fun, but Dark-Skinned Women Are Missing\nA problem that's always plagued hip-hop became painfully obvious on a recent DRAM video-watching spree.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line919635"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8172428011894226,"wiki_prob":0.8172428011894226,"text":"KABC Anchor Heads to FOX 11 as Morning Anchor\nNEXT:WBBH-WZVN Reduces Sports, Eliminates Sports Director Position\nPREVIOUS:Duke Castiglione Makes Boston Debut\nAnchors | FOX Affiliates\nBy Stephanie Tsoflias Siegel on Jan. 11, 2018 - 4:03 PM\nKABC reporter Elex Michaelson is heading to KTTV, the Fox affiliate in Los Angeles.\nMichaelson will be the newest anchor on FOX 11’s early morning show, FOX 11 Morning News, alongside Araksya Karapetyan, at 4:30a.m. every morning.\n“Since Elex was born and raised in Southern California, we are excited for the extensive knowledge and perspective that he will bring on the issues and communities we cover,” said Kristine Kruntsen, vice president of news for FOX 11.\nPrior to his time as a reporter and fill-in anchor at KABC, he was an anchor and reporter at XETV in San Diego. He has held internship positions in D.C., New York and Los Angeles including a stint at KTTV.\nMichaelson is a graduate of University of Southern California. He hold a Bachelor of Arts degree in broadcast journalism and political science.\nGet TVSpy delivered straight to your inbox\nSend an anonymous tip (for TVSpy only).\nSr. Designer, Global UXUI Experience DesignUniversal Orlando ResortOrlando, Florida","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line793552"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6400506496429443,"wiki_prob":0.6400506496429443,"text":"What Audacity Looks Like\nby Ilse Munro\nThe Voina Group\nThe other day, I came across photographs of the audacious Russian street-art group Voina. What struck me most was how ordinary the members looked. They could have easily been any undergrads from any American campus. Yet, the Russian government has brought more than a dozen criminal cases against them. The same government that also saw fit to grant them the Ministry of Culture Innovation 2011 award for modern visual arts. Though perhaps not precisely for the giant phallus that they had painted on the Liteyny drawbridge leading to the Bolshoy Dom headquarters of the Federal Security Service in Saint Petersburg.\nI took these photos as further evidence for a hypothesis first formed at my father’s knee: that there is no necessary correlation between audacious appearance and audacious acts. The seemingly unremarkable people sitting around my family’s kitchen table, all war refugees, had routinely done things that you and I wouldn’t dream of doing. The others that I later encountered, either directly or indirectly. Rosa Parks, the small woman with the rimless glasses whose singular act sparked the US civil rights movement. The girls in shirtwaist dresses and guys in plaid shirts who adopted the Port Huron Statement, written by the curly-haired Tom Hayden, that launched 50 years of student protest and mass action for a more democratic society. The controversial authors that I read–James Joyce, Vladimir Nabokov, Henry Miller, George Orwell, JD Salinger, Kurt Vonnegut— who, on looks alone, would have been welcomed at any of the libraries where their books had been banned. The more flamboyant forming the remainder of my world–the Hippies and their successors–seemed to be mere eiphenomena, not the driving force of audacity.\nBut what about visual artists, who are–well–more visually oriented? Is it easier to spot the most audacious of that sort? Look at a list of the 10 most controversial artists of our time that I located online and judge for yourself. They’re presented below by birth order, together with a brief description, and shown in a slide show with a representative work:\nPablo Picasso (1881-1973). Picasso repeatedly outraged the public as well as his associates, but no more so than with Les Demoiselles d’Avignon. At that time, the work was deemed crude, unfinished and unusually unsettling. Today, it is considered to be seminal in the development of both cubism and modern art.\nMarcel Duchamp (1887-1968). In Paris, Duchamp’s Nude Descending a Staircase, No. 2 raised a ruckus. Among the objections was that nudes never descend stairs: they recline. In New York, reactions were no more favorable. It was called “an explosion in a shingle factory” and spawned satirizations for decades. Today, Duchamp is seen as a key player in the surrealist, futurist and Dada movements.\nGeorgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986). The abstract imagery of O’Keeffe’s oversized, sensual flowers and similar depictions such as Blue and Green Music caused a stir because they called to mind female genitalia. Even as she was celebrated by feminists, she denied painting private parts. Today, she is credited with revolutionizing modern art through her portrayal of the emotional impact of nature and man-made entities.\nJackson Pollock (1912-1956). With his huge Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist), Pollock abandoned the convention of central motif and established process as paramount. The resulting action painting genre caused considerable disagreement among critics. His wife, Lee Krasner, may well have been the real innovator. Her Cobalt Night is larger than Lavender Mist and exhibits the same heroic ambition.\nChristo Javachev (1935-present). Javachev and his late wife were at the forefront of environmental art. The first version of Valley Curtain, a 400 meter length of vivid orange material stretched across Rifle Gap, was torn to shreds by wind and rock while being hung. A second version was successfully erected, only to be torn apart by gale-force winds 28 hours later. While critics searched for meaning in such massive, temporary installations, the two expanded the definition of what constitutes art.\nAi Weiwei (1957-present). Ai was the artistic consultant for the Beijing National Stadium and a dissident arrested by the Chinese government. His 10 tons of hand-painted porcelain sculptures, Sunflower Seeds, reference a staple of the Cultural Revolution and the resulting homogenization. Placing Ai first in the 2011 Power 100, ArtReview noted that his “activities have allowed artists to move away from the idea that they work within a privileged zone limited by the walls of a gallery or museum.”\nDamien Hirst (1965-present). Hirst is famous for formaldehyde-fixed animals displayed in glass tanks. His Virgin Mother, a 35 foot tall statue recalling Edgar Degas’s Little Dancer of Fourteen Years, reveals the insides of a pregnant woman. Critics have variously called him one of few late 20th Century artists who will remain more than a footnote and someone responsible for the decline of contemporary art.\nDavid Černý (1967-present). Černý gained international recognition by getting arrested for painting a Soviet tank pink. While he claims that he merely creates art for his friends and to piss people off, he doubtless has something more serious in mind. His Brownnosers allows visitors to climb a 20-foot ladder and peer into a white rear end to view a video of impersonators of President Václav Klaus and art critic Milan Knížák feeding each other slop while “We Are the Champions” plays.\nChris Ofili (1968-present). Ofili gained notoriety when questions were raised regarding his The Holy Virgin Mary and Tate Gallery’s purchase of The Upper Room containing his 13 paintings of macaques. No Woman No Cry, referencing his Nigerian heritage and the Bob Marley song, has been called a modern Pietà but has also raised hackles since it stands on two dried, varnished lumps of elephant dung–a material favored by Ofili–and a third serves as the Virgin’s pendant.\nBanksy (1974?-present). “Banksy” is the pseudonym of an anonymous street artist, painter and political activist who may or may not be Robin Gunningham. Known for his contempt of the government in labelling graffiti as vandalism, he displays his art on public surfaces such as walls and sometimes goes as far as building prop pieces. His stencil of the image of Death on the waterline of an entertainment boat in Bristol is based on a 19th Century etching illustrating the pestilence of the Great Stink.\nWhen I consider these artists, I see nothing that makes me think that there is any way to identify the truly audacious other than through their work. So more power to those who don’t want to look bland or boring. But if they want to be genuinely daring, they’ll have to come up with more than a startling appearance. And put more of themselves on the line. Personally, I’d place my money on one of those inconspicuous commuters sitting near me on the subway. Chances are better that the makings of the next fearless [literary, artistic, social, cultural, political] work is stashed in his or her plain portfolio or briefcase.\nNote: For more on audacity, see the “Audacious Ideas” series on this site. And join us for the launch of the Summer 2012 Audacity print issue in late June.\nEssayArt Exhibits, Audacity, Blogs, Essays, Literary Journals, Social Justice, Visual Art, WritingIlse Munro8 comments\nMeet the Neighbors: Atticus Review\nSet Alight by the Short Story\n8 thoughts on “What Audacity Looks Like”\nClarinda Harriss\nWow, this piece is a keeper. It should be in the e-reference-libary of every student. Nay, every reader and writer. I love the premise: it’s the toilers in the vineyard in their non-fancy work clothes, so to speak, who are responsible for the great wine.\nIlse Munro\nOr those willing to go elbow-deep in the, well, you know. Can’t say more since it’ll spoil the essay I’ll post next Monday: “Self-Interview: Clarinda Harriss.”\nLynn Weber\nA wonderful article, and an important distinction between appearance and reality.\nThanks, Lynn. Thought you’d appreciate the distinction. (See Lynn’s piece, “The Art of Identification: The Heart of Social Justice,” posted on this site.)\nAndy Strakna\nInteresting article. I’ve always found the disconnection between appearence and personality. My own family looks from the outside to be very conservative and stoid, but are really rebels.\nEva Q Tennant\nThe cliche, “You can never tell a book by its cover,” couldn’t be more true when it comes to these audacious artists who all had an outward visage that belied the heart and mind of a controversial truth teller. Bravo!\nPingback: Concerning Craft: Raoul Middleman | Little Patuxent Review\nPingback: Audacity, 50s Style: Part 1 | Little Patuxent Review","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line537205"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8348894119262695,"wiki_prob":0.8348894119262695,"text":"Black Cultural Center Office, Black Ink, 1 May 2001, Page 4.\n“That Fishbowl—as frustrating as it was, as small as it was, you were always feeling a sense of surveillance—it was a magical space,” Renee Alexander Craft, a graduate of 1994, remembered, describing the University’s first Black Cultural Center (BCC).1 The Fishbowl or the BCC (students used the terms interchangeably) was located on the first floor of the Frank Porter Graham Student Union and enclosed in glass, giving the space its nickname. The space itself was small, roughly eight hundred square feet, and located in a renovated snack bar and vending machine area, a supposedly “temporary” location the Fishbowl occupied for almost two decades.2 Despite the many limitations of the physical space of the Fishbowl, it operated as one of the only campus spaces—along with Upendo Lounge and the South Campus dorms—in which Black students could find respite from the University’s whiteness and create a sense of community through the 1990s and early 2000s.\nThis essay argues that after the colonization of Upendo Lounge and its elimination as the main counter-space for Black students in the 1980s, the Black Cultural Center served as the foremost counter-space for Black students, combining for the first time the social and academic needs of Black students within the space and drawing condemnation from white administrators. The Fishbowl also served as the nexus of a movement that sought to create a free-standing version of the BCC in honor of one of the faculty members who had fought the hardest for its creation. The history of the campus movements that operated for and within the space of the Fishbowl illustrates the ways in which the institution sought to control, contain, and exclude Black life from the dominant cultural landscape of the University.\nThe idea for a BCC began to take form in 1983, after administrators changed the reservation policy for Upendo Lounge. Black students, along with Black faculty and staff, petitioned the administration for a space separate from Upendo Lounge in which to hold Black cultural performances and academic programs. By the time this conversation had begun at the University, most of its peer institutions of public predominantly white universities across the United States had already built Black culture (or cultural) centers. Most centers had been built in the early 1970s, the result of Black student-led demonstrations in the wake of the assassination of Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., protests which also brought Black studies programs and increased numbers of Black faculty to the white campuses.\nSonja Haynes Stone, Black Ink, 26 August 1991, Page 8.\nThrough the remainder of the decade, dozens of white universities built BCCs, centers which included not only social spaces for Black students (like Upendo Lounge), but dedicated space in which to hold Black academic and cultural programs.3 During this period in Chapel Hill, a small number of Black faculty members presented a concept paper to Chancellor Nelson Ferebee Taylor outlining the creation of an “Institute for Minority Studies,” which they explained, could “serve as a unique or special resource center for minority students and faculty,” and “assist the university in its efforts to be more responsive to the needs of minority communities.”4 Taylor did not pursue their proposed institute, but among Black faculty in particular, there was a growing recognition that the University needed a Black Cultural Center to serve all Black people within the institution and Chapel Hill.\nOne of the most active participants in the national Black culture center movement was Dr. Sonja Haynes Stone, a professor in the Department of Afro-American Studies.5 Partially at Stone’s insistence, in 1984, Dean of Student Affairs Donald Boulton convened a committee to develop a proposal for a Black Cultural Center which would “promote learning, self awareness, self determination and broadened world perspectives.” The BCC planning committee (a group comprised largely of Black faculty and administrators) issued their final report in February 1986. They determined that a new Black Cultural Center would need a space of at least 8,548 square feet, an estimate which included space for a library, a large meeting room, an art gallery, a music room rehearsal hall, offices for staff members, and a lounge for socializing.6\nIn their report, the committee included a minimum of 2,500 square feet that could be used as a temporary space, a concession given with the understanding that it would take both time and financial resources to fully develop the larger proposed 8,548 square foot facility.7 But before the BCC planning committee submitted their final report, Boulton set aside a temporary eight hundred square foot space in the front of the Frank Porter Graham Student Union, and funds were raised to hire a director for the University’s new Black Cultural Center.8 Black students were dissatisfied with the space that had been set aside for the BCC. “No, we’re not happy with the vending machine area,” Black Student Movement (BSM) President from 1986 to 1987, Camille Roddy, said to Campus Profile. “This is due to the fact that the proposal that we have in mind encompasses much more spacing than what the vending machine area would allow. And by stifling us with that area, you’re stifling the ideas and the plans for the cultural center.”9\nThe Black Cultural Center Opens\nhttps://uncofthepeople.files.wordpress.com/2018/04/88nov14_permanentbccupdate_racerelations_campusprofile_stv_bcc.mp4\nCampus Profile, Episode 77. UNC Student Television. 14 November 1988. Accessed April 23, 2018.\nDespite objections from students, on July 1, 1988, the University’s Black Cultural Center officially opened in the temporary space in the Frank Porter Graham Student Union with Margo Crawford, a university professor and administrator from Chicago, as its first director.10 Donyell Roseboro, in her dissertation on the movement for a free-standing Black Cultural Center, points to the decision to create even the temporary BCC as monumental. “By officially assigning the Black cultural center temporary space in 1988,” she explained, “university administrators publicly announced their belief in the importance of such a facility; it represented a social and academic coalescence of learning, a safe space for Black students, and a tribute to the struggles of Black people on the University campus and beyond.”11 Although the BCC’s opening was indeed significant, the precarity of its status within the Division of Student Affairs and the inadequate resources it received always kept open the possibility that the BCC would be forced into a similar dismantling of power that Upendo Lounge had undergone over the last decade.\nThe Black Cultural Center, although small and exposed, immediately became a space for congregation and conversation for all members of the University’s Black community. In describing the Fishbowl, Renee Alexander Craft referred to the structural, social, and emotional resonances of the space:\n“In the middle of the space there were the same kind of chairs, but they formed a circle so that the seat part was facing out so it was like a flower in the middle, and then seats lining the side. So you’d have plenty of places to sit and plenty of floor space if you just wanted to plop down. So even if you didn’t come in for a meeting, you just came in to get something, there’s someone’s TA over there having a conversation with their students, there’s students talking about politics on campus and what needs to be done, there’s students talking about the environment and what needs to be done about that. So there’s all that energy and movement and you can fall in and fall out of those conversations as you’re going about your mundane life.”12\nAlthough the BCC held programs and lectures, organized by its director Margo Crawford and its staff of students, the center also functioned for Black students as a space for debate, mentoring, organizing, and relaxation. “I would literally walk in sometimes – I didn’t go all the time – to sit down, not say anything to anyone, and just exhale, and then ten minutes later I would get up,” remembered former BSM President from 1999 to 2000, Chris Faison. “We didn’t even have to say anything. It was just the acknowledgement of the fact that you just needed a break from being the only one in your class, right? And then you would get up and you would walk out.”13\nRenee Alexander Craft, Creator of Sauti M’pya, Photo in The Daily Tar Heel, 24 August 1992, Page 3.\nThe BCC operated not just as a social space for Black students, but also as a space of incubation for student created programs and initiatives. In 1991, Renee Alexander Craft established Sauti M’pya, the literary journal for the BCC and the first Black literary publication created by Black students in Chapel Hill, which gave many Black student writers and artists their first opportunity to publish their work.14 In 1992, Michelle Thomas and Denise Matthewson founded the Communiversity Program, which continues to serves Black students in local elementary and middle schools through a variety of cultural and educational activities in Chapel Hill.15 Many Black students in the 1990s participated in a program called Around the Circle, weekly graduate student-led discussions of political and social issues happening across the University which “sharpened [their] teeth” for public discourse.16 Each of these initiatives was created by and for Black students, faculty, and staff within the eight hundred square feet of the Fishbowl.\nDespite its limitations, the Fishbowl engendered a remarkable social dynamism infused with a progressive political orientation that marked it as distinct from Upendo Lounge as a social and academic counter-space. It was crucial for Black students’ identity development that the BCC served as an academic counter-space as well as a social space, because, as critical race theorists Daniel Solórzano and Octavio Villalpando have determined, academic counter-spaces allow Black students to stimulate their own learning in a nurturing environment where their experiences are considered important in teaching and learning.17 As the University struggled to recruit Black faculty (in 1988, there were only fifty Black faculty members out of a total of more than two thousand), the Fishbowl served as a critical space for Black students to access Black academic programs through peer mentorship.18\nWhite students viewed the Fishbowl, as they had Upendo Lounge, as a threat on their claims to the campus landscape. Unlike Upendo, which had been located on South Campus, the accepted space for Black students on campus, the Fishbowl was located on North Campus, in the main student union, a critical social space for white students. Speaking to Campus Profile in front of the Fishbowl in the fall of 1988, only months after its opening, a white student explained that “in some cases I think the Black students take it too far in that they have so many organizations for minority rights and minority counsels…I feel that Black students are pampered.”19 In 1992, the Carolina Alumni Review explained that many white students and faculty believed that “black students seem to be claiming that their race entitles them to be treated differently…well-meaning programs have often encouraged minorities to be dependent on special help and to think of themselves as victims with special rights.”20\nBlack students and faculty rejected the idea that the Fishbowl’s eight hundred square feet somehow afforded them special status on campus. “Everybody asks about a white cultural center, but the whole University is a white cultural center,” Lee Greene, a professor of English, argued.21 Because the Fishbowl was enclosed in glass and faced the Pit— a sunken plaza in front of Lenoir Hall and the Frank Porter Graham Student Union through which hundreds of people passed daily—the space could be surveilled at all times. “You did have a feeling of surveillance, and that’s both good and bad,” explained Craft. “You felt surveilled at times by people you didn’t feel like looking in on you, but you also could always find the people you were looking for, because all you had to do was peek in.”22 Simone Browne, a scholar of Blackness and surveillance studies, explains that “blackness [is] a key site through which surveillance is practiced, narrated, and enacted.”23 Even if the Fishbowl site was not chosen specifically for its increased capacities for surveillance, within the cultural landscape of white supremacy, this was an added benefit for administrators.\nhttps://uncofthepeople.files.wordpress.com/2018/04/90feb26_bccupdate_campusprofile_stv_bcc.mp4\nCampus Profile, Episode 120. UNC Student Television. 26 February 1990. Accessed April 23, 2018.\nEven before the opening of the BCC in the summer of 1988, the center’s students and staff sought a commitment from administrators for a permanent location for the center. “If we accept the space that the University has given us then it will become permanent,” Lee Greene explained.24 In the spring of 1990, Campus Profile reported that the planning committee for the BCC was eyeing the soon to be emptied Howell Hall, then the location for the School of Journalism, which was moving to Carroll Hall. Chancellor Paul Hardin met with the BCC planning committee in early February, but made no promises about the future of Howell Hall. For the students and administrators who had been working for seven years on the creation of a permanent BCC, the timeline was stagnant. “From their perspective,” Margo Crawford explained, “this is very slow and they’ve seen other programs blossom to life or be prioritized over the BCC facility.” Speaking rather presciently about the lack of movement on Howell Hall, the BSM president from 1990 to 1991, Tonya Perry told Campus Profile: “It’s a student building. If students want it, they’re going to have to push for it.”25\nLegacy of the Fishbowl\nOn August 10, 1991, Dr. Sonja Haynes Stone, the much-admired faculty member in the Department of Afro-American Studies and mentor to many students, passed away suddenly. Students immediately began to gather in the Fishbowl to comfort and support one another, reeling in their collective loss. From meetings in August 1991 held in the Fishbowl, students began to build a movement to create a permanent and free-standing Black Cultural Center, an ambition that had been deeply held by the late Dr. Stone (detailed in the essay on The Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History). As the movement to construct a free-standing building for the BCC continued to grow, the Fishbowl remained a site of incubation, energy, and renewal for Black students engaged in the struggle. The Fishbowl, which was designed to be a temporary space to be occupied for no longer than two years, was not closed until 2004, when the Stone Center building officially opened.26\nInterior of the Black Cultural Center, Carolina Alumni Review, Winter 1992, Page 26.\nMany alumni who remember the communal nature of the Fishbowl have been surprised and even dismayed to learn that its free-standing successor, the Sonja Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History, does not always play the same role as a community gathering space for Black students, faculty, and staff. “I am so proud to have the free-standing Sonja Haynes Stone Center…But there’s something we took for granted that we had in the Fishbowl that does not currently exist, which is again, a space for multiple generations and multiple ranks to come together just to be,” Renee Alexander Craft, now a faculty membr in the Department of Communication Studies, explained.27 This belief that the contemporary Stone Center suffers from the absence of social spaces is repeated throughout other interviews with Black alumni who remember the collective energy of the Fishbowl.28 The loss of a social space within the Stone Center confirms that part of the dynamism that marked the Fishbowl as a counter-space separate in significance from either the Stone Center or Upendo Lounge was the remarkable way in which it melded the academic and social needs of Black students.\nThe Fishbowl, though no longer in existence, operated for close to two decades in a temporary space defined in part by its physical shortcomings and uncertainty regarding its future. Despite this precarity, the history of the Fishbowl stands as a testament to the students, faculty, and staff who created a counter-space that supported Black students’ experiences and identity development, despite the University’s consistent undervaluing of the importance of the BCC. By blending the social and academic interests of Black students, the BCC became a vigorous force within the institution for progressive energies, intellectual activities, and passionate discourse. And in creating a space in which to both challenge the prevailing cultural practices of the University and support one another, Black students also developed the BCC into a powerful space from which to build and sustain a major movement for racial justice. But the physical space of the Fishbowl exposed the University’s anti-Black institutional policies, which sought to contain Black life within a space which could be surveilled at all times. Thus, the Fishbowl, like Upendo Lounge, carries a dual legacy of both the insurgent power of Black counter-space creation and the institutional policies utilized to suppress the capacity for Black students to exercise their power.\nDownload Chapter 4: The Fishbowl as a PDF.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1692244"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5041785836219788,"wiki_prob":0.5041785836219788,"text":"-3°C Bucharest, RO\nIulian Ernst\nIulian studied physics at the University of Bucharest, and he sees himself as a physicist in the broadest sense of the word. He also studied economics at Charles University in Prague and Central European University in Budapest, after a master’s program in business administration at Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies. Since recently, he’s been exploring coding and data analysis for business and economics. As a freelancer, he worked for nearly two decades as an analyst for ISI Emerging Markets, Euromonitor International, Business New Europe, but also as a consultant for OMV Petrom and UkrAgroConsult. Iulian was part of the founding team of Ziarul Financiar. At Romania Insider, which he joined in 2018, he is reviewing the latest economic developments for the premium bulletins and newsletters. He would gladly discuss topics such as macroeconomics, emerging markets, Prague, energy sector including renewable, Led Zeppelin, financial services, as well as tech start-ups and innovative technologies. Email him at iulian@romania-insider.com.\nSubmitted by iuliane on Fri, 01/14/2022 - 08:05\nRomania’s CA gap up 56 YoY to 6.8% of GDP in 12 months to November\nRomania’s current account (CA) deficit reached EUR 16.5 bln or 6.8% of the GDP estimated for 2021, in the 12 months to November, according to calculations based on data released by the National Bank of Romania (BNR).\nThe 12-month trade gap thus increased by 56% in nominal terms compared to November 2020. The gap-to-GDP ratio advanced some 2pp from 4.8%-4.9% in 2019-2020.\nIn a country update on October 24, rating agency Fitch said it expected relatively large current account deficits in 2021-2023, averaging 6% of GDP as a recovery in exports is offset by solid import demand. Under its November Autumn Forecast, the European Commission projected the country’s GDP within the 6%-6.5% range for 2021 and the coming years.\nOn the upside, the rating agency forecasts non-debt-creating inflows to cover an increasingly large share of the current account deficit (close to 80% by 2023) as EU transfers accelerate.\nAs of November 2021, the debt-creating inflows are still predominantly covering the current account deficit. Specifically, the EUR 37.2 bln cumulated CA gap in 2019-2020 and the first eleven months in 2021 was 76% financed by the rise in the long-term debt (EUR 28.2 bln). The EUR 23.1 bln rise in the public debt accounted for 62% of the CA gap over the period. The balance is hopefully expected to shift toward more non-debt-generating flows in the coming years, though.\nThe European Commission already disbursed some EUR 3.8 bln in December-January as advance payments under the Resilience Facility, likely to bring EUR 14 bln of grants and EUR 15 bln of soft loans by 2026. Furthermore, under the multiannual financial framework (EU budget), Romania is expected to receive EUR 28 bln cohesion funds and EUR 19 bln for agricultural and fisheries policy. All in all, nearly EUR 80 bln would be disbursed in 2022-2027, most of which are non-debt-generating.\niulian@romania-insider.com\n(Photo source: Robbiverte/Dreamstime.com)\nSubmitted by iuliane on Thu, 12/30/2021 - 17:25","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line984169"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.606308102607727,"wiki_prob":0.606308102607727,"text":"Home / Posts tagged 'A Different Kind of Tension'\nBuzzcocks to play ‘Another Music,’ ‘Love Bites’ on 22-date North American tour\nClassic punk outfit Buzzcocks today announced a 22-date North American tour later this spring that will find the band tearing through its first two albums — ‘Another Music in a Different Kitchen’ and ‘Love Bites’ — in their entirety each night, plus ‘other hits.’\nNew releases: Buzzcocks reissues, Pretenders ‘Live in London,’ UB40’s ‘Labour of Love IV’\nThis week’s new releases include a trio of expanded 2CD reissues from the Buzzcocks — ‘Another Music in a Different Kitchen,’ ‘Love Bites,’ ‘A Different Kind of Tension’ — plus ‘Live in London’ from The Pretenders and UB40’s latest covers album, ‘Labour of Love IV.’\nExpanded reissues of Buzzcocks’ first three albums to be released in U.S. next month\nReissues, Tracklist\nTweet The expanded 2CD reissues of the Buzzcocks’ first three albums — Another Music in a Different Kitchen (1978), Love Bites (1978) and A Different […]","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line997001"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6965909004211426,"wiki_prob":0.6965909004211426,"text":"Tag Archives: Myles Dungan\nThe Daniel Cassidy Memorial Lecture\nOn the 9th of November, in San Francisco, as part of a festival called Hinterland, the Irish broadcaster and historian Myles Dungan will give the inaugural Daniel Cassidy Memorial Lecture. The Hinterland festival has two independent parts, one in County Meath and the other (HinterlandWest) in California. The Irish festival is also linked to the Hay Festival on the border between England and Wales.\nAnyone who has read this blog carefully will realise that there is something very strange about the idea of commemorating Daniel Cassidy or celebrating his life.\nThe HinterlandWest Festival describes Cassidy thus:\nDaniel Cassidy was a much-loved musician, and academic who ran the Irish Studies programme at New College, San Francisco up to the time of his death in 2008.\nThe comma is interesting. Did they originally have a comment about his skills as a writer and linguist but decided to remove it because they realise that the boat sailed on that one a long time ago? Or do they simply have problems with punctuation?\nThe facts in relation to Daniel Cassidy are clear. He was certainly a musician, though an indifferent one.\nWith regard to his status as an academic, there is no doubt that Cassidy worked as a lecturer at New College of California for around twelve years. Cassidy himself claimed (under a rather obvious sock puppet identity) that he had worked before that at San Francisco State but I have no confirmation of this claim.\nWhat is very clear is that he was not entitled to be a lecturer in any university because he had no qualifications. Some sources, such as Wikipedia, claimed for a long time that he graduated from Cornell. Cassidy himself claimed to have been educated at or studied at Cornell and then at Columbia. The SF Irish American Crossroads Festival website says that Cassidy studied first at Columbia and then at Cornell, but this is contradicted by accounts of his life given by Cassidy in interviews.\nThe fact is that Cassidy attended Cornell for about four years on a scholarship, but left the university in 1965 without receiving a degree. He never attended Columbia University and he never got a primary degree or a postgraduate degree.\nIn other words, the reality is that Cassidy was just some unqualified guy who had wandered in off the street with an attitude and the gift of the gab and had no right to even apply for a job as a teacher. This is confirmed again and again in his book and in the numerous articles that appeared in newspapers around the time of its publication. In his book, Cassidy demonstrates time and time again that he didn’t care about facts or telling the truth. He knew nothing about the methods used by genuine academics. The book is weak and badly argued, with its fake phonetics, ludicrously bad referencing, a tendency to dishonestly miss out anything that conflicted with his theories and an even more disturbing tendency to simply invent phrases in ‘Irish’ that never existed and in many cases could never exist, phrases like fo-luach and sách úr and béal ónna and teas ioma and uath-anchor. The book really is a complete mess and anyone who thinks that How The Irish Invented Slang is going to make a genuine contribution to the world of etymology is delusional.\nIt has also been suggested that Cassidy used his unearned status as a lecturer to sexually harass young women who were unlucky enough to be studying under his guidance. This claim came from a person who left a message here and who studied at New College. I have no idea whether it’s true or not but knowing Cassidy’s arrogance and self-obsession and lack of boundaries, I don’t consider it at all unlikely.\nMyles Dungan, who is delivering this inaugural Daniel Cassidy Memorial Lecture (let’s hope it’s also the last), interviewed Cassidy just after his book was published. I have already dealt with this elsewhere on this blog. It was a fairly feeble interview and a poor piece of journalism, which gave Cassidy an easy ride and failed to ask any difficult (and obvious) questions. It is strange to find Myles Dungan, who gave this toxic fraud a platform to sell his garbage to unsuspecting people back then, once again stepping up to support this liar more than a decade later. It’s doubly strange in that Myles Dungan is well-known for a blog that debunks fake news stories from history.\nI don’t know who was responsible for establishing this Daniel Cassidy Memorial Lecture and damaging the reputation of the HinterlandWest Festival by associating it with a man who is universally despised by all right-thinking people. I suspect that Elizabeth Creely, one of the most vociferous Cassidy loyalists, had a hand in this bizarre decision. Whoever is responsible, the fact is that Cassidy was not a person deserving of commemoration or celebration. He was a criminal, a liar, a narcissist, a hypocrite and a total waste of space. No decent human being would knowingly associate themselves with this man and his deceptions.\nThis entry was posted in The Cassidy Scandal and tagged academic with no qualifications, Cornell, Daniel Cassidy, Daniel Cassidy Memorial Lecture, Elizabeth Creely, Hay on Wye, Hinterland Festival, HinterlandWest, How The Irish Invented Slang, Meath, Mechanics' Institute, Myles Dungan, professor with no degree, San Francisco, San Francisco festivals, sockpuppets, Trim Hinterland Festival on November 9, 2019 by Danielomastix.\nAn open letter to the advisory board of the San Francisco Irish-American Crossroads Festival\nCharles Fanning\nKatherine Hastings\nCaledonia Kearns\nDaniele Maraviglia\nLinda Norton\nMiriam Nyhan\nNancy Quinn\nJames Silas Rogers\nTim Sullivan\nSometimes, our heroes turn out to have feet of clay and even when they were responsible for establishing valid and worthwhile institutions, it can be difficult for those institutions to avoid being contaminated with the scandal associated with a toxic founder.\nIn the case of the Lance Armstrong Foundation, it rebranded itself as the Livestrong Foundation when Armstrong was exposed as a drugs cheat. It continues to raise money but it is not as successful as it was. Its new name suggests a link to Armstrong (L – strong) but the information on its website gives no indication of the organisation’s history or Armstrong’s role in it.\nIn the case of the Jimmy Savile Charitable Trust, when the shit hit the fan, it initially considered rebranding itself to remove all links to the serial rapist and paedophile who founded it but a few weeks later, it declared that it was shutting up shop. The scandal and the stigma were just too great.\nAs for the New College of California, the exposure of its founder as a predatory paedophile came shortly before the wheels came off the institution itself. The exposure of John Leary as a sexual predator was not responsible for the collapse of the institution but it probably didn’t help. Had the college survived, it would have been necessary to remove or rewrite material like this about its founder to reflect the fact that Leary was kicked out of Gonzaga for a sexual assault on a young boy: “Jack, a Jesuit priest and teacher of philosophy, had recently resigned as president of Gonzaga University in Washington state because of his dissatisfaction with the current American model of undergraduate education. He wanted to start over. And so New College of California began as a handful of students and teachers meeting in Jack’s Sausalito living room.”\nThe San Francisco Irish-American Crossroads Festival was founded by Daniel Cassidy, a ‘professor’ at New College in 2004. After Cassidy’s book was published, Cassidy was criticised immediately by genuine scholars for his poor research but it is only in the last few years that the full extent of Cassidy’s dishonesty and criminality has come to light.\nAs I have said before on this blog, the In Memoriam section of the Festival’s website gives a fictional and sanitised account of the founder’s life. According to this account, Cassidy had degrees from Columbia and Cornell. In a radio interview with Myles Dungan, Cassidy talks about his Bachelor’s degree from Cornell and taking some ‘graduate’ classes at Columbia. Cornell University has stated that Cassidy was removed from Cornell without gaining a degree and his sister has stated here that he never went to Columbia. This in itself is clear evidence that Cassidy was a fraudster. Cassidy had no degrees or qualifications at all. He was not a real professor.\nHis book, How The Irish Invented Slang, is one of the most dishonest, ignorant and badly-researched books ever written. Far from being a revelatory work of etymology, it is an insult to the world of scholarship, to the Irish people and to anyone who cares about basic standards of honesty and fair play. This dim-witted collection of disinformation is totally antithetical to the mission statement of the Festival: “Founded in 2004, the Crossroads Irish-American Festival promotes the discovery and understanding of the Irish experience in the Americas to ensure that the richness of the arts, culture, history and traditions of this heritage are both held in great esteem and preserved for generations to come.”\nI cannot force the people at the Irish-American Crossroads Festival to tell the truth about Cassidy. All I can do is to point out once again that Cassidy should be held to account for his fraud and criminality, not held up as an inspiration and a good example. Anyone who allows lies like this to be associated with their name is not a decent human being. If you wish to protect your reputation, demand that those responsible for the website remove the lies about Cassidy. If you support Daniel Cassidy and his insane theories, directly or indirectly, you are a willing accessory to this puerile, dishonest nonsense which has been used to swindle tens of thousands of people out of their hard-earned money.\nThis entry was posted in The Cassidy Scandal and tagged Advisory Board, Caledonia Kearns, Charles Fanning, Daniel Cassidy, Daniele Maraviglia, How The Irish Invented Slang, Jack Leary, James Silas Rogers, Katherine Hastings, Linda Norton, Miriam Nyhan, Myles Dungan, Myles Dungan interview, Myles Dungan RTÉ, Nancy Quinn, New College of California, Peter Quinn, San Francisco Irish-American Crossroads Festival, Tim Sullivan on December 16, 2017 by Danielomastix.\nIn a recent post (The Day JFK Was Shot) I mentioned an interview on RTÉ radio (Highway 101) in August 2007, in which Myles Dungan talks to Daniel Cassidy, fake scholar and fake etymologist, about his life and works. In that post, I pointed to several factual inconsistencies. However, they weren’t the only problems with Cassidy’s account of his life, so I decided to listen to the podcast again and make a few notes.\nFirst off, it is amazing what Cassidy leaves out. He makes no mention of his association with Andy Warhol, one of the few genuinely impressive parts of his CV. He talks about ‘when I got out of Cornell’, but makes no mention of the fact that he flunked his degree. Indeed, he even says ‘I was reasonably good at academics … you know … I just took to it …’ Really?\nLater, he talks about being in ‘graduate school’ in Columbia. Obviously, as a non-graduate, he couldn’t have been in graduate school, though he may well have taken some evening classes.\nOne of the most dishonest bits is in relation to his career as a merchant seaman. In some descriptions of Cassidy, this is almost used to define him – he is ‘the former merchant marine’. I have expressed doubt before about this episode of his life, which I think didn’t happen, or was very short, or took place later, in the late seventies. This interview confirms that there is something very suspect about his claim to have been a merchant seaman in the 1960s. When Dungan says, ‘you became a seaman’, you would expect a natural storyteller like Cassidy to really give it his all. However, you would be disappointed. There are no tall tales about being lashed to the wheel with a marlin spike pondering the nature of the stars, or doing the horizontal hornpipe in a cathouse in Surabaya, or listening to the mermaids and merrows singing songs to the dog-headed men at the edge of the world where cartographers fear to tread. Cassidy simply says ‘I hit the road’ and tells an anecdote about hitching a ride to California in 1967, the Summer of Love. Then he talks about playing in a bar in the Mission District in San Francisco. Then the narrative moves on to getting in with musicians and releasing an album. His career as a salty seadog is ignored and forgotten, as is the 23 months he spent in rehab in New York, at some time between 1967 and 1972. In other words, he might have spent slightly longer as a seaman than Malcolm Lowry, but he was no Joseph Conrad.\nThere is also a problem with the idea that he played R and B in bars in the Mission District. According to other sources, he learned guitar in Phoenix House, the rehab centre, at the end of the sixties or in the early seventies. Before that, he played the saxophone. Now, the guitar is an R and B instrument. One person can be a modern troubadour, singing songs of love and protest and accompanying themselves on the guitar. But it’s hard to imagine anyone doing solo gigs on the saxophone. So did this happen? And if it did, when? Was it later, after his music career was on the skids, when his album failed to sell?\nDungan seems to regard Cassidy as a harmless crank, and gives him an easy ride, even when it becomes obvious that Cassidy can’t pronounce Irish and knows nothing about the language. Dungan challenges him over spiel, which he rightly says is German or Yiddish, but he doesn’t challenge Cassidy when he claims that speal (which he mispronounces to make it sound more like spiel) is Scottish Gaelic and Irish for a hoe. (It’s a scythe, or course.) However, Dungan does say: ‘Are you not letting your imagination run away with you and claiming far too much for the Irish language?’ Cassidy blethers his way round this one, claiming that in fact he is being conservative and that the Irish influence is even greater than he claims.\nHowever, the thing that really shocked me was his spiel about how New College of California was founded by a Jesuit called Father Jack Leary, who came from Gonzaga University. The thing he doesn’t mention at all is that Leary had already been exposed as a predatory paedophile by (amongst others) Matt Smith in SF Weekly in October 2006 (http://www.sfweekly.com/sanfrancisco/the-double-life-of-john-leary/Content?oid=2161211).\nThis entry was posted in An Ghaeilge, The Cassidy Scandal and tagged an Ghaeilge, Andy Warhol, Columbia, Cornell, Daniel Cassidy, Father John Leary, Gonzaga University, Highway 101, How The Irish Invented Slang, Jack Leary, Matt Smith, Myles Dungan, New College of California, paedophile priest, RTÉ, SF Weekly, slang on May 14, 2016 by Danielomastix.\nDamp Squid\nDaniel Cassidy did no original research at all. His idea of research was to abstract information from dictionaries, then sneer at the people who had done the work for him. His main targets were the Oxford English Dictionary and Merriam-Webster, who he misrepresented as a clique of WASP bigots. Cassidy called these bastions of the linguistic establishment ‘the dictionary dudes’. In reality, of course, there is more of an implied criticism of the main dictionary-makers in the Irish language in Cassidy’s work, as none of Cassidy’s insane phrases like pá lae sámh and béal ónna are mentioned in any of the Irish dictionaries. It is also interesting that when Cassidy was confronted with a real Irish person who knew some Irish and could clearly see that Cassidy knew nothing about the subject, Cassidy was quite happy to hide behind the authority of the OED. This happened in an RTÉ radio programme, Highway 101 with Myles Dungan, now available as a podcast, where Cassidy, having been pulled up on his pronunciation, talks about the origins of phoney in Irish fáinne. Cassidy says: Your audience must be saying, this guy Cassidy’s a real crackpot, [TRUE!!] but that’s not my etymology, that’s the etymology in the Oxford English Dictionary … Strange that he both sneers at the OED and then appeals to its authority when it suits him. But then, Cassidy was what we call a teanga liom leat (a tongue with-me with-you, a hypocrite) or a coileach gaoithe (a weather vane). Or in the English of Ireland, a gobshite.\nHowever, most of Cassidy’s sheeple have never heard this podcast and don’t know anything about Irish, and they continue to spout nonsense about how the OED and Merriam-Webster are full of anti-Irish bigots. Just recently I quoted the Boston writer Michael Patrick MacDonald, who talks about the ‘racist OED lapdogs!’ What an idiot!\nI have been reading a book recently by one of these ‘racist OED lapdogs’, Jeremy Butterfield, who has commented here. I do not know Jeremy personally. I’ve never met him outside of the virtual realm of language blogs and I’ve never even been to Oxford.\nHowever, I loved the book, and I am giving a brief review here, mainly because it’s a good book and worth reading, but also because it exemplifies very clearly how stupid and paranoid the criticisms of the ‘dictionary dudes’ by the Cassidy Cargo Cult are.\nDamp Squid: The English Language Laid Bare is a very witty, informative and well-written account of lexicography and its history and the way that corpus linguistics and computing have changed the way that dictionaries like the OED are compiled. I have read a lot of books on linguistics, so much of the material was familiar to me, but there were plenty of interesting facts which were new to me. For example, the term dictionary was quite late in arriving on the scene. The first English dictionary was Latin-English. The second was apparently Welsh-English (1547)!\nThere are fascinating discussions of metaphor, register and eggcorns (phrases like damp squid, which was originally damp squib, but most people don’t know what a squib is these days, so they reinterpret it). I was particularly struck by his observations about how society is always metaphorically a building, while the state is often a ship. (‘foundations of a just society’, ‘Captain, My Captain…’) Obvious, when you think about it, but I had never thought about it.\nIt is also quite clear that Jeremy Butterfield is not the bigoted WASP Cassidy and his friends liked to denigrate. His views on language are very democratic. In the culture war between people like Simon Heffer and David Crystal, there is no doubt that he is on the Crystal side. He does not believe that dictionary definitions are set in stone, and he mocks the approach of a long-dead generation of language mavens who disliked the use of French words because you can apparently say all kinds of morally suspect things in French which English simply can’t express!\nThe open-mindedness of his approach demonstrates beautifully that comments like MacDonald’s ‘racist OED lapdogs’ are just childish displays of ignorance and bigotry.\nIn other words, Damp Squid is a fascinating book. It is full of information, but it is also fun and very readable. In short, it is everything that Cassidy’s rubbishy book is not. And even more gratifying, it is much higher on the Amazon Bestsellers Rank than How The Irish Invented Slang. Yay!!\nYou can (and should) buy the book at Amazon here: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Damp-Squid-English-Language-Laid/dp/019957409X\nThis entry was posted in The Cassidy Scandal and tagged Damp Squid, Damp Squid: The English Language Laid Bare, David Crystal, Highway 101, Jeremy Butterfield, Michael Patrick MacDonald, Myles Dungan, OED, Oxford English Dictionary, review, RTÉ, Simon Heffer on March 28, 2016 by Danielomastix.\nThe Day JFK Was Shot\nI noticed something interesting the other day in the description of Cassidy’s contribution to an oral history project at the Tamiment Library, curated by New York University. You can find the description here: http://dlib.nyu.edu/findingaids/html/tamwag/aia_030/dscref56.html\nIn general, the oral history project looks interesting. There are plenty of names I’ve never heard of, along with some which will be familiar to most Irish people and even one or two who are familiar faces around Belfast, like Frank Costello.\nCassidy was interviewed by his old crony Peter Quinn. One particular detail caught my eye. It says that “Cassidy provides an insider’s perspective on the day JFK was assassinated as a rookie journalist in the newsroom of the New York Times.”\nThis is interesting, because it throws up the same problems of chronology and accuracy that bedevil every attempt to work out the details of Cassidy’s life. The problem is that Kennedy was assassinated in November of 1963. We have sporadic references to Cassidy in the Cornell Daily Sun from February 1961, when he was applying for admittance to the Chi Psi fraternity, right through February 1963 when he was made co-editor of a literary mag at Cornell called the Trojan Horse, right up to May 1965, a month before he was withdrawn from the University, when he won a university award for his poetry.\nIn other words, I am very sceptical about his ‘insider’s perspective on the day JFK was assassinated as a rookie journalist in the newsroom of the New York Times.’ Not that I’m calling Cassidy a liar or anything – I’m sure we’ve all invented a degree or two to get that plum job or written a book full of fake nonsense in a language we don’t speak at some time in our lives.\nOf course, I suppose he could have been working part-time in the New York Times while studying, or done a year’s work experience in between two years at college. It’s just that that isn’t the way Cassidy himself told it. In a radio interview with Myles Dungan broadcast on RTÉ 1 on the 11th of February 2007 (now available as a podcast), Cassidy states that he took a job with the New York Times after he finished at Cornell. Notice that he doesn’t say that he graduated (he knew, and we know, that he didn’t graduate.) Perhaps he just forgot where he was. I mean, who remembers where they were when JFK was shot?\nI must say, I know where I was. I was in my high chair eating a rusk. As the car glided on and the president crumpled, I pointed at the screen, the rusk momentarily forgotten, dripping milk and crumbs into the bowl. I was unable to speak. Well, to be honest, I only knew about four words at the time: mummy, daddy, doggie, horsey, and somehow none of them seemed quite appropriate to the gravity of the situation …\n(If anyone at the Tamiment Library would like to interview me about my traumatic experience of JFK’s death for posterity, you know where to find me.)\nSo, if Cassidy was still a student in 1963, why did he tell Peter Quinn he was in the newsroom of the New York Times? I’ll take a wee punt here. Cassidy was probably chatting to Peter Quinn one day about JFK, and in keeping with his personal philosophy that a lie is simply a fact with ambition, Cassidy probably told him about his imaginary experience in the newsroom when the news of JFK’s death came through. After all, he was in the newsroom at the New York Times just a couple of short years later, so he was well-placed to take a guess. All well and good, until Peter Quinn turns up with a tape recorder and asks him about that particular occasion. And at that point, Cassidy has the choice to do the right thing and say, Actually, Peter, that was just a humungous crock of shite, like nearly everything I’ve ever told you, or do the wrong thing and carry on lying as if his life depended on it.\nNot much of a choice if you’re Daniel Cassidy, who would sooner have stopped breathing than stop lying!\nBy the way, there’s another interesting inconsistency in the Dungan interview and the Tamiment description. In the Dungan interview, Cassidy states that he sold a script called South of Market to F.F. Coppola, who was a few years senior to him in the New York Military Academy and was nicknamed Ichabod (thank God Cassidy didn’t try to find an Irish origin for that! Ith an bod, which sounds very similar, means ‘eat the penis!’). In the Tamiment description, it says that it was a script called The Volunteer. So maybe the details are wrong. Or … maybe he never really sold any scripts to F.F Coppola at all?\nThis entry was posted in The Cassidy Scandal and tagged an Ghaeilge, Cornell Daily Sun, Cornell University, Daniel Cassidy, Francis Ford Coppola, Frank Costello, How The Irish Invented Slang, JFK, lying nonsense, Myles Dungan, New York Military Academy, NYU, oral history, RTÉ, Tamiment Library, The New York Times, Trojan Horse on February 13, 2016 by Danielomastix.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1575617"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6835686564445496,"wiki_prob":0.6835686564445496,"text":"Fefe Dobson's Current Mood: Joy\nLeave a Comment\t/ Reviews / By Joy / May 5, 2010 May 5, 2010\nI’m usually quick to turn down teeny-bopping, soda popping, lollipop-sucking music. This is one of the exceptions, and it’s not because she’s a fellow Pisces and have named her second releasing album after my name (not entirely anyway). Joy, Fefe Dobson’s official sophomore studio album (produced by both 21 Music, as well as her previous record label Island Records) is scheduled to release this month.\nThis comeback single “I Want You” is currently available on . It’s fun, it’s pop, it’s chorus repetition and everything you would expect along with a punk rock school girl video. Close your eyes and listen, she could fairly easily be mistaken for Avril Lavigne, without the skateboard. There are more tracks on the album that better showcase Dobson’s spunkiness. “U Bitch” is your typical don’t mess with my man’ anthem, with the popish chorus. But something about the versus makes you yearn for more. This time around, Dobson also slows it down and takes us on an emotional ride – whether it’s trying to fight the fear of falling for the wrong person again in “In Your Touch,” or the fear of losing the one you love in “Can’t Breathe,” which is one of my personal favorites.\nGive this Canadian girl a chance. She is pop with a twist, edgy with an attitude. And there is every reason to celebrate with Joy.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line659901"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.646068274974823,"wiki_prob":0.646068274974823,"text":"‘This is what happens when you are pregnant’: Midwives give birth to baby in rural New Mexico\nIn rural New York State, midwives are trying to save the lives of newborns by delivering their babies in a remote and dangerous environment.\nThey are trying desperately to save lives.\nThe midwives in this small New Mexico town say their first-time baby was born in mid-April, and they’ve been delivering babies since then.\nThey’re not sure if the baby survived the delivery, but their hope is that it will be OK.\nMidwives are an integral part of New Mexico’s healthcare system.\n“I don’t want to be a mother anymore,” says Valerie Williams, a midwife at the El Centro Midwife Training Center.\nWilliams was a nurse for 30 years before she joined the Midwives of New York, a group of midwives that has been rescuing babies and delivering babies in remote and mountainous New Mexico.\n“It’s not only about us, it’s about the babies and the moms.\nAnd when they’re not there, they’re our babies,” she says.\nWilliams says she has had to rescue two children.\nThe first was born on March 5th and died shortly after birth.\nWilliams says that when the baby was in her arms, the baby didn’t look like a baby.\nThis is why she and the other midwives were so determined to save their babies.\nAs Williams and other midwifery students were giving birth to the baby on March 9th, she was driving through a rural area near a small town in New Mexico where she had a rural clinic and a maternity hospital.\nWilliams was delivering her own baby when she noticed a baby with severe birth defects.\n“They were not the typical ones that we see in the clinic, the small ones that are more like the size of a small baby, that were born prematurely.\nIt’s a very serious condition,” she told ABC News.\nShe called a midwife and the midwife immediately came to the hospital and treated the newborns.\nBut when the midwives got home, they were not able to find the baby.\nThey called the police, and the police said they couldn’t find the newborn.\nThe police told them that the midwives were trying to rescue their baby.\nThey had to go back to the clinic to have the baby and it was already late in the day, the police told ABCNews.\nThey couldn’t locate the newborn and they couldn`t find any information about where the baby had been born, so they called a hotline that was set up in New York City, but it wasn`t working.\nThey also couldn` t find any pictures of the baby, so Williams and the others were forced to go to the police department to find a photo of the newborn they could send to the midawomen, but they didn`t have a picture to send.\nWilliams and the Midwifers were so desperate to save this baby that they called the Midwife of the Year Awards, a New York-based organization that supports midwives who are in crisis.\nThey were able to identify a photo that showed the baby being delivered, and then they were able help save the baby from being in a worse condition.\nNow the Mid Womens of New England is planning to start an online petition to ask New York Governor Andrew Cuomo to provide funds to help Midwives rescue babies and deliver babies.\n“I`m just doing what I can do.\nI have a great support network, and I`m trying to make sure that I`ve been in a position where I can be a hero to other midwife and midwife communities around the country,” Williams said.\nShe and the rest of the MidWomens are hoping that Cuomo will act to help the Midaws and midwives throughout the country.\n“We`re hoping that he`ll step in and provide the funding to help us find the best way to save our baby,” Williams told ABC.\nWilliams is not the only midwife in need of help.\nMidwives across the country are struggling to find ways to deliver babies safely.\nIn fact, a survey released earlier this year by the National Midwives Association shows that more than a third of midwife positions are being closed due to budget cuts.\nMidwives in New England have been forced to make sacrifices in order to save a baby from the cruel conditions in which they work.\nWilliams says that she`ll continue to do what she can to save babies from these horrible conditions.\n“When I look at my family and see my daughter, it`s just like my whole family.\nWe`re just trying to survive,” she said.\nIn an interview with ABC News, Williams said that her heart broke for her friends and family members who lost a baby in childbirth.\nWilliams has been working at the Mid Women`s Clinic for 25 years and has had the opportunity to help save babies since she was born.Williams\nPosted in AboutTagged helen stockton midwife, lpn to midwife, midwife usa","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line155026"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6123367547988892,"wiki_prob":0.6123367547988892,"text":"Advertisers Go for the Gold at the 2016 Summer Olympics\nAdvertising / Culture / Marketing / Technology\nTags: digital, Olympics, Rio 2016, summer, television\nMake sure you’re stretched and hydrated, because the biggest athletic competition in the world is just a week away. We’re talking about the Summer Olympics! This year, 206 countries will join together in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil to compete in gymnastics, swimming, track and field, beach volleyball, and many more AWESOME games that promise to capture the world’s attention from August 5 to August 21.\nBut it’s not just the competition at the events that will be fierce: advertisers are also seeking gold. From Albania to Vietnam, 88 networks across the globe will broadcast the 2016 Summer Olympic Games to millions of people. That’s a pretty big target market…\nWith the growing cost of ads, the rise of digital, and the changing sponsorship rules, brands have quite a bit to take into consideration on their road to Rio.\nThere’s more money at stake.\nAnd NBCUniversal knows it. The network has the exclusive media rights to all Olympic Games content on all platforms in the United States through 2032. This year, they’ve spent $1.28 billion dollars to secure the rights to Rio 2016, and are well on their way to recouping a week before the games have even begun, with $1 billion already made in national advertising sales (including broadcast, cable, and digital).\nIn order for brands to get their own piece of the action, they will need to put down over $1 million dollars for a 30-second spot. Sure, this doesn’t quite pack the same punch as a $5 million-dollar Super Bowl commercial, but it’s a far cry from the 1988 Games’ $155,000 cost.\nDigital is in it to win it.\nPeople are watching television and videos on their phones more than ever before and digital spending is on track to surpass TV spending as early as next year. To tap into this audience, the NBC Sports App will be live streaming 4,500 hours of Olympic content. However, if you want to even be eligible to buy digital on NBCU, you’ve got to spend more than $10 million.\nAll brands are invited to compete . . . sort of.\nThe biggest shake up in Olympic advertising is the adjustment to Rule 40 from the International Olympic Committee that allows brands that are not Olympic sponsors to advertise the events. But like any game, there are rules:\nBrands can’t use any Olympic intellectual property (or “IP”). This means unless you’re one of the official sponsors (like Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, or McDonald’s), you can’t say things like “Olympic,” “Rio,” or “Gold.”\nAthletes and non-sponsor brands had to submit an application including full advertising and social media campaigns by January 27 to the United States Olympic Committee, and your ads had to start running by March 27. This is tough, considering that athletes haven’t even qualified at this point and no one is really thinking about the Olympics yet…\nBut it can be done! See how Under Armor made it work:\nIt’s the content that counts.\nSo with big-time dollars at stake, more advertising platforms than ever, and non-sponsor brands joining the conversation, your content has to stand out.\n>>You have to be creative:\nAds of the World: Bank of China, 2012 London Games, Beijing\nAds of the World: Bradesco Ad, Brazil\n>>You have to tap into the human element:\nNever Lose the Love, Gatorade\nAds of the World: Laundry Print Ad from Belgium\nOlympic Swimmers When They Were Just Beginners, USA Swimming\n>>You have to remind us why we love the Olympics – The Games bring a sense of global unity:\nMcDonald’s Rio 2016 Olympics: Friends Win!\nVisa | The Carpool to Rio – featuring Team Visa Olympians\nThe 2016 Summer Olympics will air through NBCUniversal August 5 – 21. Learn more about who, what, and how to watch.\nCover Images: Visa, McDonalds, Burger King, John Lewis, Coca-Cola","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line781644"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6682248711585999,"wiki_prob":0.33177512884140015,"text":"Services and Software for the Perfume, Flavor, Food and Beverage Industries\nFlavor-Base 100............... .. Juice-Master 2011\nBeverage-Master 2011 - A new version with enhanced features for Excel 2007 & 2010. The world's leading program for beverage development.\nJuice-Master 2011 - A new version with enhanced features for Excel 2007 & 2010. The leading program for development of juice containing beverages.\nNEW - Download area for Demos\nDownload Flavor-Base 2010 Demo\nMenthol Information\nCool without Menthol & Cooler than Menthol - NEW\nMenthol - Page 1 (Background & Organoleptic Propertites)\nH&R (-)-Menthol Synthesis from m-Cresol / Thymol\nTakasago (-)-Menthol Synthesis from Myrcene\nBASF (-)-Menthol Synthesis from Citral - NEW\nSynthesis of (-)-Menthol from (+)-Citronellal\nSynthesis of (-)-Menthol from (+)-Pulegone\nSynthesis of (-)-Menthol from (-)-Piperitone\nSCM-GLIDCO (-)Menthol Synthesis from (-)-beta-Phellandrene\n(-)-Menthol Synthesis from (-)-delta-3-Carene\n(-)-Menthol Synthesis from (+)-Limonene\n(-)-Menthol Synthesis from (-)-beta-Pinene\n(-)-Menthol via Lipase Resolution\n(-)-Menthol from Mesityl oxide via Piperitenone","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line59632"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7592437863349915,"wiki_prob":0.7592437863349915,"text":"American Way: Why Barack Obama’s Support for Gay Marriage is a Huge Political Gamble by the President – The Telegraph\nby John Avlon - May 13, 2012\nIt was a “profile in courage” moment from the American president, but one loaded with political risk.\nConsider the fact that just the previous day the citizens of North Carolina voted to ban same-sex marriage and all forms of civil unions by a 20-point margin, enshrining unequal treatment in their state constitution.\nThis has not been an unusual result when it has been put to the voters — more than 30 states have taken the same step, while in the half a dozen states where marriage equality is legal it has been achieved via state legislatures or judicial decision.\nIn other words, gay marriage might be morally right, especially in the eyes of the progressive base, but it is a proven loser at the ballot box. And the Obama campaign has bet big on winning North Carolina in November, deciding to hold the Democratic convention there in August.\nThe president won the state by a razor-thin 14,000 vote margin in 2008. It is an evangelical state in transition, containing both the Bible Belt and the research triangle of Duke University and the University of North Carolina, and given its resounding rejection of gay marriage, it just became an even more difficult prize for the Obama campaign to claim.\nThe same might be true for the crucial battleground states of Virginia, Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania. In fact, of the 12 key states that will decide the winner of the 2012 election, 10 have rejected gay marriage in statewide elections.\nThe president’s self-described “evolution” on this controversial issue does parallel an evolution that has been occurring nationally. Support for gay marriage has risen from 27 per cent in the mid-90s to just over 50 per cent today. The gay civil rights movement has accelerated in the wake of the Aids epidemic and with the rise of popular openly gay celebrities such as the comedian Ellen DeGeneres. There has been a sea change in public opinion since the 1960s, but the nation remains deeply divided, and opponents tend to be more motivated than supporters when it comes to time to vote.\nAnd while 60 per cent of Americans say that the issue of gay marriage will not affect their vote this year, according to a new Gallup poll, nearly a quarter of independent voters say the president’s position makes them less likely to vote for his re-election, while only 11 per cent say it will encourage them to back him. This does not suggest the policy will be a political success. The president even risks alienating a core element of his base — African-American churchgoers, who overwhelmingly oppose gay marriage on religious grounds.\nThe Obama campaign hopes that an outpouring of support and cash from liberals will compensate for the political risks. The activist class on the professional Left has long criticised the president for being too centrist in his approach to Congress — now it has solid evidence of his leadership on a controversial issue.\nIn the days since the president’s decision, his campaign has continued to enjoy a fundraising bonanza, including a record-setting $15?million (£9.3? million) fundraiser at his friend George Clooney’s house in Hollywood.\nHowever, the Romney camp can sense the edge this unprecedented policy position creates for it in swing states. Elements of the evangelical community, which has been slow to warm to Mitt Romney’s Mormon faith, might now be more inclined to rush to his defence. There will be associated Super PACs – supposedly independent campaign groups – to spread the message that Obama is dead-set on redefining the American family. It is a policy position his opponents can use as proof for the fantasy that he is a radical president.\nBut Team Romney also finds itself in a double-bind — because it does do not want to talk about social issues at this stage of the campaign. The Obama campaign has gone from calling Romney a flip-flopper on social issues to taking his own words from the primary that he is a “severe conservative”.\nHis camp would like to spend the campaign talking about the economy — the issue it believes can help its candidate win over centrist swing voters. Every day spent talking about social issues only compounds that negative “severe conservative” image.\nPresident Obama’s best hope is that this moment of political courage is rewarded with revived respect for his leadership. Because moral leadership from the bully pulpit matters – it can help change hearts and minds. Liberal enthusiasm may be blind to the serious political risks this move might create. If the president loses the Southern and Midwestern swing states he won last time — possibly losing the White House in the process — this decision will be an important reason why.\nBut it recalls a moment recounted in the new volume of Robert Caro’s biography of Lyndon Johnson, The Passage of Power. After the assassination of John F Kennedy, the new president was warned by advisers not to pursue a civil rights agenda, arguing that it might be morally right but politically unwise in advance of the 1964 election. “Well, what the hell is the presidency for?” Johnson replied.\nHe won in a landslide.\nThis entry was posted in Columns and tagged President Obama, The Telegraph. Bookmark the permalink.\n←Gay Marriage’s Murky Constitutional Question – The Daily Beast\nAmericans Elect Failure to Find Candidate Threatens Third-Party Dreams – The Daily Beast →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line140680"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7718870043754578,"wiki_prob":0.7718870043754578,"text":"Koala Crosses Highway, Causes Six-Car Pile Up\nWhy did the bear cross the road?\nSociety Sources WORLDCRUNCH 9NEWS Weird Australia Countries\nA koala was blamed for a six-car crash in southern Australia, as reported by 9News Adelaide. Just after 7 a.m. Monday, a driver stopped to help a koala cross the South Eastern Freeway, around the city of Adelaide. The driver's vehicle was rear-ended, resulting in a chain of collisions. Though no serious injuries were reported, there were major traffic delays through the morning.\nBut did the koala get to the other side of the road? Luckily, the wandering marsupial (which national environmental laws include in a list of vulnerable species) was unharmed and taken back to safety in the wild — but not before taking the time to be filmed behind the wheel of its rescuer's car.\n9News is the national news service of the Nine Network in Australia. Founded in 1956, it is headquartered in Sydney.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line860923"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5704562664031982,"wiki_prob":0.5704562664031982,"text":"Barbara Kruger Interview on Race, Stereotypes, Public Art and Interviews (1991)\nPosted on March 28, 2015 April 25, 2020 by Editorial @ ASX\nUntitled (Your body is a battleground)\nCourtesy Mary Boone Gallery New York\n“I hate to get to you on these words, but I wouldn’t call it an agenda-but I would say that I am interested in sort of, in not just displacing and questioning stereotypes.”\nBarbara Kruger Interview, excerpt from Critical Inquiry 17, Winter 1991\nMITCHELL: Is part of the agenda of your images, then, to re-embody, or to restore the body to these stereotypes?\nKRUGER: Yeah-and I hate to get to you on these words, but I wouldn’t call it an agenda-but I would say that I am interested in sort of, in not just displacing and questioning stereotypes-of course I’m interested in that – but I also think that stereotype is a very powerful form and that stereotype sort of lives and grows off of that which was true, but since the body is absent, it can no longer be proven. It becomes a trace which cannot be removed. Stereotype functions like a stain. It becomes a memory of the body on a certain level, and it’s very problematic. But I think that when we “smash” those stereotypes, we have to make sure and think hard about what we’re replacing them with and if they should be replaced.\nMITCHELL: If stereotypes are stains, what is the bleach?\nKRUGER: Well, I wouldn’t say that there is a recipe, and I wouldn’t say “bleach.” Bleach is something which is so encoded in this racist culture that the notion of whitening as an antidote is something that should be avoided.\nMITCHELL: So you just want to stop with the stain.\nKRUGER: I don’t want to get things whiter. If anything, I would hope when I say that basically to create new spectators with new meanings, I would hope to be speaking for spectators who are women, and hopefully colleagues of mine who are spectators and people of color. Now that doesn’t mean that women and people of color can’t create horrendous stereotypes also. Of course they can. But hopefully one who has had one’s spirit tread upon can remember not to tread upon the spirit of others.\nMITCHELL: Most of your work with the problem of difference has focused on gender. Are you interested in or working on problems with ethnicity, since that certainly involves a whole other problematic of embodiment?\nKRUGER: Well, I think about that all the time. I think about it in terms of race, and culture. I think about it when I teach. I think about it in a series of posters that I do and of projects for public spaces, but I also-unlike a number of artists-feel very uncomfortable and do not want to speak for another. I basically feel that now is the time for people of color to do work which represents their experience, and I support that, and have written about that work as a writer, but do not want to speak for others. I basically feel that right now people of color can do a better job of representing themselves than white people can of representing them. It’s about time.\nUntitled (Busy going crazy)\nUntitled (I shop therefore I am)\n111″ by 113″\nphotographic silkscreen/vinyl\n“I’m not saying that something should be unreadable. I’m saying that it should be readable, but it should suggest different meanings or that it should give a meaning.”\nMITCHELL: Let me just take one further step with the problem of word and image, and try to tie it back into the issue of public art. I’m interested in the combining of words and images in the art of publicity and in traditional public art, the old-fashioned monument.\nLet me just give you a little background on what I’m thinking here. The traditional public art, say, of the nineteenth century, is supposed to have been universally readable, or at least\nit’s often invoked that way, as something that the whole public could relate to. Everybody knows what the Statue of Liberty was supposed to mean, what it “says.” When modern works of public\nart are criticized, they’re often characterized as “unreadable” in contrast to traditional works which were supposedly universally popular. The modernist monument seems to be a kind of private\nsymbol which has been inserted into the public space, as I think you said, the garnish next to the roast beef. So it looks as if modernism kept the monument in terms of its scale, and egotism, and its placement in a public site, but it eliminated the public access to meaning.\nThis is all a kind of complicated preamble to asking whether it might be possible that word-image composite work-especially coming out of the sphere of advertising and commercial publicity might make possible a new kind of public art. I know this is to bring you back to something you said you’re not terribly in love with, or you have some problem with, the whole issue of public art.\nBut, does this question make sense to you?\nKRUGER: Yeah, I think that there is an accessibility to pictures and words that we have learned to read very fluently through advertising and through the technological development of photography and film and video. Obviously. But that’s not the same as really making meanings, because film, and, well, television, really, and advertising-even though it wants to do the opposite-let’s just talk about television-it’s basically not about making meaning. It’s about dissolving meaning. To reach out and touch a very relaxed, numbed-out, vegged-out viewer. Although we are always hearing about access to information, more cable stations than ever, . . . . But it’s not about the specificity of information, about notions of history, about how life was lived, or even how it’s lived now. It’s about another kind of space. It’s about, as Baudrillard has said, “the space of fascination,” rather than the space of reading. “Fascinating” in the way that Barthes says that stupidity is fascinating. It’s this sort of incredible moment which sort of rivets us through its constancy, through its unreadability because it’s not made to be read or seen, or really it’s made to be seen but not watched. I think that we can use the fluency of that form and its ability to ingratiate, but perhaps also try to create meanings, too. Not just re-create the spectacle formally, but to take the formalities of the spectacle and put some meaning into it. Not just make a statement about the dispersion of meaning, but make it meaningful.\nMITCHELL: That’s what I was hoping you were going to say. My next question was whether you feel there’s still some place for the unreadable image or object (which I’ve always thought of as one of the modernist canons: the idea that an image has mystery and aura and can’t be deciphered).\nKRUGER: But that’s not what I’m saying. That is not what I’m saying.\nMITCHELL: You’re speaking of another kind of unreadability.\nKRUGER: I’m not saying that something should be unreadable. I’m saying that it should be readable, but it should suggest different meanings or that it should give a meaning. I’m saying that what we have now is about meaninglessness, through its familiarity, accessibility, not through its obscurity. Whereas modernism, or what I take it to be (you’ve used the word), was meaningless to people because of its inaccessibility. What the media have done today is make a thing meaningless through its accessibility. And what I’m interested in is taking that accessibility and making meaning. I’m interested in dealing with complexity, yes. But not necessarily to the end of any romance with the obscure.\nMITCHELL: There was one other question I wanted to ask you, and that’s about interviews. The old idea about artists was that they weren’t supposed to give interviews. The work was supposed to speak for itself. How do you feel about interviews?\nKRUGER: I think that the work does speak for itself to some degree absolutely. But I also feel that we’re living in a time when an artist does not have to be interpreted by others. Artists can “have” words. So it’s not like I think I’m going to blow my cover if I open my mouth.\nMITCHELL: Well, you certainly haven’t blown your cover today.\n(All rights reserved. Text @ W. J. T. Mitchell. Images @ Barbara Kruger.)\nPosted in Art, Interviews - Art and tagged Archive Highlights, Art, Barbara Kruger, Feminism, Gender Politics, Interview, Interview Highlights, Public Art, Racism.\n← London’s Capitalist Greed is Progress…\nNostalgia/Trauma Under the STATE Apparatus… →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1193699"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7018980979919434,"wiki_prob":0.7018980979919434,"text":"2 min readScientists Invent Nanoscale Window to the Biological World\nBlacksburg, VA – If the key to winning battles is knowing both your enemy and yourself, then scientists are now well on their way toward becoming the Sun Tzus of medicine by taking a giant step toward a priceless advantage – the ability to see the soldiers in action on the battlefield.\nInvestigators at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute have invented a way to directly image biological structures at their most fundamental level and in their natural habitats. The technique is a major advancement toward the ultimate goal of imaging biological processes in action at the atomic level.\n“It’s sort of like the difference between seeing Han Solo frozen in carbonite and watching him walk around blasting stormtroopers,” said Deborah Kelly, an assistant professor at the VTC Research Institute and a lead author on the paper describing the first successful test of the new technique. “Seeing viruses, for example, in action in their natural environment is invaluable.”\nThe technique involves taking two silicon-nitride microchips with windows etched in their centres and pressing them together until only a 150-nanometer space between them remains. The researchers then fill this pocket with a liquid resembling the natural environment of the biological structure to be imaged, creating a microfluidic chamber.\nThen, because free-floating structures yield images with poor resolution, the researchers coat the microchip’s interior surface with a layer of natural biological tethers, such as antibodies, which naturally grab onto a virus and hold it in place.\nIn a recent study in Lab on a Chip, Kelly joined Sarah McDonald, also an assistant professor at the VTC Research Institute, to prove that the technique works.\nMcDonald provided a pure sample of rotavirus double-layered particles for the study.\n“What’s missing in the field of structural biology right now is dynamics – how things move in time,” said McDonald. “Debbie is developing technologies to bridge that gap, because that’s clearly the next big breakthrough that structural biology needs.”\nRotavirus is the most common cause of severe diarrhoea among infants and children. By the age of 5, nearly every child in the world has been infected at least once. And although the disease tends to be easily managed in the developed world, in developing countries rotavirus kills more than 450,000 children a year.\nAt the second step in the pathogen’s life cycle, rotavirus sheds its outer layer, which allows it to enter a cell, and becomes what is called a double-layered particle. Once its second layer is exposed, the virus is ready to begin using the cell’s own infrastructure to produce more viruses. It was the viral structure at this stage that the researchers imaged in the new study.\nKelly and McDonald coated the interior window of the microchip with antibodies to the virus. The antibodies, in turn, latched onto the rotaviruses that were injected into the microfluidic chamber and held them in place. The researchers then used a transmission electron microscope to image the prepared slide.\nThe technique worked perfectly.\nThe experiment gave results that resembled those achieved using traditional freezing methods to prepare rotavirus for electron microscopy, proving that the new technique can deliver accurate results.\n“It’s the first time scientists have imaged anything on this scale in liquid,” said Kelly.\nThe next step is to continue to develop the technique with an eye toward imaging biological structures dynamically in action.\nSpecifically, McDonald is looking to understand how rotavirus assembles, so as to better know and develop tools to combat this particular enemy of children’s health.\nThe researchers said their ongoing collaboration is an example of the cross-disciplinary work that is becoming a hallmark of the VTC Research Institute.\n“It’s an ideal collaboration because Sarah provides a phenomenal model system by which we can develop new technologies to move the field of microstructural biology forward,” said Kelly.\n“It’s very win-win,” McDonald added. “While the virus is a great tool for Debbie to develop her techniques, her technology is critical for allowing me to understand how this deadly virus assembles and changes dynamically over time.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1693493"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7471171021461487,"wiki_prob":0.2528828978538513,"text":"More Revealed About Janet's Split From Billionaire Husband\nMore details are coming out about what could have possibly led to the split. According to thejasminebrand, Jackson asked for her locks to be changed at her condo, which is the Trump International in New York.\nAs for the $500 million, it’s more like $200 million. She was entitled to $100 million if they were married at least five years. In addition, if they had a child, that payment of $100 mil would double. Jackson had their son, Eissa in January.\nThere are other reports stating their lifestyle differences is what caused rifts between them. Hana wanted a wife who was more in tune with Muslim traditions but with Janet and her profession, that’s hard to do all the time. She has toned it down since she’s been married to him but maybe that wasn’t enough.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line391300"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6364841461181641,"wiki_prob":0.36351585388183594,"text":"Spring 2015 Anime\nDrama, Harem, Psychological, Romance, School\nThe story picks up immediately after the events of Grisaia no Meikyuu, with Kazami Yuuji having been detained for suspected involvement with an international terrorist organization, lead by Heath Oslo, that has managed to enter Japan's borders with a devastating new weapon of mass destruction in hand. Meanwhile, at Mihama Academy, the remaining students find themselves with time running out - due to financial issues, the school is set to close within the month. Over the past year, though, the girls of Mihama have finally begun to find their own legs, thanks to Yuuji's involvement - are they really just…...\nThe story picks up immediately after the events of Grisaia no Meikyuu, with Kazami Yuuji having been detained for suspected involvement with an international terrorist organization, lead by Heath Oslo, that has managed to enter Japan's borders with a devastating new weapon of mass destruction in hand. Meanwhile, at Mihama Academy, the remaining students find themselves with time running out - due to financial issues, the school is set to close within the month. Over the past year, though, the girls of Mihama have finally begun to find their own legs, thanks to Yuuji's involvement - are they really just going to bury their heads in the sand and let the world change around them? And are they really willing to let the man who changed their lives slip away without so much as trying to win him back? As the end of their time at Mihama Academy approaches, Amane, Makina, Sachi, Yumiko, and Michiru find themselves arriving at a single conclusion. How much a group of students can do in the face of countries and organizations far bigger than any individual could hope to be remains to be seen. In the first place, Yuuji's position is far more complicated than any of them could have imagined, as he finds himself embroiled in an elaborate game of super-political chess revolving around both himself and an inconceivable new system slumbering in the depths of CIRS - a system that Yuuji may have more of a connection to than he thinks. One thing is for certain, though - the girls of Mihama are no longer willing to let the world steal things away from them without at least a bit of resistance first. And with help from a mysterious individual known only as Thanatos, they may just achieve their goal...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1209072"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7657329440116882,"wiki_prob":0.7657329440116882,"text":"Working around Halbig\nNicholas Bagley\nSuppose the D.C. Circuit’s decision in Halbig becomes the law of the land. If that happens, the states with federally established exchanges will come under enormous pressure to establish their own exchanges. In turn, the federal government would want to make it as easy as possible for those states to convert to state-established exchanges.\nIdeally, HHS would also want to relieve states of the need to develop new exchange infrastructure. Rollout challenges in Oregon and Massachusetts, not to mention Healthcare.gov, suggest that getting a website up and running isn’t such a simple task. What if the refusal states could just enact laws (or sign executive orders) saying they’ve “established” their exchanges, but let Healthcare.gov continue to run them?\nPointing to the text of the ACA, some critics have said that this wouldn’t work. The ACA provides that an exchange must operate through an “eligible entity.” Among other things, an entity is eligible only if it is incorporated under the laws of “1 or more States.” Because the entity that runs Healthcare.gov is federally chartered, it wouldn’t qualify.\nThat’s true, so far as it goes. But the text of the ACA leaves enough room for a workaround. A state could, for example, establish an exchange and appoint a state-incorporated entity to oversee and manage it. That state-incorporated entity could then contract with Healthcare.gov to operate the exchange. On the ground, nothing would change. But tax credits would be available where they weren’t before.\nI don’t see any legal obstacle to that approach. Larry Levitt doesn’t either; as he wrote on Twitter, “If Halbig stands, the administration could try to make it easy for states to set up state exchanges with a healthcare.gov back-end.” Switching would be pretty painless.\nTrue, not every state would accept the invitation to establish its own exchange, even if doing so were more or less a formality. But lots of states would, especially as voters started to howl about losing their tax credits. If so, even a bad outcome in Halbig might not matter that much in the end.\n@nicholas_bagley\nNicholas Bagley is a professor at University of Michigan Law School, where he teaches and writes in the areas of administrative law, regulatory theory, and health law. Prior to joining the Law School faculty in 2010, he was an attorney with the appellate staff in the Civil Division at the U.S. Department of Justice, where he argued a dozen cases before the U.S. Courts of Appeals and acted as lead counsel in many more.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1668862"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.604462206363678,"wiki_prob":0.604462206363678,"text":"Perrine Lacroix. Kontext(e)\nArchive: Perrine Lacroix. Kontext(e)\nThe exhibition of Perrine Lacroix’s work is the first time Kunsthalle Krems presents an artistic position from the AIR - ARTIST IN RESIDENCE Lower Austria programme. The exhibition acts as the beginning of a new series, which, once a year, will provide exciting insights into the strategies and working methods of international artists who have enjoyed a scholarship in Krems.\nBased in Lyon, the artist Perrine Lacroix has already garnered international attention with her multimedia installations in several solo and group exhibitions. She has run the arts center La BF15 in Lyon since 2004 and is thus actively involved in the international network of contemporary art. She stayed in Krems as part of her AIR - ARTIST IN RESICENCE Lower Austria scholarship in April of 2017.\nInspired by her stay in Krems, Perrine Lacroix’s work at Kunsthalle Krems deals with the basic requirements for exhibitions as well as the layer of meaning in pictures and objects. To what extent is context or knowledge needed to interpret pictures, if one even considers this relevant at all? The artist got to know the city of Krems, its surroundings and peculiarities via the photographic medium. The public space, in particular, is the focus of her art. Using a camera and video camera, she captured the Kunsthalle Krems’ construction in her work. It was being renovated during the period of her stay. Photos and videos of the renovated, empty showrooms point towards the aura and strong impact of work, whilst also drawing attention to the void.\nThe extent to which Perrine Lacroix deals with the concept of reality and its portrayability or rather its representation in an exhibition, is shown in Krems with an object she has serially placed, and which in turn refers to her 2017 residency in Krems. Lacroix discovered an object in the Krems Museum: the so-called Venus (also Fanny) of Galgenberg, a tiny prehistoric statuette found near Krems, which is one of the oldest known Venus figurines. Krems, however, only has a copy. The original is housed in Vienna’s Natural History Museum. Replicas can also be bought in museum shops. Lacroix places three of them in the first room of her show, illustrating how cultural goods become widely available through marketing, thus letting the viewer question the value of an original.\nPerrine Lacroix has also designed an installation of monochrome rectangular surfaces for her exhibition at the Kunsthalle Krems that show abstractions of events from the time of the Second World War in Krems. The coloured surfaces act as a pictorial commentary. In her research on Krems’ history she inevitably came across Krems’ “Hasenjagd” (hare hunt) that took place on 06.04.1945, and marks the hunting and mass shootings by National Socialists of just-released (mainly political) prisoners from Krems’ detention center “Stein”. Lacroix conducted a Google Image Search for the date and discovered that if the Internet connection is slow, the results first appear as coloured boxes in the results. These are, so to speak, the voids of image realities and their contents, which are algorithmically provided by Google. For Perrine Lacroix, these blanks represent the complex problem of attributing meaning to things and also the fundamental question of what images can even convey. She has developed the idea of a memorial from this, which she transforms into a room installation at the Kunsthalle Krems, also in a wallpainting in the Stadtpark Krems.\nCurator: Andreas Hoffer\nGoogle search AVRIL 45 KREMS, Wallpaintings, various dimensions © Perrine Lacroix\nSaturday, November 24, 2018, 6.30 pm\nKunsthalle Krems\nFranz-Zeller-Platz 3, 3500 Krems an der Donau\nDuration: 24.11.2018–10.02.2019","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line331003"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5912810564041138,"wiki_prob":0.5912810564041138,"text":"Information about crime comes from two primary sources: survey responses from victims about crimes they experienced and administrative data from law enforcement agencies about crimes reported to them. Victim survey responses capture information on crimes reported to the police, as well as those crimes that were not reported. Crime data from law enforcement agencies reflect those crimes reported to and recorded by police.\nThe Nation's Two Crime Measures\nDepartment of Justice agencies collect both survey and administrative data on crime.\nBJS's National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) captures incident-level data on reported and unreported crime from the victim's perspective\nFBI's Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program Summary Reporting System (SRS) collects summary-based counts of crime reported by law enforcement\nSimilar to many other indicators used to assess conditions in the United States, these two indicators of crime complement each other to produce a more comprehensive portrait of the nation's crime problem.\nSome of the differences between SRS and NCVS are—\nSummary Reporting System National Crime Victimization Survey\nNational and state estimates, local agency reports\nData can be aggregated to county-level and federal judicial district\nNational estimates\nCollection method Reports by law enforcement to the FBI on a monthly basis Survey data obtained from a nationally representative sample of about 240,000 interviews, which involves 160,000 unique persons in about 95,000 households.\nMeasures Aggregate counts of 10 offense types reported by law enforcement Reported and unreported crime; details about the crimes, victims, and offenders\nFor more information about the UCR and the NCVS, see The Nation's Two Crime Measures.\nOn January 1, 2021, the SRS was retired, and the FBI UCR Program transitioned to incident-based submissions of reported crime data to the National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS). For more information on the transition to NIBRS, see the National Crime Statistics Exchange (NCS-X) program page.\n2018 Update on Prisoner Recidivism: A 9-Year Follow-up Period (2005-2014)\nRace and Hispanic Origin of Victims and Offenders, 2012-15\nRepeat Violent Victimization, 2005-14\nView related publications\nRecent Data Collections\nCity-Level Survey of Crime Victimization and Citizen Attitudes\nEmergency Room Statistics on Intentional Violence\nHuman Trafficking Reporting System (HTRS)\nView related Data Collections\nWhy is there more than one set of national numbers about the crime rate and which one is right?\nThere are two national crime series which have data on crime rates and trends. The National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) is based upon a sample of households and includes both crimes that are reported to police and those that are not reported. The Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) is based upon local police reports which are compiled by the FBI. The two data series complement each other and both are “right” in terms of measuring what they are designed to measure. Please see the report, The Nation’s Two Crime Measures (NCJ 246832, BJS web), for more information.\nWhat is the National Crime Victimization Survey?\nThe Bureau of Justice Statistics' (BJS) National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) is the nation's primary source of information on criminal victimization. Each year, data are obtained from a nationally representative sample of about 240,000 persons in about 150,000 households on the frequency, characteristics, and consequences of criminal victimization in the United States. The NCVS collects information on nonfatal personal crimes (rape or sexual assault, robbery, aggravated and simple assault, and personal larceny) and household property crimes (burglary, motor vehicle theft, and other theft) both reported and not reported to police. Survey respondents provide information about themselves (e.g., age, sex, race and Hispanic origin, marital status, education level, and income) and whether they experienced a victimization. For each victimization incident, the NCVS collects information about the offender (e.g., age, race and Hispanic origin, sex, and victim-offender relationship), characteristics of the crime (including time and place of occurrence, use of weapons, nature of injury, and economic consequences), whether the crime was reported to police, reasons the crime was or was not reported, and victim experiences with the criminal justice system.\nDo you have any information on crime victims with disabilities?\nYes. The information is available in the Crime Against People with Disabilities series.\nView all related FAQs\nAn unlawful physical attack or threat of attack. Assaults may be classified as aggravated or simple. Rape, attempted rape, and sexual assaults are excluded from this category, as well as robbery and attempted robbery. The severity of assaults ranges from minor threats to nearly fatal incidents.\nA specific criminal act involving one or more victims and offenders. For example, if two people are robbed at the same time and place, this is classified as two robbery victimizations but only one robbery incident.\nMultiple offenders\nTwo or more persons inflicting some direct harm to a victim. The victim-offender relationship is determined by the offender with the closest relationship to the victim. The following list ranks the different relationships from closest to most distant: spouse, former spouse, parent, child, other relative, nonrelative well known person, casual acquaintance, or stranger. See \"Nonstranger\" and \"Stranger.\"\nRape, sexual assault, personal robbery, assault, purse snatching, and pocket picking. This category includes both attempted and completed crimes.\nA crime as it affects one individual person or household. For personal crimes, the number of victimizations is equal to the number of victims involved. The number of victimizations may be greater than the number of incidents because more than one person may be victimized during an incident. Each crime against a household is assumed to involve a single victim, the affected household.\nDate Created: February 18, 2021\nBias-Motivated/Hate Crime\nIdentity Theft and Financial Fraud\nLatest Crime Data\nInterested in Statistics?\nSign up for email notices of new crime and justice statistical materials as they become available from BJS.\nView related awards","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line593746"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5107925534248352,"wiki_prob":0.5107925534248352,"text":"The Lebanese State resembles a failed State that doesn’t provide its citizens with the most basic public services, can’t ensure its monopoly of the legitimate use of physical force and since last year doesn’t dispose of a valid parliament. On top of that the Lebanese citizens’ political and social identity and even rights are constantly confined to their sectarian belonging. The Lebanese are aware of the difficult conditions they are living in and to many it seems clear that the current sectarian political system and the corruption resulting from it, prevents the Lebanese society from advancing towards a functional State and a common and peaceful future. However political activism against the sectarian system is almost nonexistent, especially among the educated youth that one would expect to have the fiercest reaction, - but in particular the younger generations appear to have resigned. This impression is confirmed by the elaborate analysis of the Lebanese society that scholar Theodor Hanf conducted in 2006. He asserts that the Lebanese have become more pessimistic regarding their future, compared to statistics from during the Civil War. Therefore the Lebanese overall tend to be more cautious about change which they fear could lead to an even worse scenario. It is important to notice that in 2006 70% of the population felt that they couldn’t bring about any social change. This expression of resignation and desperation was surprisingly even higher among young and better educated people.[1] Many Lebanese, like the lawyer Nadine Moussa, who was supposed to run as a candidate for the parliamentarian elections in 2013 on behalf of the political movement “Take Back Parliament”, were awaiting eagerly the overdue awakening of the Lebanese youth:\n“I was always amazed, especially after the Arab Spring, […] at the passivity of the Lebanese youth and I believe strongly that you can’t make a change without the youth.”[2]\n(Nadine Moussa, 2013)\nAccording to Hanf’s research, in 1984 75% of the Lebanese citizens were in favor of a completely secular state. In 2006 this number had decreased to 65% which was still a significant majority. That same year, 69% of the Lebanese said, however, that secularization doesn’t stand a chance and that community membership is a reality one has to accept. This result reflects a contradiction between the people’s desire and expectations.[3] The prevalent apathy among the youth can be explained by different coping mechanisms with the political situation. The civil society activist Mazen Abou Hamdan who works for the Lebanese Association for Civil Rights (LACR) divides the Lebanese youth into three different categories, none of which constitutes a real challenge to the system:\nWhat we are facing among the youth in Lebanon is either frustration and therefore indifference, or sectarianism, […]. And we have a group of youth who are angry at the situation, but they don’t know how to solve it or deal with it. They just go down on the streets and say down with sectarianism, but that doesn’t really work.\n(Mazen Abou Hamdan, 2013)\nWhen Take Back Parliament (TBP) a political secular movement, was established in 2012 by a group of young Lebanese who want to abolish the sectarian and corrupted political system, the initiative was received very positively, because it finally offered an organized platform to the secular youth to express itself politically. A large number of Lebanese had already come together before in 2011 under the banner of anti-sectarianism, but the movement wasn’t organized well enough and remained too little political and clear in its aspirations, so it could be exploited by the same sectarian parties it was initially up against. TBP set itself apart as the only secular political movement with well defined goals, initiated by young Lebanese who tried to reach out to all like-minded people in the past years. They managed to organize themselves as a group of volunteers with no dependency on internal or external political actors and with the aspiration to transcend sects and religious groups with their agenda. Through social media the movement managed progressively to make a name for itself and present its political programme. However the movement also came across a lot of scepticism by people who didn’t believe that a completely independent secular movement is feasible and could be influential in Lebanese politics. More than a year after TBP's experience started it is necessary to study the initiative critically by investigating which challenges secular movements in Lebanon face when it comes to establishing their internal organization and identity. On the other hand through the study of the movement, the research touches on the Lebanese political context which still presents many obstacles for political alternatives trying to find their way into the well established political system confined to the prevalent political parties. The research seeks to explain that the attempt to infiltrate the political system by TBP shouldn’t pass unnoticed as it points to the feeling of political misrepresentation and the quest for political alternatives. In order to foreshadow future trends in Lebanese political movements the research tries to enhance the comprehension of these activists’ vision of secular activism in Lebanon, because in the future the political alternatives to the already existing parties will be shaped by them and composed of them. Even though the group is no longer active since the summer 2013, it merits to be asked to what extent this new form of political secular movements has contributed to the development of secular movements in Lebanon. By doing so, it is hoped that other movements can build on its achievements and learn from its shortages in the continuing Lebanese struggle for a secular State.\n[1] Letters from Byblos, Theodor Hanf „E pluribus unum? Lebanese attitudes and opinions on coexistence“\n[2] All information on the interviews led by the author can be found under Bibliography; Primary Sources\nHeinrich-Böll Stiftung Middle East","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line707435"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8692182898521423,"wiki_prob":0.8692182898521423,"text":"Rediff.com » News » Pakistan is the epicentre of terrorism: US\nPakistan is the epicentre of terrorism: US\nLast updated on: January 13, 2011 11:10 IST\n'Pakistan is the epicentre of terrorism'\nIn his first briefing in 2011 on the United States National Security Strategy Update, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen, while replying to a query, blurted out that Pakistan is the epicenter of terrorism in the world.\n\"I have said it before and I'll say it again, it (Pakistan) is the epicenter of terrorism in the world right now, and it deserves the attention of everybody to do as much as we can to eliminate that threat,\" Mullen said during an appearance at the Foreign Press Centre in Washington, DC.\nHe argued that \"progress in Pakistan is critical in terms of the region,\" and pointed out that \"since I've had this job, I've never talked or wanted to leave the impression that it was about one country or the other, because it's about the region.\"\nThus, he said that there cannot be any progress in Afghanistan without progress in Pakistan and that this meant shutting down the terrorist safe havens in that country.\nReportage: Aziz Haniffa in Washington, DC\nImage: Rescue workers and police survey a school van damaged after a bomb explosion in Peshawar, Pakistan\nPhotographs: Fayaz Aziz/Reuters\n'This threat is evolving'\nMullen said, \"Obviously the recent assassination, the political challenges that we've seen with MQM (Muttahida Qaumi Movement political party) leaving and returning to the coalition to ensure that that government doesn't fall, I think that the political aspect is something I keep an eye on all the time.\"\nBut he asserted, \"It is absolutely critical that the safe havens in Pakistan get shut down. We cannot succeed in Afghanistan without that. I've had many meetings with (Pakistan army chief) General (Ashfaq) Kayani on this subject and he has evolved his military against this threat.\"\n\"This threat is evolving as well, because it's not just the Haqqani network anymore, or Al Qaida, or TTT [Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, or Pakistani Taliban], the Afghan Taliban, or LeT [Lashkar-e-Tayiba], it's all of them working together in ways that two years ago they absolutely did not,\" he noted.\nImage: Paramilitary soldiers stand guard as plumes of smoke rise from a burning fuel tanker in Baluchistan\nPhotographs: Saeed Ali Achakzai/Reuters\n'That is a call for action'\nMullen said, \"One of the things that I spoke to in my remarks was support for this reconciliation process, and that process includes everything, not just the Afghan Taliban, in terms of getting to a point where Afghanistan is peaceful and stable and can take control of its own life and move forward in every respect.\"\nIncidentally, Mullen has made several trips to Pakistan since the US launched its war on terror. When asked if he believed Pakistan is doing enough to shut down the terrorist havens within its borders and what excuse Islamabad offers him every time he expresses these concerns, the top military official said, \"I don't go into specifics of discussions that I've had, private conversations that I've had.\"\n\"Strategically, the safe havens have got to go. When I talk about the region, it isn't just Afghanistan and Pakistan. We had a question earlier about Iran. I talk about this with my Russian counterpart. The neighbours in the area include India. I think we all have a responsibility and we all want to see this resolved as rapidly as possible. That is a call for action for everybody that's involved in this,\" he argued.\nImage: A photographer walks through the door of the cafeteria of the University of Karachi after a blast\nPhotographs: Athar Hussain/Reuters\n'The Taliban have lost momentum'\nEarlier, in his opening remarks, Mullen claimed that the coalition forces had the Taliban on the run in Afghanistan and painted a picture of impending victory, till he was checked by a question on why he was offering up such a picture when most of the reports pointed to the contrary.\nHe said, \"There's no question that the Taliban have lost momentum in parts of the south and in the east, and that the growth and development of Afghan National Security Forces is progressing in a much more organised way at a quicker pace than we had expected\nMullen noted, \"A couple of weeks ago I had the opportunity to go to Kandahar and Helmand Provinces to visit with our troops and see first-hand the good work they and their Afghan partners are doing. The enemy is being pushed out of population centers; he is being denied sanctuary, he is losing leaders by the score, and his scare tactics are being rejected by local citizens.\"\nImage: Afghan fire fighters wash the site of a suicide bomb attack in Kabul\nPhotographs: Ahmad Masood/Reuters\n'The enemy is losing'\n\"While I was not surprised to see this sort of progress in Nawa and Marjah, I will admit to some surprise at seeing it take root around Kandahar, particularly in Arghandab and Zhari where the enemy is not accustomed to losing. Nevertheless, he is losing and I have every confidence that he will continue to lose so long as coalition and Afghan forces increase their presence and their pressure on his operations and improve their own capacity,\" he said\nBut when told that he had painted an extremely rosy picture of the success of coalition forces, Mullen quickly backpedaled to say, \"If I left you the impression that it was rosy, that's the wrong impression. It is a very difficult fight. It is a very difficult time in this conflict.\"\nHe added cautiously, \"I am encouraged, but I do not want to understate in any way, shape or form the difficulty of the task. It clearly continues to be severe.\"\nImage: Afghan security forces are seen through the window of a Kabul bakery, at the site of a bomb blast\nPakistan is still terror's playground\nDr Singh is good, but not his party: Pakistan\n'Pakistan's smirk has changed into a smile'\nFinns are happiest, Indians 45th, Pakistan last\nAn India-Pakistan Peace Caravan to nowhere?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line976441"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7710064053535461,"wiki_prob":0.7710064053535461,"text":"Home | About | Team\nWe care about quilts, and hope you do too!\nOUR NIMBLE STAFF AND VOLUNTEER BOARD MAKE A LOT OUT OF A LITTLE\nAmy Milne\nAmy Milne has been the executive director of the Quilt Alliance since 2006. She has two decades of experience as a nonprofit administrator, educator and artist. Amy has overseen the expansion of the Quilt Alliance’s oral history projects, including the creation of the Go Tell It at the Quilt Show! project, as well as the Quilt Alliance’s biennial Not Fade Away: Sharing Quilt Stories in the Digital Age conference.\nDeb Josephs\nDebby Josephs, Office Manager, has worked in the nonprofit field for more than 15 years. Before moving to Asheville in 2006, Debby worked as office manager for Partnership in Philanthropy in Chatham, New Jersey, a nonprofit offering consulting and educational services to small nonprofits in the state. After graduating from the University of Wisconsin in Madison, she worked in the research department of Pershing and Co., a Wall Street firm in New York City.\nDebby works in the Asheville office where she says it’s very exciting to be headquartered. “It’s a town filled with people who understand and appreciate the nature of nonprofits and all the hard work that goes into sustaining them.”\nEmma Parker has worked for the Quilt Alliance since 2012, and has helped to develop the Go Tell It at the Quilt Show! program and streamline and revise the QSOS interview and training process. She has collected and edited over 400 Go Tell It at the Quilt Show! interviews at International Quilt Festival, QuiltCon, and the International Quilt Study Center & Museum. She holds degrees in Folklore & Library Science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.\nMary Kay Batte\nMary Kay (Micki) Batte is a retired Financial Analyst from Pratt Whitney Aircraft. Taking her first quilting class in 1983 quilting became a major part of her life not only as an art form but, also, opening opportunities to work and share in her community and beyond. She is active in the Asheville Quilt Guild filling many positions including Quilt Show Chair, Guild Projects and Guild Liason to organizations as NC Arboretum, Mission Hospital (Camp Bluebird) and, in 2005 part of the research team which resulted Quilt Alliance’s move to Asheville.\nEaramichia Brown\nEaramichia “Encyclopedia” Brown: My love of fiber arts and all things craft began as a child. My family had a set of the World Book Encyclopedia series and the Childcraft – The How and Why Library. Within that Childcraft series there was a volume called “Make and Do”, which I did plenty of. I wanted to become a fashion designer, but settled for plan B. I am an attorney by day to support my love of fiber.\nMy love of crafts and fiber continued to flourish throughout the years as a hobby, side jobs, and gift giving. I became an avid knitter, designed and knitted garments as gifts and by commissions, and taught knitting. In 2000, I was introduced to quilting and began taking sewing classes to improve on my techniques and learn the tips of this craft. And the story continues as I continue to grow creatively.\nLearn more about Earamichia at www.cocktailsandthread.com\nMary Kay Davis\nMary Kay began quilting in 1996 on a “quilt-as-you-go” project and hasn’t stopped since. She loves a good challenge and has entered numerous quilt shows and contests. Her quilts have won national contests and have hung in the National Quilt Museum in Paducah. She has also contributed to a number of books and magazines including 500 Traditional Quilts from Lark Books and 100 Tips from Award Winning Quilters from AQS.\nCurrently Mary Kay works at The Quilt Show.com with Alex Anderson and Ricky Tims as a website editor, photographer, and videographer. She also serves as a production assistant for their online web show. Her creative muse is served as a pattern designer for Blend Fabrics LLC and Anna Griffin, Inc.\nA graduate from San Jose State University with a degree in Information Resource Management, she worked for years in the local area networking industry in Silicon Valley. Upon retirement, she began working in a local quilt shop, teaching classes, and occasionally giving guild lectures. She spends her spare time hanging out with her two grown sons and cheering on her beloved San Francisco Giants.\nFrances O’Roark Dowell\nFrances O’Roark Dowell is the bestselling author of over twenty books for young readers, including Dovey Coe (winner of a 2001 Edgar Award and the William Allen White Award); The Secret Language of Girls trilogy, Chicken Boy (an ALA Notable Book and an NCTE Notable Book), Shooting the Moon (winner of the Christophe Award and a Boston Globe-Horn Book Award honor book), The Phineas L. Maguire series and most recently, the Sam the Man books, a chapter book series for early readers. She has also published fiction for adult readers, including Birds in the Air, a novel, and the story collection, Margaret Goes Modern and Other Stories. Her novel, Friendship Album, 1933, is available via the Quilt Fiction podcast.\nAlong with writing and molding her sons into men of distinction (or at the very least high school graduates—one down, one to go), quiltmaking occupies much of Dowell’s time. She began making quilts in 2007 and started a quilting podcast, “The Off-Kilter Quilt,” in 2010. Dowell has a deep interest in quilt history and the documentation of quilts and the quilting community. In 2015, she and her husband made a short documentary on Uncle Eli’s Quilting Party, an annual quilting event that began in 1931, in Alamance County, NC.\nH. Mark Dunn\nBoard Vice President\nMark Dunn, president and owner of Moda Fabrics in Dallas, Texas, began his career in Asheville, North Carolina, in 1966 as a third generation thread and yarn sales representative. In 1975 he started Moda Fabrics as a company to specialize in supplying independent sewing and quilting stores. Moda designs, prints and distributes high quality cotton fabrics as well as 60,000 unique items for specialty quilt stores. Moda Fabrics supplies over 4,000 independent quilt specialty stores throughout the U.S. and 20 other countries on 5 continents. Currently, Moda Fabrics is developing an educational department to work with schools and charitable organizations. Mark received the “Man of the Year” in 1985 for the sewing industry from the American Jewish Committee. He is a member of the Board of Directors of Quilts, Inc. Houston, Texas. Previously, he was a member of the international group, Inter-Sew, that was dedicated to the preservation of the craft of quilting. Dunn attended the University of South Carolina but has lived in Dallas, Texas for the past 33 years. Dunn is committed to promoting and preserving the art form of quilting.\nLisa Ellis\nBoard Treasurer\nLisa Ellis is a quilt artist, teacher and lecturer. She is passionate about quilting and using quilts to make the world a better place. She frequently lectures on healing quilts and inspires quilters to get involved in using their love of quilting to improve health care centers and hospitals. Ellis has directed a number of projects for healing-related installations including Walter Reed Army Medical Center, the University of Michigan, Auburn University, National Institutes of Health and INOVA Fair Oaks Hospital.\nEllis is the director of the non-profit organization Sacred Threads. Sacred Threads is a biennial exhibition dedicated to sharing our most personal quilts with themes of spirituality, joy, inspiration, healing, grief and peace/brotherhood.\nShe has advanced degrees in Math and Computer Science and worked for 23 years in the defense and information technology industry as an engineer, project manager and executive. Ellis retired in 2003 to focus her energies on volunteer work and her passion for the arts. In 2010, she started her own company, Giving Back Technology that provides information technology services to non-profit museums, galleries and other art organizations.\nEllis was elected in 2012 to the Board of Directors of the Quilt Alliance and is currently serving as Treasurer. Also in 2012 she joined the Board of Directors of Studio Art Quilt Associates (SAQA) as in currently serving as Vice President for Strategic Planning.\nTo learn more visit www.ellisquilts.com\nLaura Hopper\nLaura Hopper is a historian, curator, writer, and quilter. She works as the Associate Editor of Quiltfolk magazine, a dream job that combines her love of quilts with her skills in research and oral history. At Quiltfolk, Laura has profiled quilt scholars, museums, quilt industry professionals, designers, artists, and quilters from all walks of life.\nLaura holds a bachelor’s degree in history and museum studies, a master’s degree in public history, and a certificate in textile preservation. She worked for nearly fifteen years as an award-winning museum curator with previous experience at the Newberry Library, the Michigan State University Museum, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian, and more. Before starting her job with Quiltfolk, Laura was the curator at the Pick Museum of Anthropology at Northern Illinois University, an academic museum with a strong collection of textiles. Her exhibits won awards from the Illinois Association of Museums and the American Association of State and Local History and in 2018, she was the recipient of NIU’s Women Who Make a Difference Award in recognition of her work on a quilt exhibit. A community quiltmaking project she co-facilitated at NIU is the subject of a short documentary called The Women in Science Quilt Project.\nLaura trained as a classical violist for a decade and stays connected to her musical past by making quilts inspired by music. Her quilts have been juried into QuiltCon, the International Quilt Festival and more. She currently serves as the President of the Chicago Modern Quilt Guild and as a former board member of the Social Justice Sewing Academy. Born in Germany and raised in Michigan and Texas, she now lives near Chicago with her spouse and their dog Taco.\nCarolyn L. Mazloomi\nDr. Carolyn Mazloomi is a historian, curator, author, lecturer, artist, mentor, founder, and facilitator — and has left her mark on many lives. Trained as an aerospace engineer, Carolyn Mazloomi turned her sites and tireless efforts in the 1980s to bring the many unrecognized contributions of African-American quilt artists to the attention of the American people as well as the international art communities.\nFrom founding the African-American Quilt Guild of Los Angles in 1981 to in 1985 founding the Women of Color Quilters Network (WCQN), Mazloomi has been at the forefront of educating the public about the diversity of interpretation, styles and techniques among African American quilters as well as educating a younger generation of African Americans about their own history through the quilts the WCQN members create.\nA major force as an artist in her own right, Carolyn Mazloomi’s quilts have been exhibited extensively in venues such as the Mint Museum, American Folk Art Museum in New York City, National Civil Rights Museum, Museum of Art and Design, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum, and the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC Her pictorial narrative quilts make plain her personal themes: family life, women’s rights, political freedom, and musical legacy. Her own quilts have appeared in over 70 exhibits, while she has curated 17 extensive exhibits of quilts made by members of the Women of Color Quilters Network, many of them traveling exhibits. Among the many exhibitions she has curated is “Still We Rise: Race, Culture and Visual Conversations,” which visually surveys 400 years of African American history. It is the largest traveling exhibit of African-American quilts ever mounted.\nBradley Mitchell\nBradley Mitchell’s formal education is centered around Marketing, Management, Events and Branding. Mitchell is originally from the historic spa town of Ilkley, England, an area of rich textile heritage and still home to the looms of British tailor,Thomas Burberry and the UNESCO world heritage site of Saltaire.\nMitchell joined the industry in 2014 and is the Director of Marketing at Aurifil Threads, an Italian company, famous worldwide for the manufacture of Egyptian cottons. Mitchell currently resides in Chicago, IL where he is project managing the establishment of Aurifil USA’s new flagship HQ.\nGwen Westerman\nA poet and fiber artist, Gwen Westerman lives in southern Minnesota, as did her Dakota ancestors. Her roots are deep in the landscape of the tallgrass prairie, and reveal themselves in her art and writing through the languages and traditions of her family. She is an enrolled member of the Sisseton Wahpeton Oyate, and Professor in English and Humanities at Minnesota State University, Mankato. Her quilts have won awards at the juried shows of the Northern Plains Indian Art Market, the Heard\nMuseum Guild Indian Art Fair & Market, and the Eiteljorg, and have been exhibited in Minneapolis, Sioux Falls, Anchorage, Houston, Tulsa, Fargo, and Lincoln. She is the author Follow the Blackbirds, a poetry collection in Dakota and English, and co-author of Mni Sota Makoce: Land of the Dakota, a history of Dakota land tenure in Minnesota.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line880983"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7585556507110596,"wiki_prob":0.7585556507110596,"text":"trinity church facts\nTODAY & TOMORROW’S OPENING TIMES & CLOSURES. [16], During the September 11 attacks, people took refuge inside the church from the massive debris cloud produced by the first World Trade Center tower collapse. It was Grade I listed in 1968. American History for Kids, Jan 2021. Trinity's main building is a National Historic Landmark as well as a New York City designated landmark. Trinity Church is a church within Trinity Plaza in 2287. On July 9, 1976, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh visited Trinity Church. In 1959, the Internal Revenue Service sued over the compensation of the church's property manager, but the church prevailed in Stanton v. United States. < https://www.americanhistoryforkids.com/trinity-church/ >. The attempt was even revived in the 20th century. [19] On December 17, 2011, occupiers and a few clergy attempted to occupy LentSpace, which is surrounded by a chain-link fence. + Grace Chapel in Fruitland Park had a membership of 40 prior to the founding of Holy Trinity in 1886. The church was destroyed in the Great New York City Fire of 1776, which started in the Fighting Cocks Tavern, destroying between 400 and 500 buildings and houses, and leaving thousands of New Yorkers homeless. They are three distinct aspects, yet they are inseparable and together constitute one unified human being. It shares this belief with two other major world religions, Judaism and Islam. [1] When the Episcopal Bishop of New York consecrated Trinity Church on Ascension Day (May 1) 1846, its soaring Gothic Revival spire, surmounted by a gilded cross, dominated the skyline of lower Manhattan. \"Digital redraft of the Castello Plan of New Amsterdam in New Netherland in 1660 [Beta]\", \"INDEX TO PLOTS ON THE CASTELLO PLAN MAP\", \"Question of the Day: Trinity's Very Own Pirate? The Trinity is a tricky concept to understand. It is instrumental in the establishment of Good Samaritan Hospital (1873) and the Trinity Mission Chapel (St. Mark's parish). It was completed in 1877 and is made of granite. Nonetheless, proponents of such t… 1883 – The union church with the Reformed congregation was dissolved, and Trinity built a separate Lutheran church. Trinity Church of New York was an important site during the American Revolution and the founding era of the United States of America. [5] Although Trinity Church has sold off much of the land that was part of the royal grant from Queen Anne,[28] it is still one of the largest landowners in New York City with 14 acres of Manhattan real estate including 5.5 million square feet (510,000 m2) of commercial space in Hudson Square. 14. Fax (763) 533-3680. \"It is so exciting to watch the growth of Holy Trinity Classical Christian School because it is evidence of what happens when you put God as the focus in the development of young minds and souls. Diagrams of the Trinity. Trinity was founded in 1871 and has provided spiritual support, community outreach and pastoral care to this region for almost 150 years. Known for its history, location, architecture and endowment, Trinity is a traditional high church, with an active parish centered around the Episcopal Church and the worldwide Anglican Communion in missionary, outreach, and fellowship. It can accommodate up to 30 worshipers. ; Outline of the Legal History of the Trinity \"Church Farm. Trinity Lutheran Church, 120 Sunset Drive, Butler, PA, 16001, United States (724) 287-1977 [email protected] Later, in 1709, William Huddleston founded Trinity School as the Charity School of the church, and classes were originally held in the steeple of the church. It offered both moral and practical support to the demonstrators but balked when protesters demanded an encampment on church-owned land called LentSpace, adjoining Juan Pablo Duarte Square in the neighborhood of Hudson Square. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The basis of the lawsuits was that only five of Bogardus' six heirs had conveyed the land to the English crown in 1671. Trinity, in Christian doctrine, the unity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as three persons in one Godhead. Construction on the second Trinity Church building began in 1788; it was consecrated in 1790. While dwarfed by skyscrapers today, it still holds an important place in New York history. Trinity is also home to a Youth Chorus, Youth Orchestra, Family Choir, Downtown Voices, change bell ringers, and a wide variety of arts programming through Congregational Arts. Our historic church is a living beacon calling all for worship, fellowship, and growth in the grace and knowledge of our Lord. Phone (763) 533-0600. Add an embed URL or code. [35][36] The church was connected to the previous building by a footbridge, which was preserved during demolition, and will be connected to the new building upon its completion. Trinity Parish, 1821. TODAY & TOMORROW’S SERVICES NEXT WEEK'S SERVICES. During the American Revolutionary War the city became the British military and political base of operations in North America, following the departure of General George Washington and the Continental Army shortly after Battle of Long Island and subsequent local defeats. Welcome to Trinity Methodist and The United Reformed Church, Porthcawl. Add Holy Trinity Church, Lickey to your PopFlock.com topic list for future reference or share this resource on social media. Holy Trinity Church is an active parish church in Stratford, on the banks of the River Avon and used as a place of worship for over 1,000 years. In April 1977, application was made synod for a Vicar to assist our congregation. ©2019 by Trinity Church Project. VISITING HOLY TRINITY CHURCH. It partners with many organizations, such as Habitat for Humanity. St. Paul's Chapel was used while the second Trinity Church was being built. History of Trinity Baptist Church. Construction for Trinity Church began in 1872, after the original church burned down. The impressive church was designed by Henry Hobson Richardson and is the first instance of the Richardsonian Romanesque style. The three persons of the Trinity are all God. Six days later, most of the city's volunteer firemen followed General Washington north. The mainstay of Trinity's music program is The Choir of Trinity Wall Street, a professional ensemble that leads liturgical music at Trinity Church and St. Paul's Chapel, presents new-music concerts in New York City, produces recordings, and performs in international tours. The Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church Fast Facts. Holy Trinity Church is a heritage-listed Anglican church at 39 Gordon Street, Mackay, Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. #DYK that last year’s Greek Festival brought in over 170,000 attendees? The entire music program is under the leadership of Julian Wachner, Director of Music and the Arts, a renowned conductor, composer, and keyboard artist. [5][30] The parish's annual revenue from its real estate holdings was $158 million in 2011 with net income of $38 million,[5] making it perhaps one of the richest individual parishes in the world. Located on the plaza in downtown St. Augustine, Trinity Parish was established when Florida became a territory of the United States. The church houses several sculptures, beautiful stained glass windows, and more than 21,000 square feet of murals painted by John LaForge. Question: What is Trinity Church known for? The installation work was carried out by Taylors, Eayre and Smith of Loughborough, England, in September 2006. Named after the village of Izmailovo, near Moscow, the Izmailovsky regiment moved to Petersburg when the northern city was re-established as the Russian capital under Empress Anne. The first Trinity Church building was a single-story rectangular structure facing the Hudson River, which was constructed in 1698 and destroyed in the Great New York City Fire of 1776. In the churchyard is the supposed grave of the giant Jack o'Legs \"TRINITY CHURCH PROPERTY. Trinity Church Quick Facts. Answer: Besides being a very old church, Trinity Church is known for its community service and programs for children, teens, families, and the poor. Building a bigger church was beneficial because the population of New York City was expanding. Christians believe that the idea of the Trinity is found in the Bible, and it is a key concept of all of the Creeds of the Christian Church. The land on which it was built was formerly a formal garden and then a burial ground. Parish Facts. Trinity Church is one of the oldest church buildings in the City of Perth, and one of the few remaining 19th-century colonial buildings in the city. 12-27-20 Trinity Call To Prayer Happy New Year! The doctrine of the Trinity is considered to be one of the central Christian affirmations about God. Why do Christians believe in a Trinity? Besides its building, Trinity manages real estate properties with a combined worth of over $6 billion as of 2019[update]. Built from 1872 to 1877, Trinity Church is part of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts parish. Yet the history of the congregation extends much further—to the first Methodist preaching in Albany by Captain Thomas Webb in 1765. Twenty-five Trinity members were released to form Redeemer Lutheran Church and dedicating Aurora’s new church building September 1958. Trinity Church held the title of tallest building in the United States until 1869, when it was surpassed by St. Michael's Church, Old Town, Chicago. Holy Trinity is where William Shakespeare was baptised, worshipped and is buried. Myths & Facts. we had a conversation with the with maybe twenty members of the church on Thursday to just hear where people were had another conversation with members of the men's group on Saturday morning. With considerable membership growth, overcrowded conditions soon caused Trinity to initiate two Sunday morning services, which began December 12, 1955. Visit Trinity Church virtually or watch a service online. It is the southernmost Eastern Orthodox Church in the world. The article by Paul W. Wehr, cited below, provides a couple of interesting statistics pertinent to Holy Trinity’s first years of existence. Donate. Three more bells were added later. Modern Denominational Statements on the Trinity . Charles Inglis served throughout the war and then to Nova Scotia on evacuation with the whole congregation of Trinity Church.[13]. Originally founded under the charter of King William III of England in 1697, the church has Dutch roots preceding this date, when New York was still known as New Amsterdam. James W. Gerard On The Anneke Jans Bogardus Claims\", \"With $6 billion, is this the richest church in America? In 1843, Trinity Church's expanding parish was divided due to the burgeoning cityscape and to better serve the needs of its parishioners. Sculptor Steve Tobin used its roots as the base for a bronze sculpture titled Trinity Root, which stood in front of the church at the corner of Wall Street and Broadway until December 2015, when it was moved by the church to its conference center in Connecticut. Facts Against Fancy, Or A True And Just View Of Trinity Church; The Rector Rectified, A Reply; Trinity Church, A Letter (1855) [Berrian, William, Boorman, James, North, C. C.] on Amazon.com. Additional notable parishioners included John Jay and Alexander Hamilton.[14]. After demonstrating in Duarte Park and marching on the streets surrounding the park, occupiers climbed over[20] and under the fence. December 31, 2014 by Donna Bott. In 1696, Governor Benjamin Fletcher approved the purchase of land in Lower Manhattan by the Church of England community for construction of a new church. Pope John XXII formally approved the feast in 1334, but its observance dates as early as the 10th century. [23] In 1976, the United States Department of the Interior designated Trinity Church a National Historic Landmark because of its architectural significance and its place within the history of New York City.[4][24][25]. Since 1993, Trinity Church has hosted the graduation ceremonies of the High School of Economics and Finance. The church is a 15m-high wooden structure built in traditional Russian style. Contact. Trinity continued to be the tallest in New York City, with its 281-foot (86 m) spire and cross, until it was surpassed in 1890 by the New York World Building.[15]. (History of Trinity Church, Julia Norton McLean) The Parish of Trinity Church was legally organized on April 17, 1789. The artist took no payment for his work, asking only that he be paid for the cost of materials. Beginning in the 1780s, the church's claim on 62 acres of Queen Anne's 1705 grant was contested in the courts by descendants of a 17th-century Dutchwoman, Anneke Jans Bogardus, who, it was claimed, held original title to that property. [17] The pews were later replaced, but one still exists at the back of the chapel for remembrance of the events on 9/11. Built from 1872 to 1877, Trinity Church is part of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts parish. Manhattan's Trinity Church was once the tallest building in the city. Although early Christian theologians speculated in many ways on the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, no one clearly and fully asserted the doctrine of the Trinity as explained at the top of the main entry until around the end of the so-called Arian Controversy. Since the establishment of the First Methodist society in 1789, our … Did you know that 35% of our new members come through our Early Childhood Center or School Ministries? [5] Concerts at One has been providing live professional classical and contemporary music for the Wall Street community since 1969, and the church has several organized choirs, featured Sunday mornings on WQXR 105.9 FM in New York City. 20:42. The current building is the third constructed for Trinity Church, and was designed by Richard Upjohn in the Gothic Revival style. William] on Amazon.com. Following his 1789 inauguration at Federal Hall, George Washington attended Thanksgiving service, presided over by Bishop Provoost, at St. Paul's Chapel, a chapel of the Parish of Trinity Church. Trinity College opened up attendance to Catholics in 1793, during the Emancipation. Opened: 2012 . A Maryland historical marker stands at the entrance to the Holy Trinity Church and Primary School campus grounds. The building's plan is a modified Greek Cross with four arms extending outwards from the central tower, which stands 64 m (211 ft) tall. It was designed in 1923 by Lange Leopold Powell and built by A Stonage and Sons, completing in 1926. Our church’s story began in 1927, when members of the First Church of the Nazarene in Los Angeles set out to fulfill Christ’s mandate to “make disciples of all nations” by starting a Sunday School class for the local Chinese community. Trinity is a proud part of the Episcopal Diocese of Southern Virginia which is a diocese in The Episcopal Church. The church then built a plywood deck right over the bells and placed shutters on the inside of the bell chamber's lancet windows. Rich with history, the Trinity Church was originally constructed in 1698 and burned down during the Revolutionary War in 1776. The Choir is often joined by the Trinity Baroque Orchestra, Trinity's ensemble of period instrumentalists, and NOVUS NY, Trinity's contemporary music orchestra. Well it's true: The greatest row in the history of Christianity centred on a single word filioque and on the doctrine of the Trinity. [6] The Church of the Intercession, the Trinity Chapel Complex and many other of Anglican congregations in Manhattan were was part of Trinity at one point. 4240 Gettysburg Ave N New Hope, MN 55428. You may cut-and-paste the below MLA and APA citation examples: Declan, Tobin. \" 18 Jan 2021. Over 4,000 households belong to the church, which offers five services each Sunday, as well as weekday services during the summer. At Trinity Church Boston, a congregation of The Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts, we strive to build the volume of love in the world.Whether you are looking for inspiration, comfort, or to become part of a community of generous-spirited, intellectually alive, faithful Christians at the center of our city, there’s a place for you here.. Everyone is welcome. Craven, Wayne, Sculpture in America, Thomas Y. Crowell Co., New York 1968, p. 454, Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (Manhattan), Learn how and when to remove this template message, U.S. National Register of Historic Places, William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor, National Register of Historic Places portal, List of National Historic Landmarks in New York City, List of New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan below 14th Street, National Register of Historic Places listings in Manhattan below 14th Street, New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, \"Trinity Church Split on How to Manage $2 Billion Legacy of a Queen\". Weddings. She never requested that her books be re-edited and the non-Trinitarian thoughts removed since they were truth. Perhaps most notable amongst this group was the eventual rector of the parish, Charles Inglis, who published a loyalist rebuke to Thomas Paine's Common Sense in 1776. Trinity Church’s current name and location date back to 1867. Saint Augustine, one of the greatest thinkers of the early church, described the Trinity as comparable to the three parts of an individual human being: mind, spirit, and will. The newly formed parish would build Grace Church, to the north on Broadway at 10th street, while the original parish would re-build Trinity Church, the structure that stands today. The school is located on Trinity Place, a few blocks away from the church. Falling wreckage knocked over a giant sycamore tree that had stood for nearly a century in the churchyard of St. Paul's Chapel, part of Trinity Church's parish, located several blocks north of Trinity Church. Christianity is a monotheistic religion, meaning that it teaches the existence of one God (specifically, the God of the Jews). In this video we expose the pagan Trinity. Trinity Church, as an Episcopal parish in the Anglican Communion, offers a full schedule of Daily Prayer and Eucharist services throughout the week, and based on the Book of Common Prayer; it is also available for special occasions, such as weddings and baptisms. The English Evangelical Lutheran Church in Germantown in the same year purchased the site of the present church and the Christopher Sower House, where Trinity's offices now are, for $3,000. The third and current Trinity Church began construction in 1839 and was finished in 1846. Trinity Church History and Facts. Unfortunately, this year the famous Soda City event has been cancelled because of COVID-19 concerns with large crowds + such close proximity to one another. The second Trinity Church was built facing Wall Street; it was 200 feet tall, and longer and wider than its predecessor. Its sanctuary is listed in the National Register: The Church of the Holy Trinity, constructed ca. Under British occupation clergy were required to be Loyalists, while the parishioners included some members of the revolutionary New York Provincial Congress, as well as the First and Second Continental Congresses. The structure was built out of Siberian Pine by Altay carpenters led by K.V. One is through the main doors on the western side of the building, the other is through a metal gate and stairs leading to the basement of the church, on the northeastern side of the building. The Church of the Holy Trinity recently left the Episcopal denomination due to philosophical differences and is now affiliated with the more conservative Anglican church. Myth: Trinity Episcopal Church didn’t do enough due diligence and vetting. Henderson’s Chapel was deeded to the church in 1737 when Rev. Retention: 99% . Trinity was part of St. Emanuel’s Church, a union church together with the Reformed. In 1754, King's College (now Columbia University) was chartered by King George II of Great Britain, and instruction began with eight students in a school building near the church. Our Services on Youtube. Includes service times, sermon series, directions, ministries, life groups, events, sermons (audio), podcasts, online giving and contact info. [26], Trinity Church has three sets of impressive bronze doors, donated by William Waldorf Astor, 1st Viscount Astor in memory of his father, John Jacob Astor III. Guided tours of the church are offered daily at 2 p.m.[citation needed], In 2015 Mark Francisco Bozzuti-Jones, a priest at Trinity Church, commissioned Mark Dukes to create the icon Our Lady of Ferguson. Trinity Church in Boston houses one of the oldest Episcopalian congregations in the area, dating back to 1733. However, Christian monotheism is a unique kind of monotheism. It is located at 72 St Georges Terrace in Perth , … The history of Holy Trinity Roman Catholic Church in Utica, New York begins 102 years ago in October of 1894 when eighty-two (82) families and individuals contributed a sum of $79 toward a future Parish and Church to serve Polish Immigrants to the Utica Area. Jacob Henderson. As the first Protestant Church in Florida, our past is long. Boston’s Trinity Church was founded in 1733 and was originally located in downtown Boston. Henderson sold the land called “Bel Air” to Governor Samuel Ogle and Colonel Benjamin Tasker. [28][29] Numerous times over the course of six decades, the claimants asserted themselves in court, losing each time. This was the Shakespeare family’s local parish church, and Shakespeare would have attended Holy Trinity Church each Sunday, becoming well versed in biblical tales, which we see in many of his character’s knowledge of the bible. The Rev. In addition to its main facility, Trinity operates two chapels: St. Paul's Chapel, and the Chapel … Strength in Numbers. The institution also owns the Trinity Court Building property, where it formerly housed its offices and preschool. The north and east doors each consists of six panels from Church history or the Bible, and the south door depicts the history of New York in its six panels.[27]. Why do Christians believe in a Trinity? ; The Hon. December 30, 2020. was one of the earliest churches in Jacksonville. A project to install a new ring of 12 additional change ringing bells was initially proposed in 2001 but put on hold in the aftermath of the September attacks, which took place three blocks north of the church. In the Christian religion, the Trinity is an idea used to explain that three different persons are called God: God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit (who is sometimes called the Holy Ghost).Trinity states that these three all form the same God. According to historical records, Captain William Kidd lent the runner and tackle from his ship for hoisting the stones.[11][12]. In 1787, Provoost was consecrated as the first Bishop of the newly formed Diocese of New York. In 1876–1877 a reredos and altar were erected in memory of William Backhouse Astor, Sr., to the designs of architect Frederick Clarke Withers. After the parish’s church on Summer Street had burned down in the Great Boston Fire of 1872, construction on the new church began – one in the shape of a modified Greek cross – under the direction of Rector Phillips Brooks, a well-known preacher at the time. We answer the questions - Is the Trinity doctrine in the Bible? Trinity Church is a small Russian Orthodox Church on King George Island in Antarctica. After the Great Boston Fire of 1872, the church complex moved to its current location and construction was completed in 1877. View Videos or join the Holy Trinity Church, Lickey discussion. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Facts Against Fancy; Or, a True and Just View of Trinity Church The first Trinity Church building, a modest rectangular structure with a gambrel roof and small porch, was constructed in 1698, on Wall Street, facing the Hudson River. In 1835 the Diocese of Illinois was founded, with the Rt. uh it helps me see and clear as I cipher through the news, the reports and my own reactions and interactions. \", \"New York's Trinity Church has a diverse investment portfolio worth $6 billion\", \"The Church With the $6 Billion Portfolio\", \"New Mixed-Use Tower Revealed at 74 Trinity Place, Financial District – New York YIMBY\", \"Construction kicks off on Trinity Church's Pelli Clarke Pelli-designed community center and office tower | 6sqft\", 111, 115 (Trinity and United States Realty), Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, History of the National Register of Historic Places, National Register of Historic Places Portal, International Mercantile Marine Company Building, New York County Lawyers' Association Building, Trinity and United States Realty Buildings, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Building, Leadership and Public Service High School, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trinity_Church_(Manhattan)&oldid=1000866422, Episcopal church buildings in New York City, Gothic Revival church buildings in New York City, New York City Designated Landmarks in Manhattan, Properties of religious function on the National Register of Historic Places in Manhattan, Religious organizations established in the 1690s, Articles using NRISref without a reference number, Short description is different from Wikidata, Articles needing additional references from February 2019, All articles needing additional references, Articles containing potentially dated statements from 2019, All articles containing potentially dated statements, Articles with unsourced statements from January 2017, Wikipedia articles with MusicBrainz place identifiers, Wikipedia articles with WORLDCATID identifiers, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, This page was last edited on 17 January 2021, at 03:17.\nCheck Car Plate Number Singapore, Wildwood Byron Menu, Baltimore Demographics 2020, Is Colonizing Mars A Good Idea, Durban Maps And Directions,","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line87893"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6194190382957458,"wiki_prob":0.6194190382957458,"text":"Alzheimer's Disease Research Center\nDevelopmental Projects\nMayo Clinic Study of Aging\nWellness and Education\nPatient Appointments\nResearch in the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center has two main focus areas:\nPatient-oriented (clinical) research\nBasic science (laboratory) research\nPatient-oriented research\nThe clinical side of research — also known as the patient-oriented side — focuses on investigating the very earliest phases of cognitive impairment that may ultimately develop into Alzheimer's disease.\nMayo Clinic neurologists examine patients, take careful family histories, administer memory tests and use imaging, such as magnetic resonance imaging, to examine various regions of the brain.\nThree main focus areas in patient-oriented research are:\nNormal aging\nThe Alzheimer's Disease Research Center studies the entire spectrum of aging, from normal aging to mild cognitive impairment to dementia in cooperation with the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging. The Mayo Clinic Study of Aging, one of the largest and longest running studies on aging, began in 2004 and has recruited more than 3,000 people.\nThe Mayo Clinic Study of Aging is a population-based study of cognitively normal older adults ranging in age from 50 to 89 who live in Olmsted County, Minn. Through yearly contact with the participants, Mayo Clinic researchers hope to be able to develop prediction models that will help differentiate and better understand people who are aging well from those who experience a cognitive decline. Researchers want to determine who is at risk of cognitive decline well before symptoms are noticed, which could ultimately aid in the discovery of strategies for prevention.\nMild cognitive impairment\nThe transitional period between the cognitive changes of normal aging and very early Alzheimer's disease is called mild cognitive impairment. Mayo Clinic researchers are active in describing the clinical features of people with mild cognitive impairment and follow them longitudinally.\nResearchers in the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center also have learned about factors that can predict whose symptoms will progress to Alzheimer's disease at a more rapid rate. The center's researchers are involved in clinical trials of treatments designed to alter this rate of progression.\nDementia disorders\nAnother major aspect of patient-oriented research in the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center involves dementias other than Alzheimer's disease, including frontotemporal dementia and Lewy body dementia. Many people with frontotemporal dementia or Lewy body dementia are being followed both longitudinally and in clinical trials by the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center.\nNeuroscience research laboratories at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., are continuing to develop new and more-effective therapies in preparation for testing in clinical trials.\nIn addition, the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer's Disease Research Center in Jacksonville has established a cohort of more than 300 older African-Americans with normal cognition. Mayo's Older African Americans Normative Studies (MOAANS) began in 1996 as an effort to improve the accuracy of diagnostic cognitive tests in detecting early dementia in older African-Americans.\nMOAANS participants continue to be followed annually and have contributed to ongoing studies of the clinical, genetic, biomarker and neuroimaging characteristics that may help predict the risk of developing Alzheimer's disease and related dementias.\nBasic science, or laboratory research, studies the cellular and molecular processes that cause nerve cells in the brain to stop functioning and die during aging, as well as the role of genes in affecting the risk of developing an aging-related disease.\nInvestigators with the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center have been studying autopsy material from people followed in the research center to learn about the underlying pathological causes of the various dementia disorders, with emphasis on Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia.\nIn addition, the center's investigators are also able to learn about the underlying foundation of normal aging changes in the brain because of older participants with normal aging who volunteer for research projects. This helps researchers understand changes found in the brains of people with dementia-related diseases.\nPathological causes of Alzheimer's Disease\nInvestigators with the Alzheimer's Disease Research Center have made significant progress in studying two proteins, amyloid and tau, that are strongly implicated in the development and progression of dementia in patients with Alzheimer's disease.\nAmyloid protein. Researchers in Florida are studying the characteristics of the amyloid protein itself and genetic factors that could predispose people to developing this protein. Studies involving both humans and mouse models of Alzheimer's disease have yielded potential diagnostic tests for Alzheimer's disease.\nTau protein. Memory loss in Alzheimer's disease is associated with abnormal clumping of tau protein in cells, causing neurons to malfunction and die. Researchers in Florida aim to develop strategies and therapies to prevent and remove the unwanted buildup of tau.\nUnderstanding other dementia syndromes\nResearch is progressing on a better understanding of the genetics, pathological development and treatment of people with frontotemporal dementia.\nMayo Clinic researchers in Florida were among the first in the United States to identify novel genetic mutations in some families with frontotemporal dementia. In fact, the three most important dominantly inherited gene mutations that cause frontotemporal dementia were discovered at Mayo Clinic in Florida.\nThis work has led to animal models of the condition and a better understanding of its causes, while research about possible therapies continues.\nART-20037478","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1534036"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7201299071311951,"wiki_prob":0.27987009286880493,"text":"The climate justice approach and the politics of climate change\nby Lim Li Lin\nThe climate change talks have been going on for a long time. Since Rio in 1992, when the Climate Convention was adopted, there have been 16 Conference of the Parties (COPs). Then in 2007, a new round of negotiations was launched in Bali.\nMany thought Parties were going to arrive at a deal in Copenhagen, COP 15, but that proved a mirage. And then there was Cancun, and now Durban, where it is clear that negotiations will not conclude. What is perhaps unclear is what will happen after Durban.\nHow are humans going to live with climate change? One response to this is the climate justice response. The challenge here is that climate change impacts everything and everybody. It is a really big challenge, but it is also a huge opportunity. There is an opportunity to promote solutions that are real solutions – people-centered solutions, ecological solutions and socially just solutions.\nClimate change is also a justice issue. The rich and corporations are the principal drivers of climate change. And here the culprits are mainly the extractive industries, the fossil fuel industries, mining and oil companies and, of course, consumers of what these companies are extracting from the ground, so it is also a demand-side problem.\nBut it is really the rich minority in this world that have principally caused the problem of climate change. However, those who did not cause the problem, the poorest, who are the world’s majority, will feel the impacts worst and first. This is a fundamental fact and the basic foundation for the climate justice analysis and the climate justice movement.\nThe developed countries – forming only 20 per cent of the world’s population – have emitted nearly three-quarters of all the historic greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) into the atmosphere, so there is a fundamental imbalance here. This atmosphere is not theirs alone; this atmosphere is shared by all of us and they have polluted the atmosphere that they share with everyone, causing this problem of climate change.\nIf there is a limit to what can be emitted into the atmosphere, and developed countries have emitted so much, it means that there is little capacity for more. The fact is that these countries have already over-consumed what we might call their fair share. They have already taken away that space from us in developing countries, who arguably need it more to develop.\nIf this is the case, then we need to talk about how we develop – we need real, sustainable development. We need to de-link our development from emissions pollution. But because we haven’t yet been able to do this successfully – and even developed countries have not been able to show us that they can de-link their development from GHG emissions – we are still facing the struggle of how we are going to do it. At the moment the predominant model is to grow and develop our way out of poverty and that requires emissions.\nOn actual, historic emissions, since 1850, Annex 1 countries (the developed countries) have used more than three-quarters of available emissions space. This situation should probably be the reverse since the population in developing countries is around 80 per cent of the world’s population. What the developed countries propose in the negotiations is that they still take a very big share of the available emissions space in terms of population, when it should be much less because they have already over-consumed in the past and they have a much smaller population. That’s where the basic problem lies.\nOne of the key discourses in the climate justice agenda, proposed by Bolivia and backed up by NGOs and civil society, is what they have framed as climate debt: Because the developed countries have already over-used, and propose to continue over-using in the future, their share of the atmospheric capacity (a global commons), they have diminished the Earth’s ability to absorb GHG emissions and this has denied developing countries the fair space needed to further their development. This is an emissions debt to developing countries and has led to climate change and its impacts.\nThen there is also an adaptation debt, as now there are adverse effects of climate change, and these impacts are being felt in developing countries. The adaptation debt to developing countries is in terms of loss and damage, the imperative to adapt and for lost development opportunities. Together, the emissions debt and the adaptation debt comprise a climate debt. This is how Bolivia and many climate justice groups have framed it.\nMany groups have been calling for the adoption of the climate debt principle so that developed countries would be compelled to repay climate debt through finance and technology transfers. This obliges developed countries to accept full accounting for their historical emissions debt and commit to making the deepest possible emission reductions in the negotiations.\nIf one actually were to do a full accounting of the emissions debt of developed countries, this would probably show that they would need to cut emissions by minus 300 per cent. You might say that is impossible – we can’t cut it even by 100 per cent, how are we going to go to minus 300 per cent? We do acknowledge that such a cut back might not be technically possible at the moment. However, developed countries need to make the deepest cuts technically possible at this time. So what they need to do and what they can do may differ because there are presently technological and other practical limits. They need, however, to accept their responsibility and do the utmost.\nAnd for what cannot be done, they must transfer finance and technology to developing countries who will have to make emissions cuts or be faced with the impacts that excessive global emissions bring. This is a debt that developed countries owe to developing countries, it isn’t aid. It is an obligation, a right that developing countries have to finance and technology transfers from developed countries.\nThis framing has allowed for a methodology that developing countries like Bolivia and others have put forward in the negotiations. Using the principle of equity and common but differentiated responsibilities as a basis, Bolivia and other countries have demanded that developed countries reduce their emissions by 50 per cent from 1990 levels without offsetting by 2017, and transfer finance and technology to do likewise in developing countries.\nThere is a full spectrum of positions at the climate negotiations. There are the ‘usual suspects’ led by the worst of all, the United States. Others such as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Russia and Japan – basically the industrialised OECD countries – adopt hard-line positions. And then there is the European Union and the other developed countries that are either not in the European Union or are not quite in the developed country bloc, such as Mexico and South Korea, which are OECD countries, but are not Annex 1 countries.\nFurthermore, there is the full range of non-Annex 1 countries. The largest bloc is the G77 and China, which comprises nearly all developing countries. Among the G77 and China there is the alliance of small island states, quite a prominent bloc in the negotiations because they represent the small islands who, up until this point, have been the moral voice of the negotiations owing to their focus on sea-level rise and the right to survival. There are the least developed countries, the African group and the ideologically left South American countries: Bolivia is key among them, also Venezuela, Nicaragua, Cuba and others. There is also the BASIC grouping of emerging developing countries, not negotiating as a bloc, yet meeting regularly in an effort to coordinate positions. This group is viewed with suspicion by other developing countries. There is also the Arab group which overlaps with the African group.\nWhat happened after the debacle in Copenhagen was that Bolivia went on to organise a large conference in Cochabamba in 2010. The idea came about as the Copenhagen meeting had failed miserably since the developed countries had tried to force the Copenhagen Accord onto other countries. Countries including Tuvalu, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua and Sudan basically rejected the Copenhagen Accord and there was no formal decision at that meeting. So Bolivia organised a World People’s Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth to bring together governments, civil society, and climate justice and social movements to discuss and address this issue. The idea was that it was supposed to be democratic and open to the peoples of the world to decide on this fundamental issue. There is much we can draw on from this.\nThe problem is what developed countries are trying to do: They acknowledge that climate change is a problem (some sectors in the US don’t acknowledge it is a problem and that is another problem altogether), however, their approach to solving the problem is incorrect. What they are trying to do, instead of acknowledging that they are the ones responsible for the problem, is to push the burden onto developing countries. This is an injustice.\nThey are trying to push climate change mitigation onto the BASIC countries in particular with the argument that their emissions are growing considerably hence they are responsible for a lot of the climate problem. Historical responsibility is not considered, as the developed countries argue that they can’t be responsible for the actions of generations before them, and what matters is emissions today. The US is saying that China’s absolute emissions today are bigger than their own, yet on a per capita basis, US emissions are still much greater than China’s. They are also not considering their historical responsibility, and this is fundamentally unfair.\nWhat developed countries are also doing, instead of meeting reductions domestically, is to basically buy them from developing countries. This is possible with market mechanisms such as the Clean Development Mechanism in the Kyoto Protocol. Instead of effecting domestic emission reductions, developed countries can pay developing countries to mitigate for them. On paper they meet their obligations, but actually the emission reductions are made elsewhere. Developing countries are trying to expand the market mechanisms and introduce new ones.\nWhat developed countries are also trying to do is to use accounting loopholes that will allow them to show on paper that they have reduced emissions, when in reality, they have not made these emissions reductions.\nThey are also trying to deny finance and technology transfers to developing countries. What of the $100 billion that was first mentioned in the Copenhagen Accord? This is basically re-programmed aid money and it is not a pledge to give $100 billion, it is a pledge to help mobilise $100 billion, and that would include mobilising it from developing countries.\nDeveloped countries have also been trying to push the problem of adaptation back onto developing countries. They are really not going to pass on the finance and technology, but instead leave the problem to developing countries to deal with themselves.\nAll of this plays out in the climate negotiations and has crystallised into the fight over what kind of emissions reduction system we should adopt. Up until this point we have always had a system of legally binding international commitments under the Kyoto Protocol. Countries came together under the UN to say this is what we need to do because the science calls for it and we will negotiate as such and have an international agreement because it is an international problem. There is already a system for accounting, review, reporting and compliance and all of this is agreed and binding internationally.\nHowever, what is happening now is that the US is promoting a system of bottom-up domestic pledges. They are pledging to reduce their emissions by around three per cent based on 1990 levels. They are resisting common accounting, reporting and review rules, and instead talk about “the sunshine of transparency”. They do not envisage a system with international compliance but a reliance on domestic legislation. However, it is clear that they are not going to have any climate legislation in the near future, so they can’t even promise that their pledge will be in domestic legislation, they merely state that this is what they are pledging to do domestically.\nWhat is happening now is that the discussions have shifted. Countries like Canada, Russia and Japan are using the US as an excuse and have said that they will not commit to a second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol. Instead, developed countries are pushing for a new treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol, and the new treaty that they want will likely legalise a domestic pledge and review system. This is now the fundamental fight that is playing out in the climate negotiations over the Kyoto Protocol.\nBROUGHT TO YOU BY PAMBAZUKA NEWS AND AFRICAN AGENDA\nAdaptation, COP 15 Copenhagen, Finance, Technology Transfer, Toward Durban CDM, Climate Debt, Cochabamba, emissions, Kyoto Protocol permalink\nCommon statement on the Outcome of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1558786"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.606273353099823,"wiki_prob":0.393726646900177,"text":"The P.R.I.D.E. Program\nPositive Racial Identity Development in Early Education\nAbout P.R.I.D.E.\nP.R.I.D.E. Research\nOffice of Child Development\nUniversity of Pittsburgh School of Education\nPop Up Mini Art Festivals\nParent Village\nTeacher Cohort\nIn My Skin Podcast\nHelping Black children understand race\nand embrace their ethnicity and heritage\nThrough a blend of interactive professional development for educators, classes with parents, dynamic arts festivals, and community engagement, the P.R.I.D.E. program fosters positive racial identity in Black children, aged 3 to 8, in the city of Pittsburgh.\nHelping parents and caregivers engage children in conversations about race\nPresenting captivating discussions about race and young children\nCelebrating Africana culture through arts activities designed for Black children\nProviding educators with knowledge and skills to support a child's positive racial identity\nThe P.R.I.D.E. Program was born out of the 2016 study entitled “Positive Racial identity Development in Early Education: Understanding P.R.I.D.E. in Pittsburgh.” The report details the scholarship supporting positive racial identity. But that’s just where our research began. We have since conducted our own research while continually learning and incorporating new research into our work.\nListen to In My Skin\nA podcast about race and childhood\nP.R.I.D.E. Pillars\nThe Parent Village parent-child curriculum is based on core child development needs. It helps parents understand race, culture, racial identity, and socialization and that supports them in building positive racial identity in their children.\nOur Pop Up Mini Art Festivals are part arts festival, part block party. The festivals are one of the only events in the country to specifically target young Black children with art, music, and dance that celebrates Africana history and culture.\nBy bringing in leaders in the subjects of education, race, and early childhood, the P.R.I.D.E. Speaker Series raises awareness around issues of race and young children. Click the microphone above to listen to previous speakers, like Dr. Valerie Kinloch and Dr. Erin Winkler.\nThe P.R.I.D.E. team conducts Professional Development sessions tailored to meet the specific needs of programs and organizations. P.R.I.D.E. also supports a year-long Teacher Cohort group through trainings, readings, and ongoing communication and support.\nFURTHERING SCHOLARSHIP\nP.R.I.D.E. is committed to the evaluation of positive racial identity development practice and the development of a measure of P.R.I.D.E. activity and practices, sharing additional findings and Research, and inspiring future P.R.I.D.E. efforts.\nW.K. Kellogg Foundation\nHenry L. Hillman Foundation\nReceive the latest P.R.I.D.E news in your inbox\nEmail RacePRIDE@pitt.edu\nHow does impilict bias affect children?\nListen to new episodes of In My Skin","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line462359"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5756778120994568,"wiki_prob":0.4243221879005432,"text":"Council Meetings Calendar\nAudit and Risk Management Committee\nCouncil Regional Plan\nCouncil Strategic Plan\nRegional Management Plan\nRates & Charges\nCompliance Reviews\nCouncil Bylaws\nElectoral Representation\nMilikapiti\nPirlangimpi\nWurrumiyanga\nPirlangimpi Local Authority Vacancy\nWurrumiyanga Local Authority Vacancy\nTiwi Land Council\nOutstations\nLOCAL GOVERNMENT 2030\nA Strategy For A Strong, Responsive, Well-Governed Local Government Sector\nWhat is LG 2030?\nThe Local Government 2030 Strategy, or LG2030, articulates a long term vision for a strong, responsive, well-governed local government sector and the pathway to getting there.\nWho is driving LG 2030?\nThe concept of LG2030 originated at the November 2019 LGANT conference. It was developed further with local government elected members, CEOs and LGANT. The then Department of Local Government, Housing and Community Development, and now Department of Chief Minister and Cabinet partnered with LGANT in this work. Development of the strategy is being guided by a Steering Committee of local government nominees, supported by LGANT and the Department of Chief Minister and Cabinet. The Strategy is driven by the local government sector and a draft strategy will be circulated for comment from November 2021 to February 2022.\nWhy do we need LG 2030?\nLocal Government is the government closest to the community and councils play a broad and evolving role in promoting the social, economic, environmental and cultural well-being of their local communities. The sector in the NT faces many challenges including limited own source revenue, lack of economies of scale, inadequate infrastructure, the tyranny of distance and workforce skill, recruitment and retention challenges. There are many immediate issues that are being worked on. At the same time, the Strategy is intended to provide a longer term, strategic pathway forward to develop, grow and sustain the sector.\nWhat is the background to LG 2030?\nThe project was initiated at the LGANT meeting in November 2019. A Steering Committee of local government representatives was convened and a project plan was approved by LGANT and the then Minister for Local Government in December 2019. Progress was interrupted by COVID 19. The current Minister for Local Government approved the continuation of the plan in October 2020. The project was reactivated in April 2021 with the formal commitment of the new LGANT executive. The Steering Group reconvened in July 2021 and released a draft strategy for initial consultation. A second round of consultation is now being undertaken involving new councils formed by the recent local government elections.\nWho are the stakeholders in LG 2030?\nLG 2030 is driven by the local government sector. However there are many stakeholders that have an interest in a strong, sustainable, well-governed sector. The Department of Chief Minister and Cabinet regulates the sector and LGANT represents and advocates for the sector and both are involved in supporting LG2030. Cooperation and coordination between the three spheres of government has been identified as a key issue in supporting community outcomes; the Northern Territory Government and the Australian Government are also key stakeholders and participants in this work. It is intended that other peak bodies, Land Councils, key Aboriginal organisations, and community organisations will be provided the opportunity for input in developing the Strategy.\nHow can I provide input to the strategy?\nA consultation draft will be released at the LGANT November Conference in Alice Springs. Each council is invited to provide feedback, and engage its community and stakeholders as it considers appropriate. Feedback will be coordinated by LGANT and CM&C, who will also consult across government and with NT wide stakeholders. Comments can be provided to Linda.weatherhead@nt.gov.au and joann.beckwith@lgant.asn.au.\nWhen will consultations close?\nThe first round of consultations will close on Friday 17 December 2021. A further draft will be released for consultation early in 2021 with consultations to close on Friday 25 February 2022. However, the Strategy is intended to be a living document and will be reviewed regularly.\nOnce the strategy is finalised, what happens next?\nAll feedback will be considered and the Strategy finalised through the Steering Committee. The final draft will be provided to the sector for a shorter period for final feedback before it is considered by LGANT and the Minister for Local Government. It is intended that a final strategy will be launched at the LGANT April meeting.\nHow will we evaluate the strategy and what it has achieved?\nAn initial 3 year plan will be developed to guide actions under the strategy and progress will be evaluated with a review at the end of three years. A second stage implementation plan will be developed and reviewed at the end of a further three years. A final review will occur in the last 12 months of the Strategy with the intention of informing the development of a new strategy.\nRead the Local Government 2030 Consultation Report\n© Tiwi Islands Regional Council\nCreated by HutSix","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1559308"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7008088827133179,"wiki_prob":0.7008088827133179,"text":"Posted in Asia-Pacific, North America, Social Movements, Socialism/Communism, Socialist Opinion Shapers\nChinese Embassy In San Francisco Still Open, Why?\nBy: Denise Simon | Founders Code\nPrimer: The Chinese consulate in San Francisco is harboring a biology researcher who falsely denied connections to the Chinese military to obtain a visa and gain access to the country, according to court documents filed by the FBI.\nThe filing came as part of a document that cited a slew of other episodes in which Chinese nationals allegedly lied on their visa applications by hiding their military connections. More details.\nAxios:\nEvery country spies. And many countries — including the U.S. — use their diplomatic outposts to do it. But for years, China has used its embassies and consulates to do far more than that.\nWhy it matters: The Trump administration’s recent hardline stance against China’s illicit consular activities is a public acknowledgment of real problems, but it comes at a time when U.S.-China relations are already dangerously tense.\nDriving the news: Last week, the U.S. demanded that China close its Houston consulate in order to “protect American intellectual property and Americans’ private information,” White House National Security Council spokesperson John Ullyot said in a statement.\nIn response, the Chinese government ordered the closure of the U.S. consulate in Chengdu, a facility nestled in China’s more remote inland region that served primarily as a visa-issuing office for Chinese hoping to visit the U.S., and was not a major hub for U.S. intelligence activity.\nYes, but: The Houston consulate wasn’t China’s most important espionage hub.\n“San Francisco is the real gem but the U.S. won’t close it,” a former U.S. intelligence official told Axios.\nIt indicates the Trump administration is likely making an example of the Houston consulate in a bid to achieve its goal of a reduction in Chinese espionage activities without taking an even harsher measure, such as closing the San Francisco or New York consulates.\nThe Chinese government has long used its embassy and consulates in the U.S. to exert control over student groups, collect information on Uighurs and Chinese dissident groups, and coordinate local and state-level political influence activities.\nSurveilling Uighurs: Leaked classified Chinese government documents have revealed that Chinese embassies and consulates are complicit in the ongoing cultural and demographic genocide against Uighurs.\nThe CCP has sought to track down Uighurs who have left China and force them to return, with orders to place them in mass internment camps “the moment they cross the border.”\nChina’s embassies and consulates have also collected information on Uighurs abroad and submitted that information to Xinjiang police.\nConsular officials have frequently refused to renew Uighur passports, telling them they must return to China in order to obtain new documents — only to be disappeared into camps as soon as they do.\nControlling Chinese students: The Chinese embassy and consulates keep close tabs on Chinese students in the U.S., occasionally sending them political directives and quietly organizing demonstrations.\nThe Chinese embassy and consulates have paid students to demonstrate in support of visiting Chinese leaders, instructing them to crowd out anti-CCP protesters. They have also asked Chinese Students and Scholars Associations (CSSA) presidents to hold study sessions on party thought and to send back photos of the sessions to ensure compliance.\n“I feel like the tendency is that the consulate tries to control CSSAs more and more,” one CSSA president told me in 2018.\nSupporting United Front organizations: Chinese diplomatic officials regularly meet with leaders of U.S.-based organizations tied to the United Front Work Department, the political influence arm of the CCP, and preside over the ceremonies and banquets held by these organizations.\nOne such organization, the National Association for China’s Peaceful Unification, has branches in more than 30 U.S. cities. Its members issued statements in support of China’s official foreign policy positions, and the Chinese embassy and consular officials encourage them to engage in local U.S. politics.\nThe bottom line: Dealing with bad behavior by diplomats is a highly sensitive geopolitical issue that can easily result in damaged relations.\nGo deeper … Mapped: Where U.S. and Chinese embassies and consulates are located\nIn part, how big a problem does the U.S. have regarding Chinese spies around the nation?\nEconomic Espionage\nTo achieve its goals and surpass America, China recognizes it needs to make leaps in cutting-edge technologies. But the sad fact is that instead of engaging in the hard slog of innovation, China often steals American intellectual property and then uses it to compete against the very American companies it victimized—in effect, cheating twice over. They’re targeting research on everything from military equipment to wind turbines to rice and corn seeds.\nThrough its talent recruitment programs, like the so-called Thousand Talents Program, the Chinese government tries to entice scientists to secretly bring our knowledge and innovation back to China—even if that means stealing proprietary information or violating our export controls and conflict-of-interest rules.\nTake the case of scientist Hongjin Tan, for example, a Chinese national and American lawful permanent resident. He applied to China’s Thousand Talents Program and stole more than $1 billion—that’s with a “b”—worth of trade secrets from his former employer, an Oklahoma-based petroleum company, and got caught. A few months ago, he was convicted and sent to prison.\nOr there’s the case of Shan Shi, a Texas-based scientist, also sentenced to prison earlier this year. Shi stole trade secrets regarding syntactic foam, an important naval technology used in submarines. Shi, too, had applied to China’s Thousand Talents Program and specifically pledged to “digest” and “absorb” the relevant technology in the United States. He did this on behalf of Chinese state-owned enterprises, which ultimately planned to put the American company out of business and take over the market.\nIn one of the more galling and egregious aspects of the scheme, the conspirators actually patented in China the very manufacturing process they’d stolen and then offered their victim American company a joint venture using its own stolen technology. We’re talking about an American company that spent years and millions of dollars developing that technology, and China couldn’t replicate it—so, instead, it paid to have it stolen.\nAnd just two weeks ago, Hao Zhang was convicted of economic espionage, theft of trade secrets, and conspiracy for stealing proprietary information about wireless devices from two U.S. companies. One of those companies had spent over 20 years developing the technology Zhang stole.\nThese cases were among more than a thousand investigations the FBI has into China’s actual and attempted theft of American technology—which is to say nothing of over a thousand more ongoing counterintelligence investigations of other kinds related to China. We’re conducting these kinds of investigations in all 56 of our field offices. And over the past decade, we’ve seen economic espionage cases with a link to China increase by approximately 1,300 percent.\nThe stakes could not be higher, and the potential economic harm to American businesses and the economy as a whole almost defies calculation. More details here.\nSenator Ted Cruz Reacts To Jeb Bush Interview\nWorking Families Party Backs Elizabeth Warren To ‘Achieve Socialism’ — Race Politics At Play\nGlenn’s Last Show on Fox\nHillary Clinton should be worried as Benghazi coverup unravels\nThe Russians and American Progressives: Together Again\nSen. Ted Cruz. Video Message to the Southern Republican Leadership Conference\nTrump, Hillary, The Emails And Russia\nYes, Joe Biden Would Ban Fracking In Pennsylvania And The Rest Of The U.S.\n← Joe Biden Calls For Jihad Against America\nWillie Brown’s Mistress #HeelsUpHarris To Be Biden Heartbeat Away From WH? →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line847355"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5298088192939758,"wiki_prob":0.5298088192939758,"text":"Search the News Archive\nMiddlebury in the News\nHome » Newsroom » News Stories » 2020 News » Professor Jeff Munroe to Lead 5-Year National Science Foundation Project\nGeology professor Jeff Munroe will lead a team of principal investigators in a 5-year National Science Foundation (NSF)-funded study starting this fall.\nRay, Sarah C.\nray@middlebury.edu\nProfessor Jeff Munroe to Lead 5-Year National Science Foundation Project\nMIDDLEBURY, Vt. – The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded a major five-year grant to a research team led by Jeff Munroe, the Philip Battell Stewart and Sarah Frances Cowles Stewart Professor of Geology. Six scientists representing five different institutions will study how mineral dust from deserts in the southwestern U.S. is transported through the atmosphere to locations hundreds of miles away and the impacts of the exported dust on a variety of environmental and health issues.\nThe team will focus their work on the small particles of weathered rock and soil that are picked up in one place by the wind, transported through the atmosphere by air currents, and deposited somewhere else.\n“Studies on the ground, instruments carried by airplanes, and observations from satellites in space over the past several decades have shown conclusively that this process, insignificant as it may seem, collectively is of enormous importance for moving nutrients, and sometimes contaminants, around the world,” said Munroe.\nThe scientists have established a cluster of sites in eastern Nevada and throughout Utah from which to conduct their work. They’ll examine the critical zone, a term used to describe the slice of the Earth from the treetops down to the bottom of the soil. Munroe describes it as the thin skin where geology, chemistry, biology, ecology, hydrology, climate, and human society all interact.\nEarth's Critical Zone. Illustration by Critical Zone Observatories (CZO) based on a figure in Chorover et. al. 2007.\n“It’s not a stretch to say that what happens here, in this zone only a few hundred feet thick, is of more relevance to society than what happens in the hundred miles of atmosphere farther up, or in the thousands of miles of rock farther down,” said Munroe. “Think soils growing food, forests cleaning the air and generating oxygen for us to breathe, rain turning to stream- and groundwater, etc.”\nMunroe’s team will include Kevin Perry, associate professor at the University of Utah, who will lead a project focused on dust-emitting landscapes, including seasonality and interannual variability of dust emission, the formation and effects of soil crusts, and modeling of dust transport; Maura Hahnenberger, assistant professor at Salt Lake Community College, who will investigate spatial, temporal, and meteorological aspects of dust transport from the Great Basin to the Rocky Mountains; Greg Carling, associate professor at Brigham Young University, who will focus on the geochemical properties of surface materials in dust source regions, the properties of dust deposited in the mountains, and effects on mountain watersheds; S. McKenzie Skiles, assistant professor at the University of Utah, who will lead an effort studying the effects of dust deposition on snowpack in the Wasatch Mountains east of Salt Lake City; and Janice Brahney, assistant professor at Utah State University, who will study the effects of dust deposition on the nutrient status of mountain ecosystems.\nIn his own study, Munroe will focus on dust deposition in the mountains and will expand and maintain a network of dust collectors in various mountain ranges across Utah and Nevada. The original dust collector network was established in part with a Gladstone Excellence in Teaching Award from Middlebury. As the overall director of the entire effort, Munroe will also coordinate the work of his five colleagues, unifying the data management strategies, arranging outreach efforts, and connecting with other researchers who will build projects of their own into the infrastructure.\nThe multiyear project will provide myriad opportunities for Middlebury undergraduates, says Munroe. For those interested in a field experience, there will be twice-annual trips to Utah and Nevada to empty the dust collectors. For those more interested in geochemistry, undergraduate researchers will assist in analyzing the dust samples with a variety of high-tech equipment, providing students with hands-on experience in sophisticated analytical techniques.\nSome of the analysis—studying rare isotopes of some elements that can serve as a fingerprint to clarify where the dust came from, for instance—will be done in the Department of Geoscience at the University of Wisconsin, and Middlebury students will get to travel there to participate in those measurements.\n“Because many of my colleagues participating in this project work at institutions with graduate programs, the Middlebury undergraduates who take part in this project will get to interact with and learn from master’s and PhD students,” said Munroe. “This will give them great insight into what graduate school is like, as well as a network of students to connect with for advice and ideas.”\nThe collection of connected projects also contains numerous outreach initiatives, including programs designed to increase the involvement of traditionally underrepresented demographics in field and lab science. Outreach programs are also planned with public high schools and middle schools in northern Utah.\nMunroe’s project is one of 10 major initiatives the NSF is launching this fall aimed at understanding the connections among different places on the Earth’s surface. He says he’s looking forward to seeing what the other teams discover and how his team might interact with them.\n“My main point is that ‘it’s all connected,’ said Munroe. “The Earth is one big system, and nothing exists in isolation from everything else. Dust is a great example of how processes in one location can affect the environment somewhere far away. We need more knowledge about those connections so that we can understand how the decisions we make locally will affect other places, other environments, and other people.”\nMiddTags:","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line154168"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7150416374206543,"wiki_prob":0.2849583625793457,"text":"Dag Haugland\nE-mailDag.Haugland@uib.no\nPhone+47 55 58 40 33\nHIB - Thormøhlens gate 55\nShow author(s) (2020). Optimization of reliable cyclic cable layouts in offshore wind farms. Engineering optimization (Print). 258-276.\nShow author(s) (2019). On offshore wind farm maintenance scheduling for decision support on vessel fleet composition. European Journal of Operational Research. 124-131.\nShow author(s) (2019). Integer programming formulations for the shared multicast tree problem. Journal of combinatorial optimization. 927-956.\nShow author(s) (2018). Minimizing the tracking error of cardinality constrained portfolios. Computers & Operations Research. 33-41.\nShow author(s) (2017). Strategic optimization of offshore wind farm installation. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). 285-299.\nShow author(s) (2017). Obstacle-aware optimization of offshore wind farm cable layouts. Annals of Operations Research. 373-388.\nShow author(s) (2017). A model for optimal fleet composition of vessels for offshore wind farm maintenance. Procedia Computer Science. 1512-1521.\nShow author(s) (2016). The computational complexity of the pooling problem. Journal of Global Optimization. 199-215.\nShow author(s) (2016). Pooling problems with polynomial-time algorithms. Journal of Optimization Theory and Applications. 591-615.\nShow author(s) (2015). On a pooling problem with fixed network size. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). 328-342.\nShow author(s) (2014). A cost minimization heuristic for the pooling problem. Annals of Operations Research. 73-87.\nShow author(s) (2013). Strong formulations for the pooling problem. Journal of Global Optimization. 897-916.\nShow author(s) (2013). Optimization methods for pipeline transportation of natural gas with variable specific gravity and compressibility. TOP - An Official Journal of the Spanish Society of Statistics and Operations Research. 524-541.\nShow author(s) (2013). A multi-commodity flow formulation for the generalized pooling problem. Journal of Global Optimization. 917-937.\nShow author(s) (2012). Dual decomposition for computational optimization of minimum-power shared broadcast tree in wireless networks. IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing. 2008-2019.\nShow author(s) (2011). The maximum flow problem with minimum lot sizes. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). 170-182.\nShow author(s) (2011). Minimizing fuel cost in gas transmission networks by dynamic programming and adaptive discretization. Computers & industrial engineering. 364-372.\nShow author(s) (2011). Local search heuristics for the probabilistic dial-a-ride problem. OR Spectrum: quantitative approaches in management. 961-988.\nShow author(s) (2010). Feasibility Testing for Dial-a-Ride Problems. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). 170-179.\nShow author(s) (2010). Center-oriented algorithms for the minimum energy broad and multicast problem in wireless ad hoc networks. Electronic Commerce Research and Applications. 228-236.\nShow author(s) (2010). An Overview of Models and Solution Methods for Pooling Problems. Energy Systems. 459-469.\nShow author(s) (2009). New results on the time complexity and approximation ratio of the Broadcast Incremental Power algorithm. Information Processing Letters. 615-619.\nShow author(s) (2009). A fast local search method for minimum energy broadcast in wireless ad hoc networks. Operations Research Letters. 75-79.\nShow author(s) (2008). Wiretapping Based on Node Corruption over Secure Network Coding: Analysis and Optimization. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). 154-162.\nShow author(s) (2008). Minimum-energy broadcast and multicast in wireless networks: An integer programming approach and improved heuristic algorithms. Ad hoc networks. 696-717.\nShow author(s) (2008). Improved Time Complexities of Algorithms for the Directional Minimum Energy Broadcast Problem. Communications in Computer and Information Science. 488-496.\nShow author(s) (2008). Analysis and computational study of several integer programming formulations for minimum-energy multicasting in wireless ad hoc networks. Networks. 57-68.\nShow author(s) (2007). Designing delivery districts for the vehicle routing problem with stochastic demands. European Journal of Operational Research. 997-1010.\nShow author(s) (2007). A Bidirectional Greedy Heuristic for the Subspace Selection Problem. Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS). 162-176.\nShow author(s) (2006). Local search methods for l(1)-minimization in frame based signal compression. Optimization and Engineering. 81-96.\nShow author(s) (2004). A tabu search heuristic for the vehicle routing problem with time windows and split deliveries. Computers & Operations Research. 1947-1964.\nShow author(s) (2005). Analysis and Computational Study of Flow-based Formulations for Minimum-Energy Multicasting in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks. 305. 305. .\nShow author(s) (2004). An Integer Programming Approach for Performance Evaluation of Minimum-Energy Broadcasting and Multicasting in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks. 288. 288. .\nShow author(s) (2003). Designing delivery districts for the vehicle routing problem with stochastic demands. 260. 260. .\nShow author(s) (2002). Proceedings of Nordic MPS'02 - The Eighth Meeting of the Nordic Section of the Mathematical Programming Society. 237. 237. .\nShow author(s) (2002). Optimal adjustment of surfaces to point sets. 236. 236. .\nShow author(s) (2002). Local search methods for l_1-minimization in a data compression problem. 235. 235. .\nShow author(s) (2002). A Tabu Search Heuristic for the Vehicle Routing Problem with Time Windows and Split Deliveries. 234. 234. .\nShow author(s) (2002). 23. D.Haugland and S.Storøy: A Combinatorial Optimization Model for Vector Selection in Frame Based Signal Representation, Report in Informatics, no. 221, Dept. of Informatics, University of Bergen, 2001. 235. 235. .\nShow author(s) (2018). A savings procedure based construction heuristic for the offshore wind cable layout optimization problem.\nShow author(s) (2009). A Tree Decomposition Algorithm for Minimizing Fuel Cost in Gas Transmission Networks.\nShow author(s) (2011). Parallel algorithms for the maximum flow problem with minimum lot sizes.\nShow author(s) (2010). Strong formulations for the pooling problem.\nShow author(s) (2010). Solving the Pooling Problem with LMI Relaxations.\nShow author(s) (2008). The Hamiltonian Monte Carlo algorithm in parameter estimation and uncertainty quantification.\nShow author(s) (2007). Flow and Cut Models for the Minimum Energy Broadcasting Problem in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks.\nShow author(s) (2007). Flow Models in Pipeline Transportation Networks for Natural Gas.\nShow author(s) (2006). Approximation Algorithms for the Minimum Energy Broadcast Problem.\nShow author(s) (2005). Cut and Steiner Tree Formulations for Minimum-Energy Problems in Wireless Ad Hoc Networks.\nShow author(s) (2004). Heuristics for the subspace selection problem.\nShow author(s) (2004). Heuristics for the Probabilistic Dial-a-Ride Problem.\nShow author(s) (2003). Local search methods for the subset selection problem with minimum unit norm.\nShow author(s) (2003). Designing routing zones for vehicle routing problems with stochastic demands.\nShow author(s) (2003). Designing routing zones for VRP with stochastic demands.\nShow author(s) (2003). A Tabu Search Heuristic for the Vehicle Routing Problem with Time Windows and Split Deliveries.\nShow author(s) (2002). Node coloring with minimum edge weights.\nShow author(s) (2002). Local search methods for l1-minimization in data compression.\nShow author(s) (2001). An edge-traversal algorithm for the subspace selection problem.\nAcademic anthology/Conference proceedings\nShow author(s) (2011). Norsk Informatikkonferanse NIK 2011. Tapir Akademisk Forlag.\nShow author(s) (2009). Norsk informatikkonferanse : NIK 2009 : Institutt for datateknikk og informasjonsvitenskap, NTNU, 23.-25. november 2009. Tapir Akademisk Forlag.\nShow author(s) (2007). NIK 2007. Tapir Akademisk Forlag.\nMasters thesis\nShow author(s) (2008). Improving efficiency in parameter estimation using the Hamiltonian Monte Carlo algorithm.\nShow author(s) (2019). Optimization Problems in Communication Networks and Multi-Agent Path Finding.\nShow author(s) (2019). Methods for Optimizing Turbine Locations and Cable Routes in Offshore Wind Farms.\nShow author(s) (2010). Optimization Methods for Pipeline Transportation of Natural Gas.\nShow author(s) (1991). Optimization methods for blending models in oil rafinieries.\nShow author(s) (2021). The unsuitable neighbourhood inequalities for the fixed cardinality stable set polytope. 10 pages.\nShow author(s) (2019). Pooling Problems with Single-Flow Constraints. 6 pages.\nShow author(s) (2018). Fast Methods for the Index Tracking Problem. 7 pages.\nShow author(s) (2015). Optimal Intake and Routing of Floating Oil Rigs in the North Sea. 22 pages.\nShow author(s) (2015). An integer programming model for branching cable layouts in offshore wind farms. 10 pages.\nShow author(s) (2014). The hardness of the pooling problem. 4 pages.\nShow author(s) (2012). Parallel algorithms for the maximum flow problem with minimum lot sizes. 6 pages.\nShow author(s) (2012). Computing the Optimal Layout of a Wind Farm. 12 pages.\nShow author(s) (2011). Comparison of discrete and continuous models for the pooling problem. 10 pages.\nShow author(s) (2011). Compact Integer Programming Models for Power-optimal Trees in Ad Hoc Wireless Networks. 28 pages.\nShow author(s) (2010). Power savings of cyclic network coding for multicast on wireless networks. 5 pages.\nShow author(s) (2010). Methods for Flow Graph Selection in Integral Network Coding. 6 pages.\nShow author(s) (2010). An Overview of Models and Solution Methods for Pooling Problems. 11 pages.\nShow author(s) (2009). Parallel Solution of the Pooling Problem with Application to the Cell Broadband Engine Architecture. 6 pages.\nShow author(s) (2009). Line pack management for improved regularity in pipeline gas transportation networks. 7 pages.\nShow author(s) (2009). A Tree Decomposition Algorithm for Minimizing Fuel Cost in Gas Transmission Networks. 6 pages.\nShow author(s) (2007). Flow Allocation in a Model for Regularity Analysis of Gas Transportation Systems. 7 pages.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line979727"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9861809015274048,"wiki_prob":0.9861809015274048,"text":"SportFootballFA & League Cups\nLuis Suarez 'enjoyed' his handball goal, says Mansfield chairman\nMansfield chairman says Liverpool are 'embarrassed' by their striker's controversial finish and his actions brought shame on club\nTuesday 08 January 2013 02:00\nMansfield Town’s chairman has launched an extraordinary attack on Luis Suarez\nMansfield Town's chairman has launched an extraordinary attack on Luis Suarez, declaring that Liverpool's directors were \"embarrassed\" by the handball goal that helped the club knock his non-league side out of the FA Cup on Sunday and claiming that the player gloated when he realised it would be allowed to stand.\nJohn Radford's unabashed attack on the Uruguayan striker included the claim that Suarez \"enjoyed\" what he had done – by kissing the same wrist with which he had controlled the ball to steer in Liverpool's second goal. \"It was like, 'Hang on, I can get away with this,'\" Radford said. \"The referees have a hard time but to do it deliberately and then celebrate is the hardest thing. To cheat, OK, but to cheat and then celebrate cheating, that is the worst thing you can do.\" Suarez's wrist celebration is actually a ritual he frequently uses.\nThere is sympathy within Anfield for manager Brendan Rodgers' view that Sunday's goal would not have created nearly as much of a stir had it been scored by any other player.\nBut the goal has taken the controversy around the Uruguayan to new levels, even more so after the broadcaster ESPN's decision to reprimand commentator Jon Champion for claiming Suarez had cheated. After Suarez scored the decisive goal and performed his post-goal celebration, Champion said: \"That, I'm afraid, is the work of a cheat.\" The broadcaster has issued a public apology for Champion's comments – and by doing so added to the circus surrounding the goal.\nA widespread view within football is that Champion was wrong on two counts to make his claim – because Suarez sought to withdraw his arm to prevent the ball hitting it and used his own trademark celebration in innocence having scored. But ESPN risks removing the best from its commentators, including the highly respected Champion, by publicly rebuking them for their opinions.\nEven if Suarez had informed the referee Andre Marriner that he had handled, it would have made no difference because a free-kick could not have been awarded.\nYet Radford was incandescent. \"They [Liverpool] have denied us a replay,\" he said. \"I know that I'm big enough and daft enough to be able to stand up for the club and take it. [But] I'd like to take us forward. It's hurtful for the league we are in because we are playing at the likes of Luton and Grimsby and people like [Suarez] would [still do a thing like that]. I'm here for the passion, against Liverpool where it's all about business and that was a killer. It was a killer [that] a professional would do that sort of thing to a non-league team.\"\nIf Mansfield had secured a draw and taken Liverpool back to Anfield, they would have secured a £62,000 payout from ITV or ESPN, had the replay been televised. They would also have collected 45 per cent of net gate receipts. If they had actually beaten Liverpool and progressed they would have earned a further £67,500 in prize-money.\nRodgers insisted that the 25-year-old Suarez's talents should be embraced and savoured while he is plying his trade in England. \"He has had seven yellow cards this year, but he hasn't warranted all seven,\" Rodgers said. \"Yesterday was a game he was up for because it was street football for him, he enjoys that type of game. But I can only talk about his talents. I always try to educate the players, with regard to every aspect of their life. As I've said, he's very receptive, and we go forward with him.\"\nTHE HONESTY BOX\nWhile Suarez may not have owned up, we recount some examples of sportsmen who did admit their guilt…\nMiroslav Klose\nIn September 2012, Lazio striker Miroslav Klose scored from a corner to give his side an early lead against Napoli. After initially celebrating, the German confessed to the referee that he had knocked the ball in with his hand. The referee, who had initially given the goal, then gave a Napoli free-kick. Klose was not booked, instead receiving a handshake from the official and congratulations from Napoli players.\nRobbie Fowler\nIn March 1997, Liverpool forward Robbie Fowler won praise for asking referee Gerald Ashby not to allow a penalty given to his side in a Premier League match against Arsenal at Highbury. Despite Fowler telling Ashby he had not been fouled by Arsenal goalkeeper David Seaman, the decision was not reversed. Fowler took the penalty and Seaman saved it, only for Jason McAteer to follow up to score.\nAlthough Liverpool won 2-1, opposition manager Arsene Wenger said it was a \"great gesture\" by Fowler, who was later awarded a UEFA Fair Play award.\nThe Italian famously caught the ball after Everton goalkeeper Paul Gerrard injured himself as he rushed out of his box. As the ball was crossed Di Canio opted to catch the ball with the score at 0-0. His actions saw him awarded Fifa Fair Play award. Manager Harry Redknapp said at the time: \"I don't think I've ever seen anything quite like that before. It was genuine sportsmanship; it's nice to know that it does still exist in the game. We could have done with the three points but I won't be throttling Di Canio.\"\nArsenal vs Sheffield United 1998\nIn an FA Cup fifth round tie, Sheffield United kicked the ball out of play after an injury, with an Arsenal player throwing the ball back to. Striker Nwankwo Kanu misinterpreted and squared the ball for Marc Overmars, who scored to make it 2-1. After the game Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger offered a replay, which Arsenal won 2-1.\nJan Vertonghen\nVertonghen accidentally scored when trying to kick the ball back to the opposition after an injury against Cambuur Leeuwarden in a Dutch cup game in 2006. He lobbed the goalkeeper unintentionally, but Ajax graciously allowed Cambuur to score in return.\nGolf - Brian Davis\nBrian Davis called a foul shot violation on himself and conceded victory in a final play off at Verizon Heritage against Jim Furyk in April 2010. In search of his first PGA tour win, Davis’ wayward approach shot nestled in some weeds, and after trying to dig the ball out, he caused the ball to move. He admitted to this, and told officials to check slow motion replays for clarification.\nCricket - Adam Gilchrist\nThe former Australian wicket-keeper was known for his honesty at the crease, walking back to the pavilion when he was sure he had made contact with a ball caught by the opposition. Sometimes he did this contrary to the umpire's decision, for example in the 2003 World Cup semi-final against Sri Lanka. Gilchrist suffered harsh words from some teammates who wanted to 'win at all costs', but he did not change his stance.\nBy Sam Weaver and Richard Browne\nLiverpoolLiverpool FCLuis SuarezUruguay\n1/1Luis Suarez 'enjoyed' his handball goal, says Mansfield chairman\nao.com Discount Code\nUp to 25% off electricals & home appliance orders on the app: ao discount","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1537046"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8738905191421509,"wiki_prob":0.8738905191421509,"text":"Home » News » Multi-million pound Tempest funding set to advance the UK’s future Combat Air Capability\nMulti-million pound Tempest funding set to advance the UK’s future Combat Air Capability\nThe UK Ministry of Defence (MOD) has awarded a contract worth approximately £250m to progress the design and development of Tempest, the UK’s Future Combat Air System (FCAS). The contract, signed by BAE Systems, officially marks the start of the programme’s concept and assessment phase.\nThe programme is being delivered by Team Tempest, the combined expertise of MBDA UK, BAE Systems, Leonardo UK, Rolls-Royce and the UK MOD. Working with international partners, the team is leading progress towards a UK-led, internationally collaborative, Future Combat Air System that will ensure the Royal Air Force and its allies retain world-leading, independent military capability.\nThe concept and assessment phase contract will see the partners develop a range of digital concepts, embedding new tools and techniques to design, evaluate and shape the final design and capability requirements of Tempest.\nContinued funding of Tempest underlines the UK Government’s confidence in the progress and maturity of the programme, which is set to deliver the military, industrial and economic requirements of the national combat air strategy.\nBen Wallace, UK Secretary of State for Defence, said:\n“Today’s news is a momentous step towards designing and building a new combat air system which will boost our already world-leading industry and ultimately keep us safe for the rest of the century. The contract I’ve announced today spearheads a £2bn investment over four years and will see thousands of jobs sustained right across the UK.\n“We will now be getting to work with our partners to get the concept right and get this incredibly exciting and ambitious project off the ground. Make no mistake: we are remaining at the top table when it comes to combat air.”\nMike Mew, MBDA UK’s Director for Sales and Business Development, and the company’s senior responsible officer for Team Tempest, added:\n“The funding announced today is a critical milestone for the Tempest programme, and its future represent one of the most exciting periods in the history of our industry.\n“As the Effects Domain lead in Team Tempest our role is to fully optimise the FCAS to operate both existing & future weapons. This contract demonstrates the importance of addressing this during the earliest phases of development, and our bold transformation to a digital first approach is delivering a step change in the time, complexity and cost of weapon systems integration.\n“Together with our Team Tempest industry partners and the Ministry of Defence, this next phase will see us continue to transform the way we deliver, as well as define the technical and capability requirements to develop a concept that will bring Tempest to life.\n“We are on track to deliver an ambitious programme that will deliver a highly advanced and sophisticated air defence capability, capable of countering future threats and safeguarding national security and defence.\n“Not only that, the contract also means Tempest continues to offer an exciting opportunity to develop rewarding careers for the next generation of talent, and a chance for that generation to be part of something genuinely historic.”\nTempest will pioneer cutting-edge technologies, including those assisted by Artificial Intelligence, machine learning and autonomous systems to meet the capability requirements of future conflicts and be operational in the mid-2030s.\nThe design and production of Tempest demands a radically different approach and the Team Tempest partners are working with companies in their supply chain to drive digital transformation, embedding a digital enterprise through the ecosystem; embracing an agile approach that will deliver a combination of advanced technologies, efficiency, speed of production and lower costs.\nEconomic Contribution\nRecent research conducted by PwC underlines how the Tempest programme is expected to deliver significant and wide-ranging benefits to all regions of the UK, stimulating vital investment, productivity, skills and innovation. The programme will make an estimated £26.2bn contribution to the UK economy, create high productivity employment – 78% higher than the UK national average – and will support an average of 21,000 jobs a year.\nThe programme is able to stimulate R&D in regions most in need and generate wider economic benefits for these areas, with 70% of the programme’s value to be generated in the North West, South West and East of England. This means the Tempest programme is well placed to support the UK Government’s levelling up priorities and contribute to the UK’s economic recovery and prosperity in the decades ahead.\nRewarding careers\nAre you passionate about Tempest, the defence world and advanced technology? Would you like to develop your skills in a highly challenging environment? Do you want to work with dynamic people within an integrated international team? If so, find out more about MBDA UK’s rewarding careers here www.mbdacareers.co.uk/","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line358419"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9990870952606201,"wiki_prob":0.9990870952606201,"text":"Home / News / Economic Development / Organizers tout economic upside in World’s Fair bid\nFormer Minnesota Secretary of State Mark Ritchie, chair of the Expo 2023 advisory committee, on Friday formally announced a campaign to bring the World’s Fair to Minnesota. (Staff photo: Bill Klotz)\nBy: Karlee Weinmann\tApril 10, 2015 2:55 pm\nLois Quam\nHarry Melander\nThe committee hoping to bring the World’s Fair to Minnesota in 2023 officially announced its bid on Friday, touting the event as a long-term economic boon for the state.\nBy hosting the massive three-month event, expected to draw between 10 million and 15 million visitors in summer 2023, organizers said Minnesota would land in the global spotlight. But the impact would be bigger than the influx of tourism dollars, the business and local leaders said.\nThe Expo 2023 effort would put more momentum behind the state’s push to bill itself as a destination, organizers said, particularly to attract sought-after young professionals — a population seen as a huge value-add.\n“We all know Minnesota has been gaining national and international recognition on a number of fronts,” said Marilyn Carlson Nelson, co-chair of the Expo 2023 advisory committee and former chair and CEO of the Carlson Cos. “This is going to be a nice complement for that.”\nThe expo, which would push a theme of health and wellness, would provide a platform for Minnesota companies to reach a broader audience, potentially inviting new trading partners and investors from beyond the state’s borders.\n“I see trade and investment opportunities here having a very long tail,” said co-chair Lois Quam, singling out especially high potential for Minnesota companies that are already market leaders in the health, clean water and other industries. Quam, a former executive with Minnetonka-based UnitedHealth Group, is now chief operating officer of the Nature Conservancy.\nStill, big logistics questions loom as the $1.5 million bid process kicks into high gear.\nThe committee needs to find a site big enough to accommodate 62-acre plans for the fair that gives attendees relatively easy access to the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport and other attractions, including sites in greater Minnesota.\nThe North American High Speed Rail Group is a founding supporter of the effort, and the fair bid puts momentum on what would be a landmark infrastructure project to help streamline trips to Rochester, Duluth and other corners of the state, said Expo 2023 advisory committee chair Mark Ritchie, who previously served as Minnesota secretary of state.\nSite selection is expected to last into next year. So far, Ritchie said the committee has zeroed in on “quite a few opportunities” and will likely plant the event in the Twin Cities metro area.\nSpeaking at an event last year, Ritchie named Rosemount’s 5,000-acre UMore Park development site, the 125-acre former Ford Motor Co. facility in St. Paul and the 427-acre former Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant in Arden hills as potential candidates.\n“We are blessed here in the Twin Cities with lots of good possibilities,” Ritchie said on Friday, noting pushes from officials in Shakopee as well as Rochester, suggesting at least one outstate option.\nWhen organizers settle on a location, a private developer will build accommodations for visitors and presenters, a mix of countries and local outfits. That developer will hang onto the site for 100 years, Ritchie said.\nThe Minnesota Building and Construction Trades Council, an early supporter of the project, affirmed its involvement on Friday.\n“We were here early and we’re going to stay for the long haul,” said Harry Melander, the council’s president and a Metropolitan Council member.\nRitchie said it was too early to forecast how big a boost the fair would give to Minnesota’s construction industry and other sectors but said the lead-up to past world’s fairs has propped up local jobs numbers in a big way.\nDespite the prospect of front-loaded gains, though, past expos have sometimes proved a financial drain on their hosts. In 1984, the last time a fair took place in the United States, the Louisiana World Exposition declared bankruptcy before the event was over.\nWhile Ritchie said Expo 2023 isn’t trying to turn a major profit, business analysis from the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management predicts modest gains based on a $20-per-person entry fee and expected daily attendance on par with the State Fair’s figures.\nOrganizers aren’t expecting public funding for the project. So far, Ritchie said they’ve crowd-funded about two-thirds of the bid’s $1.5 million price tag and will look for new contributors of all sizes — mainly businesses with Minnesota ties – to bridge the gap.\nEven though private funding will propel the bid, public officials will play a pivotal role.\n“We’re not expecting public money but we need excellent cooperation from local governments,” Ritchie said.\nOrganizers expect to fine-tune the bid before the end of the year. The U.S. State Department will then pitch it to the selection committee in June 2016, with a decision expected in November of next year.\nExpo 2023 Louisiana World Exposition Metropolitan Council Minnesota Building and Construction Trades Council Nature Conservancy TCAAP Twin Cities Army Ammunition Plant U.S. State Department UMore Park UnitedHealth Group World’s Fair 2:55 pm Fri, April 10, 2015 Finance & Commerce","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line47195"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.53087317943573,"wiki_prob":0.46912682056427,"text":"Meghalaya govt to oppose citizenship amendment bill during parliamentary panel visit\nSHILLONG, May 8: The Meghalaya Democratic Allaince (MDA) government has decided to oppose the union government proposed citizenship amendment bill 2016.\nThe decision was arrived at during the Cabinet meeting held at the state secretariat on Tuesday.\nAddressing media persons soon after the meeting, State Deputy Chief Minister Prestone Tynsong said that after a detailed discussion the state government has decided to say a “Big No” to the proposed Citizenship Amendment Bill 2016.\nThe Bill aims at granting citizenship to presecuted Hindus, Parsis, Jains, Sikhs,Christians from Pakistan,Bangladesh and Afghanistan.\nThe State Government’s decision to oppose the Bill comes two days ahead of the Joint Parliamentary Committee.\nThe Joint Parliamentary Committee on the Citizenship (Amendment) Bill,2016 will be visiting Shillong on May 10 and 11.\nThe objective of the Joint Parliamentary Committee is to obtain feedback from the migrants, if any, belonging to religious minority communities of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh i.e Hindus, Sikhs, Buddhists, Jains, Parsis and Christians residing in the State of Meghalaya and other stakeholders in connection with the examination of ‘The Citizenship (Amendment) Bill 2016’.\nTynsong referred to two provisos of the drafted bill which the government said is flawed and will not serve the interest of the indigeneous people of the state.\n“We cannot accept the clause that entails to the granting of migrants getting citizenship after residing for six years. It is dangerous to our people and that is the main reason that we are saying no to the bill,” the Deputy Chief Minister said.\nHe also said that proper intimation will be officially made to the Committee during its sitting in Shillong.\nPrevious Around 200 houses affected by storm, power supply affected in Garo hills\nNext KHADC to revive the Boundary Dispute Committee\n1 thought on “Meghalaya govt to oppose citizenship amendment bill during parliamentary panel visit”\nJohn B says:\nA very good decision… As it is seen, this will just increase our states population and also cause unrest among various sections of society, and not to forget, there will also be some of those antisocials and antinationals to take a negative advantage of this bill.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1407561"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7886945605278015,"wiki_prob":0.7886945605278015,"text":"Iran nuclear talks to restart as US emphasizes it’s ‘prepared to use other options’ if diplomacy fails\nBy Nicole Gaouette, Kylie Atwood and Jennifer Hansler, CNN\nThe US and its allies restart Iran nuclear talks on Monday unsure how Tehran’s new government will approach negotiations, not optimistic about the prospects ahead and emphasizing that if diplomacy fails, the US is “prepared to use other options.”\nThe parties to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action will reconvene in Vienna after almost six months to discuss a mutual return to the deal by both the US and Iran, but the hiatus has given time for new obstacles to take root.\nOn Friday, Iran announced yet more advances in its uranium enrichment, which reduces the amount of time Tehran would need to develop a nuclear weapon, if it chooses to, an announcement clearly meant to give Iran leverage when it arrives in Vienna for talks.\nOther parties to the agreement — including Germany, the UK, Britain, France, China and Russia — are coming into the talks calling for negotiations to pick up where they left off. European sources tell CNN they expect the Iranians to treat the meeting as “round one.” US officials have expressed similar concerns.\nThe recently elected hardline government in Tehran will send a new set of negotiators to Vienna who have been emphasizing the need for complete US sanctions relief, not compliance with the deal, while US officials have said they have absolutely no plans to offer Iran incentives to talk.\n‘The time to choose is short’\nAnd senior US officials have repeatedly warned that if advances in Iran’s nuclear program and enrichment capability continue unabated, they could render the benefits of the JCPOA moot — a development that would force the US to pursue other options.\n“We are still hopeful that diplomacy can find a way,” Brett McGurk, the National Security Council’s coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa, told the Manama Dialogue organized by the International Institute for Strategic Studies. “But if it cannot find a way, we are prepared to use other options.”\n“There is no question, we are not going to allow Iran to get a nuclear weapon, period,” McGurk said. “And when it came to military force for behavior change, that is a pretty fuzzy objective for a military force. When it comes to military force to prevent a country from obtaining a nuclear weapon, that is a very achievable objective.”\nUS Special Envoy for Iran Rob Malley said in a tweet after a November 18 meeting with Middle Eastern allies and European parties to the deal that Iran could choose one of two paths: “continued nuclear escalation & crisis, or mutual return to the JCPOA, creating opportunities for regional economic & diplomatic ties.”\n“Time to choose is short,” Malley wrote.\nSources familiar with preparations for the talks say that the parties were closely watching International Atomic Energy Agency director Rafael Grossi’s visit to Tehran last week, seeing it as an indication of Iran’s approach to the talks in Vienna, those sources said. Grossi told the IAEA board afterward that the talks were “inconclusive.”\nOne of the contentious issues remaining is that Iran is refusing inspectors from the IAEA monitoring access to the Karaj centrifuge production facility, which reports suggest has resumed operations.\n“This is seriously affecting the [IAEA’s] ability to restore continuity of knowledge at the [Karaj] workshop, which has been widely recognized as essential in relation to a return to the JCPOA,” Grossi told a Board of Governors meeting on Wednesday.\nThe Arms Control Association noted that Iran’s refusal to allow the IAEA to install new cameras or confirm that production hasn’t restarted could undermine attempts to revitalize the JCPOA and its strict verification regime if it isn’t possibly to fully complete records of Iran’s nuclear program. Tehran’s refusal to grant access to Karaj also drives speculation and concern about what, exactly, Iran is doing, the ACA said.\n‘No choice’\nOn Thursday, the US Mission to International Organizations in Vienna told the IAEA meeting that “if Iran’s non-cooperation is not immediately remedied … especially the restoration of continuity of knowledge at Karaj, the Board will have no choice but to reconvene in extraordinary session before the end of this year in order to address the crisis.”\nMeanwhile, on Friday, Iran announced its stock of 60% enriched uranium has grown to 66 pounds (30 kilograms) and its amount of 20% enriched uranium had also increased. Both levels are much closer to weapons-grade uranium which is enriched above 90%.\nAccording to the Arms Control Association, enriching uranium to 20% “constitutes about 90 percent of the necessary work to enrich to weapons-grade.”\nAs Iran’s stockpiles grow, the ACA says, its breakout time, or the time it would take to produce enough uranium enriched to weapons-grade for one bomb, decreases. The ACA estimates that Iran’s current breakout time is likely about one month, down from 12 months when the JCPOA was fully implemented.\nEnrichment was limited under the JCPOA, which the US left unilaterally in May 2018 under former President Donald Trump. Iran restarted enrichment last year to pressure the US to ease sanctions.\n‘A very uncertain proposition’\nState Department spokesman Ned Price reflected the ambiguity surrounding the resumed talks on November 22, calling the mutual return to compliance with the JCPOA “a very uncertain proposition.”\nThe next day, Price told reporters in Washington that, “it is our hope that the new government in Iran shows up in Vienna and shows up in Vienna ready to negotiate in good faith to build on the progress that had been achieved in the previous six rounds of negotiations.”\nBut he added that the US has “been very clear that we are not prepared to take unilateral steps solely for the benefit of greasing the wheel” to get the talks going again. Former President Donald Trump pulled the US from the deal in 2018.\nSources familiar with the preparations for the talks have told CNN that the US and its allies are not at a point where they would begin offering Iran confidence building measures, but one official said there is a possibility the US and its allies could employ them down the road. As a result, incentives for Iran won’t be discussed at this week’s meetings in Vienna, where the US and allies will be focused on simply taking the temperature and seeking to advance from where they left off months ago, US and European sources explained.\n‘Plan B’\nEveryone involved in the talks is mindful of the ticking clock. The sources told CNN that there’s still time to reach a deal, but it would likely run out by the end of next year. For now, they said there is no hard and fast “Plan B” yet.\nCritics of the deal say that the Biden administration has sacrificed leverage by easing pressure on Iran while it builds up its nuclear program.\n“The Biden administration’s Iran policy is failing, and without a significant course correction that policy will either result in Iranian nuclear weapons or in a war to stop that development,” said Mark Dubowitz, the CEO of Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Dubowitz argued that the administration’s approach will allow Iran to rebuild toward a “lethal end state” of with pathways to nuclear weapons and a robust nuclear infrastructure.\n“Israel is going to have no choice but to use military force to stop Iran’s nuclear weapons before Tehran reaches this lethal end state,” Dubowitz said.\nIsraeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett has been making clear that Israel will be prepared to act if necessary. Addressing delegates at a security conference near Tel Aviv on Tuesday, Bennett said that “if there is a return to the JCPOA, Israel obviously is not a party to the agreement and is not obligated by it.”\nBennett complained that after the nuclear deal was signed in 2015, the “State of Israel simply went to sleep. We were occupied with other things. We will learn from this mistake. We will maintain our freedom of action,” he said.\nWestern officials have tried to argue to the Israelis that attacks on Israel’s nuclear program are not very useful when the overall goal is to come up with a comprehensive solution, and especially when the Iranians have sped up their capability to rebuild after attacks, sources familiar with the Iran talks have told CNN.\nWestern officials have also raised the danger of Iran responding with kinetic action, but sources familiar with the talks say Israeli officials still seem to think that it is still an effective tool to show their capabilities.\nAsked about those warnings, Price said that, “at the end of the day, the United States and Israel, we share a common objective here, and that is to see to it that Iran is verifiably and permanently prevented from obtaining a nuclear weapon. And we continue to believe that diplomacy in coordination with our allies and partners — and that, of course, includes Israel — is the best path to achieve that goal.”\n“We’ve also been very clear that this is not a process that can go on indefinitely and if the Iranians through their actions or through their inactions demonstrate or suggest that they lack that good faith, that they lack that clarity of purpose, we’ll have to turn to other means,” Price said Tuesday. “We have a variety of other means we’re discussing those with our allies and partners.”\nDiplomatic flurry\nIn recent weeks, US officials have conducted a flurry of diplomacy with regional powers and other parties to the deal, working to forge a united front.\nPresident Joe Biden met with European partners to discuss Iran during the June G7 meetings in the UK. In recent weeks, Secretary of State Antony Blinken has also conferred with European allies, as well as China and Russia, on Iran. And Malley recently met with Gulf countries, Israeli officials and European partners in the JCPOA.\n“I think the Iranians believe they have some eastward option with Russia and China in which they can circumvent the pressure of sanctions,” McGurk said on Sunday. “And that is just wrong. And so I think we are approaching the talks at the end of November as a pretty united front with the P5+1.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1614554"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6181702017784119,"wiki_prob":0.38182979822158813,"text":"Man's Chest Caught on Fire During Surgery—Here's How That Happens\nAs if open heart surgery isn't enough of a challenge.\nBy Christina Oehler Updated June 04, 2019\nUndergoing open heart surgery is a pretty big deal on its own. But one surgery patient faced an incredible and life-threatening complication while on the operating table: A fire broke out inside his chest cavity in the middle of the procedure.\nThe 60-year-old man, from Melbourne, Australia, went to the hospital for emergency surgery in 2018 to repair a tear in the inner layer of the wall of his aorta. The unusual case, which was presented over the weekend at the European Society of Anaesthesiology annual meeting, involved a patient with a medical history that was a bit more complicated than usual. He had a history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a lung disease that contributed to this rare accident.\nRELATED: 9 Subtle Signs You Could Have a Heart Problem\nSo how exactly did a fire break out in his chest? Because of his COPD, the man had air pockets in his lungs called bullae. During surgery, a doctor accidentally punctured the bullae, which caused air to leak from the lung. To prevent respiratory problems during surgery, doctors had increased the amount of oxygen in the patient’s anesthesia. A surgical tool the doctors were using emitted a spark—and the combination of this and the extra oxygen caused the dry surgical pack inside the patient’s chest to catch fire.\nRELATED: 8 Causes of Chest Pain That Aren't a Heart Attack\nIncredibly, the surgical team was not only able to extinguish the fire, but the patient made it out of his surgery successfully. What might be even more amazing, however, is that this isn't the first time a surgery patient's chest caught on fire. It's known to have happened six times before.\n\"While there are only a few documented cases of chest cavity fires—three involving thoracic surgery and three involving coronary bypass grafting—all have involved the presence of dry surgical packs, electrocautery, increased inspired oxygen concentrations, and patients with COPD or pre-existing lung disease,” Ruth Shaylor, MD, a doctor from Austin Health in Melbourne, where the fire took place, said in a press release from the annual meeting.\n\"This case highlights the continued need for fire training and prevention strategies and quick intervention to prevent injury whenever electrocautery is used in oxygen-enriched environments,” she stated. “In particular surgeons and anaesthetists need to be aware that fires can occur in the chest cavity if a lung is damaged or there is an air leak for any reason, and that patients with COPD are at increased risk.\"\nTo get our top stories delivered to your inbox, sign up for the Healthy Living newsletter","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line840812"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5673191547393799,"wiki_prob":0.5673191547393799,"text":"What does the public know about transparency and safeguards in the procurement & deployment of Digital Technology Systems in Africa?\nAFIC released its research report “Sunlight in Digital Technologies”. This report analyzes data gathered through triangulation from varied secondary and primary sources, using an exploratory research design combining a scoping review of grey and published literature with key informant interviews and a survey in Uganda, Liberia, and Nigeria to assess what the public knows about transparency and safeguards in the procurement and deployment of Digital Technology Systems in Africa.\nThe report finds that overall, only 38% of survey participants were knowledgeable about government purchase of at least one of the three technologies which include biometric, artificial intelligence, and facial recognition technologies. In addition, more Nigerians were knowledgeable about their government’s procurement of facial recognition (75%) and biometric technologies (73%) than Ugandans (20%) and Liberians (54%). Artificial intelligence was the least known of the three technologies perhaps because of its nature i.e., less visible than facial recognition technologies which are on the streets, in offices and banks, or biometric technologies that are used during electioneering.\nThe Report also explored the purpose for which governments procure the Digital Technology Systems across the three countries. Specifically, these technologies help government Ministries, Departments, and Agencies to deliver their statutory service delivery mandates while in some, they may support other purposes related to security other than the core purposes they were procured. Across the three countries, biometric machines, CCTV cameras, voter verification kits, and facial recognition systems have been procured for registration for citizens’ NINs, voter registration, and support in the management of elections.\nThe report further discovered that in all three countries, different government MDAs were procuring Digital Technology Systems. However, MDAs in the security sector and those whose functions depend on having accurate information about citizens (for instance, Electoral Commission) procured these technologies more than others. Fewer MDAs in Liberia procured and deployed DTS than in Nigeria and Uganda. The primary sources of funding for DTS procurement across the three countries are the national budgets (annual tax revenue). For example, in some of the agencies that participated in this study in Uganda, government funding for DTS constituted over 75% of the total cost, while donors contributed only 25%. The government financed the purchase of hardware while donors raised funds for software.\nIt was also clear all three countries are yet to establish institutions that will facilitate the protection of data collected through Digital Technology Systems. However, this report acknowledges that there have been efforts by all three countries to put in place institutions that oversee government digital platforms:\nIn Uganda, the National Information Technology Authority-Uganda (NITA-U) is expected to offer guidance to agencies to develop institutional data protection mechanisms, and in Nigeria, government is in the process of creating a central database linking the National Identification Numbers (NIN) with all data collected by government agencies and the private sector such as the sim cards, international passports, and Bank Verification Numbers (BVN). Furthermore, the National Assembly is reviewing the Data Protection Bill, which will create the Office of the Independent Data Protection Commissioner. These efforts are aimed at stemming misuse and abuse of personal data by criminals and third parties due to proliferation of databases with information on citizens.\nSanctions for data misuse were embedded in various laws and policies as reported by participants from Nigeria, Uganda and Liberia. However, participants from Nigeria and Liberia emphasized sanctions other than those from Uganda and Liberia. In Nigeria, laws have sanctions that strengthen proper use of data. Hence, although ostensibly procured to ensure efficient service delivery, promote safety, security, citizenship and democracy, evidence suggests that DTS are sometimes deployed against the grain of these ideals when they are used by security agencies to crack down on opposition politicians, especially in Uganda. Interviews with participants from civil society organizations in Uganda raised concerns on abuse or misuse of DTS, particularly CCTV cameras and the FinFisher spyware. They argue that these technology platforms were acquired primarily to enable state surveillance of opposition figures in order to silence dissenting voices.\nThis report seeks clarity on the extent to which the Digital Technology Systems are supported by prevailing legal and policy frameworks without specific laws governing their procurement and deployment. While there are no special laws to guide the procurement of DTS in all the countries, less than one percent of the value of contracts for DTSs is disclosed, increasing the risk for corruption and inefficiency in the tendering and procurement of DTSs across the three countries. With a lack of disclosure, it is difficult for data users in the public, private and voluntary sectors to meaningfully contribute to the improvement of performance and governance of DTS procurements.\nTogether with Partners, AFIC recommends that:\nData protection laws and policies in respective countries should be enacted and strictly enforced to protect citizens from unwarranted manipulation for commercial and political advertising.\nData holding public and private agencies should publish annual transparency reports regarding the release to third parties data collected using DTSs. Governments should also strengthen existing laws to ensure proper usage and protection of individual data that are collected through DTS. In line with this, the public should be sensitized on such laws so that in case of abuse they can seek justice.\nCivil society organizations should take interest and monitor the regulation and compliance of data holders the protection of personal information and privacy.\nAFIC and Partners conducted this study; PPDC and CEMESP, with support from the Omidyar Network. The Report is available on AFIC’s website in English.\nAccess to Information, Open Contracting","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line700713"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5992820858955383,"wiki_prob":0.40071791410446167,"text":"Rio Holaday\nRio Holaday has always wanted to know what makes people tick, and she uses facilitation, graphic recording, and hard conversations to find out. She has a strong grounding in social justice and public health, and is currently a Culture of Health Leader with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.\nRio’s graphic recording practice involves listening, synthesizing, and documenting conversations live and large-scale using images and words. She centers social justice and racial equity in her practice, and constantly asks how graphic practitioners can normalize oppressed stories and stop using visuals that perpetuate stereotypes.\nRio was formerly the Director of HOPE Collaborative and a Senior Policy Analyst at ChangeLab Solutions, both in Oakland. She co-founded Rebel Ventures, a social enterprise that works with high school students to make healthy snacks to sell in corner stores and schools, and conducted research on food access in Philadelphia. Rio is a former Fulbright Scholar and worked in refugee resettlement in Vermont. She received her MPH from the University of Pennsylvania, a master’s degree in Forced Migration from the University of the Witwatersrand, and bachelor’s degree from Wesleyan University.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1726061"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8524219393730164,"wiki_prob":0.8524219393730164,"text":"The 40 Day and 40 Night Challenge: A Blueprint for National Survival\nGage Skidmore / Wikimedia Commons\nAre you ready to take the 40-Day and 40-Night Challenge? Our nation's survival may be at stake.\nHere is the blueprint:\nGlenn Beck: Why is Pelosi REFUSING to release Jan. 6 Capitol Police information?\nRep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.) recently sent a fiery letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi demanding she stop obstructing GOP efforts to investigate security measures taken before and on January 6, 2021.\nOn \"The Glenn Beck Program,\" Rep. Davis said the Capitol Police should release all communications concerning security from that day, but the police chief can’t do so without an \"okay\" from the House sergeant at arms — a Pelosi appointee. Americans deserve to know why the Capitol’s security posture was so bad that day, so we can be sure it won’t happen again, but unfortunately, Rep. Davis told Glenn, that may not occur until Republicans take the House majority back.\n\"Republicans condemn the violence that took place a year ago. That was unanimous,\" Davis said. \"But here we are today still left wondering, what did the sergeant at arms of the House — the lead law enforcement official appointed directly by the speaker — what did he do in preparation leading up to January 6? There's been conflicting testimony, and all I've ever asked for, as the lead Republican on the respective oversight committee, is just to get the communications. We want to know what preparations were made, and the only person standing in the way of us getting the communications from her own appointee, who controls the House security operations, is Speaker Pelosi,\" he added.\n\"Unfortunately, the House is a very majority-driven institution. And remember, the Capitol Police chief cannot make a single security decision without going to Speaker Pelosi's appointed sergeant at arms. That's her own political appointee,\" Davis continued. \"So, you know when I'm going to get this information? It's when I'm the chairman of the House Administration Committee when Republicans take over Congress in November of 2022.\"\nWatch the video clip below to catch more of the conversation:","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line471560"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5863351225852966,"wiki_prob":0.41366487741470337,"text":"The Majority Of Young Adults Have Moved Back In With Their Parents Due To The Pandemic\nby Leah Groth September 5, 2020\n10'000 Hours/Getty Images\nThe last time this many young adults were living with their parents was during the Great Depression\nThe coronavirus pandemic has undeniably changed the dynamics of society. When the nation’s shutdown started in mid-March and the majority of the country was advised to shelter in place, many young adults headed home to stay with mom and dad to ride out the pandemic. In fact, according to a new poll, over half of young adults between the ages of 18 and 29 are currently living at home with their parents — the most since the Great Depression.\nDuring the month of July, the majority of young Americans — 52 percent of them — were living with one or both of their parents, according to a Pew Research Center poll published on Friday. Compared against monthly Census Bureau data from years before, this is higher than any previous measurement.\n“Before 2020, the highest measured value was in the 1940 census at the end of the Great Depression, when 48 percent of young adults lived with their parents,” the report states. “The peak may have been higher during the worst of the Great Depression in the 1930s, but there is no data for that period.”\nTo put this in perspective, from February — shortly before the shelter-in-place orders were administered in most of the country — until July, an additional 2.6 million young adults were living with mom and pops. Those on the younger end of the young adult spectrum (18 to 24) as well as white young adults experienced the sharpest growth.\n“The number and share of young adults living with their parents grew across the board for all major racial and ethnic groups, men and women, and metropolitan and rural residents, as well as in all four main census regions,” Pew says.\nSurprisingly, the racial and ethnic gap from previous years seems to be closing in when it comes to cohabitation with parents.\n“In past decades, white young adults have been less likely than their Asian, Black and Hispanic counterparts to live with their parents. That gap has narrowed since February as the number of white young adults living with their mothers and/or fathers grew more than for other racial and ethnic groups,” the report states.\nThe survey found that young adults “have been particularly hard hit by this year’s pandemic and economic downturn, and have been more likely to move than other age groups.” In fact, approximately one-in-ten (9 percent) surveyed revealed that they had temporarily or permanently relocated due to the coronavirus outbreak, and 10 percent had another person move into their household. Twenty-three percent of young adults who moved attributed it to their college campus closing. However, 18 percent revealed that it was due to job loss or other financial reasons. The report also points out that this age group is more likely than other age groups to experience unemployment or a pay cut as a result of the pandemic.\nInformation about COVID-19 is rapidly changing, and Scary Mommy is committed to providing the most recent data in our coverage. With news being updated so frequently, some of the information in this story may have changed after publication. For this reason, we are encouraging readers to use online resources from local public health departments, the Centers for Disease Control, and the World Health Organization to remain as informed as possible.\nBack to Coronavirus","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1763300"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9768519997596741,"wiki_prob":0.9768519997596741,"text":"https://apnews.com/article/mlb-sports-chicago-chicago-white-sox-st-louis-cardinals-720a5ab85e4e84436080a18fddf43efd\nRobert, Lopez lift White Sox over eliminated Reds 7-1\nBy MARK GONZALESSeptember 29, 2021 GMT\nChicago White Sox's Leury Garcia (28) slides into home plate while being tagged out by Cincinnati Reds catcher Tucker Barnhart right, while trying for an inside the park home run during the fourth inning of a baseball game Tuesday, Sept. 28, 2021, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Paul Beaty)\nCHICAGO (AP) — Luis Robert homered twice, Reynaldo Lopez pitched two-hit ball over a season-high six innings and the Chicago White Sox beat Cincinnati 7-1 Tuesday night as the Reds were eliminated from postseason contention.\nThe Reds (82-76) had won four straight but were knocked out of the NL playoff hunt mid-game when the St. Louis Cardinals beat Milwaukee to lock up the second wild card.\n“Tip your cap to the Cardinals,” Reds manager David Bell said after St. Louis won its franchise-record 17th straight game. “It’s pretty amazing what they’re doing now.”\nThe White Sox (90-68), who clinched the AL Central last Thursday, have won three straight. They remain 2 1/2 games behind Houston for home-field advantage in the first round of the AL Division Series.\nRobert paced a four-homer attack, marking the 12th time the White Sox have hit at least four home runs in a game and tying a franchise record set in 2006. They have hit at least four homers in a game 10 times since June 30.\nRobert has hit 11 home runs in 39 games since returning from the injured list Aug. 9. He hit a solo shot in the first off Riley O’Brien (0-1), who was making his major league debut. Robert added a two-run shot in the eighth off Amir Garrett.\n“He’s got his ego in check,” White Sox manager Tony La Russa said. “It gives him a chance to be very good for a long time.”\nYoan Moncada and Gavin Sheets also homered for the White Sox. Sheets, who connected off Luis Cessa in the fourth, added an RBI single during a two-run sixth.\nLopez (4-3) didn’t walk a batter and hasn’t issued a walk over his last 11 1/3 innings. After allowing a single to Joey Votto to start the second, Lopez retired his next 10 batters.\nThis was Lopez’s longest outing since he pitched eight innings in a 7-1 win over Detroit in the first game of a doubleheader on Sept. 28, 2019.\nLopez believes he has pitched well enough to earn a spot on the playoff roster, which will be discussed Friday.\n“That’s something that’s not in my hands,” Lopez said. “I’m doing all they’re asking me to do.”\nEugenio Suarez ended Lopez’s shutout bid with his 30th homer with one out in the fifth. Suarez joined teammates Votto and Nick Castellanos in the 30-homer club. This marked the fifth time in franchise history that a trio of Reds have hit at least 30 homers in a season.\nO’Brien, who was 7-7 with a 4.55 ERA in 23 games at Triple-A Louisville, started in place of Luis Castillo, who is on the family medical emergency list.\n“My mechanics weren’t too crisp and could have been better,” said O’Brien, who said he pitched in front of 40 family members and friends.\nABREU’S ARGUMENT\nWhite Sox slugger Jose Abreu said he took exception to Detroit reliever Alex Lange’s chirping that led to a benches-clearing incident in Monday’s 8-7 win.\n“Even when he hit me, he didn’t apologize or say anything,” Abreu said. “And that’s fine. But then I slid into second base and he started chirping, that’s not good, you don’t do that.”\nReds: To make room for O’Brien, LHP Cionel Perez was optioned to Triple-A Louisville.\nReds: None of the six players on Cincinnati’s 10-day injured list will return this season, Bell said.\nWhite Sox: OF Adam Engel (leg soreness) is expected to start Wednesday night. Engel hasn’t played since Aug. 23. ... RHP Ryan Tepera (cut finger) threw a bullpen session with the hope he can pitch this weekend, La Russa said.\nRHP Sonny Gray (7-8, 3.99) will oppose the White Sox on Wednesday night. Gray is 4-0 with a 2.93 ERA lifetime in seven career starts against Chicago.\nLHP Carlos Rodon (12-5, 2.47) will face the Reds. Rodon is 4-0 with a 2.35 in his last five starts but has pitched only once since Sept. 10 due to left shoulder fatigue.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1459252"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9602895975112915,"wiki_prob":0.9602895975112915,"text":"Khashoggi murder: Probe blames Saudi Arabia for 'premeditated execution' of journalist\nSaudi Arabian journalist Jamal Khashoggi was the victim of a \"deliberate, premeditated execution,\" a United Nations special rapporteur has concluded in the first independent investigation into his death.\nIn a much anticipated report, released Wednesday, UN extrajudicial executions investigator Agnes Callamard said that Saudi Arabia was responsible under international law for Khashoggi's \"extrajudicial killing.\"\nA prominent writer and Washington Post columnist, Khashoggi died after entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018. While Riyadh initially denied any knowledge of the incident, Saudi officials later claimed that a group of rogue operators, many of whom belong to Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's inner circle, were responsible for the journalist's death .\nThe Saudi attorney general later acknowledged that Khashoggi was killed in a premeditated murder.\nThe special rapporteur does not make any conclusions on the guilt of the Saudi Crown Prince and King. Instead, Callamard says that there is \"credible evidence meriting further investigation by a proper authority\" as to whether the \"threshold of criminal responsibility has been met.\"\nShe goes on to say that Khashoggi was \"fully aware of the powers held by the Crown Prince\" and had expressed fears about what would happen to him if he returned to the kingdom.\nCNN has reached out to the Saudi government for a response to Wednesday's report.\nRiyadh has maintained that neither bin Salman nor King Salman knew of the operation to target Khashoggi. US officials, however, have said such a mission -- including 15 men sent from Riyadh -- could not have been carried out without the authorization of bin Salman.\nAccording to the report -- which cites evidence from Turkish and other intelligence agencies -- after entering the consulate, Khashoggi was injected with a sedative and then his head put inside a plastic bag and suffocated.\nIt quotes an audio recording from inside the consulate, in which Khashoggi is heard being told he will be taken to Saudi Arabia.\n\"We will have to take you back. There is an order from Interpol,\" a Saudi man tells the journalist, who replies that \"there isn't a case against me\" and warns them that people are waiting for him outside the consulate.\nThe men instruct Khashoggi to write a text message to his son, and argue over what he should say before a voice says \"Cut it short.\"\n\"There is a towel here. Are you going to give me drugs?\" Khashoggi asks.\n\"We will anesthetize you,\" a man responds.\nA struggle can then be heard, after which a man asks whether Khashoggi has passed out.\n\"He raises his head.\"\n\"Keep pushing.\"\n\"Push here; don't remove your hand; push it.\"\nIt has previously been reported that after Khashoggi was killed his body was dismembered and removed from the consulate in separate bags. It has not been found.\nThe special rapporteur found credible evidence pointing to the crime scenes having been \"thoroughly, even forensically, cleaned\" -- indicating that the Saudi investigation was \"not conducted in good faith, and that it may amount to obstructing justice.\"\nRepercussions for Riyadh\nKhashoggi's killing and the continued fallout from it has caused a diplomatic crisis for Riyadh , ruining Saudi Arabia's already shaky international reputation and leading many allies to distance themselves from bin Salman.\nWhile US President Donald Trump has shied away from taking a hard line against bin Salman, wishing to retain Riyadh's support in pressuring Iran and flow of money for arms sales, other American politicians have sought to punish the Saudis.\nWeeks after the killing, top US officials called for a ceasefire in the Saudi-led but US-supported war in Yemen, and Congress has voted to end US involvement in that conflict entirely -- though Trump vetoed that motion .\nBin Salman's \" Davos in the Desert \" summit weeks after the Khashoggi killing was a failure after many high profile guests pulled out, and investment in the Kingdom has also suffered since Khashoggi's killing, at a time when the Crown Prince is desperately trying to get foreign backing for his Vision 2030 plan.\nWashington has also eased up on Saudi rival Qatar, after initially backing Riyadh's attempts to blockade its fellow Gulf monarchy.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1043784"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5845192074775696,"wiki_prob":0.4154807925224304,"text":"Here's the \"official\" biography\nNorm Strauss is a concert/recording artist who has toured extensively in Canada, Europe and parts of the USA. He has recorded 15 full-length solo recording projects and appeared on eight compilation and live compilation projects released both here in Canada and Europe. Norm has written hundreds of songs some which have been published internationally and recorded by numerous artists around the world. His concerts have been described a ‘journey of the heart’ accompanied by world class finger-style guitar, vocal and story telling.\nNorm is also a seminar speaker and record producer and has a touring schedule that takes him all over the place. If you are not familiar with Norm's brand of eclectic roots/americana/blues style music you owe it to yourself to listen in to the conversation.\nCanadian born singer-songwriter Norm Strauss is known for world-class songwriting, storytelling and guitar playing. Always thoughtful, always authentic, his career spans almost 30 years and he is a masterful performer. He has gained rave reviews in every coffeehouse, festival, theatre and folk club that he has played and is always asked to return to those same venues. He maintains a touring schedule of roughly 110 concerts per year across Canada and Western Europe and his performances have been described by newspapers and concert reviewers as 'A journey of the heart' (Cochrane folk Club) and 'Masterful with Pure Emotion.' (Max 30 Klub, Augsburg).\nIf you like authentic music, delivered masterfully with humor and heart, you owe it to yourself to experience this world class artist live and in concert.\n\"A true, full blooded musician from head to toe.\" Stefanie Kloss The Voice of Germany\nMasterful Musicianship. Wonderful songwriting!-Gilli Moon songs alive Los Angeles\nYou will see how spiritual music can be! -Pep Estrada Vamp Club Palma Mallorca\nThis is the 'unofficial version'.\nDon't read this if you have attention deficit.\nI was born in Prince Rupert BC and grew up mostly in the northern towns of British Columbia like Vanderhoof, Williams Lake.... Places you would have a hard time finding if you didn't know where they were. I come from a very musical family. In fact, unless you played an instrument or sang you wouldn't even be considered for the part.\nI played as a drummer in various rock bands through high school but never thought of myself in the role of a singer/songwriter. I never even played guitar back then. That came after high school when I was working in the timber camps of central BC. In the winters we would be stationed in logging camps deep in the forests about 150 km from the nearest town. I picked up guitar then for the first time because I had nothing else to do in the evenings.\nThat was how it all started. 21 years old sitting in my bunkroom with the smell of pine sawdust and chainsaw oil in my nose and the sounds of James Taylor, Mark heard and Paul Simon in my ears (via my cassette player.) I would try to figure out what they were doing and try to mimic the picking on my $400 Yamaha acoustic. I spent almost 3 years doing that.\nI started writing songs soon after when I moved down to Kelowna to explore the 'big city'. I was amazed when people would actually sit through the songs. Eventually I recorded my first project (for the tidy sum of $150.00 on Malcolm Petch's home stereo system). Malcolm had figured out how to bounce tracks between two cassettes and thereby create multi-tracking. I sold 500 copies that summer and was introduced into the world of making music to pay rent. I have been doing more or less the same thing since then.\nI have been happily married now for 30 years. My wife is a best selling author of murder mysteries. You can see her stuff at www.leestraussbooks.com. We have 4 kids all grown up now. We divide our time between Dresden, Germany. Mexico and Germany.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line179216"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6483033895492554,"wiki_prob":0.35169661045074463,"text":"Greek Esther\nDaniel Greek\nThe Flood\n1The LORD said to Noah, “Go into the boat with your whole family; I have found that you are the only one in all the world who does what is right. 2Take with you seven pairs of each kind of ritually clean animal, but only one pair of each kind of unclean animal. 3Take also seven pairs of each kind of bird. Do this so that every kind of animal and bird will be kept alive to reproduce again on the earth. 4Seven days from now I am going to send rain that will fall for forty days and nights, in order to destroy all the living beings that I have made.” 5And Noah did everything that the LORD commanded.\n6Noah was 600 years old when the flood came on the earth. 7#Mt 24.38–39; Lk 17.27He and his wife, and his sons and their wives, went into the boat to escape the flood. 8A male and a female of every kind of animal and bird, whether ritually clean or unclean, 9went into the boat with Noah, as God had commanded. 10Seven days later the flood came.\n11 # 2 Pet 3.6 When Noah was 600 years old, on the seventeenth day of the second month all the outlets of the vast body of water beneath the earth burst open, all the floodgates of the sky were opened, 12and rain fell on the earth for forty days and nights. 13On that same day Noah and his wife went into the boat with their three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth, and their wives. 14With them went every kind of animal, domestic and wild, large and small, and every kind of bird. 15A male and a female of each kind of living being went into the boat with Noah, 16as God had commanded. Then the LORD shut the door behind Noah.\n17The flood continued for forty days, and the water became deep enough for the boat to float. 18The water became deeper, and the boat drifted on the surface. 19It became so deep that it covered the highest mountains; 20it went on rising until it was about seven metres above the tops of the mountains. 21Every living being on the earth died — every bird, every animal, and every person. 22Everything on earth that breathed died. 23The LORD destroyed all living beings on the earth — human beings, animals, and birds. The only ones left were Noah and those who were with him in the boat. 24The water did not start going down for 150 days.\nGood News Bible with Deuterocanonicals/Apocrypha. Scripture taken from the Good News Bible (r) (Today's English Version Second Edition, UK/British Edition). Copyright © 1992 British & Foreign Bible Society. Used by permission.\n1Yahweh said to Noah, “Come with all of your household into the ship, for I have seen your righteousness before me in this generation. 2You shall take seven pairs of every clean animal with you, the male and his female. Of the animals that are not clean, take two, the male and his female. 3Also of the birds of the sky, seven and seven, male and female, to keep seed alive on the surface of all the earth. 4In seven days, I will cause it to rain on the earth for forty days and forty nights. I will destroy every living thing that I have made from the surface of the ground.”\n5Noah did everything that Yahweh commanded him.\n6Noah was six hundred years old when the flood of waters came on the earth. 7Noah went into the ship with his sons, his wife, and his sons’ wives, because of the floodwaters. 8Clean animals, unclean animals, birds, and everything that creeps on the ground 9went by pairs to Noah into the ship, male and female, as God commanded Noah. 10After the seven days, the floodwaters came on the earth. 11In the six hundredth year of Noah’s life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month, on the same day all the fountains of the great deep were burst open, and the sky’s windows were opened. 12It rained on the earth forty days and forty nights.\n13In the same day Noah, and Shem, Ham, and Japheth—the sons of Noah—and Noah’s wife and the three wives of his sons with them, entered into the ship— 14they, and every animal after its kind, all the livestock after their kind, every creeping thing that creeps on the earth after its kind, and every bird after its kind, every bird of every sort. 15Pairs from all flesh with the breath of life in them went into the ship to Noah. 16Those who went in, went in male and female of all flesh, as God commanded him; then Yahweh shut him in. 17The flood was forty days on the earth. The waters increased, and lifted up the ship, and it was lifted up above the earth. 18The waters rose, and increased greatly on the earth; and the ship floated on the surface of the waters. 19The waters rose very high on the earth. All the high mountains that were under the whole sky were covered. 20The waters rose fifteen cubits#A cubit is the length from the tip of the middle finger to the elbow on a man’s arm, or about 18 inches or 46 centimeters. higher, and the mountains were covered. 21All flesh died that moved on the earth, including birds, livestock, animals, every creeping thing that creeps on the earth, and every man. 22All on the dry land, in whose nostrils was the breath of the spirit of life, died. 23Every living thing was destroyed that was on the surface of the ground, including man, livestock, creeping things, and birds of the sky. They were destroyed from the earth. Only Noah was left, and those who were with him in the ship. 24The waters flooded the earth one hundred fifty days.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1690208"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9361660480499268,"wiki_prob":0.9361660480499268,"text":"Born: 13 September 1903\nOld Time Radio, Saint-Mandé, France\nDied: 30 July 1996, Speightstown, Barbados\nAn American actress, and a leading lady for two decades. Colbert began her career in Broadway productions during the 1920s, progressing to film with the advent of talking pictures. Initially associated with Paramount Pictures, later gradually Colbert shifted to a freelance actor. She won the Academy Award for Best Actress in It Happened One Night (1934), and also received Academy Award nominations in Private Worlds (1935) and Since You Went Away (1944).\nÉmilie \"Lily\" Chauchoin (pronounced “show-shwan”) was born in Saint-Mandé (an eastern suburb of Paris), France, to Georges Claude Chauchoin (1867-1925) and Jeanne Marie (née Loew, 1877-1970). Despite being christened \"Emilie\", she was called \"Lily\", because she had a aunt living with her. The aunt was her maternal grandmother's adopted child, Emilie Loew (1878-1954), who wasn't a blood relative, worked as a dressmaker, and never married. Colbert's nickname \"Lily\" came from Jersey-born actress Lillie Langtry. Jeanne Chauchoin and Colbert's grandmother Marie Augustine Loew (1842-1930) were born in the Channel Islands in the British Isles, and they were already fluent English speakers before coming to the U.S., though French was spoken in the family circle. Colbert's brother, Charles Auguste Chauchoin (1898–1971), was also born in Jersey. Jeanne held various occupations. While Georges Chauchoin had lost the sight in his right eye and hadn't settled into a profession, he was a pastry-shop owner in Paris and also worked in banking business but made some inappropriate investments. Marie Loew had already been to the U.S., and Georges' brother-in-law (surname Vedel) was already living in New York City. Marie was willing to help Georges financially but also encouraged him to try his luck in the U.S. After suffering business setbacks, in order to pursue more employment opportunities, her family including Marie and Emilie Loew emigrated into Manhattan in 1906. They lived in a fifth floor walk-up at 53rd Street. Colbert stated that climbing those stairs to the fifth floor every day until 1922 made her legs beautiful. Her parents formally changed her real name to Lily Emilie Chauchoin. Georges Chauchoin worked as a minor official at First National City Bank. She quickly learned English from her grandmother Marie Loew before entering public school and remained fluent in French. Colbert hoped to become a painter since she could grasp a pencil. In 1912 her family was naturalized in the U.S. Jeanne clearly favored her son Charles Chauchoin than her daughter.\nColbert studied at Washington Irving High School having strong art program, where her speech teacher, Alice Rossetter, encouraged her to audition for a play Rossetter had written. In 1919, Colbert made her stage debut at the Province town Playhouse in The Widow's Veil at the age of 15. However, Colbert’s interest in the arts was still towards painting.\nIntending to become a fashion designer, she attended the Art Students League of New York, where she paid for her art education by working as a dress shop employee. After attending a party with the writer Anne Morrison, Colbert was offered a bit part in Morrison's play and appeared on the Broadway stage in a small role in The Wild Westcotts (1923). Influenced by her father's middle name Claude, she had been using the name Claudette instead of her first name Lily since high school, and for her stage name she added her maternal grandmother's maiden name Colbert. She formally changed her real name to Lily Claudette Chauchoin. Her father Georges died in 1925 and her grandmother Marie Loew died in New York in 1930.\nAfter signing a five-year contract with the producer Al Woods, Colbert played ingenue roles on Broadway from 1925 through 1929. During this periods, she disliked being typecast as French maid. Colbert later said, \"In the very beginning, they wanted to give me French roles … That’s why I used to say my name Col-bert just as it is spelled instead of Col-baire. I did not want to be typed as ‘that French girl’\". She received critical acclaim on Broadway in the production of The Barker (1927) as a carnival snake charmer. She reprised this role for the play's run in London's West End. Colbert was noticed by the theatrical producer Leland Hayward, who suggested her for heroine role in a silent film For the Love of Mike (1927), now believed to be lost. The film didn't fare well at the box office.\nIn 1928 Colbert signed a contract with Paramount Pictures, who were looking for stage actors who could handle dialog in the new \"talkies\" medium. Colbert's skill as speaker was one of her best assets. At first, Colbert didn't like film acting. During production of the 1929 film, The Lady Lies, she was appearing nightly in the play See Naples and Die. Her earliest films were produced in New York. In 1930 she starred opposite Maurice Chevalier in The Big Pond, which was filmed in both English and French. She co-starred withFredric March in Manslaughter (1930), which was critically acclaimed for her acting as a vehicular manslaughter. She was paired with March in four productions, including Honor Among Lovers (1931) with Ginger Rogers. While these films were box office successes, she also starred in Mysterious Mr. Parkes (1931), which was a French-language version of Slightly Scarlet for the European market, although it was also screened in the United States. She sang opposite Maurice Chevalier in the Ernst Lubitsch musical The Smiling Lieutenant (1931), which was a box office success and critically acclaimed for her ability to shrewdly play a character role opposite Miriam Hopkins. Also her musical voice was featured in the 1933 film Torch Singer, which co-starring Ricardo Cortez and David Manners.\nColbert landed her famous role as a femme fatale in Cecil B. DeMille's films where she wore fetishistic costumes which lose layer after layer of clothing. In the 1932 historical epic, The Sign of the Cross, she starred opposite Fredric March as the Roman empress Poppaea. For an instant, glimpses of her bare breasts and nipples were visible in a scene where her character was bathing in asses' milk, a scene that came to be regarded as an example of Hollywood decadence prior to the enforcement of the Production Code. In 1933, Colbert renegotiated her contract with Paramount to allow her to appear in films for other studios. In Cleopatra (1934), she played the title role opposite Warren William and Henry Wilcoxon. Thereafter, Colbert did not wish to be portrayed as overtly sexual and later refused such roles.\nColbert was reluctant to appear as the \"runaway heiress,\" Ellie Andrews, in the Frank Capra romantic comedy, It Happened One Night (1934), oppositeClark Gable and released by Columbia Pictures. Running behind schedule after several actresses had refused the role, the studio accepted Colbert's demand that she be paid $50,000 and that filming was to be completed within four weeks to allow her to take a planned vacation. Through the filming, Colbert felt that the script was weak, and Capra claimed Colbert \"had many little tantrums, motivated by her antipathy toward me;\" however, \"she was wonderful in the part.\" After filming was completed, Colbert complained to her friend, \"I just finished the worst picture in the world.\" Capra fretted that the film was released to indifferent reviews and initially only did so-so business. Then after it was released to secondary movie houses, word-of-mouth began to spread and ticket sales became brisk. It turned out to be a major hit, easily Columbia's biggest hit to the 1980s. The film contained at least one scene that is often cited as representative of the screwball film genre and which became well known, being a resounding box-office success. In 1935, after her Academy Award nomination, Colbert decided not to attend the presentation, feeling confident that she would not win the award and instead, planned to take a cross-country railroad trip. After she was named the winner, studio chief Harry Cohn sent someone to \"drag her off\" the train, which had not yet left the station, and take her to the ceremony. Colbert arrived wearing a two-piece traveling suit which she had the Paramount Pictures costume designer, Travis Banton, make for her trip.\nWidespread recognition\nColbert's success allowed her to renegotiate her contract, raising her salary. In 1935 and 1936, she was listed in the annual \"Quigley Poll of the Top Ten Money Making Stars\", which was compiled from the votes of movie exhibitors throughout the U.S. for the stars who had generated the most revenue in their theaters over the previous year. Then she received an Academy Award nomination for her role in the hospital drama, Private Worlds (1935).\nIn 1936, Colbert signed a new contract with Paramount Pictures, and this contract made her Hollywood's highest paid actress. This was followed by a contract renewal in 1938, after which she was reported to be the best-paid star in Hollywood with a salary of $426,924. At the peak of her popularity in the late 1930s, Colbert earned $150,000 a film. Colbert spent the rest of the 1930s deftly alternating between romantic comedies and dramas, and found success in both: She Married Her Boss (1935), with Melvyn Douglas; The Gilded Lily (1935) and The Bride Comes Home (1935), both with Fred MacMurray; Under Two Flags (1936), with Ronald Colman; Zaza (1939), with Herbert Marshall; Midnight (1939), with Don Ameche; It's a Wonderful World (1939), withJames Stewart.\nIn addition to Lubitsch, DeMille and Capra, Colbert was working with the top directors in the industry: Dorothy Arzner, Preston Sturges, Frank Lloyd, John M. Stahl, Wesley Ruggles, Gregory La Cava, George Cukor, Mitchell Leisen, and John Ford.\nColbert was a stickler for regarding the way she appeared on screen. She believed that her face was difficult to light and photograph, and she was obsessed with not showing right side of her face, to the camera, because of a small bump that resulted from a childhood broken nose. She refused to be filmed from right side of her face, and it often necessitated redesigning movie sets.Film technicians described the right side of her face as \"the dark side of the moon.\" During the filming of Tovarich in 1937, when one of her favored cameramen was dismissed by the director,Anatole Litvak. After seeing the rushes filmed by the replacement, Colbert refused to continue. She insisted on hiring her own cameraman, and offered to waive her salary if the film went over budget as a result. Gary Cooper was terrified at the prospect of working with Colbert in his first comedy, Bluebeard's Eighth Wife (1938), because he considered Colbert to be an expert in the genre. She learned about lighting and cinematography, and refused to begin filming until she was satisfied that she would be shown to her best advantage. Colbert knew more about lighting than the experts did. Drums Along the Mohawk (1939) with Henry Fonda was Colbert's first color film. However, she distrusted the relatively new Technicolor process and feared that she would not photograph well, preferring thereafter to be filmed in black and white.\nDuring this time she began appearing for CBS' popular radio program Lux Radio Theater, making 22 episodes between 1935 and 1954. She also appeared for another radio program The Screen Guild Theater, making 13 episodes between 1939 and 1952.\nIn 1940, Colbert refused a seven-year contract that would have paid her $200,000 a year, as she had found that she could command a fee of $150,000 per film as a freelance artist. With her manager, Colbert was able to secure roles in prestigious films, and this period marked the height of her earning ability. Colbert once said that Arise, My Love (1940) was her favorite film of her own.\nDuring filming of So Proudly We Hail! (1943), a rift occurred between Colbert and co-star Paulette Goddard. Asked which of her costars she preferred, Goddard had replied, \"Veronica, I think,\" referring to Veronica Lake. Goddard further commented that Colbert \"flipped\" and \"was at Paulette's eyes at every moment,\" and said that they continued their feud throughout the duration of filming. Colbert usually had her particular tough standards of professionalism on the filming. Impressed by Colbert's role in So Proudly We Hail!, David O. Selznick approached her to play the lead role in Since You Went Away (1944). She was initially reluctant to appear as mother of teenaged children, but Selznick awared of her sensitivity. Released in June 1944, the film became a substantial success and grossed almost $5 million in the United States. The critic James Agee praised aspects of the film, but particularly Colbert's work. As a result, she received Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.\nAfter World War II\nIn 1945, Colbert ended her association with Paramount Studios, and continued to free-lance in such films as Guest Wife (1945), with Don Ameche. She starred opposite John Wayne in the RKO Studios film Without Reservations (1946), with a storyline and setting intentionally inspired by It Happened One Night. Without Reservations grossed $3 million in the U.S., and the overall popularity of Colbert's films during 1946 led to her making third appearance in the \"Quigley Poll of the Top Ten Money Making Stars\". While working on Without Reservations (1946), director Mervyn Leroy referred to Colbert as an interesting lady to work with, recalling her habit of not watching where she was going and constantly bumping into things. Praised for her sense of style and awareness of fashion, Colbert ensured throughout her career that she was impeccably groomed and costumed. For the 1946 melodrama, Tomorrow is Forever (1946), Jean Louis was hired to create eighteen changes of wardrobe for her.\nShe achieved great success opposite Fred MacMurray in the comedy The Egg and I (1947). The film was one of the year's biggest hits, and was later acknowledged as the 12th most profitable American film of the 1940s. The suspense film Sleep, My Love (1948) with Robert Cummings, was also a commercial success. The romantic comedy Bride for Sale (1949), in which Colbert was part of a love triangle that included George Brent and Robert Young, was well reviewed and modestly commercial success. The Pacific war film Three Came Home (1950) was praised for her acting by the critics. However, The Secret Fury (1950), distributed by RKO Studios, was a mystery melodrama that received negative reviews. During this periods, Colbert was unable to work beyond 5 p.m. each day, due to doctor's orders. While Colbert still looked like a young woman, she found it difficult to make the transition to playing more mature characters as she approached middle-age. Colbert once said, \"I'm a very good comedienne, but I was always fighting that image, too\".\nIn 1949 she was originally cast in All About Eve, because producer Joseph L. Mankiewicz was enthusiastic about Colbert feeling that she best represented the style he envisioned for the part. Colbert severely injured her back and led her to abandon the picture shortly before filming began. In later life, Colbert said, \"I just never had the luck to play bitches.\"\nFor tax reason, Colbert traveled to Europe, making fewer films in the early 1950s. She appeared in Royal Affairs in Versailles with Orson Welles, only one film she acted for French director, however Colbert had a supporting role rather than top billing in the film. This film was screened in the United States in 1957.\nIn 1954 Colbert turned down a million-dollar broadcast deal with NBC-TV, but made pact with CBS-TV to star in several teleplays. After a successful appearance in a television version of The Royal Family, she began acting in various televison programs. From 1954 to 1960, she starred in thetelevision adaptations of Blithe Spirit in 1956 and The Bells of St. Mary's in 1959. She also guest starred on Robert Montgomery Presents, Playhouse 90, and Zane Grey Theater.\nIn 1958, she went back to Broadway in 1958 doing The Marriage-Go-Round, for which she was nominated for a Best Actress Tony Award.\nShe made a brief return to the screen in Parrish (1961), playing the supporting role of mother, which received little attention from the press. After that, Colbert instructed her agent to stop his attempts to generate interest in her as a film actress, because there have been no offers.\nHer occasional successful acting ventures were appearances on Broadway in The Irregular Verb to Love (1963); The Kingfisher (1978) in which she co-starred with Rex Harrison, and Frederick Lonsdale's Aren't We All? (1985) also with Rex Harrison.\nIn 1987, Colbert appeared in a supporting role in the television miniseries The Two Mrs. Grenvilles. The production was a ratings success. Colbert won aGolden Globe and received a nomination for an Emmy Award.\nModern critic pointed out that Colbert had a mixture of unique physical assets (her round apple-face, big eyes, curly light hair, slender stooping body), elegant voice, aristocratic manner, sleek acting, a tongue-in-cheek vivacity, witty senses of humor and ladylike alluring charm, that distinguishes her from the other screwball comediennes of the 1930s such as Jean Arthur and Irene Dunne. In her comedy films, she invariably played shrewd and self-reliant women, but unlike many of her contemporaries, Colbert rarely engaged in physical comedy. Her characters were more likely to be observers and commentators.\nIn 1928, Colbert married Norman Foster, an actor and director, who co-starred with her in the Broadway show The Barker, and in the 1930 film Young Man of Manhattan which received negative reviews as one of her weakest leading men. Their marriage remained a secret for many years while living in separate homes. In Los Angeles, Colbert shared her home with her mother Jeanne Chauchoin, but her domineering mother disliked Foster and did not allow him into their home. Colbert and Foster divorced in 1935 in Mexico.\nFour months after her divorce, Colbert married Joel Pressman, a surgeon at UCLA, a throat specialist. The marriage lasted 33 years, until his death of liver cancer in 1968. She gave theBeechcraft Bonanza single-engine plane to Pressman as a present. They purchased a ranch in Northern California, where her husband kept show cattle. During this periods, Colbert drove Lincoln Continental and Ford Thunderbird.\nJeanne Chauchoin envied her daughter's talent of art/acting, and never gave the recognition of Colbert's success. Jeanne let Colbert's brother Charles serve as Colbert's agent. Colbert spent many years of her life getting Jeanne's approval. Charles used the surname Wendling which was borrowed from Rose Wendling who was Jeanne's paternal grandmother. He served as Colbert's business manager for a time, and was credited with negotiating some of her more lucrative contracts in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Colbert was generally respected for her professionalism, with the New York Times stating that she was known for giving \"110 percent\" to any project she worked on. Hedda Hopper wrote that Colbert placed her career \"ahead of everything save possibly her marriage\", with a strong sense of what was best for her, and a \"deep rooted desire to be in shape, efficient and under control\". The writer A. Scott Berg described Colbert had \"helped define femininity for her generation with her chic manner.\" Colbert once said, \"I’ve been in the Claudette Colbert business a long time.\"\nIn 1954 her aunt Emilie Loew died in the U.S. Virtually retiring from motion picture industry since mid 1950s, she was still financially solvent enough. Despite having a country house in Palm Springs for staying on weekends, she rented a cottage in Cap Ferrat, southeastern France. Adman said, \"Claudette was extravagant, I never, ever saw her question the price of anything.\" In 1963, Colbert sold her residence located in Holmby Hills (western Los Angeles), so Joel Pressman rented a small house in Beverly Hills.\nIn 1958 she met Verna Hull, a wealthy painter/photographer and the stepdaughter of a Sears Roebuck heiress. They had nine-year friendship and painted together, went for a drive together, traveled together and even rented twin penthouses back in New York. They had a mutual interest in art. When Colbert bought a house in Barbados in early 1960s, Hull also bought a modest house next door.\nFor years, Colbert divided her time between her apartment in Manhattan and her vacation home in Speightstown, Barbados. The latter purchased from British gentleman was the island’s only plantation house fronting the beach. Its summer house was called \"Bellerive\" as nickname. However, her permanent address remained Manhattan. Later in life, she was also a staunchRepublican and natural conservative.\nColbert's mother Jeanne died in 1970 and her brother Charles died in 1971, so her only surviving relative was a niece, Coco Lewis, Charles' daughter.\nFollowing a series of small strokes during the last three years of her life, Colbert died in 1996 at her second home in Barbados, where she was employing one housekeeper and two cooks at that time. Colbert’s body was shipped to New York for cremation. A requiem mass was held at St. Vincent Ferrer church in New York City later. Her ashes were buried in the Parish of St. Peter Cemetery, Barbados, along with her mother and second husband.\nThe childless Colbert left most of her estate, estimated at $3.5 million and also including her Manhattan apartment and another home Bellerive, to a long-time friend, Helen O'Hagan, a retired director of corporate relations at Saks Fifth Avenue, whom Colbert had met in 1961 on the set of the her last film and became best friend from circa 1970. Though O'Hagan was financially comfortable without the generous bequest, Bellerive was sold at over $2 million to a midwestern U.S. couple. Her remaining assets were distributed between three heirs: $150,000 to her niece Coco Lewis; a trust worth more than $100,000 to UCLA for Pressman’s memory; and $75,000 to Marie Corbin, Colbert's Barbadian housekeeper.\nHollywood Players\nShow Count: 3\nBroadcast History:\nSponsor: Cresta Blanca\nCast: Bette Davis, John Garfield, Gregory Peck, Claudette Colbert , Joan Fontaine, Paulette Goddard\nAlan Marshall, William Gargan, Claudette Colbert\nBroadcast: 1st February 1940\nStarring: Hanley Stafford, Fanny Brice, Claudette Colbert , William Gargan, Edward Arnold, Meredith Willson, Alan Marshall, Connie Boswell\nAlice Adams\nBroadcast: 3rd January 1938\nStarring: Claudette Colbert\nArcher (Ancestor)\nBroadcast: 13th April 1943\nStarring: Arch Oboler, Claudette Colbert\nAwful Truth, The\nBroadcast: 11th September 1939\nStarring: Claudette Colbert , Cary Grant\nAdded: Aug 26 2006\nBarker, The\nBroadcast: 20th July 1936\nClaudette Colbert & Bob Burns & Tommy Dorsey\nBroadcast: November 7, 1944\nStarring: Claudette Colbert , Verna Felton, Jimmy Durante, Tommy Dorsey, Igor Gorin, Bob Burns, Ken Carpenter, Victor Young, Bonnie Lou Williams, Corina Mura, Corrina Mura\nEgg and I, The\nBroadcast: January 5, 1950\nStarring: Claudette Colbert , Frank Nelson, James Hilton, Frank Goss, Betty Macdonald\nGreat Lakes Naval Training Center\nBroadcast: 5th May 1942\nStarring: Bob Hope, Frances Langford, Claudette Colbert\nAdded: Apr 26 2007\nBroadcast: 20th March 1939\nStarring: Clark Gable, Claudette Colbert , Walter Connolly, Roscoe Karns\nLady With The Lamp, The\nBroadcast: September 27, 1950\nStarring: Francis X Bushman, Claudette Colbert , Jane Wyatt, Robert Ryan, Dan O'Herlihy, Irene Tedrow, Herbert Rawlinson, Tudor Owen\nMagnificent Obsession\nBroadcast: 13th November 1944\nStarring: Don Ameche, Claudette Colbert\nAdded: Nov 15 2008\nBroadcast: 20th May 1940\nStarring: Cecil B DeMille, Gale Gordon, Don Ameche, Claudette Colbert , Rosemary DeCamp, Lou Merrill, John Lake, Rolfe Sedan, Victor Rodman, Fred MacKaye, Ted Bliss\nMovietime USA\nStarring: Bing Crosby, Gary Cooper, Gene Kelly, Claudette Colbert , Donna Reed, John Wayne, Robert Ryan, Jane Wyman, Dan Dailey, Wendell Corey, Forrest Tucker, Joann Drew, Ann Blythe, Leslie Caron, John Derek, Vera Ralston, Mary Alden\nNight Elevator\nBroadcast: 6th April 1949\nStarring: John Dehner, Claudette Colbert , Virginia Gregg, Jimmy Gleason, Jack Kruschen, William Lally, Nancy Olson\nOnce Upon A Honeymoon\nStarring: Brian Aherne, Claudette Colbert\nPalm Beach Story, The\nBroadcast: 29th October 1944\nStarring: Robert Young, Claudette Colbert\nPractically Yours\nBroadcast: August 27, 1945\nStarring: Claudette Colbert , Ray Milland, Peggy Webber, Charles Seel, Fred MacKaye, Herbert Rawlinson, Stanley Farrar, Janet Scott, Griff Barnett, Earl Keen, Sanford Barnett, Charlie Forsyth, Louis Silvers, Ed Emerson, Ramsay Hill, Arthur Q Bryan, Boyd Davis, Franklyn Parker, Bill Martel, John Cromwell, Norman Krasna\nRemember The Day\nBroadcast: May 18, 1942\nStarring: Elliott Lewis, Gale Gordon, Claudette Colbert , Gayne Whitman, Erik Rolf, Louise Erickson, Herb Vigran, Tommy Cook, Robert Armbruster, Homer Fickett, Bud Hiestand, Jack Mather, Conrad Binyon, Janet Beecher, George Barraud\nShop Around The Corner, The\nBroadcast: June 23, 1941\nStarring: Cecil B DeMille, Don Ameche, Claudette Colbert , Verna Felton, Lou Merrill, Leo Cleary, Fred MacKaye, Felix Bressart, Charles Peck, Melville Ruick, Ferdinand Munier, Sanford Barnett, Louis Silvers, Ann Tobin, George Wells, Arthur Q Bryan, Bruce Payne, Bea Benaderet, Charles Forsyth, Nikolas Laszlo, Jesse Arnold\nSixth Anniversary Special\nStarring: Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Jack Benny, Bob Hope, Claudette Colbert , Dinah Shore, Rita Hayworth, Ronald Colman, Jimmy Durante, Jerry Colonna, Sara Berner, Betty Hutton, Ken Carpenter, Ticker Freeman\nStarring: Brian Aherne, Cecil B DeMille, Claudette Colbert , Wally Maher, Ray Milland, Leo Cleary, Edward Marr , Melville Ruick, Charlie Forsyth, Louis Silvers, Ann Tobin, George Wells, Allan Scott, Thomas Mills, Lux, Torey Carleton, Samuel Raphaelson, Doris Sederholm, Dick Elliott\nSo Proudly We Hail\nBroadcast: 1st November 1943\nStarring: Claudette Colbert , Les Tremayne, Paulette Goddard, Veronica Lake\nStarring: Gale Gordon, Van Heflin, Claudette Colbert , Natalie Wood, Richard Long\nStarring: Basil Rathbone, Jack Benny, Claudette Colbert , Edward Arnold, Ernst Lubitsch","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line916042"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6648078560829163,"wiki_prob":0.6648078560829163,"text":"Christopher Heitmann - owner\nJeff Neuhof - sax, flute\nCheech Iero - drums\nMelanie Perez - piano\nTom Cullen - drums\nDennis Hancock - violin, viola\nAdam Hershberger - brass\nRyan Kelch - guitar\nSteve Montenegro - bass, guitar\nJoseph T. Lally – guitar\nGary Margerum – voice\nGregory Grasty - piano, sax, clarinet\nJoanna Firth\nTony Gairo\nSaxophonist, flutist, clarinetist, and jazz composer Tony Gairo keeps an active calendar of professional performances, engagements, sessions, and shows while maintaining busy teaching studios at Music Forte, Moravian, Muhlenberg, Lafayette and Mercer County Community Colleges. A 22-year member of the Jazz Faculty at Moravian, he has directed Jazz Combo 1 since 1998 and was awarded the T. Edgar Shields Prize for Distinguished Studio Instruction in 2006. He has directed and conducted the Big Band at Muhlenberg since 2009 and is a former Vice President of the Pennsylvania Jazz Collective (2015-18).\nA graduate of Temple University (B.M. Jazz Saxophone Performance), Tony performs with some of the best musicians in the industry including Johnny Mathis, Clay Aiken, the Temptations, the Four Tops, Bob Dorough, and Maria Schneider and has appeared on stage with such luminaries as Phil Woods, Natalie Cole, Al Martino, David “Fathead” Newman, and Bud Shank, among others. Voted the 2004 Jazz Musician of the Year – Lehigh Valley (PA) by Pulseweekly Magazine, he has composed more than 120 works for Jazz Orchestra including The Real Book of Gig (2012), a jazz opera, Collaboration (2007), a jazz ballet, The Never-Ending Saga of Elli and Griff (2013), a jazz suite featuring Phil Woods, and an album, Treacherous (2005), on Sea Breeze Jazz Records which was nominated for a Grammy nomination. Mr. Gairo is an alumnus of the prestigious BMI Jazz Composer’s Workshop in New York City (2001-2006) where several of his compositions for Big Band were premiered. He conducted the BMI (NY) Jazz Composer’s Orchestra in concert at Merkin Hall, New York in 2003, 2004, and 2005.\nWhether as sideman or leader, Tony gig several nights a week and records in disparate musical settings throughout the Northeast Corridor, primarily in the Lehigh Valley of PA, the Greater Philadelphia region, and Princeton NJ with such ensembles as the Franklin Alison Orchestra, the Rob Stoneback Big Band, Band From Mars (a David Bowie Tribute), the Hoppin’ John Orchestra, Swing Easy, Philadelphia Funk Authority, Marah, duos with pianist/vocalist Lou Lanza and guitarist Jason Wolbach, and his own Cross Current Big Band whose book is comprised entirely of his works for Jazz Orchestra. Tony leads various jazz trios, quartets, and quintets including the Hot 3. He is immensely grateful to have had the good fortune and resilience to have made a career of music and absolutely loves what he does for a living.\nMonday-Thursday 12:00pm - 8:00pm\n© 2019 Music Forte. All rights reserved,\nGET UPDATES & SPECIAL OFFERS\n8919 New Falls Road\nLevittown, PA 19054","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line862881"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.942887544631958,"wiki_prob":0.942887544631958,"text":"Christopher Tolkien, Gil-Estel, Has Retired From Tolkien Estate\nI amar prestar aen, han mathon ne nen, han mathon ne chae a han noston ned ‘wilith.\nIt is a busy time in the world of Tolkien. Fresh off the announcement that Amazon will produce a new series based on The Lord of the Rings, a perhaps more significant change has occurred. According to theOneRing.net Christopher Tolkien, for decades the editor of his father’s work and arbiter of the Tolkien legacy, has stepped down from his role at the head of the Tolkien Estate. While not a shock to some, thanks to his statement in the preface of Beren and Lúthien that “this is (preemptively) my last book in the long series of editions of my father’s writings,” it still feels like the end of an era.\nThere From The Start\nConsidered the undisputed chief scholar of Tolkien, Christopher has been a part of the creation of Arda since he was a child. As a young boy, he was told the tales of Bilbo Baggins that, after his incessant demand for consistency force his father to write the stories down, became The Hobbit. He served as a sounding board for The Lord of the Rings and, when he was 25, became a member of the Inklings, the Oxford University literary society that also included C.S Lewis, Nevill Coghill, and Charles Williams. And those famous maps of Middle Earth adorning walls, book covers, and body parts? All drawn by “C.J.R.T” a.k.a Christopher John Reuel Tolkien.\nEditor and Guiding Hand\nBut it was his contribution to Tolkien’s lifelong project and arguably magnum opus The Silmarillion that truly ensured Christopher’s importance within his father’s legacy. Gathering up over fifty years of notes, scribbles, and drafts that his father had made over the years, Christopher set out to edit it together into what he hoped would be close to his father’s vision. With character names changing from paragraph to paragraph and an entire legendarium to try to distill into a narrative, it was no easy task. Thanks to editorial decisions that have proved controversial, even ones that he himself later debated, he was able to put the pieces together and release The Silmarillion in 1977, four years after it’s author’s passing.\nHe followed it up with his edited collections of his father’s writing, Unfinished Tales and The History of Middle Earth-the molten metal from which The Silmarillion was cast. For the first time, fans could see characters like Sauron, Gandalf, and Elrond develop over time. He also released, in the new millennium, more compact and edited works from his father like The Children of Húrin and the aforementioned Beren and Lúthien. He has also helped release some of J.R.R Tolkien’s non-LOTR work like Beowulf, The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún, and The Fall of Arthur.\nCritic and Fierce Protector\nIn recent years, he has become known for his tight grip on his father’s legacy in the aftermath of an explosion of interest thanks to the Peter Jackson film trilogy of the Lord of the Rings. When said trilogy was announced, his opinion was that the films would lose the “essence” of the film. In a 2012 interview, he further declared the films to have “gutted” the book, calling them “making an action film for 15 to 25-year-olds.” His views on Jackson’s The Hobbit films was seemingly even lower, raising legal objections with New Line and in the aftermath declaring that The Silmarillion would not be touched for “a very long time.”\nWhat This All Could Mean\nThe biggest question is all this? Whether the Amazon deal is a direct result of Christopher giving up the reins. The estate still counts among its members Christopher’s younger sister Priscilla Tolkien as well as multiple Tolkien grandchildren. But Christopher was always the chief arbiter and, with his orthodox control gone, will the Amazon deal be the first of many? The Tolkien legendarium is ripe for the very cinematic universes that Hollywood is currently desperate for. For better or worse, the new management may seem more amenable to adaptations and expansions than Christopher ever was.\nAs it is, it’s important for fans to thank Mr. Tolkien for his service to his father’s legacy and we all wish him a very happy retirement.\nNai tiruvantel ar varyuvantel i Valar tielyanna nu vilya.\nImage courtesy of New Line Cinema\nIn this article:Amazon,books,Featured,News,the hobbit,the lord of the rings,the silmarillion\nD&D Gift Set Brings New Book, Streamlined Rules That Put Story First\nNew year, new D&D. Well, not really. After many months of fear and loathing amongst the tabletops of the world, the release of the...\nProspero Hall Reveals Details of Upcoming ‘Jurassic World: The Legacy of Isla Nublar’ Legacy Game\n“Life finds a way,” and so does the passionate team at Prospero Hall, the acclaimed development studio of Funko Games, who has created a...\nDan ArndtDecember 7, 2021\nCult X-Team X-Statix Returns With Original Creative Team In X-Cellent #1\nIt’s finally here! This February, writer Peter Milligan, artist Michael Allred, and color artist Laura Allred make their long-awaited return to their iconic X-Statix...\nGen Con Report: Five Faves From the Floor\nIn my last big report from GenCon, I wanted to spotlight some of the games I got to look at while out on the...\nDan ArndtSeptember 29, 2021","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1319367"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8464527130126953,"wiki_prob":0.8464527130126953,"text":"Smartphone device saving lives\nStory Factory tells a strong tale\nNew gift to help pharmacists build integrity in their practice\nHistoric partnership to be sealed at Westmead\nHome / News & opinion / News / September / Historic partnership to be sealed at Westmead\nThe brightest minds will be brought together as part of a historic partnership agreement between the University of Sydney and Westmead precinct partners announced earlier today.\nThe partnership includes an initial commitment by the University of Sydney to contribute over $60 million of funding for new education facilities, upgrades to existing spaces, and a suite of new academic programs and initiatives, in addition to its existing staffing contribution of $35 million per year at Westmead.\nThis increased contribution to the partnership will help ensure that clinicians, students and researchers at Westmead Hospital, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead, Westmead Institute for Medical Research and the Children’s Medical Research Institute will be able to continue to meet the needs of the expanding population and increasing health needs of Western Sydney, New South Wales and beyond.\nThe new facilities and programs will support the expanded expertise and educational opportunities available on the precinct in areas like data sciences, engineering, physics, business management, the social sciences and others.\nNSW Health Minister, the Hon Jillian Skinner was present at the announcement and welcomed the partnership agreement.\n“I congratulate the University of Sydney and all the Westmead precinct partners on this great partnership. Students all across Westmead – who are our clinicians and researchers of the future - will enjoy the contemporary, flexible technology-enabled teaching, learning and working spaces that are being built as part of this partnership,” Jillian Skinner said.\nThe University of Sydney investment includes capital funding for:\n5,000m2 across two floors of the Westmead Redevelopment’s new acute services building, to become the central location of the University of Sydney’s Westmead Campus\nan upgrade and expansion of the current Westmead Education and Conference Centre, within Westmead Hospital, to provide innovative and versatile learning environments\nrefurbishment of student facilities, to improve the student experience at Westmead\na new simulation ward, which provides facilities for educating students in nursing, medicine and allied health, and training staff at Westmead Hospital and The Children’s Hospital at Westmead.\nThe University spaces will also be available for use by other precinct partners, giving them access to contemporary education facilities that are not currently available at Westmead.\nThe University is also working with the Westmead precinct partners to develop the proposal for the Westmead Innovation Centre. The Innovation Centre will be collecting and generating ideas and new solutions from patients, clinicians, researchers and other innovators and will be fostering a culture of innovation and knowledge sharing.\n“This is such an important part of the University’s work in Western Sydney. A key focus of the next era of strategic growth for the University of Sydney will be in – and for – Western Sydney, and this is the early phase of what we anticipate will be a $500m investment over the next 15 years. Importantly, this investment will help us build on the University’s areas of strength with its partners at Westmead,” University of Sydney Vice-Chancellor Dr Michael Spence said.\nWelcoming the investment and the University’s role in helping address the healthcare challenges of the future, WSLHD Chief Executive Danny O’Connor said “Westmead Hospital and the University of Sydney have had a long standing partnership, dating back to the official opening of the Hospital, in 1978. This expanded commitment from the University means a greater opportunity to collect and generate ideas and new solutions from students in different disciplines as well as clinicians, researchers, patients and other innovators.”\n“Co-locating the education and research activity with the clinical services space means Westmead will extend the quality of its education and research capability for the benefit of our patients and families in Western Sydney and beyond,” said Sydney Children’s Hospitals Network Chief Executive Dr Michael Brydon.\nThe strength of the precinct partnerships has helped deliver on Westmead’s strong track record as a successful innovator in the delivery of healthcare, research and education and helped attract a talent pool that is now the largest concentration of biomedical, scientific and healthcare focused minds in Australia.\nThe investment is just one part of the $3.4 billion earmarked by government, universities and the private sector for investment at Westmead over the next decade, including new commercial and residential facilities and development of the Parramatta Light Rail.\nOur Westmead facilities\nVerity Leatherdale\nManager, Faculty Media and PR\nverity.leatherdale@sydney.edu.au\nLevel 7 Jane Foss Russell Building G02","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1749945"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7945143580436707,"wiki_prob":0.7945143580436707,"text":"Xenoblade Chronicles 2 Sells Over 17 Million Copies Around World\nXenoblade Chronicles 2 Sells Over 1.7 Million Copies Around The World\nBy: Joseph Allen\nIt's an auspicious day for Monolith Soft and JRPGs. Xenoblade Chronicles 2 has sold more than 1.7 million copies worldwide. This figure makes it the best-selling game in the Xenoblade series as well as Monolith Soft's best-selling game in the West overall.\nMonolith Soft's executive director Tetsuya Takahashi revealed the sales figures in an interview with Japanese gaming website 4gamer. Takahashi says this is encouraging and that the environment is getting better for JRPGs in the West. Back in September last year, Takahashi told US Gamer that Xenoblade Chronicles 2 had exceeded his sales expectations and that he hadn't expected so many people to buy it in North America and Europe.\nWe don't yet know what this might mean for the future of Xenoblade. In May 2018, Monolith Soft opened a new studio in Iidabashi in Tokyo. Also, in October, Monolith sent out notices for staff to work on two new unannounced projects. Global market researcher Stealth believes that the two games are likely to be a new IP and the next Xeno game respectively. The strong performance of Xenoblade Chronicles 2 will no doubt be encouraging to the studio as they work on these projects. We're also holding out hope for a port of the severely underrated Xenoblade Chronicles X.\nXenoblade Chronicles 2 is the third game in the Xenoblade Chronicles series and the seventh in the Xeno meta-series. It follows Rex, a Driver who is searching for the fabled World Tree. Rex gets caught in a faction war and must evade his pursuers while trying to reach the World Tree. Like the previous two Xenoblade Chronicles games, Xenoblade Chronicles 2 is an open-world action RPG with an emphasis on exploration, combat, and questing. It's available to buy now on Nintendo Switch along with its standalone expansion, Torna: The Golden Country. You can buy a physical version of Torna: The Golden Country which doesn't require Xenoblade Chronicles 2 to play. We'd still recommend you check out Rex's adventure though.\nDid you play Xenoblade Chronicles 2? Will you be checking it out soon? Let us know in the comments below!\nDark Souls changed my life, and I'm here to spread the good news. I like pretty much all sorts of games, but I judge everything by its proximity to our Lord and saviour, Dark Souls.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1551771"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.683831512928009,"wiki_prob":0.31616848707199097,"text":"Hendrik Andriessen (1892-1981)\nNationality: Dutch\nBorn: September 17, 1892, Haarlem Died: April 12, 1981, Haarlem (age 88)\nPage 1 of 2 | | | |\nAll (24) Brass Quintet (1) Cello Sonata (1) Clarinet Sonata (1) Clarinet Trio (1) Duo (10) Flute Sonata (1) Piano Trio (2) Quartet (4) Quintet (4) Sextet (1) String Duo (1) String Quartet (3) Trio (5) Viola Sonata (1) Violin Sonata (1) Wind Quintet (1)\nPiano Trio No. 2\nViola Sonata\nViolin Sonata\nCello Sonata\nThree Inventions (for violin and cello)\nSuite for Brass Quintet (for 2 trumpets, horn and 2 trombones)\nQuartetto in stile antico for String Quartet\nIl pensiero for String Quartet\nL'indifférent for String Quartet\nAdagio for Clarinet Trio (for clarinet, viola and piano)\nFlute Sonata\nChoral varié (for 3 trumpets and 3 trombones)\nDivertimento a cinque (for flute, oboe, violin, viola and cello)\nClarinet Sonata\nVariations on a Theme by Haydn (for oboe and piano)\nCanary (for recorder, cello and harpsichord)\n3 Pezzi (for flute and harp)\nConcert spirituel (for flute, oboe, violin and cello)\n1900 2000 WWI WWII Hendrik Andriessen (1892-1981) Jurriaan Andriessen (1925-1996) Louis Andriessen (1939-2021)\nLouis Andriessen (1939-2021)\nBorn: June 6, 1939, Utrecht Died: July 21, 2021 (age 82)\nJurriaan Andriessen (1925-1996)\nBorn: November 15, 1925, Haarlem Died: August 23, 1996, The Hague (age 70)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1482832"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8190602660179138,"wiki_prob":0.8190602660179138,"text":"HomeEntertainmentWBCP Plans 'Friends' Pop-Up Shop\nWBCP Plans 'Friends' Pop-Up Shop\nWarner Bros. Television Group is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the series premiere of \"Friends\" with a Central Perk pop-up shop and product program.\nWarner Bros. Television Group, Warner Bros. Consumer Products and Eight O’Clock Coffee have teamed up to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the series premiere of \"Friends\" with a Central Perk pop-up shop and product program.\nA pop-up replica of Central Perk, the neighborhood coffee shop frequented by the characters on the sitcom, will open in Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood Sept. 17.\nThe shop will serve free cups of Eight O’ Clock coffee, including the limited edition Central Perk Roast specially created for the occasion.\nThe fully functioning pop-up coffee bar will remain open through Oct. 18 and will also feature signature props from the show including Central Perk’s iconic orange couch and a range of in-store promotions.\nOther highlights of the Central Perk pop-up shop will include:\nSpecial appearances by actor James Michael Tyler who played deadpan barista Gunther on the show;\nPhoto opportunities on a re-created Central Perk set;\nWeekly in-store performances akin to Phoebe’s improvised songs;\nFriends-themed merchandise including Eight O’Clock Coffee’s Central Perk Roast and other bagged coffee varieties; and\nSpecial activities and giveaways on Sept. 29, National Coffee Day.\nThe limited edition Central Perk Roast coffee will also be available at grocery and mass merchandise stores across the U.S.\nTAGS: Corporate Brands Food & Beverage Entertainment Live Events Streaming and TV Warner Bros. Consumer Products Central Perk Friends Warner Bros. Television Group Eight O’Clock Coffee","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line883062"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5058977603912354,"wiki_prob":0.49410223960876465,"text":"What If March Madness Was Formatted Like the World Cup?\nPosted on July 10, 2018 by Shane McNichol\nMarch Madness is the most chaotic sporting event on the calendar each year. The unpredictability of the tournament makes for exciting viewing, but it means the result is often less than perfect. With top teams able to be bounced from contention with a cold shooting night or buzzer-beating defeat, the best team doesn’t always win it all, with hot teams, rather than the best, reaching the Final Four.\nThe World Cup format provides a buffer zone for the best teams by beginning with group play. There’s still a chance for upset wins or shocking results, yet a true Cinderella needs to sustain their level of play for more than just one game. This year, the soccer world was abuzz as Germany failed to reach the knockout round for the first time EVER. All the Germans needed was a draw versus a solid, but pedestrian South Korea side and they couldn’t manage even that. My Soccer Friend Dennis (everyone has a Soccer Friend) compared it to top seed in March losing to an 8 or 9 seed in terms of shock value. That happens all the time, but Germany had two games prior to the Korea loss to earn their way past the group stage. The Germans also lost to Mexico, sealing their fate.\nIf Virginia had two more games to survive after losing to UMBC, the upset would mean far less, but would it have been less exciting? Would Virginia have been able to bounce back and advance?\nThose are the kinds of questions we’re going to try to answer here today, by taking the field of the 2018 NCAA Tournament and imposing the World Cup draw and tournament format.\nFor those unfamiliar, it’s somewhat simple to explain. Teams qualify in their respective regional tournaments, just like college basketball teams in their conferences. FIFA then draws the qualifying countries from a series of pots based on their region. For a basketball example, it would be like picking one team from the ACC, one from the Big XII, one from the Big East, and one from the Pac-12 for each group. That process doesn’t exactly work for college basketball, though. FIFA has only five regions. College basketball has 32 conferences.\nInstead, for our purposes as we try to recreate a World Cup like situation, let’s use the seeds already awarded by the NCAA Selection Committee as our pots. The top 16 seeds make up the first pot, with the next 16 in the second pot, the next 16 in the third, and the bottom 16 in the fourth (with the teams that lost in the First Four in Dayton not invited for numbers sake).\nThis way, each of the top 16 seeds could end up in a group with a team as good as Kentucky or West Virginia, or feel safely paired with a team like Missouri. Why doesn’t top seeded Virginia automatically get placed with the bottom team from the next pot? Because soccer is insane and the randomness makes up for the possibility of human error in the seeding process. If this already bothers you, the rest of this post may not be for you!\nEach group will have a team that was seeded 1-4, 5-8, 9-12, and 13-16. This could potentially lead to what soccer fans call a GROUP OF DEATH, with teams seeded 1, 5, 9, and 13 all playing for two spots to advance. This would be wildly unfair and buckets of fun.\nEach four team group will play a round robin, at the home gym of the top seed. The top two teams in each group advance to the next round, with (gulp) point differential serving as tie breaker. That gets us to 32 teams, which is why we’ll have ANOTHER DRAW (!) to re-group based on first round performance. Those groups will contain two teams who won their First Round group and two that finished second. We round robin again and have our Sweet Sixteen, seeded into a single elimination bracket. If you are the kind of person worried scheduling, here’s what we’re thinking:\nFirst Round: On-campus games either Wednesday-Friday-Sunday or Thursday-Saturday-Monday. Yes, this is even more than the usual tournament weekends. That’s a good thing.\nSecond Round: Same schedule as above, but in regional cities, just like the first two rounds are now.\nKnockout round: Now it’s just the Sweet Sixteen as usual. Four cities, four teams per city. Final Four and National Championship are just as lovely as they are now.\nIf you’re lost, stick with me. It will make sense in action. Oh, and we aren’t making any special rules about teams from the same conference being in the same group. Let’s get nuts.\nFirst reactions to this draw:\nGROUP OF DEATH ALERT: Remember how UMBC and Loyola-Chicago were the darlings of March and thrilled fans across the nation? They are stuck not only in the same group, but in a group with North Carolina and Kentucky! Only two of those teams will even advance to our second draw. While that may be less fun in a basketball sense, that draw result is already 400 million times more exciting than whatever the hell happened with Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson this year.\nGroup 4 look familiar? Three of those teams were in the same pod of the NCAA Tournament, playing in Pittsburgh. Radford lost to Villanova, Alabama beat Virginia Tech and Villanova beat the Tide to reach the Sweet Sixteen. Those three teams breathe a sigh of relief drawing Xavier here instead.\nMarquee games are everywhere. For those of you thinking this first round lost meaning with this format, can I interest you in some of the games that will happen here? Carolina-Kentucky, Michigan-West Virginia, and Ohio State-Duke (at Cameron) are worth the price of admission, with fun stylistic and rivarly situations happening in Kansas-Butler, Xavier-Alabama, Purdue-Creighton, Cincinnati-Miami, Tennessee-Florida, Texas Tech-Texas, Gonzaga-Clemson, Houston-Wichita State- and Michigan State-Marshall.\nPossible Cinderellas pop up all over. Penn no longer needs to beat mighty Kansas, instead tasked with three super inconsistent teams. Bucknell, Iona, Murray State, and St. Bonaventure have to like their draw here more than in real life.\nNow, here’s where we get wild. When I pitched this idea to some people, they assumed that this is where the experiment stopped. That’s no fun! We need to Google the phrase “college basketball simulator”, find one that seems effective, and then play out this tournament!\nSo, that’s exactly what I did.\nHere’s how the first round of group play happened (with teams in green advancing):\nEvery team that went 2-1 or better advanced, with one exception. Nevada, in Group 13, won twice in narrow fashion, but lost to Syracuse. The Orange and Auburn also won twice, finishing with a better point differential. For this to happen in just one of 16 groups is pretty satisfying, especially since we’re comparing to soccer, which features draws and a point system. I can already imagine Dickie V and Jay Bilas screaming about how unfair this system is to Nevada, but hey, they should have beaten Penn by more than six points.\nUpsets still exist! Even with the safety of group play, the top two teams in every group did not cakewalk to the next round. Two teams in the top pot failed to reach the next round: Gonzaga and Duke. Five more teams from the second pot failed to advance. Only one team from our bottom feeders survived, with Cal State Fullerton earning a trip to the next round by beating Duke (at Duke!) in what would go down as an all-time great tourney win.\nThe sim isn’t truly chaotic like March Madness, but it’s worth trusting. Bad teams struggled and the best teams generally did just fine. VIllanova was undefeated with the best point differential. I think this round went well enough to sim some more.\nNow that we’re down to 32 teams, our tournament begins to look more like the actual World Cup. We’ll randomly take two teams who won their first group and two who finished second to create eight new groups. The top two from each of those will be placed in a pre-seeded bracket. Here’s how that draw shook out:\nGROUP OF DEATH ALERT: Thanks to a first round loss by Virginia (sounds familiar!) and Kansas, those top teams were drawn from our second pot in this draw. That led to a stacked group alongside Wichita State and Texas Tech. Those four teams were initially among the top 16 original seeds, but just two will reach the knockout round. Fun!\nSofter groups appear to lead to easy advances. The top team in Group 7 is Florida, who was a 3-seed in real life (as was Houston). Over in Group 3, just one team reached the Sweet Sixteen in reality. Meanwhile, Alabama and Texas luck into each other, rather than one of the more stacked pools.\nSim time!\nGasp! Villanova is out! Faced with a tough pool, the Wildcats will not be our fictional champions. They managed to beat Butler, their Big East foe and one of the few teams to knock them off this season. It was the rest of the pool that proved too difficult. Purdue, armed with a healthy Isaac Haas, and Kentucky nipped Villanova to send them home. If you’re looking for parallels to the World Cup, Villanova is our Germany. Or maybe Duke was. I don’t know.\nOnly one group was decided by tiebreaker! That’s pretty encouraging. Just 2 out of 24 total groups needed to be settled by point differential. In terms of fairness, that’s a good sign. This time, rather than three teams tied at 2-1 fighting for two spots, we had three teams at the bottom of a group tied at 1-2. Alabama moves on by just one point, but beat Texas, the team they nearly tied, head-to-head (but lost to Ohio State, who Texas beat, and so on, in a circle). There are worst things than getting Collin Sexton into the Sweet Sixteen. We’ll live with it.\nThe sim went far different than the actual tournament. Obviously this is just a thought experiment, but it is interesting to see than just four teams from the real Sweet Sixteen are still alive here (Kansas, Texas A&M. Purdue, Kentucky). That speaks to the unpredictability of not just bracket play, but this format as well.\nMichigan State should join the SEC. Sparty made quick work of its Southern foes, with an undefeated second round.\nLet’s simulate the next weekend of play.\nOk, things are getting weird. We lost all of our true Cinderella stories, with the entire Elite Eight coming from the top two original pots and power conferences. I started to worry than maybe the simulator was a little too favorable to the top teams. But then Seton Hall made the Final Four, so I stopped worrying about that.\nSome of these games are making me salivate. UNC and Kansas? Virginia and Arizona? Florida beats Xavier by 1? Creighton over Alabama by just a bucket? These look, feel, and sound like real tournament games. That’s all we can ask for.\nTime for the Final Four:\nWait, what? No, like, uh, what. What happened? I understood Arizona making a run, since the computer doesn’t know the team was embroiled in scandal and drama. I got why great teams like UNC and Michigan State were advancing. I do not understand how or why the simulator loved Seton Hall. It really, really loved them. The Pirates went 9-1 this Fictional March and cut down the nets as National Champions. I couldn’t be fake happier for these fake computer generated players.\nIn conclusion, the World Cup format might not be as wild as a single elimination bracket, but it isn’t far off. This formatting change gave us more games, more basketball, more drama, and more random silliness. I can’t say it’s an improvement, especially in the one regard we expected it to be: choosing a worthy champion. Yet we still got chaos and madness, and that’s good enough for me.\nShane McNichol is the founder, editor, and senior writer at PalestraBack.com. He has also contributed to ESPN.com, Rush The Court, SALTMoney.org, Larry Brown Sports, and USA Today Sports Weekly. Follow him on Twitter @OnTheShaneTrain.\nDon't play hero ball, pass the rock:\nTags: college basketball, college hoops, March Madness, World Cup\nShane McNichol is the founder, editor, and senior writer at PalestraBack.com. He has also contributed to ESPN.com, The Action Network, Rush The Court, Larry Brown Sports, RotoBaller, and USA Today Sports Weekly. Follow him on Twitter @OnTheShaneTrain. You can find every post from this blog on Twitter by following @PalestraBack. If you have any suggestions, tips, ideas, or questions, email them to palestraback@gmail.com.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1203493"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6829705834388733,"wiki_prob":0.3170294165611267,"text":"Game 3: FMP-Serbia 74, Team USA3 73 - FINAL\nUpdated: Jan. 11, 2019, 2:38 a.m. | Published: Aug. 09, 2008, 12:20 a.m.\nBy Tim Brown | The Oregonian/OregonLive\nThis game was easily the best of the afternoon so far, and it even provides an Oregon angle as Portland's own Mike Moser (6'7, 179) is playing for Team USA3 as they take on FMP-Serbia. Also, playing for Team USA3 will be Rivals.com No. 1 recruit for the class of 2009, John Wall (6'3, 188) out of Word of God Christian HS in North Carolina. Wall is being recruited by the University of Oregon.\nTim Brown / OregonLive.com\nJohn Wall of Team USA3 drives past FMP-Serbia's Nikola Markovic during the first half of game 3 at the 2008 Nike Global Challenge.\nThings looked good for FMP-Serbia in the beginning as they quickly went up 3-0 on a foul shot and then an easy lay-up off a fast break. However, Team USA3 came roaring back in the first quarter to take the lead behind excellent interior play that included a slew of baskets coming from\nDeShaun Thomas (6'9, 210)\nDaniel Orton (6'9, 260)\n. Orton especially was a handful inside where Uros Lukovic (6'11, 209) was trying to guard him, but to no avail. Every time Orton touched the ball it was either a foul by Lukovic to stop the play, or two easy points on a short jumper. John Wall led the US team in the first half with 9 points, but he had a bunch of silly turnovers where he stepped on the end line, or missed a ally-oop dunk as he tried to cock the ball back to far on the flush.\nFMP-Serbia was more than solid in the first half. In fact they did just enough to tie the game going into the half (37-37) with some timely buckets from long distance including one with under a minute to play in the half by Ivan Smiljanic (6'6, 203) that really got the FMP bench fired up as they hopped to their feet hollering in approval. However, it was the early baskets from Nikola Markovic (6'9, 216) that really helped FMP get an early lead he burned a few defenders with nice footwork in the post and excellent decision-making on the run. Another big contributor for FMP was the nig man, Dejan Musli (7'0, 255). He had a thunderous dunk in the first half and then another one that made the crowd happy as he hammered it down and then hung on the rim for a good 2-3 seconds of emphasis. However, the most important part of the Serbian team was Filip Covic (5'10, 163) who not only was able to keep John Wall from exploding in the first half, but kept the tempo up for his squad which led to a lot of easy baskets for FMP. He had a great game.\nIn the fourth quarter, It seemed as though Team USA3 had the game all but locked up, but to their surprise, it was far from over. With under two minutes to play, a steal by Nikola Markovic for an easy two made it a two possession game. After a quick jumper missed for Team USA3, Milojko Vasilic canned an open three off the drive and dish by Filip Covic. That made it a three point contest, and after another miss followed by another quick two for FMP-Serbia, they were down by only one. A turnover on Team USA3 gave the ball right back to FMP-Serbia who raced down court with the ball. The initial shot was long by Vasilic, but Nikola Markovic was there for the tip in and that gave FMP-Serbia a one point lead. Team USA3 had 10.7 seconds to get a basket, but an ill-advised drive by John Wall was easily blocked and time ran out giving the Serbians a 74-73 victory. Man, they are extremely hyped about the win as well. Nikola Markovic ran over to FMP coach Aleksandar Glisic and tried to pick him up over his head, but they both fell down into some chairs, then Markovic belly flopped onto the floor and started slamming his hands on the ground. Pretty funny stuff, and yes... I got it on camera... I'll upload the video later tonight.\nOfficial Basketball Box Score\nSerbia vs USA THREE\n08/08/08 6:30 pm at Nike Global Challenge, Hillsboro, Ore.\nVISITORS: Serbia 1-0\nTOT-FG 3-PT REBOUNDS\n## Player Name FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA OF DE TOT PF TP A TO BLK S MIN\n04 Covic, Filip........ * 3-7 0-2 1-2 0 2 2 3 7 6 7 0 2 35\n06 Zivanovic, Stefan... * 1-7 1-3 1-2 0 0 0 2 4 0 3 1 2 29\n09 Markovic, Nikola.... * 6-12 1-2 4-5 5 8 13 2 17 4 2 0 5 37\n11 Lazic, Branko....... * 3-4 0-0 1-2 0 2 2 3 7 1 1 0 1 25\n15 Musli, Dejan........ * 7-9 0-0 0-4 2 4 6 3 14 0 7 1 1 26\n05 Zaric, Aleksandar... 0-1 0-0 0-0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0\n07 Vailic, Milojko..... 1-2 0-0 2-2 2 0 2 2 4 0 2 3 0 8\n08 Dimic, Milos........ 4-6 1-1 0-0 0 0 0 1 9 1 0 0 1 5\n10 Djokic, Dejan....... 1-3 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 2 2 0 2 0 1 6\n12 Smiljanic, Ivan..... 3-11 1-7 0-0 1 5 6 0 7 0 0 1 0 21\n13 Stojadinovic, Marko. 1-2 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 7\n14 Lukovic, Uros....... 0-0 0-0 1-2 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 1\nTeam................ 4 4\nTotals.............. 30-64 4-17 10-19 11 25 36 20 74 13 25 6 14 200\nTOTAL FG% 1st Half: 15-30 50.0% 2nd Half: 15-34 44.1% Game: 46.9% DEADB\n3-Pt. FG% 1st Half: 1-6 16.7% 2nd Half: 3-11 27.3% Game: 23.5% REBS\nF Throw % 1st Half: 6-14 42.9% 2nd Half: 4-5 80.0% Game: 52.6% 4\nHOME TEAM: USA THREE 0-1\n05 Dotson, Aaron....... * 1-3 0-1 2-2 1 2 3 2 4 2 0 0 1 14\n06 Wall, John.......... * 8-15 2-4 0-0 1 2 3 1 18 2 3 2 4 30\n09 Richmond, Jereme.... * 0-1 0-1 0-2 1 3 4 1 0 0 3 0 1 16\n10 Moser, Mike......... * 0-2 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 20\n13 Tyler, Jeremy....... * 3-7 0-1 0-0 1 1 2 3 6 0 2 0 1 11\n04 Franklin Jr, Gary... 4-10 4-8 0-2 0 8 8 1 12 2 0 0 1 25\n07 Gilchrist, Michael.. 0-3 0-0 1-2 1 2 3 1 1 1 3 1 0 11\n08 Waiters, Dion....... 2-6 0-2 2-2 1 2 3 3 6 3 4 1 5 24\n11 Jennings, Milton.... 0-0 0-0 0-0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 10\n12 Thomas, DeShaun..... 11-18 0-0 0-0 4 2 6 3 22 0 2 0 1 17\n15 Orton, Daniel....... 1-3 0-0 2-6 1 5 6 3 4 1 3 2 0 22\nTeam................ 4 1 5\nTotals.............. 30-68 6-19 7-16 16 28 44 19 73 12 20 6 17 200\n3-Pt. FG% 1st Half: 3-12 25.0% 2nd Half: 3-7 42.9% Game: 31.6% REBS\nF Throw % 1st Half: 2-8 25.0% 2nd Half: 5-8 62.5% Game: 43.8% 6\nOfficials:\nTechnical fouls: Serbia-None. USA THREE-Team.\nScore by Periods 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Total\nSerbia........................ 14 23 12 25 - 74\nUSA THREE..................... 21 16 20 16 - 73\nFull Bracket and box scores\ncan be found on PrimeTimePDX.com","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line920600"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5609497427940369,"wiki_prob":0.5609497427940369,"text":"Great Pentecost sermon on the signs of the times (e.g., the Obama’s HHS mandate and his war on the Church)\nPosted on 1 June 2012 by Fr. John Zuhlsdorf\nIt is the Octave of Pentecost. We can should and review Pentecost during the Octave.\nA friend of mine, Fr. Richard Jacobs, OSA, gave this sermon for Pentecost Sunday:\nOne of the Fathers of the Church, St. Cyril of Alexandria, wrote the following statement describing the presence of the Holy Spirit alive and at work within us:\nIt’s quite natural for people who have been absorbed by the things of this world to become entirely other-worldly in outlook and for cowards to become people of great courage.\nOn this Solemnity of Pentecost, what would it mean for those who have been absorbed the things of this world to become entirely other-worldly in outlook and for their cowardice to be transformed into great courage?\nI know for sure what our nation’s Catholic bishops are saying it requires: Confronting the threats being posed today to religious liberty.\nAs you may know, this past week the nation’s Catholic bishops filed 12 lawsuits on behalf of 43 different Catholic institutions and groups to defend religious liberty. The focus of the lawsuits is the Department of Health and Human Services’ healthcare mandate. While many in the media have called the bishops’ lawsuits part of the Vatican’s larger “war against women” and a dispute that’s of concern “only to a tiny minority of Catholics who hold rather peculiar views about human sexuality,” that kind of vitriol is purposely intended to deflect attention away from the merit of the substantive argument, which is the slow but steady erosion of conscience protections for religious institutions and individuals in what’s for the most part a secular society…one having no religious roots.\nThe substantive issue being contested can be stated in the form of a question: Does the federal government possess the right to mandate Church-sponsored institutions and individuals to promote what its moral teachings forbid?\nMore practically, should an organization—like Catholic Charities—be compelled by the federal government to provide its employees access to contraceptives, sterilizations, and abortafacients? Or, should Catholic Relief Services—one of the world’s premiere disaster assistance organizations—be compelled by the federal government to provide “the full range of reproductive services,” including abortion, when attempting to aid people who have been afflicted by natural disasters?\nThe bishops’ lawsuits are not contesting those practicalities, but something that’s much more fundamental, the constitutional principle guaranteeing free expression of religion. The bishops believe this principle has been gradually eroding in such ways that the federal government and its agents now believe they possess the authority to make those practicalities the issue.\nHHS Secretary Sebelius has maintained that the goal of her mandate is to protect women’s health. That may be, depending upon what it means “to protect women’s health.” But, Ms. Sebelius’ mandate has the intentional effect of compelling religious institutions and individuals to facilitate and to fund services that violate their beliefs and, worse yet, within their own institutions. The irony is that, in fact, those services are already widely and for the most part cheaply available, and most employers provide coverage for them.\nWhat the mandate is, is bad enough. It’s nothing other than an unprecedented assault by agents of the federal government to compel religious institutions and individuals to violate their deepest moral convictions. But, there’s something even more insidious about Ms. Sebelius’ mandate. If government policy can close down or force religious providers of healthcare, social services, and education to serve as agents of the government’s policy, then the federal government will have consolidated its monopoly over those services, making the government all-powerful in those areas.\nThe President of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Cardinal Timothy Dolan said: “Never before have we faced this kind of challenge to our ability to engage in the public square as people of faith.”\nBut it’s not just the nation’s Catholic bishops who are concerned. Baptist, Orthodox Jew, Orthodox Christian, Mormon, and other religious leaders gathered this past week for a daylong summit in Washington, DC, at the Ethics and Public Policy’s American Religious Freedom Program. There they discussed the eroding state of religious freedom in the United States and formulated a plan to confront this moral malignancy.\nThen, too, in what would have been impossible to envision even just six decades ago, the largely evangelical Protestant group sponsoring the summit awarded Archbishop Lori of Baltimore the “American Religious Freedom Award” for his “vigorous but gracious defense of religious liberty in the face of increasing hostility and legal and policy challenges.” Then, too, in response to the bishops’ defense of religious freedom, the one-time Baptist minister, former Arkansas Governor, and Fox News host, Mike Huckabee, flatly declared, “We’re all Catholics now.”\nToday’s scripture reminds us that when the Holy Spirit is alive and at work within us, people who don’t comprehend what they are saying to one another as well as what they are debating or arguing with one another about, miraculously understand one another.\nToday’s scripture also reminds us that when the Holy Spirit is alive and at work within us, differences in race, nationality, and creed—externals that would otherwise divide people—suddenly disappear.\nToday scripture also reminds us that when the Holy Spirit is alive and at work within us, people who possess different talents and capabilities don’t use them exclusively for their personal aggrandizement or benefit, but offer those talents and capabilities for the good of all.\nIn sum, the presence of the Holy Spirit alive and at work in us makes all of this possible since the source of all these differences is God. And, when people realize the divine source of these differences and root themselves in God, it’s possible for love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness, gentleness, and self control to overcome all of the immorality, impurity, lust, idolatry, sorcery, hatred, rivalry, jealousy, outbursts of fury, acts of selfishness, dissensions, factions, occasions of envy, drinking bouts, orgies, and the like that are rooted in all of those differences, not in the divine source of those differences.\nBecause, as we heard in the Sequence, the presence of the Holy Spirit “heals wounds,” “bends stubborn hearts and wills,” and “guides the steps that go astray.”\nAllow me to suggest that what we may be witnessing on this Solemnity of Pentecost are religious leaders who for all too long have been absorbed in the things of this world suddenly becoming entirely other-worldly in outlook, as their cowardice is being transformed into great courage. As Cardinal Dolan said to Bob Scheifer on “Face the Nation” back on April 8: “We didn’t ask for this fight, but we won’t back away from it.”\nSurveying all of these events, I’m wondering whether this series of events may be one of those “signs of the times” the Second Vatican Council said we should be alert to and, in particular, what may be a sign of the Holy Spirit making possible the first concrete step in authentic ecumenism. For once, religious leaders are rooted in upholding God’s law rather than defending who was right and who was wrong in religious battles that took place centuries ago. If that doesn’t demonstrate the power of the Holy Spirit alive and at work in those religious leaders, then I don’t know what possibly could. And, if it is, then it’s time for all of us to get to work confronting the threats being posed to religious liberty.\nOn this Solemnity of Pentecost, let’s those of us who have been absorbed in the things of this world to become entirely other-worldly in outlook, as St. Cyril of Alexandria reminds us, by allowing the Holy Spirit to transform our cowardice into great courage.\nThis entry was posted in Dogs and Fleas, Mail from priests, Our Catholic Identity, Religious Liberty, The Drill, The future and our choices, The Last Acceptable Prejudice and tagged Catholic Charities, Catholic Relief Services, Cyril of Alexandria, health care, HHS mandate, Kathleen Sebelius, Obama Administration, Pentecost, Pres. Obama, religious liberty, reproductive services. Bookmark the permalink.\nPoor Green Lantern.\nI’m SHOCKED! LCWR rejects the Holy See’s reform\n1 June 2012 at 4:35 PM\nThere will be conversions to Catholicism because of this fight. But, we shall lose some Catholics as well. As in any war, there are heroes and casualties.\nLegisperitus says:\nThe war being waged is against Christ. His life, death, and resurrection change and inform everything. The banner we take up, more than the banner of liberty, must be the banner of Christ because He is the true Enemy and Victim of those who oppress the Church. The liberty of the Church is the freedom of Christ’s action in the world. Sooner or later, it will have to come down to a stand on the question of Christ. “Who do you say that I am?”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1280688"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5348073244094849,"wiki_prob":0.5348073244094849,"text":"File photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graeme Roy\nBurned vehicle in Port Moody linked to Coquitlam, B.C., shooting, police say\nNine-year-old boy who was in the back seat was not injured\nPolice say they believe a suspicious vehicle fire in Port Moody, B.C., is connected to a shooting that occurred minutes before in nearby Coquitlam.\nA statement from Port Moody police says officers responded to a report of a silver sedan that was found burning on Saturday after being abandoned.\nMounties in Coquitlam say they’re now investigating any connection between the burned vehicle and the shooting, which may have been targeted.\nThey say the victim, who was not known to police, was taken hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries and later released.\nThey say his nine-year-old son, who was in the back seat, was not injured.\nThe RCMP say in a statement that there is not enough evidence to establish or rule out a link between the shooting and gang conflict in the Lower Mainland, “but police do not believe this was a completely random act.”\nThey say a silver sedan with a description matching the burned vehicle was seen leaving the area and police are asking anyone who was in the Westwood Plateau or Maude Court areas between 4:20 and 5:30 p.m. on Saturday to come forward with any information that could be helpful.\nB.C.’s storm recovery ‘trending in the right direction,’ but gas rationing to remain\nNelson ecologist questions B.C.’s roll-out of old growth strategy","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line999357"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7390123605728149,"wiki_prob":0.7390123605728149,"text":"This is my Day-to-Day Weblog on the Japanese Economy. For More Detailed In-Depth Commentary, Analysis and Links on Japan's Continuing Economic Crisis See the Japan Page on My Website\nJapan's Job-Loss 'Recovery'\nI'v made myself a promise to try and look a bit more at Japan this week, since I'm sure I've been neglecting things there. This piece serves to kill two birds with one stone, since it also relates to the ongoing 'structural reforms' theme. I think the argument demonstrates two things: that job creation is getting harder everywhere, and that the Asia Times (following on from the previous post) is a neglected source of good-quality information. BTW I've put the 'R' word in scare quotes, since that is the topic I will be trying to investigate this week.\nJapan: the rising specter of unemployment By Hussain Khan\nTOKYO - Higher labor costs, yen appreciation resulting in the outsourcing of production facilities and growing computerization all point to a long-term structural increase in Japan's jobless. Due to heavy losses in labor-intensive sectors, companies are planning further outsourcing of their production facilities to countries where labor costs are much lower.\nIt is difficult to describe how profound these changes are in Japanese society. They are breaking down a system of lifetime security for the low-paid but loyal sarariman (salaryman) of legend, whose antecedents sociologists trace back to the samurai system in which a warrior class dedicated their lives to their feudal lords. In modern society, the Japanese company has served as the locus of social stability for the sarariman, with loyalty to the firm resembling earlier fealty to nobles. Today, as outsourcing continues and jobs go overseas, the essential nature of the country�s work force and its values are being challenged in an unprecedented way. The office lady, who joined her equally inefficient sarariman colleague in the work force, is also likely to be a victim of the aggressive rationalization of Japan's notoriously disorganized office operations.\nJapan's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate stood at 5.1 percent in August, the lowest level since the 5 percent posted in August 2001, according to a report released by the Ministry of Public Management, Home Affairs, Posts and Telecommunications. That means that during the last two years, employment has not improved. Rather it has deteriorated. The number of part-time workers fell for the first time in 20 months, while the total of all people who worked during the month also dropped 100,000 from a year before to 63.61 million, the first negative growth in four months, indicating that the nation's employment situation remains bleak. The number of employed people decreased by 160,000 year on year to 53.47 million.\nThe number of people out of work due to corporate restructuring and other reasons related to their employers totaled 970,000. This was the first time since January 2002 that the figure had fallen below 1 million, an indication that corporate restructuring may have run its course. But this optimism over a drop of mere 3 percent in one month is not justified after 1 million have been unemployed for the last 20 months.\nThe weakening dollar and the stronger yen had not taken their toll as the Bank of Japan heavily intervened in the currency market. But after John Snow, the United States Treasury Secretary, criticized Japanese exchange rate intervention in a congressional committee in Washington, the yen rose as high 107 yen to US$1, breaking the psychological barrier of 108 yen. Speculation is for a trend toward 105 yen and more yen appreciation shortly.\nUnder such a scenario, the pressure is increasing for further corporate restructuring, and with it further job losses. The one-month drop of 3 percent and the 20-month old trend averaging more than 1 million unemployed can be expected to resume with greater force as long the yen continues to appreciate, since a lot of export-related corporations have started fresh plans to outsource their production facilities, especially in the electrical white goods sector.\nEven apart from the pressure of yen appreciation, corporate restructuring is continuing, with no signs of abating. Although the banking sector has been the main beneficiary of the recent stock market rise, some banks like the Resona Group expect to cut employees, with the group dismissing some 4,000 employees,reducing its staff from 19,000 to 15,000 by March 2005 in a bid to complete its revised restructuring program two years ahead of schedule.\nA draft of Resona's new restructuring plan also calls for reducing outstanding loans to smaller businesses at fiscal year-end next March by 1 trillion yen on the year as an attempt to shift its focus from quantity to quality. The draft fails to set the schedule for repaying public funds, foreseeing that the group's profits will remain flat from fiscal 2004 through fiscal 2006. It also calls for skipping all dividend payouts through fiscal 2004, including those to the government. The latest plan by the banking group, which is effectively under the government's control, is expected to be finalized by the end of next month for submission to the Financial Services Agency.\nThis is a revised version of the business reconstruction plan crafted in June after the government decided to inject about 2 trillion yen of taxpayer's money into the group. Under the updated plan, Resona group is to also reduce its number of branches to 495 by the end of fiscal 2004, 20 more than called for under the current plan. With these aggressive restructuring efforts, the group's expenses as of the end of March 2005 are projected at 90 billion yen less than those of two years earlier. The ratio of labor and property costs to gross operating profit is to be slashed to 52 percent from 59 percent as well.\nThe banks are not alone in their restructuring plans. Sanyo is emblematic of the new and unsettling Japan. In the electrical goods manufacturing sector, as a part of its effort to provide secure employment, Sanyo continued to produce white goods at its domestic plants. But with the white goods business unlikely to stop bleeding red ink in the immediate future, Sanyo has decided to downsize its operations in Hyogo Prefecture and another in Shiga prefecture. The Hyogo plant is to cease production of vacuum cleaners, massage chairs and all other products by year-end and focus on research and development. The Shiga plant is scheduled to stop making microwave ovens, washing machines and double-tub washing machines by the end of this fiscal year.\nAs a result, sales from domestic production are expected to account for about 20 percent of the firm's overall home appliance sales, down sharply from the current 60 percent. Sanyo intends to reduce employees at the two plants from the current 1,250 to around 900 by April 2004 through relocations to other divisions and transfers to subcontractors. The company plans to maintain its product lineup by outsourcing production at the two plants to outside firms and transferring it to overseas factories. Sanyo's home appliance division recorded a 10.5 billion yen operating loss on a consolidated basis for the fiscal year ended March 31, making it the only one of the firm's six divisions to be in the red.\nOther companies in the same or related sectors like Futjitsu and Hitachi have also announced losses. Like Sanyo, these companies also must reduce employees to meet their restructuring goals. Fujitsu, the major computer maker, said that it posted a consolidated net loss of 58.5 billion yen for the fiscal first half ended September 30, mainly due to money-losing operations in the computer software service division caused by a general decline in information technology investment among corporate clients.\nProfit from the software division, the firm's core operation, declined by more than 40 percent. The manufacturing sectors for electronics parts and for information and telecommunications stayed in the red despite cost reduction efforts, according to company officials. The company reported a special profit of 34.4 billion yen, mainly from sales of its stockholding in Fanuc Ltd, the major industrial robot maker, but the gain was not enough to offset the net loss.\nAs for Hitachi, growing losses from a hard-disk drive business it acquired the previous year were the main contributor to a 5 percent fall in consolidated net profit to 5.3 billion yen in the fiscal first half, even after Hitachi sold portions of its stock in affiliate Nitto Denko Corp, which generated a special profit of more than 90 billion yen. Hitachi officials said that an increase in pension payments and other factors reduced operating profit by 67 percent to 20.2 billion yen.\nHitachi�s heavy and industrial machinery division also suffered a decline in profit due to cutbacks in investment, mainly among electric power companies. Earnings from refrigerators, washing machines and other household appliances were also weak because Japan experienced an unusually cool summer. Unlike Sharp Corp and Matsushita Electric Industrial Co, neither Fujitsu nor Hitachi is a major player in the fast-growing digital home appliances sector, which is another factor for their poor performance.\nThe effect of computerization on employment cannot be neglected. On the second day of the Nikkei Global Management Forum, Scott McNealy, chairman and chief executive officer of US computer firm Sun Microsystems Inc, said information technology will bring about drastic changes in the corporate world. Since the spread of IT will render obsolete conventional ways of working, personnel ability and corporate activities, companies will have to adapt to the changes, for example, by reorganizing their employment structure, he said.\nMcNealy pointed out that companies can enjoy the benefits of a ubiquitous computing environment such as improved productivity and the need for less office space. The Sun executive noted that companies also need to accept the negative aspects of IT, such as changes in working conditions and increases in corporate bankruptcies as the natural consequences of a computerized society. He said that although governments tend to try to stop such changes, companies should be forward-looking.\nThat means that if Japan's companies are to become more competitive, the job cuts will continue, changing long-held standards of Japanese society. Those changes are bound to be painful for a society not used to pain.\nSource: Asia Times\nThis is my Day-to-Day Weblog on the Japanese Econo...\nJapan's Job-Loss 'Recovery' I'v made myself a...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1784816"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9106512069702148,"wiki_prob":0.9106512069702148,"text":"“… a place of innocent recreation and entertainment …”\nIn 1870, Perth people quickly took advantage of the new facilities and organised social events such as concerts and dances. Some early users of the hall raised money to help the City Council improve the facilities, while other activities supported all sorts of causes. The Town Hall was truly intended as a social centre.\nEntertainments of all kinds – both amateur and professional – have been a feature of the Town Hall ever since. Concerts – popular as well as classical – continue to be popular. Plays and shows are still staged – the Town Hall has even been a venue for the Perth Festival Fringe. The Town Hall was also used as a cinema for a while in the early years of the twentieth century.\nSporting activities, such as boxing, fencing, callisthenics, and even badminton, also feature in the history of the Town Hall.\nCelebrations over the years\nPerformances for all tastes\nDances at the Town Hall have always been popular and many community groups have organised balls there. Tuesday morning community shows still provide a popular program of entertainment for seniors.\nJane Jewell, daughter of the architect Richard Roach Jewell, sang a solo at the first concert held at the Perth Town Hall on 15 July 1870. ‘The Elfin Echoes’ is a setting of a poem by Tennyson. The composer is unknown. Performed by Valerie Bannan. MS supplied by RWAHS.\nThe Perth Congregational Choral Society were first off the mark. Their concert on 15 July 1870 was repeated by popular demand a few days later. All the musical forces of the colony were marshalled for a Grand Concert on 29 August 1870. This raised £43/15/8 (equivalent to more than $6000 today), given to the City Council for fitting out the building.\nLocal amateur musicians formed a group called the Minstrels of the West to raise money for a piano. They achieved their goal at their 10th concert in 1877.\nAmateur music-making has always been important to the Perth community. Indeed, community singing at the Town Hall was a feature of the 1920s and 1930s, with radio broadcasts of these events to the West Australian community. Many local choral and instrumental groups have performed at the Town Hall over the years. The stage has also been popular with dancing schools for putting on end-of-year performances and for musical and theatrical competitions.\nA concert performance on the Town Hall stage. The group is probably The Minstrels of the West. Royal Western Australian Historical Society. P1999.4423\nConcert program for the tenth and final concert of the Minstrels of the West. State Library of Western Australia PR381/2\nAudience at the Town Hall for the first community singing concert broadcast by 6WF, 1936. State Library of Western Australia 006489D.\nScouts dressed for performing plays and sketches at their annual meeting and display, 1934. State Library of Western Australia 095312PD.\nDining and dancing\nThe Town Hall today is an elegant and historic function venue.\nAs well as formal civic dinners and receptions, community organisations, private companies and ordinary people host monster tea parties, receptions and dinners in the Town Hall.\nA tea and social in 1935 to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Mr Alfred Sandover’s arrival in Western Australia. State Library of Western Australia 018921PD.\nTown Hall dances have always been popular. Balls were a highlight of social activity in the early years of the Swan River Colony and the Town Hall provided the community with a new popular venue for dancing.\nDancing at the Postal Institute annual meeting and dance.\nImage courtesy of the National Archives of Australia. NAA: K1131, W1552/D.\nPatricia Langford, née Edmondson,\nwearing her debutante gown,\non the Town Hall staircase,\nat the Printers Ball, 1952.\nLance and Patricia Langford and friends at the Printers Ball, 1952.\nHand-made dress, jacket and\nwrap worn by Elsie Weeks\nfor dances at the Town Hall,\n1960s. Lent by Steve Weeks.\nMany Perth couples met at Town Hall dances. Lance Langford remembers how a beautiful brunette named Patricia Edmondson caught his eye and he asked her for a dance. He was 19 and she was 16. There were many dance venues but the Town Hall was a favourite because it was the biggest, had a good floor for dancing and had a good band. Lance and Patricia married in 1954.\nExploring changing fashions of dress over 150 years of events at the Perth Town Hall\nSteve Weeks also remembers the dances at the Town Hall in the early 1960s. As a child, his mother would bring him and he would sleep under the table! But later on, Steve danced there himself as a competitive ballroom dancer.\nSteve Weeks remembers dances at the town hall\nSocial dance clubs have been popular at the Perth Town Hall for many years. This 1991 video shows the Amelia Club, which met on Wednesday nights. The pianist is Beryl Long. She continued to play for the dance clubs well into her 70s! Other clubs were Kui, Beehive and Harmony. The Kui Club started in 1947 and is still going at the Wembley Bowling Club. Most of the dance clubs moved out of the Town Hall to make way for the restoration in 2005.\nThe Coolbaroo Club\nOn 4 October 1954, the Coolbaroo Club held a Gala Royal Show Ball at the Perth Town Hall.\nThe Coolbaroo Club was an Aboriginal organisation well-known for its advocacy for Aboriginal rights and for organising social activities, especially dances. The City of Perth was a prohibited area for Aboriginal people, only abolished in 1954. Booking the Town Hall for their Gala Royal Show Ball celebrated the abolition of the prohibited area and publicly reclaimed the right to be on Aboriginal land. The Coolbaroo Club continued to hold events in the Town Hall for the rest of the decade.\nFarley Garlett interviews Albert and Irene McNamara about their memories of the Coolbaroo Club\nFind out more about the Coolbaroo Club from the City of Perth's new podcast 'Untold Stories of Perth'\nListen to Untold Stories of Perth\nA wide range of sporting contests have been held in the Town Hall, including boxing, badminton, fencing, callisthenics.\nThe first State Badminton Championships were held at the Perth Town Hall in 1927 and in 1950 the Australian Championships finally came to WA for the first time. 1951 saw the State Fencing Championships at the Town Hall.\nBoxing was controversial. Boxing was very popular, but there was also considerable opposition to the sport. Consequently, the use of the Town Hall for boxing matches was very controversial.\nLotteries were also controversial. There was strong opposition to the formation of the Lotteries Commission (now Lotterywest) in the 1930s. A 1933 meeting to protest against the refusal of the Lotteries Commission to allow newspaper competitions was said to be the biggest ever held at the Perth Town Hall. Nevertheless, the Lotteries Commission held public draws at the Perth Town Hall for many years.\nFirst public lottery draw at the Perth Town Hall, 1932. SLWA 101652PD\nJunior boxing match at the Perth Town Hall. WA Newspapers\nA craze for ‘rinking’\nOne of the more surprising uses for Perth Town Hall was for roller skating – or ‘rinking’ as it was known.\nThe craze for roller skating arrived in Australia in the 1860s and a rinking club was formed in Perth in 1877. This was strictly an upper-class affair and the members met twice a week in the Town Hall.\nThe club held a remarkable costume ball on 17 October 1878, recorded in detail in the local papers and by Henry Prinsep’s sketch of the event. The most ‘original and remarkable dress’ was undoubtedly Captain Wilkinson’s Cleopatra’s Needle costume – which must have been very difficult to skate in!\nThe craze grew and within ten years commercial operators stepped in and established several skating rinks in Perth and Fremantle. Mr George Webb set up the Broadway Elite Skating Rink at the Perth Town Hall.\nRoller skating was a popular family affair. Advertisements invited ‘Girls and Boys, their Fathers, Mothers, Grandmothers and Grandfathers and the Baby FREE’. On Boxing Day 1888, 5000 people were expected to attend the Town Hall rink over morning, afternoon and evening sessions. As well as general skating, there were organised games and competitions for adults and children, fast skating and races. Exhibitions of trick skating entertained the crowds, with a band supplying music.\n\"Our Town Hall was looking its best …\"\nThe City of Perth decks out the Town Hall in all its finery for special occasions and celebrations, such as royal visits, commemorations – and of course Christmas!\nThe Town Hall was decorated with flags even before it was finished for the royal visit of the Duke of Edinburgh in 1869. SLWA 6909B/134\nDecorations in Barrack Street for the visit of the Duke and Duchess of York in 1901. SLWA 012500D\nThe 1929 centenary celebrations saw the Town Hall decorated with flags in the daytime and lit up at night. City of Perth. SLWA 095640PD.\nThe Town Hall lit up for the coronation of King George V in 1937. SLWA 095659PD\nAnother royal visit. Perth Town Hall lit for HM Queen Elizabeth II in 1954. SLWA 231933D\nThe Town Hall clock tower decorated for Christmas\nWe are glad to learn that the large public clock for the Town Hall is now in course of erection, and that probably in a few days' time the passing hours will be notified by the quarter chimes, and deep-toned hour bell, while the true Perth time will be shown on its four dials, illuminated at night. … This is the first public convenience which the Town Hall extends to the city; and we cannot question its usefulness.\n… the grand old clock by which all Perth sets its watches, catches its trains, keeps its appointments.\nTown hall clocks were once important landmarks for city life. In the days before everyone carried a personal watch – or a mobile phone – everyone relied on the Town Hall clock to keep time for the city. The sound of the bells striking the hours and the quarters carries about three kilometres and can sometimes be heard as far as Bayswater. And the clock was lit at night.\nAt least one resident of South Perth used to keep a telescope in his front room to check the time by the Town Hall clock. Raising a flag on the tower used to be the signal that the mail boat had arrived.\nWaiting for the stroke of midnight, New Year’s Eve, 1936. WA Newspaper.\nLooking After The Clock\nThe Town Hall clock was built by London clockmakers, Thwaites and Reed and the three bells also came from London. It was installed by local clockmaker Mr John Bowra, who maintained the clock for many years. It was originally wound by hand, but electric motors now do the job.\nThe Ennis family has looked after the clock now for nearly ninety years. Norman Ennis of Ennis Jewellers, got the contract in the early 1930s and Norm’s sons, Norman Junior and Ron followed in his footsteps. Today, Paul Ennis, Norm Ennis’s grandson, keeps the clock running.\nPaul Ennis is the third generation of the Ennis family to maintain the clock. WA Newspapers\nAny problem with the Town Hall clock was once big news in Perth. One of the hazards in the early days was birds getting into the works and stopping the clock. The clock is also affected by the weather – so in a heat wave people would complain that the clock was wrong.\nGenerations of Perth people gathered at Town Hall to see in the New Year as the clock struck. Radio station 6WF broadcast New Year festivities from the Perth Town Hall. And the Town Hall clock marked the two-minute silence on Armistice Day 11 November.\nNorm Ennis, junior, remembers how “Everyone congregated under the dial for the clock to see the New Year in, and nearly every year there was a big article in the paper that the Town Hall clock had never struck the midnight hour. …. the congregation was so eager, that they’d start cheering and that before the clock actually struck, and then they’d claim the damn thing had never struck.” So, Norm used to climb up with a hammer to strike the bell himself if necessary. But he never needed to as the clock always worked perfectly!\nA word from John Bowra\nBattles over time\nCommitment to the cause\nThe Clock Tower\nA scale model of the Perth Town Hall clock made in recycled jarrah by retired engineer, James Lang, of Mount Lawley. Lent by the Lang family.\nFor many years, the clock tower on the corner of Barrack and Hay Streets was the tallest building in the city and would have been a prominent landmark for meeting friends.\nHelen Mountstephen remembers in the 1950s and 1960s “the Perth Town Hall was one of the places where people would quite often meet.”\nAnd Steve Weeks remembers being a newsboy on the Town Hall corner selling the Daily News.\nListen to Steve Weeks\nOver the years, the platform at the top of the tower has been a favourite vantage point for photographers. More than a century of photographs taken from the clock tower show how the city has changed.\nHistorical Panoramas\nClick here to find out more about the changing cityscape.\nFrom “Old Derelict” to “Jewel of the City”\nSince it opened, there have been a wide range of opinions about the Perth Town Hall, as the building has adapted to the changing needs of a growing city.\nGovernor Hampton’s views of the town hall\nA much-loved landmark\nThe citizens of Perth were generally delighted with their new Town Hall. However, early users complained about the ‘wretched acoustics’ and the facilities.\nChanges to the Town Hall began even before it was opened, with the telegraph office housed in the base of the tower from 1869. A new building to house the Legislative Council was built in the planned courtyard to the east of the building. The Legislative Council was sworn in at the Town Hall on 5 December 1870, while the Perth City Council held its first meeting in 1871.\nCommemorating the centenary of the first meeting of the Council in 1971. City of Perth.\nThe plan to use the undercroft for a market was controversial from the start. The market did eventually open in 1872, but only lasted a few years. Instead, the undercroft was progressively enclosed and altered from the 1880s to provide space for Town Hall staff and lettable offices to increase revenue.\nIn 1875, Perth acquired a fire engine. It was kept under the arches at the Town Hall until the new fire station was built in 1901. There was no room for a stable, so if the fire alarm rang the horses from the cab rank outside the Town Hall were hitched to the fire engine.\nFrom the 1890s, discussion began about replacing the Town Hall with a more modern building to meet the needs of the Council as Perth grew. For the next thirty years, every scheme that was proposed met with opposition. One problem was that the land title only included the land on which the building stood. This was an obstacle to any future expansion. It also became clear that many citizens were attached to the Town Hall as a landmark and for its historical associations, despite its inconveniences.\nFinally, in 1924, the Council bought the Strelitz Building on Murray Street for offices and Council chambers. The move was financed by converting the ground floor of the Town Hall to shops – described by the West Australian at the time as ‘municipal vandalism’. At the same time, alterations were made to the Town Hall itself, including remodelling of the stage and gallery, and a new kitchen and supper rooms. Various alterations and repairs have continued over the years.\nConverting the undercroft at the Perth Town Hall into shops in 1925. SLWA 008814PD\nCraven’s Pharmacy on the corner of Hay and Barrack Streets, 1925. SLWA 008314PD\nShops under the Town Hall\nOver the years, various businesses have had premises in the Town Hall. Craven’s Pharmacy was the longest tenancy and became a landmark in its own right on the corner under the Town Hall clock. As the 1927 advertisement said:\nTry Craven’s Pharmacy, under Town Hall Clock, first.\nIf they haven’t got it, it can’t be got.\nOther shops in the 1930s included Ferstat, jeweller and tobacconist, the Rose Marie Fruit Palace, Petals florist, Warner, jeweller, Rutland and Thomas, tailors, and the Rosebud Tea Rooms.\nAfter World War 2, Maxim’s Café was a favourite destination after dances at the Town Hall – as Lance Langford remembers:\nI loved the food … popular in the evening with a cup of tea – a pancake with syrup like a waffle … only two shillings.\nThere was a public outcry when the Council closed Maxim’s in 1956 for major alterations to the shops.\nRose Marie Fruit Palace. SLWA 128411PD\nMaxim’s Café. SLWA 103462PD\nClick here to read more about Mr Epstein’s Rosebud Tea Rooms.\nA heritage jewel in the historic heart of Perth\nThe Town Hall narrowly escaped demolition in the 1950s when the new Council House was planned. The new Council House was built, but public protests ensured the old Town Hall was not replaced.\nIn the 1990s, conservation studies recommended restoration of key features such as the brick arches, as well as necessary repairs resulting from the construction and demolition of the R&I bank tower. Modernisation of the facilities secured the use of the Town Hall into the future. The Council embarked on a major program of restoration in 2001, which was completed in 2005.\nToday, the Perth Town Hall is once again appreciated as an iconic landmark and a key element in the complex of historic buildings at the heart of the city, including the State Buildings, St George’s Cathedral and Government House.\nCaptain Stirling and his party arrived at Kuraree on 12 August 1829, and marked the site of the future City of Perth by felling a tree. This event began a period of conflict over land and resources. For the dispossessed Whadjuk Nyoongar, life would never be the same again. The settlers, with their houses, fences and roads, their crops and their animals, took over the land and stopped access to traditional hunting and gathering places.\nChris Pease, Land Release 3 2008. The artist shows how British land tenure was imposed on Nyoongar Country. City of Perth Cultural Collections\nNevertheless, over the years Whadjuk Nyoongar have continued to fight for recognition and asserted traditional ownership of the area where the city stands.\nThe Aborigines Protection Act of 1905 gave power over all aspects of Aboriginal people’s lives to a ‘Protector’. This included employment and wages, where they could live, who they could marry, and often children were taken away from their parents to be brought up in institutions such as Moore River Settlement. From 1927, central Perth was a prohibited area. Aboriginal people needed permits to enter the city and were arrested if found there after the 6pm curfew.\nA permit allowing the holder to be in the prohibited area\nCity of Perth Elder Margaret Culbong remembers those days.\nWe hardly went into Perth because we were only allowed in parts because of the racism and discrimination. My Dad worked on the railways and got a free pass on the train into Perth. That street that ran past the station, we were really only allowed to go. The corner of Barrack Street and Wellington is where we used to sit. Dad and Mum did business and went to Perth for medical business. We would sit on the seat and watch all the traffic go past.\nWe only went down Barrack Street if we went to the government garden. We had to walk on one side of Barrack Street past the Town Hall, not the other side. Weren’t allowed to do that. We went into the government gardens. Walking on the right side, never on the left side of Barrack Street. Because of all those restrictions. Racism and oppression.\nCity of Perth Elder Margaret Culbong\nOver the years, various Aboriginal organisations, mostly based in East Perth, such as the Coolbaroo League formed in 1947, provided social services and campaigned for Aboriginal rights. When the prohibited area was finally abolished in 1954, the Coolbaroo League lost no time in reclaiming the City of Perth by hiring the Town Hall for their Royal Show Gala Ball.\nToday, the City of Perth acknowledges that it is on Whadjuk Nyoongar land and City of Perth Elders have contributed to developing the content for this exhibition.\nCrochet shield in Aboriginal colours, by City of Perth Elder Margaret Culbong.\nI do a lot of crocheting – beanies and that sort of thing. Get the cheaper wool when I can pick it up. I had this wool left over and I thought maybe I should make something with it. I thought the City of Perth had all their coat of arms whatsit things. I thought I’d do one too. Thought I might as well crochet a shield. At the time it didn’t really mean anything and no real significance, but then as I went along with the crochet it did begin to matter. It became something. It mattered. It had the white man’s shape and size but it was putting our mark and our claim on our country.\nMargaret Culbong\nCity of Perth Cultural Collections.\nFind out more about Aboriginal culture and heritage in the City of Perth at Perth Online","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1456559"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6150652766227722,"wiki_prob":0.3849347233772278,"text":"After Emily came Unity\n“Never paint from anything but real life whether it is a person or flower.” — Unity Bainbridge\n[We have only just been informed of the death of author and painter Unity Bainbridgem who live more than one hundred years. – Ed.]\nUnity Bainbridge of West Vancouver was a distinguished painter and an amateur ethnologist who frequently visited the Lillooet and Whistler area, painting many portraits of First Nations people. In editions of 1,000 copies she self-published Songs of Seton: The Three Sisters of Nekiat (1974, 1975, 1976) and Lullaby of Lillooet (1977). Along with text in the form of diary extracts, Bainbridge’s paintings recall her visits from 1942 and 1976 with a romanticized, tragic perspective. “This book is written in memory of lovely things that have gone… the lost little churches and the villages of Lillooet,” etc.\nOn a social level, Bainbridge preceded a community of artists and arts supporters in West Vancouver during the 1940s and 1950s that included Gordon and Marion Smith, Bert (B.C.) Binning, Jessie Binning, Alistair Bell, Betty Bell, Geoff and Ruth Massey. Her contributions to art and society were eventually recognized with the Order of British Columbia in 1993 and a Queen’s Jubilee medal.\nBorn on July 6, 1916, she died on November 30, 2017, predeceased by her parents, Ursula Ridgeway (her sister) and husband Bob. She was survived by her daughter Deb Ryan (Rick) and sister Monica Reznick as well as grandchildren, great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews. Her work is in the permanent collection of many galleries such as Buckingham Palace, Imperial War Museum, Diefenbaker Museum and the Vancouver Art Gallery.\n[See obituary below from Emily Carr News]\nBainbridge, Unity. Songs of Seton: The Three Sisters of Nekiat (s.p., 1974, 1975, 1976).\nBainbridge, Unity. Lullaby of Lillooet (s.p., 1977).\n[BCBW 2018] “First Nations” “Art”\nUnity Bainbridge | In Memoriam\nPosted on December 15, 2017 | Emily Carr News\nWe are sad to announce the passing of one of our most loved and respected alumni, artist Unity Bainbridge, a 1936 graduate of the Vancouver School of Art. We are sharing her obituary, lovingly written by her daughter, Deb Ryan.\nUnity (Bainbridge) Brewster, a long time resident of West Vancouver, passed peacefully in her sleep in the late hours November 30th 2017. Unity was predeceased by her parents, George P. and Deborah Bainbridge, and her sister Ursula Ridgeway. Unity is survived by her daughter Deborah Ryan (Rick), granddaughters Lisa Denton (Caley), Cindy Devlin, grandchildren Isabelle and Emma Denton, Chase and Hudson Devlin. Also left to mourn are sister, Monica Resnick and many nieces and nephews.\nUnity, an early pioneer Canadian artist, was born in Victoria BC on July 6th 1916. Her talent was exhibited as a child and perfected as a student at the Vancouver School of Art (Emily Carr University) from which she graduated in 1936. She felt a kinship with other artists who shared her love of nature. She was a classmate contemporary of Ed Hughes and was influenced by her discussions and visits with “Group of Seven artists Frederik Varley and Lawren Harris.\n“History must be left intact” is a phrase often associated with the work of Unity when one views her work and reads the details of her subjects in her books and the marginalia integral to her art. Unity saw and experienced the mystical magic of the world and always sought to reflect that mysticism in her work.\nUnity never ceased to remind people “We were taught at Art School to always draw from life and strive to do as well as Leonardo. Art is life and life is Art. We would have been expelled if we were found copying. I along with my class mates were taught that you do not paint to sell: you paint because you are passionate about something and to embrace that passion so others can experience it.”\nUnity’s art has been exhibited in galleries, large and small, from the early thirties to the present day. She had her first large one woman show in the early fifties. Her work is in the permanent collection of Buckingham Palace, Canada House, Imperial War Museum, the Diefenbaker Museum, Vancouver Art Gallery, as well as in numerous galleries and homes around the world.\nUnity was always drawn to the Indigenous people. She believed the First Nation traditional culture provides the foundation blocks for creating a healthy, compassionate society possessing respect for the power of nature.\nUnity received many awards over her lifetime including the Province of British Columbia’s highest honour, the Order of British Columbia.\n« Unity Bainbridge (1916-2017)\n#292 What’s OK & not OK in OK »","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line778631"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8403348922729492,"wiki_prob":0.8403348922729492,"text":"Latvia to enter month-long lockdown\nHELSINKI (AP) — Latvia will enter into a nearly monthlong lockdown, including a curfew, on Thursday due to the worsening coronavirus situation in the Baltic country where the vaccination rate is among the lowest in the European Union.\nFollowing an emergency government meeting late Monday, Latvian Prime Minister Krisjanis Karins said that the lockdown from Oct. 21 until Nov. 15 and accompanying drastic measures are needed as the pandemic continues to spread quickly, causing hospital wards to fill up with COVID-19 patients amid scarce health care resources.\nOnly slightly over half of Latvians are now fully vaccinated, and Karins admitted that his government had failed in sufficiently luring citizens to get jabs.\n“There are many people, too many people, who are not vaccinated,” Karins said, as quoted by the Latvian public broadcaster LSM.\nSo far Latvia, a nation of 1.9 million, has recorded some 190,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and nearly 2,900 deaths.\nThe Centre for Disease Prevention and Control of Latvia said on Monday that the country’s COVID-19 incidence rate per 100,000 population stands now at 864, currently among the highest in the world.\nA nationwide curfew will be imposed between 8 p.m. and 5 a.m. as of Thursday. Most stores will be closed and indoor and outdoor gatherings, including entertainment, sports and cultural events won’t be allowed.\nKarins and Health Minister Daniels Pavluts apologized for the stringent measures to those Latvians who had already been vaccinated.\n“We, the government and society as a whole, haven’t succeeded in achieving a high enough vaccination coverage. So we must ask you to suspend your lives for several weeks to avoid the worst possible scenario,” Pavluts said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line60104"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9713305830955505,"wiki_prob":0.9713305830955505,"text":"France: Russia is funding Wagner Group mercenaries in Mali\nPARIS (AP) — France on Thursday condemned the Malian transitional authorities’ decision to allow the deployment of the Wagner Group, and accused Moscow of funding the private military company’s use of mercenaries in the West African country.\n“We are aware of the involvement of the Russian government in providing material support to the deployment of the Wagner group in Mali,” the French foreign ministry said in an emailed statement. It called on Russia “to revert to a responsible and constructive behavior” in West Africa.\nMali has struggled to contain an Islamic extremist insurgency since 2012. Extremist rebels were forced from power in the country’s northern cities with the help of a French-led military operation, but they regrouped in the desert and began launching attacks on the Malian army and its allies.\nIn June, Col. Assimi Goita was sworn in as president of a transitional Malian government after carrying out his second coup in nine months. Mali faces increasing isolation from the international community over the junta’s power grab. Elections are due to be held in February, but there are fears they will be delayed.\n“We deeply regret the choice of the Malian transitional authorities to use already scarce public funds to pay foreign mercenaries instead of supporting the Malian Armed Forces,” the French statement said.\nThe Wagner Group has been accused by western governments and United Nations experts of human rights abuses in the Central African Republic and involvement in the conflict in Libya. France and Germany have both objected to the presence of its mercenaries in Mali.\nRussian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said that the company has a “legitimate” right to be in the West African nation because it was invited by the transitional government, and he has insisted that the Russian government is not involved.\nTsunami advisory issued for West Coast while Texas deals with high fire danger\nAdalia Rose: Austinite, social media star with rare genetic condition dies at 15","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line74247"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7203612327575684,"wiki_prob":0.27963876724243164,"text":"The Clover Club\nWhen I first started working on this project in 2004, I had a head full of ideas and was working my way through them when in 2013 I was admitted to hospital in a serious condition. Fortunately for me the amazing doctors and staff at Clatterbridge Hospital in the Wirral pulled me through. Not surprisingly after that, my family had a lot to say about the amount of time I was working on Post Racing and the additional time I would be spending on my vision. This caused me to sit back a bit, take stock and look at what I could do once I got back to my desk. I accepted I did far too much, hardly ever took time off and consequently it had taken its toll. I decided to go back to basics last year and the results speak for themselves. Now, however, I am looking at how I can take the vision forward starting in October 2021 without it putting me back into hospital!\nI believe that by working in a different way, the Post Racing Clover Club is achievable and that once you read the rest of this document, you will agree and help to make it happen.\nPRIMARY AIMS AND OBJECTIVES\nMy aim, as always, is to make sure we all feel part of the Post Racing community, back enough winners each year to cover the subscription fees and produce a profit that will ensure the longevity of the community year after year.\nThe Post Racing Clover Club is based on bringing together the equivalent of potentially 1000 members, who will make a one off payment of £1000 each to cover Post Racing Clover Club membership for four years, starting in October 2021.\nUsing the information, ratings and profiling I provide it has been demonstrated that it is more than possible to cover the cost of the four-year subscription fee in one season alone. In the year August 2017- September 2019 enough profit was produced from a bank of £1k to purchase 40 shares. The number of subscribers will determine to what degree the Post Racing Clover Club aims and objectives can be achieved, but those that do subscribe can be assured of having a brilliant journey over the four years.\nTHE NEW PACKAGE\nThe cost for each share for the new four year subscription package as previously stated will be £1,000 and there is no limit to the number of shares you may purchase.\nOriginally the decision had been made not to permit monthly subscriptions because experience tells us that people come and go, returning for just the flat racing season, leaving when the NH racing commences, and vice versa. We have now addressed this and several monthly options for subscription now exist.\nHowever, when you compare what other organisations offer for the money they charge, I believe you will agree that what Post Racing is offering is terrific value for money. Once you have paid for one of these shares there is no more to pay for the next 4 years.\nThe Post Racing Clover Club package is equal to a cost of just under 69p per day across the four years of membership, from October 2021 to October 2025, and I am convinced you will not find anything else to match this simply amazing deal anywhere else.\nNeither will you be asked for any further subscription payments to cover anything else we do during those four years.\nThe Primary Aim target to have the 1000 shares sold before October 2020 would provide an investment of £1 million pounds to kick start Post Racing’s aims and objectives.\nPOST RACING’S CLOVER CLUB\n…….and I am sure that those who sign up for the Post Racing Clover Club will be in “clover”!\nI enjoy everything about Post Racing. My members, other people I meet, the charity work and of course trying to make money from my love of horse racing.\nI hope that is what comes across to you and I appreciate those people who have already put faith in what I do and subscribed to this. I love everything associated with Post Racing and hopefully on many occasions bring good luck to all those associated with it.\nFour words in that paragraph stand out to me: Hope, Faith, Love and Luck.\nIf you Google the meaning of the number 4, you will find a section on the four leaf clover and, symbolically, each of the leaves represents one of those words.\nPost Racing’s Clover Club will symbolise everything about Post Racing.\nAs is the current situation, 10% of all subscriptions will be put aside to be used for good causes. We will continue to support racing charities and other amazing projects such as the Sensory Garden at Clatterbridge Hospital’s Stroke Rehabilitation Unit.\nThe creation of that Sensory Garden in particular was an incredible achievement, thanks to Post Racing subscribers.\nCan you imagine what else we could do with £1,000,000 spread across four years!?\nWe will be able to invite representatives from a number of racing charities that we have previously supported to a racecourse once a year for a day out. This will also enable us to provide an opportunity for some of our members to present a cheque to each of them.\nCan you imagine the good this will do for these charities and ,how you will feel making the presentation on Post Racing’s behalf?\nAs well as racehorse syndication, our aim will be to have horses racing in Post Racing Clover Club silks.\nWe also want to have at least one horse that we can loan to Bob Champion, who rode Aldaniti to win the 1981 Grand National, and donate any prize money won to the racing charities that we support.\nIf we achieve that, members will have the opportunity to be taken to the Grand National meeting on Legends Day…..Grand National Saturday.\nFANTASY HORSE RACING\nThis has been my “baby” for many years and a game was created a few years ago that was superb. Many people, worldwide, joined in but because of the expense of upgrading the website and the necessary coding to bring it up to date, I put it on the backburner.\nConnect, the company I approached about five years ago, were tasked with creating the new game and website and produced a mock up that was simply outstanding. Their work does not come cheap but it is the best.\nThe total cost of developing the specification and producing the game and site itself would have cost in the order of £65k. I said I’d get back to them….they are still waiting.\nIt would have already been done and dusted but for my enforced period out of the game whilst in hospital during which I lost a third of my membership.\nThe aim will be to meet with the heads of the IJF, Greatwood, Racing Welfare and the Bob Champion Cancer Trust, to discuss Post Racing having stand alone games created for them, for which they would obtain sponsored prizes.\nWe will run those games for them free of charge and in addition for those involved, play for some amazing prizes.\nABOUT FANTASY HORSE RACING\nFantasy Horseracing is a cross between Fantasy Football and the old Racing Post Ten to Follow, but with a million whistles and bells.\nA player begins with a budget of £20m and selects a stable of 15 horses with varying values.\nThey will have a maximum of 10 on track, with five remaining in their stables and when their selections race in “real life” they will need to make sure they are placed on the “track”.\nIf they win or place they are awarded points and accumulate the prize money won by those horses in real life.\nThis prize money is added to the player’s “banks” and provides them with an opportunity to “horse trade”.\nWhen new horses come along they will be introduced into the game and given a value.\nThe game will be played seven days a week and a “Weekend only” game option will be introduced so that those unable to play during the whole week will have an opportunity to play the game at the weekend.\nIncluding testing, Post Racing’s Fantasy Horseracing will take about a year to build. The game will be 100% free to play and potentially we will have many 000’s from around the globe playing it.\nThis will be more than a game though and incorporated into the website will be access to a stats database that may provide you with answers to questions that might well prove valuable when it comes to finding winners of horse races.\nRacing Charities will be able to create their own game inside our game and promote it to their existing supporters and potentially new Post Racing members.\nHOW CLOVER CLUB MEMBERS WILL BENEFIT FINANCIALLY FROM FANTASY HORSE RACING\nFantasy Horse Racing will be free to play but monetised in multiple ways to produce a profit, 50% of which will be divided equally between The Clover Club members, the other 50% being divided equally between the charities supported by Post Racing.\nTony provides our football tips together with a very good explanation as to why he is recommending particular bets.\nHis football knowledge and expertise will ensure that we can get some very profitable outcomes from his advice.\nCOMPETITION PRIZES\nIt has always been important to me, to give most of what comes in from my subscribers, back to my subscribers and we have, over the years, provided some absolutely fantastic prizes.\nThe best, for sure, being a year’s membership of the Harry Fry Racing Club, that saw Peter, one of our Scottish based members, become part owner of a Cheltenham Festival winner in UNOWHATIMEANHARRY.\nPost Racing has enabled Members to travel to Paris, for the Arc meeting with all expenses paid, provided all the prizes for the raffle conducted to get the Sensory Garden built and so much more over the years.\nIt’s what makes Post Racing different. Just wait until you see what the prizes will be once we move into 2020.It’s what dreams are made of!\nOne thing I have promised my wife Karen is that I’ll not try to do everything myself. I will most certainly be looking for people to work on Fantasy Horse Racing.\nIt is anticipated that due to the complexity of the build and the level of input and support required, Connect will be contracted to maintain, upgrade and host the Fantasy Horse Racing game. They will also train up those required to work with the dashboard of the Fantasy Horse Racing website.\nI will have someone on board that can take care of any in-house IT issues and I will also be looking to introduce contributors to the website. Their contributions may not essentially be about tipping but simply interesting things for us to read.\nSame as it’s always been. To ensure that you continue enjoying being involved with Post Racing and to do my utmost to make sure you get the best information daily that will enable you to cover your subscription fees, and more.\nMy primary aim at the moment is to try and help anyone interested in the Post Racing Clover Club to be able to get involved.\nIt is also in our interests to get as many of our current and past Post Racing members on board and with that in mind there are a number of options that hopefully will help.\nThese are mainly covered in the following question and answer section.\nQ) WHAT ARE THE PAYMENT OPTIONS?\nA) We have introduced several options, one of which provides Life Membership of the Post Racing Clover Club.\nIf you are happy to make a one off subscription payment of £1000 you will, after October 31st, 2020, never pay another penny to Post Racing.\nFor those fully subscribed by October, you too will become a Life Member.\nMONTHLY OPTIONS\nYou currently have two options.\nYou can opt to make varying payments between now and October (inclusive), to cover your full £1000 subscription fee\n36 x £35\nOptions 2 & 3 provide you with full membership until October, when you will automatically convert to Clover Club membership.\nThese options can be accessed by clicking HERE\nQ) HOW MANY SHARES CAN I BUY?\nA) As many as you wish!\nI myself have already purchased 53 and will most certainly be taking more….I’m in this as much as anyone!\nQ) WHAT HAPPENS AT THE END OF THE FOUR YEARS?\nA) Any syndicated horses owned by the Post Racing Clover Club will be sold. All prize money won and dividends from the sale of those horses will be added together and divided by the total number of Post Racing’s Clover Club shares.\nIf we were lucky enough to have purchased a Derby Winner (let’s keep that dream alive), then we could be looking at prize money close to £1million pounds.\nQ) I CURRENTLY SUBSCRIBE TO ANOTHER PACKAGE AND DON’T WISH TO CHANGE.\nA) Not a problem. Simply retain your current membership package. You will, if you choose, be able to have your own league within the Fantasy Horse Racing Game to play for some outstanding prizes and continue to receive exactly what you receive now by way of information and advice on punting.\nBy October 2020 we would 1000 Post Racing Clover Club shares sold and, with your help, it will be accomplished. By working together we can make all the above happen. I have already started the wheels moving on this.\nIf you require any further information or explanation, please do not hesitate to contact me.\nSUBSCRIPTION METHODS\nThe Post Racing banking details are:\nPAYEE: Post Racing\nREFERENCE: YOURSURNAME/CC\nPlease send cheques made out to Post Racing to:\n8, PRESCOT STREET\nCH45 9JW\nPlease include you e-mail address for confirmation of receipt.\nBob Champion says….","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line932528"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6671178936958313,"wiki_prob":0.3328821063041687,"text":"Saturday morning quotes 6.29: Willaert\nThis week we feature a new video and offer more insights on the music that may be heard on our new recording, Magnum Mysterium, and seen in its companion book of scores. Highlighting the fourth of four settings of the Christmas responsory text, “O magnum mysterium”, we turn to the lute-friendly composer Adrian Willaert (c.1490 – 1562).\nIn addition to his estimable output of sacred music as maestro di cappella at San Marco’s in Venice (1527 – 1562), Willaert composed an ample amount of secular music including French chansons, Italian madrigals and Villanesca alla napolitana. Some of Willaert’s most beguiling madrigals are the settings of texts from the Canzoniere of Francesco Petrarca (1304 – 1374), published in Musica Nova, 1559.\nAmong modern lutenists, Willaert is known for his Intavolatura de li madrigali di Verdelotto da cantare et sonare nel lauto, intavolati per Messer Adriano, published by Scotto in 1536. As the lengthy title indicates, this work consists of madrigals from Verdelot‘s Il primo libro de madrigali, 1533, arranged for solo voice and lute. It is from such historical intabulations that we take inspiration for our own work as we continue to create arrangements of particularly good historical polyphony.\nReturning to the subject of Willaert’s motets:\n“Willaert’s greatest and most enduring compositions are his motets. Out of a provisional total of 175, 79 are for four voices, 51 for five, 38 for six and five for seven or eight voices. The motets enjoyed wide circulation during his lifetime in manuscripts, printed anthologies and a series of influential publications issued by Scotto and Gardano from 1539 on. These publications, which include two books of motets for four voices (1539, repr. 1545), one book for five voices (1539, repr. 1550) and one for six voices (1542), were among the first printed books to focus on the music of a single composer, attesting to the high regard in which Willaert was held at the time.”\n– Michele Fromson, “Adrian Willaert”, Grove Music Online\nAlthough Willaert was very highly regarded in his day, his music is rarely performed today. We aim to rectify this situation in future performances of our vocal ensemble.\n“O magnum mysterium” and its secunda pars, “Ave Maria” (which we have featured in a past post) are from Willaert’s Motecta … liber primus, 4vv, Venice, 1539 (reprinted 1545). Setting the entire Christmas Responsory text, Willaert’s music is sublimely calm and understated, the cantus part almost narrative and descant-like as the lower parts weave and intertwine in leisurely imitation. The work is obviously the result of a thoughtful and deliberate composer aiming to create the perfect music to express the text—no matter how long it may take.\n“Willaert is known to have been a slow worker. His pupil Gioseffo Zarlino writes that he composed in great concentration and without haste. In a letter of 15 March 1534 Ruberto Strozzi, a nobleman resident in Venice, writes to his mentor, the humanist and historian Benedetto Varchi, that he will do all he can to get Willaert to set an epigram to music, but that he can promise nothing, for much patience is required to persuade Willaert to compose.”\n– Ignace Bossuyt, “O socii durate: A Musical Correspondence from the Time of Philip II”, Early Music, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Aug., 1998), p. 441.\nMuch patience indeed. We all know the type who is compelled to try every possible approach to a thing, and its inverse, until the correct solution emerges. But Art cannot by rushed.\nThe quiet beauty of Willaert’s setting is established at the outset with his delicate treatment of the lower voices that tread lightly on tiptoes, following one another in not-quite perfect imitation while whispering among themselves; in awe of the great mystery unfolding before their eyes. The cantus enters midway through the ninth measure with an arcing line that is gently declamatory, the notes expressing the text perfectly right down to the “blue” note that colors the word “mysterium”.\nOur performance of Willaert’s “O magnum mysterium” may be heard on our new recording, Magnum Mysterium, available with a companion edition of scores arranged for voice and lute, with transcriptions of all lute parts in standard notation for harp or keyboard.\nFrom → All posts, CD releases, Cross-pollination, Musings about lute music, New from Mignarda Editions, News & Announcements, On French music, On history, On Italian music, On making ends meet, On marketing & promotion, On musicians, On old music in the 21st century, On part songs, On performing, On poetry, On programming, On recording, On singing, On teaching, On technique, On the musician's life, Saturday morning quotes\nSaturday morning quotes 7.45: Bembo | Unquiet Thoughts\n« Saturday morning quotes 6.30: Intabulation\nSaturday morning quotes 6.28: Turtles and Swans »","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line226380"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6835204362869263,"wiki_prob":0.31647956371307373,"text":"Home American History Halloween History and Origins\nHalloween History and Origins\nAs the masses disguise themselves in ghoulish attire and beg for candy, they should give Halloween meaning by familiarizing themselves with the holiday’s origins.\nHalloween has become one of America’s most favorite holidays. Children and adults participate in fun activities inspired to scare and entertain on Halloween night, celebrated on October 31st. This year, instead of blindly following these rituals of dressing up in ghostly attire and begging for candy door-to-door, participators should educate themselves on the history and origins of this nationally-recognized holiday.\nHalloween’s Beginnings – The Samhain Festival\nCenturies ago, Celtic farmers believed that there was one day a year where the season of life met the season of death. The belief was that malicious spirits could rise on this night and walk amongst the living. Nicholas Rogers, author of Halloween: From Pagan Ritual to Party Night states that in Celtic Ireland, this day was referred to as “Samhain” (pronounced “sa-win”), meaning “summer’s end.” This idea turned into a great festival, where Druid priests would gather to determine whether or not their villages would survive the winter and have bountiful harvests the following spring.\nThe Halloween Costume Ritual\nToday, many people know that Halloween institutions include dressing up in creative, scary costumes, but the origins of this ritual remain unfamiliar. At the time of Halloween’s formation, villagers would light a great bonfire and where disguises in order to bewilder and ward off the roaming spirits. Popular costumes today represent a variety of myths and legends including vampires, werewolves, witches, and goblins.\nPope Gregory III, of the 8th century Roman Catholic Church, established “All Hallows Day” on November 1st, designed to honor all saints known and unknown, states history.com in their educational video, “Haunted History of Halloween.” This holiday is now known as “All Saints Day.” This was an attempt to distract pagans’ October 31st festivities. While this new holiday was accepted by the public, they did not see a reason to give up their previous revelries and decided instead to simply change the name to “All Hallows Eve.”\nPotato Famine – Interrupting Puritan Ideals\nThe English Puritans, who had traveled to America, decided to leave many pagan rituals behind, including the “All Hallows Eve” celebration. History.com explains that it was not until a million starving Irishmen set sail for America, during a potato famine in the mid-19th century, that this holiday regained popularity. Some previous rituals were exchanged for the traditions established today. For example, the bonfire was replaced with jack-o-lanterns, originally carved from vegetables, such as the rutabaga and turnip.\nSouling – Modern Day Trick-or-Treating Ritual\nThe trick-or-treating stems from the act known as “souling.” During souling, poor families would go door to door and pray for the dead in exchange for small cakes, as explained by history.com. It was not until the mid-20th century that this holiday was gaining a footing as an American tradition and the term “trick-or-treating” was first seen in print.\nHalloween Today\nFrom its Celtic roots, Halloween has become one of America’s most popular holidays. Children and adults alike will participate in the time-honored traditions of wearing costumes and trick-or-treating, enjoying parties and ghostly galas. Remembering the history of this beloved holiday can add more meaning to the festivities this year.\nRogers, Nicholas. “Samhain and the Celtic Origins of Halloween”. Halloween: From Pagan Ritual to Party Night, New York: Oxford University Press, 2002.\nHistory.com educational video “Haunted History of Halloween,” narrated by Timothy Dickinson. A&E Television Networks. 1996-2008.\nHistory Bot\nMcCarthy and Stalin – Political Brothers?\nWhy the United States Entered World War I\n123rd Machine Gun Battalion in the Meuse-Argonne\nNorthern Military Advantages in the Civil War\nThe Year Before America Entered the Great War\nCauses of the 1937-1938 Recession","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1511086"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6527600884437561,"wiki_prob":0.3472399115562439,"text":"US National Dams / Find a dam / Jeffrey Kramer Pond Dam\nJeffrey Kramer Pond Dam\nJeffrey Kramer Pond Dam Share Share\nHolmesville, New York\nJeffrey Kramer Pond Dam is an earth dam built on the Tr-Great Brook River and is located in Holmesville, New York. It was built in 1981 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe dam is privately owned by Jeffrey Kramer.\nHolmesville, New York, U.S.\nJeffrey Kramer\nJeffrey Kramer Pond Dam is privately owned by Jeffrey Kramer.\nTr-Great Brook River\nJeffrey Kramer Pond Dam was built in 1981.\nMax discharge 84 cubic feet per second\n84 cubic feet per second\nHollow Dam\nHuehnel Pond Dam\nAutumn Lake Dam\nImperial, Missouri\nAutumn Lake Dam is an earth dam built on the Tributary TO Rock Creek River and is located in Imperial, Missouri. It was built in 1962 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe dam is privately owned by Autumn Lake Devl. Co. It is also known as Autumn Lake Dam.\nLake Windsor Dam\nLake Windsor Dam is an earth dam built on the TR Yahara River and is located in Madison, Wisconsin. It was built in 1969 for the purpose of recreation.\nSettling Pond No. 1 Dam\nPenfield, Pennsylvania\nSettling Pond No. 1 Dam is an earth dam located in Penfield, Pennsylvania. It was built .\nThe dam is privately owned by Penfield Collieries LLC. It is also known as Amdt Impoundment;No. 1 Mine Drainage Treatment Basin.\nTibbals Dam\nHiteman, Iowa\nTibbals Dam is an earth dam built on the Trib TO Cedar Creek River and is located in Hiteman, Iowa. It was built in 2005 .\nThe dam is privately owned by Don Tibbals.\nSaddle Pond Dam\nWoody Creek, Colorado\nSaddle Pond Dam is an earth dam built on the Trentaz Gulch-Os River and is located in Woody Creek, Colorado. It was built in 1988 .\nThe dam is privately owned by Carroll Drive Properties C/O William Ziff.\nArmendaiz Levee Dam\nArmendaiz Levee Dam is an earth dam built on the Off Ch-North Floodway River and is located in Texas. It was built in 1960 for the purpose of irrigation.\nThe dam is privately owned by Lloyd Bentsen ET AL.\nCamp Freedman Pond Dam\nCanaan, Connecticut\nCamp Freedman Pond Dam is an earth dam built on the Housatonic R. Trib River and is located in Canaan, Connecticut. It was built in 1942 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe dam is privately owned by Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center Inc. It is also known as Camp Freedman Pond.\nBlack Dog Lake Dam\nBurnsville, Minnesota\nBlack Dog Lake Dam is a gravity dam built on the Minnesota River-Tr and is located in Burnsville, Minnesota. It was built in 1953 .\nThe dam is owned by the public utility, Xcel Energy.\nUpper Locust Creek W- 67 Dam\nBrowning, Missouri\nUpper Locust Creek W- 67 Dam is an earth dam built on the Tr-Locust Creek River and is located in Browning, Missouri. It was built in 2000 .\nSanders Pond Dam\nBaltic Community, Alabama\nSanders Pond Dam is an earth dam built on the TR Big Creek River and is located in Baltic Community, Alabama. It was built in 1965 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe dam is owned by the public utility, Ted Sanders.\nBaldhill Dam\nValley City, North Dakota\nBaldhill Dam is built on the Sheyenne River and is located in Valley City, North Dakota. It was built in 1950 .\nThe dam is under federal ownership and is owned by the Cemvp. It is also known as Lake Ashtabula.\nWilliams Lake Control Structure Dam\nWilliams Lake Control Structure Dam is a gravity dam located in Michigan. It was built in 1972 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe dam is privately owned by Oakland County Drain Commissioner.\nSpruance Polishing Dam\nSpruance Polishing Dam is an earth dam built on the Tr-James River and is located in Virginia. It was built .\nThe dam is privately owned by E.I. Dupont DE Nemours & Co., Inc. It is also known as Ash Pond.\nNewberry Lake Dam\nBrasswells Lake Environs, Georgia\nNewberry Lake Dam is an earth dam built on the Unknown River and is located in Brasswells Lake Environs, Georgia. It was built in 1965 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe dam is privately owned by Newberry, S. L.\nSmeallie Dam\nAmsterdam, New York\nSmeallie Dam is a rockfill dam built on the North Chuctanunda Creek River and is located in Amsterdam, New York. It was built in 1974 for the purpose of irrigation.\nDam is an earth dam built on the TR Oakley Creek River and is located in Kansas. It was built in 1972 for the purpose of fire protection / stock / small fish pond.\nThe dam is privately owned by Smith.\nScs-Little Deep Fork Creek Site-40 Dam\nSlick, Oklahoma\nScs-Little Deep Fork Creek Site-40 Dam is an earth dam built on the Morgan CR River and is located in Slick, Oklahoma. It was built in 1960 for the purpose of flood control.\nThe state-owned dam is owned by the Creek CO Cons Dist. The dam used to be known as Scs-Little Deep Fork Creek Site-40.\nSmitherman Millpond Dam\nCapelsie, North Carolina\nSmitherman Millpond Dam is built on the Little River and is located in Capelsie, North Carolina. It was built in 1900 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe dam is privately owned by Tally Lassiter.\nRobinsons Slang Dam\nFerrisburgh, Vermont\nRobinsons Slang Dam is an earth dam built on the East Slang-Tr River and is located in Ferrisburgh, Vermont. It was built in 1956 for the purpose of recreation.\nThe state-owned dam is owned by the State of Vermont - DFW. It is also known as East Slang.\nTopeka, Kansas\nKsnoname 4527 Dam is an earth dam built on the Little Soldier Creek-Tr River and is located in Topeka, Kansas. It was built in 1968 for the purpose of fire protection / stock / small fish pond.\nThe dam is privately owned by Moser. It is also known as Ksnoname 4527.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line398718"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5403884649276733,"wiki_prob":0.5403884649276733,"text":"Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game\nBilly Beane, general manager of MLB's Oakland A's and protagonist of Michael Lewis's Moneyball, had a problem: how to win in the Major Leagues with a budget that's smaller than that of nearly every other team. Conventional wisdom long held that big name, highly athletic hitters and young pitchers with rocket arms were the ticket to success. But Beane and his staff, buoyed Billy Beane, general manager of MLB's Oakland A's and protagonist of Michael Lewis's Moneyball, had a problem: how to win in the Major Leagues with a budget that's smaller than that of nearly every other team. Conventional wisdom long held that big name, highly athletic hitters and young pitchers with rocket arms were the ticket to success. But Beane and his staff, buoyed by massive amounts of carefully interpreted statistical data, believed that wins could be had by more affordable methods such as hitters with high on-base percentage and pitchers who get lots of ground outs. Given this information and a tight budget, Beane defied tradition and his own scouting department to build winning teams of young affordable players and inexpensive castoff veterans. Lewis was in the room with the A's top management as they spent the summer of 2002 adding and subtracting players and he provides outstanding play-by-play. In the June player draft, Beane acquired nearly every prospect he coveted (few of whom were coveted by other teams) and at the July trading deadline he engaged in a tense battle of nerves to acquire a lefty reliever. Besides being one of the most insider accounts ever written about baseball, Moneyball is populated with fascinating characters. We meet Jeremy Brown, an overweight college catcher who most teams project to be a 15th round draft pick (Beane takes him in the first). Sidearm pitcher Chad Bradford is plucked from the White Sox triple-A club to be a key set-up man and catcher Scott Hatteberg is rebuilt as a first baseman. But the most interesting character is Beane himself. A speedy athletic can't-miss prospect who somehow missed, Beane reinvents himself as a front-office guru, relying on players completely unlike, say, Billy Beane. Lewis, one of the top nonfiction writers of his era (Liar's Poker, The New New Thing), offers highly accessible explanations of baseball stats and his roadmap of Beane's economic approach makes Moneyball an appealing reading experience for business people and sports fans alike. --John Moe\n30 review for Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game\nWill Byrnes – Oct 25, 2008\nMichael Lewis - image from Forbes This is one of the best baseball books I have ever read, and that is saying something. Lewis’ focus is on Billy Bean, the GM of the Oakland Athletics. Because Oakland is a small-market team, Bean must use his brain to tease out the players who can help his team, at a reasonable cost. This makes him a sort of anti-Steinbrenner. Lewis goes into some detail on how Bean manages to field competitive teams almost every year under dire fiscal constraints. Must-read for Michael Lewis - image from Forbes This is one of the best baseball books I have ever read, and that is saying something. Lewis’ focus is on Billy Bean, the GM of the Oakland Athletics. Because Oakland is a small-market team, Bean must use his brain to tease out the players who can help his team, at a reasonable cost. This makes him a sort of anti-Steinbrenner. Lewis goes into some detail on how Bean manages to field competitive teams almost every year under dire fiscal constraints. Must-read for any true baseball fan, and a source of hope for fans of small-market teams. The film version was a top-notch interpretation of the book, a lovely surprise. Some other books that deal in baseball analytics in whole or part -----The Inside Game by Keith Law -----Smart Baseball by Keith Law -----The Arm by Jeff Passan 4/13/18 - NY Times - How Do Athletes’ Brains Control Their Movements? - by Zach Schonbrun - Fascinating article. Maybe the next level in the expanding realm of the sort of baseball analysis someone like Billy Bean might employ to get an edge over wealthier franchisesIt would seem to have almost nothing to do with their biceps muscles or fast-twitch fibers or even their vision, which, for most baseball players is largely the same. It would seem to have much more to do with the neural signals that impel our every movement. “It’s like saying people who can speak French very well have a very dexterous tongue,” John Krakauer, a neuroscientist at Johns Hopkins University, told me. “It would be the wrong place to assign the credit.”\nJeffrey Keeten – Feb 24, 2016\n“The pleasure of rooting for Goliath is that you can expect to win. The pleasure of rooting for David is that, while you don’t know what to expect, you stand at least a chance of being inspired.” This book came out in 2003, and the movie version came out in 2011; yet, it is amazing to me that despite the success shown by the Oakland As under the guidance of Billy Beane, baseball, for the most part, is still focusing on the wrong things. Just recently the manager of the New York Mets, Terry Co “The pleasure of rooting for Goliath is that you can expect to win. The pleasure of rooting for David is that, while you don’t know what to expect, you stand at least a chance of being inspired.” This book came out in 2003, and the movie version came out in 2011; yet, it is amazing to me that despite the success shown by the Oakland As under the guidance of Billy Beane, baseball, for the most part, is still focusing on the wrong things. Just recently the manager of the New York Mets, Terry Collins, who commands one of the best teams in the world, said in an interview after the World Series: “I’m not sure how much an old-school guy can add to the game today,’’ Collins told USA Today. “It’s become a young man’s game, especially with all of the technology stuff you’ve got to be involved in. I’m not very good at it. I don’t enjoy it like other people do. I’m not going to sit there today and look at all of these (expletive) numbers and try to predict this guy is going to be a great player. OPS this. OPS that. GPS. LCSs. DSDs. You know who has good numbers? Good (expletive) players.” Terry Collins said: “Shit Happens” at a press conference. Billy Beane must have rolled his eyes. The MLB network show Hot Stove was incensed that Collins would make such a statement in this day and age, especially since they could track several “gut” decisions he made during the World Series that probably cost them a chance to win it. The most glaring error was when he decided to pull the pitcher, Matt Harvey, in the 9th inning of game five only to change his mind and send him back out there after Harvey complained. Collins looked into the player’s eyes and saw what he wanted to see. It was the third time through the order. Harvey had pitched brilliantly, but statistically, that bad word that Collins doesn’t like. When you look at the Royals, they get to pitchers late. The Royals got to Harvey and knocked him out of the game, which left a mess for Jeurys Familia to come into the game to try and save. Royals Win! Eric Hosmer going off the Billy Beane script for success, but man, was it dramatic. I about had a heartattack. The Royals deviate from Billy Beane ball at many junctures. One being the most dramatic play of the series when Eric Hosmer steals home. Beane does not believe in stealing bases, too risky, and if you steal a base on a Billy Beane team, you better make sure you are safe. The Royals also occasionally bunt to move a runner, which doesn’t fit the Beane philosophy. He believes in managing outs and never giving up an out to advance a runner. The Royals have speedy wheels and frequently turn bunts into base hits, which would probably keep them from finding themselves subjugated to a Billy Beane lecture. You can go off script, but just be right. The Royals are a homegrown team. Most of the players have come from the farm club system, although they are a bit too athletic and good looking for a Billy Beane ball club. One of the things that Beane talks about is getting away from players who could sell jeans. He should know; he was one of those players that looked like a Greek God in a uniform. He was drafted in 1980 along with another phenom that even those people who don’t follow baseball probably recognize his name...Darryl Strawberry. Beane was an interesting enough prospect that, for a while, the Mets were even considering taking him in the draft first instead of Strawberry. Both were amazing specimens of what we want athletes to look like. The Mets ended up taking Beane, too, but with the 23rd pick. Beane had all the physical gifts to be successful, but sports is not just about the body; it is about the mind. Billy had a lot of expectations for himself, and those expectations became insecurities that eventually evolved into a gifted player being unable to play the game. Billy Beane on the verge of a stardom that somehow eluded him. He is exactly the player who Billy now tries to avoid. He asked for a job in the As front office, and that began an odyssey in search of those players who were ”ballplayers”, not pretty head cases, not players that hit home runs and created RBIs, but players that could control the strike zone. As he tore apart the As organization, he got rid of the scouts who were still insisting on signing Apolloesque ballplayers and sold off overpriced talent. Ownership wasn’t giving him much money to work with anyway, so instead of buying expensive talent, he had to sell expensive talent and replace it with a motley group of players whom no one else wanted, but who had the one important element he wanted most, OPS (on base plus slugging), i.e. these guys knew how to get on base. These players had a menagerie of interesting things wrong with them that had other clubs looking to get rid of them, which made them perfect for Billy Beane. One pitcher had club feet. They were below average fielders. They were overweight. They threw sidearm pitches. They were older players on their way out. They were players too green for any other team to consider playing them. You can’t win with players like this! Well, maybe you can. Exhibit A: The standings at the end of the season in the American League West in 2002. Wins Losses Games Behind Payroll Oakland 103 59 ---- $41,942,665 Anaheim 99 63 4 $62,757,041 Seattle 93 69 10 $86,084,710 Texas 72 90 31 $106,915,180 Now the interesting thing is notice the payroll compared to the wins. The more money a team spent the fewer games they won. If I had been the Texas Rangers owner, I’d be looking at these results and think to myself, What am I paying for? Baseball is in love with RBIs and Home Runs. They think those are the things about baseball that put butts in seats. As the Royals made their way through the playoffs in the American league in 2015, they encountered two teams that depended on the home run to win ball games. The Royals hit 95 home runs in 2014, which placed them dead last at 30th among major league baseball teams. In 2015, they improved to 139 home runs, but were still 24th in the league. Their opponent in the playoffs in 2015, the Toronto Blue Jays, were 1st in all of major league baseball with 232 home runs. Their other opponent, the Houston Astros, hit 230 home runs and were second in the league for home runs. Jose Bautista hit several dramatic home runs in the playoffs, including the famous bat flip home run, but despite those fence clearing bombs, they were unable to advance in the playoffs. Jacking up home runs might equal playoffs, but it doesn’t seem to equal winning world championships. Even the Mets hit 177 home runs for 9th in the league. They did win the pennant, but still fell short of winning a world championship. To my eye, they are a more complete offensive ballclub than Houston or Toronto and will be contenders again this year, but not because they hit a lot of home runs. So why is major league baseball so reluctant to embrace the philosophy of Moneyball? ”Anti-intellectual resentment is common in all of American life and it has many diverse expressions.” For instance, preferring high school players in the draft over college players, even though statistically college players do better. College athletes have played against stiffer competition. They have honed their skills. They have more reliable stats to give a general manager a better clue to how they will perform at the next level. I admire the Mets. They are a terrific team. I still have a lot of nostalgia for Gary Carter and the Miracle Mets of 1986, and if the Royals hadn’t been playing against them last year, I would have been rooting for them in the World Series. I have to say that Terry Collins’ comments about basically comparing statistics to voodoo was disappointing to me. I don’t mean to pick on Collins, but his comments came after he made several decisions in the face of a pile of data to the contrary that probably cost his team at least a better chance to win the World Series. He is not alone. Baseball is still filled with owners, GMs, and managers who believe that home runs and RBIs are the most important statistics and the best way to win championships. The Royals, after all, are an anomaly, right? It was the same things teams were saying about the As in the early 2000s. I think of all those ballplayers who really know how to play the game, who are stuck in the minor leagues because they hit too many singles or walked too many times, and didn’t launch enough missiles over the back fence. I loved this book because I’m a fan of baseball, but the book had a much bigger impact on me. I started thinking about and applying Billy Beane principles to my own business. We are a company mired in traditions and traditional thinking and long overdue for an overhaul in philosophy to meet new challenges. Like all companies, we need to become more efficient, more lean, more targeted to what wins ball games rather than what creates a big splash. I’m buying copies of this book for the rest of the management staff, and we are going to talk about singles and doubles and managing our outs. Maybe we, too, can get our Royal on. If you wish to see more of my most recent book and movie reviews, visit http://www.jeffreykeeten.com I also have a Facebook blogger page at:https://www.facebook.com/JeffreyKeeten\nBrina – Jul 24, 2012\nI read Moneyball at a time when I wasn't reading too much besides preschool kids books and reread it for the baseball book club I am a part of on good reads. Michael Lewis follows the story of general manager Billy Bean and his 2002 Oakland As, a low budget baseball team that managed to win their division going away. What is remarkable is that Bean built his team focusing on sabermetrics, not home runs and RBIs. He knew he did not have money to compete with the Yankees of the world and assembled I read Moneyball at a time when I wasn't reading too much besides preschool kids books and reread it for the baseball book club I am a part of on good reads. Michael Lewis follows the story of general manager Billy Bean and his 2002 Oakland As, a low budget baseball team that managed to win their division going away. What is remarkable is that Bean built his team focusing on sabermetrics, not home runs and RBIs. He knew he did not have money to compete with the Yankees of the world and assembled a team of Harvard brainiacs to read stats in order to then assemble the best low cost baseball team his money could buy. An amazing thing happened: the As team of damaged players won 20 games in a row on their way to a division title. The east coast establishment took notice and offered Bean a job at season's end. He declined and these years later his heart is still with the As determined to win in their crumbling ballpark with a lower budget team than before. Postscript: teams are focusing on sabermetrics and big budget teams like the Yankees are floundering. The last World Series champion, the Royals. The best two up and coming teams with stocked farm systems who have entire teams of Harvard brainiacs at their disposal running stats: the Cubs and Astros. Even the Yankees are building their team around up and coming players. Sabermetrics is here to stay even if it isn't as fun to watch as a home run. I have tried to read Lewis' other books but did not got get into them because they are about money, not baseball. Maybe I will try again because Lewis writes in a manner that makes his subject accessible to all readers. Highly recommended to all.\nKemper – Apr 19, 2012\nHaving the misfortune of being a Kansas City Royals fan, I thought I’d had any interest in baseball beaten out of me by season after season of humiliation. Plus, the endless debate about the unfairness of large market vs. small market baseball had made my eyes glaze over years ago so I didn’t pay much attention to the Moneyball story until the movie came out last year and caught my interest enough to finally check this out. Despite being a small market team and outspent by tens of millions of dol Having the misfortune of being a Kansas City Royals fan, I thought I’d had any interest in baseball beaten out of me by season after season of humiliation. Plus, the endless debate about the unfairness of large market vs. small market baseball had made my eyes glaze over years ago so I didn’t pay much attention to the Moneyball story until the movie came out last year and caught my interest enough to finally check this out. Despite being a small market team and outspent by tens of millions of dollars by clubs like the Yankees, the Oakland A’s managed to be extremely competitive from 1999 through 2006. They did this when their general manager Billy Beane embraced a new type of baseball statistics called sabermetrics that had been championed by a stat head from Kansas named Bill James. James had pored over box scores and started seriously questioning the traditional ways of measuring the performance of players with his initially self-published digests that eventually became must reads for hardcore baseball nerdlingers. As the digital age made mountains of baseball stats available on-line, fans with a mathematical frame of mind (And there are a lot of them.) started coming up with ways of looking at the data that called the old ways of evaluating players into question. Beane had plenty of reason to distrust the old way of scouting since he had once been identified as a can’t-miss prospect who ended up quitting as a player to take a job in the front office after his career flamed out. By coming up with new ways to grade performance and ignoring things that other teams deemed flaws like being overweight or having a peculiar throwing motion, the A’s went after low dollar high-impact players who made them one of the winningest teams with the lowest payroll in baseball. The sport has always had a weird intersection of nerd and jock, and this story illustrates that dynamic very well as Beane and his staff decided to trust the numbers rather than conventional wisdom. The conflict between the two worlds is a fascinating story, and the brash Beane makes a great focal point. It’s a great book not just for sports fans, but for anyone who likes stories about people trying to shake up an established way of doing things. And if you’re a math geek or have a thing for hard nosed business deals, there’s a lot to like here. By framing the story in terms of the people involved, Lewis keeps it relatable in human terms and not just a dry recitation of on base percentages. The movie is also extremely well done and entertaining (Hence the Oscar nomination for Best Picture.),but the Aaron Sorkin screenplay vastly simplifies the story and Hollywoodizes it to an extreme degree. Still, it’s a great flick for anyone who has a soft spot for stories about underdogs.\nHoward – Jun 07, 2014\nIn honor of the MLB postseason, I am resurrecting a book review that I wrote back in 2009 on another website. I hardly know where to begin in attempting a review of Michael Lewis’ Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game. It isn’t that I don’t think that the book is well written, because it is. It isn’t that I disagree with the conclusions that are reached in the book, because, for the most part, I don’t. What bothers me, as a recovering baseball fanatic, is that I don’t enjoy the game that u In honor of the MLB postseason, I am resurrecting a book review that I wrote back in 2009 on another website. I hardly know where to begin in attempting a review of Michael Lewis’ Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game. It isn’t that I don’t think that the book is well written, because it is. It isn’t that I disagree with the conclusions that are reached in the book, because, for the most part, I don’t. What bothers me, as a recovering baseball fanatic, is that I don’t enjoy the game that utilizes the approaches that are proposed in this book. Moneyball describes how the general manager of the Oakland A’s, Billy Beane, has been able to use sabermetrics (statistical analysis originated by Bill James and others) to more intelligently draft players and win games. According to the proponents of this new approach: 1) offense is more important than pitching; 2) defense hardly matters at all; 3) the most important baseball statistic is on-base percentage, followed by slugging percentage; 4) stealing bases should not be attempted because it is not worth the risk; 5) the same goes for the hit-and-run; 6) never sacrifice because it is not worth giving up the out; 7) scouts are unnecessary; and 8) line-ups and game strategy are dictated to the manager by the general manager and his statistical analysts, making managers almost as unnecessary as scouts. Beane and his statistical guru, and not the scouts, decide who should be drafted. According to Lewis, the most important statistic to Beane and his statistician in determining what position players to draft is the ability of players to draw walks. They look for players (only college players for they never draft high school players) who have exhibited the ability to work deep in the count and to draw walks. I can’t speak for others, but I don’t watch baseball games in order to watch hitters work deep into the count, draw a walk, camp out on the bases until somebody gets an extra-base hit (or two) to drive them home. The strategy utilized by Beane and his proponents may produce a more efficient style of baseball, about that I am in no position to quibble. It may be the only way that a small market team like the Oakland A’s can compete with the deep pockets of the New York Yankees and other large market teams (the ‘unfair game’ mentioned in the book’s subtitle). However, to repeat, I find the emphasis on this approach to result in a game that is much less fun to watch.\nMatt – Mar 01, 2016\n“It breaks your heart,” A. Bartlett Giamatti wrote of baseball in a piece called The Green Fields of the Mind. “It is designed to break your heart.” And so it does, year after year. Baseball, as has often been noted, is a game predicated on failure. The game’s best hitters only succeed in roughly three out of ten at bats. A 162-game season presents a tremendous sample size, which should iron out aberrations; and yet year after year, entire seasons come down to a single bad bounce or mistimed swi “It breaks your heart,” A. Bartlett Giamatti wrote of baseball in a piece called The Green Fields of the Mind. “It is designed to break your heart.” And so it does, year after year. Baseball, as has often been noted, is a game predicated on failure. The game’s best hitters only succeed in roughly three out of ten at bats. A 162-game season presents a tremendous sample size, which should iron out aberrations; and yet year after year, entire seasons come down to a single bad bounce or mistimed swing or hanging curve or missed call. You can spend an entire summer of lazy days drinking beer and cheering for your 100-win team, only to watch them sputter and die in a five-game series in October. It doesn’t seem fair, sometimes. Michael Lewis’s Moneyball is about a man who tried to crack the code, to find the secret to winning an “unfair” game. That man is Billy Beane, the general manager of the small market Oakland Athletics. In 2002, the A’s were coming off a tremendously successful season in which they’d won 102 games. After the season, however, they lost three key free agents, including all-around masher (and later-admitted PED user) Jason Giambi. Beane wanted to replicate his team’s success, but he had to do it on a shoestring budget. Beane’s approach was to find undervalued players with a knack for getting on base. Instead of looking simply at the time-honored statistics of batting average, home runs, and RBIs, he turned to more obscure figures like on base percentage (OBP). He believed that getting on base more-closely correlated to wins than any other metric. The baseball world largely doubted Beane’s sanity. Yet the 2002 A’s ended up winning one more game than their star-heavy 2001 model. Beane’s revolution didn’t result in a championship (for which Beane is often unfairly maligned), but it help change the game of baseball, a sport that is historically resistant to transformation. It’s a testament to the impact of Lewis’s book that the title has become a shorthand of sorts for the entire sabermetric movement that has altered the way players are watched, judged, and paid. Like all of Michael Lewis’s books, Moneyball is addictively readable. Getting my almost-two-year-old to fall asleep every night has become an epic battle of wills. If you leave the room before she is sound asleep, she will hop up in her crib and unleash a sound akin to the war cry of the orcs on the Pelennor Fields. Then, once you get her to sleep, she will randomly wake up screaming as though her Daniel Tiger doll has caught on fire. The only way to ease her into unconsciousness is to sit with her. That’s become my job. I sit with her in a dark room reading with a headlamp. Moneyball proved to be perfect for this task. It is fast paced, perceptive, and filled with memorable character sketches. Lewis has an uncanny knack for making his readers feel smart. He can take complex subjects and boil them down with such ease that you start to feel like you can learn anything. (Of course, one of the knocks on Lewis is that he is an over-simplifier. Perhaps. But that’s better than a needless confuser). Lewis is a gifted storyteller. As such, he tends to find idiosyncratic characters upon which to hang his story. Beane proves to be a good choice. He ia a former ballplayer, a highly touted 5-tool athlete who became a high draft pick and a major bust. It is easy to see how his failures as a player made him eager to find a better rubric for evaluating talent. In Lewis’s hands, Beane is a passionate convert with a bucketful of neuroses, such as an inability to watch the A’s play live. Moneyball is partly Beane’s biography. Beane, however, did not create the sabermetric movement. In this area, he stood on the shoulders of giants math nerds. The godfather of advanced statistics is Bill James, founder of the self-published statistical compilation Baseball Abstract. Lewis rightfully devotes an entire chapter to James and his acolytes, many of whom were hired by various Major League teams. They devised a new model; Beane implemented it. Moneyball was originally published in 2003, and has since been made into a motion picture. It’s interesting to read it now, in light of all that has transpired. When the book first came out, it angered a lot of people in Major League Baseball. There are, it seems, a lot of innumerate luddites in the baseball world who couldn’t stand the way Beane (and others like him) viewed their game. I mean, you got a guy like Dusty Baker – a freaking manager – who doesn’t like walks because they “clog up the bases.” This kind of wrongheaded institutionalized dogma makes it difficult for fresh views to gain traction. The popularity of Moneyball helped bring the stat geeks into the mainstream. Today, advanced statistics are the norm, and even casual baseball articles make reference to wins above replacement (WAR), weighted on-base average (wOBA), and fielding-independent pitching (FIP). Beane isn’t a prophet or really even a pioneer. Other teams were using advanced stats. Beane just staked a lot more on it. He also had a great promoter in Michael Lewis. In some ways, his tactics were pretty rudimentary. For instance, one of the center pieces of Moneyball is Scott Hatteberg’s transition from catcher to first base. Hatteberg was an on-base machine, so Beane plugged him into first base, despite having no experience playing there. Today, with advanced defensive metrics, such a move would be even more suspect than it was at the time. As it turned out, Hatteberg ended up playing decent first base. The point is that Beane’s deprecation of defense now seems rather shortsighted for a value-oriented GM. (He also undervalued the bullpen, which looks especially wrongheaded in the age of ace middle relievers and closers). Many of the players mentioned in the book as Beane favorites never quite panned out (including catcher Jeremy Brown, who plays a large role). This isn’t to say that Beane was wrong in the premises, only that the game of baseball will always remain unfair. The term “moneyball” has outrun its original meaning. Teams like the Red Sox and Cubs that are known for using sabermetrics also happen to have all the money in the world. Small market winners like the Kansas City Royals use a different kind of moneyball, by utilizing young, cost-controlled players, valuing defense, and utilizing outside the box thinking, such as their stocked bullpen which effectively shortens games to 6 innings. (The Royals and their manager Ned Yost did employ one quintessential Beane tactic: refusing to bunt or steal. Yost, of course, was disparaged throughout two playoff runs, right up until the moment he won the World Series. In fact, baseball’s wise men are still griping that the Royals won despite the man, rather than because of him. This is par for the course in baseball). Beane and the A’s have not won a World Series since the publication of Moneyball. As Beane himself admits, his tactics are great for the regular season, but don’t mean squat in the playoffs. That is the nature of baseball and life. You think you have all the time in the world to get things done, and then suddenly you don’t. “The game begins in the spring, when everything else begins again,” A. Bartlett Giamatti wrote. “When you need it most, it stops.”\nJason – Nov 03, 2011\nThis is a good book, but not as good as I thought it was going to be. Sometimes I find technical writing to be a bit repetitive and this definitely leans more toward technical non-fiction than biography (I was hoping for more of a human interest story here)—because even though Billy Beane takes up a large chunk of the story, it isn’t really a story about Billy Bean per se. Moneyball was published in 2003, only a year after John Henry bought the Boston Red Sox. Before that time, very few people in This is a good book, but not as good as I thought it was going to be. Sometimes I find technical writing to be a bit repetitive and this definitely leans more toward technical non-fiction than biography (I was hoping for more of a human interest story here)—because even though Billy Beane takes up a large chunk of the story, it isn’t really a story about Billy Bean per se. Moneyball was published in 2003, only a year after John Henry bought the Boston Red Sox. Before that time, very few people in baseball had ever heard the term sabermetrics, never mind tried to implement it into a strategy for drafting and trading players—very few people, that is, besides Billy Beane. What’s fascinating about Beane is how much he had to struggle against the tide in order to apply the statistical approach of sabermetrics to his managing of the Oakland Athletics. Of course, given the payroll of the A’s in the early 2000s one might argue that he had no choice. But still, he was the first general manager in baseball to attempt it, so his story is unique. But why the struggle? Any baseball fan could tell you how important it is to get on base, that patience at the plate is in fact doubly rewarding as it wears down opposing pitching and draws walks. And walks are huge! They extend an inning by avoiding an out, and they put a man on base which statistically leads to a greater probability of runs scored. The reverse is also true: base stealing attempts and sacrifice bunts are no-no’s in the world of sabermetrics precisely because they have the effect of potentially shortening an inning, leading to a lower probability of runs scored. It is simply not worth the calculated risk to try to advance a base runner. So why were these concepts so difficult for baseball operations managers (besides Beane) to understand? This is essentially what the author investigates here, and the easy answer lies somewhere in the fact that baseball managers are curmudgeons who are used to doing things a certain way and don’t want any smart alec college boy with his pocket protector changin’ the way things ‘er done. Also, Joe Morgan is a buffoon. I think this is basically old news, but I was still pleased to have my suspicions confirmed. So the story here is definitely interesting, but like I said, the argument in favor of a more objective approach to baseball decision-making is something that I already subscribe to (Yeah, Science!), so the argument itself does become rather repetitive. Being a baseball fan, though, there are a few things I did enjoy, specifically Billy Beane trying to steal Kevin Youkilis out from under the noses of the Red Sox brass. At first, even though I obviously knew how things would turn out, I was almost rooting for Beane (who, by the way, was John Henry’s initial choice for managing his new organization), but I quickly checked myself and did a Jersey Shore–style fist pump when Theo Epstein refuses to let himself be outsmarted by that West Coast punk! And now that I’ve read this book, I think I’ll see the movie.\nRiku Sayuj – Oct 25, 2011\nIt was a better story before I knew the whole story. Almost every book on randomness I have read had a reference to Moneyball and I had built up my own version about this story (I had even told a few people that version!) and it imagined everybody doing what Billy Beane was doing, and Billy Beane doing some sort of probability distribution among all players and randomly picking his team, winning emphatically, and thus proving that a truly random pick of players is the equivalent of a true-simula It was a better story before I knew the whole story. Almost every book on randomness I have read had a reference to Moneyball and I had built up my own version about this story (I had even told a few people that version!) and it imagined everybody doing what Billy Beane was doing, and Billy Beane doing some sort of probability distribution among all players and randomly picking his team, winning emphatically, and thus proving that a truly random pick of players is the equivalent of a true-simulation of the market and just like how no considered selection of stock picks can ever outperform the market in the long run, a truly random representation of the baseball market cannot be outperformed by the interventionist methods of other teams over a long season. That is the story I wanted to hear. My apologies to anyone to whom I have spouted this story - it is not true. It is still probable though, when the next radical Billy Beane comes along in sports.\nDiane – Jul 22, 2013\nMichael Lewis hit this one out of the park. I love his writing style -- he is able to explain complex and insider ideas to a layperson, and he makes it interesting. That skill is as valuable to a reporter as a baseball player's on-base percentage was to the Oakland Athletics. The story follows the Oakland A's during the 2002 baseball season, which was when their general manager, Billy Beane, was following a different set of principles for assembling a team than the majority of the league. Beane a Michael Lewis hit this one out of the park. I love his writing style -- he is able to explain complex and insider ideas to a layperson, and he makes it interesting. That skill is as valuable to a reporter as a baseball player's on-base percentage was to the Oakland Athletics. The story follows the Oakland A's during the 2002 baseball season, which was when their general manager, Billy Beane, was following a different set of principles for assembling a team than the majority of the league. Beane and his assistant, Paul DePodesta, were applying sabermetrics, which meant they were looking for players with certain qualities that the rest of the league had undervalued. This was critical because the Oakland A's had very little money -- back then their payroll was about $40 million, compared to the New York Yankees payroll of $126 million. The stats Beane and DePodesta were most interested in were a player's on-base percentage and slugging percentage. The A's experiment worked and the team had a historical 20-game winning streak and made it to the playoffs. By now, the A's analytical tactics have widely been adopted by Major League Baseball, but back in 2002, the strategy was mocked by almost everyone inside the league. In addition to explaining baseball stats, Lewis makes the story more compelling by bringing in sports psychology, game theory and sharing the stories of statistician Bill James, Beane, and a few key players. Beane had himself played in the major leagues, but he lacked the skills to be a consistent hitter. Beane was recruited out of high school and had to decide between a pro-baseball contract or going to Stanford. \"I made one decision based on money in my life -- when I signed with the Mets rather than go to Stanford -- and I promised I'd never do it again.\" After several disappointing seasons as a player, Beane decided he would rather be a scout, and quit playing to work his way up in the A's front office. Another interesting story was that of A's first baseman Scott Hatteberg. Hatte had been a catcher for the Boston Red Sox, but after suffering nerve damage in his elbow, he could never catch again. Beane and DePodesta saw in him the potential to be a good hitter and trained him to play first base. One of my favorite chapters in the book was about Hatte and how thoughtful he was about his hitting. In a great scene, he's in the team's video room watching footage of pitcher Jamie Moyer, who Hatte will be facing later that day. Moyer was a tough pitcher and Hatte was trying to figure out a strategy. \"Moyer was one of the few pitchers in baseball who would think about Scott Hatteberg as much as Hatteberg thought about him. Moyer would know that Hatteberg never swung at the first pitch -- except to keep a pitcher honest -- and so Moyer might just throw a first-pitch strike. But Moyer would also know that Hatteberg knew that Moyer knew. Which brought Hatteberg back to square one. He was knee-deep in game theory, and he had only an hour before he had to play the game.\" I would highly recommend this book to baseball fans, even if they've seen the movie version, because the book is more in-depth and has great stories that didn't make it into the film. I think readers who like stories about underdogs would also enjoy it, because it shows how a poor team was able to change the institution of baseball.\nDavid Rubenstein – Mar 29, 2017\nFor the most part, the is a fun book to read about the general manager of the Oakland Athletics baseball team. The first half of the book was very enjoyable. Toward the end, though, it became a bit repetitive. It's not that the author repeats himself--he does not. It's just that the stories about hiring and trading for good baseball players started to sound all the same after a while. Billy Beane was the general manager during the late 1980's, early 1990's. His team was one of the poorest in the For the most part, the is a fun book to read about the general manager of the Oakland Athletics baseball team. The first half of the book was very enjoyable. Toward the end, though, it became a bit repetitive. It's not that the author repeats himself--he does not. It's just that the stories about hiring and trading for good baseball players started to sound all the same after a while. Billy Beane was the general manager during the late 1980's, early 1990's. His team was one of the poorest in the league, so he found it necessary to do things differently than other teams. He could not afford to pay top dollar for new recruits. So, when it came to recruiting and hiring new players, he decided not to strictly follow the advice of his died-in-the-wool scouts. He often ignored their advice, and listened to the advice of his assistant, Paul Depodesta. Paul was an economist, and used sabermetric principles in making up his recommendations. That is to say, he combined data with statistical approaches, and uncovered many correlations and relationships that gave Billy Beane a better idea of the relative values of players. Whereas many general managers listened to their scouts' advice, they would often judge a player not by their playing ability, but by a set of factors; speed, hitting, fielding--and even by their body type, appearance and mannerisms. But, to Billy Beane and Paul Depodesta, one really counts is the data-based evidenced that a player could get himself on base, which is highly correlated with the number of runs scored. And, since the team was starved for cash, Billy Beane often resorted to wily negotiations with the general managers of other teams. He could not express his interest in another team's player too openly, because that would tip off others about the high value he placed on that player. So, this book is not only about the use of statistics in putting together a superior baseball team, it is also about the art of negotiation, and the wily craftiness involved in getting good deals. The book describes some very interesting characters. And, it is also about the psychology behind coaching players, and hyping up their self-confidence. I didn't read this book; I listened to the audiobook. It is narrated by Scott Brick. While I have listened to many thrillers narrated with great drama by Brick, this book is not a thriller. Brick's tendency to over-dramatize seems a bit over-the-top for a book of this sort. He should have toned it down some\nJay Schutt – Apr 26, 2019\nThis just didn't wow me like I thought it would. I guess I just like the play on the field better than the behind-the-scenes action. This just didn't wow me like I thought it would. I guess I just like the play on the field better than the behind-the-scenes action.\nJokoloyo – Feb 01, 2018\nThe major taxing of this book is not the baseball terms, but there are so many people appeared in the book, and the similarities in names are not helping. For example, the main protagonist is Billy Beane, and there is another important character whose name is Billy James. That's my only concern when reading this book. Some people maybe not comfortable with the writing style in this book, jumping from one subject to another without smooth main story. I am not a professional baseball fan although I The major taxing of this book is not the baseball terms, but there are so many people appeared in the book, and the similarities in names are not helping. For example, the main protagonist is Billy Beane, and there is another important character whose name is Billy James. That's my only concern when reading this book. Some people maybe not comfortable with the writing style in this book, jumping from one subject to another without smooth main story. I am not a professional baseball fan although I enjoy reading some Japanese high school baseball manga. Pardon my approach, I read this book as if I read a fantasy novel where I don't know the setting or magic system of the story. And there is magic in this story, called sabermetrics. But as in any good fantasy story, the magic system is one aspect, but a good fantasy story still needs a good plot. The plot is: how the second lowest payroll team could become the team with the highest number of win in American League West in 2002. If the answer is simple \"by using sabermetrics\", there won't be necessary to write such a thick book. No worry, Billy Beane still had a lot of to do although he was supported by sabermetrics mages behind him. I admit the author could delivery the story in interesting way, sometimes I forget this is a non fiction book. When I check other sources for cross reference, some things don't developed as in fairy tales that I imagine after reading this book.\nLeft Coast Justin – Dec 24, 2021\nMichael Lewis and greatness finally intersect. They have orbited around each other for years before this book arrived. The story is narrow in scope, discussing a baseball team. Or more narrowly, discussing the general manager (i.e., the person responsible for hiring and firing players and coaches) who doesn't have enough money to hire new players. Or even more narrowly, how this manager realized he could never win using the traditional tools of the trade, so he cobbled together a new toolset and Michael Lewis and greatness finally intersect. They have orbited around each other for years before this book arrived. The story is narrow in scope, discussing a baseball team. Or more narrowly, discussing the general manager (i.e., the person responsible for hiring and firing players and coaches) who doesn't have enough money to hire new players. Or even more narrowly, how this manager realized he could never win using the traditional tools of the trade, so he cobbled together a new toolset and changed the game forever. The more narrowly the books is defined, the more universal the message, oddly enough. Cobbling together a new toolset, for example, is exactly what Isaac Newton did back in the late 1600's when he invented calculus to help him explain why falling apples and orbiting planets were actually two manifestations of the same force. Innovators are rarely appreciated by the people they work with, and Billy Beane (the topic of this book) was no exception. Lewis, an author given to hagiography, here produces a much more complex portrait of an inspiring figure, and in so doing has written the best book about competition I've ever read.\nAshley – Jun 01, 2019\nSmart people who think outside the box are so much fun to read about. I read this book really fast, and it was enjoyable to read the whole way through. I've never read a Michael Lewis book before, but I might consider reading more now. He has a simple, clean style that is really efficient at getting his story across, and he has an instinct for the best way to use his material. And he has some great underlying material here. As he notes in the Afterword (which is really great, so if you're going t Smart people who think outside the box are so much fun to read about. I read this book really fast, and it was enjoyable to read the whole way through. I've never read a Michael Lewis book before, but I might consider reading more now. He has a simple, clean style that is really efficient at getting his story across, and he has an instinct for the best way to use his material. And he has some great underlying material here. As he notes in the Afterword (which is really great, so if you're going to read this book, make sure you track down a newer copy that has it included), he didn't set out to write a book about the Oakland A's with GM Billy Beane at its center, that's just where the research took him. That's where the answer to his initial question was centered, which was all about how the monetary inequalities between baseball teams affected economic efficiency. How could a team like the Oakland A's, with a budget of only approximately $10M to spend on players salaries, hope to compete against say, the New York Yankees, who were shelling out closer to $130M? And yet they were! What follows is a book that can basically be summed up, as the author puts it, \"when reason collides with baseball\". It boggles my mind how stubborn and shortsighted humans can be. This book only reinforces my view that people who are capable of adaptation and change, of admitting they are wrong instead of blindly adhering to something just because \"that's the way it's always been\", are extremely valuable in every aspect of life, not just running baseball teams. Highly recommend this one. [4.5 stars] Read Harder Challenge: A business book.\nCaroline – Apr 30, 2008\nA couple cons: The writing’s a little heavy-handed in places, which might just be a hazard of writing about baseball. Ex: “The batter’s box was a cage designed to crush his spirit.” Plus, as a poet, I always feel guilty reading books like this when I could/should be reading Proust or Shakespeare… But: Overall, I really enjoyed Moneyball, and I’m glad I read it. Even though it’s focused on the emergence of new baseball-thinking, Moneyball seems much more comprehensive, and much more narrative than A couple cons: The writing’s a little heavy-handed in places, which might just be a hazard of writing about baseball. Ex: “The batter’s box was a cage designed to crush his spirit.” Plus, as a poet, I always feel guilty reading books like this when I could/should be reading Proust or Shakespeare… But: Overall, I really enjoyed Moneyball, and I’m glad I read it. Even though it’s focused on the emergence of new baseball-thinking, Moneyball seems much more comprehensive, and much more narrative than I expected. Essentially, Lewis tells the story of a new way of thinking about baseball. Bill James, this smartypants non-athletic geek, challenges the traditional way of thinking about baseball, subverting “the foolishness of many conventional baseball strategies.” With the most pitiful bank account in the AL West, Oakland A’s listen to James, apply his theories, and improve exponentially. “Conventional baseball strategies” includes such nonsense as: discouraging plate discipline, encouraging recklessness, and pooh-poohing walks ( I’m still shocked to know that drawing walks used to be, and sometimes still is, considered a failed at-bat). Anyway, James, The A’s, and now the Red Sox, operate—thrive—by challenging conventional thinking and looking for ways to locate and manipulate inefficiencies in the baseball market. They rely on stuff like logic and math to evaluate performance, rather than the good-ole’ traditional scouting system (drafting/evaluation based on non-quantifiable qualities like hunches, scout observation, the player’s “presence”). Although there’s still some problems about what this actually means and how to implement or manipulate stats, it’s clear to me that math and logic beats out chutzpah. Things about Moneyball I particularly enjoyed, and think you will too: --Anytime Lewis discusses the language of baseball. (BTW, for an awesome book about baseball language and signs, read Dickson’s The Hidden Language of Baseball). --Issues of the value of and tensions between emotional and intellectual intelligence, or lack thereof, in baseball—Lewis tell of scouts ranking a player with “personal problems,” such as psychological issues and jail records on the same plane as a player who’s “too smart”(!). Then he writes: “Physical gifts required to play pro ball were…less extraordinary than the mental ones. Only a psychological freak could approach a 100mph fastball aimed not all that far from his head without total confidence.” (I like thinking about this when I watch games now.) --Even though Billy Beane’s sort of the *star* of the story, I found Bill James’s, Chad Bradford’s and Scott Hatteberg’s stories especially, surprisingly, endearing. --Challenges to unchecked tradition, which basically run through the whole book. This includes questioning insider baseball journalists, talking heads, Bud Selig, Joe Morgan & co. What can I say?—-Selig & Morgan might not actually care about Lewis’s jabs at them...but reading them does kinda fill me with glee.\nShane – Apr 22, 2008\nMoneyball is a book that shook the world of professional baseball, but not necessarily in the way it should have. Let me explain... Moneyball is framed around the story of Billy Beane, a hot prospect who never panned out in the majors, who became general manager of the Oakland A's in 1997. Since that time, the A's, while consistently having one of the lowest payrolls in baseball, have been one of the best teams in the game. How is this possible? The book details how Beane and a few trusted associ Moneyball is a book that shook the world of professional baseball, but not necessarily in the way it should have. Let me explain... Moneyball is framed around the story of Billy Beane, a hot prospect who never panned out in the majors, who became general manager of the Oakland A's in 1997. Since that time, the A's, while consistently having one of the lowest payrolls in baseball, have been one of the best teams in the game. How is this possible? The book details how Beane and a few trusted associates began looking at the game in a different way. Instead of trusting scouting intuition and traditional baseball thinking, the A's began focusing on particular assets of players that were being undervalued by other teams. In this way, they were able to build winning teams using players that were overlooked or discarded by wealthier or less skilled organizations. While straightforward statistical analysis is interesting enough to me (see my review of Baseball Between The Numbers), where Moneyball shines is it's more detailed investigations into the development of statistical analysis in baseball, and some of the individual players who made up the A's successful 2002 squad. It is these investigations that give the Beane storyline depth and character, and add credence to the statistical analysis strategies the A's employed. I also appreciated the way Lewis outlines the response FROM the baseball community to the release of Moneyball, which is included in the later paperback edition. This even more firmly establishes the view that most baseball organizations are wasteful and subjective in their approach to analyzing the game they spend hundreds of millions to play. However, Moneyball also explains how teams such as the Toronto Blue Jays and, more impressively due to their two World Series wins in 3 years, Boston Red Sox have hired statistically-minded and data-crunching GM's to run their organizations - showing that the future will perhaps indeed have on base and slugging percantage be our primary focus rather than batting average and RBIs. Not if Joe Morgan has anything to do with it, though.\nAshley Marie – Oct 05, 2016\nReally enjoyed this, partly because reading a baseball book in October when your team is in the playoffs gives you a great high and partly because I was surprisingly and honestly fascinated by the science of sabermetrics. Science and math have never been my strong points, but like Jurassic Park or The Martian, I was nevertheless intrigued. Coupled with the handful of recognizable players scattered through the book, I had a good time with this one. I also remember seeing the film a few years ago; Really enjoyed this, partly because reading a baseball book in October when your team is in the playoffs gives you a great high and partly because I was surprisingly and honestly fascinated by the science of sabermetrics. Science and math have never been my strong points, but like Jurassic Park or The Martian, I was nevertheless intrigued. Coupled with the handful of recognizable players scattered through the book, I had a good time with this one. I also remember seeing the film a few years ago; gotta watch it again. It's not nearly as accurate to the book as it should be, but that's an adaptation for you. October 2016 Baseball Book Club group read\nJoy D – Mar 02, 2020\nNon-fiction about how Oakland A’s General Manager Billy Beane used sabermetrics to develop winning baseball team at less expense than the wealthier teams in the industry. Published in 2003, we can see much of Beane’s philosophy being practiced now throughout the game. There are fewer sacrifices, hit & runs, and steals, and more emphasis on walks and reliance on statistical probabilities in making decisions. On base percentage plus slugging has upstaged the traditional measurements of RBIs, runs Non-fiction about how Oakland A’s General Manager Billy Beane used sabermetrics to develop winning baseball team at less expense than the wealthier teams in the industry. Published in 2003, we can see much of Beane’s philosophy being practiced now throughout the game. There are fewer sacrifices, hit & runs, and steals, and more emphasis on walks and reliance on statistical probabilities in making decisions. On base percentage plus slugging has upstaged the traditional measurements of RBIs, runs scored, and batting average. The book is part biography of Billy Beane, part homage to Bill James (the father of sabermetrics), part explanation of the (at the time) unorthodox strategies employed by the A’s, and part a case study in resistance to change. Personal stories of a few A’s players are also included. In 2002, the baseball season covered in this book, the A’s won 102 games and finished first in their division. Lewis has strong opinions about the effectiveness of past methods, and makes no bones about criticizing scouts, managers, general managers, and pretty much anyone that disagrees with him. This can, at times, be grating, as the former regime has certainly had successes in developing star players. Of course, most of this work occurred prior to the computing age, so they did not have the same tools, and, therefore, it is not a level playing field (pun intended) by which to judge. I did not see the need to come down so hard on some individuals, who are hard-working baseball people with good intentions. Moneyball is written such that a person does not need any in-depth knowledge of statistics, as the author explains the mathematics in a straight-forward manner, possibly over-simplifying to reach a wider audience. With the benefit of hindsight, it is obvious that baseball has adopted some of the concepts put forth in this book, such as drafting college players more frequently than those in high school and establishing an Analytics Department to evaluate the numbers. This book will appeal to those interested in the history of baseball or the application of statistical methods to the game. It is a good example of “out of the box” thinking. It will be interesting to see what is next in the drive to gain a competitive advantage now that “analyzing the numbers” is more widely embraced.\nRossdavidh – Sep 10, 2021\nIn nearly everyone's mind, for any topic which they care about at all, there is a mental model. Not, generally, a probabilistic population of models, but rather, one model: The Way This Thing Is. It may be how the economy works, it may be how politics works, it may be how romance works (or fails to). Whatever it is that a person needs to have an opinion on, because it impacts their life and they must deal with it (which means they must have a strategy for dealing with it), people have a mental m In nearly everyone's mind, for any topic which they care about at all, there is a mental model. Not, generally, a probabilistic population of models, but rather, one model: The Way This Thing Is. It may be how the economy works, it may be how politics works, it may be how romance works (or fails to). Whatever it is that a person needs to have an opinion on, because it impacts their life and they must deal with it (which means they must have a strategy for dealing with it), people have a mental model of how that thing works that they use to decide what to do. It is always, in every case and for every person, at best, incomplete. As the saying goes, \"all models are false; some models are useful.\" Small wonder, then, that from time to time people come across evidence that their model is wrong. Even in fields such as war which have been analyzed from time immemorial, by people whose life depended on it, new things are discovered. For most of us, whose professions are considerably newer than that of the warrior, not only do changes upend our profession, but the old models of how things worked may not ever have been that good in the first place. It takes time for a profession to discover what works and what does not; my own current profession of software development has certainly not sorted this out yet. But when this happens, when a new mental model of How This Works comes along, there are at least a generation of people who have deep investment in the old mental model, who will be deeply resistant to any attempt to change the consensus on How This Works. This is because it would render their years (or decades) of accumulated knowledge suddenly less valuable. In many fields, this resistance is enough to prevent any change to the orthodoxy, whereas in others, there is some objective method of determining whose mental model is most correct. In no field, not science and not warfare and certainly not economics, is this testing more rigorous than in professional sports. Every other expert in the field may disagree with you, and yet your strategy and theirs, when matched against each other in full public view, may declare yours the winner. This book, is the story of how one paradigm was overthrown, and a new one came to replace it. If you enjoy watching the sport of baseball, it will likely add an extra layer of interest to the story for you, but I am guessing that it is by no means necessary, because this is not at its most fundamental level a story about baseball, per se. It is the story of how an intellectual orthodoxy can resist change for years (decades), and then can be shaken and overthrown by events. Billy Beane was, we are led to believe, able to see through the common orthodoxy about what makes a great baseball player, because he was not one, and yet everyone he met in his life for years thought that he would be. While possessed of great physical talent, and obviously a keen intellect (he had been accepted to Stanford University before choosing to play baseball instead), he was unable to perform well at the professional level. Not merely in spite of this failure, but perhaps because of it, he went on to become one of the most consequential managers in the history of baseball. His fundamental insight, the foundation for all of the rest, was that Looks Are Deceiving. He turned to a succession of ever-more-nerdy sources of statistical analysis to tell him what really mattered in a player. In many ways, he was looking for players who were the antithesis of his younger self. If they were a bit chubby, or slow, or old (by the standards of professional baseball), or otherwise failed to live up to the Olympian ideal of American baseball, but they nonetheless could get the job done, then Billy Beane wanted them on his team. If they got the job done, but not in the usual way (e.g. getting a walk rather than a hit, which nonetheless got you to first base), he wanted them on his team. The principal motivation for this unorthodoxy, was that he was manager for a team, the Oakland A's, which had far less money than its competitors. Unlike many other professional sports leagues, professional baseball teams each were free to spend as much as they wanted on player salaries. This meant that, for example, the New York Yankees could spend several times the money that the Oakland A's could, on getting the best players. It was as if they were competing in a pole vault in which different players were able to use poles of different lengths, depending on how much pole length they could afford. Because he was never going to be able to outbid the richer teams for the players which those rich teams wanted, Billy Beane was forced to find ways to get players which the rich teams didn't want, that were nonetheless just as good at winning games. This meant, that he had to have a better mental model than they did, for what it is that makes a player good. I don't watch much baseball anymore, but as a youth I did watch many St. Louis Cardinals games with my dad, and enjoyed it. The game has a pace slow enough to encourage discussion, debate, and even prediction. Do you think he's going to try to steal a base? Do you think he's going to pitch him inside? Do you think they'll do a hit-and-run? There is enough time for those watching the game to guess what is happening, or what should happen, and enough of a pause afterwards to discuss it before the next play begins. You don't just have time to say \"Yay!\" or \"Oh no!\"; you also have time to say \"Why didn't he...?\" It's not as if it is a purely intellectual exercise, but more than many sports it is tailored well for intellectual analysis. For over a century now, people have been recording what happened, analyzing it, and debating it. In this sense, baseball was uniquely prepared for someone such as Billy Beane to disrupt it, by mining the data of all that history instead of relying on whether a scout liked the young fellow's physique (\"we're not selling blue jeans here,\" he liked to say). But in a larger sense, Moneyball is a great symbol of what has happened to our entire world, with one exception: here, it is the little guy, without huge piles of money, who has the data. Because if it had been, say, the New York Yankees who had first tried to use the power of data and analysis to crush all resistance, they could have been the Facebook, Google, or Amazon. Or, to look at it another way, this is a world where those companies were kept forever small and hungry, knocking down the walls around privilege instead of erecting new ones around their own fortresses. It can also be seen as a story of what happened when science overthrew religion in the heart of Europe, or what happened when medical knowledge started to come from double-blind trials instead of the wisdom of the ancients. There are a lot of different ways to see the quixotic quest of a small-market team in a poor city, trying to compete with the teams of larger, wealthier cities. And it can also, of course, be read as a story about baseball. Either way, it is a great read.\nScott Rhee – Mar 23, 2016\nAs a writer, Michael Lewis has that amazing ability to write about one thing but actually be writing about something else entirely. Sometimes it’s meanings within meanings, and it often requires a deeper read between the lines. “Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game” is, ostensibly, about the economics of baseball, how baseball can be looked at as a financial microcosm of the real world: the wealth inequalities between major league teams and how rich teams tend to win many more games than As a writer, Michael Lewis has that amazing ability to write about one thing but actually be writing about something else entirely. Sometimes it’s meanings within meanings, and it often requires a deeper read between the lines. “Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game” is, ostensibly, about the economics of baseball, how baseball can be looked at as a financial microcosm of the real world: the wealth inequalities between major league teams and how rich teams tend to win many more games than poor teams and why that is. Insofar as any book ever written about baseball is never actually about baseball, one can still enjoy “Moneyball” as a basic underdog story, and it has the distinction of being that rare literary beast of an underdog story: a true one. But it’s even more than a metaphorical look at the unfairness of how our economic system works. Going deeper, it’s actually about our 21st-century disinterest in and---more worrisome---inexplicable discouragement of innovative “out-of-the-box” thinking, perhaps because true “out-of-the-box” thinking has the perception of being counterintuitive and diametrically opposed to everything we’ve been taught. In 2002, Billy Beane, the general manager of the Oakland A’s, decided to do something so radical as to have the appearance of utter insanity. Rather than listen to his talent scouts---seasoned veterans of the sport and guys who could recognize real talent---in regards to picking players for the upcoming season roster, Beane chose to listen to his assistant Paul DePodesta, an economics graduate from Harvard with a laptop always at the ready. Beane’s theory was this: picking players based on an outdated and somewhat mystifying and undefined je ne sais quoi of inherent talent was too subjective to be reliable, and, not only that, it simply didn’t work. How did he know this? Beane was living proof that it didn’t work. By all rights, according to the talent scouts, Beane should have been one of the sport’s all-time best players ever. He hit all the markers: running, catching, hitting, throwing, looks. In 1980, fresh out of high school, he was signed by the New York Mets. Everyone knew, absolutely, that Beane was going to go places. Everyone, of course, except Beane. The truth was, Beane’s heart wasn’t in it. If any of the myriad of scouts had asked him what he really wanted to do---go to college, for one---his life may have been drastically different. Unfortunately, Beane’s baseball career was a series of trades to teams who didn’t know what to do with a decent player who didn’t really want to be there. As General Manager, Beane decided in 2002 that doing it the old-fashioned way just wasn’t cutting it. There had to be a better way. Enter DePodesta. Like Beane, DePodesta loved baseball but saw that the sport was growing stagnant and major changes needed to be made, even changes that might initially seem destructive but would, in the long term, be better overall for the sport. One of the changes was the way baseball statistics were being used. Basing their new philosophy on the writings of historian and statistician (and baseball lover) Bill James, Beane and DePodesta looked at the stats of the players in a way that most people didn’t. Most of the stats that scouts looked at were irrelevant, and scouts often overlooked more important stats. In a nutshell, Beane and DePodesta were looking for a player to do one thing: ensure a win. The team that Beane/DePodesta picked looked, on the face of it, like a nightmare of rookies, has-beens, and never-wases. At one point, someone referred to the 2002 Oakland A’s roster as “the island of misfit toys”, and to most people it was an appropriate moniker. As the season opened, the Oakland A’s lost every single game they played for the first two weeks. Then, something interesting started happening. They started winning games. It bumped their standing up from dead last in the league to, well, second to last. But it was something. Then, something even more interesting started to happen. They started winning more games, until, at one point, they had a 19 game winning streak that didn’t appear to let up. Sadly, the A’s lost in the postseason against the Minnesota Twins, and while their success to that point was something incredible, many of Beane’s naysayers pointed to the postseason loss as an “I told you so” moment, negating everything Beane was trying to do. Clearly, he was a failure, and his ideas were hokum. Except, he wasn’t, and they weren’t. Since 2002, more teams have begun adopting the same philosophy and methods that Beane used for his team, to great success. Indeed, the Boston Red Sox (a team that offered Beane a $12.5 million salary to be general manager, an offer that he turned down) won the 2004 World Series utilizing the same metrics and philosophies pioneered by Beane. Clearly, many people in baseball were changing their minds about Beane’s ideas: they weren’t hokum. While Lewis’s book may seem like it might be a dry look at numbers that won’t interest anyone other than people who are die-hard baseball fans, it is anything but dry. Besides being beautifully written, Lewis never forgets the human element---the “romantic” side---of baseball in his characterizations of an ensemble cast of fascinating, flawed, and idiosyncratic people. He also knows what makes for an exciting baseball underdog story, ending the book with the climactic tension-filled now-famous early-September game against the Kansas City Royals, where the A’s, starting off with an 11-0 lead, slowly began to lose the lead until the final inning, a score of 11-11. This was the game that would have either broken their 19-game winning streak or continued on to a 20-game streak. It was a nail-biter of a game, and Lewis captures it brilliantly on the page. Beneath all the baseball and the economic theory, though, Lewis is telling another story about the American people, one that isn’t very pretty. According to Lewis, people like Beane---idea people, outliers with highly innovative new ways of doing things---must fight their way past almost-unstoppable barriers of ignorance, anti-intellectalism, and traditionalism. Sometimes people like Beane never get heard. For every Beane, Steve Jobs, or Bernie Sanders, there are countless millions who may have had revolutionary ways of changing health care, education, the economy, the environment, etc. who simply gave up trying. There is the secret tragedy that hides behind the upbeat and optimistic pages of “Moneyball”. It is a tragedy, I think, that Lewis hopes to avert in the future by telling Beane’s amazing story.\nJason – Sep 06, 2008\nI fucking hate watching sports. Hate it. Then how is it that this book, about applying pertinent statistical analyis to creating baseball teams and playing basesball, so captivated me? It's a testament to a) the skill of the author, Michael Lewis, but also b) the unequivocal appeal of the underlying story: how hard it is to change the status quo (and how one can succeed despite that) and the man Lewis profiles, Billy Beane. A fantastic narrative for fans of spectator sports or folks like me who'd I fucking hate watching sports. Hate it. Then how is it that this book, about applying pertinent statistical analyis to creating baseball teams and playing basesball, so captivated me? It's a testament to a) the skill of the author, Michael Lewis, but also b) the unequivocal appeal of the underlying story: how hard it is to change the status quo (and how one can succeed despite that) and the man Lewis profiles, Billy Beane. A fantastic narrative for fans of spectator sports or folks like me who'd rather clean a toilet bowl with his tongue than watch a ball game.\nDonald Powell – Jun 11, 2020\nThis was a fun book I had on a list for a long time. The author has challenged America's Pastime with the modern world. This is the fourth book I have read from Mr. Lewis. He is a master at finding, explaining and making interesting the way technology and mathematics wrenches us into this current, new world. He has an \"Afterword\" in the edition I read which was laugh inducing and quite fun. This was a fun book I had on a list for a long time. The author has challenged America's Pastime with the modern world. This is the fourth book I have read from Mr. Lewis. He is a master at finding, explaining and making interesting the way technology and mathematics wrenches us into this current, new world. He has an \"Afterword\" in the edition I read which was laugh inducing and quite fun.\nNooilforpacifists – Nov 27, 2013\nSimultaneously among the top 10 sports books and the top 10 economics books. Without Lewis's typical Princetonian smugness. Simultaneously among the top 10 sports books and the top 10 economics books. Without Lewis's typical Princetonian smugness.\nGwen (The Gwendolyn Reading Method) – Oct 30, 2016\nA wee bit all over the place and rambling but more than made up for by the fascinating subject matter.\nRJ - Slayer of Trolls – Apr 02, 2020\n\"I was writing a book about the collision of reason and baseball.\" - Michael Lewis Moneyball has become the modern-day shorthand term for a perceived over-reliance on statistical data by a given baseball manager, front office, or franchise. Critics point out that, since Billy Beane took over as General Manager and implemented many cutting-edge valuation models based on sabermetric data, the Oakland As have failed to win a World Series Championship. That criticism is accurate. It also misses the p \"I was writing a book about the collision of reason and baseball.\" - Michael Lewis Moneyball has become the modern-day shorthand term for a perceived over-reliance on statistical data by a given baseball manager, front office, or franchise. Critics point out that, since Billy Beane took over as General Manager and implemented many cutting-edge valuation models based on sabermetric data, the Oakland As have failed to win a World Series Championship. That criticism is accurate. It also misses the point. Moneyball is the story of one of the poorest teams in baseball, cursed with a stingy owner and an antiquated stadium, that nevertheless manages to be shockingly competitive during the tenure of its oft-, and wrongly-, maligned General Manager despite consistently fielding one of the lowest payrolls in the league. How do they do it? (Ironic spoiler alert) They find and acquire players whose production is inefficiently undervalued by the marketplace. Author Lewis turns his eye from the financial markets (Liar's Poker, The Big Short: Inside the Doomsday Machine) to baseball, and with wit and clarity, peers inside the age-old mystery of why baseball does the things it does. A working knowledge of the basic rules of the sport is probably a good idea but even casual readers and not just die-hard baseball fans will be both educated and entertained.\nEric – Sep 28, 2011\nI found this book extremely interesting, especially since I didn't read it until eight years after it came out, meaning I knew how all the draft picks and other players mentioned in the book panned out (a topic on which a good deal has now been written). Only my rule of always reading the book before seeing the movie prompted me pick it up now, a decision I don't regret. The book had some interesting tidbits I wasn't aware of, such as where the term sabremetrics came from (\"The name derives from I found this book extremely interesting, especially since I didn't read it until eight years after it came out, meaning I knew how all the draft picks and other players mentioned in the book panned out (a topic on which a good deal has now been written). Only my rule of always reading the book before seeing the movie prompted me pick it up now, a decision I don't regret. The book had some interesting tidbits I wasn't aware of, such as where the term sabremetrics came from (\"The name derives from SABR, the acronym of the Society for American Baseball Research\") and the origin story for Rotisserie Baseball (\"1980 a group of friends, led by Sports Illustrated writer Dan Okrent, met at La Rotisserie Française, a restaurant in Manhattan, and created what became known, to the confusion of a nation, as Rotisserie Baseball\"). It also had some great quotes on the mindset of Billy Beane (\"He'd flirted with the idea of firing all the scouts and just drafting the kids straight from Paul's laptop\") and the team he managed (\"The Oakland A's are baseball's answer to the Island of Misfit Toys\"). The book probably could have been a bit shorter -- I could have done with a bit less on Beane's backstory as a failed player and a lot less of Chad Bradford's life story -- but overall Moneyball was a great read that should be mandatory for any serious baseball fan.\nJoshua Guest – Jul 20, 2012\nIf you haven't already seen the movie, you ought to see the movie. And after you have seen the movie, you ought to read the book. I loved the film adaptation, it adds magic and melancholy to the story. This book stands out to me not because it's a good underdog story (though it is a very good underdog story), and not because it's a good non-fiction story (and it is a very good non-fiction story), but because of the symbolic power and universality of its core message: there is unseen value in eve If you haven't already seen the movie, you ought to see the movie. And after you have seen the movie, you ought to read the book. I loved the film adaptation, it adds magic and melancholy to the story. This book stands out to me not because it's a good underdog story (though it is a very good underdog story), and not because it's a good non-fiction story (and it is a very good non-fiction story), but because of the symbolic power and universality of its core message: there is unseen value in every human being. People are overlooked and undervalued because of all kinds of perceived flaws such as age, appearance, personality, and other superficial attributes. What makes Billly Beane and Paul DePodesta such great heroes in this story is how they see past the superficiality and bring out the value of people like Chad Bradford, Scott Hatteberg, Jeremy Brown and Kevin Youkilis. The chapter on Hatteberg alone made the $5 Kindle Book worth the money I spent. The epilogue on the pudgy Jeremy Brown is touching, especially the way it's depicted at the end of the film: he doesn't realize that he has just hit a home run. My recommendation comes with the condition that you must be willing to tolerate baseball clubhouse language. I was too into the story to really notice, but the semi-frequent use of the f-word may be the only thing some people see if they read this. They won't know what they're missing.\nNancy – Feb 26, 2009\nI know next to nothing about baseball, and less than that about statistics, but this book about applying new statistical thinking in baseball to the selection of a winning team (the Oakland A's) was absolutely riveting reading for me. Michael Lewis is just that good. I know next to nothing about baseball, and less than that about statistics, but this book about applying new statistical thinking in baseball to the selection of a winning team (the Oakland A's) was absolutely riveting reading for me. Michael Lewis is just that good.\nChase Chandler – Jun 11, 2018\nHas phenomenal insight on the inner workings of the front office of baseball. Additionally it offers an incredible perspective into the complex world of baseball stats. I feel like I understand baseball waaaaaaaaaaaaay better because of reading this book. A must read for any baseball fan, and a great read for any sport fan!\nRyan – Jan 24, 2012\nBoy did I read Michael Lewis' Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game at the right time: January. (The off-season.) Over the last two years, I've made a real effort to learn about sports. Hockey? Not a problem. The NBA? A gossipy league, but I think it's more popular because of it. The NFL? Short but sweet. No matter how hard I try -- I'll score the game, I'll eat the peanuts, but I draw the line at chew -- I just cannot develop an interest in baseball. I recently talked to a former ESPN writ Boy did I read Michael Lewis' Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game at the right time: January. (The off-season.) Over the last two years, I've made a real effort to learn about sports. Hockey? Not a problem. The NBA? A gossipy league, but I think it's more popular because of it. The NFL? Short but sweet. No matter how hard I try -- I'll score the game, I'll eat the peanuts, but I draw the line at chew -- I just cannot develop an interest in baseball. I recently talked to a former ESPN writer, and he told me that football's popularity is often attributed to its TV friendly format. I can see what he means. When I watch a football game, there's a lot of action, the replays are good, and there are only a few games so it's hard to become bored with the season. Baseball strikes me as a radio friendly game, particularly the many sounds we think of when we think of baseball. Unfortunately, radio went out of style decades ago. So even after watching an entire season of baseball games, the first association that comes to mind when I think of baseball is this line from The Simpsons: \"And now there's a beach ball on the field. And the ball boys are discussing which one of them is going to go get.\" In Moneyball, Michael Lewis mostly ignores the game of baseball. Instead, he looks into why the Oakland Athletics, a team with the second smallest payroll in the league, was for a brief while able to compete with the New York Yankees. It turns out that Billy Beane, the A's general manager, decided to found his strategy on decisions that tend to lead to wins. Runs lead to wins; outs do not. For example, stealing second and sacrifice bunts tend to lead to outs. So don't do those things. Relying on Bill James' analysis, Beane ignores defense and invests in hitters that get on base because a high on-base percentage tends to correlate with a lot of wins. Because Beane has an idea of how to measure players that can lead to wins, he can find players that are undervalued. The best parts of Moneyball may be when Lewis explains the archaic thinking that is guiding the Major Leagues' managers. For example, a relief pitcher's value increases as he accumulates saves. But how often does the relief pitcher \"save\" the game? Rarely. Consequently, Beane realizes that he can buy cheap pitchers, plays them until they accumulate a lot of saves, and then sell them at a profit. It's not that the other teams don't have access to the same statistics as Beane. It's just that they don't seem to care. Lewis explains that there are outsiders and insiders, and the insiders want nothing to do with the horn-rimmed glasses wearing, ivy league educated, statistic gathering nerds that point out that teams can win more games paying less if they pay attention to these few undervalued skills that have been tied to wins. What makes Moneyball work is that its central figure, Billy Beane, is actually an insider. He had the \"good face,\" and he looked good in a baseball uniform. He should have been big. He had a ticket to a free education at Stanford, but he traded that in to become a Met. Beane ended up leaving the game to become an advance scout. Beane seems to have a vendetta against the traditional, \"go with your gut\" decision making that guides the league and, arguably, ruined his life. Watching him outwit other managers because he is willing to consider non-traditional approaches to the game is real joy, and Lewis does a fantastic job in these sequences. There are moments that don't work so well. For example, Lewis is happy to praise Beane, which is fine. However, after writing an entire book about how every aspect of baseball can be broken down into statistical likelihoods, he then explains Oakland's failure to make it out of the first round of the playoffs is that the playoffs are a \"crapshoot.\" We could argue that an NFL playoff game is a crapshoot, but baseball teams are eliminated in a series. Although there's little data to gain from a single series, there are many playoff series to study. Lewis and Beane want to embrace moneyball, even though it fails in the playoffs. Why they should accept Beane's claim that \"my shit doesn't work in the playoffs?\" Lewis also gives little attention to what happens when other teams do begin to realize the importance of on-base percentage. I've read on Marginal Revolution that the size of a team's payroll is a bigger predictor of success now than it was ten years ago. That may have been inevitable, but it's not irrelevant. Still, I have to admit that for over 300 pages, Lewis had my interest. I once read that the best non-fiction books transcend their subject, and I think Lewis has produced that caliber of non-fiction here. It was almost as though baseball itself was interesting. But that may just have been because there it's been a long time since I watched a baseball game. After all, it is January.\nDC Comics novels - Batman: The Court of Owls: An Original Novel by Greg Cox\nAll Star Comics Archives, Vol. 6\nCivil War: A Marvel Comics Event\nDetective Comics (2016-) #972\nAction Comics (2016-) #1003\nChacha-Chaudhary-And-Pop-Show-English\nUnderground Classics: The Transformation of Comics Into Comix\nBatman Detective Comics #2","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1736524"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5420465469360352,"wiki_prob":0.5420465469360352,"text":"Huey, Mirnyi fall to top-seed French duo as dream run in Wimbledon ends in semis thriller\nTreat Huey and Max Mirnyi fell short of an upset against top-seed men's duo Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut a scare at Wimbledon. Jerome Ascano\nTREAT Huey and Max Mirnyi succumbed to top-seed Frenchmen Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut, 6-4, 3-6, 6-7, 6-4, 6-4, on Friday in the semifinals of the men’s doubles at Wimbledon.\nIt was a heartbreaking defeat for Huey and Mirnyi, who appeared on their way to an upset after taking the third set before dropping the final two.\nThe Filipino/Belarussian pair had a stellar run, making the semifinals after a 6-3, 6-2, 7-6 win over Oliver Marach of Austria and Fabrice Martin of France.\nHerbert and Mahut will face compatriots Julien Benneteau and Edouard Roger-Vasselin in the final.\ntreat huey ,\nmax mirnyi ,\nwimbledon ,","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line366510"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8463653922080994,"wiki_prob":0.8463653922080994,"text":"Daryl Cates\nColumbia, IL\nDaryl Cates currently serves as vice president of the American Soybean Association. Daryl is a fourth-generation farmer on his family farm, raising soybeans, corn, wheat, and double crop beans. Daryl returned to the family farm in 1980 after graduating from the University of Illinois, degree in agronomy, to farm with his father, who at 90 still helps work ground down and combines. While at the U of I, he met his wife-to-be, Sandy, and they have three children, Drew, Brett and Megan.\nFrom 1986-1992, Daryl was on the Illinois Soybean Operating Board, which eventually became the Illinois Soybean Association. During those years, he held the office of assistant secretary/treasurer, secretary, treasurer, vice chairman. In 1988, he was elected to serve on the American Soybean Development Foundation Board, which he did until 1992 when he was appointed to serve on the first board of the United Soybean Board.\nAfter serving a year on the USB board, Daryl concentrated on the farm and raising his family until 2013 when he became a director on the Illinois Soybean Association. Daryl continued to serve on the ISA board until 2019, including holding the offices of assistant secretary/treasurer, secretary, and chairman. In 2015, Daryl was nominated to serve for Illinois on the ASA WISHH committee, where he has been secretary, chairman, and continues to serve. In 2018, he was elected to also be a director for ASA.\nIn 2016, Congressman Mike Bost asked Daryl to be a member of Agricultural Board, and he continues to serve in that capacity.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1585132"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9548467993736267,"wiki_prob":0.9548467993736267,"text":"Ant and Dec 'surprised' that 'I'm A Celebrity' returned to Wales for second year\nJulia Hunt\n·Contributor\nAnt and Dec were surprised that the show went back to Wales. (ITV)\nAnt and Dec have admitted they were surprised that I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here! went back to Wales for a second year.\nThe ITV reality show was moved to Abergele in North Wales from its home in Australia in 2020 amid the coronavirus pandemic and returned there for another series last year.\nSpeaking on The Graham Norton Show, the presenters said they were surprised to be back in Gwrych Castle – and that they are desperate to get back Down Under.\nAsked if they are saddened to be filming the show in Wales again, Dec said: “We weren’t saddened but we were surprised.\n\"With COVID there was no getting around it.”\nRead more: Danny Miller crowned King of the Castle\nThe presenters want to back to get back to the jungle. (ITV)\nAnt added: “If it has to be Wales for another series, we will do it in Wales, but we want to go back to Australia.\n“Australia is the spiritual home of I’m A Celebrity and where it’s been for 20 years, and four weeks there in the sun in October and November is great! We love it and we want to go back.”\nThe 2021 series of the reality show was hit with problems.\nContestant Richard Madeley had to leave the show after a trip to hospital when he was unwell meant he had broken the COVID bubble and couldn’t return to the camp.\nThe show has been held at Gwrych Castle near Abergele for the last two years. (PA)\nRead more: Ant McPartlin says I'm A Celeb could've 'easily' been cancelled if not for crew's efforts\nAnd the show had to pause for a few days after the production base was damaged during Storm Arwen.\nEmmerdale star Danny Miller was crowned King of the Castle, pipping Coronation Street actor Simon Gregson to the title.\nThe Graham Norton Show is on BBC One on 14th January at 10.35pm and is available on BBC iPlayer.\nWatch: Piers Morgan desperate to end Ant and Dec's NTAs streak\nUS says Russia readying 'false-flag' operation to invade Ukraine\nRussia has put in place operatives trained in explosives to carry out a \"false-flag\" operation to create a pretext to invade Ukraine, US officials alleged Friday.\nRussian troops are returniNg home after order was restored in Kazakhstan\nPrime Minister Boris Johnson is facing calls to resign over allegations of 'partygate' breaches of Covid rules","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1067774"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6106564998626709,"wiki_prob":0.3893435001373291,"text":"Home » American History • Does History Matter? • Environment • History and Policy\nCampaigning with History: Wildlands and Woodlands\nMay 25, 2010 May 25, 2010 1 Comment on Campaigning with History: Wildlands and Woodlands\nLast week we have two great posts by Tom and Alix on historians engaging with current issues and the value of “thinking with history” for policy development. Both these post brought to mind a project in New England that I learned about at an environmental history conference a few years ago. The Wildland and Woodlands campaign is to protect 70% of New England’s land for forests:\nNew England forests are at a turning point. Following a 200-year resurgence, forest cover has begun to decline in every New England state. What will we do with this challenge and opportunity?\nThe Wildlands and Woodlands vision calls for a 50-year conservation effort to retain at least 70 percent of New England in forestland, permanently free from development.\n-90% of forests would be “Woodlands,” conserved by willing landowners and sustainably managed for multiple uses, from recreation to wood products.\n-10% of forests would be “Wildland” reserves, identified by local communities and shaped only by the natural environment.\nThe project is the initiative of a mix of ‘active’ academics including foresters, ecologists, and environmental historians that use their combined expertise to argue a plan to maintain a sustainable future for New England’s forests. The majority of these academics are scientists and they contributed a great deal on the ecological value of maintaining forests in this region and the many threats to its future. However, David R. Foster, an ecologist and the director of the Harvard Forest, explained during the conference presentation, that a simple graph created by the team’s historian, Brian Donahue, demonstrating the changing forests cover throughout history proved to be the most powerful rhetorical device when they meet with policy makers and politicians.\nNew England Forest Cover and Human Population\nThe graph showing a dramatic decline in the forest between 1600 and the mid-nineteenth century, the remarkable recovery in the century that followed and the more recent trend towards another steep decline encapsulated the problem in a clear and concise way. This graph gets people to think with history and it begins to tell the story of the New England forests since the colonists arrived. The Wildlands & Woodlands report contains a section on environmental history near the beginning along with the substantial contributions from ecologist and foresters. The historical section provides some context to explain the dramatic change in forest cover since the colonial period. The growth of farms, villages and cities led to the steep decline in the forests in the south of New England through to the early nineteenth century. Donahue then references his own research to explain how during the mid-nineteenth century, New England farmers shifted to high value crops on the best land and raised animals using cheap imported grain from the Midwest, leaving marginal pastures to return to forests. In the twentieth century transportation networks improved further and made it more difficult for New England farmer to compete in the national and global food markets. As a result a large amount of farmland transitioned back to forest. This section goes on to provide an overview of the history of forest conservation in New England and demonstrates the long tradition of local stewardship upon which the Wildlands & Woodlands project hopes to build a region wide plan. After this historical context the report discuss the current threats against the forests and proposes a future with a sustainable balance between urban/suburban space, farms, managed forests and protected wildlands.\nNew England Land Cover: Past, Present, and Future\nAgain this graph encourages the viewer to think historically, by noticing the growing trend of development replacing forest and then presenting alternative versions of the future. I know historians, with good reason, are very weary of using history to predict the future. However, I think we can more safely demonstrate historical trends and provide a range of possibilities for the future to help provide context for policy debates. It is also worthwhile noting that Donahue is a well respected historian (his book the Great Meadow won the George Perkins March Prize for the best book in environmental history in 2005) and his research is not soly focused on present issues. He is a good example of historians ability to research and write academic history and to work to influence the present and the future.\nAmerican History, Does History Matter?, Environment, History and Policy\t\"thinking with history\", Brian Donahue, David R. Foster, environmental history, Harvard Forest, New England Forests, Wildlands and Woodlands\n← Active History Announcements: May 23-29 Collection Access: the Toronto District School Board Artifact Loan Program →\nOne thought on “Campaigning with History: Wildlands and Woodlands”\nM. Furrow June 10, 2010 at 10:22 pm\nI like the effectiveness of the chart, but there is a serious problem with the label “Human Population” — it suggests that there were no people in New England in 1600! It really needs to read “European Population,” “Non-Aboriginal Population” or the like.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1751720"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8301413059234619,"wiki_prob":0.8301413059234619,"text":"May 25, 2018 – North Korea said today that it’s still willing to sit down for talks with the United States “at any time, at any format” just hours after President Donald Trump abruptly canceled his planned summit with the North’s leader Kim Jong Un.\nThe statement by Vice Foreign Minister Kim Kye Gwan, a longtime nuclear negotiator and senior diplomat, said the North is “willing to give the U.S. time and opportunities” to reconsider talks that had been set for June 12 in Singapore is the latest whiplash development in what had been seen as a rare opportunity to address what might be the world’s most dangerous standoff. Focus will now swing back to how Trump will respond to the North’s seemingly conciliatory gesture.\nA scrapping of diplomacy could see a return to the torrent of weapons tests — and the fears of war they created — that North Korea unleashed last year as it sought to put the finishing touches on a nuclear-armed missile program meant to target the entire U.S. mainland.\nSince January, Kim has taken a radically softer approach to foreign affairs, sending his sister to the Olympics in South Korea, meeting with his South Korean counterpart on their shared border and exploding parts of his nuclear testing site Thursday in a sign of good faith.\nEarlier comments by South Korean President Moon Jae-in, seen as the driving force behind the summit, suggested that Seoul, a top U.S. ally and host to 28,500 U.S. troops, was blindsided by Trump’s cancellation. Moon said he was “very perplexed” at Trump’s announcement that he was canceling the summit because of North Korea’s “tremendous anger and open hostility.” Moon urged direct talks between Trump and Kim.\nMany expected a belligerent North Korean response to Trump’s comments, but Kim, the North Korean vice foreign minister, said Pyongyang’s “objective and resolve to do our best for the sake of peace and stability of the Korean Peninsula and all humankind remain unchanged.” Kim called Trump’s decision “unexpected” and “very regrettable,” and said the cancellation of the talks shows “how grave the status of historically deep-rooted hostile North Korea-U.S. relations is and how urgently a summit should be realized to improve ties.”\nWhile the statement may keep the possibility of a summit alive, there were also hints in North Korea’s statement that Pyongyang was willing to walk away.\nKim said the United States is at fault for what Trump described as North Korea’s “hostility,” saying that Pyongyang was responding to “excessive” U.S. comments pressuring the country to “unilaterally discard” its nuclear weapons ahead of the summit.\nKim said North Korea had “highly rated” Trump’s efforts to set up a summit between the countries, something previous U.S. presidents were unwilling to do. But Trump’s move to cancel the summit has forced the North to “rethink whether the efforts we have so far put in and the new path we have taken is the right choice.”\n13 Aug 15 admin\nMyanmar Security Forces Surround Ruling Party Headquarters\nAugust 13, 2015 - Myanmar security forces have surrounded the headquarters of the ruling Union Solidarity…\nQuestions Linger As Malaysia Marks Two Years Since MH370\nMarch 8, 2016 - Investigators probing the MH370 mystery will release an annual statement, and…\n22 Jan 15 admin\nYingluck Shinawatra Slams Impeachment Vote\nJanuary 22, 2015 - Ousted Thai premier Yingluck Shinawatra today attacked impeachment proceedings against her ahead…","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1468101"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.749950110912323,"wiki_prob":0.749950110912323,"text":"Luster says to finalise deal with HK firm in due time\nYimie Yong\nJuly 12, 2016 22:04 pm +08\nKUALA LUMPUR (July 12): Luster Industries Bhd has clarified that it had entered into a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to explore further the opportunity presented and make further verifications before entering into a conditional sale and purchase agreement (SPA) with Hong Kong based Citi-Champ International Ltd.\nIn a bourse filing today, Luster said it will make a detailed announcement to Bursa Malaysia if the company decides to enter into the SPA.\nLuster was responding to an editorial published under the Frankly Speaking column in The Edge weekly issued for the week of July 11–17.\nOn July 5, Luster announced that it had signed an MoU with Hong Kong-based Citi-Champ to buy \"a certain percentage\" of New Harvest Asia Investment Ltd for \"a certain purchase consideration to be determined later\".\nIn the article, The Edge questioned the lack of details in the announcement made on Bursa.\nFurthermore, the weekly also pointed out several announcements made earlier, including a plan to mine tin ore in Kemaman and venturing into property development in Kedah, have not materialised.\nOn these issues, Luster explained that Pan Cambodian Lottery Corp Ltd is already in operation and had recorded an audited profit after tax of US$500,000 (RM1.98 million) in financial year ended 2015.\n\"Exzone Plastics Manufacturers Sdn Bhd is an active company and is currently operating and had recorded audited revenue of RM46.7 million in financial year ended 2015,\" it explained.\nLuster said it had started exploring the mining site at Kemaman.\n\"However, the company had since decided to halt the exploration and mining activities mainly due to the declining price of commodities in the world market. However, Luster is currently negotiating with a few parties to enlarge the area of mining in order to achieve a more sustainable economies of scale for its operations,\" it said.\nLuster also pointed out that the property development is with Koperasi Hartanah Malaysia Bhd (KOHAMA) instead of Koperasi Pembangunan Hartanah Putrajaya Bhd (KPHP) as announced to Bursa Malaysia Securities on May 27, 2014.\n\"We had inked a tripartite agreement on March 9, 2016 for the development of an affordable home project in Perak. The construction had started and is targeted to complete by end of 2016,\" said Luster.\nLuster, which is involved in assembly of printed circuit boards and manufactures precision plastic parts, closed unchanged at 7 sen today, with 2.03 million shares traded, for a market capitalisation of RM121.23 million.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1230383"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9717029929161072,"wiki_prob":0.9717029929161072,"text":"Chris Burger Petro Jackson Players Fund - 40 years of hope\nFor four decades, Rugby’s Caring Hands have helped turned tragedy into triumph, writes Quintin van Jaarsveld.\nLaying helpless in a hospital bed, hours removed from breaking his neck during a Currie Cup match against Free State in Bloemfontein on August 30, 1980, Western Province fullback Chris Burger spoke with his captain Morné du Plessis for the final time.\n\"He said, ‘Please look after my family and ask the guys to see that they’re okay’,” recalls Du Plessis 40 years on.\n“Even then, being a young man, I still didn’t fully realise the gravity of the situation and two hours later, he passed. We were absolutely devastated.”\nMoved to action by that last conversation, Burger’s teammates founded a fund in his honour on 9 September 1980. The true depth of rugby’s brotherhood had been cemented, the legacy of Rugby’s Caring Hands born.\nOn 11 April 1987, South African rugby was rocked to its core once more as Kylemore wing Petro Jackson passed away on the field after having suffered a broken neck during a zone club competition match against Excelsior. A similar fund was established in his memory, with the two merging in 1992.\n“Rugby brings people together. Whether you play at school, club or professional level, there’s an undeniable bond between all who play the game and an unwritten rule that we look after each other,” says Springbok great and Chris Burger Petro Jackson Players’ Fund Chairman, Jean de Villiers.\nJurie Roux, CEO of SA Rugby, said: “Rugby is more than what happens on the field - it’s a game where family values and camaraderie are strong. That means also assisting those in need, which is why SA Rugby’s support is vitally important, and it was a great driver to ensure the Chris Burger Petro Jackson Players’ Fund became our official charity a few years ago.”\nThis has come at a cost of R50m, but ask any of the 107 recipients Rugby’s Caring Hands currently assists and they’d say the support is priceless. For hidden in its name lies the true power of the Fund as for the past four decades, it has been a source of hope for those catastrophically injured playing the game they love. Hope of a life worth living, a second chance at happiness despite seemingly overwhelming obstacles.\n“The Fund plays a huge role in my life. If they weren’t part of my life, I would probably have passed away years ago,” says Amos Mzimeli. Left a quadriplegic after breaking his neck at the age of 18 while playing for Moonlight Rugby Club on May 20, 1990, the former loose forward “fell into a deep depression”, his will to live snuffed out by a cruel twist of fate.\nThirty years on, he’s a multi-award-winning pillar of strength, championing the Great Kei Disability Multipurpose Centre in Soto Village, where he’s now a beacon of hope. The happily married father of three insists he wouldn’t be where he is today without the Fund, saying, “It’s so comforting to know you have their support and that support goes a long way to help you make something of your life. They’ve become family; [General Manager] Gail [Baerecke] is like my mother…she’s always there when I need her.”\nMzimeli is one of many success stories, of a recipient finding remarkable resolve and conquering cruel challenges on a daily basis with the support of family, both blood and rugby’s band of brothers and sisters. The Fund epitomises what rugby is at its core, says founder and Trustee Du Plessis, who served as Chairman for an astounding 38 years.\n“Both is about teamwork and passion,” notes the Springbok icon. “There’s a sense of family among everyone linked by the Fund. As much as we love it, there’s much more important things in life than the game, and the scoreboard.\n“Witnessing the sheer bravely of the recipients and the unbelievable dedication of the families for 40 years has had an incredible impact on my life. I’ve learned so much from them and I’m so honoured to have had that privilege.”\nOffering wide-ranging support based on each recipient’s individual needs, the Fund is a lifelong companion for fallen heroes and their families. It’s also been at the forefront of further significant change.\nTackling injuries head-on, the Fund and SA Rugby launched the BokSmart national rugby safety programme in 2009. The all-encompassing, scientific-based project has been game-changing, producing a 63% decrease in acute spinal cord injuries in schoolboy rugby and a 52% decrease in permanent catastrophic injuries in the club game.\nPlayers who’ve suffered the misfortune of disabling despair are left with a daunting task. Amidst the heartache and broken dreams, they’re forced to adapt to a “new normal.” For them, this term has been a way of life long before it was thrust into popular culture by the Covid-19 pandemic.\nSimilar to its recipients, the Fund’s had to constantly adapt to adversity in terms of fundraising, which has become increasingly difficult every year. Inspired by the unbroken will of those it supports, the Fund has gallantly crusaded against the grain to remain the lifeline it is, hosting marquee events like the telethons of old on SuperSport, formal banquets and other special events, all attended by the entire Springbok squad.\nWith its Springbok legends, as well as health and industry professionals, the Fund family’s steely determination remains unshaken. However, the stark reality the non-profit organisation finds itself in is that it’s facing its gravest challenge yet in an invisible enemy that changed the world as we knew it, one that’s threatening to suffocate South African rugby’s greatest ‘impact players’.\n“Fundraising for all charities has been hugely affected as a result of the pandemic. We are no exception as a result of no rugby being played, where much of our funding is generated. Corporate donors are also having to weather their own storm,” says Baerecke, the Fund’s passionate General Manager for the past 15 years.\n“What hasn’t changed for us during this time is the support that our recipients have needed from us, be it monthly subsistence for those who are needy, replacement and or repairs to their mobility equipment, or transport to and from vital clinic and hospital appointments.\n“Our costs have also escalated during this time as a result of our recipients’ household economic situations having been impacted. We are, therefore, humbly appealing for financial help so that we can meet the essential needs of our particularly vulnerable group of recipients.”\nNelson Mandela famously said, “Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does. It speaks to youth in a language they understand. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair.”\nNow, more than ever, there’s a dire need for rugby-loving South Africans to rally behind the sport’s most meaningful cause and prove, like the world-beating Springboks reminded the Rainbow Nation in Japan last year, that we are indeed #StrongerTogether.\nSupport the Fund via the following options:\nDIRECT DEPOSIT:\nAccount Name: Chris Burger Petro Jackson Fundraiser\nBank: Standard Bank of SA\nBranch Code: Rondebosch 025009\nAccount Number: 071 499 776\nReference to use for an EFT Payment: Name and Telephone number\nIf you make use of internet banking, why not consider setting up a recurring monthly payment to pledge your ongoing support?\nSNAPSCAN or ZAPPER:\nFor more information, visit www.playersfund.org.za and follow the Fund on social media:\nFacebook: The Players’ Fund\nTwitter: @playersfund_sa\nInstagram: @playersfund_sa\nchris burger petro jackson players fund\nThe 2022 Carling Currie Cup Bulletin #1...\nDefending Carling Currie Cup champions, the Vodacom Bulls, started the 2022 campaign with a bonus-point victory over the...\nDavids hat-trick steers WP to comfortable win...\nBlitzbok star Angelo Davids scored a hat-trick of tries in the DHL Western Province's 48-36 romp over a youthful Sigma L...\nCheetahs made to work hard for Bloem victory...\nThe Toyota Cheetahs got their 2022 Carling Currie Cup campaign off to a winning start after they beat Tafel Lager Griqua...\nFNB Varsity Cup returns to campuses in 2022...\nThe FNB Varsity Cup will be staged at universities around the country for the first time since 2020 when the 15th instal...\nBulls open title defence with solid win ...\nThe Vodacom Bulls scored a bonus-point 33-19 win over the Pumas in their opening Carling Currie Cup match played in pers...\nCoetzee to spark Ulster in Guinness PRO14 final\nUlster may start as the underdogs against Leinster in the Guinness PRO14 final in Dublin on Saturday, but they are expected to rely heavily on their “clutch player”, Springbok loose forward Marcell Coetzee, to boost their forward momentum.\nUlster to enter Guinness PRO14 final with nothing to lose\nUlster were always set to be the underdogs no matter how they beat Edinburgh in the Guinness PRO14 semi-final this past weekend, but given the manner in which they did it, Dan McFarland’s team should be even less burdened by expectations in Saturday’s final in Dublin.\nRIP Peter Cronje (1949-2020)\nSA Rugby paid tribute to former Springbok center Peter Cronje, who passed away on early on Friday morning after a battle with cancer, at the age of 70.\nVictor Matfield: “It was the best final ever”\nWith 127 Test caps and 148 Vodacom Super Rugby appearances to his name, Victor Matfield is well-placed to talk about the state of the game in South Africa and abroad, and he reckons the 2019 Rugby World Cup final was the best there has been.\nFrom Springbok captain to Players’ Fund chairman\nNo-one is more uniquely equipped to lead the Chris Burger Petro Jackson Players’ Fund into the future than Jean de Villiers.\nRIP Noel Klaasen (1954 to 2020)\nSA Rugby President Mr Mark Alexander paid tribute to former Boland and SARU lock Noel Klaasen, who passed away from natural causes over the weekend. He was 66 years old.\nLast chance for British & Irish Lions tour tickets with one week to go\nThere’s just one week to go and South African rugby fans are urged to get into the virtual queue for tickets to the British & Irish Lions tour in 2021, before the ballot closes at midnight next Wednesday (16 September).\nPienaar: Guinness PRO14 final a massive achievement for Ulster\nVeteran Springbok and Toyota Cheetahs scrumhalf, Ruan Pienaar, who represented Ulster 141 times, believes it is a massive achievement for the team to contest the Guinness PRO14 final on Saturday against defending champions Leinster in Dublin.\nVan der Merwe scoops top Guinness PRO14 prize\nSouth African-born Duhan van der Merwe - a former SA Schools and Junior Springbok player - has been honoured with the prestigious PRO14 Players’ Player of the Season award for 2019/20.\nAustralia to host the Castle Lager Rugby Championship 2020\nThe Castle Lager Rugby Championship 2020 would take place in Australia, in November and December this year, SANZAAR announced on Friday.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line676169"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.693911612033844,"wiki_prob":0.306088387966156,"text":"International EVOO Competitions 2022\nThe London International Olive Oil Competition will take place in London on 12-14 May, 2022. Samples to reach the storage venue by 30 April 2022.\nhttp://www.londonoliveoil.com/\nThe Olive Japan International Extra Virgin Olive Oil Competition will be held in mid-May, 2022. Registrations close on 2 May. Samples must be received no later than 9 May.\nhttps://olivejapan.com/en\nThe Italy EVOO International Olive Oil Contest will be held in Palmi, Italy on 16-19 May, 2022. Registration deadline is 7 May. Samples are due at the venue by 7 May.\nhttps://evo-iooc.it/en/\nThe Canada International Olive Oil Competition will take place in Montreal on 30-31 May, 2022.\nhttps://canadaiooc.com/\nTerraolivo IOOC 2022 will be held in Yehud, Israel on 13 June, 2021. Deadline for registration and samples delivery is 1 June.\nhttps://terraolivo-iooc.com/\nThe 2022 Aurora International Taste Challenge will be held in Stellenbosch, South Africa (date TBC). Entries open on 8 June and close on 2 August. Samples to be delivered on 15-16 August.\nhttps://aurorachallenge.com/\nInformation on the 2022 Australian International Olive Awards is not yet available.\nhttps://internationaloliveawardsaustralia.com.au/\nThe 2022 Sol d’Oro Southern Hemisphere will be held in Argentina in September. Further detail to be advised.\n2021-11-24T17:32:25+02:00SA Olive News|\nShare this content. Choose your platform.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line222428"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6538196206092834,"wiki_prob":0.6538196206092834,"text":"OACC presents \"REJOICE\"\nThe Oneida Area Civic Chorale will open the 2021-2022 concert season with “Rejoice”, a collection of music celebrating the Christmas Season, on Sunday, December 5, 2021 at 4:00 PM at St Agatha’s Church in Canastota. The Chorale, an 80 voice community chorus under the direction of Mark Bunce, will be accompanied by piano, organ and a brass quartet. This is the first seasonal concert by the OACC since the unexpected “intermission” due to Covid-19 following the March 2020 performance. The Chorale was fortunate to be able to present “I Hear America Singing”, a program of patriotic songs, on July 7, 2021, which was enthusiastically received by those in attendance.\nThe December 5, 2021 program will consist of 15 pieces, including well known ones like “O Holy Night”, “Still, Still Still” and “Christmas Gloria”, which is a compilation by Lloyd Larsen of “Hark, The Herald Angels Sing”, “O Little Town of Bethlehem”, and “Angels We Have Heard on High”. It will also include lesser known melodies as “Every Valley” and “Winter Comes”, both by John Ness Beck, as well as two arrangements by John Rutter: “Angels Carol” and “I Wish You Christmas” and Daniel Pinkham’s “Christmas Cantata”, which will be sung in Latin. Another special number will be an arrangement by Craig Hella Johnson combining “Lo, How A Rose” with “The Rose”. The audience will be asked to sing-along with the Chorale on “Angels From The Realms of Glory” and “Joy To The World”. The brass quartet will also perform “O Little Town of Bethlehem” and “What Child is This?”. A short intermission will be included as part of the program.\nMusical accompaniment will be provided by Heather O’Connell on piano and organ, and a brass quartet consisting of Chuck Penfield and Henryk Lotyczewski on trumpet, and Mark Case and Martin Hollister on trombone.\nTickets for the concert are $10 and are available from Chorale members. The concert will be recorded, and CDs will be available for purchase from Chorale members at a later date (after the holidays). Seating for this performance will be limited. Patrons who will be using a season pass are requested to make an advance reservation (refer to instructions provided with patron pass). Tickets will not be sold at the door.\nMasks will be required by all audience members. Attendees ages 12 and over will be required to present proof of Covid-19 vaccination or recent negative Covid-19 test.\nPlease refer to the OACC Covid-19 policy on this website for additional information.\nFuture OACC Concert Dates:\nMarch 13, 2022 “Great is Thy Faithfulness”\nMay 22, 2022 “Let Music Live”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line576120"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6265645027160645,"wiki_prob":0.6265645027160645,"text":"Paul Farmer on ‘Fevers, Feuds and Diamonds’\nDecember 16, 2020 138 views0\nDecember 16, 2020– “In November 2014, Partners in Health co-founder and chief strategist Dr. Paul Farmer was in Freetown, Sierra Leone, sharing bread with a group of Ebola survivors as the world’s largest virus epidemic raged. spread throughout the country. ” It was the night I met Ibrahim, “Farmer recalled, referring to one of the survivors.” We started talking and he told me that he had lost 23 members of his family to Ebola. I was silent. And what he said next was: “I would like you to interview me about my experience.” “I’ve been an anthropologist since I’ve been a doctor, and it’s very rare for anyone to say that,” Farmer continued. “I thought, ‘If I’m going to interview him about such a terrible experience, it better be for someone other than just me.” That, Farmer said, was when he decided to write a book. “More from Farmer on” Fevers, Fights, and Diamonds: Ebola and the Ravages of History “in the following interview. (5 readings)\nTo take actionFor more inspiration, join this Saturday’s Awakin Call with Paul Farmer: “Partners in Health: Repairing the Many Pandemics of Our Time.” More details and RSVP information here. [more]\n10 Health Problems That Make You Have Excessive Thirst\nBarbie Style and Makeup Artist Sir John Team Up to Create Beauty Looks","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1281193"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6049174070358276,"wiki_prob":0.6049174070358276,"text":"José Antich\nMoncloa disavows Iglesias: \"Puigdemont broke the law\"\nNicolas Tomás\nBarcelona. Tuesday, 19 January 2021. 20:55\nReading time: 1 minute\nRead in Catalan\nAlthough less so than yesterday, Pablo Iglesias' comparison between Catalan president in exile Carles Puigdemont and the Spanish republican exiles continues to stir up trouble. Today the vice-president reaffirmed his statements, warning that he will not be added to the campaign to criminalisation Catalan independence, led by other Spanish groups. The Spanish Socialists (PSOE), their partners in the Spanish Government have however, joined in. The spokeswoman for the executive, María Jesús Montero, took the opportunity today to disavow the Podemos leader. \"The Spanish exiles defended the current legislation, others chose to break it,\" said the socialist leader.\nShortly before the cabinet’s press conference, Pablo Iglesias stood by his words. In a brief address to the media, he accepted the criticisms that fell on him \"with sportsmanship\". He did, however, issue a warning: \"If what some want is for me to join in the criminalisation of Catalan independence, I say they already have many politicians for that. I won’t be one of them”.\nMoncloa’s reply came few moments later. Spokeswoman María Jesús Montero defended with \"absolute firmness\", that Spain is \"a social state governed by the rule of law\" and a \"complete democracy\". She rejected the idea of politically motivated exiles. She also disavowed the comparison with the republican exiles of Franco’s dictatorship. \"The exiles fought for and defended the law, while others chose to break it,\" replied the socialist leader.\nThe executive spokeswoman declared that they had been working \"since day one\" to recover the \"dignity\" of the republican exiles and that they would continue \"to work for their memory\". She gave as an example the exhumation of the remains of the dictator Francisco Franco from El Valle de los Caídos, the recovery of the Pazo de Meirás (a manor in Galicia previously belonging to the Franco family) and the fact that the children and grandchildren of exiles can acquire Spanish nationality.\nIglesias’ words\nThe second vice-president of the Spanish government and leader of Podemos, Pablo Iglesias, compared this Sunday the Catalan president in exile, Carles Puigdemont, with the spanish republican exiles during Francisco Franco’s dictatorship. In an interview on live television, Iglesias stressed that he does not \"share in any way\" their objectives, but that if Puigdemont is in Brussels, it is not because \"he has stolen from anyone or is trying to get rich, but due to taking his political ideas to the wrong extreme\".","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1806369"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5229319334030151,"wiki_prob":0.47706806659698486,"text":"A witness is a person who has firsthand information about a significant event through their senses. The declarations and statements of a witness are made under oath and are received as evidence for some purpose, whether such statements or declarations are made on oral examination or by deposition or affidavit.\nThe witness has to assist the courts in the administration of justice by attending court when required. Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, service of a subpoena upon a person named therein requires tender to the witness of fees for one day’s attendance and the mileage allowed by law.\nThe trial court may call as the court’s witness persons who were personally present at the event forming the basis of the prosecution, or whose testimony is material, or eyewitness, or any other witness. The practice in criminal cases of calling someone as a court’s witness, while seldom used and not particularly desirable, is recognized as proper in both state and federal courts. The result of one being called as a court’s witness is not too dissimilar from that of having a witness adjudged a hostile or a surprise witness. The effect is that neither party to the suit may be held responsible for the testimony of the witness and both of course may exercise the privilege of cross-examination[i].\nA witness in attendance at any court of the United States, or before a United States Magistrate [United States Magistrate Judge], or before any person authorized to take his deposition pursuant to any rule or order of a court of the United States, shall be paid the fees and allowances so provided[ii].\nTo testify, a witness should be competent. The competency of a witness depends upon the facts as they exist when the testimony is given. The traditional test is if the witness has intelligence to make it worthwhile to hear him/her at all and whether s/he feels a duty to tell the truth.\nUnder the Federal Rules of Evidence, every person is competent to be a witness except as otherwise provided in the rules; however, in civil actions and proceedings, with respect to an element of a claim or defense as to which state law supplies the rule of decision, the competency of a witness is to be determined in accordance with state law.\nThe purpose of direct examination is to get the witness to testify about facts that support the plaintiff’s case. Questions which are so indefinite, vague, or which leave it almost entirely to the discretion of the witness as to what matters the witness will elucidate, are improper[iii].\nAlthough leading questions are generally not permitted on direct examination, there are certain exceptions to this rule. Depending on the circumstances, leading questions shall be objectionable or proper. If the prosecutor believes that a witness may give an inadmissible answer during his examination, the prosecutor should warn the witness to refrain from making such a statement.\nWhen a witness forgets things, the attorney can refresh his/her memory[iv]. In such circumstances, the attorney may attempt to refresh the witness by asking a leading question, showing the witness a document, which can be prepared by the witness.\nIt is not competent for a witness to state merely that another person knew a thing. At present the law treats such statements as conclusions, not facts. What was said to or by the testator would be legitimate evidence on the subject of knowledge[v].\nAfter the direct examination of a witness, the opposing party may then cross-examine the witness, either to develop facts favorable to the cross-examiner or to discredit the witness. If the witness is the plaintiff in the action, cross-examination may be employed to test the good faith of the witness and the righteousness of his/her case.\nImpeachment is an attack upon the credibility of a witness. The purpose of impeachment is to destroy credibility. A witness may be impeached by proving that he is not worthy of credit, or that the facts to which he deposes are not true, or by cross-examination, in which he may be shown to be incosistent; and it is admissible under such circumstances to prove the good character of the witness [vi].\nCorroborating evidence is evidence supporting a proposition that is already supported by some evidence. Corroboration strengthens the testimony of another witness. If corroboration tends to strengthen or add credibility to the testimony, corroborative evidence may include new and additional information.\nIn order to rehabilitate an impeached witness, the trial court should determine if the statements have some probative force bearing on the credibility of the witness[vii]. If the credibility of a witness has been attacked on the ground that influence of others has altered his/her testimony, supporting evidence and the nature of prior consistent statements may be introduced. A witness’s credibility can be affected by factors such as the credibility of other witnesses in the case, the plausibility of the theory, and theme the witness is meant to support, the order in which witnesses are called, and the character of the jury.\n[i] Smith v. United States, 331 F.2d 265 (8th Cir. Iowa 1964).\n[ii] 28 USCS § 1821.\n[iii] Southwest Metals Co. v. Gomez, 4 F.2d 215, 218 (9th Cir. Ariz. 1925).\n[iv] USCS Fed Rules Evid R 612.\n[v] Slaughter v. Heath, 127 Ga. 747 (Ga. 1907).\n[vi] La Follette Coal, Iron & Ry. Co. V. Minton, 117 Tenn. 415 (Tenn. 1906).\n[vii] Smith v. City of Phila., 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 96594 (E.D. Pa. Oct. 19, 2009).\nInside Witnesses\nAttendance of Witnesses\nCalling of Witnesses\nCompensation and Fees for Attendance\nDuty to Testify\nWaiver of Privilege Against Self-Incrimination\nCompetency of Witnesses\nPrivileged Relations and Communications\nDead Man’s Statutes\nExamination of Witnesses\nCross Examination\nCorroboration\nCredibility of Witnesses\nForms and Guides","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line94696"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5014030933380127,"wiki_prob":0.4985969066619873,"text":"Carbon monoxide alarm law toughened\nCarbon monoxide alarms will have to be fitted when new boilers or gas appliances are installed in Scottish properties, under a change to the law.\nNew building regulations will apply from October this year.\nThe devices, which detect the presence of the so-called “silent killer”, will have to be installed when boilers, heaters, cookers and fires are fitted in houses, hotels and care homes.\nAt least 50 people die every year from carbon monoxide poisoning in the UK.\nThe Scottish government’s planning minister, Derek Mackay, said: “Not a year goes by where there isn’t an avoidable death in Scotland from carbon monoxide poisoning caused by faulty heating appliances in buildings.\n“There are also a considerable number of incidents where people are treated in hospital for the effects of carbon monoxide poisoning.\n“That is why, from 1 October, the Scottish building regulations will require carbon monoxide alarms to be fitted when a new or replacement boiler or other heating appliance is to be installed in a dwelling and other buildings with bedrooms.”\n‘Save lives’\nLouis Blake, from the Carbon Monoxide – Be Alarmed campaign, added: “An audible carbon monoxide alarm is the only way to protect yourself and your family.\n“This change to the Scottish building regulations will see more detectors in Scottish homes, which will save lives.\n“However, we urge people to act now to protect themselves from carbon monoxide and buy an alarm today.”\nCarbon monoxide cannot be seen, smelt or tasted.\nCombustion appliances fuelled by solid fuel, oil or gas all have the potential to cause carbon monoxide poisoning if they are poorly installed or commissioned, inadequately maintained or incorrectly used.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line18631"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7256748676300049,"wiki_prob":0.7256748676300049,"text":"Eli Lev Goes the Distance on “Way Out West”\nFolk artist, Eli Lev, originally from the DC area, is known most for his smooth vocals, catchy melodies, and out of the box ideas. Lev just recently released a crowdsourced, fan involved video for his track, “Chasing Daylight.” With weeks of work behind it, the video features Eli Lev fans from all around the world, singing and smiling to his uplifting track. Now, Eli is ready to give his fans even more songs to sing along to, with the newest release of his full EP, Way Out West.\nUnconventional in the most refreshing way possible, Eli Lev is now officially at the halfway point of his four album project, Four Direction EPs. Way Out West, is album release number two out of four, right in front of his previous EP, All Roads East, which features notable tracks like, “Making Space” and “Go Down.”\nWith five diverse yet cohesive tracks, Way Out West is centered around Eli’s smooth voice and acoustic guitar. In a way, this EP seems to be going in a completely different direction than his previous EP, yet still incorporating important elements that worked from his past tracks.\nThis EP feels comforting for its listeners, in it’s uplifting lyrics and “looking forward” attitude. With songs like, “Oh My Lord”, “Water” , and his most recent single release, “Treason”. This EP reminds listeners that it’s okay to live in the moment, and it’s okay to look back on your past for lessons to learn from.\nWith Way Out West, Eli Lev delivers a gift of relatability, honesty, and sincerity through his music, and although we don’t know what direction Eli will be taking us next, we know that we are definitely ready for this music journey with him.\nListen to Way Out West here: https://soundcloud.com/elilevmusic/\nFind Eli Lev Here:\nhttps://eli-lev.com\nhttp://www.facebook.com/elilevmusic\nhttps://www.instagram.com/elilevmusic\nhttps://twitter.com/elilevmusic\nhttp://www.youtube.com/elilevmusic\nEli Lev on Spotify\n← Tara Lett Brings The Christmas Party! To Your Home\nThe New COOL LIFE Record is HOT! →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line642723"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6390669941902161,"wiki_prob":0.6390669941902161,"text":"Brewers and Admirals Announce 2-Man Advantage Ticket Package\nPosted: Nov 24, 2015 4:51 PM CST\nThe Milwaukee Brewers and Milwaukee Admirals announced the continuation of the “2-Man Advantage” ticket package that was originally introduced for the 2008 season.\nThe joint ticket opportunity is a part of the partnership established by the two teams in 2005.\nThe ticket package includes one “Stern & Bow” ticket to one of three Brewers promotion nights at the BMO Harris Bradley Center for an Admirals home game and one Terrace Reserved ticket to one of three select Brewers games at Miller Park during the 2016 season, all for only $22. The package is valued at $37.50. The dates available to fans for the ticket deal are as follows:\nSaturday, January 9, 2016– Milwaukee Admirals vs. Iowa Wild at 7:00 p.m. –\nBrewers/Admirals Ice Scraper Giveaway (First 2,500 Fans)\nFriday, February 12, 2016 – Milwaukee Admirals vs. Rockford IceHogs at 7:00 p.m. –\nBrewers/Admirals Travel Coffee Mug Giveaway (First 2,500 Fans)\nFriday, March 18, 2016 – Milwaukee Admirals vs. Charlotte Checkers at 7:00 p.m. –\nBrewers Buy One, Get One Free Ticket Voucher (All Fans)\nSaturday, April 9, 2016 – Milwaukee Brewers vs. Houston Astros at 6:10 p.m.\nFriday, April 29, 2016 – Milwaukee Brewers vs. Miami Marlins at 7:10 p.m.\nFriday, May 13, 2016 – Milwaukee Brewers vs. San Diego Padres at 7:10 p.m.\nFor more information or to purchase tickets, please call the Brewers Ticket Office at 414-902-4000 or visit Brewers.com/admirals. These packages are also available by contacting the Milwaukee Admirals Ticket Office at 414-227-0550. Packages will be available beginning tomorrow, Wednesday, November 25 at 9 a.m. and continue through Thursday, March 17, 2016.\nIn addition to this special ticket package, the Admirals will sport the “M” logo on their jerseys as the Brewers are the exclusive jersey sponsor of the team. Announcements during the game, dasherboard signage at the BMO Harris Bradley Center, radio spots during broadcasts and in-game promotions where fans can win Brewers prize packs are also a part of the partnership between the two clubs.\nThe Milwaukee Admirals are a member of the American Hockey League and are an affiliate of the Nashville Predators of the National Hockey League.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line411908"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5739129185676575,"wiki_prob":0.42608708143234253,"text":"Price distortions slow economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa\nKym Anderson, Markus Brückner 07 October 2011\nReal income in sub-Saharan Africa has grown by less than 1% per year over the past half century. Yet within this dismal statistic, there is wide variation. This column explores the policy reforms that may have caused growth to flourish or stagnate.\nEconomic growth in sub-Saharan Africa has been slow for decades (Easterly and Levine 1997, Ndulu and O'Connell 2007).\nSub-Saharan African real income per capita grew at less than 1% over the past half century (Heston et al 2009).\nSome countries have enjoyed faster growth in recent years, but the reasons for that acceleration, and the extent of its sustainability, are still uncertain (Page 2009, Arbache and Page 2010).\nAmong the candidates, though, are reductions in distortions to producer incentives, particularly to farmers who over that time period accounted for more than half of African labour and between one quarter and one third of the region’s GDP.\nA database recently compiled as part of a World Bank study on policy distortions to agricultural incentives since 1955 reveals that there have been numerous price and trade policy reforms in Africa since the 1980s, although they have not been as extensive as reforms in Asia or even Latin America (Anderson and Valenzuela 2008, Anderson 2009, Anderson and Masters 2010). That raises the question: How much can differences in reforms explain differences in national economic growth rates within Africa? To address that question, we have made use of the World Bank’s distortions database plus other variables to examine econometrically sub-Saharan Africa's patchy growth performance.\nFigure 1 plots the time-series evolution of our measure of relative agricultural price distortions for each of the 14 sub-Saharan African countries for which a full set of data is available. It is clear from this Figure that, for the majority of those sub-Saharan African countries, there was a strong policy bias against agriculture over the past half century (a negative relative rate of assistance). The relative rate of assistance is the ratio of the nominal rates of assistance to agricultural and the non-agricultural tradables, where the nominal rate of assistance is defined as the percentage by which government policies directly raise the gross return to producers of a product above what it would be without the government’s intervention (or lowered it, if NRA<0). Another stylised fact that emerges from Figure 1 is that there is also substantial RRA variation across time and countries. For example, in Ethiopia, Madagascar, and Tanzania there was a continuous reduction in policy biases against agriculture, while in countries such as Zambia and Zimbabwe the strong bias against agriculture has persisted.\nFigure 1. Time-series plots of the relative rate of assistance to agriculturea\nNotes: aThe relative rate of assistance (RRA) is defined as RRA = [(100+NRAagt)/(100+NRAnonagt)] - 1\nwhere NRAagt and NRAnonagt are the percentage NRAs for the tradables parts of the agricultural and non-agricultural sectors, respectively, and NRA is the percentage by which gross returns to producers of a product have been raised directly by government policies above what they would be without the government’s intervention (or lowered it, if NRA<0). Source: Anderson and Brueckner (2011).\nCasual empiricism supports the expectation of economists that reductions in distortions are associated with faster economic growth. Tanzania, for example, halved its distortion to the relative price of farm products over the 1985-2005 period, during which time its income per capita increased by over 30%. By contrast, over the same period Zimbabwe increased its distortions to relative agricultural prices by over 50% and experienced a drop in income per capita of more than 25%. Other less-extreme examples during the 1960-80 period include Madagascar, which experienced an increase in relative agricultural price distortions of more than 50% when its real income per capita fell by more than 10%, and Uganda, which experienced a fourfold increase in relative agricultural price distortions and a decrease in real income per capita of over 25%.\nThe econometric challenges\nBut such country examples do not prove that those price distortions slowed economic growth. There could be country-specific factors, for example ethnic divisions, that affect economic growth beyond their effect on the political economy of price distortions. Empirical analysis requires rigorous panel-data regressions that control for country as well as year fixed effects. Our estimation strategy hence takes into account that there are deep and sometimes difficult-to-measure differences across sub-Saharan African countries in terms of history, geography, and ethnicity.\nAnother empirical challenge is to allow for the possibility of reverse causality, with impact going from income (say, due to political economy mechanisms) to price distortions. We address this issue by building on the by now well-established literature showing that rainfall and international commodity price shocks have a significant effect on income in sub-Saharan African countries. Using rainfall and international commodity price shocks as instruments for growth, we examine and quantify the size of the reverse causal effect that income growth has on price distortions. By doing so, we obtain an estimate of the response of price distortions to growth. With this estimate in hand, we adjust for endogeneity of price distortions when estimating the effects that these distortions have on economic growth.\nWhat our study found\nOur key finding is that policy-induced price distortions had a quantitatively large negative effect on economic growth. In other words, reductions in those distortions in recent decades have contributed significantly to economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa. More specifically, a one standard-deviation decrease in distortions to relative agricultural prices raised real GDP per capita growth in the region by about half a percentage point per annum on average (Anderson and Bruckner 2011).\nOur finding of a statistically significant and quantitatively large negative effect of distortions to relative agricultural prices on sub-Saharan African economic growth is important for several reasons.\nFirst, it implies that reducing distortions to incentives faced by even the world’s poorest farmers can be growth-enhancing. Thus this result does not support the view that there are significant growth benefits associated with supporting manufacturing and other sectors at the expense of agriculture.\nSecond, our finding suggests that the returns from investments in agricultural development will be greater in countries with less-distorted relative prices. Since funding for agricultural development in sub-Saharan Africa is expanding rapidly at present, particularly via development assistance programmes1, our findings provide additional empirical support to those arguing that aid flows would be more effective in those African countries that have reduced, or are willing to reduce, their anti-agricultural policy bias.\nThird, our empirical analysis shows that there is a significant within-country effect of policy distortions on economic growth. This is an important result. It implies that the relationship between price distortions and economic growth is unlikely to be a consequence of the strong ethnic divisions that characterise many sub-Saharan African countries. The reason is that ethnic divisions, as measured by countries' ethnic fractionalisation or polarisation, are mostly time-invariant variables. Hence, these variables cannot be a cause of within-country variations in price distortions. From an economic policy viewpoint, this is important because it suggests that in African countries there are significant factors that influence economic growth other than ethnic divisions.\nAnderson, K (ed.) (2009), Distortions to Agricultural Incentives: A Global Perspective, 1955–2007, Palgrave Macmillan and World Bank.\nAnderson, K and E Valenzuela (2008), Global Estimates of Distortions to Agricultural Incentives, 1955 to 2007.\nAnderson, K and M Brueckner (2011), “Price Distortions and Economic Growth in sub-Saharan Africa”, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 8530.\nAnderson, K and W Masters (eds.) (2009), Distortions to Agricultural Incentives in Africa, World Bank.\nArbache, JS and J Page (2010), “How Fragile is Africa's Recent Growth?”, Journal of African Economies, 19(1):1-24.\nEasterly, W and R Levine (1997), “Africa's Growth Tragedy: Policies and Ethnic Divisions”, Quarterly Journal of Economics, 112(4):1203-1250.\nHeston, A, R Summers, and B Aten (2009), Penn World Table Version 6.3, Center for International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices, University of Pennsylvania.\nNdulu, BJ and SA O'Connell (2007), “Policy Plus: African Growth Performance 1960-2000”, Ch1 (pp. 3-75) in BJ Ndulu, P Collier, RH Bates and S O'Connell (eds.), The Political Economy of Economic Growth in Africa, 1960-2000, Cambridge University Press.\nPage, J (2009), “Africa’s Growth Turnaround: From Fewer Mistakes to Sustained Growth”, Commission on Growth and Development Working Paper No. 54, World Bank.\n1 See, for example, the wide range of major donor partners that have joined with the Alliance for a Green Revolution for Africa, at www.agra-alliance.org/section/links and the Partnership to Cut Hunger and Poverty in Africa, at www.partnership-africa.org, as well as the contribution from the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation at www.gatesfoundation.org/agriculturaldevelopment/Pages/default.aspx.\nTopics: Development\nTags: sub-Saharan Africa, regulation, ethnic divisions\nKym Anderson\nGeorge Gollin Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Adelaide; Honorary Professor of Economics at the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University; and CEPR Research Fellow\nMarkus Brückner\nProfessor of Economics, University of Queensland","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line901488"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5095911026000977,"wiki_prob":0.49040889739990234,"text":"Academic Dialogues\nProgram HUM\nSymposium on History & Archaeology\nA Small Symposium on History & Archaeology\nas part of the 9th Annual International Conference on Humanities & Arts in a Global World\n3-6 January 2022, Athens, Greece\nSponsored by the Athens Journal of History & the Athens Journal of Humanities & Arts\nThe Arts, Humanities and Education Division of ATINER is organizing a Small Symposium on History & Archaeology as part of the 9th Annual International Conference on Humanities & Arts in a Global World which will be held in Athens, Greece on 3-6 January 2022. The symposium is sponsored by the Athens Journal of History & the Athens Journal of Humanities & Arts.\nThe aim of the symposium is to bring together scholars and students of all areas of history, archaeology and other related disciplines. You may participate as presenter of one paper or observer.\nFee structure information is available on www.atiner.gr/fees.\nSpecial arrangements will be made with a local hotel for a limited number of rooms at a special conference rate. In addition, a number of special events will be organized: A pragmatic symposium (as organized in Ancient Athens but fine tuned to synchronous ethics), a special one-day educational island tour, an Athens educational walking tour, and an one-day visit to Delphi. Details of the social program are available here.\nPlease submit an abstract (email only) to: atiner@atiner.gr, using the abstract submission form by the 22 November 2021 to: Dr. Steven Oberhelman, Professor of Classics, Holder of the George Sumey Jr Endowed Professorship of Liberal Arts, and Associate Dean, Texas A&M University, USA, Vice President of International Programs, ATINER and Editor of the Athens Journal of History or Dr. Nicholas Pappas, Vice President of Academic Membership, ATINER & Professor of History, Sam Houston University, USA. Please include: Title of Paper, Full Name (s), Current Position, Institutional Affiliation, an email address and at least 3 keywords that best describe the subject of your submission. Decisions will be reached within four weeks of your submission.\nIf your submission is accepted, you will receive information on registration deadlines and paper submission requirements. Should you wish to participate in the Conference without presenting a paper, for example, to chair a session, to evaluate papers which are to be included in the conference proceedings or books, to contribute to the editing of a book, or any other contribution, please send an email to Dr. Gregory T. Papanikos, President, ATINER & Honorary Professor, University of Stirling, UK (gregory.papanikos@stir.ac.uk).\nATINER was established in 1995 as an independent academic association and its mission is to act as a forum, where academics and researchers – from all over the world – can meet in Athens in order to exchange ideas on their research and to discuss future developments in their disciplines.\nAcademically, the Association is organized into 6 Divisions and 37 Units and 6 Centers. Each Unit organizes at least an Annual International Conference, and may also undertake various small and large research projects.\nSee the Committee here\nDr. Gregory T. Papanikos, President, ATINER & Honorary Professor, University of Stirling, UK.\nDr. Nicholas Pappas, Vice President of Academic Membership, ATINER & Professor of History, Sam Houston University, USA.\nDr. David A. Frenkel, LL.D., Head, Law Unit, ATINER & Emeritus Professor, Law Area, Guilford Glazer Faculty of Business and Management, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel.\nDr. Panagiotis Petratos, Vice President of ICT, ATINER, Fellow, Institution of Engineering and Technology & Professor, Department of Computer Information Systems, California State University, Stanislaus, USA.\nDr. Chris Sakellariou, Vice President of Financial Affairs, ATINER, Greece & Associate Professor, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.\nDr. David Philip Wick, Director, Arts, Humanities and Education Division, ATINER & Retired Professor of History, Gordon College, USA.\nDr. Steven Oberhelman, Vice President of International Programs, ATINER & Professor of Classics, Holder of the George Sumey Jr Endowed Professorship of Liberal Arts, and Associate Dean, Texas A&M University, USA.\nDr. Jayoung Che, Head, History Unit, ATINER & Visiting Professor, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, South Korea.\nDr. Stamos Metzidakis, Head, Literature Unit, ATINER, & Professor, Washington University in Saint Louis, USA.\nDr. Patricia Hanna, Head, Philosophy Unit, ATINER & Professor of Philosophy & Linguistics, University of Utah, USA.\nDr. Valia Spiliotopoulos, Head, Languages & Linguistics Unit, ATINER and Instructor, Department of Language and Literacy Education, The University of British Columbia, Canada.\nDr. Stephen Andrew Arbury, Head, Arts & Culture Unit, ATINER & Professor of Art History, Radford University, USA.\nDr. Nicholas Patricios, Director, Engineering & Architecture Division, ATINER & Professor & Dean Emeritus, School of Architecture, University of Miami, USA.\nDr. Carmen Cozma, Academic Member, ATINER & Professor, Department of Philosophy, “Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iași, Romania.\nDr. Vasileios Adamidis, Lecturer, Nottingham Trent University, UK.\nDr. Tatiana Tsakiropoulou-Summers, Director, Center for Classical & Byzantine Studies (ACCBS) & Associate Professor, The University of Alabama, USA.\nDr. Franco Scalenghe, Independent Scholar Former member of the Laboratorio Internazionale di Genetica e Biofisica (LIGB) of the CNR (National Research Council), Naples, Italy.\nAbstract Submitting Form","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line669945"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7453410625457764,"wiki_prob":0.7453410625457764,"text":"After Bolling: School Desegregation in DC\nMost chronologies of the fight for school desegregation often leave off at the Supreme Court decision, a nice bow-on-top finish to a long struggle against segregation, but in reality, the process of integrating the schools was far from over.\nFor The Blackbyrds, Making Music was a Walk in the Park\nin DC by Lori Wysong\nIf you’re from the D.C. area, you know Rock Creek Park for its hiking trails and scenic views. But if you’re from any other part of the country, you might recognize it best from the 1975 song, “Rock Creek Park.” The song’s minimalist verse describes happenings at the local park after sundown...\nEli Nugent's Asbury Chapel\nWhen Reverend Eli Nugent witnessed the silencing and segregation of fellow Black worshippers at a D.C. church, he decided that his community would be better off worshipping somewhere else. His efforts created one of the first and oldest Black churches in the city: Asbury United Methodist.\nLocal Activists, Backed by District's Black Churches, Led the Fight for DC School Desegregation\nThe history of school desegregation in the District is rooted in civil disobedience. The story is one of a grassroots organization of parents that challenged the institution of legalized segregation to guarantee better schools for their children. Throughout the seven-year struggle, the activists were supported by the District's Black churches, and their mission was grounded in the principles of faith and social justice.\nRazing the Mother Church: The Sale and Destruction of Saint Augustine Catholic Church\nFor seventy years, St. Augustine Catholic Church, at 15th and L St., NW, was the place where Washington's Black Catholics were baptized, married, and laid to rest. Known as \"The Mother Church\" of Black Catholics, the property was sold to The Washington Post in 1946. The transaction caught many parishioners by surprise and caused a rift with the white leadership of the Archdiocese.\nAnti-Lynching Activism at Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church\nin DC by Lisa Dupree\nIn the late 1800s, Metropolitan A.M.E. Church was a center for anti-lynching activism in Washington, D.C. Famed journalist Ida Wells-Barnett addressed the church on at least two occasions and, in 1894, Frederick Douglass delivered one of his last speeches from the Metropolitan A.M.E. pulpit. Entitled “The Lessons of the Hour” Douglass's address was an epic condemnation of lynching – from its pervasiveness, to its general acceptance amongst both Southern and Northern whites.\n\"Our Neighbor\" Bill Clinton\nIn 1993, then President-elect Bill Clinton’s choice of location for his inaugural morning prayer service was certainly a departure from precedent. For the first time in history, this time honored tradition took place at a historically Black church: Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal on M Street in downtown Washington. Church officials and clergy were pleased -- as Metropolitan administrator Roslyn Stewart Christian said: “He picked a neighborhood church … 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is right around the corner. He intends to be our president, our leader and our neighbor.”\nWhat's in a Name? Chevy Chase\nThough most Americans (and Google) associate the name with Cornelius “Chevy” Chase, the actor of National Lampoon fame, those of us in the D.C. area know that Chevy Chase, Maryland had it first. Rumor has it, though, that the man and the town actually get their names from the same place: an English ballad that’s at least 500 years old.\nIn 1814, Washington was Woefully Unprepared to Defend the Young Capital\nThe U.S. Capitol Building has been attacked a small handful of times, but the first and most devastating assault on the seat of American democracy in 1814 by the British army bears a striking resemblance to the events of January 6, 2021.\nWhat's in a Name? Anacostia\nHow did the historic D.C. neighborhood of Anacostia get its name? The short answer is, of course, its proximity to the Anacostia River; but the river has its own history that’s worth unpacking. Like the Potomac, Anacostia’s name can be traced back to the area’s Indigenous population – in this case, the Nacotchtank of the Algonquian stock.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1306063"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.552942156791687,"wiki_prob":0.447057843208313,"text":"International Traffic Medicine\n(ITMA)\nAs Adopted 3 November, 2000\nand Amended at Cairo World Congress, 24 September 2002\nand Amended at Special Board Meeting, 27 January 2003\nName, Logo, and Language\nSection 1. Name. This Association, founded in San Remo, Italy, on December 10, 1960, with the name the International Association for Accident and Traffic Medicine, was, on 3 November 2000, renamed the International Traffic Medicine Association (ITMA), hereinafter referred to as ITMA, or the Association.\nSection 2. The ITMA Logo. The ITMA Logo is the property of the Association and cannot be used without written permission of the President on behalf of the Executive Committee. In doubtful cases, the Executive Committee shall be consulted.\nSection 3. Language. The official language of ITMA and its World Congresses shall be English. All written and spoken scientific content of World Congresses shall be English. Ceremonial proceedings may include use of other languages, as determined by the President of the World Congress.\nSection 1. Document Titled “Policies and Procedures”. ITMA will maintain the latest revision of a document titled “Policies and Procedures”. This will specify details of day-to-day operations. It can be modified by a majority vote at a Meeting of the Board of Directors. Nothing contained in the “Policies and Procedures” may be in conflict with these Bylaws.\nSection 1. Eligibility. Membership is open to road-vehicle traffic safety researchers; physicians; emergencymedical-care providers; automotive, traffic, roadway, and electronic engineers; epidemiologists; psychologists; behavioral scientists; participants in law enforcement, policymaking, or legislation concerning traffic safety; and others pursuing the Association’s goal of reducing human harm from traffic crashes. Because harm from vehicular traffic crashes is a major worldwide problem, the Association’s membership is expected to be distributed throughout the world.\nSection 2. Members. Eligible persons are members and entitled to vote if they have filled in the Association’s membership application form giving details of their occupation or other activities related to the goals of the Association and have paid the annual dues as determined by the Board.\nSection 3. Termination. Membership is ended by (a) resignation, (b) failure to meet the membership requirements listed in Sections 1 and 2, unless excused for good cause, or (c) expulsion by a two-thirds vote at a regular or special meeting of the membership or Board of Directors for conduct unbecoming a member or prejudicial to the aims or reputation of the organization, after notice and the opportunity for a hearing.\nWorld Congresses and Membership Meetings\nSection 1. World Congresses World Congresses will be held at times and places determined by the Board, and conducted in accord with Policies and Procedures.\nSection 2. Annual Meeting and Regular Meetings. The annual meeting and any additional regular meetings shall be held at times and places fixed by the Board of Directors. In years in which there are World Congresses, an Annual Meeting will take place at the World Congress. Members shall be informed of these meetings at least 10 days but not more than 60 days before the meeting. Annual meetings shall include elections to fill vacancies in the board of directors, presentation of a financial report for the preceding fiscal year, and such other matters as are properly determined by the membership.\nSection 3. Special Meetings. A special membership meeting may be called by the President at any time, and must be called upon petition in writing of any five members, provided that notice, including the time, place, and purposes of the meeting is provided to members at least 10 days but not more than 60 days before the special meeting. A special meeting shall act only on matters included in the notice.\nSection 4. Quorum, Voting, and Procedures. At any membership meeting, 10 members shall constitute a quorum, and unless otherwise provided in these bylaws or in Robert’s Rules of Order, a majority of those present can decide any matter if a quorum is present. Each member present may cast one vote; no votes may be cast by proxy.\nExcept as otherwise provided in these bylaws, meetings of the membership shall be conducted in accordance with the current edition of Robert’s Rules of Order.\nSection 1. Composition, Selection, Removal, and Terms. The affairs and property of the organization shall be managed by a Board of Directors (hereafter Board) consisting of 13 to16 directors, as determined by the Board. The Board of Directors is comprised of :\nThe Officers of the Board\nOne Director representing each of 7 to 10 geographic regions. These geographic regions will cover the\nentire world, as recorded in “Policies and Procedures”\nThe Immediate Past President\nUp to 3 other Directors\nSection 2. Eligibility for Board Membership. Only members of ITMA may be nominated for election to the Board. Only members of ITMA may be members of the Board. A Board member who has allowed a period of more than three months to elapse without paying membership dues will be presumed to have resigned from the Board.\nSection 3. Election of Directors. Each director except the Immediate Past President, the President Elect and the President is elected by a plurality vote of the entire membership at an annual meeting for a term that ends at the next annual meeting or when a successor takes office. The President-Elect is normally elected at an Annual Meeting taking place at a World Congress, and holds that office until the term of the President ends, at which time the President-Elect automatically assumes the office of President. The President normally assumes, and leaves, office at an Annual Meeting taking place at a World Congress. Normally, the President’s term of office will be more than two years, but less than five years, as determined by agreement with the Board. If any other elected directorship is vacated by death, resignation, inability to serve, or other cause, the Board may select a person to serve until the next annual meeting.\nSection 4. Nominations Committee. The President will appoint a nominations committee chair. This chair will appoint additional ITMA members to the nominations committee. This committee will prepare a slate of candidates to recommend to the membership at the Annual Meeting. Members will be informed of the recommendations at least 10 days before the annual meeting. Additional candidates my be nominated by any member at the Annual Meeting.\nSection 5. Meetings. The Board shall hold regular meetings at times and places it determines, and each director shall receive notice at least 10 days before each regular meeting of the time, place, and proposed agenda. A special meeting shall be held on the call of the President or any three directors, with not less than 24 hours advance notice to each director of the time, place, and purpose; a special meeting shall act only on matters included in the notice.\nSection 6. Conduct of Meetings. Except as otherwise provided in these bylaws, all decisions of the Board shall be made at a meeting attended by a quorum. A quorum shall consist of one-third of the directors then in office. No director may cast a vote by proxy. Directors holding more than one office may cast only one vote. No director shall vote on a matter that could create a personal conflict of interests unless the possible nature of the conflict has been disclosed to the Board and the other members present by a majority vote permit the member to vote. Except as otherwise provided in these bylaws, meetings of the Board shall be conducted in accordance with the current edition of Robert’s Rules of Order.\nSection 7. Committees. The Board may create such committees as it requires and may delegate to them any of its powers, subject to the Board’s power to review and revise committee decisions. Unless otherwise determined by the Board, the President may appoint the members and designate the chairperson of each committee.\nSection 1. Offices, Terms, and Selection. The officers include the President, the President-Elect, the Secretary, the Treasurer, and other officers that the Board may designate. Additional offices may be created and filled by action of the Board, and one director may hold more than one office. The Treasurer and Secretary are elected as part of the “Election of Board Members” (Article 5, Section 3).\nSection 2. Duties. The officers shall perform the duties normally associated with their offices except as otherwise provided in these bylaws and shall perform such additional duties as are determined by the Board. The President shall preside at membership, Board, and Executive Committee meetings. If the President is unable to preside, the President Elect shall preside; if the President Elect is unable to preside, those present shall select a person to preside. During any period of absence or disability of the President and President Elect, an officer selected by the Board shall perform the duties and exercise the powers of the President. The Treasurer shall manage all funds pursuant to policies adopted by the Board and as provided in Article 7, Section 3.\nSection 3. Executive Committee. The officers, plus others the Board may chose to designate, shall constitute an Executive Committee, which may exercise any powers of the Board between meetings of the Board, unless otherwise provided by law or in the Articles of Incorporation or these bylaws, except that the Executive Committee cannot amend the Articles of Incorporation or these bylaws, cannot reverse a decision previously made by the Board, and cannot elect or remove an officer. Except as otherwise provided in these bylaws, all decisions of the Executive Committee shall be made at a meeting attended by a quorum consisting of at least half of its members. No Executive Committee member may cast a vote by proxy. No Executive Committee member shall vote on a matter that could create a personal conflict of interests unless the possible nature of the conflict has been disclosed to the Executive Committee and the other members present by a majority vote permit the member to vote.\nSection 1. Acceptance of Funds. Grants, donations, bequests, and other funds and property may be accepted from any source in conformity with policies adopted by the Board.\nSection 2. Depository Accounts. All funds of the organization shall be placed in such depository or investment accounts as the Board may designate. Checks must be signed by persons authorized as signers by the Board.\nSection 3. Management of Funds. The Treasurer shall be the principal custodian of all funds, shall see that accurate books of account are maintained, shall ensure compliance with government tax, reporting, and other requirements, and shall provide the Board with financial reports and statements as needed. All financial records shall be open to inspection by any director or member.\nSection 4. Payments to Directors and Officers. There shall be no compensation for serving as an officer or director. Out of pocket expenses paid by Directors and Officers in executing their official ITMA duties, supported by receipts when normally provided, will be reimbursed. Directors and Officers may enter into contracts with ITMA to provide special services that are compensated.\nSection 5. Disbursement of funds. The treasurer, or other officer or officers, specified in Policies and Procedures, may write checks against ITMA funds in payment for ITMA goods and services provided the amount is not more than that specified in Policies and Procedures. If the amount exceeds that in Policies and Procedures, at least two Board Members, as specified in Policies and Procedures, must approve the payment.\nSection 6. Fiscal Year. The financial records and reports of the organization shall be based on a fiscal year ending December 31.\nAmendment of Articles of Incorporation or Bylaws\nSection 1. Amendment. The Articles of Incorporation or these bylaws may be amended by vote of a majority of the members present at any membership meeting attended by a quorum, provided notice of the intent to amend is provided to members at least 20 days before the meeting, including the text or a fair summary of the intended amendment.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1526654"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7095232009887695,"wiki_prob":0.7095232009887695,"text":"Google to pay some media publishers for high-quality news content\nGlobal tech behemoth, Google has decided to put an end on its ongoing spat with publishers by announcing that it would pay some media groups for their news content. Reportedly, Google is planning to remunerate some media groups in Brazil, Germany, and Australia for their high-quality content.\nThe search engine giant has previously tried to circumvent payment deals demanded by news publishers around the world in return for using their content. Among these groups, European media groups are one of the tech giant’s harshest critics.\nRecently in a blog post, Google's vice-president for news, Brad Bender wrote that the company is launching a licensing program to remunerate publishers for high-quality content which will be used for Google’s news experience releasing around the fourth quarter of 2020. The company would work with publishers from across multiple countries, with several more to be added in the coming years.\nApparently, the new product would be available on the company’s News and Discover section. Google is willing to pay for free access to paywalled articles on a publisher's website. However, the European Publishers Council expects that the standard norm should be designed only for leading platforms.\nAccording to Angela Mills Wade, Executive Director, European Publishers Council, the current scenario where no licenses are settled with Google is highly unacceptable.\nMeanwhile, publishers working on this project are Brazil's A Gazeta and Diarios Associados; Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Der Spiegel, Rheinische Post, and Die Zeit; along with Australian groups The Conversation, Solstice Media, and Schwartz Media.\nAs for France's competition authority, it has directed Google to pay publishers in France for their high-quality content. Whereas, Australia has made it clear that it would force tech giants like Facebook and Google to share their advertising revenue with Australian media groups.\nSource Credit: https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/google-to-pay-some-publishers-for-content-others-dubious-2020-06-25","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line48261"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7555083632469177,"wiki_prob":0.7555083632469177,"text":"Outside Lands 2018: A return to form in Year 11\nAugust 17, 2018 by Kevin J Quandt Leave a Comment\nPhotos by Norm de Veyra // Written by Kevin Quandt //\nOutside Lands Music and Arts Festival //\nGolden Gate Park – San Francisco\nAugust 10th-12th, 2018 //\nAs another summer festival season winds down, we look back at the 2018 edition of Outside Lands with highlights, thoughts, musings and enough images to make you nostalgic for the Bay Area’s banner music festival. With the Superfly, Another Planet Entertainment and Starr Hill event celebrating its 11th edition, this incarnation of the annual Golden Gate Park soirée saw more of a return to form over the past year while also experiencing a notable shift in the sound that could be heard emanating through the eucalyptus and other flora.\nWhile cancellations left a slightly sour taste in the mouths of last year’s attendees, this year only saw limited lineup hiccups. However, the bigger story at hand surrounds the changing tides of popular music. Sure, you’ve heard folks state “rock is dead,” but is a once-amusing quip starting to take greater shape as the youth clamor for a different sound and aesthetic? Though it was pretty evident on the 2018 lineup poster when it dropped in April, this query started to take greater shape once you were on the grounds and bouncing between sets. So, let’s jump straight into this now.\nDay 1 at Outside Lands tends to be a slow trickle of fans entering the park as some are able to play hooky, bounce from the office early or only show up for the headliners. Sure, some folks had to deal with longer-than-expected box office lines and others even had to bear the fest’s new bag policies, but luckily those in attendance were blessed with some clear skies instead of the usual August dread of the Outer Lands.\nWhile Billie Eilish was relishing in her rising appeal on the Lands End stage, covering Drake and running through the majority of her singles, Rex Orange County was trying his hand at something a bit new and terrifying. The UK wunderkind was forced to play his first-ever solo festival set as his band and their gear ran into transit issues on the way to SF from the Pacific Northwest. The young crooner seemed a bit nervous about this predicament but competently knocked out a solid, eight-song performance that included “Sunflower” and closer “Loving Is Easy”.\nN.E.R.D., meanwhile, played their first SF show in many years to a raucous crowd, opening with “Anti Matter” as a hyped Pharrell Williams feverishly worked every corner of the huge Lands End stage. The set featured a massive medley of tracks by The Neptunes, a cover of “Seven Nation Army” and a double dose of “Lemon” to send us on our way to the next set.\nSimultaneously, Carly Rae Jepsen was apparently throwing down one of Outside Lands’ most enjoyable performances in front of a rather large crowd. While the pop sensation pleased the masses with a rendition of her breakout hit “Call Me Maybe”, she also performed more recent songs like “Emotion”.\nODESZA obviously drew a large crowd for their main stage afternoon showcase, putting the spotlight on the changing tides and tastes of the youth music market. That kind of youthful angst and energy seemed to be danced out to ODESZA, DJ Snake and Big Gigantic compared to the pits of rock bands from the 2000’s, be it Queens of the Stone Age, System of a Down or Deftones.\nWith the under-25 crowd predominantly stationed at Lands End, you could say there was a more intimate feeling at Twin Peaks for Father John Misty. Touting his expanded band that featured a string section and dialing back his quirky stage banter, Josh Tillman’s latest tour has been pretty much about presenting his music as faithfully as he can. “Nancy From Now On” opened his career-spanning performance as the shadows began to drape the park.\nWhile FJM’s attendance was noticeably a bit small for a rock act, the king of “jizz jazz,” aka Mac DeMarco, was able to attract a rowdy crowd for his closing set on the Sutro stage. When the synth sections of “On the Level” opened DeMarco’s set, a certain air of relaxation swept the crowd as various smokeables were consumed in honor of indie-slacker royalty onstage.\nAbel Tesfaye, popularly known as The Weeknd, enjoyed a sort of victory lap as he headlined the festival’s first day with an onslaught of hits such as “Starboy”, “Can’t Feel My Face” and “The Hills”, along with a few select covers of Future, Belly, Drake and Ty Dolla $ign. Though Tesfaye’s current large-scale show is nothing new to the live music circuit, he still threw one helluva party before sending the masses into the wilds of the City.\nIt has been a couple of years since Outside Lands was fortunate enough to have a truly clear, sunny Saturday — and not just for a few hours, but the whole damn day. Plus, it was topped off with another insanely gorgeous sunset, but let’s not jump the gun here.\nAs the day got underway, New York indie artist Amen Dunes performed an extremely tight set, showcasing his wavy take on psychedelic rock/folk. Led by Damon McMahon, the trio played heavy off its most recent release Freedom while also not completely ignoring its back catalog. Moreover, McMahon’s stage presence was infectious and somewhat akin to R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe, as his slender build moved to the emotive nature of his craft.\nOn the opposite end of the spectrum, Lizzo was bringing down the early-afternoon house as she decimated the Lands End stage. “Fitness” opened her 10-song set as her pair of dancers, as well as Lizzo herself, left everything on the stage for the sizable crowd that was yearning for her energy, and some even yearned for a shot of tequila from her bottle of Patrón as she entered the photo pit for an up-close appearance during closing song “Good as Hell”.\nWhen the Lizzo crowd dispersed, Broken Social Scene fans got prime real estate to catch the Canadian indie-rock demigods perform a blistering set of guitar-heavy tunes like opener “KC Accidental” and closer “Anthems for a Seventeen Year-Old Girl”. Even in such a large setting, the massive band was able to cook up a sense of intimacy and really engage.\nWhile OSL this year leaned more toward R&B, electronic pop and other hip genres, UK jazz purveyors GoGo Penguin delivered a stunning set of avant-garde-leaning jazz. This punchy trio showed their chops over tracks like “One Percent” and set closer “Window” and could easily be compared to The Bad Plus. GoGo were a perfect palate cleanser before heading to more current stylings from either SOB X RBE or CHVRCHES.\nLocal legend Tycho performed to an enthusiastic crowd while Scott Hansen stated this would be the last incarnation of this phase for the group (we look forward to the next chapter). Back over at Lands End, Bon Iver delivered a prototypically powerful set as the sunlight dwindled, simultaneously providing a seriously stunning sunset.\nAs the limited amount of darkness fell over the park, one-third of The xx was preparing to hold court as the Sutro crowd swelled, moving their dancing feet to the new-school dance pioneer known as Jamie xx (born James Smith). Even as Jamie xx eased into his intro (The Animals’ “San Francisco Nights”) and more fans pushed in, it was rather evident that the Sutro’s sound system wasn’t able to fully reach the volume many were looking for. But an Above & Beyond nod (“Sun in Your Eyes”) eventually led straight into Smith’s mix of “On Hold” and all was right in the world, if only for about eight minutes.\nThere was a bit of controversy surrounding Saturday’s main slot as Florence + the Machine officially made the move to full-blown festival headliner. Some festivalgoers had their own doubts after FYF Fest 2018 was canceled with a near-identical top billing, but Florence and her bandmates proved, many times over, that she is more than capable of commanding any stage as her energy is unlike many others. She debuted a brand-new show, which featured “June” in the opening slot and was book-ended by “Big God” and “Shake It Out” for a two-song encore.\nJanelle Monáe\nOn the final day, the weather was back on track; by that, I mean it was cold, blustery and generally moist. Most were thankful for the two previous days as opposed to three days of “Karl the Fog,” as has been tradition for a good 3-4 years now.\nThe early afternoon of Sunday bore witness to some very lively performances from up-and-comers like Rainbow Kitten Surprise and Hobo Johnson & the Lovemakers, both of who are primed to make moves in the festival circuit over the next year if they play their cards right.\nContinuing with the trend of electro-leaning acts playing to some big crowds, BØRNS fully commanded a youthful contingent with hits such as “10,000 Emerald Pools” and set closer “Electric Love”.\nThe incomparable Janelle Monáe was a tad late to take the stage, as she was fighting off a stomach bug, but when she did, she captivated the masses with a suite of tracks from her most recent release Dirty Computer and tossed in a fair amount of costume changes over a nearly hour-long set. Monáe proved that she’s easily one of the best in the business at the moment and will only continue to climb upwards.\nOver at the Twin Peaks stage, The Internet was trying to hash out some sort of technical difficulties before beginning their abbreviated performance, which seemed to be a little lopsided and uneven as they did their best to deal with the 30 minutes that they had left. Fortunately, “Girl” got the majority who stuck around swaying to Syd’s sultry vocals and generally chilled demeanor.\nPortugal. The Man held a fleeting rock slot on the main stage, putting their quirky brand of psych-leaning pop rock on display. Moreover, they tossed in some oddly placed Pink Floyd and Beatles covers before closing with their breakthrough hit “Feel It Still”.\nAussie newcomer Tash Sultana, meanwhile, was putting on a masterclass in instrumentation and looping. Sultana has really had one of the biggest breakout years in independent music, and it was clearly evident as she had a carefree stage presence backed by some truly unique, solo-delivered music ripe with psychedelic and world elements. The 23-year-old is certainly a name to watch over the next year and beyond.\nAs the last set of OSL artists got ready to play, James Blake brought us to church for this year’s final performance on the Sutro stage, failing to disappoint while the fog grew slightly thicker in Lindley Meadow. Highlights from Blake’s dreamy set were easily his take on Untold’s track “Stop What You’re Doing” and a semi-rare rendition of “Modern Soul”.\nSome say Janet Jackson couldn’t pull in big crowds amid the current shifting landscape of large-scale music festivals, and although she didn’t pull in record-breaking numbers on a rugged SF night, it was clearly evident that those fans who stayed to watch her were all-in. Jackson’s career-spanning show touched on more than 35 songs and was accompanied by some fierce choreography and production elements. Sure, she wasn’t singing much of the time, but that didn’t stop a wide range of fans from showering Jackson with affection. Her closing performance was highlighted by “That’s the Way Love Goes” and later on, the MJ collaboration “Scream” that transitioned into “Rhythm Nation”.\nAs the music festival industry continues to deal with a shifting crowd and demand, Outside Lands regained its stride after a few hiccups in 2017. And while this year’s lineup might not have appealed to the core demographic from its incarnation, the event still offers something for everyone.\nFiled Under: Editor's Picks, Featured, Festival Reviews, Festivals Tagged With: Amen Dunes, Another Planet Entertainment, Aquilo, Bahamas, BØRNS, Beck, Belly, Big Gigantic, Bon Iver, Broken Social Scene, Carly Rae Jepsen, Chicano Batman, Chromeo, Chvrches, Claptone, Cuco, Daniel Caesar, DJ Snake, Drake, Father John Misty, Florence & the Machine, Future, Golden Gate Park, Goldlink, Gryffin, Hobo Johnson, Hobo Johnson & the Lovemakers, Huey Lewis, Huey Lewis and the News, Illenium, James Blake, Jamie xx, Janet Jackson, Jessie Reyez, Kelela, Lauv, Lizzo, LP, Mac Demarco, Margo Price, N.E.R.D., Odesza, Outside Lands, Outside Lands 2018, Outside Lands Music Festival, Outside Lands Music Festival 2018, Perfume Genius, Poolside, Portugal. The Man, Quinn XCII, R.E.M., Rainbow Kitten Surprise, Rex Orange County, Sabrina Claudio, Shannon and the Clams, Smokepurpp, SOB x RBE, Starr Hill, Superfly, Tash Sultana, The Growlers, The Internet, The Mountain Goats, The Weeknd, Ty Dolla $ign, Tycho, Whethan\nImpending Apocalypse Now: 21 Songs for the End of the World\nDecember 20, 2012 by Mike Frash Leave a Comment\nSubscribe to the “Impending Apocalypse Now” Spotify playlist.\nSo the world ends on Friday. That’s too bad, I was just getting used to Dubstep.\nHere are 21 lucky tracks that somehow relate to the impending apocalypse. And they are pretty great songs too.\n21. David Bowie – “Five Years”\n20. St. Vincent – “The Apocalypse Song”\n19. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds – “I’ll Love You (Till The End Of The World”\n18. STS9 – “When the Dust Settles”\n17. Andrew Bird – “Yawny At The Apocalypse”\n16. Bright Eyes – “Four Winds”\n15. Creedence Clearwater Revival – “Bad Moon Rising”\n14. R.E.M. – “It’s The End Of The World As We Know It (And I Feel Fine)\n13. The Clash – “London Calling”\n12. The Rolling Stones – “Gimme Shelter”\n11. Muse – “Apocalypse Please”\n10. The Cure – “The End of the World”\n9. Medeski, Martin & Wood – “End Of The World Party”\n8. The Postal Service – “We Will Become Silhouettes”\n7. Radiohead – “Ideoteque”\n6. The Decemberists – “Calamity Song”\n5. Tom Waits – “The Earth Died Screaming”\n4. Morrissey – “Everyday Is Like Sunday”\n3. Metallica – “Blackened”\n2. Tame Impala – “Apocalypse Dreams”\n1. The Doors – “The End”\nFiled Under: BAM of the Week Tagged With: Andrew Bird, Bright Eyes, CCR, David Bowie, Medeski Martin & Wood, Metallica, Morrissey, Muse, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, R.E.M., Radiohead, St. Vincent, STS9, Tame Impala, The Clash, The Cure, The Decemberists, The Doors, The Postal Service, The Rolling Stones, Tom Waits","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1750794"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5939773917198181,"wiki_prob":0.5939773917198181,"text":"57-Year-Old Man Arrested For Eating, Selling Human Part\nZamfara State Police Command has arrested a 57-year-old man, Aminu Baba, for allegedly eating and selling human body parts.\nThe state Commissioner of Police, Ayuba Elkana, who paraded the suspect before journalists on Thursday, said Baba connived with three other persons, who usually sold the parts to him at the rate of N500,000 per body.\nThe suspected accomplices were identified as Abdulshakur Mohammed, 20; Buba, 17; and Tukur, 14.\nThe commissioner said the suspect and his collaborators were apprehended based on intelligence information from members of the public.\nREAD ALSO: Senate President Visits Burnt Nguru Market In Yobe\nElkana said, “On December 12, 2021, around 2pm, one Ali Yakubu Aliyu reported at the Central Police Station, Gusau, that his son, Ahmad Yakubu, 9, was missing.\n“On receiving the report, police detectives swung into action and commenced a discreet investigation into the matter.\n“On December 28, 2021, around 9.30am, police detectives received an intelligence report with regards to the earlier report, that on the same date around 9am, the corpse of a human being was found in an uncompleted building at the Barakallahu area, Gusau, with the two hands and legs tied with rags, and the head covered with a polythene bag.”\nThe police boss said detectives proceeded to the scene and found the corpse with some parts removed, adding that the remains were taken to a hospital for an autopsy.\nHe explained that on January 4, 2022, around 2am, police detectives acted on an intelligence report and arrested Baba in connection with the case.\n“During interrogation, the second suspect, Abdulshakur Mohammed, confessed that it was the third time he was contracted by the first suspect, Aminu Baba, to source human parts for him at the sum of N500,000, which he successfully did for the first and the second time, before his arrest.”\nMohammed recalled that he connived with Buba and Tukur to deceive a victim who was taken to an uncompleted building, where they killed him and removed his intestines, oesophagus, private parts and eyes.\nHe claimed that the parts were taken to Baba, who gave them N500,000.\nThe police commissioner said Baba, a father of 19, confessed to the crime, adding that his revelations were assisting the police in the arrest of other members of his gang.\nHe said, “The suspect further confessed that he usually ate the body parts and identified the throat as the most delicious part. He also sold some of the human parts to his customers. Exhibits recovered from the suspect included intestines, oesophagus, penis and two eyes.”\nTags: 57-Year-Old Man, Human parts\nPrevious Senate President Visits Burnt Nguru Market In Yobe\nNext AAUA Students To Pay N20,000, Swear Oath Ahead Of Resumption","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1298407"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5396280884742737,"wiki_prob":0.4603719115257263,"text":"Lillian Gish\nClassicFlix (Teen Scene) – Review #14: The Night of the Hunter (1955)\nPosted on June 29, 2017 January 15, 2018 by Virginie Pronovost\nFrom March 2015 to April 2017, I was writing the monthly Teen Scene column for the website ClassicFlix. My objective was to promote classic films among teenagers and young adults. Due to the establishing of a new version of the website, it’s now more difficult to access to the old version and read the reviews. But, I’m allowed to publish my reviews on my blog 30 days after they had been published on ClassicFlix! So, I decided to do so as you could have an easy access to them. If you are not a teenager, it doesn’t matter! I’m sure you can enjoy them just the same! My fourteenth review was for the 1955’s classic The Night of the Hunter directed by Charles Laugthon. Enjoy!\nCharles Laughton was known as one of the most prolific actors of the 20th-century with films such as The Private Life of Henry VIII, The Hunchback of Notre-Dame, Witness for the Prosecution, and Spartacus. But in 1954 he started working on what would be his only film as a director. Unfortunately, upon release in 1955, The Night of the Hunter wasn’t a commercial success, nor a critical one. Nevertheless, the film is acclaimed today as one of the best of the ’50s and as a brilliant film noir.\nThe Night of the Hunter is based on the novel of the same name by Davis Grubb and set during the Great Depression. Its central character is Reverend Harry Powell (Robert Mitchum), a dangerous serial killer. The film starts with the arrest of Ben Harper (Peter Graves) who has just committed a hold-up, killing two people. He arrives at home and hides the money with his children, John (Billy Chapin) and Pearl (Sally Jane Bruce) the only ones who know where it is; both swear not to tell anyone.\nBen is arrested with the scene being witnessed by his kids and wife, Wilma (Shelley Winters). In the jail where he waits to be hanged, he shares a cell with Harry Powell, who has been condemned to spend some time in prison for stealing a car. Ben talks in his sleep and Harry discovers he has hidden some stolen money, no less than $10,000. After Ben’s death, Harry’s objective is to get his hands on the money and decides to become Willa Harper’s next husband.\nCharmed by him, and looking for a new father for her children, Willa doesn’t take much time before marrying the dangerous man. Willa doesn’t know where the money is hidden, but Powell suspects the children know where it is leaving them in constant danger.\nLead actor, Robert Mitchum, claimed Charles Laughton was one of the best directors he worked with and this was Mitchum’s favorite movie he acted in. Of course, with such motivation, the results couldn’t be anything else but fantastic. On his side, Charles Laughton agreed Robert Mitchum was one of the best actors ever, so both had winning teamwork, bringing out the best in each other. Charles Laughton himself described the character of Harry Powell as “diabolical” and that’s really what he is! We believe in this description of the character because Robert Mitchum puts all his good human qualities aside to embody one of the meanest characters in movie history.\nCharles Laughton didn’t really like directing children, but Sally Jane Bruce and Billy Chapin as Pearl and John give us credible performances, especially little Billy Chapin, who is as much able to move from a feeling of suffering to a feeling of joy. His physical resemblance to Peter Graves, who plays his father is proof of his being a great choice for the part. Sally Jane Bruce portrays one of the most adorable little girls in film. She is very naive, but some of her reactions are so adorable that she does nothing but win our love.\nShelley winters described her performance as “the most thoughtful and reserved performance I ever gave” and we know what she means. There’s a beautiful modesty in her acting perfectly suited to her character. We feel she is thinking well about her actions and knows how to transposed them on screen.\nRobert Mitchum aside, the other great performance of the film is by the one and only Lillian Gish as Rachel Cooper. Rachel is a strong, generous woman and one of the best female heroines in movie history. In her early 60s, Lillian Gish illustrates her experience as an actress, and her performance as Rachel remains a favorite. The film certainly wouldn’t have been the same without her. The Night of the Hunter is a dark film, but Lillian Gish and her character, Rachel add a ray of light to make us realize there’s always hope.\nThe film cost less than $800,000 to produce and despite its plot it remains a simple and beautiful film. Its visual dimension is one of its best qualities. Stanly Cortez, who also worked with Orson Welles on The Magnificent Ambersons, took care of the cinematography. How can we forget the scene where Pearl and John sail in the boat at night? The nature, with its vegetation and its animals is filmed in a surreal quality. It’s neat, showing us detail and the contrast between the dark night and the moonlight adds magic and poetry to the film. It’s hard believing The Night of the Hunter didn’t receive at least an Oscar nomination for its cinematography.\nAside from its brilliant acting and cinematography, The Night of the Hunter also has a well-written script. The way the characters evolve in the film is well developed; one of the best character evolutions is John’s. He’s the one who gains the most experience and wisdom from this unfortunate adventure. The film also contains some memorable quotes and dialogues, one of the best being Harry Powell’s speech explaining why “Love” and “Hate” are tattooed on his knuckles. There are also many other quotes that terrify us, make us smile, make us laugh or make us sad. Here are some examples:\n– Rachel Cooper: “I’m a strong tree with branches for many birds. I’m good for something in this world and I know it too.”\n– Harry Powell: “Not that you mind the killings! There’s plenty of killings in your book, Lord…”\n– Pearl [to John who just threw a hairbrush on Harry Powell’s head]: “You hit Daddy with a hairbrush!” (The way she says it is hilarious.)\nAnother important thing to notice is the score, composed by Walter Schumann, who knew how to perfectly compose the right music to illustrate the film’s visual and narrative dimensions. It’s terrifying music at some moments when associated with Harry Powell, or it can be joyful depending on the scene. We also hear songs such as “Leaning on the Everlasting Arms,” sung by Robert Mitchum with his beautiful, deep voice.\nSally Jane Bruce originally sang “Pretty Fly,” but Betty Benson dubbed her in the end. If we pay attention to its lyrics, “Pretty Fly” perfectly illustrates the children’s situation. Night of the Hunter’s most memorable musical moment is when Robert Mitchum and Lillian Gish sing “Leaning on the Everlasting Arms” together. Rachel protects the children from this dangerous man, but finds a way to connect with him by singing the same song as him for a truly powerful moment.\nThere’s so much to say about The Night of the Hunter, but you’ll need to discover the rest by yourself. If you haven’t seen the film ignore its poor reception on its release, and make sure to immediately dive into this mysterious, intriguing world.\nPosted in Movie Reviews, Movies of the 50's\tTagged Charles Laughton, ClassicFlix (Teen Scene), Lillian Gish, Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, The Night of the Hunter\t3 Comments","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line422835"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7175233960151672,"wiki_prob":0.7175233960151672,"text":"(→Communities)\n[[Image:Saline-county-1864.jpg|thumb|250px|Saline County in 1864.]]\n'''Saline County''' is named for large geologic salt formations found within the county borders. The county was formed in 1835 from portions of Hempstead and Pulaski counties. Neighboring counties include [[Pulaski County]], Grant County, Hot Springs County, Garland County, and [[Perry County]].\n'''Saline County''' is named for large geologic salt formations found within the county borders. The county was formed on November 2, 1835, from portions of Hempstead and Pulaski counties. Neighboring counties include [[Pulaski County]], Grant County, Hot Springs County, Garland County, and [[Perry County]].\n====History====\nThe vicinity was made famous for the buffalo salt licks found by members of the [[Hunter-Dunbar Expedition]] of 1804-1805.\nSaline County was established on November 2, 1835. The county is famous for its rich mineral resources. Early salt works in the county supplied the precious mineral to places throughout the mid-south. Bauxite was discovered in June 1887 by state geologist [[John C. Branner]], and the [[American Bauxite Company]] quickly bought up ninety percent of the deposits. The company built a large reduction plant at the company town of Bauxite, Arkansas, and shipped the resulting ore out of the state to East St. Louis, Illinois, for further refining into alumina, and eventually to Niagara Falls where the final aluminum product was produced by electrolysis. Other smaller players were [[Republic Mining and Manufacturing Company]] of Little Rock, [[Globe Bauxite Company]] of Chemical Spur, and the [[Du Pont Chemical Company]]. In the 1920s it was thought that seventy percent of the world's supply of the mineral was locked up in geological formations located in Saline and Pulaski counties between Benton and Little Rock.\nThe county is also famous for its pottery clays, especially kaolin deposits near Benton which are made into [[Niloak pottery]].\nThe largest employers in the county are the [[Bryant Public School District]], Wal-Mart, the [[State of Arkansas]], [[Saline Memorial Hospital]], [[Benton Public School District]], [[Landers Automotive]], [[Birch Tree Communities]], [[Rineco Chemical]], [[CoorsTek]], [[Rivendell Behavioral Health]], [[Almatis]], Sonic Drive-In, [[RGIS Inventory Specialist]], [[Timber Ridge Ranch Neurorehab]], and the [[Alexander Youth Service Center]].\nThe largest employers in the county are the [[Bryant Public School District]], [[Wal-Mart]], the [[State of Arkansas]], [[Saline Memorial Hospital]], [[Benton Public School District]], [[Landers Automotive]], [[Birch Tree Communities]], [[Rineco Chemical]], [[CoorsTek]], [[Rivendell Behavioral Health]], [[Almatis]], [[Sonic Drive-In]], [[RGIS Inventory Specialist]], [[Timber Ridge Ranch Neurorehab]], and the [[Alexander Youth Service Center]].\n====Law, government, and politics====\n*Dallas Tabor Herndon, ''The Highlights of Arkansas History'' (Arkansas History Commission, 1922), 133.\n*State of Arkansas, ''Minerals in Arkansas: Including a Review of Oil and Gas Conditions'' (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 1922), 8, 42-46.\n*[http://www.salinecounty.org/ Official Saline County Arkansas website]\n*[http://arkansasedc.com/media/38362/Saline_01_2007.pdf Arkansas Economic Development Commission - Largest Employers in Saline County]\n[[Category:Counties]]\nSaline County in 1864.\nSaline County is named for large geologic salt formations found within the county borders. The county was formed on November 2, 1835, from portions of Hempstead and Pulaski counties. Neighboring counties include Pulaski County, Grant County, Hot Springs County, Garland County, and Perry County.\nThe vicinity was made famous for the buffalo salt licks found by members of the Hunter-Dunbar Expedition of 1804-1805.\nSaline County was established on November 2, 1835. The county is famous for its rich mineral resources. Early salt works in the county supplied the precious mineral to places throughout the mid-south. Bauxite was discovered in June 1887 by state geologist John C. Branner, and the American Bauxite Company quickly bought up ninety percent of the deposits. The company built a large reduction plant at the company town of Bauxite, Arkansas, and shipped the resulting ore out of the state to East St. Louis, Illinois, for further refining into alumina, and eventually to Niagara Falls where the final aluminum product was produced by electrolysis. Other smaller players were Republic Mining and Manufacturing Company of Little Rock, Globe Bauxite Company of Chemical Spur, and the Du Pont Chemical Company. In the 1920s it was thought that seventy percent of the world's supply of the mineral was locked up in geological formations located in Saline and Pulaski counties between Benton and Little Rock.\nThe county is also famous for its pottery clays, especially kaolin deposits near Benton which are made into Niloak pottery.\nThe largest employers in the county are the Bryant Public School District, Wal-Mart, the State of Arkansas, Saline Memorial Hospital, Benton Public School District, Landers Automotive, Birch Tree Communities, Rineco Chemical, CoorsTek, Rivendell Behavioral Health, Almatis, Sonic Drive-In, RGIS Inventory Specialist, Timber Ridge Ranch Neurorehab, and the Alexander Youth Service Center.\nSaline County has five high schools: Bauxite High School (Bauxite), Benton High School (Benton), Bryant High School (Bryant), Harmony Grove High School (Benton), and Paron High School (Paron).\nSaline County has a number of incorporated cities within its boundaries: Benton, Bryant, and Haskell. Incorporated towns in the county are Alexander, Bauxite, and Traskwood.\nDallas Tabor Herndon, The Highlights of Arkansas History (Arkansas History Commission, 1922), 133.\nState of Arkansas, Minerals in Arkansas: Including a Review of Oil and Gas Conditions (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan, 1922), 8, 42-46.\nOfficial Saline County Arkansas website\nArkansas Economic Development Commission - Largest Employers in Saline County\nRetrieved from \"https://honors.uca.edu/wiki/index.php?title=Saline_County&oldid=13952\"","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line648880"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6354114413261414,"wiki_prob":0.36458855867385864,"text":"Govt offices in Odisha to remain closed on 2nd & 4th Saturdays in August\n(Representative image/ PC: Live Mint)\nBhubaneswar, Aug 3: The Odisha government today issued guidelines regarding functioning of government offices in August.\nAs per the new guideline, all the state government offices will remain closed on second and fourth Saturdays in the month of August. However, the offices will function on other Saturdays of the month.\n“All Departments of the State Government and Sub-ordinate Offices in the State shall function with full strength of employees with effect from 2nd August, 2021 until further orders. The employees, who are now fully vaccinated, will mandatorily to attend office regularly. The employees who are unable to get vaccinated for medical or some other compelling reasons, may seek exemption from attending Office from the Head of Office, which would be considered on a case-to-case basis. Employees who are neither vaccinated nor exempted would not be permitted to attend office and their absence will be treated as willful,” sated an order issued by General Administration and Public Grievance Department.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line471753"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6074316501617432,"wiki_prob":0.39256834983825684,"text":"https://www.nist.gov/publications/bios-protection-guidelines\nBIOS Protection Guidelines\nDavid Cooper, William Polk, Andrew Regenscheid, Murugiah Souppaya\nThis document provides guidelines for preventing the unauthorized modification of Basic Input/Output System (BIOS) firmware on PC client systems. Unauthorized modification of BIOS firmware by malicious software constitutes a significant threat because of the BIOS's unique and privileged position within the PC architecture. A malicious BIOS modification could be part of a sophisticated, targeted attack on an organization--either a permanent denial of service (if the BIOS is corrupted) or a persistent malware presence (if the BIOS is implanted with malware). As used in this publication, the term BIOS refers to conventional BIOS, Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI) BIOS, and Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) BIOS. This document applies to system BIOS firmware (e.g., conventional BIOS or UEFI BIOS) stored in the system flash memory of computer systems, including portions that may be formatted as Option ROMs. However, it does not apply to Option ROMs, UEFI drivers, and firmware stored elsewhere in a computer system. While this document focuses on current and future x86 and x64 client platforms, the controls and procedures are independent of any particular system design. Likewise, although the guide is oriented toward enterprise-class platforms, the necessary technologies are expected to migrate to consumer-grade systems over time. Future efforts may look at boot firmware security for enterprise server platforms.\nSpecial Publication (NIST SP) - 800-147\nNIST Pub Series\nSpecial Publication (NIST SP)\nPub Type\nNIST Pubs\nhttps://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.SP.800-147\nLocal Download\nBIOS, firmware, security, firmware updates, basic input/output system, BIOS firmware, system BIOS\nCooper, D. , Polk, W. , Regenscheid, A. and Souppaya, M. (2011), BIOS Protection Guidelines, Special Publication (NIST SP), National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD, [online], https://doi.org/10.6028/NIST.SP.800-147, https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=908423 (Accessed January 16, 2022)\nAdditional citation formats\nCreated April 28, 2011, Updated October 14, 2021","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line168641"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5263316631317139,"wiki_prob":0.5263316631317139,"text":"490 North DuPont Highway Dover, DE 19901 • 302-674-4220\n490 N DuPont Hwy, Dover • 302-674-4220\nWild Quail\nEstates of Wild Quail\nVillage at Wild Quail\nPennwood\nCommunities in West Dover\nOlde Dover\nTownsend Fields\nResidential Rentals\nLandlord-Tenant Code\nCOVID Alert\nBeds: Bed 1+ Beds 2+ Beds 3+ Beds 4+ Beds 5+ Beds 6+ Beds\nBaths: Bath 1+ Baths 2+ Baths 3+ Baths 4+ Baths\n$Min $0 $100,000 $125,000 $150,000 $175,000 $200,000 $225,000 $250,000 $275,000 $300,000 $325,000 $350,000 $375,000 $400,000 $450,000 $500,000 $550,000 $600,000 $650,000 $700,000 $750,000 $800,000 $850,000 $900,000 $950,000 $1,000,000 $1,250,000 $1,500,000 $1,750,000 $2,000,000 $2,250,000 $2,500,000 $2,750,000 $3,000,000 $3,500,000 $4,000,000 $4,500,000 $5,000,000 $6,000,000 $7,000,000 $8,000,000 $9,000,000 $10,000,000\n$Max $0 $100,000 $125,000 $150,000 $175,000 $200,000 $225,000 $250,000 $275,000 $300,000 $325,000 $350,000 $375,000 $400,000 $450,000 $500,000 $550,000 $600,000 $650,000 $700,000 $750,000 $800,000 $850,000 $900,000 $950,000 $1,000,000 $1,250,000 $1,500,000 $1,750,000 $2,000,000 $2,250,000 $2,500,000 $2,750,000 $3,000,000 $3,500,000 $4,000,000 $4,500,000 $5,000,000 $6,000,000 $7,000,000 $8,000,000 $9,000,000 $10,000,000\nType: Property Type Single Family Condo Townhouse Mobile Home Lot-Land Commercial\nUrban Living, Historic Setting\nIf you reside in or near Dover, you'll be living right next to an important part of our nation's history. Others may have to drive hours to attend the city's events and see its museums and landmarks, but all of this will be right in your own backyard if you own a home here.\nDover's historic legacy contributes to its charming ambience; in fact, an average of two million tourists visit the state capital every year. Due to its brick sidewalks and historic homes, Olde Dover especially offers a pleasant stroll into a past era. Visit The First State Heritage Park, which highlights Delaware's role in our country's beginnings. It's also home to the Old State House (built in 1792) and Legislative Hall, which replaced it as the seat of government in 1933. In the summer, you'll love taking a guided tour by characters in period dress; other seasonal activities include lantern tours, Colonial games, scavenger hunts, and the annual Olde Dover Days Festival.\nFor details on specific homes available immediately, click here.\nOlde Dover Homes for Sale - Homes for Sale in Dover, Delaware\nMLS: Dekt2004852\n419 S State St, Dover, Delaware 19901\n233 Walker Rd, Dover, Delaware 19904\n4 baths(full)\n620 N Governors Ave, Dover, Delaware 19904\n490 North DuPont Hwy\nDover, Delaware 19901\nOffice Hours | Monday - Friday 9:00 - 5:00\n*We always have an agent on duty including after hours and on weekends.\nAll information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1719158"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6417593955993652,"wiki_prob":0.6417593955993652,"text":"Washington Attorney General Sues Johnson & Johnson Over Opioid Crisis\n‘ILLEGAL CONDUCT’\nJulia Arciga\nPublished Jan. 02, 2020 8:01PM ET\nEric Baradat/Getty\nWashington's attorney general filed a lawsuit Thursday against Johnson & Johnson, claiming the company is one of the largest suppliers of raw materials to make opioids. According to news station KING-TV, Attorney General Bob Ferguson also claimed the company “deceptively” advertised in favor of using opioids over the long term at high doses and ignored the risks of the drugs. Along with civil penalties and damages, Ferguson said he hoped a judge would order the company to relinquish its profits it made in Washington to the state for the firm’s supposedly “illegal conduct.” “Johnson & Johnson has made billions through its sale of opioids and the raw materials it sold to other companies, we expect Washington’s share to at least be in the millions,” he said, adding that the money would go towards opioid treatment, education, and prevention in Washington. Oklahoma also filed a lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson and was able to get $572 million from them. In 2017, Ferguson also filed legal action against Purdue Pharma—the Oxycontin maker that has been a major legal target for numerous states. Johnson & Johnson has not commented publicly on the matter.\nRead it at KING-TV","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line464035"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.751024603843689,"wiki_prob":0.751024603843689,"text":"Tuesday night: Live from Newark, Delaware\n(The Deer Park Tavern, which is kindly letting us set us camp there Tuesday night.)\nOct. 4, 2010, 10:38 PM UTC\nBy Laura Conaway\n(The Deer Park Tavern, which is kindly letting us set us camp there Tuesday night.)Because we live for the intersection of politics and beer, we're going to broadcast Tuesday night's show from the Deer Park Tavern in Newark, Delaware. You're invited.We'll have just spent the day reporting on the Senate race that ate the 2010 elections, and then we'll head for the bar. If you're in the area, drop by and watch the magic happen. From here, we'll just say that the Deer Park Tavern looks great, if it is cursed. From the website:\nOn December 23, 1843, Edgar Allan Poe lectured at the Academy and visited the inn. As he was attempting to emerge from his carriage at the inn, he was reputed to have fallen in the mud and was so upset that he put a curse on the building.\nThe show starts at 9 p.m., whether you're in the Deer Park Tavern or in TV Land. Wish us luck, OK? And by all means, if you're a Christine O'Donnell supporter who lives in Delaware and is up for a chat, drop us a line, please.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1255048"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9697576761245728,"wiki_prob":0.9697576761245728,"text":"News Briefs: Miller to Head HC \"Studio\"\nMiller to Head HC “Studio”\nBob Miller, longtime president of Hyperion, is leaving the company to join HarperCollins, where he will head a “publishing studio” that will do 25 titles a year in a variety of print and digital formats. Authors will be paid on a profit-sharing basis, and the division is looking at alternative forms of distribution. Target date for the first books is spring 2009, and Miller will report directly to HC CEO Jane Friedman.\nArcher Named Hyperion President\nWith Bob Miller’s move to HC, Disney named Ellen Archer president of its Hyperion book unit. Archer joined Hyperion in 1999 and in 2005 was named to her most recent post, senior v-p and publisher. In addition to spearheading campaigns for some of Hyperion’s biggest books, Archer founded the Voice imprint in 2006.\nWeisbach Leaving Weinstein\nAfter more than two years overseeing the refigured Weinstein Books, Rob Weisbach is stepping down. According to a statement from the Weinstein Company, Weisbach is departing to “pursue other publishing interests.”\nLightning Teams with On Demand\nLightning Source has signed with On Demand Books, proprietor of the Espresso Book Machine, in a deal that will give On Demand access to Lightning’s scanning facilities, as well as access to copyrighted material through an opt-in/opt-out clause that Lightning Source will add to its publisher contracts. At present, the titles available through Espresso fall mainly in the public domain. Currently there are only seven Espresso machines in use, but a new, less expensive printer is expected to be ready by 2009.\nBloomsbury USA Down\nLed by sales of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, revenue at Bloomsbury doubled in 2007, hitting £150.2 million ($300 million), and pretax profit jumped to £15.9 million from £5.2 million. Results in the U.K. publisher’s U.S. subsidiary, however, were off in the year, falling 10.8%, to £13.4 million ($26.8 million). While sales of children’s books at Bloomsbury USA were up, the adult division had a disappointing year. To return the unit to profitability, Bloomsbury cut seven positions earlier this year. To help expand in the post-Potter era, Bloomsbury acquired the elementary school publisher Featherstone Education.\nCurtis Brown, ICM in Joint Venture\nCurtis Brown and ICM have signed a co-agenting agreement under which Curtis Brown’s London office will work with ICM to handle the sales of U.K. and foreign rights for ICM clients. As part of the deal, four agents who work for ICM in London, under the agency’s ICM Books outpost, will move into Brown’s Haymarket offices.\nPatriot Act Revision Urged\nIn an open letter published last week in the Capitol Hill trade, Roll Call, the AAP, the ABA, ALA and PEN American Center have called on Congress to approve the National Security Letters Reform Act (S. 2088 and H.R. 3189), an alteration to the Patriot Act that, they think, will return reader privacy.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1419757"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.810806393623352,"wiki_prob":0.810806393623352,"text":"You are here: Home / News / Rogers-Doherty take momentum into Manhattan Open\nRogers-Doherty take momentum into Manhattan Open\nTodd Rogers couldn’t have been happier playing on American sand again.\nHe certainly showed it in the first AVP Tour event of the season last weekend in Utah. Rogers, the former San Marcos High and UCSB star, and 7-foot-1 partner Ryan Doherty finished second to Phil Dalhausser and Sean Rosenthal, pushing the top seeds to three sets before falling 21-12, 19-21, 15-10, in the final of the inaugural Salt Lake City Open pro beach volleyball tournament.\nIt was Rogers and Doherty’s best result together since a runner-up finish in their debut in a FIVB regional event in the Cayman Islands back in March. They struggled on the FIVB World Tour. Their best finish was a ninth in the tournament in Long Beach last month.\nThe AVP Tour is beginning its second year under owner Donald Sun, who brought the tour back with two events last summer. There are five tour stops this year, including Santa Barbara, Sept. 28-29.\n“Awesome!” Rogers replied when asked how nice it was to play on a domestic tour again. “I went past 100,000 miles on the way home from the FIVB event in Berlin. I would much rather have the short flight to Salt Lake or short drive down to Manhattan Beach.”\nThe next AVP Tour event is this weekend in Manhattan Beach, where Rogers’ name is enshrined in the venerable pier’s Walk of Fame three times for winning “the Wimbledon of beach volleyball.” He won all three Manhattan Opens with Dalhausser, his gold-medal partner at the 2008 Olympics.\nAfter placing 25th in Berlin, Rogers and Doherty regrouped and put together a string of good performances in Salt Lake.\n“We played better and better as the weekend progressed, and that is a good sign,” he said.\nThe highlight for them was a 24-22, 21-18 semifinal win over the “home” team of Jake Gibb and Casey Patterson. Gibb is from Bountiful, Utah, and Patterson played collegiately at BYU, so they had the crowd rooting for them.\n“I got two red cards, the fans were heckling us big time — par for the course in Utah,” Rogers said. “I used to play vs. BYU, and they were the gnarliest hecklers; no bad words, but they’d be all over us.”\nGibb gave props to Rogers for his play in the semifinal.\n“He played really well, the best I’ve seen him play all year,” Gibb told the Deseret News. “You got to give it to him. The guy has a gold medal for a reason. He’s a great player.’\nRogers said it was one of his most satisfying wins in some time.\nAs for his partner, who is playing his first full season as a professional beach volleyball player, Rogers said Doherty has improved “a ton. The scary part is he still has a long, long way to go as well.”\nDoherty had some difficulty adjusting to the level of competition and the lighter ball on the international tour, according to Rogers.\nThey’ll get their hands on the Wilson AVP ball and be back on a beach this weekend in Manhattan Beach.\nSo, after a good showing in Salt Lake City, does Rogers feel confident they’ll be able to keep it going at the Manhattan Open?\n“Kind of,” he admitted. “The serving wasn’t as tough due to the elevation, and I think that helps us. Plus, the sand was pretty packed and Manhattan is deep. I love the deep stuff but Ryan has said he doesn’t.\n“We will see.”\nFiled Under: News, Pro Volleyball, Volleyball Tagged With: AVP Tour, Manhattan Beach Open, pro beach volleyball, Ryan Doherty, Todd Rogers","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1462760"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7734307050704956,"wiki_prob":0.7734307050704956,"text":"Dean Hussey, Liberty Bell High School Senior, Receives 2019 Steinebach Award for Outstanding Contribution to Live Theater\nThe Merc Board of Directors and Missi Smith (Executive Director) unanimously voted to award Dean Hussey with the 2019 Steinebach Award for Outstanding Contribution to Live Theatre. The award was presented to him at the opening night of Charlotte’s Web on Friday, March 15.\nThe Merc blog states…\nIt was during our 2014 production of Willy Wonka, Junior that Dean Hussey arrived on the scene to work in our sound booth. He was in 8th grade at the time, and according to Dean his mom signed him up. He wasn’t very excited about it…but by the time the show was over he claims he was “in his element.” We were fortunate that theater hooked him because he has worked on nearly every show since then. He has logged well over 1000 volunteer hours in five years of productions.\nTo say Dean’s contribution to live theater is outstanding does not even begin to scratch the surface. He has participated on our production team in a number of ways over five years. He’s gone way beyond pushing the “GO” button behind our sound board. Dean has composed music and created sound cues for a number of shows, most notably Bike America, for which he composed the full soundtrack as his senior project. Our 2018 summer production required Dean to commit countless hours of composing, editing, and working with the rest of the cast and tech crew through rehearsals and performances. Missi Smith, the show’s director, was thrilled with Dean’s artistic interpretation through music, and she loved how his work enhanced the production.\nThough he has typically remained behind the scenes in the tech booth, Dean recently went in front of the audience in our Reader’s Theater production of A Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Adding another whole level of risk, and stepping even further out of his normal comfort zone, he became a strong advocate for those living with autism while teaching his fellow cast members about his own experiences with it. His participation on stage, for the first time ever, greatly enhanced the production. The guy can act, too!\nOur founders, Carolanne and Egon Steinebach took huge risks to begin The Merc Playhouse Society. They committed to building a theater that has grown into a community gem over the past 20 years. Without their countless hours of work, their dedication to live performing arts, and their inspired vision, we wouldn’t be the organization we are today. We are happy to honor people in our theater community who show the same type of dedication to live performing arts, and Dean could not be more deserving of the award this year.\nDean is graduating from Liberty Bell High School in May. He will be greatly missed at The Merc while he bravely ventures out into his future, but we are certain he has many successes ahead of him. We just hope he comes back to see us once in a while, and maybe work on some more shows…\nPlease join us as we congratulate Dean Hussey and thank the Merc Board of Directors, Executive Director Missi Smith, Merc Playhouse Society Founders Carolanne and Egon Steineback, and the many community partners and volunteers that support live theatre and the performing arts in the Methow!","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1227817"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9289394617080688,"wiki_prob":0.9289394617080688,"text":"Ramchand Pakistani\nRamchand Pakistani (Urdu: رام چند پاکستانی) is an Urdu-language Pakistani drama film directed by Mehreen Jabbar and produced by Javed Jabbar.[2] The film features Nandita Das, Rashid Farooqi, Syed Fazel Hussain, Maria Wasti and Noman Ijaz in lead roles. The film is based on a true story of a boy who inadvertently crosses the border between Pakistan and India and the following ordeal that his family has to go through.[3] Ramchand Pakistani was also released in India.[4][5][6]\nMehreen Jabbar[1]\nJaved Jabbar[1]\nJaved Jabbar\nScreenplay by\nMohammad Ahmed\nRashid Farooqui\nSyed Fazal Hussain\nMaria Wasti\nNouman Ijaz\nHassan Niazi\nAdnan Shah\nShahood Alvi\nZhalay Sarhadi\nSaleem Mairaj\nSaife Hassan\nSajid Shah\nDebojyoti Mishra\nMoringo Nusrat Nigam Banerjee\nSarthak Sarkar\nShiraj Hussain\nSofian Khan\nAseem Sinha\nPercept Picture Company\nGeo Films\n2 October 2008 (2008-10-02) (Pakistan)\n₨6.0 crore (US$420,000) [1]\nChampa (Nandita Das) is a Hindu woman who is left desolate when her young son and husband disappear one day from their village at the India-Pakistan border near Nagarparkar, in the Tharparkar district of the Sindh province. The film depicts the crossing of the India-Pakistan border, during a period (June 2002) of war-like tension between the two countries, by two members of a Pakistani Hindu family belonging to the 'untouchable' dalit caste, and the extraordinary consequences of this unintended action upon the lives of a woman, a man, and their son.\nThe film is about a Hindu Dalit family living in Pakistan peacefully. Ramchand, the main protagonist who is 8 years old, is the son of Shankar and Champa. One day, after an altercation with his mother, Ramchand runs away in anger and, accidentally, crosses the Indo-Pakistan border into India. His father follows him and, he too, crosses the border into India.\nAfter being arrested by the border security personnel, they are sent to a prison in India and stay there for a long time. They get a release order soon, but later it turns out to be a mistake and they are sent back to the jail. Ramchand, the 8 years old boy, and his father Shankar are unregistered prisoners during much of their stay in India.[2] Meanwhile, Ramchand’s mother, Champa, leads a life of loneliness and although she takes a temporary job in a faraway place, she returns to her village.\nFinally, after 5 years,[2] when Ramchand has grown a few years, he gets released. He returns home to his mother. His father, Shankar, also gets released soon after. They are united and there, the film ends.\nThe singular theme of the film is how a child from Pakistan aged eight years, learns to cope with the trauma of forced separation from his mother while being held prisoner, along with his father in the jail of a country (India), which is hostile to his own (Pakistan). Meanwhile, the wife-mother, devastated by their sudden disappearance builds a new chapter of her life, by her solitary struggle for sheer survival.\nNandita Das as Champa[1]\nSyed Fazal Hussain as Younger Ramchand[2]\nNavaid Jabbar as Older Ramchand[2]\nRashid Farooqui as Shankar[2]\nMaria Wasti as Kamla[2]\nNouman Ijaz as Abdullah[2]\nAdnan Shah as Sharma\nAdarsh Ayaz as Moti\nFarooq Pario as Suresh\nShahood Alvi as Asif Hussain\nZhalay Sarhadi as Lakshmi\nAtif Badar as Lalu\nSaleem Mairaj as Vishesh\nSaif-e-Hasan as Murad\nRao Saleem as Interrogator\nKarim Bux Baloch as Baloch\nMaster Yaqub as Baba Gul\nHassan Niazi as Deepak\nKazim Raza as Professor\nMuhammad Rafiq as Bengali\nSajid Shah as Inspector\nIqbal Motilani as Maulvi\nAnis Chachar as Captain Saleem\nFilm screenings overseas\nThis film had six screenings at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City in 2010.[2]\nThe soundtrack is composed by Debojyoti Mishra[2] and include the following songs:\nTrack Song Singers Composer Duration\n01 Teri Meri Preet Shubha Mudgal Debojyoti Mishra 5:34\n02 Allah Megh De Shubha Mudgal & Shafqat Amanat Ali Debojyoti Mishra 4:41\n03 Phir Wahi Raste Shafqat Amanat Ali Debojyoti Mishra 5:52\n04 Khari Neem Key Neechay Mai Bhagi Debojyoti Mishra 5:24\n05 Tarrin Paunda Allan Fakir Debojyoti Mishra 6:09\n06 Meri Maat Instrumental Debojyoti Mishra 4:19\nThis film won the following awards:\nFIPRESCI Prize from the International Federation of Film Critics at the Osian Film Festival, July, 2008[7]\nWinner of Honourable Mention by the 13th Annual Satyajit Ray Award at the 2008 London Film Festival.[7]\nBest Actor for Rashid Farooqi at the KaraFilm Festival, Pakistan, 2009\nWinner of Audience Award at the Fribourg International Film Festival, Switzerland, March 2009.[7]\nWinner of Special Mention by the Eucumenical Jury at the Fribourg International Film Festival March 2009.[7]\nWinner of Special Mention by the E-Changer Award at the Fribourg International Film Festival in March 2009[7]\nRamchand Pakistani received a silver medal in the feature film category at the 2012 SAARC Film Awards.\nRashid Farooqui received the award for best actor in the feature film at the 2012 SAARC Film Awards.\nRamchand Pakistani won Best Film Award on Pakistan Media Award in 2010.\nGori temple, the site of Meri Maati song.\nNagarparkar Bhodesar temple: the site of Tarrin Paunda song.\n\"Pakistani movie to play in India\". DAWN (newspaper). 19 July 2008. Retrieved 5 June 2019.\nStephen Holden (20 April 2010). \"Ramchand-Pakistani - Directed by Mehreen Jabbar\". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 June 2019.\n\"Ramchand Pakistani Movie Review\". The Times of India. 7 April 2016. Retrieved 5 June 2019.\n\"Kolkata release of Pak film in limbo\".\nRamchand Pakistani (2008 film), film review on Rotten Tomatoes website Retrieved 5 June 2019\nRamchand Pakistani (2008) on IMDb website Retrieved 5 June 2019\nAwards for Ramchand Pakistani (2008 film) on IMDb website Retrieved 5 June 2019\nRamchand Pakistani on IMDb\nMovie Review Ramchand Pakistani (2008)\nHighest-grossing Pakistani films\nDomestic Worldwide\nJawani Phir Nahi Ani 2 (2018)\nPunjab Nahi Jaungi (2017)\nJawani Phir Nahi Ani (2015)\nTeefa in Trouble (2018)\nActor in Law (2016)\nWaar (2013)\nBin Roye (2015)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1564540"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.792923092842102,"wiki_prob":0.792923092842102,"text":"5 Tips for California Cruises\nEmbarkation in Los Angeles (Long Beach): Cruise Terminal Parking, Address and Amenities\nEmbarkation in Los Angeles (San Pedro): Cruise Terminal Parking, Address and Amenities\nThings to Do in San Diego Before a Cruise\nTop 8 Long Haul Short Break Cruises\nThe Best Month to Cruise Hawaii\nWhere You Can Cruise to Onboard Carnival's Newest Cruise Ship, Carnival Panorama\n10 Best Beaches in Mexico for Cruisers\nWhat Is the Economic Impact of the Cruise Industry in the United States?\n\"Pent-Up Demand\" Causes Growth In West Coast Cruises in 2021-22\nFirst Time Cruiser\n5 Signs That Cruising Is Making a Comeback in California\nBrittany Chrusciel\nSailing under the Golden Gate Bridge, warm breezes off the Pacific Ocean, a few days in L.A. -- what's not to love about cruising from California? While the region suffered a setback early in the decade, cruise lines have returned, and not only that, the demand for a more robust cruise market in California has kept the ports on their toes.\nMajor terminal renovations to Long Beach by Carnival shows good faith. San Francisco is planning to infuse art, retail therapy and some food options into terminal facilities to bolster the port experience for passengers. For San Diego's 2017/2018 season, Disney Cruise Line has increased homeport calls to 18 cruises.\nSo is California \"back\" to being a true cruising contender? It's tough to say there will never be another repeat of 2010 to 2012 when many cruise ships left the state because of tough economic times and concerns of violence in Mexico. But based on interviews with port officials and looking at where cruise lines are currently sending their ships, California is by all means making a return -- one that might not draw dramatic passenger counts just yet, but should remain rock steady for at least a few seasons.\nHere are five signs that cruising is making a comeback in California.\n1. Major cruise brands are showing up.\nThe cruise business, for better or worse, is dictated by the cruise lines, and looking at the 2017 season in California, they are well represented.\nMost if not all major cruise brands -- including umbrella organizations Carnival Corp., Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings and Royal Caribbean Cruises Limited -- are represented across Los Angeles, San Diego and San Francisco. Using Cruise Critic's Find a Cruise tool, we found nearly 160 cruises departing from the state of California from January to December 2017.\nEleven cruise lines and 24 ships will sail from the Port of Los Angeles (San Pedro) this year; the Port of San Francisco expects 14 cruise lines and 28 cruise ships, plus 82 ship calls totaling 300,000 passengers. San Diego's season, typically September to May, will see 90 vessels call, with four homeported cruise lines: Holland America Line, Disney Cruise Line, Norwegian Cruise Line and Celebrity Cruises, and visiting ships from nine other cruise lines.\n2. No alarms and no surprises.\nWhen asked how 2016 measured up, every port interviewed gave a comforting, if not exciting response: \"2016 went as expected.\"\nIn this region, where unpleasant headlines in Mexico dominated the news in the early part of the decade, that's good news.\nAccording to Michael Nerney, maritime marketing manager for the Port of San Francisco, \"[The] Port of San Francisco cruise business has been steady the past two years, since opening of the new Pier 27 cruise terminal. We expect to maintain current levels of ship calls and passengers with potential incremental growth. The 2016 cruise season was as expected: 80 calls and 290,000 passengers.\"\nFurther down the coast, the \"Port of [Los Angeles] San Pedro finished where we expected for 2016 and 2017 looks very similar…By the look of things, 2018 will remain similar to 2017 at this point,\" Phillip Sanfield, director of media relations for the Port of Los Angeles, told Cruise Critic.\n\"In 2008, which was our most successful cruise year, we had 279 cruise calls,\" said Marguerite Elicone, a marketing and public relations representative for the Port of San Diego. \"After the recession, the numbers dropped dramatically. We are now seeing the numbers slowly climbing back and predict a steady growth rate in passengers of about 6 to 8 percent ... this year's number of cruise calls is up by 30 percent (to 90 calls total in 2017) and the port is confident that the number will increase each year.\"\n3. When construction is complete in 2017, Long Beach will be one of Carnival's largest homeports.\nAnd that's saying something. Carnival Cruise Line ships homeport in 15 U.S. cities, and are widely considered a great drive-to option for that reason. When expansion of the Long Beach cruise terminal outside Los Angeles is complete in 2017, the current facilities will expand from around 66,000 square feet to 142,000 square feet, more than doubling its initial size. Carnival is the only cruise line that homeports in Long Beach.\nPart of the issues with Long Beach in the past centered on the limitations of the port structure, which occupies a portion of a geodesic dome that once housed Howard Hughes' historic Spruce Goose plane.\n\"Our embarkation/debarkation operations in Long Beach were not as guest friendly and efficient as they could be based on the constraints imposed by space limitations with the geodesic dome,\" Jennifer de la Cruz, vice president of corporate communications for Carnival Cruise Line, told Cruise Critic. \"We've had a desire for a long time to expand our footprint within the dome to enable the improvement of the guest experience and also allow us to bring larger ships into Long Beach.\"\nCarnival currently has three ships homeported year-round in Long Beach (Miracle, Inspiration and Imagination); just over 12 percent of its fleet. With the addition of Carnival Splendor in 2018, the line will carry upward of 700,000 passengers annually from Long Beach on nearly 250 voyages ranging from three to 14 days in length. \"The capacity increase via Carnival Splendor moving to Long Beach is based on strong demand for that program and the cruise terminal operational improvements we will gain from having full use of the geodesic dome,\" said de la Cruz.\nIf that wasn't enough of an investment, Carnival plans to improve infrastructure in order to welcome mega-ships down the line. \"We are also expanding shore power capability to accommodate Carnival Splendor and potentially larger ships in the future,\" de la Cruz said.\n4. The Mexican Riviera is on the rebound.\nOnce the reason why cruise ships were being pulled from California, the ports along the Mexican Riviera now have improved safety, desirability and demand.\nCarnival's move to reposition Splendor in Long Beach, according to the line, comes from that demand. \"Based on the particularly strong popularity of our weeklong Mexican Riviera cruises, we had a desire to increase capacity on that program,\" de la Cruz said. \"As a result, we are moving Carnival Splendor to Long Beach in January 2018 to take over the weeklong Mexican Riviera cruises currently operated on Carnival Miracle. That will represent a capacity increase of 41 percent on that program.\"\n(If a bigger ship on its own isn't convincing, Carrie Underwood will be performing as part of the line's Carnival Live! concert series on a Baja Mexico itinerary out of L.A.)\n\"The Mexico product is rebounding and it will continue to do so,\" Sanfield of the Port of Los Angeles said. \"The climate in Mexico has improved and the ability for a large population to access warm water year-round contributes to a continued interest in our market.\"\nLikewise, sailings to the Mexican Riviera make up most of the cruise itineraries departing from San Diego. \"As tourism continues to grow in Mexico on both the land and water sides, the Port of San Diego can expect to see a positive effect on the number of Mexico sailings,\" said Elicone for the Port of San Diego.\n5. Domestic destination interest is on the rise.\nApart from its stake in the Mexican Riviera (California cruising's bread and butter), the West Coast accommodates itineraries to Hawaii, Alaska and along the Pacific Coast -- all places that stay within the confines of the U.S. With international unease, particularly in Europe, American travelers are opting for vacations closer to home. California's cruise market serves them well, with sailings to the most exotic of the 50 states -- Alaska and Hawaii -- and scenic sweeps of the Golden State.\nPrincess Cruises offers a couple of Alaska cruises round trip from the Port of Los Angeles. Itinerary options that remain from San Francisco include Alaska, coastal California, Mexico and Hawaii, ranging in duration from a week to 15 days. California homeports also serve as ports of call for transcanal and world cruises.\nIt helps that the sunny cities by the sea draw large amounts of land-based tourists each year, providing built-in pre- and post-cruise options for cruisers who might have traveled to California to sail.\nAdjacent to the Pier 27 Cruise Terminal in San Francisco, the Pier 29 Bulkhead Building is being developed as a retail facility \"offering sales of arts and crafts, cultural and exhibit space, and food service,\" said Nerney for the Port of San Francisco.\nMuch like the construction to Carnival's facility, the Port of Los Angeles at San Pedro will look to expand its terminals \"as the business warrants additional or expanded facilities,\" Sanfield said.\nFrom Carnival in Long Beach to luxury lines like Regent or Seabourn, if they bring cruise ships, passengers will come.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1687941"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9061562418937683,"wiki_prob":0.9061562418937683,"text":"John Marshall and the need for judicial transparency\nDavid Adler\nWhatever you think about the U.S. Supreme Court’s controversial, 5-4 midnight ruling on the Texas statute forbidding most abortions in the state, one thing is clear: the Court bears, in the name of accountability, the great responsibility of explaining its reasoning to the American people.\nThe Court’s reliance on the “shadow docket,” a historic practice of ruling on emergency petitions, to uphold a novel law that greatly diminishes Roe v. Wade and converts every Texan into a law enforcement official, constituted a sharp departure from the usual process. The Court spent less than three days on the case. There was no oral argument. The opinion was unsigned and a mere paragraph long. Given the Court’s weighty impact on a constitutional battle that has been raging since at least 1973, when the Court held that women possess a fundamental right to obtain an abortion, the citizenry had every right to expect more transparency from the nation’s highest tribunal.\nJustice Hugo Black was fond of reminding his colleagues of the Court’s duty to explain its reasoning in terms that average Americans could understand. “The Constitution was written for the people, not the government,” he often said. For Justice Black, this meant that the Court’s opinions sorting out the meaning of constitutional provisions and language should be clearly written in the name of transparency and accountability.\nJustice Black’s view of the responsibility of the Court to explain its reasoning was shared by Chief Justice John Marshall, who served as Chief from 1801-1835, and is universally regarded by scholars as the greatest Chief Justice in American history. Marshall took this duty so seriously that, in response to what he regarded as stinging, but confused, criticism of his landmark opinion in 1819, in McCulloch v. Maryland, he picked up his pen and wrote a pseudonymous defense of it under the name, “A Friend to the Union”\nin a series of op-ed pieces. He wrote these newspaper columns in the name of transparency and accountability.\nMcCulloch v. Maryland, one of the most important Supreme Court rulings in our history — for its treatment of fundamental constitutional principles and resolution of historic arguments about federalism, the scope of congressional authority and the exercise of judicial power in the interpretation of the Constitution — generated immediate and heated criticism. Suffice it to say that critics, including James Madison and Virginia’s leading Judge, Spencer Roane, thought Marshall’s opinion declared that Congress possessed authority to increase its constitutionally limited powers.\nChief Justice Marshall was alarmed by these criticisms, precisely because he believed nothing of the sort. Nor did he believe that his opinion for the Court had intimated any such conclusion. The point of his opinion was to state that Congress enjoyed considerable latitude in choosing the means by which it could exercise its enumerated powers, not that Congress could invent new powers for itself. In sum, no branch of government possessed authority to revise its constitutionally granted authority.\nMarshall fretted. What could he do, given the Court’s institutional understanding that its opinions alone speak for the Court? But Marshall found the public confusion so disturbing, so threatening to the constitutional system and particularly harmful to the Court’s reputation, that he decided to engage in an extra-judicial measure by further explaining the Court’s reasoning in newspaper columns. These were the only newspaper replies in his storied judicial career.\nMarshall’s pseudonymous newspaper explanations, so knowledgeable of the Court’s discussion of foundational constitutional issues, and so thorough in their explanations of the Court’s reasoning, inspired speculation about their author. Who could possibly know so much about the Court’s reasoning and conclusions? At the time, nobody guessed that it was none other than Chief Justice Marshall himself.\nIndeed, nobody knew the identity of the author of the op-ed pieces signed under the name, “A Friend to the Union,” until Gerald Gunther, a renowned constitutional scholar then teaching in the Stanford Law School, stumbled upon them in 1967 while conducting research for his biography of the legendary federal judge, Learned Hand. While working through the collection of Hand’s papers, Gunther found Marshall’s essays sandwiched between some documents that had nothing to do with McCulloch v. Maryland. In 1968, Gunther published the essays in his book, “John Marshall’s Defense of McCulloch v. Maryland.”\nFor all of you who have ever experienced the great joy and surprise of finding a delightful book on the shelves of a library or in a bookstore, imagine Professor Gunther’s jubilation in finding Marshall’s op-ed pieces. Talk about a library coup!\nMarshall’s extraordinary efforts to inform the public of the Court’s reasoning in McCulloch, to bring a halt to the misunderstanding of its rulings on fundamental constitutional issues, represents a fulfillment of the judicial duty, in the name of transparency and accountability, to explain its opinions to the American people.\nMarshall’s extra-judicial elaboration of the Court’s reasoning, however, is not without criticism. After all, if individual members of the Court decide to comment on the Court’s opinions, perhaps bringing a different version of the Court’s legal conclusions than those printed on paper, the result might well be confusion. More than that, if Justices offer competing views of the Court’s reasoning, what happens to the meaning of the “authoritative” Supreme Court opinion? Indeed, what happens to the principle that the Court’s opinions speak for the Court? Those are issues for another time, but it is clear that the citizenry is better off with a full explanation of how and why the Court resolves the legal issues before it.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1833510"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5332099795341492,"wiki_prob":0.46679002046585083,"text":"How to Make Money with Youtube\nSeptember 3, 2021 April 4, 2021 by Veneta Lusk\nIf you’re looking to make money with YouTube, you’re not alone. Each minute, YouTubers upload 400 hours of content. That’s the equivalent of more than 16 days worth of video added to the platform every minute.\nYouTube is the second largest search engine on the planet, garnering more than a billion views daily.\nFor people looking to make money on the internet, YouTube offers an opportunity to connect their content with the right audience and cash in.\nBut how much money can you really make on YouTube?\nThe highest-paid YouTube star is a British gamer named Daniel Middleton who goes by the name DanTDM and makes a reported $16.5 million a year by posting videos of himself playing Minecraft.\nWhile you may not be able to earn millions right off the bat, there are a few ways you can make money with YouTube.\n5 Ways to Make Money with YouTube\n1. Make Money From Ads as a YouTube Partner\n2. Sell Products or Merchandise\n3. Land Sponsorships for Your Channel\n4. Work With Brands as an Influencer or Affiliate\n5. License Your Content to the Media\nTips for Making Money on YouTube\nKnow Your Demographics\nGet Targeted with Keywords\nCreate Other Avenues to Direct to Your Channel\nGo Full-Time When You’re Ready\nThe good news about monetizing your YouTube channel is that your earning potential is not determined solely by the number of subscribers and views you have. It’s far more important to have an engaged audience in a targeted niche.\nWe talked about million-dollar video earner Daniel Middleton above, however, a more realistic but equally engaging YouTube success story is that of Ryan Scribner.\nIn October of 2016, Ryan started the Ryan Scribner YouTube channel\nIn less than a year, Ryan was able to quit his full-time job and focus solely on his YouTube channel and the blog he would eventually partner with it. Today he makes $6,000 a month from his YouTube channel alone.\nJust like making money with blogging, you can earn revenue even with a small YouTube channel by creating multiple revenue streams. Finding the right audience and targeting them with the right type of content can skyrocket your earning potential.\nIf you have what it takes to build a big following and gain subscribers quickly, becoming a YouTube Partner will be an easy way to cash in on your content. As a partner, you’ll earn revenue from companies that place ads throughout your videos.\nThis is a relatively passive income generating method that relies on getting enough traffic to your channel.\nTo join the YouTube Partner Program, you’ll need 4,000 hours of watch time in a 12-month period and 1,000 subscribers. When you’re just getting started, it can take a while to build up a loyal viewership.\nOnce you have, the average rate for a YouTube content creator is $7.60 per 1,000 views. That means that if you have a video that receives 2,000 views, it’ll earn $15.20. For a video to make $1,000, it’d need to get more than 130,000 views.\nNiche Matters\nThe amount of money you’ll make from your ads does vary by niche as well. Ryan says that some niches, such as personal finance, pay more than other niches–even with the same number of views.\nKeep that in mind as you choose your niche and try and grow your channel.\nAs a YouTube ad partner, you’ll need to open an AdSense account so you can opt in to Google’s advertising network and get paid. Once you’ve met the requirements, the setup is easy.\nHowever, this is far from the most lucrative way to earn money on this platform. YouTube can still refuse to show ads on your videos if they believe you don’t produce “advertiser-friendly” content.\nIn the past, the platform has been known to demonetize content without the knowledge of the content creator.\nWhile creators now get notified when their content gets excluded from YouTube’s advertising network, this is still not the best revenue stream. The platform gets to keep a 45 percent share of ad revenue, leaving creators with 55 percent.\nFortunately, there are other ways you can leverage your channel to cash in, some of which don’t require a huge audience.\nSelling products is a quick way to monetize your YouTube channel, even if you don’t have a large audience. There are a few different ways to go about doing this and making money in the process.\nSome people sell physical products such as T-shirts, coffee mugs, tote bags, etc. that represent their online brand and personality.\nYou can commission affordable designs tailored specifically to the products you’re looking to sell through freelance sites such as Fiverr.\nAnother option is to sell digital products such as exercise routines, ebooks or online courses. You can direct customers to your website or an online store where they can purchase the products.\nWhat you sell really depends on your niche and what resonates with your audience.\nThe big advantage of selling digital products is that you don’t need to worry about taking care of shipping and handling for the orders.\nIf you have a very targeted or niche audience that resonates with certain brands, getting a sponsorship deal may be a good way to cash in. This is where having an engaged audience can really pay off when trying to make money with YouTube.\nSponsors pay creators to promote or mention their products in their videos. This can be in the form of a lump sum, clicks on the company’s website, or on a per-view basis.\nKeep in mind that sponsors will want to know where their products will be featured, for how long, in what context, and so on.\nRyan Scribner says that sponsorship opportunities will probably come your way automatically once your channel starts gaining serious success. However, he says it doesn’t hurt to approach companies you’re passionate about to inquire about potential sponsorship opportunities either.\nBecoming a brand influencer or an affiliate is a great way to make money with YouTube, even without millions of views. Influencer marketing is gaining traction and many YouTube creators use this income stream to support their channel.\nIf your brand is a good fit for a company, you can negotiate a good deal with a brand to promote them in front of your audience. Mid-level influencers with 50,000 to 100,000 subscribers charge brands on average $500 to $1,000 per post.\nHowever, it’s important to be transparent with your audience and only endorse products that you believe in and support.\nAnother option is to become an affiliate for select brands. You’ll make money through commissions from sales you generate from your channel. This works especially well if you review products on your channel.\nRyan says one key to his success regarding affiliate income is that he’s very transparent about the affiliate connection in his videos. He’ll mention the opportunity to get a product or service by clicking on a link in the description of his video.\nRyan says that he chooses transparency in this area for two reasons: First, he wants to be entirely honest with his viewers in order to build authentic relationships with them.\nSecond, he finds that if he tells people they can support him by clicking on affiliate links, they’re much more likely to buy through the links because of the human nature we all have to want to help others. Especially when those “others” are providing valuable information to viewers.\nDid you upload a video of your dog howling “Merry Christmas” and it went viral? You can license your content in exchange for money to TV news outlets, morning shows, online news sites, and so on.\nIf your video goes viral, other content creators may reach out to you to use it as part of a compilation. Alternatively, you can also list your videos in a marketplace such as Jukin Media where they will be easier for the right people to find and purchase.\nJust like with other platforms, as your following grows and you gain a loyal audience, you’ll have more options to monetize. Learning how to make money with YouTube takes trial and error.\nIt’s important to take the time to figure out what works and what doesn’t for your specific audience.\nHowever, here are a few pointers that will accelerate your growth and make it easier to monetize your content.\nGrowing your audience on YouTube is extremely important. If you’ve got great content, you will find growing your audience easier. But Ryan suggests some other tips for growing your audience as well.\nRyan started growing his audience by reaching out to family, friends, and acquaintances and asking them to subscribe to his channel. After that, he created a Twitter account.\nHe’d post links to his videos on Twitter, and then he’d seek out followers of popular experts in his niche–personal finance.\nHe’d follow other experts’ followers, and then when they’d follow back, he’d send them a private message. Ryan would thank them for following him and share his YouTube channel link, asking them to subscribe.\nGrowth was slow at first. But eventually, his channel’s growth started to snowball. He had 100 subscribers after 7 weeks, 10,000 subscribers after six months and 100,000 subscribers after 14 months. Today he has over 400,000 subscribers.\nBuilding a loyal audience who’s interested in your content puts you in a great position to monetize in a variety of ways. However, you need to understand the makeup of your audience so you can be very targeted in the content you create.\nAdvertisers are looking to reach a specific audience so the more niche your channel is, the better you’ll be able to make money down the road. Videos that appeal to someone in their 20s will likely not resonate with someone in their 50s.\nThink about what the ideal person watching your videos looks like, wears, and does on a daily basis. Give them a name, face, profession, hobbies, etc.\nThis is your customer avatar, the person you’ll be targeting with your content. Identifying your avatar will help you monetize your channel faster and make it easier to create content that resonates with your viewers.\nSince YouTube is a search engine, keep in mind that it relies on keywords to rank content just like Google does. Certain keywords are more valuable than others and demand a premium in terms of advertising dollars.\nThis is why it’s important to do your research and find keywords that are high in demand but lower in competition. Use keyword research tools like KeywordTool.io specifically targeted to YouTube to find the keywords in your niche that will resonate with your audience and are also valuable to advertisers.\nThe more valuable the keyword, the fewer views you’ll need to cash in on advertising dollars.\nEventually, Ryan started a blog called Investing Simple. He and his business partner started the blog to share powerful investing tips. Ryan also includes YouTube videos with many of his blog posts.\nThis technique helps drive traffic to his YouTube channel and thereby increase his income.\nRyan quit his job to focus on his YouTube business full-time in June of 2017, just eight months after he started. He was only making $1,000 on his channel at the time, however, he had some safety measures in place before he quit.\nFor instance, he had $10,000 in an emergency savings fund. And he made himself a promise: If he blew through $5,000 of his emergency fund, he’d go get a job to supplement his income while he continued working on growing his channel.\nRyan also worked hard to minimize expenses by living with his mom. He cut costs where he could and lived frugally as he worked to grow and market his channel.\nLuckily, his hard work and smart planning paid off. Today, Ryan Scribner works about 15 hours a week on his YouTube channel and marketing it, and another five hours a week on his blog. And he makes several thousand dollars a month working part-time.\nIf you’re looking to make money with YouTube, don’t rely on advertising as your sole monetization strategy. Making money with a small channel is possible but it does require that you explore multiple earning opportunities.\nTake the time to create quality, targeted content that speaks to your audience, and focus on building your brand.\nCategories Make Money\nVeneta Lusk\nVeneta Lusk is an award-winning writer with nearly 14 years of experience. She holds a BA in journalism from the University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill. Her expertise includes personal finance, making money, frugal living, saving money, and building a freelance career.\nShe has been featured in MSN, The Penny Hoarder, Debt.com and more.\nShe loves empowering people to get smart about their finances so they can live their dreams.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1765725"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9650058150291443,"wiki_prob":0.9650058150291443,"text":"Digital Marketing & Ad Tech News\nBrands Bet Millions That Apple's iTunes Radio Scales Quickly\nApple's Device and OS Infrastructure Gives it Chance to Be the Biggest\nBy John McDermott. Published on September 18, 2013.\nWhat Spotify's Joe Rogan uproar means for brands\nLike any new service, iTunes Radio will have zero users when it launches on Wednesday. More important, one of the key platforms for Apple's highly-anticipated streaming music service, the iOS 7 mobile platform necessary to run iTunes Radio on iPhones and iPads, is also being released for the first time today.\nBut that doesn't seem to concern advertisers.\nSeveral big brands have shelled out upwards of $10 million to be iTunes Radio launch partners, a large bet that iTunes Radio will quickly become a force in the already crowded Internet radio industry.\n\"We've worked with all of them,\" said Frank Cooper, PepsiCo's CMO for global consumer engagement, \"We looked at the the devices Apple has and the number of subscribers that they have overall on iTunes. Just in terms of infrastructure, we think they have the chance to be the biggest.\"\nApple's iTunes has already been receiving more Internet traffic than most streaming music services, and that was without its new radio product. iTunes received 26.6 million unique U.S. visitors in July 2013, more than streaming music providers Spotify (20.19 million), Rdio (4 million) and Rhapsody (2.89 million), according to comScore. iTunes has the advantage of coming preloaded on all Apple products and being available for free download on Windows as well.\nMr. Cooper thinks iTunes will be so popular that he helped make Pepsi one of the handful of brands to advertise on the service shortly after it launches. Other marketers in on the launch include Macy's, McDonald's, Nissan and Procter & Gamble. Each brand will be the exclusive advertiser on iTunes Radio within its respective category through the end of 2013. Pepsi will be the only brand with a branded radio station at launch.\nThe nature of iTunes Radio -- serving songs (and ads) to users based upon their listening habits rather than allowing them to play songs on demand -- makes Pandora its closest competitor. At the moment, Pandora is by far the industry leader in streaming music with nearly 65 million uniques in July alone, per comScore.\nTony Giannini, senior VP-media strategy and marketing effectiveness at Macy's, said he will continue buying ads on Pandora despite Macy's being an iTunes Radio launch partner.\n\"Audio has for us always done very, very well. It's something we use to support most if not all of our campaigns,\" he said.\nPandora's main advantage over its competition is its mobile presence. Eighty percent of people who visited Pandora in July 2013 did so from a mobile device, according to comScore. Apple will compete by making iTunes Radio built into all iPhones, iPods and iPads that run iOS 7, Apple's latest iteration of its mobile operating system.\nPhil O'Connor, Nissan's senior manager of media, said he plans to use iTunes Radio's location-targeting capabilities for Nissan's traveling Heisman House campaign. The installation goes to a different college football stadium each week, so Mr. O'Connor plans to serve ads to iTunes Radio users near its weekly location.\nTargeting only matters if there is a substantial user base, and in order for this to happen, Apple needs its users to upgrade their software. Apple has a good track of record of getting its mobile users to update to subsequent OSs. When Apple CEO Tim Cook announced iOS 7 this summer, he said 93% of Apple mobile users were using iOS 6, the latest version at the time.\nDisregarding iTunes Radio's scale, launch partners still stand to benefit from being associated with a high-profile Apple product.\n\"We'd never shy away from the positive PR of an Apple launch, but we've found that those things fade out,\" Mr. Cooper said. \"What's left is the substantive aspects of that partnership.\"\nCORRECTION: In an earlier version of this story, Tony Giannini's name was spelled incorrectly.\nCrypto.com teams with LeBron James for Web3 education\nConsumer losses to social media scams nearly tripled last year\nHow NFTs are used by marketers—a continually updated list\nHow TikTok, Twitter, Snap are upgrading ad tools to help drive brand sales\nAT&T profit tops estimates as it braces for wireless slump\nInstacart debuts landing pages and shoppable display ads for Ben & Jerry's and other brands","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1462256"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.983905553817749,"wiki_prob":0.983905553817749,"text":"Britain’s walking hero, Captain Tom, awarded knighthood by the queen\nCapt. Tom Moore became a national hero in Britain after raising more than $40 million for the National Health Service ahead of his 100th birthday in April. (Reuters)\nBy Jennifer Hassan\nLONDON — Capt. Tom Moore, the beloved British war veteran who walked the length of his garden 100 times to raise money ahead of his 100th birthday in April, has received a knighthood for his fundraising initiative, which brought in about $40 million for Britain’s National Health Service charities.\nLast month, more than half a million people signed a petition asking for Moore to be knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for his efforts. Now, it appears their wish has been granted.\nReacting to news he was to be knighted on Wednesday, Moore, who served in India during World War II, told BBC Breakfast it was an “outstanding honor” and said he was “delighted.” On social media, many used the hashtag #SirCaptainTomMoore to celebrate his new title and achievement.\nWidely hailed as a “legend,” Moore has become a national and international treasure in recent weeks, with many branding him Britain’s light amid the darkness of the deadly coronavirus pandemic that has so far claimed at least 35,000 lives in the United Kingdom.\nOn Wednesday, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said of Moore: “You have inspired us all with your fantastic fundraising efforts. On behalf of the whole country, I want to say a huge thank you.”\nMoore’s rise to fame began in April, when he set out to raise £1,000 (nearly $1,250) for the health service and its staff during the health crisis by walking the 82-foot length of his garden back and forth 100 times, using his walker for support. He sought to complete the laps ahead of his birthday on April 30.\nBut just 24 hours after Moore started, he had shattered his target, raising the equivalent of $8,750. From then on, donations poured in from all corners of the world, even causing his online fundraising page to crash repeatedly. Moore continued to increase his goal and vowed to keep walking.\nMoore completed his final lap two weeks ahead of schedule, as the figure hit $15 million. On April 30, his fundraising page closed, with the final total at a staggering £32,796,510 ($40 million) pledged from more than 1 million donors worldwide.\nThe veteran’s life and achievements were widely celebrated on his milestone 100th birthday last month with a flyby above his home in Bedfordshire, 50 miles north of London, and an honorary promotion from captain to colonel as tributes around the world flooded in.\nCelebrities including champion boxer Anthony Joshua and racecar driver Lewis Hamilton have praised his actions, while Britain’s royals have also hailed his story as “incredible.”\nPrince William, who is second in line to the British throne after his father, Prince Charles, called Moore a “one-man fundraising machine.”\n“Arise #SirTomMoore! Congratulations to @captaintommoore, on being knighted following his fundraising efforts for #NHS Charities,” the British Army tweeted Wednesday along with many others who took to social media to congratulate the 100-year-old.\nCapt. Tom’s 100th birthday: 150,000 cards, a promotion and a fundraiser worth $39 million\n“I really do thank you from the bottom of my heart,” Moore said Wednesday in a message to those who have supported his journey.\nOn Wednesday morning, many of Britain’s tabloid newspapers ran photos of Moore on their front pages.\n“Arise Sir Tom,” read the cover of the Telegraph, as The Sun declared him a “hero.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line817810"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6077128648757935,"wiki_prob":0.39228713512420654,"text":"Phil Cooper\nOur friend Phil is a contemporary singer/songwriter who has earned excellent reviews from the national press, with his thought provoking songwriting and energetic live performances drawing comparisons to Neil Finn, Glenn Tilbrook and Ben Folds. He is also a member of the folk trio “The Lost Trades” who have been making a noise on that scene recently.\nDuring his solo shows, he makes a real connection with the crowd, whether it’s handing out dozens of egg shakers, or passing around his “doodle book” for the audience to draw in. Every now and then you’ll catch him unplugging his guitar and shunning the stage to stand right in among the captivated audience.\nPhil has three albums on CD or download available via the Infinite Hive Shop: “Things I’ll Never Say“, “Thoughts & Observations“, which is also on 12″ vinyl, and the new, darker, edgier more rock-based album “These Revelation Games” which we published for him during the lockdown period of 2020.\nCheck out his videos for “House of Mirrors” and “Over My Head” on YouTube, to give you a taste of what to expect.\nThese Revelation Games (album)\nIHPCDL037\nThoughts & Observations (album)\nIHPCVI022\nThings I’ll Never Say (album)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line483361"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7350298166275024,"wiki_prob":0.26497018337249756,"text":"020 8090 1623 info@alsalam.ac.uk\nAbout ASI\nWhy ASI?\nThe initial idea that led to establishing Al-Salam Institute was the desire to facilitate the study of Islamic sciences. Shaykh Akram Nadwi had been travelling from Oxford to London on a weekly basis to teach a growing number of students, a large number of whom were also travelling from Oxford to attend these classes. Continue Reading...\nDr Akram Nadwi\nDr Mohammad Akram Nadwi is a world-renowned scholar of Indian origin, who has now resided in England for many years. He is recipient of the Allama Iqbal prize for contribution to Islamic thought and is the Principal and co-founder of Al-Salam Institute.Continue Reading...\nAt ASI we pride ourselves in creating an inclusive environment. Students enrol onto the ISP from a diverse range of personal and theological backgrounds, and find that they are able to expand their friendship circles and networks. Continue Reading...\n“It seems as if the whole umma is represented, and always the best of each group. Sufis, Deobandis, Modernists, Salafis, etc., are all present – and in the time I’ve been there I’ve never witnessed any of the sectarianism witnessed elsewhere.” - Abu Yusuf Vazquez, Advanced level student 2015\n“Alhamdulillah this has been by far my best year in a very long time. Being a full-time mother of two small children, ASI has been a break from the usual pressures of life and a time for spiritual growth.”\nSupport a Student\nThrough your help, Al-Salam Institute will be offering scholarships to students who would otherwise be unable to pursue the path of sacred knowledge. Learn More...\nIslamic Scholarship Programmes\nThe Foundation Year is tailored for students of Islamic knowledge who are just beginning their journey. The course provides a solid basis in Islamic scholarship through part-time study with some of the most renowned and accomplished teachers in the UK, including Shaykh Akram Nadwi.\nArabic Immersion Year\nThe Arabic Immersion Year provides an immersive environment for students to improve in their knowledge of Arabic grammar and morphology, as well as further develop their skills of speaking, listening, reading and writing in the Arabic language.\nAlimiyyah Programme\nThe Alimiyyah Programme is designed to provide students with a firm grounding in the Arabic language and Classical Islamic Disciplines. Students begin by studying intermediate texts in a variety of disciplines, before being exposed to broader and more advanced texts.\nStudy from a number of short courses throughout the year on classical topics and contemporary issues, taught by specialists and open to all.\nLearn anytime, anywhere with ASI On-Demand. Specialise in your chosen subject area or follow dedicated study pathways with seminar series.\nKnowledge Retreat\nBetween the 3rd April to 14th April 2020, students will attend a ten-day retreat in Malaysia. Learn More\nSacred Sciences Journey\nAt Al-Salam we seek to reconnect students to their scholarly lineage, taking them to different countries all over the world in order to sit with and benefit from a number of notable scholars. Learn More\nModern science seeks power, not wisdom\nOver-definition of legal concepts\nAcademic Programmes OfficerAl-Salam Institute is seeking to hire an Academic Programmes Officer for the student support and delivery of the ASI academic programmes.\nASI On-Demand\nLECTURES AND SERIES ON A VAST ARRAY OF FASCINATING SUBJECTS\nAl-Salam Institute provides a number of bespoke short courses throughout the year on classical topics and contemporary issues. These short courses are delivered as seminars, taught by specialists and experts in the field, and are open to all. Students can join us live onsite or online and also access these later on-demand.\nOur short courses cover:\nHadith Studies\nQuranic Studies\nIslam and Society\nObjectives of Islamic Law\nPrinciples of Quranic Exegesis\nPrinciples of Prophetic Traditions\nPrinciples of Islamic Jurisprudence\nHistory and Theology\nLogic and Philosophy\nStay updated with the latest special offers, exciting news and upcoming courses and events.\n© 2021 ASI\nWe use cookies to ensure proper functionality of our site and to ensure you get the best online experience. You can read more about how we use them in our cookies policy. Your cookie consent choices can be changed at anytime in your browser settings. FIND OUT MORE.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1528369"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.588327944278717,"wiki_prob":0.41167205572128296,"text":"Samples US politics A Review Of “THE Trouble With Hillary Clinton’s Free Tuition Plan”\nPolitical PartiesGlobal PoliticsPolitical CrisisElectionWorld ReligionsAviationWorld Wide WebEntertainmentSelf ReflectionPatient\nA Review Of “THE Trouble With Hillary Clinton’s Free Tuition Plan”\nBackgroundKevin Carey’s “The Trouble with Hillary Clinton’s Free Tuition Plan” appeared in the New York Times on July 19, 2016. Carey’s writing on this subject is significant because he serves as the director or the Education Policy Program at the influential New America Think Tank. Carey’s writing is also worth reading, because he has lectured on education policy at Johns Hopkins University and was the Assistant State Budget Director for Education in Indiana.\n\"A Review Of “THE Trouble With Hillary Clinton’s Free Tuition Plan”\"\nIn this article, Carey addresses the feasibility of creating a free tuition system in America. This subject is particularly important because Hillary Clinton, one of the two major contenders for United States president has proposed making tuition free for students whose parents earn less than $125,000 a year. This could affect the country’s budget, debt and rates of taxation. It also has the potential to affect the worth of college degrees and the finances of different states. Because making college tuition free has the potential to affect the well-being of every American, it is important for Americans to understand how feasible such a program is and how it might change their lives.\nCarey argues that Clinton’s plan for free tuition s infeasible. He suggests that if Clinton were to present a plan that would allow students to send their bills to government for it to pay that colleges would bump up their tuition rates. This, he says, could create an unsustainable financial burden on the country. He also suggests that if Clinton were to promise to subsidize tuition only at the current prices, she would penalize states which had provided for the most education spending and reward states which spent too little on education. He argues that if Clinton were to implement a plan which would provide the same subsidy to each student based on a formula which would take into account income, poverty levels in certain areas that certain states would still have difficulties charging $0 for tuition and would force states that have often been reluctant to raise taxes to have to raise them in order to subsidize tuition enough to make it free. This would, he says, cause some states to opt out of the program.\nCarey suggests that instead of trying to create an entirely free college system that Clinton should return to the policies that she supported before the election. These policies, he says, would allow states to administer grants to colleges which reduce their tuition costs, so that students could pay for their educations without assuming debt.\nCarey speaks in plain language and does not define any keywords or technical terms. His presentation of the topic is even-handed. While he finds Clinton’s plan unfeasible, he does not attack her personally. Instead, he suggests that some of the plans she supported in the past would work well. He points out the specific flaws in Clinton’s proposal and offers an alternative. His information seems sound. He points out the differences in tuition costs in Wyoming, New Hampshire and Alaska and explains why these differences would matter if the government were to subsidize each equally.\nThis article has many strengths. Carey explains the possible problems which could arise if Clinton were to create a free tuition system. He makes these problems easy to understand and his information seems credible, as he speaks from his own knowledge and experience in the world of education policy. He does not seem particularly biased. His organization is non-partisan and non-profit. He offers Clinton praise as well as criticism. Yet he does omit some information which would be useful. He does not, for instance, explain that the problem with Clinton’s plan is that driving tuition costs higher might adversely affect the very people it was designed to help. Taxpayers would have to foot the bill when universities raised the cost of tuition in response to government subsidies. This would mean higher taxation for some and could mean lower wages or lost jobs for others as employers, taxed more, looked for ways to cut their costs. Carey does not mention these things.\nNevertheless, Carey’s article is largely unbiased, lacks distortion and is not at all sensational. It is far less biased than many of the other articles that have been written on the same topic. For instance, Jeff Jacoby of the Boston Globe, declared unequivocally that “Making college ‘free’ will only make it worse.” Jacoby denounced the idea of free tuition as a fantasy akin to a belief in Santa Clause or time travel. Other writers, like NBC’s Martha C. White emphasized the fact that two-thirds of Americans have a favorable opinion of free tuition, but largely ignored the problems with costs and sustainability Carey mentions. Some articles contradicted Carey’s claim of infeasibility. They suggested that schools could opt into the tuition free system, but could continue to raise extra money though out-of-state premiums or by charging more for room and board. The fact that Carey provides both praise and criticism for the program – and that he explains why he believes that Clinton’s program would not work – makes his article more useful than many other articles, which simply aim to criticize or support Clinton as a candidate. The most impressive aspect of Carey’s article is its simplicity. Carey’s straightforward language makes it very easy to follow his arguments and to understand the complexities of creating a free tuition system. Although I originally found the idea of free college tuition attractive, I had not realized that schools might be tempted to raise their tuition prices exorbitantly in response and could make such a system hard for the economy to support.\nCarey’s simple, straightforward language, along with his relative lack of bias and his ability to explain both the pros and cons of ideas in a rational manner make his observations about Clinton’s tuition-free college plan well worth reading. His reliance on facts rather than personal attacks or idol worship make his article far more useful than many of the partisan articles written on the same subject.\nJacoby, J. (2016, July 13). Making college ‘free’ will only make it worse. Retrieved from Boston Globe: https://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2016/07/12/making-college-free-will-only-make-worse/YVonfawas70nG1CPZy8ctJ/story.html\nKamanetz, A. (2016, July 28). Clinton’s Free-Tuition Promise: What Would It Cost? How Would It Work? Retrieved from NPR: http://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2016/07/28/487794394/hillary-s-free-tuition-promise-what-would-it-cost-how-would-it-work\nNew America. (2016, June). Kevin Carey: Director, Education Policy Program. Retrieved from New America: https://www.newamerica.org/our-people/kevin-carey/\nWhite, M. C. (2016, August 1). Two-Thirds of Americans Support Free College Tuition. Retrieved from NBC: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/personal-finance/two-thirds-americans-support-free-college-tuition-n620856\nAmerican Political Parties\nAre parties an important part of American politics? Are they helpful? Are they detrimental? For long-term development in emerging democracies, political parties are extremely important. For many years these parties…\nThere are many variations in the political party systems in different democracies. The three main systems include single party system, multiparty system and two party systems. The first reason for…","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1143684"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5026260614395142,"wiki_prob":0.5026260614395142,"text":"i About Homeopathics💬 Homeopathy Forum✚ Remedy Finder App\nHomeopathic Remedies: 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 Combinations Kits\nBuy Ammonium Carbonicum 4C\n(Carbonate Of Ammonia, Ammonium Carb, Ammon. Carb, Amm Carb)\nAmmonium Carbonicum materia medica\nAmmonium Carbonicum is available in all the potencies, formats and brands specified below. If you do not see what you require, please contact us.\nFor uses of Ammonium Carbonicum 4C see the main Ammonium Carbonicum page for materia medica from Boericke, Boger, Clarke, Hahnemann, Hering, Kent Lectures, Nash, T.F. Allen, Boenninghausen and our reversed & reworded Kent repertory.\nUse the new shop...\nPlease select a supplier below.\n...or use the old shop:\nAmmonium Carbonicum is available from Canada in the following:\nBoiron Pellets from $6.59 in : 4X, 6X, 8X, 12X, 30X, 2C, 3C, 4C , 6C, 8C, 12C, 30C, 200C, 200CH, 1M, 10M, 80 pellets, Unit Dose\nBoiron Liquid Dilutions from $9.79 in : 4X, 6X, 8X, 12X, 30X, 2C, 3C, 4C , 6C, 8C, 12C, 30C, 200C, 200CH, 1M, 10M, 30ml, 60ml, 1 litre\nImages representative. Not to scale. Packaging may vary.\nIn Canada, Boiron & Homeodel remedies are shipped from Toronto.\nBuy from Canada\nShipping from $3.00 .\nShipping in USA and Canada only. Prices in Canadian dollars.\nShipping to USA from $23.00\nAmmonium Carbonicum is available from Boiron in the following:\nPellets from $8.49 in : 6C, 30C, 200C, 80 pellets\nBoiron remedies shipped from San Diego, California. Generally cheapest shipping on international orders.\nBuy from Boiron\nShipping globally, except Europe, Africa, India and South America. 2nd day shipping available in USA.\nAmmonium Carbonicum is available from WHP in the following:\nPills from $8.99 in : 10X, 11X, 12X, 13X, 14X, 15X, 16X, 17X, 18X, 19X, 20X, 21X, 22X, 23X, 24X, 25X, 26X, 27X, 28X, 29X, 30X, 7C, 8C, 9C, 10C, 11C, 12C, 13C, 14C, 15C, 16C, 17C, 18C, 19C, 20C, 21C, 22C, 23C, 24C, 25C, 26C, 27C, 28C, 29C, 30C, 200C, 1M, 4dm\nWHP remedies are shipped from Berkeley Springs, West Virginia.\nBuy from WHP\nShipping from $4.99. FREE for orders over $100 (USA addresses). .\nShipping globally, except Europe, Nigeria and South Africa.\nThis site is for information only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice.\nSite contents and design © Copyright 2001-19 Influenca ltd","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1392736"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8677026033401489,"wiki_prob":0.8677026033401489,"text":"HomeAll CountriesUnited KingdomUK band HURTS submit song to Russian broadcaster\nUK band HURTS submit song to Russian broadcaster\nAfter the BBC’s recent announcements on the United Kingdom’s entrant at Eurovision 2011, British band “HURTS”, have instead submitted a song to the Russian broadcaster C1R, for the opportunity to represent the country at Eurovision 2011. According to a tweet made by the duo’s singer, Theo Hutchcraft, the band “have decided to submit our song to the good, good people of Russia.”\nThe band are known to be fans of the contest, and attended the final of the 2010 contest in Oslo. They have also expressed in the past in interviews that they would like to be given the chance to take part in the contest; although not mentioning whether they would go for their home country (the UK), or not. However, the comment may be a backlash against the group “Blue” who were recently chosen to represent the United Kingdom at Eurovision 2011.\nHURTS is a duo that consist of vocalist Theo Hutchcraft and synth player Adam Anderson. The group originates from Manchester, England and was formed in 2009. They have released their debut album “Happiness” throughout Europe at the end of August 2010, and have released three singles in the UK. However, the group has received significantly more success on mainland Europe as opposed to in the United Kingdom, being part of Russian airplay charts for 41 weeks now, with the song “Wonderful Life” (peaking at #4). They have recently completed a string of concerts in Russia, and have returned to England for a set of concerts over the next week.\nIt is still unknown how Eurovision 2009 host broadcaster C1R will select their entrant for the 2011 contest – whether it be by a national final or an internally selected artist. ESCDaily will hopefully be able to give more information about this in the next few days.\nThe Netherlands: 3JS to sing “Je Vecht Nooit Alleen” in Düsseldorf\nGermany: First Semi Final","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1308347"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9077540636062622,"wiki_prob":0.9077540636062622,"text":"Private Eyes: DQ talks to Jason Priestly and Cindy Sampson\nBirth days\nToo Close for comfort\nReturn of the space cowboy\nGoodbye Gomorrah\nJason Priestly and Cindy Sampson team up as a pair of private investigators in Canadian drama Private Eyes. Michael Pickard tracks them down.\nThey’ve teamed up to play a pair of private investigators who carry out covert operations at the request of their clients.\nBut when DQ finds Jason Priestly and Cindy Sampson sitting together on a beachside sofa in Cannes, they’re anything but undercover. Laughing loudly at each other’s jokes, they’re supremely at ease and riotously enjoying one another’s company – a quality that also comes across on camera in the early teaser trailers for their new crime drama Private Eyes.\nThe series follows ex-pro hockey player Matt Shade (Priestly) who partners with PI Angie Everett (Sampson) to form an unlikely duo.\nOn the ice, Shade learned how to hustle, read people and anticipate their moves. Working with Angie, he’s found a new home where his skills still matter. Meanwhile, Everett – straightforward and clever – has taken over her father’s PI business after his death and strives to keep his legacy alive.\nThe show sees Priestly’s ex-pro hockey player partner with PI Angie Everett, played by Sampson\n“He’s the flashy ex-hockey player with the celebrity status,” Sampson explains. “Angie doesn’t suffer fools, she has no time for that and is a workaholic so there’s some friction in the beginning but eventually she opens up her life and her business and they become partners by the end of the first season.”\nTraditional crime procedurals – from which Private Eyes takes its cue – have fallen out of favour in the US over recent years as serialised stories have taken priority for broadcast and cable networks and streaming platforms. But Priestley believes there’s still a place for case-of-the-week series, with demand for episodic content particularly high across Europe.\n“Detective shows have been around for a long time and people always seem to respond well to them,” he says. “We grew up on a steady diet of shows like Moonlighting and Heart to Heart (both of which feature male and female co-leads) and this show is a homage to programmes like that – just with a much more modern storytelling technique.”\nPriestly needs no introduction. Growing up on camera in various bit-part roles, he shot to fame as Brandon Walsh in Beverly Hills, 90210 – the Aaron Spelling-produced soap that ran on Fox for 10 seasons until 2000. More recent credits include Canadian comedy Call Me Fitz and a recurring role on Syfy’s Haven, among numerous cameo appearances in shows produced on both sides of the US/Canada border.\n“I was attached to the show from the very beginning of the development process,” Priestly says of Private Eyes, which launches on Global TV today. “I was involved right from the get-go and it’s been about three years. We had an exhaustive search to find our Angie and luckily we found Cindy in Toronto. We looked everywhere – New York, Los Angeles, Vancouver; we looked everywhere and found Cindy in Toronto, which was very lucky for us. We clicked right away.”\nSampson, who came onboard in August 2015, continues: “I did a screen test, a chemistry test, so I read with (Priestly) in a room of 40 people. We had a good laugh and then it all happened really quickly. We went into fittings and started shooting in the middle of September. We wrapped 10 episodes in February.\nJason Priestly is best known for his long stint on Beverly Hills, 90210\n“There are a lot of lines to learn. We did a lot of talking! And being in every scene… It was amazing though. We had so much fun doing it. It didn’t feel like work.”\nThe pair didn’t know each other before partnering for Private Eyes but Sampson – whose credits include Rookie Blue, Supernatural and Rogue – says they instantly connected through their shared sense of humour.\n“That helps when you spend 24 hours a day with someone for six months,” she says. “It really helps when you have to eat three meals a day with the same person. We hear that other people don’t get along so well but we’ve been pretty fortunate. We had a good time. So many times you work on projects and the finished result is great but the experience maybe wasn’t great.”\nPriestly adds: “We’ve been having a really good time and hopefully it comes through in the show and people enjoy watching it.”\nThe 10-episode season, produced and distributed by Entertainment One, has been written by showrunners Shelley Eriksen (Continuum) and Alan McCullough (Rookie Blue), who gave their stars plenty of room to embody their characters beyond the lines on the script.\n“We had quite a bit of latitude (with the characters), which is good because things would change on a daily basis,” Priestly reveals. “Things would evolve while we were shooting, so it was exciting. A lot of those changes came out of the fact that everyone was always working to make the show better.”\nSampson adds: “And once we got into the groove of our characters, things were evolving because of that too. It was like a living, breathing thing.”\nThe production wasn’t without its challenges, however, and both Sampson and Priestly recall one particularly cold day shooting on board a ferry.\nCindy Sampson says she and Priestly hit it off from the start\n“The day on the ferry was coldest I have been in my entire life,” Sampson says. “There were tears rolling down our faces and we’re trying to pretend it’s a nice fall day. There were tears non-stop!”\nPriestly adds: “We shot an episode on Toronto Island – it’s not a place many people go or know about. It’s a beautiful island just in Lake Ontario and you have to take a ferry to get there (from the main city of Toronto). They shut down the ferry in the winter, and we were on it on the last day it was in operation before winter. And there’s a reason they shut it down – because it’s so fucking cold. It was the coldest I’ve been in a long time.”\nPriestly now splits his time in front of and behind the camera, having first climbed into the director’s chair more than 20 years ago for episodes of 90210. More recently, he’s helmed episodes of medical drama Saving Hope and forthcoming horror Van Helsing – and he says the new opportunities that emerging streaming services provide mean it’s an exciting time to be working in television.\n“There’s been a lot of qualitative improvements in television, certainly since I started my career in the 1980s, like the way we shoot television now,” he notes. “When I started, we shot on film. Film is dead. The way we light television now is different. We use LED lights as opposed to the old acetylene lights.\n“The technology has impacted the way we do it in myriad ways. But also the fact the special effects are so readily available now. The use of green screens and the things you can do without green screens, the opportunities to be creative are so much greater now than they were even 10 years ago. The landscape has evolved and continues to evolve every day.”\ntagged in: Cindy Sampson, Entertainment One, Global TV, Jason Priestly, Private Eyes","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line886866"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9221271872520447,"wiki_prob":0.9221271872520447,"text":"Former WWE Writer Matt Mazany Reflects On Trying To Change WWE Culture From The Inside Out\nA former WWE screenwriter reflects on his time in the business, including a firsthand account of Vince McMahon ripping a script in two.\nBeing a WWE writer is a job that can be kind of a revolving door. Bringing together TV creation, character storytelling, and the occasional TV script, writing for WWE is a job that takes a lot of flexibility and patience.\nRhett Titus remembers Austin Aries farting at him on first day of training\nMatt Mazany was a WWE writer in the second half of the past decade. Now he talks about his experience, the good and the bad, in a new appearance on Reconcile the Aisle on Radio Misfits.\nMatt recalls a time when Vince McMahon ripped a script in half at 11 a.m. on a Monday Night Raw and recounts how he tried to change the culture of WWE slightly while he was there – low.\n“Oh, that was a weird, fun, wild, miserable, cool, crazy, intense time in my life. It was great. It was a great experience. I’m glad I did. It was like a childhood dreamer type thing. But, my boy, the reality of this place is very wild. There are a lot of stories about it. They are all half true. It was fun, man. It’s cool,” Matt said. “You’re there to sort of control the show, because it’s three hours of TV on Monday, it’s two hours of TV on Friday, it’s one hour of TV on Wednesday. So you file, and then there are other specials like pay-per-view. So at any given time you are doing about seven to ten hours of television. So you just have to write the script of the long-term scenarios that go from month to month, the short-term scenarios that go from the start of the series to the end of this series. But the only thing is when they get in the ring, it’s the wrestlers, it’s their performances, they have producers there to help work with the camera team. But it’s a whole, it’s a huge, huge undertaking. You just need a lot of people to get everything in order. Otherwise, you know, these shows go to chaos, because it’s live too. It’s a live broadcast.\n“We had scripts there and you know, Vince McMahon is kind of an interesting guy. We had 8pm, the show goes live on TV, a three hour show, and I saw it. The 11 o “Clock production meeting, just tear the script in half and say,” Oh we have to start over, guys, my God “and you just gotta start, you just gotta go and you just have to find a new show and write it and put it together. So it’s a crazy time, but it’s a lot of good. If there weren’t any good people there, this would never be done. There are a lot of good people who bring it all together. “\nSpeaking of the corporate culture, Matt would say there were times when working for WWE caused internal turmoil in him, but ultimately he felt he had better be there to try. to change the culture from within.\n“It is happening there, there is a culture there that has in some ways improved, in some ways has never changed. But there is a culture there that looks a bit like the bullying and that has happened before there. Personally, I haven’t encountered too many of them, some but not in a different way than others. So I can only speak from my experience. In the scenarios, you kind of have to run into that stuff. The only thing about the storylines in wrestling is there’s, you know, a lot of archetypes and you just think that this person is bad. person is good Sometimes the reasons why someone is bad or why someone is good maybe a little out of date.\nHe continued, “So those old school ideas like what makes a bad guy bad are still around so I mean there were times out there where I had to go like you know” Hey that’s the reason they are laughing at you do you know that person is because they are, you know a tall person is or is it because they are bad? You’ve got to kind of play the motives of Moses over there. I think wrestling is basically – at its best, wrestling is kind of a moral game-building. So you want to make sure that the bad guys are bad for the right reasons and the good ones are good for the right reasons.\n“There was enough space where I could get the things I wanted to do and I didn’t have to be on top of the things I didn’t want to do that way. There were other writers who were fine with the writing if the storylines were so. But I think it’s worth talking about. Because like, that’s the only way cultures change in these places. I think like, you kind of got to do it, and it’s hard to do, because it’s like, there was a time when I was there, that was when Charlottesville happened and there was nothing in the room that we were doing anything that or anything like that against. But it was just the fact that I knew Vince McMahon had given Donald Trump about $ 6 million, personal money, at the time. All of these things tied together. I said, “Should I even work for this company?” »Do I feel good working for this company? I told my partner about it at the time. She told me it was like, “Yeah, it’s bad that you’re with this business, but it’s probably better that you’re in the business so you can influence how certain things have turned out. ”\n“I did my best to watch out for the fat-shaming in the gym, because that’s something that in wrestling culture Vince grows up like, guys have amazing bodies, right? they’re all in amazing shape. But every once in a while you’ll have an athlete who just happens to be a bit portly, but they’re still amazing athletes. But then one of the things they have like, Oh he eat a sandwich all the time or something. So I could do influences in that by trying to push things a certain way. But it’s hard because nobody likes being the squeaky wheel. No one likes to stand out that way. But I tried to do that. There was a story someone told me after the fact, where someone was saying things they shouldn’t have said. whatever it was, and me and I jumped in and started tearing them up for it. Then they told this story . I was like, ‘I forgot I did this.’ But I was glad I did. I was like, okay, fine. I’m glad I got up at times and said the right things.\nThese days, Matt Mazany continues his involvement in the wrestling industry with his Get It Again podcast, taking an exclusive look at WCW Thunder with former Raw and NXT writer Stephen Loh. You can view the podcast here.\nIf you use any part of the above quotes, the transcript credit should go to Fightful with an H / T link to this article.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1552945"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6067329049110413,"wiki_prob":0.6067329049110413,"text":"Eurovision Song Contest 2019: Darude feat. Sebastian Rejman – Look away (Finland)\nFinland in Tel Aviv will be represented by Darude and Sebastian Rejman, whose performance of the song “Look away” won the national competion UMK19.\nDarude is a Finnish DJ and record producer from Eura, Finland. His first single “Sandstorm”, released in 1999, was an instant success. Another well-known single is “Feel the beat”, which reached number one on the singles charts in Finland for 2 weeks and number five on the UK singles chart.\nBoth tracks were included in Darude’s debut album “Before the storm” in 2000.\nA few years later, the techno artist released his second album “Rush” followed by “Label this!” (2007) and “Moments” (2015).\nDarude is not the only one we will see on stage. He will bring his friend Sebastian Rejman, a Finnish singer, actor, and television host.\nRejman is known as singer and guitarist of the band The Giant Leap.\nWritten by the artists themselves, “Look away” is a catchy dance track. The music video was directed by Jaakko Manninen, who also directed the previous two music videos for UMK19 competing songs “Release me” and “Superman”.\nThere is something you should know\nI can’t sing a love song anymore\nThere’s something going on\nAnd I can’t turn my back on it anymore\nHow can we go to sleep at night\nAnd lay there in our beds?\nWhen we know what’s going on\nWith the world today\nIs it in my head?\nAm I the only one?\nWhen the war has just began\nWe look away, look away, look away, look away\nLook away, look away, look away, look away\nLook away, look away, no\nThere’s something in the air at night\nThat feels so different\nAnd I don’t understand\nI didn’t see this one coming\nAm I the only the one?\nLook away, look away, look away, look away, no\nEurovision Song Contest 2019: Tulia – Fire of love (Poland) Eurovision Song Contest 2019: Victor Crone – Storm (Estonia) Eurovision Song Contest 2019: Kobi Marimi – Home (Israel) Eurovision Song Contest 2019: Ester Peony – On a Sunday (Romania)\nBy allaroundnewmusic|2019-05-13T20:41:57+00:00May 13th, 2019|EUROVISION|0 Comments","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line921046"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.693397045135498,"wiki_prob":0.693397045135498,"text":"Imah\nImah Dumagay is a stand-up comedian, actor, host, and producer. She has been a staple of the UAE comedy scene since 2018, and is a co-founder of Comedy Kix, a popular comedy club that runs weekly shows at various venues across UAE. Previously working as an executive assistant, Imah is now a full-time entertainer and a Partner at VIRUVI Management Consultancy, an event management company. She hails from Cotabato City, Philippines and currently lives in Dubai. In September 2021 she performed and filmed her comedy special \"IMAH: A Dose of Laughter at The Theatre, Mall of the Emirates. August 2020, she performed in Dubai Opera, she hosted for the Dubai's King and Queen of Comedy, Ali Al Sayed & Mina Liccione. - Imah Dumagay graduated from a comedy school in Dubai in March 2018. In just few months of doing stand-up gigs, she entered a comedy contest Yalla Laugh's Beat The Camel and won first place (Aug 2018), and was Judges' Choice 2nd Runner Up - International Category in Dubai Short + Sweet Comedy Festival - 2018, She was one of the local comedians performed at the Dubai Comedy Festival 2020 and 2021. After over 200 gigs, she performed her first sold-out stand-up comedy special, \"The Imah's Day Off\" at The Theatre, Mall of the Emirates Dubai in November 2020, acting as the first Filipina comedian to do so in the GCC region. - She has opened for famed Indian comedians, Zakir Khan, Nitin Mirani, Anuradha Menon, and Anshu Mor. She was featured in One Africa's Global Comedy Fest in 2018 where she performed with some of the best comedians from across Africa, among others, Basketmouth, Eric Omondi, Bovi, Salvador, & Kenn Blag. In March 2021, she performed her second headlining hour, \"The Shelarious Imah\", at The Theatre. Mall of the Emirates. - She also opened for the UK comedians Mandy Knight and Axel Blake in 2019. She appeared in the smash-hit comedy play \"lust Like That\" in 2019 & 2021.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line401602"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9789265394210815,"wiki_prob":0.9789265394210815,"text":"Glennard “OJ” Johnson\nGlennard “OJ” Johnson is a 1997 graduate of St. Albans School. He received a B.S. in Business Administration from Georgetown University where he also played varsity basketball and football. Mr. Johnson formerly served as the head basketball coach and athletic director at Dr. Henry A. Wise Jr. High School in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. Now back at his high school alma mater, Mr. Johnson serves as head basketball coach, admissions associate, and Director of the Skip Grant Program. Back at his alma mater since 2011, Mr. Johnson is excited to be an active member of the St. Albans community.\nDenny Gonzalez\nDenny Gonzalez hails from New Jersey and graduated from Colgate University with an A.B. magna cum laude in English with an emphasis in Creative Writing. He currently pursues an M.A. in English at the Middlebury Bread Loaf School of English. Prior to his work at St. Albans, Mr. Gonzalez worked as a campus minister and service coordinator at Saint Ignatius High School, an all-male, Catholic high school in Cleveland, Ohio. He also taught English and served as student diversity coordinator at School of the Holy Child, an all-female, Catholic 5–12 school outside New York City. Committed to issues of justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion, Mr. Gonzalez is thrilled to step into this new role in the Skip Grant Program while continuing to foster joy in both teaching and learning in his Upper School English classroom.\nRJ Johnsen\nRJ Johnsen is an Assistant Director of the Skip Grant Program. In addition to this role, Mr. Johnsen serves as St. Albans' Head Varsity Baseball Coach, Director of Retail Operations, and Assistant Director of Upper School Admissions. Mr. Johnsen is a native of Washington, DC, having graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School in 1999. In 2003, he received a degree in political science from the University of Rochester, where he also played varsity baseball.\nRachelle Sam\nRachelle Sam serves as an Assistant Director of the Skip Grant Program. Reverend Sam grew up in southeast Texas and received a B.A. in Religious Studies from Rice University and Master of Divinity from Harvard University. Prior to joining St. Albans, she taught ancient history and world history at Groton School in Massachusetts. At St. Albans she teaches in the Religion Department, works with the social service program, and coaches Cross Country.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1199610"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.504188060760498,"wiki_prob":0.504188060760498,"text":"They Know Not The Way\nNaturalists know not the way, save the way to confusion and chaos in their own souls and that of their nations. Naturalists propose this or that \"solution\" to this or that \"problem,\" whether domestic or international, and, almost invariably, the \"problem\" they are trying to \"resolve\" gets worse and worse and worse. One set of naturalists is thrown out at the ballot box when things get particularly bad, being replaced by yet another set of naturalists who have, they assert, \"learned\" from the lessons of the past. The only winner in this diabolical trap is, of course, the devil, as he promotes more and more naturalism by means of the various Judeo-Masonic forces at work in naturalistic, anti-Incarnational, religiously indifferentist and semi-Pelagian modern civil state.\nIt is thus laughable to read accounts of United States Senator and Secretary of State-designate Hillary Rodham Clinton talk about pursuing \"peace\" in the Middle East during her confirmation hearings before the United States Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, now headed by that august Catholic pro-abort named United States Senator John F. Kerry, D-Massachussets. As is ever the case, naturalistic platitudes ruled the day as Senator Clinton talked about \"not giving up\" on \"peace\" in the Middle East, trying to strike a balance between the humanitarian crisis faced by the Palestinians in Gaza and the security of Israeli civilians:\nAs intractable as the Middle East's problems may seem — and many presidents, including my husband, have spent years trying to help work out a resolution – we cannot give up on peace. The president-elect and I understand and are deeply sympathetic to Israel's desire to defend itself under the current conditions, and to be free of shelling by Hamas rockets.\nHowever, we have also been reminded of the tragic humanitarian costs of conflict in the Middle East, and pained by the suffering of Palestinian and Israeli civilians. This must only increase our determination to seek a just and lasting peace agreement that brings real security to Israel; normal and positive relations with its neighbors; and independence, economic progress, and security to the Palestinians in their own state.\nWe will exert every effort to support the work of Israelis and Palestinians who seek that result. It is critical not only to the parties involved but to our profound interests in undermining the forces of alienation and violent extremism across our world. (Transcript Of Clinton's Confirmation Hearing : NPR)\nNot to be outdone in the annals of naturalism is Germany's \"gift\" to the United States of America, the latter-day self-styled Prince Klemens Wenzel von Metternich, Dr. Henry Alfred Kissinger, a true believer in the \"new world order\" that is at the heart of Judeo-Masonic beliefs. As I noted a few months ago:\nKissinger, a former aide to the arch supporter of contraception and abortion, the late adulterous former Governor of New York and Vice President of the United States, Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller, and Nixon sought to issue a National Security Study Memorandum (NSSM-200) in 1974 which would have encouraging countries to impose a one-child-per family policy in order to receive American foreign aid. The Nixon Administration authorized the writing of National Security Study Memorandum 200 in 1974 that was designed to implement a variety of the “population control” measures that had been recommended by the Rockefeller Commission, a panel appointed by President Nixon in 1969 following his own Special Message to Congress on July 18, 1969, on the “necessity” of controlling population growth.\nThis particular Memorandum, which was the brainchild of Nixon and Henry Kissinger and presidential counselor Donald D. Rumsfeld, included such draconian measures as encouraging countries to develop a one child per family policy and to regulate the control of food to developing nations. As a result of pressure brought by several Catholic cardinals in the United States, this NSSM was classified until 1989, at which point its terms were released. (Foggy Bottom's Bloody Tradition)\nKissinger published an article on The Chance for a New World Order yesterday, January 13, 2009, that spells out a quintessential naturalist \"plan for peace\" that has no room for the Prince of Peace:\nThe complexity of the emerging world requires from America a more historical approach than the insistence that every problem has a final solution expressible in programs with specific time limits not infrequently geared to our political process.\nWe must learn to operate within the attainable and be prepared to pursue ultimate ends by the accumulation of nuance.\nAn international order can be permanent only if its participants have a share not only in building but also in securing it. In this manner, America and its potential partners have a unique opportunity to transform a moment of crisis into a vision of hope.\nNaturalists never learn as they reject the simple fact that He Who is the Way, the Truth and the Life, Our Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, has given us the only path to peace. Our Lord has commissioned His Catholic Church to be the instrument by which men may know true peace by being converted to the Faith and persevering in states of Sanctifying Grace. Peace within the souls of men by means of Sanctifying Grace is the necessary precondition, although, given the vagaries of fallen human nature, never an infallible guarantor, of peace within families and thus within nations and among nations. All other paths to \"peace\" are illusory, especially when one considers the path that the United States of America and most of the other allegedly \"civilized\" nations of the world at at war with God by means of slaughter over one million preborn babies by surgical means under cover of law each year and and the slaughter of countless millions more by means of chemical abortionists.\nHow can anyone in his right mind speak about \"peace\" among nations when when slaughter the innocent under cover of law and go about the pursuit of our \"bread and circuses\" so casually? There can be no authentic \"peace\" among nations absent a conversion of men and their nations to the true Faith. Nations that promote sin, the very thing that caused Our Blessed Lord Saviour Jesus Christ to suffer in His Sacred Humanity during His Passion and Death and that caused His Most Blessed Mother's Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart to be pierced through and through with Seven Swords of Sorrow, under cover of law and in every aspect of their popular culture will know nothing but disorder at home and conflict with each other.\nPope Leo XIII noted this in Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus, November 1, 1900:\nGod alone is Life. All other beings partake of life, but are not life. Christ, from all eternity and by His very nature, is \"the Life,\" just as He is the Truth, because He is God of God. From Him, as from its most sacred source, all life pervades and ever will pervade creation. Whatever is, is by Him; whatever lives, lives by Him. For by the Word \"all things were made; and without Him was made nothing that was made.\" This is true of the natural life; but, as We have sufficiently indicated above, we have a much higher and better life, won for us by Christ's mercy, that is to say, \"the life of grace,\" whose happy consummation is \"the life of glory,\" to which all our thoughts and actions ought to be directed. The whole object of Christian doctrine and morality is that \"we being dead to sin, should live to justice\" (I Peter ii., 24)-that is, to virtue and holiness. In this consists the moral life, with the certain hope of a happy eternity. This justice, in order to be advantageous to salvation, is nourished by Christian faith. \"The just man liveth by faith\" (Galatians iii., II). \"Without faith it is impossible to please God\" (Hebrews xi., 6). Consequently Jesus Christ, the creator and preserver of faith, also preserves and nourishes our moral life. This He does chiefly by the ministry of His Church. To Her, in His wise and merciful counsel, He has entrusted certain agencies which engender the supernatural life, protect it, and revive it if it should fail. This generative and conservative power of the virtues that make for salvation is therefore lost, whenever morality is dissociated from divine faith. A system of morality based exclusively on human reason robs man of his highest dignity and lowers him from the supernatural to the merely natural life. Not but that man is able by the right use of reason to know and to obey certain principles of the natural law. But though he should know them all and keep them inviolate through life-and even this is impossible without the aid of the grace of our Redeemer-still it is vain for anyone without faith to promise himself eternal salvation. \"If anyone abide not in Me, he shall be cast forth as a branch, and shall wither, and they shall gather him up and cast him into the fire, and he burneth\" john xv., 6). \"He that believeth not shall be condemned\" (Mark xvi., 16). We have but too much evidence of the value and result of a morality divorced from divine faith. How is it that, in spite of all the zeal for the welfare of the masses, nations are in such straits and even distress, and that the evil is daily on the increase? We are told that society is quite able to help itself; that it can flourish without the assistance of Christianity, and attain its end by its own unaided efforts. Public administrators prefer a purely secular system of government. All traces of the religion of our forefathers are daily disappearing from political life and administration. What blindness! Once the idea of the authority of God as the Judge of right and wrong is forgotten, law must necessarily lose its primary authority and justice must perish: and these are the two most powerful and most necessary bonds of society. Similarly, once the hope and expectation of eternal happiness is taken away, temporal goods will be greedily sought after. Every man will strive to secure the largest share for himself. Hence arise envy, jealousy, hatred. The consequences are conspiracy, anarchy, nihilism. There is neither peace abroad nor security at home. Public life is stained with crime.\nAlthough the sequence of passages from Pope Pius XI's Ubi Arcano Dei Consilio, December 22, 1922, have been printed in numerous articles on this site, even I forget which articles contain what passages. I can imagine that readers can forget as well. These passages, however, are always useful to reprint when naturalists talk endlessly about \"peace\" and \"peace plans\" and do the adversary's bidding by making it appear as though men can \"build for peace\" absent a due submission to the true Church:\nIf we stop to reflect for a moment that these ideals and doctrines of Jesus Christ, for example, his teachings on the necessity and value of the spiritual life, on the dignity and sanctity of human life, on the duty of obedience, on the divine basis of human government, on the sacramental character of matrimony and by consequence the sanctity of family life -- if we stop to reflect, let Us repeat, that these ideals and doctrines of Christ (which are in fact but a portion of the treasury of truth which He left to mankind) were confided by Him to His Church and to her alone for safekeeping, and that He has promised that His aid will never fail her at any time for she is the infallible teacher of His doctrines in every century and before all nations, there is no one who cannot clearly see what a singularly important role the Catholic Church is able to play, and is even called upon to assume, in providing a remedy for the ills which afflict the world today and in leading mankind toward a universal peace.\nBecause the Church is by divine institution the sole depository and interpreter of the ideals and teachings of Christ, she alone possesses in any complete and true sense the power effectively to combat that materialistic philosophy which has already done and, still threatens, such tremendous harm to the home and to the state. The Church alone can introduce into society and maintain therein the prestige of a true, sound spiritualism, the spiritualism of Christianity which both from the point of view of truth and of its practical value is quite superior to any exclusively philosophical theory. The Church is the teacher and an example of world good-will, for she is able to inculcate and develop in mankind the \"true spirit of brotherly love\" (St. Augustine, De Moribus Ecclesiae Catholicae, i, 30) and by raising the public estimation of the value and dignity of the individual's soul help thereby to lift us even unto God.\nFinally, the Church is able to set both public and private life on the road to righteousness by demanding that everything and all men become obedient to God \"Who beholdeth the heart,\" to His commands, to His laws, to His sanctions. If the teachings of the Church could only penetrate in some such manner as We have described the inner recesses of the consciences of mankind, be they rulers or be they subjects, all eventually would be so apprised of their personal and civic duties and their mutual responsibilities that in a short time \"Christ would be all, and in all.\" (Colossians iii, 11)\nSince the Church is the safe and sure guide to conscience, for to her safe-keeping alone there has been confided the doctrines and the promise of the assistance of Christ, she is able not only to bring about at the present hour a peace that is truly the peace of Christ, but can, better than any other agency which We know of, contribute greatly to the securing of the same peace for the future, to the making impossible of war in the future. For the Church teaches (she alone has been given by God the mandate and the right to teach with authority) that not only our acts as individuals but also as groups and as nations must conform to the eternal law of God. In fact, it is much more important that the acts of a nation follow God's law, since on the nation rests a much greater responsibility for the consequences of its acts than on the individual.\nWhen, therefore, governments and nations follow in all their activities, whether they be national or international, the dictates of conscience grounded in the teachings, precepts, and example of Jesus Christ, and which are binding on each and every individual, then only can we have faith in one another's word and trust in the peaceful solution of the difficulties and controversies which may grow out of differences in point of view or from clash of interests. An attempt in this direction has already and is now being made; its results, however, are almost negligible and, especially so, as far as they can be said to affect those major questions which divide seriously and serve to arouse nations one against the other. No merely human institution of today can be as successful in devising a set of international laws which will be in harmony with world conditions as the Middle Ages were in the possession of that true League of Nations, Christianity. It cannot be denied that in the Middle Ages this law was often violated; still it always existed as an ideal, according to which one might judge the acts of nations, and a beacon light calling those who had lost their way back to the safe road.\nThere exists an institution able to safeguard the sanctity of the law of nations. This institution is a part of every nation; at the same time it is above all nations. She enjoys, too, the highest authority, the fullness of the teaching power of the Apostles. Such an institution is the Church of Christ. She alone is adapted to do this great work, for she is not only divinely commissioned to lead mankind, but moreover, because of her very make-up and the constitution which she possesses, by reason of her age-old traditions and her great prestige, which has not been lessened but has been greatly increased since the close of the War, cannot but succeed in such a venture where others assuredly will fail.\nIt is apparent from these considerations that true peace, the peace of Christ, is impossible unless we are willing and ready to accept the fundamental principles of Christianity, unless we are willing to observe the teachings and obey the law of Christ, both in public and private life. If this were done, then society being placed at last on a sound foundation, the Church would be able, in the exercise of its divinely given ministry and by means of the teaching authority which results therefrom, to protect all the rights of God over men and nations.\nIt is possible to sum up all We have said in one word, \"the Kingdom of Christ.\" For Jesus Christ reigns over the minds of individuals by His teachings, in their hearts by His love, in each one's life by the living according to His law and the imitating of His example. Jesus reigns over the family when it, modeled after the holy ideals of the sacrament of matrimony instituted by Christ, maintains unspotted its true character of sanctuary. In such a sanctuary of love, parental authority is fashioned after the authority of God, the Father, from Whom, as a matter of fact, it originates and after which even it is named. (Ephesians iii, 15) The obedience of the children imitates that of the Divine Child of Nazareth, and the whole family life is inspired by the sacred ideals of the Holy Family. Finally, Jesus Christ reigns over society when men recognize and reverence the sovereignty of Christ, when they accept the divine origin and control over all social forces, a recognition which is the basis of the right to command for those in authority and of the duty to obey for those who are subjects, a duty which cannot but ennoble all who live up to its demands. Christ reigns where the position in society which He Himself has assigned to His Church is recognized, for He bestowed on the Church the status and the constitution of a society which, by reason of the perfect ends which it is called upon to attain, must be held to be supreme in its own sphere; He also made her the depository and interpreter of His divine teachings, and, by consequence, the teacher and guide of every other society whatsoever, not of course in the sense that she should abstract in the least from their authority, each in its own sphere supreme, but that she should really perfect their authority, just as divine grace perfects human nature, and should give to them the assistance necessary for men to attain their true final end, eternal happiness, and by that very fact make them the more deserving and certain promoters of their happiness here below.\nIt is, therefore, a fact which cannot be questioned that the true peace of Christ can only exist in the Kingdom of Christ -- \"the peace of Christ in the Kingdom of Christ.\" It is no less unquestionable that, in doing all we can to bring about the re-establishment of Christ's kingdom, we will be working most effectively toward a lasting world peace.\nNo Republican naturalist and no Democrat naturalist believes this to be so. Why should they? Conciliar \"pontiffs\" have spoken endlessly about the ability of \"inter-religious dialogue\" and international organizations to produce \"world peace.\" No conciliar \"pontiff\" has exhorted men and their nations to convert with urgency to the Social Reign of Christ the King, thus leaving the naturalists to hatch their endless plans that are just variations of the same semi-Pelagian theme over and over and over again as the bombs fly and the innocent die.\nOur Blessed Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Himself has sent us His own Most Blessed Mother to teach us that the path to world peace runs through her Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart. She explained this Jacinta and Francisco Marto and their cousin Lucia dos Santos in the Cova da Iria near Fatima, Portugal, ninety-two years ago this year. We must do all we can to fulfill Our Lady's Fatima Message in our own lives, especially by praying as many Rosaries each day as our states-in-life permit and by observing the conditions of the Five First Saturday devotions. We may not see the fruit of all this with our own eyes. We must, however, continue to remain steadfast in our fidelity to the true Faith in the Catholic catacombs without making any concessions to conciliarism or its wolves that masquerade as shepherds.\nAs noted before, peace in the world is the result of individual souls being at peace with God by having His own inner life dwelling within our souls by means of Sanctifying Grace. The price of the purchase of that grace was the shedding of every single drop of the Divine Redeemer's Most Precious Blood on the wood of the Holy Cross and the Seven Swords of Sorrow that were thrust through and through the Immaculate Heart of His Most Blessed Mother. All men need to do is seek out this grace with a spirit of true contrition for their sins and a firm purpose of amendment of their lives as they give acts of thanksgiving to the Blessed Trinity for the great gift of the true Faith that makes it possible for them to scale the heights of sanctity and to live in true peace, that of eternity, with all others, forgiving injuries right readily and seeking justice when it is necessary to do so without malice and in a spirit of perfect equity and proportionality.\nThe saint we commemorate today, Saint Hilary of Poitiers, would find the naturalism of Hillary Rodham Clinton to be odious. Saint Hilary of Poitiers worked hard in the Fourth Century to combat Arianism in France, which is why he is called the Athanasius of the West, fighting also against the Gallican spirit that was condemned fourteen centuries later by Pope Pius VI in Auctorem Fidei, August 28, 1794. May Saint Hilary help us overcome the naturalism of the world and the Modernism of the counterfeit church of conciliarism as we remain steadfast in defense of the truths of Catholicism as the one and only foundation of personal and social order.\nLet us continue to use the path to personal and world peace that is the Immaculate Heart of Mary, out of which her Divine Son's Most Sacred Heart was formed, a Sacred Heart from which we are called to drink fountains of Divine mercy as we seek to view all people and all things and all events at all times and in all of the circumstances of our lives through the eyes of the true Faith, the only means of human salvation and thus the only means of personal and social order.\nViva Cristo Rey!\nSaint Hilary of Poitiers, pray for us.\nIsn't it time to pray a Rosary now?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line257567"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5552724003791809,"wiki_prob":0.4447275996208191,"text":"Karmanos Cancer Institute to host author at Health Equity Book Club discussion December 16\nKarmanos Cancer Institute|News|Karmanos Cancer Institute to host author at Health Equity Book Club discussion December 16\nDamon Tweedy will present on his book \"Black Man in a White Coat: A Doctor's Reflections on Race and Medicine\"\nThe Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute invites health care professionals, including trainees and students, as well as community members to participate in the fourth installment of its Health Equity Book Club from 4-5:30 p.m. Thursday, December 16. At this quarter's conversation, Karmanos will welcome Damon Tweedy, M.D. Dr. Tweedy is the author of the book to be discussed, \"Black Man in a White Coat: A Doctor's Reflections on Race and Medicine.”\nParticipants can register at www.karmanos.org/bookclub.\nCreated by Michael Simon, M.D., MPH, co-leader of the Breast Cancer Multidisciplinary Team, the purpose of the Health Equity Book Club is to enhance awareness of systematic racism, inequality and misinformation within the medical community. This is achieved through research and reading, followed by honest and transparent conversations about difficult topics.\nAt the December 16 event, Dr. Tweedy will speak about his book for the first portion of the meeting. Following his presentation, Isaac J. Powell, M.D. member of the genitourinary multidisciplinary team and professor in the department of urology, Wayne State University and Karmanos Cancer Institute and Taylor Barrow, second-Year Medical Student, Wayne State University School of Medicine will provide local perspectives. The event will conclude with a Q&A session.\nAbout Dr. Tweedy\nDr. Damon Tweedy is the author of the New York Times bestseller “Black Man in a White Coat,” selected by TIME magazine as one of the Top 10 Non-Fiction books of 2015. He has published articles about race and medicine in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) and other medical journals. His columns and op-eds have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post and various other print publications.\nDr. Damon Tweedy travels frequently to speak to physicians and clinicians, health care companies, medical schools and teaching hospitals and other organizations involved in health and wellness, about the impact of race on the medical profession at all levels. He is a graduate of Duke University School of Medicine and Yale Law School. He completed both his medical internship and psychiatry residency at Duke Hospital. He is currently an associate professor of psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine and a staff psychiatrist at the Durham Veteran Affairs Health Care System.\nAbout the Karmanos Cancer Institute Health Equity Book Club\nThe Karmanos Cancer Institute Health Equity Book Club's mission is to build awareness across the Karmanos Community and amongst health care professionals of issues related to and stemming from systematic racism in the health care system and society in the United States. By revealing the contributing factors and results of racism, we seek to highlight an important goal for us as a cancer institute: to expose and better understand the impact of racism on our practice of medicine. We believe that open dialogue within our community of colleagues, patients and families will help to facilitate Karmanos Cancer Institute's goal of equal access and provision of culturally competent, quality care to all patients and their families regardless of race, ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation.\nRelated Blogs/News\nThroat Cancer: The HPV-related Cancer That Affects More Men Than Women\nPreventing Cervical Cancer: Gynecologic Oncologist Explains Why Pap Tests Are Important","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1196236"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5707324743270874,"wiki_prob":0.5707324743270874,"text":"Recording Memories: Meet EveryStep Hospice Volunteer Bob Leonard\nIf you ask an EveryStep Hospice volunteer what the biggest misconception is about hospice care, they’ll usually answer that most people don’t understand exactly what hospice is. Bob Leonard was among that group until about 15 years ago, when he interviewed a hospice volunteer on his KNIA/KRLA (Knoxville/Pella/Indianola) radio show.\n“Not knowing much about hospice, I was worried that it would be a boring and sad interview,” says Bob. “But it wasn’t. She taught me that hospice was about life as much as death. Most importantly, I learned enough about hospice to help my mom and dad, and an aunt.”\nIt also led Bob to become actively involved in hospice volunteer work.\nFor the last 11 years, Bob has visited EveryStep Hospice patients to ask questions about their lives and digitally record their answers. These “life reviews” are then provided to the patients’ families. “I always hope that each person I talk with shares not only some stories from their life, but also leaves a precious gift or two in words for those they will leave behind,” says Bob. It also provides loved ones with a recording of their loved one’s voice.\nOnce Bob ran into the daughter of a man whose stories he had spent time recording. “She told me, ‘we took that recording you made with Dad, and put it in the side room of the funeral home with all his photos and memorabilia, and put it on loop, and it was just like he was there with us, like he wasn’t gone, hearing him laugh and talk with you, it was wonderful. Wasn’t like a funeral at all, and everyone had a good time just hearing his voice, his stories, and it was more like a party than a funeral, and he would have just loved it, so thank you.’”\nBob’s volunteer work also extended to serving on the advisory board for the EveryStep Hospice team (then HCI Care Services) in Knoxville. He remembers telling his mother about his position on the board; he recalls the conversation went something like this:\nWhen I told her I was on the [EveryStep] board, she asked me, \"What do you do?\"\nI replied, \"Well, we meet for lunch once a month, and talk about stuff.\"\n\"No,\" she said. \"What do you do?\"\n\"Well, I replied. \"We eat, and discuss budgets and events and stuff.\"\n\"NO,\" she said, \"What do YOU do?\"\n\"Oh,\" I replied, \"I go around and visit patients and record their stories for their families.\"\n\"Good,\" she said. \"Why didn't you just tell me that?\"\n“Her point was to be an active board member,” says Bob. “In mom’s 50 years of volunteering she had seen plenty of board members who only ‘met for lunch.’\" Bob encourages everyone that is interested in volunteering for EveryStep to do so. “We all have different talents and interests, and we need to ask ourselves, ‘how can I use my talents and interests to help the organization?’ If you are like me, you will get lots more out of it than you give.”\nTo learn about hospice volunteering opportunities, please visit www.everystep.org/volunteer; go to “programs” and click on “hospice.”\nTo read a recent piece written by Bob and published by the Des Moines Register, click here.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1837615"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6768642067909241,"wiki_prob":0.3231357932090759,"text":"City of Summerside » Official Documents and Data » Community Profiles » Present\nSummerside Today\nSummerside is PEI’s second largest City and the principal municipality for the western part of the province. The City, according to the 2016 Census, has a population of nearly 15,000.\nOur labour force is made up of roughly 7,600 people and is distributed amongst 16 industries.\nMost of Summerside’s employment is in year-round industries, including:\nRetail (14%)\nManufacturing (12%)\nHealth and social services (11%)\nGovernment (10%)\nAccommodation, food, and beverage (10%)\nThe largest employer in the City is the Summerside Tax Centre. Slemon Park (formerly CFB Summerside) houses a number of other major employers, including StandardAero and Honeywell. Cavendish Farms, located in the outlying community of New Annan, is PEI’s largest private sector employer.\nEight councilors and a mayor govern the City’s geographic areas (called wards). The current mayor is Basil L. Stewart. Our City is protected by the Summerside Police Department, the Summerside Fire Department, and the East Prince Detachment of the RCMP.\nSummerside has eight excellent schools, including:\nFour elementary schools\nTwo junior high schools\nOne senior high school\nOne French school\nWe have a large Holland College presence in Summerside, which includes the following facilities:\nEast Prince Centre\nAerospace Centre\nMarine Training Centre\nAtlantic Police Academy\nMotive Power Centre\nWe’re also home to the College of Piping and Celtic Performing Arts.\nIn 2007, the City signed a 20-year agreement with a private wind energy company in West Cape to supply Summerside with 23% of its electricity needs. Construction started in 2009 to build our own wind turbines to tie those to our electric utility. We now own and operate our own wind farm, which, on the average day, provides us with about 25% of our City’s energy. The City is also a large supporter of electric vehicles. We have more charging stations for electric cars per capita than any other Canadian city.\nSummerside’s Prince County Hospital is the main referral hospital in western PEI. Island EMS (Emergency Medical Services) has a base in the downtown area of the City from which it operates two Advanced Life Support ambulances 24/7.\nEntertainment/Attractions\nCredit Union Place (CUP) brings numerous musical and sporting events to the City each year. The largest indoor sports facility in the province, CUP has a swimming pool, bowling alley, ice surfaces, and much more. Other attractions in Summerside include the Silver Fox Curling & Yacht Club, Spinnaker’s Landing, the Summerside Golf and Country Club, the Harbourfront Theatre, and various arts and cultural attractions.\nTourism Summerside works throughout the year to market Summerside as a four-season tourism destination. The Green’s Shore Park area attracts skiiers and skaters in the winter months. The Curling Club and hockey arena are also popular for winter sports. In the summertime, visitors love our historic attractions, Green’s Shore Beach, walking trails, parks, the Baywalk Boardwalk, and the natural beauty of the City. Many visit the City to explore their family history at the MacNaught History Centre and Archives.\nSince the closure of CBF Summerside in 1990, the City has been aggressively seeking new ways to attract businesses to the area. Our Economic Development Office has created a number of programs to encourage companies to invest in the City. Thanks to these efforts, we’ve become a destination for Aerospace companies, Health IT organizations, Bio-tech businesses, and more.\nThe City of Summerside is steeped in history and heritage. Our preserved heritage homes, museums, cultural centres, and exhibits all demonstrate that our history will always be part of our present and our future.\nFor more information about our City, contact:\nRob Philpott\nrob.philpott@city.summerside.pe.ca\nRelated External Links\nTourism PEI Summerside","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1348052"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7854216694831848,"wiki_prob":0.7854216694831848,"text":"Coastwatch Currents\nMeet the 2016 NCSG/WRRI Graduate Student Fellows\nOctober 10, 2016 | Janna Sasser\nCasey Lindberg from Duke University will study the impacts of multiple environmental stressors on fish populations native to estuaries along the East Coast. Photo courtesy Casey Lindberg.\nFive recipients of graduate research fellowships, awarded by North Carolina Sea Grant and the Water Resources Research Institute of the University of North Carolina system, will explore current water resources and coastal issues in North Carolina.\nResearch topics range from the prevalence of E. coli in North Carolina’s agricultural watersheds, to innovative nanotechnology research for filtering brackish groundwater.\nThe 2016 student recipients are from Duke University, East Carolina University, North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.\n“This set of projects exemplifies the diversity of topics available to students through the joint Sea Grant and WRRI fellowship, allowing both organizations to expand into new areas of research,” notes John Fear, Sea Grant deputy director.\nRegina Bledsoe is a doctoral student in ECU’s interdisciplinary doctoral program in biological sciences, where her advisor is Ariane Peralta.\nRegina Bledsoe\nBledsoe will study a newly constructed stormwater wetland on the university’s campus, designed in part by project collaborator Eban Bean, on faculty at East Carolina and NC State, and recently appointed to faculty at the University of Florida.\n“The fellowship gives me an opportunity to test hypotheses generated from previous studies in an applied context, where hydrological manipulation is a management strategy,” Bledsoe explains. Hydrological manipulation involves a strategic regime of saturating and drying wetland soils to examine potential tradeoffs in water and air pollution.\nThe study builds off previous work in restored wetlands by Peralta in 2013. By conducting her project in an urban setting, Bledsoe will address gaps in previous research and determine management strategies for enhancing wetland function. This would include improving urban water quality and decreasing negative side effects, such as greenhouse gas production.\nBledsoe is from Theriot, Louisiana. She received her bachelor’s degree in environmental science from Nicholls State University in Louisiana. She also is the recipient of a National Science Foundation 2016 Graduate Research Fellowship.\nElizabeth Christenson, a doctoral student in applied microbiology at the UNC-Chapel Hill’s Gillings School of Public Health, will study the prevalence of antibiotic-resistant, virulent E. coli in North Carolina’s agricultural watersheds. Her advisor is Jill Stewart.\nElizabeth Christenson\n“Testing surface water for fecal indicator bacteria, such as E. coli, is commonly used to identify fecal pollution and human pathogen exposure,” Christenson explains. Using water samples from agricultural watersheds with and without large swine-feeding operations, she will test for differences in the number of pathogenic and antibiotic resistant E. coli present.\nMicrobial source tracking, a recently developed technique that enables researchers to determine the host source of fecal contamination using a “gene marker,” will identify where E. coli originate.\n“I’m also incorporating spatial analysis to identify whether land-use characteristics, such as wetlands and vegetative river buffers, may help mitigate effects of runoff from swine operations on nearby water bodies,” Christenson adds.\nOriginally from Wisconsin, Christenson grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. She received a bachelor’s degree in environmental science and a master’s degree in environmental sciences and engineering from UNC-Chapel Hill. She is a recipient of a 2016 North Carolina Impact Award by The Graduate School at UNC-Chapel Hill for developing a spatial database of industrial hog farm sprayfields in Duplin County.\nJack Kurki-Fox is a doctoral student in biological and agricultural engineering at NC State, where his advisor is Michael Burchell.\nJack Kurki-Fox\nHe will test an innovative lab-scale model of nutrient removal for restored wetlands — previously developed by Burchell and department members as a jointly-funded Sea Grant and WRRI project — to demonstrate water-quality and ecosystem benefits at a field scale.\nTo test the model, agricultural drainage water will be rerouted by pumping it to a large restored wetland in Hyde County. Water quality will be monitored across the wetland to determine how efficiently the restored wetland removes nutrients.\n“Results of this project hopefully can be used to guide further large-scale wetland restoration projects on former agricultural lands, and encourage wetland restoration as a water management strategy in coastal agricultural areas,” Kurki-Fox notes.\nFox grew up in Ashland, Wisconsin. He holds master’s and bachelor’s degrees in civil engineering from the University of Florida. He also is the recipient of a 2016 William H. and Glenda N. Johnson Graduate Engineering Fellowship, administered by the Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering at NC State.\nCasey Lindberg is a doctoral student in Duke’s integrated toxicology and environmental health program, part of the Nicholas School of the Environment. Her advisor is Richard Di Giulio.\nCasey Lindberg\nUsing wild-caught populations of Atlantic killifish, Lindberg will study the impacts of multiple environmental stressors on fish populations native to estuaries along the East Coast.\nAtlantic killifish are small, nonmigratory fish commonly found in estuarine systems along the Eastern Seaboard. Subpopulations of these fish have evolved to become resistant to toxic waters caused by certain chemical pollutants found in contaminated ecosystems, including the Cape Fear River system, Lindberg notes.\n“My research aims to understand how co-exposures to hypoxia, a condition characterized by oxygen-deficient waters, and a class of chemical pollutants known as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHS, impact the development and health of local fish species,” she explains, “and how evolved resistance to one stressor may influence tolerance to a secondary stressor, like hypoxia.”\nThe work may be used to identify population-level responses to both stressors, and model ecological risks across several regions of the United States.\nOriginally from Maryland, Lindberg received her bachelor’s degree in marine science with a concentration in chemical oceanography from the University of South Carolina.\nJames Peerless is a doctoral student in materials science and engineering at NC State. His advisor is Yaroslava Yingling.\nJames Peerless\nPeerless will study a novel technology to filter and desalinate brackish groundwater. “I’m investigating a new filtration method that potentially will remove harmful contaminants from salt water, and produce safe drinking water for North Carolina coastal communities,” Peerless says.\nThe design involves combining activated carbon with functionalized nanoparticles. These particles measure 1 to 100 nanometers in size — for comparison, a human hair is 80,000 to 100,000 nanometers wide. Nanotechnology research is a quickly growing field. Improved water-purification methods currently are being sought for next-generation filtration designs.\n“Our design uses one of the most promising nanomaterials investigated for selective absorption of water contaminants — functionalized inorganic nanoparticles, or INPs,” Peerless explains. INPs have been heavily studied in water purification for their antimicrobial, or disease-inhibiting, properties, as well as their ability to remove heavy metals from wastewater.\nUsing computer simulations, Peerless will design and optimize the model to potentially inform future fabrication and implementation. “We have a unique opportunity to investigate an economic and technological bottleneck in clean water production crucial to the environmental and economic stability of North Carolina,” he notes.\nPeerless is a native of Granby, Connecticut. He received his bachelor’s degree in chemical engineering from Northeastern University in Boston.\nFor more information on North Carolina Sea Grant funding opportunities and fellowships, visit ncseagrant.ncsu.edu/funding-opps/.\n« Preparing for Hazardous Weather: After a Flood\nForecasting Hypoxia, Algal Blooms for the Neuse River Estuary »","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1723294"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5181862711906433,"wiki_prob":0.4818137288093567,"text":"Vital City Challenge\nCity of Fuenalabrada\nFUENLABRADA: A young city, with sports and eldery as their friend.\nParticipation is the common thread of a city built in the last 40 years with the collaboration of several generations.\nFuenlabrada is an example of success. Success is the only way to understand the history of a city that has grown from just 7,000 inhabitants to over 200,000 in 50 years, in an orderly and cohesive manner.\nThere is a fundamental secret behind this succes. Citizen participation has become a common thread through the different generations of the community. This has helped to build the identity of the citizens of Fuenlabrada, the city’s main heritage.\nThe Vital Cities Challenge is an excellent opportunity to promote sports and healthy leisure, and encouraging participation in the city life as well. The Vital Cities Challenge also contributes to uniting different generations in the city of Fuenlabrada through active cooperation between the young and elderly citizens.\nCity of Trnava\nTRNAVA: Trnava offers sport opportunities for every age group. Recreational sports such as cycling, walking, running, swimming, athletics and collective games like volleyball, football and basketball are becoming increasingly popular.\nThe City of Trnava has six sport facilities, four sport halls and stadiums, three multifunctional playgrounds and three swimming pools besides the commercial ones. You can also visit multifunctional playgrounds in primary schools which are open in the summer all day long and during the school year in the evenings and over the weekends. The townhall is currently modernizing the Slavia Sport Complex and building new running tracks. Every year we add several kilometers to the network of bike lanes. We also conduct the bike sharing for the citizens.\nWe care about the public health and we do our best to provide wide range of activities and meaningful use of leisure time in the city. It is worth mentioning that Trnava received the prestigious award of the European City of Sport in 2020.\nCity of Sofia\nSOFIA: City in the mountains and mountain in the city\nGreen, modern and active\nThe city of Sofia, as the capital of Bulgaria, is ancient, fast growing and developing for the needs of its nearly 1.3 million inhabitants. Also like every modern EU capital Sofia is following the tendention of being a greener, attractive, and innovative destination for the guests of the city. In matters of sport and healthy lifestyle the local authorities are developing the brand \"Sofia - European capital of sport\" for the last 7 years and following the success of the campaign ahead of the city is the candidacy for World Capital of Sport 2024. The percentage of active citizens in Sofia is increasing on a monthly basis and that is why there is much and much more \"thirst\" for sport activities and a healthier-eco-friendly lifestyle. Following that tendention the VCC project can be naturally implemented, as a platform which can be very accessible and helpful for a variety of society layers - young, middle aged, elderly and basically to everyone. Looking forward to seeing the Virtual city challenge in action!\nCity of Emmen\nEMMEN: Did you know that a lot of happy people live in the municipality of Emmen? From all big municipalities in the Netherlands the inhabitants of Emmen belong to the top 3 happiest inhabitants in Holland. Emmen is the biggest municipality in the province Drenthe. Drenthe is in the north east of Holland. Emmen gives inhabitants a high quality of life. It is a safe, friendly, and green municipality where a lot of events are organized. From the 107.000 inhabitants of Emmen, 1500 are students. In the region a lot of educational institutions.\nThe city of Emmen has all services you need, like a big indoor shopping center, a hospital, educational institutions, a cinema, an Atlas theatre, and elite sports clubs, like FC Emmen (the paid football organization). Also, Emmen has the most beautiful zoo in the Netherlands, called Wildlands. You can also stay fit in Emmen at one of our 110 sport associations. You can enjoy the nature of Bargerveen and art and culture in the Rensenpark.\nIn the region of Emmen contains 7.800 companies. Emmen is the largest industry center of North-Holland. A lot of green energy innovations are taking place here. In addition to that Emmen has a strong service sector and offers employment in the field of High-tech systems & materials, logistics, chemistry, Agrofood, and horticulture.\nACES europe\nACES Europe is a non-profit association based in Brussels which assigns every year the recognitions of World Capital, European Capital, Region, City, Island, Community and Town of Sport. The allocation of these recognitions is done by ACES Europe, according to the principles of responsibility and ethics, being aware that sport is a factor of aggregation of the society, improvement in the quality of life, psycho-physical well-being and complete integration within social classes in the community. ACES Europe awards the European Capital of Sport title, an initiative that has received the recognition of the European Commission in the White Paper (Art. 50). In addition, ACES Europe is an official partner of the European Commission in the European Week of Sport.\nuniversity of bruxelles\nThe Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) is based in the city of Brussels, the capital of Europe. The University was founded in 1834 as an offshoot of the French-speaking Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). The Dutch-speaking University was finally split off from its French-speaking counterpart in 1969. The Vrije Universiteit Brussel is a dynamic and modern University with two parkland campuses in the Brussels Capital Region: the main campus in Etterbeek is home to seven faculties. In Jette you can find the medical campus and the University Hospital. VUB offers quality education to more than 9000 students. Add to that the almost 4500 students of our partner, the Erasmus Hogeschool Brussels; the 400 students at the English-speaking Vesalius College; the 5000 students at the Centre for Adult Education with whom VUB shares campuses and the more than 150 research teams working on both campuses, and you get one of the biggest centers of knowledge in the capital of Europe. Internationalisation is one of the top priorities in the VUB strategic plan, exemplified by the establishment of the International Relations and Mobility Office (IRMO) in 2004. Thanks to its expertise and strategic location, the Vrije Universiteit Brussel is an ideal partner for prestigious research and education with an outlook on Europe and the world.\ninnosportlab\nInnoSportLab Sport & Beweeg is a non-profit innovation Centre, based in Eindhoven. InnoSportLab Sport & Beweeg innovates to make sports, games and exercise self-evident for everyone. InnoSportLab strives for innovations that lead to social and economic impact, is a national sports innovator center and an active partner in the Brain port innovation cluster Sports & Technology. Together with end users, companies, municipalities and knowledge institutions, we develop new products, services and methods that contribute to making effective sports and exercise stimulation possible.\nkinetic Analysis\nKinetic Analysis® is lead partner of the Vital Cities Challenge project. They are specialized in human motion data and capturing data using next-generation sensors and customized measurement tools, resulting in highly accurate input that is improving peoples' lives. It is quantifying the human body motion with scientific accuracy. This data leads to the development of innovative products and services that revolutionize the way we live.\nVital Cities Challenge aims to build a healthier and happier lifestyle\nPlease check our Privacy Statement here.\nThe Vital Cities Challenge aims at the well-being of its members using online and offline activities that engage people of all ages.\n© VCC 2021 Vital Cities Challenge","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1505793"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8965734839439392,"wiki_prob":0.8965734839439392,"text":"Catching a Killer exposes the mind of an abuser for the first time - and you need to watch\nCatching a Killer follows the murder investigation into Natalie Hemming - Pro Co. Channel 4 images must not be altered or manipulated in any way. This picture may be used sol\nIt isn’t easy to leave a manipulative man. It’s a simple thing to say but the harsh reality is exposed in a groundbreaking documentary made for Channel 4, Catching a Killer, which follows a real-life murder investigation. The victim, 31-year-old Natalie Hemming, was killed last year by her ex-partner when she finally made up her mind to leave him after enduring years of abuse.\n‘Cold and calculating,’ 42-year-old Paul Hemming then tried to persuade detectives that someone else was responsible for her disappearance. The murder inquiry began with a call to Thames Valley police from Natalie’s distraught mother, Margaret. Her daughter had disappeared after her first date with a new man, which she had tried to keep secret from her former partner. From the outset, Natalie’s mother feared that Paul Hemming was responsible.\nDetectives took the unusual step of allowing a documentary-maker, Anna Hall, to film their inquiry. The 90-minute film, which airs tonight, is a rare opportunity to see how an unrepentant abuser operates.\nThis is believed to be the first time that a murder investigation has been filmed from start to finish\nUnder questioning, Hemming uses exactly the same techniques – dishonesty and tears – that he used on women. He lies from the moment he is woken up by police officers investigating Natalie’s disappearance, even refusing to hand over his mobile phone in case his former partner – who is in reality already dead – should call him.\nWhen he’s arrested the following day, he wipes away tears and comes up with a story Natalie has gone away because she was raped by another man. According to Hemming, they were on good terms when she left the house and had agreed to ‘start afresh’.\nNot a word of it is true, but Natalie’s mother and sister go through hell before her body is found in a wood in Hertfordshire three weeks later.\nEven then, Hemming does not confess. On the first day of his trial, he changes his story, admitting manslaughter and claiming that he 'accidentally' killed Natalie by throwing a jade egg at her head during a row. The jury aren’t taken in and convict him of murder. He’s currently serving life with a recommendation that he should be locked up for a minimum of 20 years.\nPaul and Natalie Credit: Production Company\nThis is believed to be the first time that a murder investigation has been filmed from start to finish.\nHome Office figures show that two women are killed by a current or former partner every week. What is going on is sometimes known by family members - Natalie’s sister Jo tried on many occasions to persuade her to leave Hemming – but less often to the authorities.\nResearch carried out in London by the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime suggests that most victims of domestic homicide are not previously known to the police, suggesting either that they keep hoping for the best – or don’t know what help is available.\nThat’s one of many reasons why the documentary is so important, showing the determination of Thames Valley Police, led by Superintendent Simon Steel, to gather the evidence they need to convict Hemming. While it is true that some police forces are more effective than others, the film confirms that official attitudes to domestic violence have changed out of all recognition in recent years.\nNatalie’s story is familiar, but no less tragic and compelling for that.\nNow viewers can see for themselves the techniques used by an accomplished liar and abuser\nShe was a 21-year-old single mother, struggling with post-natal depression, when she met Hemming. He was 11 years older and already on file for violently assaulting a previous girlfriend. But men like Hemming target vulnerable women and he swept Natalie off her feet, presenting her with a £2,500 engagement ring.\nThey never married but went on two have two children together, despite escalating violence on Hemming’s part. On one occasion, he injured her so badly that she had to go to A&E and gave a statement to police. Hemming bombarded her with tears and promises that he would change, and Natalie eventually withdrew her complaint.\nWhen a woman is murdered by a partner, outsiders often ask why she didn’t leave him years ago. Now viewers can see for themselves the techniques used by an accomplished liar and abuser, offering unusual insights into the mentality of such men. Last year, Radio 4 soap The Archers was praised for a plotline depicting domestic abuse in real time. This film is the next logical step in our education.\nWomen are most at risk when they finally find the courage to leave – something that murder detectives know all too well. The general public doesn’t, and that’s why documentaries like this one perform an important public service.\nAbout | Domestic violence\nJason Bateman says his career suffered because he 'stayed at the party too long'\nJason Bateman says his career suffered because he 'stayed at the party too long' until he landed roles in 'Arrested Development' and 'Juno'.\nRose Inc's Luminous Tinted Serum Is Basically a Ring Light in a Bottle\nLike a lot of people during these continued periods of working from home, I've reached for lightweight, more glowy complexion products - focusing on hydration over coverage. That's why I couldn't wait to try the new Rose Inc Skin Enhance Luminous Tinted Serum (£36).\nShowcasing a land of culture and colour: the Indian Pavilion at Dubai's World Expo\nIn this edition of Postcards we explore the India Pavilion at Expo 2020 in Dubai.View on euronews\nSlow Ibiza: A guide to the island's most relaxing hotels, restaurants and hotspots\nThe style crowd now flock to Ibiza for health as well as hedonism. Enjoy island's calmer side with our guide\nDame Emma Thompson SLAMS plastic surgery\n'Cruella' star Dame Emma Thompson has hit out at the idea of plastic surgery and described going under the knife as \"a form of collective psychosis\".\nEvidence is mounting that Tobey Maguire will return in Doctor Strange in The Multiverse of Madness\nRumours have been circulating that Tobey Maguire would return for Doctor Strange in The Multiverse of Madness.\nMorrissey asks Johnny Marr to stop using his name as 'click-bait'\nMorrissey has issued a lengthy rant calling for Johnny Marr to stop talking about him to the press.\nThe US Government Will Soon Offer Free N95 Masks\nOn January 19, the US Government announced that it will make 400 million N95 masks available to the public for free. The masks have been sent to thousands of pharmacies and community health centers across the country - including Hy-Vee, Meijer, CVS, Walgreens and Kroger - where you can pick up a maximum of three masks per person.\nRay J responds to Kanye West's claim he made second sex tape with Kim Kardashian\nDuring a recent interview with Hollywood Unlocked, the rapper alluded to the existence of a second tape between his estranged wife Kim and her ex-boyfriend Ray J. He claimed that he obtained a laptop from the singer and it contained unreleased intimate footage of the former couple together.\nCardi B thanks family and friends for support during defamation trial\nCardi B has thanked her lawyers, family and friends for their support during her defamation trial. Earlier in the week, a jury sided with the Grammy winner after she sued YouTuber Tasha K for defamation. Variety reports that the rapper was awarded more than $4 million (£2.9 million) overall, with the internet personality being held liable for additional punitive damages and attorney fees. In a statement shared with People, the WAP hitmaker reflected on the trial and thanked the jury for their fi","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1208325"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7401456236839294,"wiki_prob":0.7401456236839294,"text":"The Cat Breed With The Strongest Bite\nBy Eric Meisfjord/April 27, 2020 11:04 am EST\nIn Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me, we learn that Dr. Evil's Mini-Me would bite. \"He's a biter,\" said Young Number Two, holding up a bandaged right hand. \"He bites.\" Anybody who's ever been bitten by another human being knows it's nothing to sneeze at. (We're talking about biting-to-do-damage, not, well, other kinds of biting.) Researchers generally take the stance that if it can't be measured, it isn't worth knowing. Other researchers will say everything can be measured if you use the right kind of ruler. And so, yes, there are people out there, bless their hearts, who measure things like bite force in various creatures — including human beings.\nAnd humans are not particularly impressive on this particular scale. The Mysterious World reports that the average human bite can deliver about 160 pounds per square inch (psi). Fortunately, we also have things like massive brains and opposable thumbs and neighborhood hardware stores to help even the score.\nBecause, frankly, 160 psi ain't nothin' in the animal kingdom. The National Center for Biotechnology Information has the whole nine yards about how calculations are performed to determine bite force in dogs and cats. Factor in placement and condition of muscles, the state of the teeth, and the animal's motivation — is it mad? — and the numbers start to stack up. Some of those numbers are very impressive indeed.\nSmaller, but mightier\nIt's probably no surprise larger predators in the wild can summon up really significant bites. Taking the first bite out of the food chain would be the Nile crocodile, with a bite force of 5,000 psi. Saltwater crocs weigh in at 3,960 psi. The hippopotamus can muster up 1,850 psi. If we limit comparisons to just cats, the numbers are smaller, but still impressive. Lions are a relatively puny 650 psi. Tigers can summon up 1,050 psi, which doesn't surprise anyone who's watched Tiger King. But if you factor in size, the biggest bite-for-the-buck is delivered by the jaguar: 2,000 psi from a cat that tops out at around 200 pounds for the male. About a third the size of a tiger. About twice the bite strength.\nBBC Wildlife Magazine agrees. According to Adam Hartstone-Rose of the University of South Carolina, \"The strength of the jaguar's bite is due to the arrangement of its jaw muscles, which, relative to weight, are slightly stronger than those of other cats. In addition – also relative to weight – its jaws are slightly shorter, which increases the leverage for biting.\"\nThe National Center for Biotechnology Information has the whole nine yards about how calculations are performed to determine bite force in dogs and cats. Factor in placement and condition of muscles, the state of the teeth, and the animal's motivation. If it's a mad jaguar, make sure your insurance is paid up.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1443492"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9884505271911621,"wiki_prob":0.9884505271911621,"text":"US shutters Russia's San Francisco consulate in retaliation\nBy Associated Press Aug 31, 2017, 12:03pm MDT\nShare All sharing options for: US shutters Russia's San Francisco consulate in retaliation\nFILE - President Donald Trump speaks about tax reform at the Loren Cook Company, Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2017, in Springfield, Mo. In an escalating tit-for-tat, the United States forced Russia on Thursday to shutter its consulate in San Francisco and scale back its diplomatic presence in Washington and New York, as relations between the two former Cold War foes continued to unravel.\nAlex Brandon, Associated Press\nWASHINGTON (AP) — In an escalating tit-for-tat, the United States forced Russia on Thursday to shutter its consulate in San Francisco and scale back its diplomatic presence in Washington and New York, as relations between the two former Cold War foes continued to unravel.\nThe Trump administration said the move constituted its response to the Kremlin's \"unwarranted and detrimental\" decision to force the U.S. to cut its diplomatic staff in Russia. Under the order, Russia must close its San Francisco consulate by Saturday, along with Russia's \"chancery annex\" in Washington and a \"consular annex\" in New York.\n\"The United States is prepared to take further action as necessary and as warranted,\" said State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert. Still, she said the U.S. hoped both countries could now move toward \"improved relations between our two countries and increased cooperation on areas of mutual concern.\"\nEarlier this month, the Kremlin retaliated for stepped-up U.S. sanctions on Russia by announcing the U.S. would have to cut its embassy and consulate staff in Russia by 755 people. During meetings in the Philippines shortly thereafter, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson left open the possibility the U.S., in turn, would retaliate for that move, and promised Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov a formal response by Sept. 1.\nThe U.S. has said as a result, it will stop issuing visas at its consulates in Russia in cities other than Moscow. A senior U.S. official said Thursday that the U.S. reduction of diplomatic staff is complete.\nThere was no immediate reaction from the Russian government. But given the back-and-forth nature of the escalating tensions over the past year, it was likely the Kremlin would feel compelled to respond by taking further action against the U.S.\nNevertheless, the United States argued that the score has been evened, urging Russia not to retaliate for the retaliation. U.S. officials pointed out that Russia, when it ordered the cut in U.S. diplomats, had argued it was merely bringing the size of the two countries' diplomatic presences into \"parity.\"\n\"The United States hopes that, having moved toward the Russian Federation's desire for parity, we can avoid further retaliatory actions by both sides,\" Nauert said.\nNext Up In U.S. & World\nThe early omicron variant symptoms to remember\nAn undersea volcano erupted near Tonga, causing a tsunami advisory for the U.S. West Coast\nHow long you can wear an N95 mask\nThis omicron variant symptom is more common among kids, doctor says","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1130"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6275935769081116,"wiki_prob":0.6275935769081116,"text":"HomeEducationLatest News\nWhat Is the New Alzheimer’s Disease Medication – and Who Should Get It?\nDr. Keith Vossel, Professor of Neurology, and Director of the Mary S. Easton Center for Alzheimer's Disease Research at UCLA, David Geffen School of Medicine, was featured in a June 15 UCLA Health article explaining the science behind the newly FDA approved Alzheimer's disease medication, Aduhelm (aducanumab).\nThe New Discovery of Inhibitors for the Treatment of Alzheimer's Disease\nThe Drug Discovery Lab, under the direction of Professor Varghese John, announced in the May 14, 2020 edition of UCLA Health news the publication in ACS Chemical Biology of their \"... Discovery of a novel class of compounds that function as dual inhibitors of the enzymes neutral sphingomyelinase-2 (nSMase2) and acetylcholinesterase (AChE). Inhibition of these enzymes provides a unique strategy to suppress the propagation of tau pathology in the treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD).\" In the report, they describe the key structure-activity relationship elements that affect relative nSMase2 and/or AChE inhibitor effects and potency, as well as the identification of two compound analogs that suppress the release of tau-bearing exosomes in vitro and in vivo. Dr. John stated “Identification of these novel dual nSMase2/AChE inhibitors represents a new therapeutic approach to AD and has the potential to lead to the development of truly disease-modifying therapeutics.\" Read more in ACS Chemical Biology.\nMRI may help Doctors differentiate causes of Memory Loss\nDr. Mario Mendez, Professor-in-Residence of Neurology, Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences at the Geffen School of Medicine, was featured in an October 23 UCLA Newsroom article about identifying distinct characteristics of dementia caused b brain injury could prevent misdiagnosis of Alzheimer's disease.\nPrimary Care Providers should Screen Seniors for Decline in Memory and Thinking Skills\nDr. Sarah Kremen, Clinical Physician of Neurology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; Director of Clinical Trials programs at the Mary S. Easton Center for Alzheimer’s Disease Research at UCLA, and Principal Investigator for California’s Alzheimer’s Disease Centers (CADC) at UCLA, was interviewed on June 19, The Alzheimer’s Prevention Registry article about why primary care doctors should evaluate patients for memory and thinking skills.\nExperimental Alzheimer’s Drug Boosts SirT1 Levels and Improves Memory in Mice\nResearchers at the Drug Discovery Lab (DDL) at the Mary S. Easton Center for Alzheimer's Disease Research at UCLA have recently reported that an experimental drug known as A03, previously developed to treat depression, was found to increase brain levels of an enzyme Sirtuin1, or SirT1, and improve memory after oral treatment in mice genetically modified to have a protein called ApoE4, the most common genetic risk factor for AD. Increasing the levels of SirT1 may delay the buildup of the toxic tau pathology and improve cognition in Alzheimer's. The DDL is conducting additional research on A03 to evaluate its potential for clinical testing in Alzheimer's disease. The lab is also developing similar compounds that might be more effective in increasing SirT1 levels. The study was funded by the National Institute of Health.\nUCLA Newsroom Research Alert - December 20, 2018:\n\"Experimental Alzheimer’s drug boosts SirT1 levels and improves memory in mice.\"\nResearchers Discover Drug that could Combat Brain Cell Death in Those with Alzheimer’s Disease\nAlzheimer's Association® - AAIC 2018 News Highlights\nMolecule halts spread of toxic protein associated with Alzheimer’s.\nDisrupted sleep-wake cycle might be a measure for preclinical Alzheimer’s.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line229064"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.661703884601593,"wiki_prob":0.338296115398407,"text":"European Jungle\nA pick-up carries men hired to fell trees into one of the last areas of...\nA pick-up carries men hired to fell trees into one of the last areas of rainforest in western Ghana. Logging companies have been granted permits to remove certain trees from the forest for the Europea...\n© Sven Torfinn/Panos Pictures\nTwo cocoa farmers standing beneath a forest giant growing on their plantation.\nTwo cocoa farmers standing beneath a forest giant growing on their plantation. Bia Tributaries North Forest Reserve is one of the last stretches of rainforest in western Ghana. Logging companies have...\nOne of the last areas of rainforest in western Ghana. Logging companies have...\nOne of the last areas of rainforest in western Ghana. Logging companies have been granted permits to remove certain trees from the forest for the European market. Despite strict rules, the result is t...\nA truck carries logs from one of the last areas of rainforest in western Ghana...\nA truck carries logs from one of the last areas of rainforest in western Ghana where logging companies have been granted permits to remove certain trees to be sold on the European market. Despite stri...\nYoung man with chainsaw, hired to fell trees in one of the last areas of...\nYoung man with chainsaw, hired to fell trees in one of the last areas of rainforest in western Ghana. Logging companies have been granted permits to remove certain trees from the forest for the Europe...\nThe stump of a felled tree in one of the last areas of rainforest in western...\nThe stump of a felled tree in one of the last areas of rainforest in western Ghana. Logging companies have been granted permits to remove certain trees from the forest for the European market. Despite...\nMajid (22) from Sudan in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\n© Nora Lorek\nA group of refugees from Sudan, Eritrea and Ethiopia eating breakfast during...\nA group of refugees from Sudan, Eritrea and Ethiopia eating breakfast during Ramadan while sitting in the open air mosque in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\nPeople from the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp trying to get into vehicles...\nPeople from the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp trying to get into vehicles while they are queuing to gain entry to the port.\nA church built by Ethiopian migrants in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\nA bed space in a makeshift shelter, the only two floor structure built in the...\nA bed space in a makeshift shelter, the only two floor structure built in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\nA man stands out against the night sky and the ferry port's lights at the...\nA man stands out against the night sky and the ferry port's lights at the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\nThe smoldering remains of shelters destroyed by fire at the so-called 'Jungle'...\nThe smoldering remains of shelters destroyed by fire at the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp. When the authorities moved to close the camp some of the residents decided to set fire to their makeshift s...\nA man runs from tear gas fired by French police during an operation to close...\nA man runs from tear gas fired by French police during an operation to close down the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\nHadi Elya (19) from Pakistan leaps over a stream near the so-called 'Jungle'...\nHadi Elya (19) from Pakistan leaps over a stream near the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp. Previously he lived in Austria for eight months but was not able to get a residence permit. After six months...\nA group of men warm themselves around a fire burning in an old tin at the...\nA group of men warm themselves around a fire burning in an old tin at the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\nPeople living in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp make their way to the...\nPeople living in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp make their way to the road that leads to the ferry port where they will try to get onto trucks queuing to enter the port.\nIbrahim, a Syrian refugee living in a makeshift shelter in the so-called...\nIbrahim, a Syrian refugee living in a makeshift shelter in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp. Eventually he made it to the UK where he moved in with relatives.\nWessam (21) smoking in his makeshift shelter in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee...\nWessam (21) smoking in his makeshift shelter in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp. He fled Syria with his parents just before the war broke out and ended up in in Calais in October 2015. Among the m...\nDandan, Wessam and Ibrahim refugees from Syria, met in Calais in the autumn of...\nDandan, Wessam and Ibrahim refugees from Syria, met in Calais in the autumn of 2015 and moved into a shelter together in an area mostly housing Syrians from Daraa in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee cam...\nIn a makeshift shelter in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp, Wessam and...\nIn a makeshift shelter in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp, Wessam and Dandan look at old pictures from their hometown Daraa in Syria.\nYassin, a refugee from Damascus reading an Arabic/English dictionary while...\nYassin, a refugee from Damascus reading an Arabic/English dictionary while resting in a makeshift shelter in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp. After the camp was demolished he spent time living rou...\nA group of men warm themselves around a fire in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee...\nA group of men warm themselves around a fire in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp.\nThe lights from a patrolling police vehicle appear on a beach near the...\nThe lights from a patrolling police vehicle appear on a beach near the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp. Refugees from the camp have no more than four minutes to run one kilometre along the beach, get...\nA composite image showing the remains of an Iranian passport (centre) and...\nA composite image showing the remains of an Iranian passport (centre) and various other items lying on the ground after the south part of the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp was cleared of people and...\nA man stands on a ladder while seeking a better signal for a mobile phone call...\nA man stands on a ladder while seeking a better signal for a mobile phone call in the so-called 'Jungle' refugee camp. The police had recently visited the premises to warn the owner not to build the p...\nA woman uses her mobile while sitting by the sea at Torreblanca looking...\nA woman uses her mobile while sitting by the sea at Torreblanca looking towards Fuengirola. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the sum...\n© Espen Rasmussen\nMorning fog obscures the tower blocks in Torreblanca. The long broad beach,...\nMorning fog obscures the tower blocks in Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and lat...\nPeople beach fishing between Fuengirola and Torreblanca. The long broad...\nPeople beach fishing between Fuengirola and Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and...\nA man jumps over a small stream on the beach between Fuengirola and...\nA man jumps over a small stream on the beach between Fuengirola and Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months...\nTourists on the beach at Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from...\nTourists on the beach at Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and late eveings, the s...\nThe moon shines on the beach between Fuengirola and Torreblanca. The long...\nThe moon shines on the beach between Fuengirola and Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the morni...\nPeople on the beach at Torreblanca are enveloped by a morning fog. The long...\nPeople on the beach at Torreblanca are enveloped by a morning fog. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mor...\nPeople fishing from a water break at Torreblanca, are enveloped by morning...\nPeople fishing from a water break at Torreblanca, are enveloped by morning fog. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months b...\nA boy swimming in the sea at Torreblanca is enveloped by a light morning fog.\nA boy swimming in the sea at Torreblanca is enveloped by a light morning fog. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but...\nResidents play tennis and football at courts attached to a residential...\nResidents play tennis and football at courts attached to a residential apartment block. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer...\nChildren in the sea enveloped by wispy morning fog on the beach at...\nChildren in the sea enveloped by wispy morning fog on the beach at Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months b...\nTourists riding one of the many waterslides in the waterpark Parque Acuatico...\nTourists riding one of the many waterslides in the waterpark Parque Acuatico Mijas. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer mont...\nNovelty boats on the beach are enveloped by morning at Torreblanca. The long...\nNovelty boats on the beach are enveloped by morning at Torreblanca. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mo...\nTourists crash into the pool after riding one of the many waterslides in the...\nTourists crash into the pool after riding one of the many waterslides in the waterpark Parque Acuatico Mijas. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day...\nTourists swimming in the sea. The long broad beach, stretching from...\nTourists swimming in the sea. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and late eveings, the sun hungr...\nTourists dancing in one of the many pools at the waterpark Parque Acuatico...\nTourists dancing in one of the many pools at the waterpark Parque Acuatico Mijas. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months...\nA visitor's shadow falls on a shack. The long broad beach, stretching from...\nA visitor's shadow falls on a shack. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and late eveings, the su...\nTwo women sit on a bench outside Tivoli World in Benalmadena, a popular spot...\nTwo women sit on a bench outside Tivoli World in Benalmadena, a popular spot for tourists in the evening and at night-time. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists d...\nTivoli World in Benalmadena, a popular spot for tourists in the evening and at...\nTivoli World in Benalmadena, a popular spot for tourists in the evening and at night-time. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summ...\nChildren on an adventure train ride in Tivoli World in Benalmadena, a popular...\nChildren on an adventure train ride in Tivoli World in Benalmadena, a popular spot for tourists in the evening and at night-time. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tour...\nBoys run and play on the beach in Torreblanca (Fuengirola). The long broad...\nBoys run and play on the beach in Torreblanca (Fuengirola). The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings a...\nTourists leave the beaches after a long warm day. The long broad beach,...\nTourists leave the beaches after a long warm day. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and late ev...\nBoys playing football on the beach at Torreblanca (Fuengirola). The long...\nBoys playing football on the beach at Torreblanca (Fuengirola). The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornin...\nA child swimming in a pool. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola,...\nA child swimming in a pool. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and late eveings, the sun hungry...\nThe long and wide beaches at Fuengirola are crowded with sun-beds, rented by...\nThe long and wide beaches at Fuengirola are crowded with sun-beds, rented by tourists for four Euros per day. The locals mostly lie on blankets on the sand close to the waterfront. The long broad beac...\nPeople playing beach volleyball at sunset. The long broad beach, stretching...\nPeople playing beach volleyball at sunset. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the mornings and late eveings,...\nThe shadows of people walking a seaside promenade fall on a shed Fuengirola.\nThe shadows of people walking a seaside promenade fall on a shed Fuengirola. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but...\nBoys playing football on the beach at Torreblanca (Fuengirola), using a...\nBoys playing football on the beach at Torreblanca (Fuengirola), using a storage shed as a goal. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout th...\nChildren play on a trampoline ride on the beach at Fuengirola. The long broad...\nChildren play on a trampoline ride on the beach at Fuengirola. The long broad beach, stretching from Fuengirola, is crowded with tourists during the day throughout the summer months but in the morning...\nBoys playing football on the beach at Torreblanca (Fuengirola). The long broad...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1307855"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.617621898651123,"wiki_prob":0.617621898651123,"text":"650-years jubilee, © Museum Hameln\nThe Pied Piper jubilee celebrations\nIn the late 19th century, interest in the Pied Piper of Hamelin increased dramatically. In 1875, the extremely popular epic poem of Julius Wolff was premiered, and in 1879 the opera of Viktor Nessler. The potential of the old legend was also recognised in Hamelin: 600 years after the supposed procession of the children, a large jubilee celebration was held in 1884.\nThe Pied Piper subsequently became a poster child for tourism. Brochures, picture collections, postcards and souvenirs with his picture have been produced.\nJubilee celebrations also occurred in Hamelin in 1934, 1984 and 2009. The character of the celebrations exemplified the Zeitgeist. The 1934 jubilee also had a recognisable political dimension: The legend was used by the National Socialists for propaganda purposes.\nThe 650-years anniversary\nThe Pied Piper anniversary in 1934 is further evidence of the dangerous ability of the Nazi rulers to organize large-scale events, advertise them on a large scale and use them for political propaganda. People are mobilized by appealing to their „national duty“ to participate. In contrast to the festival weekend 50 years ago, the celebrations extend almost all year round.\nThe treasure of imperishable legends is one of the finest pearls of German folklore.\nGerman history calls you, German legend, German landscape!\nGerda Riege\nWoodcut, around 1940\nGerda Riege is the sister of the Hamelin painter Rudolf Riege who is considered the best-known graphic artist in Weserbergland.\nProgramme booklet\nThe organisation of the festival lay for the most part in the hands of the district administration of the NSDAP. Among the scheduled events were mixed together torch processions of the SA, military parades and an “ethnic German mass active game”: “Volk will zu Volk”. The jubilee celebrations thus also turned into a political propaganda function.\nHenze-Dessau, 1934\nThe motto of the Pied Piper festival, “German history, German legend, German landscape calls to you!” makes it clear that the organisers in 1934 had more in mind than merely the celebration of a Hamelin city festival. Can the terrible events of 1284 be considered a cause for celebration at all? In contrast to 50 years previously, the figure of the Pied Piper was not made into a hero, but rather the legend was presented as an example of “real German folklore”.\nTourist office letter\nThe Hamelin tourist office, founded in 1914, describes itself as an establishment for the promotion of the city’s tourism. It works closely with the city administration. The first brochures appeared in the 1920s. Hamelin is promoted as the “Pied Piper city in the Weser Hills.” In 1933, the citizens of Hamelin were requested to provide “active assistance”. In May 1934, the office asked the Director of Studies, Heinrich Spanuth, to arrange an exhibition of the Pied Piper legend. Within six weeks, the jubilee exhibition resulted, “The Pied Piper legend in words and pictures”. It later formed the basis of the Pied Piper collection of the museum.\nPied Piper figure\nDelius pottery, Hamelin 1934\nThe Hamelin Delius pottery, rich in tradition, produced a ceramic Pied Piper figure to mark the Pied Piper jubilee. The company logo of the pottery had always been a rat symbol. Because of this, it did not present any great difficulty for the management in 1934, as the “pottery with the rat”, to produce high quality souvenirs for the jubilee.\nThe circular red badge was the official festival emblem of the Pied Piper jubilee in 1934. The festival participants had to be expressly able to “identify” themselves. Each badge wearer also had the opportunity to participate in a tombola. “Hamelin good luck rats” made of parish chocolate could be bought for 30 Reichspfennigs. Each fourth rat received a winning ticket.\nThe triangular pin badge was used as a mark of identification for the promoters of the Pied Piper festival. This not only meant helpers and organisers, but also those businesses and places that were prepared to spread information and sell festival badges, commemorative publications and good luck rats. The “street hawkers” without a permanent business also wore an armband with the title “tourist office” and a number.\nInformation board\nCar park, 1934\nIn contrast to 1884 – many people arrived by their own automobile, motorcycle or bicycle. Parking spaces had to be arranged for the cars: a supervised parking area in the Sedanplatz and various unsupervised surfaces were made available. Similarly to the Bückeberg festivals, which had occurred annually since 1933, the direction of traffic represented an enormous organisational cost.\nKarl Schatzberg, 1934\nThe events of the 650-year celebrations of the Pied Piper legend lasted from May to September 1934. The main festival week took place from 24th June until 1st July. Similarly to 1884, local artists were attracted and mainly contributed to designing the cultural part of the events. The author Bernhard Flemes devised a theatre play, which was first performed on 26th June. On the same day, the Pied Piper art clock together with glockenspiel was ceremonially inaugurated. The puppet artist Marga Rulff performed a Pied Piper puppet play in the city hall “in eight pictures”. The open-air play, which had taken place regularly since 1930 under the direction of Magda Fischer, formed the core of the events line-up alongside the historical festival parade.\nTwo puppets from the puppet theatre of 1934, © Museum Hameln\nGlove puppets: The Pied Piper of Hamelin\nRulff’s Artist Puppet Games\nHeads and hands by Rudolf Nickel, 1934 | costumes by Marga Rulff, 1934\nThe jubilee of 1934 was planned as a large festival with many events. In March 1934, Rulff’s Artist Puppet Games from Bad Pyrmont was commissioned by the city of Hamelin to stage a puppet show for the jubilee celebrations. Some of the beautifully-made puppets were preserved in Hamelin Museum, including to be seen here: Pied Piper and Madam Fable.\nMarga Rulff based her songbook on Grimm’s fable template. But typical puppet show elements were also interwoven: The clown as a servant always speaks turned to the audience. Together with Madam Fable, he frames the actual plot.\nFrom June to October 1934, several performances of the puppet show took place as part of the legend jubilee each week at the meeting hall in the garrison church.\nRulff’s production envisaged that all dramatic, i.e. real scenes would be represented by puppets. All mythical scenes should be performed with the help of an artistic shadow play. The fantastical in the night-time rat procession appeared likewise in three silhouettes in the same way as the procession of the children.\nThe design and production of the impressive shadow scenes was undertaken by Lotte Reiniger, the animated silhouette film artist from Berlin, already widely known in 1934.\nThe first jubilee took place on 28th and 29th June and was a splendid success. An array of photographers seized the opportunity to document the event with the new, modern technology and then sell their pictures.\nThe magnificent album with golden inscription: “Recollection of the Pied Piper festival in Hamelin” and the two framed commemorative coins contain studio and outdoor shots of the event. The first “full-time” Pied Piper actor is also represented: the businessman Adolph Pietsch.\nThe album is part of the estate of the Hamelin family Silberschmidt and was placed in the museum in 1936.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1419045"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9978740811347961,"wiki_prob":0.9978740811347961,"text":"Halle Berry To Be Honoured With The People’s Icon Award At ‘People’s Choice Awards’\nBy Anita Tai. 19 Nov 2021 5:50 PM\nHalle Berry — Photo: Matt Winkelmeyer/WireImage/Getty Images\nNBC and E! announce Halle Berry will receive The People’s Icon award at the 2021 “People’s Choice Awards”.\nCardi B will present the award to the actress for her contributions to TV and film.\nREAD MORE: Halle Berry Ups Her A-Game In ‘Bruised’, Reminding Her That ‘Age Is Just A Number’\nHalle Berry – Photo: Adrienne Raquel\n“Throughout her career, Halle Berry has broken down barriers, directed and starred in diverse roles that have paved the way for others in the industry,” said NBCUniversal Entertainment Television and Streaming Executive Vice President Jen Neal. “In addition to her filmography accolades and trendsetting ethos, Berry is known for her philanthropic work with women, children and underserved communities. She is an icon of our time and for all these reasons and more, we are honoured to present her with The People’s Icon award.”\nBerry has worked as an actress, director, and producer throughout her career, earning a variety of accolades for her work including the Academy Award for Best Actress in “Monster Ball” and a Best Actress Golden Globe in “Frankie and Alice”.\nREAD MORE: Halle Berry And Van Hunt Say Her Son Already Gave Them A Wedding Ceremony\nIn her philanthropic work, the actress has been a supporter of the Jenesse Center in Los Angeles, which supports victims of domestic violence and aims to change the pattern of abuse in the lives of women and children. Berry also joined forces with Novo Nordisk and the Entertainment Industry Foundation to launch the Diabetes Aware Campaign along with many other charities.\nThe actress made her directorial debut in the film “Bruised” which hit theatres on Nov. 17.\nThe People’s Choice Awards take place on Dec. 7 at 9 p.m. ET/PT.\n2021 People's Choice Awards Awards Celebs Halle Berry Movies\n2022 Costume Designers Guild Awards Nominations: ‘Cruella,’ ‘Dune,’ ‘Euphoria’ Among Nominees","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1814624"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.841741144657135,"wiki_prob":0.841741144657135,"text":"Hale & Monico\nAndrew M. Hale\nAndrew M. Hale - Chicago, IL\nMonadnock Building53 West JacksonSuite 337 Chicago, IL 60604\nChicago Personal Injury Lawyer\nMr. Hale, a founding member of the firm, concentrates his practice in commercial litigation, with significant experience in both State and Federal Courts. Mr. Hale has significant experience in complex litigation matters and is admitted to practice law in Illinois, California and Florida. Mr. Hale is also an avid New York Yankees fan.\nAbout Andrew M. Hale\nCurrent Employment Position(s)\nU.S. District Court Middle District of Florida, 1987\nU.S. Court of Appeals 11th Circuit, 1987\nU.S. District Court Northern District of Illinois, 1988\nU.S. Court of Appeals 7th Circuit, 1988\nU.S. District Court Central District of California, 1992\nUniversity of Illinois College of Law, Champaign, Illinois\nUniversity of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, IL\nMajor: Political Science\nOther Sources of Feedback About Andrew M. Hale\nIncluded on the 2022 Illinois list\n2021 Illinois Super Lawyers list\nView the profile for Andrew M. Hale on Super Lawyers\nhttps://www.halemonico.com/\nhttps://www.halemonico.com/blog/\nEvans v. City of Chicago, et al, No. 04 C 3570, 2006 WL 463041 (N.D. Ill. 2006)\nWilkins v. Riveredge Hospital, 130 Fed. Appx. 823 (7th Cir 2005)\nTy Inc. v. Softbelly's, Inc., 2005 WL 326974 (N.D. Ill. 2005)\nFlood v. Ty Inc., No. 02 C 9497, 2005 WL 994579 (N.D. Ill. 2005)\nTy Inc. v. Softbelly's, Inc., No. 00 C 5230, 2005 WL 326974 (N.D. Ill. 2005)\nBaker v. Jewel Food Stores, Inc., 355 Ill. App.3d 62, 291 Ill. Dec. 83 (Appeallate Court of Illinois, First District 2005)\nAlsdorf v. Bennigson, No. 04 C 5953, 2004 WL 2806301 (N.D. Ill. 2004)\nWilkins v. Riveredge Hospital, No. 02 C 9232, 2004 WL 906010 (N.D. Ill 2004)\nLunding v. Biocatalyst & Resources, Inc., No. 03 C 696, 2004 WL 547250 (N.D. Ill 2004)\nTy Inc. v. Softbelly's, Inc., 353 F.3d 528 (7th Cir. 2003)\nTy Inc. v. Softbelly's, 353 F.3d 528, 57 Fed.R.Serv.3d 637 (7th Circuit 2003)\nLunding v. Biocatalyst Resources, Inc., No. 03 C 696, 2003 WL 22232831 (N.D. Ill. 2003)\nTy Inc. v. Jones Group, Inc., 237 F.3d 891 (7th Circuit 2001)\nBurns & Associates, Inc. v. Prestige Products Group, 2001 WL 830975 (N.D. Ill. 2001)\nTy Inc. v. Jones Group, Inc., 98 F.Supp.2d 988 (N.D. Ill. 2000)\nChicago Professional Sports Limited Partnership and WGN Continental Broadcasting Co. v. National Basketball Association, 808 F.Supp. 646 (N.D. Ill. 1992)\nChicago Professional Sports Limited Partnership and WGN Continental Broadcasting Co. v. National Basketball Association, 961 F.2d 667 (7th Circuit 1992)\nFirst National Bank of Louisville v. Brooks Farms, 821 S.W.2d 925 (Tenn. 1991)\nKeller v. A.O. Smith Harvestore Products, Inc., 819 P.2d 69 (Colo. 1991)\nHarrison/Erickson, Inc. v. Chicago Bulls, Limited Partnership, No. 91 C 1585, 1991 WL 51118 (S.D.N.Y. 1991)\nChicago Professional Sports Limited Partnership and WGN Continental Broadcasting Co. v. National Basketball Association, 754 F.Supp. 1336 (N.D.Ill. 1991)\nNew Park Forest Associates II v. Rogers Enterprises, Inc., 195 Ill.App.3d 757, 142 Ill.Dec. 474 (First District 1990)\nFirst National Bank of Louisville v. Brooks Farms, No. 89-194-II, 1990 WL 6386 (Tenn. App. 1990)\nFund Plan Services, Inc. v. Dickens, No. 88 C 6821, 1990 WL 6645 (N.D. Ill. 1990)\nLaramore v. The Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, The City of Chicago and The Chicago White Sox, Ltd., 722 F.Supp. 443 (N.D. Ill 1989)\nWFLD-TV v. The Chicago White Sox, Cook County, IL (1988)\nLaramore v. The Illinois Sports Facilities Authority, the City of Chicago, and the Chicago White Sox, 89 C 1067 (N.D. IL)\nChicago Professional Sports Ltd. Partnership v. National Basketball Association, 90 C 6247 (N.D. IL)\nHarrison/Erickson Inc. v. Chicago Bulls Limited Partnership dba The Chicago Bulls, 91 Civ. 1585 (S.D.N.Y.)\nwww.halemonico.com/","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line871541"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5248876214027405,"wiki_prob":0.4751123785972595,"text":"The U.S. International Trade Commission: An Introduction\nThe U.S. International Trade Commission, Material Injury Determinations, and Remedies for US Manufacturers: An Introduction\nWritten by Dan Pickard of Wiley Law\nThe U.S. International Trade Commission (“ITC”) is one of the most powerful, but least known, agencies in the Federal Government. The ITC is an independent, quasi-judicial, federal agency, which, in trade remedy investigations, determines whether a domestic industry is materially injured, or threatened with material injury, by dumped or subsidized imports. The ITC’s decisions in these trade remedy cases, generally either antidumping or countervailing duty investigations, can have major effects on both international trade and domestic industries, specifically by determining whether U.S. manufacturers and their workers are entitled to a remedy against unfair import competition. This article provides a brief introduction to this important agency.\nThe ITC is composed of six Commissioners, who are nominated by the President and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. No more than three Commissioners may be of any one political party (i.e., there are typically three Democrats and three Republicans) The Commissioners serve overlapping terms of nine years each, with a new term beginning every 18 months. The Chairman and Vice Chairman are designated by the President for two-year terms. The Chairman and Vice Chairman must be from different political parties, and the Chairman cannot be from the same political party as the preceding Chairman. The ITC has a staff of over 300 professionals, including investigators, analysts, economists, attorneys, and technical support personnel.\nThe ITC has four primary responsibilities, namely: (1) investigate and make determinations as to whether unfairly priced imports have injured a domestic industry; (2) investigate claims that imports have violated U.S. intellectual property rights; (3) provide independent analysis and information on tariffs, trade and competitiveness; and (4) maintain the U.S. tariff schedule.\nThe ITC is likely best known for its role in antidumping investigations. As explained in a previous article in this series, before antidumping duties can be assessed on unfairly priced imports, the ITC must find that the imports are a cause of material injury (or threat thereof) to the U.S. industry. In this regard, injury is defined as harm that is more than inconsequential, insignificant, or immaterial. Indeed, the domestic industry can demonstrate injury in a number of ways, typically through downward trends in financial data (production, shipments, profits, etc.). Operating losses are not a necessary component of material injury if it is otherwise clear that the industry would have been better off absent the subject imports. As long as the dumped imports are found to be a cause of material injury or threat thereof, the ITC will make an affirmative determination, even if there are other, more important causes of such injury or threat.\nIf the ITC makes a final affirmative determination (i.e. 3 or more of the 6 Commissioners finding material injury or threat of material injury) then an antidumping order will be issued that will require payment of duties for all covered imports from all producers in the subject countries in an amount to offset the unfair pricing. The antidumping order is issued for a five-year period but which can be re-issued for subsequent five-year periods through a “sunset review” process. Antidumping orders frequently result in U.S. manufacturers regaining lost market share, increased pricing levels in the United States, and improved operating profits and profit margins.\nThe ITC also conducts “Section 201” investigations (also known as “Safeguard” cases) which are one of the strongest trade remedy actions available under U.S. law. These cases are less common than antidumping investigations and to examine whether a particular import is causing or threatening to cause “serious injury” to a domestic industry (as compared to “material injury” in an antidumping investigation).\nBoth the injury and causal standards are higher in a Section 201 investigation as compared to an anti-dumping case. However, the remedy provided in a Section 201 can be much broader – covering imports potentially from every country in the world – and more meaningful than in an antidumping/countervailing duty case. Additionally, Section 201 does not require a finding of an unfair trade practice, as do the antidumping and countervailing duty laws.\nIf the ITC makes an affirmative injury determination under Section 201, the investigation proceeds to a remedy phase. During the remedy phase, ITC recommends specific actions to address the serious injury to the domestic industry. The ITC generally must make its injury finding within 120 days (150 days in more complicated cases) of the initiation of the Section 201 investigation, and must transmit its report to the President, together with any relief recommendations, within 180 days after initiation. The President can then accept, reject, or modify the ITC’s recommendation.\nFor more information regarding the U.S. International Trade Commission, please do not hesitate to contact Daniel B. Pickard, a partner in the International Trade practice of Wiley Rein LLP, in Washington DC. He can be reached at 202.719.7285 or via email at [email protected].\nBy Guest Contributor on 12/28/2021 / Featured, News / Leave a comment","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1531002"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7111218571662903,"wiki_prob":0.2888781428337097,"text":"Kumba Iron Ore (JSE:KIO)\nThemba Mkhwanazi\nMarket Cap (AUD): 159.81B\nSector: Basic Materials\nLast Trade (AUD): 496.18 +0 (+0%)\nKumba Iron (JSE:KIO) produces a high-grade iron ore that is one of the minerals that society needs to develop and prosper. Iron ore is the key component in steel, the most widely used of all metals. It is used in the construction of buildings and bridges, and manufacturing of vehicles and many household appliances.\nThe company's production process consists of: exploration; planning and building; mining; processing and blending; shipping; marketing and selling.\nThe company's exploration in South Africa is focused in the Northern Cape, close to its existing operations. On and near-mine exploration and resource definition drilling is conducted to increase confidence in the geological models; these are updated annually in support of life of mine and long-term planning.\nThe company's geologists and engineers design its mines using virtual mine planning systems. Kumba Iron builds mines that are effective, cost-efficient and environmentally sound – mines that minimise the company's environmental footprint while safeguarding its cash resources.\nThe company extracts iron ore by mining the iron ore bodies within its mining leases using open pit methods. Kumba Iron is implementing a technology roadmap that aims to accelerate the adoption of technology to improve safety, quality, efficiency and resource utilisation.\nThe company uses dense-media and ultrahigh density media processing and jigging technologies to regulate the physical properties of the finished product, removing impurities and improving product quality. It also supports the South African government’s objectives to maximise the developmental impact of the minerals sector.\nProcessing and blending\nBlending allows Kumba Iron to utilise products from its operations to provide niche specification products to its markets. Products are screened and sized to match customer requirements, and then transported through its outbound logistics chain.\nShipping, marketing and selling\nThe group sells iron ore domestically and internationally. Export customers are in a range of geographical locations around the globe, including China, Japan, India, South Korea and countries in Europe and MENA. Domestically, Kumba Iron sells ore to ArcelorMittal SA.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line572859"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5314631462097168,"wiki_prob":0.4685368537902832,"text":"400 County Center, 3rd Floor\nOffice hours are M-F (holidays\nexcepted) 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.\nTweets by SanMateoCoDA\nStephen M. Wagstaffe - District Attorney\nSMW_800.jpg\nI am pleased that you have visited the San Mateo County District Attorney website. We in the District Attorney's Office are committed to seek justice and accountability for all who violate the law in our county. We also seek to provide assistance for those victimized by criminals. Our efforts to achieve justice will continue to make San Mateo County as safe an environment as possible in which to live and work.\nThe mission of the District Attorney’s Office is the prosecution of adult and juvenile offenders, to provide services to victims of crime, enforcement of consumer and environmental laws, provision of legal and investigative support to other law enforcement agencies, and dissemination of public information about law enforcement.\nCondemnation - Racism And Bigotry\nAs District Attorney of San Mateo County, I join the other District Attorneys in California... Read more »\nExecutive Order prohibiting price gouging of at-home COVID test kits\nOn January 8, 2022 the Governor issued a statewide Executive Order (N-2-22) prohibiting price gouging in the sale of at-home COVID testing kits. It is operative through March 31, 2022. It generally prohibits anyone who sold at-home testing kits as of December 1, 2021 from increasing prices by greater than 10 percent. Anyone selling testing kits who did not sell them as of December 1, 2021 is prohibited from charging 50 percent greater than what they paid for the kit themselves. Violating the Executive Order is a misdemeanor violation of Government Code section 8665, which is punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 or imprisonment for up to six months, or both. This would also constitute a violation of the Unfair Competition Law. Please report illegal price gouging in San Mateo County to our Consumer & Environmental Unit. A complaint form can be obtained by calling (650) 363-4651. State and spell your name and address on the recording and a complaint form will be mailed to you. You can also fill out the consumer complaint form . Completed complaint forms should be emailed to smda@smcgov.org , sent by US mail to San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office, 400 County Center, 3 rd Floor, Redwood City, CA 94063 or delivered to our office. ... View moreView Executive Order prohibiting price gouging of at-home COVID test kits\nSMC Community College District Official Pleads Guilty\nOn January 5th, 2022, Jose Nunez, Vice Chancellor of Facilities for the the San Mateo County College District pled nolo contendere to two counts of the Education Code section 7054 felony: Use of Community College District resources for political purposes (the election of candidate Mohr for District Board and the bond measure for District projects). The defendant’s pleas were conditioned on his testifying fully and truthfully if called to testify as a witness in any proceeding or trial related to the DA’s Office ogoing investigation of the Community College District. There was no sentence limitation and the defendant faces a maximum sentence of 3 years, 8 months in state prison for the two felony convictions. The case was continued to July 15, 2022 8:30 to set a date for sentencing. The remaining charges were dismissed as part of the plea bargain for truthful testimony. The defendant remains out of custody on his own recognizance.... View moreView SMC Community College District Official Pleads Guilty\nBAY AREA PROSECUTORS JOIN FORCES TO COMBAT ORGANIZED RETAIL THEFT\nPosted by Press Release on Nov 24th 2021\nBAY AREA PROSECUTORS JOIN FORCES TO COMBAT ORGANIZED RETAIL THEFT As Organized Retail Thieves Turn to New Tactics, Bay Area Prosecutors Form Alliance to Ensure Accountability STOCKTON – Today, San Mateo County District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe announced an alliance between Contra Costa, Alameda, San Francisco, Marin, San Joaquin, and Santa Clara counties, law enforcement, and state agencies to combat the recent increase in organized retail theft. Each office has pledged a prosecutor to collaborate and participate in the joint effort. ... View moreView BAY AREA PROSECUTORS JOIN FORCES TO COMBAT ORGANIZED RETAIL THEFT","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line262311"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7309137582778931,"wiki_prob":0.7309137582778931,"text":"[Page 120]\n“Alte Hejm”\nFour Zionist Newspapers\n“HANOJGA” [noga is Hebrew, means to shine] Monthly No. 1\nPublished by the students of the “Tarbut” School\nEditor Icchok Szumowicz\nToday's edition contains 8 pages No. 1\n“OSTROWER LEBEN” [“Ostrow Life”]\n“NOSIV” [Hebrew, means route]\nCollected writings from Kibbutz “Nasiv” in Ostrow Maz.\nWarszawa 25 stycznia [January] 1935 – Warszawa 21 Shevat [January] 5695 [1935]\n“OSTROWER TRIBUNE” price 10 groschen\nFriday 7th December 1934 Friday 1st Tevet 5695 [1934]\nthe Work of Keren Kayemet l'Yisroel “Colosseum” Movie Theatre\nThe History of Ostrowa\nBy Arja Lejb Margolis, Tel-Aviv\nTranslated by Judie Ostroff Goldstein\nFor various reasons, Jews settled in Mazowsze [Mazovia] later than in other parts of Poland. The reasons being:\nThe political independence of the realm with its own court and political traditions.\nEconomic independence and strong opposition on the part of the Catholic Church.\nUntil 1526, Mazowsze was an independent duchy and the connection to the crown was weak, but the Mazowsze nobles recognized the Polish Kings and the government. By mid 14th century they swore loyalty to the Kings, but until 1526 they maintained their independence.\nThe Polish kings were able to incorporate Mazowsze into the crown in a process that began in the 15th century. Whenever a Mazowsze noble died without children, their land was incorporated into Greater Poland. In 1462 the districts of Rawa and Gostynim were incorporated in this manner. In 1464 – Sochachów and in 1495 Plock and Ostrowa. The largest part of Mazowsze Duchy was incorporated into the crown after the death of the last two dukes of the old Pyast dynasty died without heirs.\nThis happened in 1526. The area that was incorporated into the crown in 1526 was given wide autonomy and had their own judicial courts.\nAfter 1526 the entire Mazowsze Duchy was divided into three provinces: Rawa, Plock and Czersk (Mazowsze). (ref. “Historja Polska”, 104 by S. Koczewy). In 1578 King Batory instituted the Polish judicial system in Mazowsze.\nThere were several attempts by the nobility, from the 15th through the 18th century, to pass a law expelling the Jews from Mazowsze, but none were successful.\nWe hear demands from all sides to expel the Jews from Mazowsze until the end of the 18th century. Even the “Council of the Four Lands” produced a rabbinical decree that no Jews should settle in Mazowsze. In 1669 the interdiction decrees from the “Council of the Four Lands” was read aloud in the Tikocyn synagogue. (Pinkus Tiktyn)\nA law was passed by the King, beginning 28th March 1789 and in force until 1862, forbidding Jews from settling in Ostrów Mazowiecka. In 1856 the Jews were already a majority, two thousand four hundred ten Jews to one thousand five hundred sixty Christians.\nI found this in the “Jewish Encyclopedia”, Petrograd, published by Efrun (volume 12, Pg. 28-147). Also from a population census in 1897, the number of inhabitants in the Ostrów district totaled ninety-eight thousand – seventeen thousand two hundred ninety were Jews. The population of Ostrowa itself was ten thousand four hundred seventy-one of which five thousand nine hundred sixty were Jews.\nThere were many attempts to keep the Jews out of Mazowsze by both Christians and Jews, however none of them were successful. The Jews continued to live in Mazowsze and spread out into all the cities and villages, including the Jewish community in Ostrowa.\nOstrów Mazowiecka, a district city, had belonged to Lomza Gubernia. The city is located on a flat, hill-less area that is the water table for the Narew and Bug rivers. The inlets from the two rivers flowed into the third, the Brok. (ref. Slownik Geographiczny).\nOstrów Mazowiecka was ninety-three versts from Warszawa, forty-one versts from Lomza, ninety versts from Bialystok, fifteen versts from Malkinia (railroad station on the line Warszawa-Petrograd) and ten versts from the Bug River.\nA top grade, important highway goes through Ostrowa from Serock and Wyszków to Bialystok. There were not many rivers in the Ostrów District. (Neighbouring Ostroleka District was rich in water.) The middle area in the northern part of the district had no water. The southern and eastern parts have the Brok River with several inlets from the Bug River.\nAlmost the entire Ostrów District, starting from the historical era, was one large, first growth primeval forest, in which there were very sparse, scattered, small communities (colonies). Communities during the hunting age were in the forests around Brok. The principal for the city was the hunting-palace of the Dukes. The unproductive soil was not conducive to establishing a lot of colonies. This was not a good area for large agricultural endeavors. There were some middle-sized, but mainly small peasant holdings and there were only fifty-seven noble households.\nIn the realm of communications, Ostrów District, particularly the southern and eastern sections were well provided for.\nThe Bug River flowed at the southern border of the district. The railroad Warszawa-St. Petersburg cut through the southeastern portion of the district for thirty versts with stations in Malkinia Górna and Czyzewo.\nThe top-grade Bialystok highway cut through the district, for forty-three versts, from southwest to northeast. Another second-grade highway went through the district (through Ostrowa to Ostroleka) for twenty-eight versts. About the founding of Ostrowa, there is a version that states the city had royal privileges and the city had been established in 1410.\nThe Duke of Mazowiecka, Boleslaw IV, had given his village (Ostrowa) the privileges of a city in 1410. The Mazowiecka Princess Anny (when Poland gained independence the old market, called Rynek, was renamed “Plac Anny Mazowiecka”) never extended the privileges.\nIn 1930 (when I was a member of the city council) the city celebrated its 500th anniversary. The Mayor, Jan Zakszewski (who thought of himself as an historian) put out a brochure about the history of the city.\nAfter the incorporation of Mazowiecka (into the Polish crown) the Polish kings confirmed the privileges of the city Ostrów Mazowiecka. According to a decision by the Sejm in 1565, Ostrów was united under one Governor.\nIn 1616 in back of the city was a royal court, where trials took place in matters concerning the villages and the city. At that time there were four hundred fifty-three houses in the city. Behind the city there was also a mulberry tree plantation (with a total of thirty thousand trees) run by A. Bogucki.\nIn 1660, Ostrowa together with surrounding villages had 5,509 inhabitants. An order from the King dated the 28th of March, 1789 (in effect until 1862) forbid Jews from settling in Ostrów Mazowiecka. In 1856 the Jews were already a majority with 2,410 Jews to 1,560 Christians.\nIn 1827 there were 184 houses and 1,792 inhabitants in the city and in 1860, 297 houses and 4,119 inhabitants (of which 2,486 were Jews).\nThe spreading Ostrów District became part of Lomza Gubernia that was established in 1867 with eight communities from the old Ostroleka District and two from Pultusk District.\nThere was already a railroad line to Warszawa in the district in 1867. There were 77,700 inhabitants in the District – by religion: 61,761 Catholics, 2,797Evangelists, 67 Protestants and 12,515 Jews. In Ostrowa there were two elementary schools and in the surrounding villages: Brok, Nur, Andrzejewo, Wasewo, Zambrów, Czyzewo, Dlugiosiodlo and Komorowo – only one school.\nThe Ostrów District was divided into twelve communities, in which there were four hundred twenty-six villages. Roads were built to Wyszków and Bialystok.\nSix fairs a year were held in Ostrowa. There was a tobacco factory, a lot of windmills and a famous toilet water factory owned by the pharmacist and established in the pharmacy. Afterward, a hospital was built (Christian, not used by the Jews), a Post Office-Telegraph building, and government buildings for the civil servants.\nIn 1886 there were two schools (one for boys and one for girls), a Justice of the Peace for four districts, a district office, a City Hall, Post Office-Telegraph office. There were 472 houses (five were brick) with 7,800 inhabitants: 2,688 Catholics, 6 Protestants, 18 Evangelists and 5,088 Jews.\nFrom the population census of 1897, the total number of inhabitants in Ostrów District was 98,000 of which 17,290 were Jews. In Ostrowa of 10,471 inhabitants, 5,660 were Jews.\nOf all the villages in the district, these had more than five hundred inhabitants. Andrzejewo had 1,448 inhabitants (of which 586 were Jews). Brok had 2,657 (1,296 Jews). In Wasewo there were 576 (196 Jews). Dlugosiodlo numbered 1,249 Christians (800 Jews). Zareby Koscielne had 1,241 Christians and (1,063 Jews). Malkinia had 1,091 Christians (348 Jews). In Nur there were 2,133 Christians and (1,212). Poreba had 541 Christians (74 Jews); Suchcice 522 Christians (88 Jews) and Czyzewo 1,785 Christians (1,596 Jews).\nAt the end of the 19th century there were sixty-three windmills with a yearly output of 53,450 rubles, nineteen water mills with 6,620 rubles, Liquor Distilleries: in Branszczyk, Zoszków and Trynosy with an output of 88,500 rubles; Tobacco factory – 19,615 Rubles; Brewery – 7,500 Rubles. At the pharmacy there was a toilet water factory (famous throughout the country).\nIn the 20th century, thanks to Jewish initiative and organization, industries grew. The forest was a treasure. There were two sawmills in the city and forestry was the largest industry in town, as well as in the villages around Ostrowa. Lumber was sent to Warszawa and other cities far and wide, as well being exported to Germany and England.\nDue to the large military presence in the city and in Komorowo, steams mills were built and had a large output especially the large mill “Automat”. With twenty-four pairs of rollers it was one of the largest in Poland and shipped product all over the country.\nThe brewery also increased its output and was known for its high quality beer that was also shipped to Warszawa. There were also some small manufacturing enterprises such as a glass factory, a vinegar factory, etc.\nThe Jewish population however did not grow because a lot of Jews had moved. A lot had left (especially the young ones) for the large cities, like Warszawa, Łódz, etc. An even larger number had emigrated to America, Argentina, Uruguay and other countries around the globe. Some of the young people had made aliyah.\nIn 1921, the population of the city was 13,425 of which 6,812 were Jews.\nIn 1934 (after Komorowo and other villages were incorporated into the city), there were 20,000 inhabitants of which 8.000 were Jews.\nA Walk Through the City\nBy Arija Lejb Margolis, Tel-Aviv\nIn the eastern part of Poland, in Mazowsze, lies our town Ostrowa, whose name became Ostrów Mazowiecka. The city is surrounded by forests, depended upon for the past five hundred years. Back when people began to inhabit the city, there was one large forest that extended for many kilometers. Now roads stretch in many directions. First of all there is the highway from Warszawa which cuts through Radzymin, Wyszków, then goes through Ostrowa and continues on to Zambrów, Bialystok, Grodno, Wilno and as far as Peterburg [St. Petersburg].\nEntering the city, off to the right, is the road to the village of Brok on the “Bug” and on the left stretches the road to Goworowo, Rózan-Maków-Pultusk.\nContinuing through the city via the market, ahead on the right is the road to the railroad station Malkinia Górna, 15 kilometers from Ostrowa. On the left stretches the road over to Komorowo village - 3 kilometers from Ostrowa, which continues to Ostroleka and as far as the German border.\nThe highway then goes over to Zambrów (30 kilometers from Ostrowa), to various other villages and on to Bialystok.\nFrom ulica Ostrolecka turn off to ulica Lubiejewska (once called ulica Kosa) which is the road to the railroad station Siedlce-Lomza (which is located three kilometers from the city) and then the road over to Sniadowo and on to Lomza, fifty kilometers from Ostrowa.\nAround Ostrowa are the small villages Wasewo, Poreba, Czerwin, Nur, Sterdyn, Brok, Dlugosiodlo, Andrzejewo, Zareby Koscielne and Czyzewo; whose merchants buy and sell in Ostrowa, the same as in scores of Prince's estates such as Biel, Ligiawe, Trynosy, and Kalinowo. There are also hundreds of large and small villages from which the peasants bring their products to sell and then to buy the goods they need for their farms and homes. The market was held every Monday and Thursday; once a month (Monday) was the Monthly Fair; four times a year – there was what people called the “Year-Fair”.\nThe grain trade was a major industry, as there were several steam-mills; the main one being the large mill “automat”. Also the lumber trade played a major role in our livelihood. There were two large sawmills: one belonged to Zelman Jozef Nutkiewicz and the other to the family of the late Hirszel Tejtel. Forestry was important. But in Poland the wood was sent to foreign countries to become various materials. Grain and wood actually were the two main industries providing employment in the city.\nIn the centre of the city lies the old marketplace where the City Hall now stands, built 1925 to 1927, in the Kraków style with a tower and a clock on all four sides. The City Hall was used for town council sessions. The city committee (subordinate to the town council) which managed the city affairs met there as well. The town council and committee were chosen every five years.\nIn former times, before the First World War (1914 -1918), Jews had no influence over decisions made at City Hall. The city President managed the city himself, asking nothing of anyone and in charge of everybody. The Jews struggled to pay high taxes and had no say in the matter.\nTejtel family sawmill\nFrom right: Michal Tejtel, A.D. Pokrzywa and Awigdor Tejtel\nDuring the German occupation, there was a small change for the better. There was a Jewish Vice-Mayor (Hirszel Tejtel) as well as some Jewish officials (Icchok Morgensztern, Kaplański and others).\nDuring the era of Russian rule, Shamas Natan Zelig and Shamas Hirszel Balbier - called “szkolnik” [Polish, “teacher”], were often at City Hall as they registered the marriage and birth acts in the municipal record books. And at times the books were not in order. Some births had not been registered, or had been registered late. Later these irregularities created confusion when boys were asked to report to the military committee (conscription). Since the names in the register were not correct, the committee was not always able to determine who should report for the draft. An “expert” at doing this was Shamas Hirszel.\nAround the four sides of the marketplace stood low wooden houses, in ones and twos. All the businesses in the market, wholesale and retail, were Jewish: food, iron, fashion goods, leather, haberdashery, kerosene, paint, food products - a to z.; as it had been for hundreds of years.\nIn the last years between the two world wars, the Christians had already opened businesses in the city. The Christian owners competed with the Jews, not by lowering prices, but by inciting the Christian population to boycott the Jewish merchants.\nThe entire life of the city was concentrated around the old marketplace. The streets branching off from the market were: Warszawer, 3go Maja, Pułtuska, Nurski, Malkińska, Solna, Jatkowa and the streets that joined with ulica Ostrołęcka to Komorowo.\nStreets run between the wooden houses, here and there a brick house, straight and crooked, the length and breadth of the entire city as far as the fields, forests and highways which connect with other cities and villages. Narrow and wide streets connect street with street in the city itself.\nThe Jewish quarter exists first from the Old Market (as far back as the uprising in Poland named “Plac Kzienznej Anny Mazowieckiej”) and also the streets: Warszawska, Brokowska, Chausée Brokowska, Miodowa, Pułtuska, Rożanska, Koza (or Mieckiewicz), Jagielońska, Nurski, Solna, Ostrołęcka, Jatkowa and Batorego. Mixed streets were ulica 3go Maja, Malkińska, Pocztowa, Kosciuszki Alley, Ugniewska, Cmentarza, Lubiejewska and the Piaskes. Clean gentile streets were away from the centre– around the outskirts of the city, with their own gardens and orchards.\nWarszawska Street\nulica 3go Maja\nPocztowa Street\nAt each of the corners (four) of the marketplace there was a water-pump (four in all) where people went to get “hard” water for use in the house and for livestock. The pumps squeaked and groaned each time the curved handle went up. In winter there was usually a pile of ice around the pumps that hampered access. Often the water carrier had to put down burning pieces of wood to melt the ice.\n“Soft water” or “tea water” from the wodoczong [water pump] was also available at the old market. The water carrier used to deliver water from house to house. Crazy Icchok carried water for many years. He believed that he was an Emperor with his own militia (In summer when the military would leave the city to go on maneuvers, he deserted his pails and went off with the military, carrying a pack on his shoulder like a rifle. The officers already knew him and did not interfere). Szepsel wasertreger [water carrier] was also popular. Later, a fire hut [fire station] was put up near the wodoczong. (In 1925 during the building of the city hall, the wodoczong and the fire hut were removed).\nBesides being large and small wood and grain merchants, Jews were: buyers, sellers, re-sellers, brokers, wagon drivers, porters, craftsmen and old clothes peddlers at the fairs here in town and away from home.\nThe “rulers” of the small market were the fish, fruit and vegetable merchants, for whom the housewives would tremble with fear and if not careful were taken in “by their big mouths”. During the winter, the merchants' wives wore warm coats, padded with soft cotton, sat on top of the stalls, kegs and baskets with a pot of glowing coals between their knees to stay warm.\nFish was delivered in wooden “berths” and fruits in small wooden barrels or round, deep baskets. Spread out over the wooden stalls were red and yellow cherries, green gooseberries, rosy red-berries, plums of all kinds, large apples, pears, black radish, red radish, yellow carrots, onions, beets, fruits and vegetables - all to delight the eye with cool, fresh produce. The small market was full, even in the weeks before the arrival of Yontef.\nThe streets were paved with round fieldstones (cobblestones), pressed together and wild grass grew between the stones.\nIn latter years, along Warszawska (later Pilsudskiego) and 3go Maja (formerly Przedmieszcze) there were sidewalks made of cement slabs only on one side of the street. In the lanes there were none; only a deep gutter where a gully, divided by pointed stones, kept the rainwater in the gutter. Young boys took off their boots and socks and waded in the water, which froze in winter\nTwo young, heder boys\nand became a slide. Trees were found only on the Christian streets. The Jewish shtetl consisted of a lot of wooden houses, a few brick houses [covered with stucco], narrow lanes, open courtyards used as public access to get from street to street, narrow footpaths and inner courtyards. They told about a poor, unassuming, but respectful life; a partnership between house and house, courtyard and courtyard. Despite their forlorn appearance, every street had its own way of life, local colour and history.\nStanding between Warszawska and Brokowska highways, at the Russian Orthodox Church, is a water pump; opposite the water pump is the white brick house of the Jewish doctor Kliaczke (during Word War One, 1914-1918 he was exiled to Russia), which was later used by the cultural society and public library.\nOn the other side of the Orthodox Church was the Promenade Garden (that the Poles called Napoleon Square) During the day the children played there and at night - couples in love.\nOn Sunday the bells from the Orthodox Church called people to prayer. From the other corner of the city, on ulica 3go Maja, the Catholic Church did the same and they competed with each other to see which would overpower the other with their bim-bom, bim-bom.\nA new era arrived. The Poles took some land from the Orthodox Church and added it to the promenade-garden.\nFurther along ulica Warszawska, past the brewery was the sadzawka. Who does not remember the sadzawka from childhood, the natural pond where children caught small fish. Also, during the summer, the elders would rest in the shade of the beautiful trees and in winter, there were skaters on the frozen pond.\nPast the sadzawka is the house of Abram Icchok Frejman. He supplied meat to the Polish military in Komorowo and other towns.\nNext to it - the home of the big lumber merchant, Jozef Froimowicz, partner in his father-in-law's sawmill. Opposite right - the building of the Governor in Ostrowa - and its garden - one of the prettiest in the city. Only the garden separated the 2 roads: the one on the right, the Warszawska Highway, via Wyszków and Radzymin. The forest runs the entire length of the road. There one rented summer cottages and also strolled; on the left - the highway to Brok, ten kilometers from Ostrowa. The entire road - full of woods where most people strolled and on Shabes the poor craftsmen and workers came to rest with their families. These woods could tell many tales from the romantic era.\nOstrow-Mazowiecka, Poland Yizkor Book Project JewishGen Home Page\nThis web page created by Lance Ackerfeld\nUpdated 3 Jul 2010 by LA","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line484051"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8332740068435669,"wiki_prob":0.8332740068435669,"text":"Local Taxi Info\nWelcome to the Miami Taxi Fare Finder. This page will calculate your cab fare using Miami, FL taxi rates. To begin, enter your travel information in the fields below the map.\nAdd $2.00 from Port of Miami\nAdd $1.55 from Miami airport\nZone rates available\n$27.00 between Airport and Seaport\nMIA ↔ Port of Miami $27.00\nCentral Cabs (305) 532-5555\nYellow Cab no. 965 (305) 281-7392\nSuper Yellow Cabs (305) 888-7777\nYellow Cabs (305) 444-4444\nYellow Cab Southwest (305) 266-7799\nMiami Yellow Cab (305) 400-0000\nHow much does a taxi cab cost from Port of Miami - Dodge Island, Miami, Florida 33132, United States to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States in Miami, FL?\nor select a point of interest… Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (FLL) Miami Convention Center Miami International Airport (MIA) Port of Miami Doral Golf Resort & Spa Four Seasons Hotel Miami Hyatt Regency Miami JW Marriott Miami Mandarin Oriental Marriott's Villas at Doral Sonesta Hotel Coconut Grove Historic Virginia Key Beach Park Miami Metrozoo Miami Seaquarium Museum of Contemporary Art Jackson Memorial Hospital University of Miami Front Porch Cafe Timo Versailles Restaurant American Airlines Arena Hard Rock Stadium Coconut Grove Coral Gables Little Havana Miami Beach (Ocean Drive) Overtown South Beach (Lincoln Road) Fort Lauderdale\nPopular Taxi Fare Estimates for Miami, FL\nPort of Miami to Miami International Airport (MIA): $31.79\nFort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (FLL) to Miami International Airport (MIA): $73.73\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (FLL): $74.44\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Miami Beach (Ocean Drive): $37.38\nPort of Miami to Fort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (FLL): $72.62\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to South Beach (Lincoln Road): $39.49\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Brickell, Miami, Florida 33130, United States: $31.46\nSouth Beach (Lincoln Road) to Port of Miami: $23.30\nFort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (FLL) to Miami Beach (Ocean Drive): $76.83\nHollywood, Florida, United States to Miami Beach, Miami, Florida 33125, United States: $54.58\nFort Lauderdale, Florida, United States to Miami Flight Service Station - KTMB Kendall Tamiami Executive Airport, 14301 SW 128th St, Miami, Florida 33186, United States: $119.63\nFort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (FLL) to South Beach (Lincoln Road): $76.02\nHoliday Inn Port Of Miami-Downtown, 340 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, Florida 33132, United States to Port of Miami: $10.13\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States to Collins Avenue, Miami Beach, Florida 33139, United States: $45.91\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Hyatt Regency Miami: $28.05\nFort Lauderdale, Florida, United States to Miami Beach, Miami, Florida 33125, United States: $72.23\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Port of Miami: $33.14\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to JW Marriott Miami: $30.61\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL), 100 Terminal Dr, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, 33315, United States of America: $74.31\nFort Lauderdale, Florida, United States to The Ritz-Carlton, 1 Lincoln Rd, Miami Beach, Florida 33139, United States: $80.39\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States to Fontainebleau Miami Beach, 4441 Collins Ave, Miami Beach, Florida 33140, United States: $37.88\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Port Of Miami - Carnival Cruise, Terminal D - 1435 North Cruise Boulevard, Port of Miami, Miami, FL 33132, Miami, Florida, 33132, United States of America: $31.93\nPort of Miami to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States: $31.82\nFort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL), 100 Terminal Dr, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33315, United States to 1109 Brickell Avenue, Miami, Florida 33131, United States: $70.85\nFort Lauderdale/Hollywood International Airport (FLL) to Port of Miami: $73.41\n153 Northwest 6th Street, Miami, Florida 33125, United States to 151 Southeast 15th Road, Miami, Florida 33129, United States: $11.28\nPort Everglades, SE 19th Ave., Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316, United States to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America: $77.38\nFort Lauderdale Cruise Terminal, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316, United States to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America: $76.19\nPort of Miami to Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL), 100 Terminal Dr, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33315, United States: $72.57\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Holiday Inn Port Of Miami-Downtown, 340 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, Florida 33132, United States: $28.07\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Four Seasons Hotel Miami: $33.82\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to 550 Southeast 6th Street, Hialeah, Florida 33010, United States: $15.76\n620 E Las Olas Blvd, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33301, United States to Port Everglades, SE 19th Ave., Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33316, United States: $16.11\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Fort Lauderdale: $80.94\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States to The Ritz-Carlton, 1 Lincoln Rd, Miami Beach, Florida 33139, United States: $40.41\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Boca Raton, Florida, United States: $122.41\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States to Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL), 100 Terminal Dr, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33315, United States: $74.31\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States to Sawgrass Mills, Sunrise, Florida 33323, United States: $89.69\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Provident Doral at the Blue, 5300 NW 87th Ave, Doral, Florida 33178, United States: $31.63\nFort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL), 100 Terminal Dr, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33315, United States to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida 33122, United States: $73.76\nFort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (FLL), 100 Terminal Dr, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, 33315, United States of America to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America: $73.76\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Islamorada, Florida, United States: $197.87\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Miami Marriott Biscayne Bay, 1633 N Bayshore Dr, Miami, Florida, 33132, United States of America: $27.87\nHyatt Regency Miami to Port of Miami: $11.42\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to Miami, Florida, United States: $27.85\nPort of Miami, Miami, Florida 33132, United States to Coral Gables, Florida, United States: $34.61\nPort of Miami Terminal C, Miami, Florida, 33132, United States of America to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America: $31.44\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Port of Miami, Miami, Florida 33132, United States: $32.45\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Fontainebleau Miami Beach, 4441 Collins Ave, Miami Beach, Florida, 33140, United States of America: $37.67\nAventura Mall, 19501 Biscayne Blvd, Aventura, Florida 33180, United States to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America: $53.61\nHilton Miami Airport, 5101 Blue Lagoon Dr, Miami, Florida 33126, United States to Miami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America: $17.39\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Pompano Beach, Florida, United States: $97.47\nMiami, Florida 33122, United States to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States: $80.94\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to 2889 Mcfarlane Road, Miami, Florida 33133, United States: $28.59\nMiami International Airport (MIA) to 4628 Ocean Drive, Lauderdale By The Sea, Florida 33308, United States: $96.52\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Port of Miami Terminal C, Miami, Florida, 33132, United States of America: $32.07\nMiami International Airport (MIA), 2100 NW 42nd Ave, Miami, Florida, 33122, United States of America to Hotel YVE Miami, 146 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, Florida, 33132, United States of America: $28.34\nNorth Cruise Boulevard, Miami, Florida 33132, United States to Brickell City Centre, 701 S Miami Ave, Miami, Florida, 33130, United States of America: $16.15","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line525497"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9827255010604858,"wiki_prob":0.9827255010604858,"text":"Sebastian Rotella is a senior reporter at ProPublica. An award-winning foreign correspondent and investigative reporter, he worked for almost 23 years for the Los Angeles Times before joining ProPublica in 2010. He covers international security issues including terrorism, intelligence, organized crime, human rights and migration. His reporting has taken him across the Americas and Europe, and to the Middle East, South Asia and North Africa.\nIn 2020, Sebastian was part of the ProPublica team whose coverage of the pandemic and the CDC was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for public service. The Association of Health Care Journalists gave that coverage the Award for Excellence in Health Care Journalism in the investigative category.\nIn 2016, he was co-writer and correspondent for Terror in Europe, a Frontline documentary that was a finalist for the Investigative Reporters and Editors broadcast/video award. In 2013, his Finding Oscar investigation with This American Life won a Peabody Award, a Dart Center Award, and two awards from the Overseas Press Club. In 2012, he was recognized with Italy’s Urbino Press Award for excellence in American journalism. His A Perfect Terrorist investigation of the Mumbai attacks (with Frontline) was nominated for an Emmy, and the online version of the story got an Overseas Press Club Award in 2011.\nIn 2006, he was named a Pulitzer finalist for international reporting for his L.A. Times coverage of terrorism and Muslim communities in Europe, which won the German Marshall Fund’s senior award for excellence in European reporting. He was part of a team whose coverage of al-Qaida received an Overseas Press Club award and finalist honors for Harvard University’s Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting in 2002. In 2001, he won Columbia University’s Maria Moors Cabot Prize for his career coverage of Latin America. His work in Latin America also won honors from the Overseas Press Club, Inter-American Press Association and the American Society of Newspaper Editors.\nAt the L.A. Times, Sebastian served as a correspondent at the Mexican border, in South America and in Europe. His border reporting inspired two songs on Bruce Springsteen’s album The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995).\nSebastian is the author of three novels: Rip Crew (2018), The Convert’s Song (2014), and Triple Crossing (2011).He is also the author of Twilight on the Line: Underworlds and Politics at the U.S.-Mexico Border (1998). He speaks Spanish, French and Italian. He is a graduate of the University of Michigan, studied at the University of Barcelona, and was born in Chicago.\nSaudi Fugitives Accused of Serious Crimes Get Help to Flee While U.S. Officials Look the Other Way\nThe FBI, Department of Homeland Security and other agencies have known for years that Saudi diplomats were helping Saudi fugitives. But Washington avoided even raising the problem out of concern that it might hurt Saudi cooperation in the fight against terrorism.\nApril 26, 2019, 5 a.m. EDT\nDespite Trump’s Tough Talk About Migrant Smugglers, He’s Undercut Efforts to Stop Them\nICE has shifted manpower and money away from more complex investigations to support the administration’s push to arrest, detain and deport undocumented immigrants.\nFeb. 21, 2019, 5 a.m. EST\nA pesar de sus duras palabras contra traficantes de migrantes, Trump ha socavado esfuerzos para frenarles\nICE ha transferido personal y dinero de investigaciones más complejas para respaldar la campaña de la administración de arrestar, encarcelar y deportar a los inmigrantes ilegales.\nTrump Takes a Tougher Line on Pakistan, but the 2008 Mumbai Attack Goes Unpunished\nAlthough the administration’s policy shift has raised hopes, a Pakistani intelligence officer and others indicted in the killings of 166 people remain at large. Critics say the Pakistani government protects them.\nNov. 26, 2018, 5 a.m. EST\nEl extraño caso de los diplomáticos estadounidenses en Cuba: el misterio se intensifica y las divisiones en Washington también\nFuncionarios de la administración Trump insisten que los americanos fueron atacados, aunque las pruebas no aparecen. “La cosa de Cuba es uno de los pocos misterios no resueltos que tenemos,” dijo un oficial.\nNov. 9, 2018, 11:35 a.m. EST\nThe Strange Case of American Diplomats in Cuba: As the Mystery Deepens, So Do Divisions in Washington\nTrump officials insist the Americans were attacked, even as the evidence fails to materialize. “The Cuba thing is one of the few unsolved mysteries we’ve got,” an official said.\nNov. 9, 2018, 5 a.m. EST\nThe U.S. Considered Declaring Russia a State Sponsor of Terror, Then Dropped It\nAfter an attack on a former spy, the State Department pondered placing that label on Putin’s government. Instead, the Trump administration continued a longtime U.S. policy of treating Russia as a partner in fighting terrorism even as evidence of its misbehavior mounts.\nMay 21, 2018, 1:41 p.m. EDT\nJohn Bolton Skewed Intelligence, Say People Who Worked With Him\nFormer colleagues say the next national security adviser — whose job is to marshal information and present it to the president fairly — resists input that doesn’t fit his biases and retaliates against people he disagrees with.\nMarch 30, 2018, 5 a.m. EDT\nState Department Likely to Extend Cuts to U.S. Embassy in Cuba\nSix months after the State Department pulled most of its diplomats from Havana because of mysterious incidents that injured 24 Americans, the Trump administration is poised to make the reductions permanent. The decision could affect U.S. intelligence, Cuban migration and support for Cuban human rights advocates.\nMarch 1, 2018, 5 p.m. EST\nEl sonido y la furia: Dentro del misterio de la embajada de La Habana\nMás de un año después de que diplomáticos americanos empezaron a sufrir extraños síntomas en Cuba, la investigación no ha logrado determinar cómo fueron lesionados ni por quien, y el FBI y la CIA difieren sobre el caso. Una investigación de ProPublica revela las muchas capas del misterio — y las maniobras políticas que están transformando las relaciones entre EE.UU. y Cuba.\nFeb. 14, 2018, 12:46 p.m. EST\nThe Sound and the Fury: Inside the Mystery of the Havana Embassy\nMore than a year after American diplomats began to suffer strange, concussion-like symptoms in Cuba, a U.S. investigation is no closer to determining how they were hurt or by whom, and the FBI and CIA are at odds over the case. A ProPublica investigation reveals the many layers to the mystery — and the political maneuvering that is reshaping U.S.-Cuba relations.\nRussian Politician Who Reportedly Sent Millions to NRA Has Long History in Spain\nSpanish authorities were poised to arrest Alexander Torshin in a money-laundering case in 2013 when he mysteriously canceled his trip to Spain.\nJan. 19, 2018, 5:01 p.m. EST\nA Gangster Place in the Sun: How Spain’s Fight Against the Mob Revealed Russian Power Networks\nNov. 10, 2017, 10 a.m. EST\nTruck Terror Attacks May Be a Sign of ISIS Weakness, But They’re Very Hard to Stop\nAs ISIS loses territory on the battlefield, U.S. counterterror officials have been bracing for the sort of lone-actor vehicle assault that left eight people dead yesterday in lower Manhattan. The question that lingers for all of the world’s major cities is what more can be done to protect against such attacks.\nNov. 1, 2017, 3:54 p.m. EDT\nRussia’s Shadow-War in a Wary Europe\nFears of Russian meddling in a French vote reflect an overt and covert influence campaign.\nApril 4, 2017, 8 a.m. EDT\nFormer ‘Border Czar’ Gives Real Facts About Immigration\nAlan Bersin says a border wall won’t address the real challenges confronting the U.S. border enforcement system: hopelessly understaffed immigration courts and lawlessness and poverty in Central America.\nFormer Intelligence Official: Trump Conflict With Spy Agencies Creates ‘Dangerous Moment’\nMatthew Olsen, a senior national security official in both Democratic and Republican administrations, says the ongoing conflict between President-elect Trump and the U.S. intelligence community poses grave risks.\nJan. 16, 2017, 8:59 a.m. EST\nFederal Agents Arrest a Former Guatemalan Soldier Charged With Massacring Civilians\nThe Maryland resident has been linked to a 1982 attack on the village of Dos Erres in Guatemala that led to the deaths of about 250 children, women and unarmed men.\nU.S. Identifies ISIS Planner in Attacks on Europe\nState Department sanctions a former soldier in the French Foreign Legion as a senior plotter as French authorities roll up an ISIS network said to be planning new attacks.\nNov. 22, 2016, 12:05 p.m. EST\nU.S. Identifies Key Player in ISIS Attacks on Europe\nAmerican officials say the investigation of the assaults on Paris and Brussels has led them to a shadowy Moroccan militant who was raised in Southern France and now lives in Syria.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1806657"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8506852388381958,"wiki_prob":0.8506852388381958,"text":"1LT Francis Noel Barbarin\nBrooklyn, Kings County (Brooklyn), New York, USA\nGeorgetown, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, USA\nWashington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, USA\nAmphitheater, Lot 137 East. Unmarked burial.\nAge 81 years, 9 months, 16 days. Buried March 1, 1883.\n14th Annual Reunion Of The Association Of The Graduates Of The United States Military Academy, At West Point, New York, June 12, 1883, Courier Printing Co., East Saginaw, Michigan, 1883.\nFrancis N. Barbarin\nNo. 237. Class of 1820.\nDied February 28, 1883, at Georgetown, District of Columbia, aged 82.\nFrancis Noel Barbarin was born in Brooklyn, New York on the 12th of May 1801 and died in Georgetown, D.C., on the 28th of February 883, being in his 82d year.\nHe entered the Military Academy at West Point as a cadet March 1815 and graduating in 1820 was commissioned in the Artillery Corps in 1821.\nHis death leaves but one survivor to the class to which he belonged.\nIn 1829 he was married to Miss S.M. Totten, sister of Joseph G. Totten, Chief of the Corps of Engineers, United States Army.\nAfter serving in the Army for sixteen years at Arsenals and Posts, as Assistant Instructor of Infantry Tactics at West Point and as Assistant Commissary of Subsistence, he resigned his commission as First Lieutenant in the United States Artillery Corps and was for some time engaged as a Civil Engineer in the construction of Railroads in North Carolina, of which his friend, Major Walter Gwynn, a graduate of the class of 1822, was Chief Engineer. On January 10, 1845, he was appointed Chief Clerk in the Office of the Chief of Engineers, United States Army, discharging the duties of that officer until 1871, when declining years rendered them too arduous for his performance and he was placed in immediate charge of one of the important branches of the office, which position he filled up to the time of his death, his clear, unimpaired mind and vigorous memory combining to render his services specially valuable. He was a man of exemplary character, of affable and courteous manners and during his long service in office he had the confidence of the several chiefs of the Bureau and their associates and the esteem of his fellow clerks. Always blessed with remarkable health, he was rarely absent from his post of duty and his death was caused by a severe cold contracted the last day he spent at his office, which, resulting in an attack of pneumonia, proved fatal on the third day and he passed to his rest as gently and peacefully as he had always lived.\nHe was buried from the Chapel of Oak Hill Cemetery, D.C. and in that beautiful home of the dead he sleeps with the beloved wife who had preceded him but a few years.\nCullum's Register of Officers and Graduates of the United States Military Academy\nAppointed from New York.\nMilitary History: Cadet at the Military Academy March 1, 1815 to July 1, 1820, when he was graduated and promoted in the Army to Third Lieutenant, Ordnance, July 1, 1820. Served on Ordnance duty July 1, 1820 to August 20, 1822; in garrison at Fort Moultrie, South Carolina 1822‑1824 and Fort Monroe, Virginia (Artillery School for Practice), 1824‑1826; at the Military Academy, as Assistant Instructor of Infantry Tactics January 19 to April 20, 1826; on Ordnance duty, April 20, 1826 to November 2, 1827; in garrison at Fort Wolcott, Rhode Island 1827‑1833 and on Ordnance duty January 1, 1834 to September 16, 1836. Resigned, September 16, 1836.\nSecond Lieutenant, 3d Artillery, in Re-organization of Army June 1, 1821 to rank from July 1, 1820.\nFirst Lieutenant, 3d Artillery, February 28, 1827.\nCivil History: Civil Engineer in Virginia and North Carolina, 1836‑1840. Chief Clerk of United States Engineer Department, 1845‑1871 and Clerk, 1871‑1883. Died February 28, 1883, at Georgetown, D.C. Aged 82. Buried Oak Hill Cemetery, Washington, D.C.\nSally Markoe Totten Barbarin\nFrancis Sinclair Barbarin\nCatalina Barbarin\nMary Curtis Barbarin Laub\nSee more Barbarin memorials in:\nCreated by: SLGMSD\nFind a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/29472045/francis-noel-barbarin : accessed ), memorial page for 1LT Francis Noel Barbarin (12 May 1801–28 Feb 1883), Find a Grave Memorial ID 29472045, citing Oak Hill Cemetery, Washington, District of Columbia, District of Columbia, USA ; Maintained by SLGMSD (contributor 46825959) .\nAdd Photos for 1LT Francis Noel Barbarin\nFulfill Photo Request for 1LT Francis Noel Barbarin\nyour computer for 1LT Francis Noel Barbarin memorial.\nI thought you might like to see a memorial for 1LT Francis Noel Barbarin I found on Findagrave.com.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line773249"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9568108916282654,"wiki_prob":0.9568108916282654,"text":"Maryland accused of race discrimination over scrapping of Baltimore rail project\nGovernor Larry Hogan faces a civil rights lawsuit after axing plans for a light rail line serving African American areas and switching funds to roads in the suburbs\nBaltimore has remained radically segregated in practice, if not in law, to the present day. Photograph: Alamy\nBaynard Woods in Baltimore\n@baynardwoods\nWed 23 Dec 2015 09.51 EST\nLast modified on Tue 21 Aug 2018 08.57 EDT\nCivil rights groups are alleging Maryland violated federal discrimination laws when it canceled plans for a long-considered Baltimore transit line that would have benefited predominantly African American neighborhoods.\nEyewitness: Baltimore, USA\nIn a Title VI civil rights complaint filed this week against Maryland, the NAACP Legal Defense Fund (LDF) charges that the decision by the Republican governor, Larry Hogan, to eliminate the plans for an east-west light rail line in Baltimore – and transfer the state funds slated for it to road projects in largely white suburban and rural parts of the state – discriminates against the city’s black residents.\n“Maryland’s cancellation of the Red Line is the latest chapter in a long history of racially discriminatory decisions regarding the allocation of transportation and housing resources in the state,” said the complaint, filed with the US Department of Transportation on behalf of a coalition of civil rights groups and the African American residents of Baltimore.\nA transportation economist cited in the complaint found that the switch from a subway line to the new highways initiative would cost African Americans $19m in user benefits by 2030, while white Maryland residents will gain more than $35m in user benefits during that period.\nMickey Martin, a middle-aged African American man waiting for a bus as cars streamed by near the Lexington Market, the city’s hub for public transportation, said he did not know if it was discriminatory or not, because he does not own a car and has no idea how the other half lives.\nFor his part, Martin, who no longer works, said he spends around 14 hours a week on the city’s buses, making at least two transfers to make it out to Edmundson Ave, one of the areas the new light rail line would have reached.\n“It sucks,” said Amy Johnson, who was waiting on the bus to return home from her job at the University of Maryland hospital, of the city’s public transportation.\nBaltimore’s bus system functions so poorly that, last week, the city offered a $100k forgivable loan to the online retail giant Amazon, which opened a warehouse in the area, to fund shuttles because the bus system “does not provide access to where the jobs are available now”, a spokesperson for the Baltimore Development Corp told the Baltimore Sun. “From some parts of the city, the commute to some areas where there are jobs can be as long as 90 minutes each way.”\nEach day the city’s single existing light rail line is packed with people commuting south towards low-paying jobs at the BWI airport – the line’s final stop.\nProponents of the proposed light rail line, called the Red Line, believed it would similarly allow many of the city’s impoverished African Americans to reach jobs they would not otherwise be able to take.\n“The lack of mobility, long commuter times, have critical implications for families in Baltimore,” said Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel for LDF. “We regard the cancellation of the Red Line as a critically important moment that must be addressed and must be engaged.”\nJohn Waters on Baltimore\nThe federal government had already promised $900m for the project before Hogan announced in June that his administration would scrap the plan – and forfeit the federal funds.\n“I never thought, ever, in my closing year in the US Senate, I would see a letter saying the Baltimore region rejects $900m in federal investment,” Senator Barbara Mikulski said at the time.\nA history of transportation discrimination\nThough the press conference announcing the complaint put it in the context of the economic and social conditions that caused unrest after the death of Freddie Gray in April, the complaint makes it clear that discriminatory transportation is nothing new in Baltimore.\n“Maryland, including the City of Baltimore, has exhibited a preference for its white residents over its African American residents in highway construction decisions since at least the 1930s,” the complaint reads.\nIn the 1960s, “government officials devised new expressway proposals, all of which planned to use at least a portion of the predominantly African-American Franklin-Mulberry corridor in Baltimore’s Harlem Park neighborhood,” the complaint reads. “As a result, Harlem Park residents stopped investing in their homes, and the neighborhood became filled with deteriorating and abandoned buildings.”\nHarlem Park neighbors Sandtown-Winchester, where Freddie Gray grew up and was arrested in, and they are often grouped together in studies.\nThe city long had strict race-based housing covenants and the practice of blockbusting, where real estate speculators would exploit white fear of black neighbors to get them to sell at artificially low prices, kept the city radically segregated in practice, if not in law, until the present day.\nWhen the light rail system was first proposed in 1965, residents of predominantly white areas surrounding the city, such as Anne Arundel County, objected, complaining that “that the Metro would enable poor, inner-city blacks to travel to the suburbs, steal residents’ TVs and then return to their ghettos in Baltimore”.\nJust last year, nearby Carroll County introduced a “Mass Transit Protection Resolution”, intended to keep public transportation riders from Baltimore out.\nMany saw it as emblematic that shortly after the governor announced that he would reallocate transportation funds, his administration released a transit map that did not include Baltimore City at all.\n“Literally took #Baltimore off the map. Just gone. Lots of #Maryland-ers not apart of infrastructure improvements,” Ben Krimmel tweeted in a typical reaction at the time.\nAntero Pietila, the author of Not in My Neighborhood: How Bigotry Shaped a Great American City, said that the city has always struggled with east-west transportation and that various plans to build highways that cut through the center of the city have “created lots of damage to the urban fabric of the city without solving any of the transportation problems”.\n“This case is about the Red Line but it’s also about so much more than just the construction of the Red Line,” Ajmel Quereshi, assistant counsel for LDF, said. “It’s about the 50 years that went into consideration.”\nGovernor Hogan, who has announced a $135m overhaul of the city’s bus lines as a replacement for the Red Line, said through a spokesperson that the complaint has “zero credibility or legal standing” and characterized it as “nothing more than a press release”.\nThe Hogan administration rejected the plan partly because of a tunnel – estimated to cost $1bn – that would cut through Baltimore.\nLost opportunity\nAccording to the complaint, the Red Line would not only enable many of the city’s African American residents to reach new jobs, it would bring jobs to them.\n“Strong transit connections to West Side neighborhoods would attract economic development, and many areas along the Red Line route were rezoned for mixed-use, transit-oriented development in anticipation of the Line’s construction,” the complaint reads.\nThe complaint also alleges the loss of up to 10,000 construction jobs, in a city whose unemployment rate is over 7%, two percentage points higher than the rest of the state.\nAnd, unlike many construction jobs, the complaint alleges, these jobs would not all be temporary. “As part of the construction process, training was to be provided to local adults and students at the Edmondson-Westside high school so that they would be qualified for jobs in construction, maintenance, and operations of the transit line,” the complaint states.\nBut some who agree with the complaint’s allegations of discrimination are not necessarily fans of the light rail as it was planned.\n“If you want to see the reality of a light rail system in Baltimore take a train from Hunt Valley to BWI airport and time it. And it will take you about an hour and a half,” said Pietila, a former Baltimore Sun reporter who was born in Finland where he said he has experienced truly convenient public transportation. “When we turn from the light rail to the Red Line as proposed, I wonder how popular it would be. If it isn’t frequent and fast people wouldn’t want to use it.”\nAt the press conference, the complainants said that while they “certainly would like the Red Line to get reinvigorated”, the issue of taking funds from predominantly African American areas and investing it in predominantly white areas is the larger problem.\n“Most of that money can be reinvested in Baltimore where it belongs,” Ifill said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line957854"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6181257367134094,"wiki_prob":0.3818742632865906,"text":"Pennington NJ Traffic Ticket Attorney\nTraffic Violations in the Borough of Pennington\nIn a case that received press several years ago, a lawyer from Pennington was driving his girlfriend in his BMW SUV. The two were having a dispute, and at one point, the woman fell from the car and onto the street. She later died from her injuries. The Pennington lawyer had been drinking and was charged with driving while intoxicated (DWI). While it was unclear whether there was foul play on the part of the lawyer in the woman’s accident, the one thing that was certain is that the lawyer was now facing a DWI charge. If you were recently charged with a traffic violation, from a minor moving violation to a DWI, you should be represented in court. Even with minor offenses, an experienced attorney has many tools available to help you possibly get the charge dismissed. And with something as serious as a DWI, it is vital that you have representation. We are The Law Offices of Jonathan F. Marshall. We specialize in handling traffic charges for our clients in Pennington and throughout Mercer County. Call us at (609) 683-8102 for a free initial consultation. We are available 24/7 to speak with you.\nGet Traffic Ticket Offenses Dismissed In Pennington\nThe Marshall Firm handles all types of traffic violations in Pennington Municipal Court, including:\nBlocking Traffic\nDriving While Suspended\nDriving While Intoxicated (DWI)\nLet’s discuss the more common offenses that occur in the Pennington area.\nDriving With A Suspended License. Driving while suspended is a very serious offense. A conviction for a first offense will result in a $500 fine and an added 6 months of license suspension. A second conviction will result in a mandatory jail sentence of 1 to 5 days, plus a $750 fine, and another 6 months without driving privileges. A third conviction results in a 10-day jail sentence and a $1,000 fine. What happens if you are involved in a car accident while driving with a suspended license? It is a 45-day jail term, even if the accident was not your fault.\nDriving While Intoxicated (DWI). DWI is not considered a criminal offense in this State, which means that you do not have the right to a trial by jury for a DWI in New Jersey. That said, the punishment can still be significant. A conviction for a first offense results in a 1-year license suspension. A second conviction is a 2-year suspension, and a third conviction is a 10-year suspension. Further, a third DWI conviction means the judge must impose a jail sentence.\nThe Law Offices of Jonathan F. Marshall have a leg up on other attorneys specifically with regard to DWI offenses. Not only have Marshall attorneys successfully helped many clients charged with DWI, but also our attorneys have specialized training in the sobriety test procedures employed in DWI cases.\nPennington Traffic Ticket Lawyers Can Help You Beat Your Traffic Tickets\nTraffic offenses in New Jersey have consequences beyond monetary penalties. Some offenses may even result in jail time. Given that you most likely need a car to go to work and support yourself, do not go it alone in court when you have been charged with a traffic offense. The lawyers at The Law Offices of Jonathan F. Marshall are here to assist you. The first consultation is free, so call our Lawrenceville office at (609) 683-8102.\nPennington NJ Traffic Ticket Attorney | Mercer County Criminal Lawyers","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1214653"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.587299644947052,"wiki_prob":0.587299644947052,"text":"Feast on Fido? Pyongyang serves dog ‘sweet meat’\nDog meat is eaten in Asia. South Korea, mindful of criticism attached to eating dogs in the West, has made the practice more discreet and better regulated,but isolated North Korea attaches no public stigma to consuming the meat.\n“Let's see by a show of hands, who won't be having sweet meat? Five? We're going then.”\nWith that quick vote, it was decided that a delegation of 21 South Koreans visiting Pyongyang this month for a conference would be having an extravagant lunch where every one of the eight courses would be a dog meat delicacy.\n“A once-in-a-lifetime experience!” a North Korean official chaperoning the group said enthusiastically.\nWhile South Korea, mindful of its overseas image and the criticism attached in the West to eating dogs, has made the practice more discreet and better regulated, isolated North Korea attaches no public stigma to consuming the meat.\nDog meat restaurants in the South are usually back-alley fare catering to middle-aged men. In the North, dog meat has become a celebrated part of the culture served at its best dining halls to the few in the impoverished state who can afford it.\nDog meat is eaten in other countries in Asia, including Vietnam. In South Korea, “boshin-tang” which translates as \"health preserving soup\" is usually braised meat, stewed in a spicy broth and served with steamed rice. But marinated ribs, as found in North Korea, are rare.\nIn the North's capital, the recipe calls for less spice, presumably to highlight the natural flavor of the ingredients, and a variety of cuts are served for a leisurely meal accompanied by rice wine.\nDefectors in the South said Korean cuisine, which varies according to region, undergoes further change in the North because there is less money for elaborate spices and ingredients. This means food is simpler in the North, the taste is lighter and little is wasted.\nSweet and soft\nThe pungent odor of dog meat is far more noticeable in the North's cuisine with its fewer spices, leading a few uneasy Southerners to forego the feast. They were instead served a set that included chicken, fish, shrimp and vegetables.\n“You want to go easy at first, or else, near the end, you won't have any room left,” said Shim Jae-hwan, a human rights attorney from Seoul who was part of the South Korean delegation dining at the Pyongyang Sweet Meat Restaurant.\nFollowing a bowl of clear broth for a starter, an impressive roast was served, its texture soft and sweet as it easily tore from a 15-cm (6-inch) segment of the vertebra.\nThen came an assortment of meat in a variety of sauces, one more exotic than the next, and the meal ends with a hearty bowl of spicy soup and rice.\nThe North's reclusive leader Kim Jong-il is said to be a fan of dog meat, and state media said he often offers advice on how the dish should be prepared, such as: “To get the broth right, the meat should be cooked with its skin intact.”\nTogether with restaurant Okryu-kwan, which seats nearly 10,000 people a day and is known for Pyongyang's trademark dish of cold noodles, the Pyongyang Sweet Meat Restaurant has become a popular spot among the North's elite and visitors from the South.\nThe restaurant near the Taedong River in central Pyongyang can accommodate more than 2,000 people a day and manager Pak Song-suk boasts all the meat comes from home-grown canine.\n“Sweet meat is considered the best remedy when the appetite is low because of hot weather or fatigue,” a feature article in the North's official Rodong Sinmun newspaper said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1009351"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5195976495742798,"wiki_prob":0.4804023504257202,"text":"Russia. Masks. Vaccinations.\nA story in the Telegraph overnight should have had the market moving\nA story in the Telegraph overnight should have had the market moving, but has been largely ignored so far… They’re writing that the government’s ‘central working assumption’ is that there will not be a deal done with the EU ahead of the end of the year and that we’ll be trading with each other on WTO terms thereafter. The latest round of face to face talks end tomorrow and with nothing likely to be agreed upon, it means Boris will also have missed his target of getting something across the line before the end of July. The news of this being the government’s working assumption is disappointing on the one hand, but on the other it means that at least the next few months can be spent preparing as best as we can for whatever disruption this brings.\nAdditionally, the FT is reporting that the government has given up hope of getting a deal done with the US ahead of the presidential election in November -perhaps no bad thing given who’s in charge.\nThe long awaited release of a report on Russia’s possibly interference into UK politics was finally over, yesterday. The report highlights that Russia did try and influence the outcome of Scotland’s independence referendum, but was unable to determine if they got involved in the Brexit vote. The committee behind the report has urged the UK intelligence services to carry out their own investigation into whether or not the Kremlin were involved and publish an unclassified summary of it. This report was fairly damning of Russia and said that they consider the UK “one of its top intelligence targets”. It also talks about London being open for business in welcoming oligarchs and their vast wealth, whilst asking very little questions over the origin of the funds. The report raises as many questions as it answers, its just a shame it took a year for the government to publish it! Reuters has some more detail and the Times is reporting that Boris will hand more powers to security services to stop this happening again – though he’s confident that Russia didn’t interfere in the Brexit referendum.\nClinical trials of the Oxford covid vaccine are going well and early indications are positive that it creates a strong immune response. This has led them to cautiously predict that it could be rolled out by the end of the year. A 10,000 subject strong trial is now underway and there are plans for a larger 30,000 person trial to get underway shortly.\nYesterday’s New York Times Daily podcast was focused on the possible uptake of a vaccine in the US and their public health reporter believes that as many as 50% of Americans wouldn’t want to get vaccinated. They cite issues such as anti-vaccers with a lot of influence, fear over the pace at which it has been developed and therefore the unknown long term side effects and also the concern that Trump would be the one to effectively sign it off as reasons why people wouldn’t volunteer to get it. Creating herd immunity through vaccination would require about an 85% vaccination rate and at 50% would mean that the virus would hang around potentially for years to come.\nTrump has changed his tune and held his first covid briefing for three months. The president now recommends the wearing of face masks and taking social distancing measures, saying that doing so is being patriotic. He’s also warned that things are likely to get worse before they get better. His remarks come as the virus continues to grow and Dr Faucci warned senators that 100,000 people per day could become infected if things carried on as they are. The cynic in us thinks this might have as much to do with Trump’s polling numbers as it does public health, which are universally lower than Biden’s by enough margin to lose the election.\nIn Europe: Getting the bailout package across the line pushed the euro higher across the board. The combination of loans and grants was signed off in conjunction with the first post-Brexit EU budget and lays down a seven year funding plan for the bloc, putting it in a good place for a strong recovery. Getting this across the line was seen as a key test of the Euro project, however it’s not entirely a done deal that funds will be distributed as planned, as countries applying for grants will have to submit detailed recovery plans that will be reviewed by all member states. Additionally, Europe has had to sacrifice a couple of its high ideals to get the deal done, watering down clauses to ‘respect the rule of law’, at the insistence of Poland and Hungary – the latter of which is working towards a dictatorship within EU. Poland also got a break from having to work towards stringent climate change targets – a relief for them as their industrial economy is heavily dependent on coal fired power stations, but a big setback in the EU’s world leading climate change combat agenda.\nLooking to today: The data sheets are quite light, but we do get a live Q&A from Christine Lagarde, run by the Washington Post. We’ll also see a lot of US energy inventory data, which will have an impact on the oil market. The last set of numbers showed a much larger than forecast inventory build, which put the brakes on crude’s gains of late.\nLastly, it’s worth keeping an eye on the gold and silver markets, which are close to recent highs. The build in positions could be a pre-emptive flight to safety.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line543334"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6741379499435425,"wiki_prob":0.6741379499435425,"text":"13 Mexican police officers murdered by suspected cartel gunmen in bloody ambush\nMexico-A group of armed gunmen believed to be part of a powerful drug cartel in Mexico ambushed a police convoy in the western state of Michoacan, killing at least 13 officers and wounding nine.\nSome 42 state police officers had gone to the township of Aguililla on Monday to enforce a judicial order when they were met with more than 30 gunmen believed to be from the Jalisco New Generation, one of Mexico’s most powerful cartels at the moment.\nOfficials said the gunmen opened fire on the police convoy with .50 caliber sniper rifles and AR-15 and AK-47 assault-style rifles.\nAt least 13 officers were killed, some of their bodies still inside the patrol trucks when the vehicles were set afire.\n“No attack on the police will go unpunished, and this was a cowardly, devious attack because they laid an ambush in this area of the road,” Gov. Silvano Aureoles said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1494837"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5320373773574829,"wiki_prob":0.5320373773574829,"text":"Οικοσελίδα » Ειδήσεις » Κυπριακή Οικονομία » Επιχειρήσεις » The Government invests in the human capital of the country\nThe Government invests in the human capital of the country\nCyprus President Nicos Anastasiades said Tuesday that the Government aims to invest in the country`s human capital and create a modern labor market with well-trained human resources that can effectively respond to the ever-changing conditions and growing challenges and demands of the modern economy, in his speech at the 29th Pancyprian Congress of SEK trade union. The speech was delivered on behalf of the President by the Minister of Finance Constantinos Petrides.\nThe President said that in the last years the Government has put special emphasis on the protection of workers` rights and the deepening of institutionalized social protection. He also referred to the future actions of the government in that context.\nAmong them is the completion of the social dialogue for the introduction of the minimum wage, based on the studies that have already been prepared by the Ministry of Labour with the support of the European Commission and the International Labor Office.\nFurthermore, he referred to the revision of the Social Security System and the relevant Legislation, with the aim, of simplifying the Legislation for the benefit of the citizens and strengthening the coverage of the self-employed and workers with new forms of employment.\nHe also referred to the promotion of a pension reform for equitable pensions for all.\nThe President also spoke of an assessment of the current situation in the Social Security Services in relation to the organization and procedures and the study of good practices of other European countries. He said there would be a redesign and simplification of the procedures of the Social Security Services and training of the staff, for the digital transformation of the Social Security Services.\nAt the same time, he said ensuring that jobs provide good wages is essential to ensuring adequate working and living conditions, building a fair and resilient economy and supporting inclusive growth.\nThe President also praised the positive contribution of SEK in managing the pandemic crisis.\n“The conditions created by the pandemic temporarily stopped a five-year course of extremely positive progress in the field of employment. Between 2015 and 2019, 72,118 new jobs were created, a net increase in the number of employees of 20.9%\", he noted\nHe added that through the cooperation with the social partners it was possible to significantly mitigate the effects of the pandemic, by providing support to the majority of employees in the private sector and the self-employed, but also to the unemployed by extending the unemployment benefit for an additional 18 months, in addition to 6 months of unemployment from the Social Insurance Fund.\nAccording to the President, support for employees, the self-employed and the unemployed to maintain their incomes and jobs has been extended to more than 210,000 people and amounted to more than 760 million euros from March 2020 until today, which brings the Republic of Cyprus in the second place out of the 27 countries of the European Union in percentage of workers that were supported during the pandemic. He also referred to the support of companies with one-off sponsorships for their operating expenses over 160 million euros, in addition to any other sponsorships and support they have received from the state.\n\"As a result of the efforts of all, but also of the targeted moves of the Government, from the second quarter of 2021 the economy records again positive growth rates while unemployment follows a significant downward trend reaching according to the latest data to 5.2% which is the lowest level since 2009.,\" the President said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line382134"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.839426577091217,"wiki_prob":0.839426577091217,"text":"Patsy Cline, Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard among 2020 Grammy Hall of Fame inductees\nJan 14, 2020 @ 2:00pm\nABC/Image Group LAMultiple country stars will have their recordings inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame this year.\nThe Recording Academy announced today that 26 recordings will added to the Grammy Hall of Fame, which preserves prominent songs of historical significance that are at least 25 years old.\nAmong the 2020 selections are Patsy Cline‘s “Walkin’ After Midnight,” which became her breakthrough single after its 1957 release, reaching number two on the Billboard country chart. Also on the list is Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard‘s collaboration on “Pancho and Lefty,” the title track of their acclaimed 1983 album.\nOther country inductees include “I’ll Fly Away” by country gospel group The Chuck Wagon Gang, one of the top-selling gospel songs in history, plus the Allman Brothers Band album Eat a Peach, and “I’m a Man of Constant Sorrow” by The Stanley Brothers & The Clinch Mountain Boys.\nNancy Sinatra‘s “These Boots Are Made for Walkin,’” “Oh Mary Don’t You Weep” by gospel act Swan Silverstones, and “How Can a Poor Man Stand Such Times and Live” by Blind Alfred Reed, who recorded during the famous Bristol Sessions in 1927, will also be inducted.\nElton John, Neil Diamond and Joni Mitchell are among the many other multi-genre acts whose work will be inducted into the Hall of Fame this year.\n963KLLL Country News KLLL Lubbock","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1086894"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9127498269081116,"wiki_prob":0.9127498269081116,"text":"The Campaign Report – January 5, 2020\nWashington Post: “After a year of campaigning, and with less than a month to go before the first and therefore most important single contest in the Democratic nomination fight, few if any are confident of the outcome. At least four candidates are seen as having a shot to win Iowa, or, alternatively, to suffer a crippling result that could hobble their campaigns going forward, especially if there is a late surge by a lower-tier contender.”\n“The result is a hotly contested sprint to the Feb. 3 caucuses — a struggle that could either propel a clear winner into the next-voting states with momentum or open a months-long fight for the delegates needed to secure the party’s presidential nomination. Unlike past primaries, several of the top candidates are expected to have the financial resources and dedicated fan base to wage long campaigns even if they finish in the middle of the pack in Iowa.”\nThe moderate middle is a myth. https://t.co/IeNXUXvBWu\n— FiveThirtyEight (@FiveThirtyEight) January 5, 2020\nJoe Biden lit into President Trump’s tweeting about the possibility of retaliating against Iran Saturday night, calling it “incredibly dangerous and irresponsible,” Politico reports. Biden accused Trump of taking reckless action as “the walls close in on this guy.”\nThe Washington Post reviews Donald Trump Jr.’s new book, Triggered, and notes it “fails as memoir and as polemic.”\n“Its analysis is facile, its hypocrisy relentless, its self-awareness marginal. (The writing is wretched, even by the standards of political vanity projects.) But the point of Triggered is not autobiographical, literary or analytic, and it should not be read or evaluated on such grounds. Rather, the book is most useful as a preview of a possible Donald Trump Jr. 2024 presidential campaign, the contours of which grow clearer the deeper one wades into these pages.”\nA new SurveyMonkey poll of Republican voters finds two children of President Trump — Don Jr. and Ivanka — as two of the top four picks for president in five years. The other two are Mike Pence and Nikki Haley.\nProgressives have called the former vice president naive for his goal of bringing Republicans and Democrats together. But that’s a big reason his supporters love him, writes @elainejgodfrey. https://t.co/axOU6OWlJY\n— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) January 5, 2020\nAndrew Yang will launch a write-in campaign in Ohio after a “bureaucratic paperwork issue” prevented him from appearing on the presidential primary ballot, The Hill reports.\nPresident Trump took aim at Pete Buttigieg at a rally in a Miami megachurch, claiming the the Democratic candidate was faking his faith ahead of the election. Said Trump: “All of a sudden, he’s become very religions… this happened about two weeks ago.” Of course, he also made fun of Buttigieg’s last name.\nDemocratic hopefuls respond to Trump's war-mongering https://t.co/fUj1SW1L5f\n— Joan McCarter (@joanmccarter) January 3, 2020\nPolitico: “Sliding steadily in the polls and battling a narrative that he couldn’t endure the kind of rigorous campaign schedule Iowans demand, Joe Biden’s Iowa prospects were just about written off earlier this fall. Even his own campaign began to downplay expectations.”\n“But with 31 days left before the Feb. 3 caucuses, Biden has managed to turn his fortunes around.”\n“He launched a successful, eight-day bus tour through rural Iowa last month that sparked an uptick in volunteers, precinct captain requests and caucus commitments. He doubled his fundraising in the last quarter, allowing him to flood the state’s airwaves with ads.”\nPlaybook: “Joe Biden is cycling three new ads into his $4 million Iowa ad buy. It’s a six-figure buy that will run in the Des Moines, Cedar Rapids, Quad Cities and Sioux City media markets.”\n“The first ad is Soul, which reiterates Biden’s message that the fabric of American society will change if Trump has another four years in office. Integrity has testimonials from people about Biden’s character. They also have a 15-second spot, Enough which has a Des Moines firefighter praising Biden.”\nRep. Phil Roe (R-TN) announced Friday that he will not seek reelection, The Hill reports.\nNew York Times: “The morning after the Democrats’ last debate in December, the Democratic National Committee announced the thresholds to qualify for the next one, scheduled for Jan. 14 in Des Moines: 5 percent support in four qualifying polls, or 7 percent in two early-state polls. With those steeper requirements in place, just five candidates have qualified so far: Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar.”\n“Those who haven’t made the cut are getting angry about relying on the results of public polling — when no polls that count have been released since the last debate, on Dec. 19.”\n“If any of the lower-tier candidates got a boost from that last debate, there have been no qualifying polls to reflect it. With just one week to go before the Jan. 10 qualification deadline, there’s been no way for Andrew Yang or Tom Steyer — who are on the fringe of making the debate stage — or anyone else (like Cory Booker, who needs a lot of help) to secure a spot.”\nSanders has an early edge establishing himself as the primary's anti-war candidate. https://t.co/Gfgceb9dEJ\n— Sarah Jones (@onesarahjones) January 4, 2020\nPresident Trump rallied his evangelical Christian base of supporters on Friday, portraying himself as the restorer of faith in the public square and claiming that God is “on our side,” the New York Times reports.\nSaid Trump: “Evangelical Christians of every denomination and believers of every faith have never had a greater champion, not even close, in the White House, than you have right now. We’ve done things that nobody thought was possible. Together we’re not only defending our constitutional rights. We’re also defending religion itself, which is under siege.”\nJoe Biden has a unique electoral advantage — but it may prove less beneficial than it appears today. @EricLevitz writes https://t.co/S4cBUjvpZq\n— Intelligencer (@intelligencer) January 4, 2020\nAmy McGrath (D) raised $6.2 million for her U.S. Senate campaign in the fourth quarter of 2019, “marking another impressive fundraising quarter even as she faces grumbling from some progressive Democrats in Kentucky,” the Lexington Herald Leader reports.\n“The money McGrath raised in the final three months of 2019 brings her total to $16.9 million, just $2 million shy of what former Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes raised in her bid against U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in 2014. McGrath’s campaign said it has $9.1 million on hand.”\n'There’s obviously a lot of energy out there': Democratic donations surge heading into 2020 https://t.co/fwhEVHoMHg\n— Daily Kos (@dailykos) January 3, 2020\nJonathan Bernstein: “The end of Julian Castro’s presidential campaign on Thursday offered another opportunity to complain about the nomination process, and plenty of pundits have been doing just that. After all, Castro has more relevant experience than South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, who remains a contender, and he’s far more qualified than entrepreneur Andrew Yang or activist Tom Steyer, both of whom scored invitations to the November and December debates. Castro’s final debate was in October.”\n“But while I’m a Castro fan (I live in San Antonio, where he was once mayor), it’s hard for me to see any legitimate complaints about the process in this case. I’d agree that Castro in some sense deserved to be one of the remaining candidates, but presidential elections aren’t really about what candidates deserve. Castro had his chance, and for whatever reason he failed to attract much support. He was going nowhere in the polls, both nationally and in the early states, and he ended up at only 1% in Nevada, where plenty of Latino voters joined white Democrats in Iowa and New Hampshire in ignoring him.”\nWinning office is a necessary step, but figuring out what to do once you’re in power—how to translate electoral wins into policy action—is an entirely different game. https://t.co/cOJI397CR9\n— The New Republic (@newrepublic) January 4, 2020\n“President Trump’s 2020 election strategy relies largely on the white, working-class base that he excited in 2016. But he faces a demographic challenge: The electorate has changed since he was last on the ballot in ways likely to benefit Democrats,” the Wall Street Journal reports.\n“Working-class, white voters are projected to decline by 2.3 percentage points nationally as a share of eligible voters, compared with the last election, because they are older and therefore dying at a faster rate than are Democratic groups. As those voters pass on, they are most likely to be replaced by those from minority groups or young, white voters with college degrees—groups that lean Democratic.”\n“That means Mr. Trump will have to coax more votes from a shrinking base—or else find more votes in other parts of the electorate.”\nSen. Elizabeth Warren raised $21.2 million for her presidential campaign in the fourth quarter of 2019, “a slight dip from the previous quarter and behind three of her top rivals for the Democratic nomination,” the New York Times reports.\nSen. Amy Klobuchar raised $11.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2019, “a sum that was more than twice what she collected during the prior three months but still left her no better than sixth in fund-raising for the last three months among Democrats running for president,” the New York Times reports.\n0 comments on “The Campaign Report – January 5, 2020”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line763208"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.862034797668457,"wiki_prob":0.862034797668457,"text":"Luke Campbell: I will beat Vasiliy Lomachenko\nLuke Campbell thinks that he’ll have come out victorious against WBA/WBO lightweight champion Vasiliy Lomachenko on August 31 in London, UK. The 31-year-old Campbell is a big underdog in this fight and many expect him to lose in the same fashion as fellow countryman Anthony Crolla. Campbell will have the fans on his side, but that may not be enough for him to win, reports Boxing 24.\nLomchenko destroyed Crolla in four rounds last April in Los Angeles, California. Former WBA 135 pound champion Crolla (34-7-3, 13 KOs) took a frightful beating before the fight was halted with him lying bleeding and battered on the canvas.\nCampbell (20-2, 16 KOs) fighting for a world title for the second time in his six-year pro career, and he’s hoping to have better luck in the scoring than he did when challenge Jorge Linares for his WBA lightweight title in September 2017.\n“They all get beat in the end, don’t they? Sooner or later. I believe I will beat him. I’m fighting the elite of the elite. “I’m confident in the 19 years that I’ve put into this sport, always being disciplined,” said Campbell to skysports.com.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1460843"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8662148118019104,"wiki_prob":0.8662148118019104,"text":"Home›Motion Picture›More than 100 members of Congress call on Hollywood producers to come up with a fair deal at IATSE – deadline\nMore than 100 members of Congress call on Hollywood producers to come up with a fair deal at IATSE – deadline\nMore than 100 Democrats in the House and Senate and independent Bernie Sanders signed a letter urging the Alliance of Film and Television Producers to negotiate a fair contract with IATSE, saying: “We are united in our belief the importance of decent wages, sustainable benefits and reasonable rest periods between shifts and during the working day ”- three of the union’s fundamental demands.\nThe letter was signed by 31 senators and 87 representatives and sent to AMPTP president Carol Lombardini.\nUnion members begin voting on leave to strike on Friday ahead of what could be the last round of negotiations before a strike that would end film and television productions across the country.\nIATSE to Hollywood media giants: “You are going to change the way you do business”\nPoliticians also reminded Lombardini that workers in the industry “risked their health and safety” during the pandemic, and that “the entertainment you jointly produce is helping to heal our nation.”\nHere is their letter:\nDear Madame Lombardini:\nAs the elected representatives of the voters who make a living working behind the scenes in film and television production, we urge you to negotiate fair succession contracts with the International Alliance of Theater Stage Employees (IATSE). We support the principles of adequate sleep, meal breaks and a living wage for all workers.\nThese workers have risked their health and safety over the past year, working during the Covid-19 pandemic to ensure that the film and television production industry is left intact. Production has now returned to pre-pandemic levels, in large part thanks to the critical role these workers play in the creative process. The entertainment that you jointly produce helps heal our nation.\nThe contract under negotiation covers around 60,000 film and television production workers across the country. Failure to reach a deal would threaten not only the livelihoods of these workers, but also their family members who depend on work in your industry, sending shock waves throughout the U.S. economy and industry.\nThe key issues in this negotiation, as we understand them, concern the dignity of workers and basic human needs. We are united in our belief in the importance of a living wage, sustainable benefits and reasonable rest periods between shifts and during the work day.\nIt appears that IATSE members are mobilizing for a nationwide strike authorization vote on October 1, 2021, due to the announcement that AMPTP has no plans to make a counter-offer. A strike would seriously disrupt the industry, the economy and the communities we represent. We hope that the two sides can negotiate in good faith and reach a consensual agreement, which obliges both sides to continue to participate in the ongoing negotiations.\nWe call on AMPTP to negotiate with these workers to achieve a fair contract and meet the basic human needs that will allow them to do their jobs in safety and with dignity.\nTruly,\nThe letter-writing campaign was led by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) And Senator Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (DN.Y.) and Whip of the Senate majority Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), and Sens. Tammy Baldwin (D-Minn.), Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Cory Booker (DN.J.), Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), Ben Cardin (D-Md .), Bob Casey (D-Pa.), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.), Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.), Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Kirsten Gillibrand (DN. Y.), Martin Heinrich (DN.M.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), Ben Ray Luján (DN.M.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Bob Menendez (DN.J .), Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.), Jack Reed (DR.I.), Jacky Rosen (D-Nev.), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Jeanne Shaheen (DN.H.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), And Ron Wyden ( Golden.).\nThe letter is also signed by Democratic Representatives Pete Aguilar (California), Cynthia Axne (Iowa), Nanette Diaz Barragan (California), Karen Bass (California), Earl Blumenauer (Oregon), Suzanne Bonamici (Oregon), Brendan Boyle (Pa .), Julia Brownley (Calif.), Tony Cárdenas (Calif.), André Carson (Ind.), Troy Carter (La.), Judy Chu (California), David Cicilline (RI), Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ), J. Luis Correa (California), Angie Craig (Minn.), Charlie Crist (Florida), Danny K. Davis (Illinois), Madeleine Dean (Pa.), Val Demings (Fla.), Theodore Deutch (Florida), Debbie Dingell (Michigan), Anna G. Eshoo (California), Adriano Espaillat (NY), Bill Foster (Illinois), Jesús García (Illinois), Jimmy Gomez (Calif.), Jahana Hayes (Connecticut), Steven Horsford (Nev.) , Hakeem Jeffries (NY), Henry C. “Hank” Johnson Jr. (Ga.), Mondaire Jones (NY), Robin L. Kelly (Illinois), Daniel Kildee (Michigan), Andy Kim (NJ), Raja Krishnamoorthi ( Illinois), Ann Kuster (NH), Conor Lamb (Pa.), John B. Larson (Connecticut), Brenda L. Lawrence (Mich. ), Barbara Lee (California), Susie Lee (Nev.), Teresa Leger Fernandez (NM), Andy Levin (Mich.), Ted Lieu (California), Zoe Lofgren (California), Alan Lowenthal (California), Stephen F. Lynch (Mass.), Carolyn Maloney (NY)), Tom Malinowski (NJ), Betty McCollum (Minn.), James P. McGovern (Mass.), Grace Meng (NY), Kweisi Mfume (Md.), Joseph D Morelle (NY), Jerrold Nadler (NY), Grace Napolitano (California), Joe Neguse (Colo.), Marie Newman (Illinois), Donald Norcross (NJ), Eleanor Norton (DC), Scott H. Peters (California) , Charlie Pingree (Maine), Mark Pocan (Wis.), Katie Porter (California), Mike Quigley (Illinois), Jamie Raskin (Md.), Kathleen M. Rice (NY), Deborah K. Ross (NC), Bobby L. Rush (Ill.), Linda Sánchez (California), Mary Gay Scanlon (Pa.), Janice Schakowsky (Ill.), Brad Sherman (California), Bradley Scott Schneider (Ill.), Mikie Sherrill (NJ), Darren Soto (Fla.), Melanie Stansbury (NM), Haley M. Stevens (Mich.), Thomas Suozzi (NY), Dina Titus (Nev.), Rashida Tlaib (Mich. .), Norma Torres (California), David J. Trone (Md.), Juan Vargas (California), Peter Welch (Vermont), Susan Wild (Pa.) And Frederica S. Wilson (Florida).\nJohn J. Rigas, cable TV mogul who ...\nThe Academy Museum is here, movie fans ...\nHow toxic aggregates form and kill brain cells in prion disease\nIN THE HEIGHTS (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is captivating and beautiful\nSony says there is a plan for Spider-Man to connect to their spin-offs\nDozens of other pirate IPTV and streaming domains in the sights * TorrentFreak\nRichard Donner, director of “Superman”, “Lethal Weapon” and “Goonies”, deceased at 91\nAmazon Prime Day Deals on Tech and Movies\nEvangelion creator Hideaki Anno teases his movie Shin Kamen Rider\nI’m a little less clueless now: Saif Ali Khan on his evolution in cinema and in life","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line86225"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8371824622154236,"wiki_prob":0.8371824622154236,"text":"Outriders Album\nMax Wickert Short Curriculum Vitae\nMy Life in Brief\nI was born in 1938 in Augsburg, Germany, the eldest and only boy of five children. My father was an artist who supported himself by working as a teacher and later in life, as an industrial designer. My mother was trained as a concert singer who chose not to pursue a career in order to devote herself to her family. Toward the end of World War II, I entered grade school in a small village where my family was evacuated after a bombing raid. By 1949, I was back in Augsburg and entered the gymnasium where my father taught art.\nWhen I was 14, my family immigrated to the U.S. and settled in Rochester, N.Y. I finished high school there and went on to college at St. Bonaventure University and to graduate school at Yale.\nAfter a brief spell on the faculty of Nazareth College in Rochester, I joined the English Department at SUNY/Buffalo, where I taught until my retirement. In the course of my career, I produced a handful of scholarly and critical essays (Spenser and Shakespeare, modern East Germany poetry, and early opera), but worked chiefly as a teacher of undergraduate literature courses and as a poet/translator. (During the late ‘60s and early ‘70s I was also fairly embroiled in anti-war and civil rights protests.) I began seriously working in poetry when I arrived in Buffalo, at a time when the campus was buzzing with literary activity. (John Logan, John Barth, Robert Creeley, Lionel Abel, Raymond Federman, Dwight MacDonald and Leslie Fiedler were all on the faculty).\nMy first substantial collection of poems, Pat Sonnets, appeared in 2000. Along the way, I also produced a chapbook, All the Weight of the Still Midnight (Outriders, 1972; 2nd. ed. 2013) and two self-published monographs. A new volume, No Cartoons, was published in 2011. Over the years, almost 200 of my poems appeared in journals including American Poetry Review, Chicago Review, Poetry, Sewanee Review, and Shenandoah. My short story, “The Scythe of Saturn” was among the winning entries in the first annual Stand Magazine International Short Story Competition in Newcastle-on-Tyne (England).\nFrom 1966 onward, I have also been active as a translator, at first principally of poetry from German, especially the Austrian expressionist, Georg Trakl. I also translated into German (in collaboration with Hubert Kulterer) Tulli Kupferberg’s 1001 Ways to Live without Working. This appeared in Vienna (Austria) in 1971 and has recently been reissued in Germany. I have also been a frequent regional poetry administrator, as a charter member of Niagara-Erie Writers, a regional writers' collective; and as director of several summer poetry festivals, including one at Artpark in Lewiston, N.Y. I have been Director of the Outriders Poetry Project since 1969. I ran it as a reading series between 1969 and 1980 and relaunched it as a small press in 2009. My most recent contribution to the press was as compiler and editor of An Outriders Anthology.\nDuring the late 1980s and early 1990s I spent a series of happy summers in Perugia learning Italian, and eventually began to translate from that language. The Liberation of Jerusalem, my version of Torquato Tasso’s epic, Gerusalemme liberata, was brought out in 2009 by Oxford University Press. It was followed by my verse translation of Love Poems for Lucrezia Benadidia (the First Book of Tasso's Rime), published by Italica Press in 2011. In recent years, I completed the first English translation of Andrea da Barberino’s The Royal House of France . I am now working on a version of Tasso’s first epic, Rinaldo.\nBy my first marriage, I have a daughter who works as a therapist with troubled teens in Massachusetts. I retired from teaching in 2005, and married my second wife, Katka Hammond, in 2006. We live in Buffalo's pleasant West Side. For further details about me, please consult my Wikipedia profile. The dry career facts can be found in my Curriculum Vitae.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line486175"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6710498929023743,"wiki_prob":0.6710498929023743,"text":"Montréal 2013 - GP Preview - Caterham Renault\nAlexander Rossi, driving FP1 at the 2013 Canadian Grand Prix: \"After Monaco I was home in the States for the first time since January, preparing for my FP1 session at the Canadian GP, and then for the start of my Le Mans work straight after Montreal! Looking back, Monaco wasn’t a great weekend for us in GP2 with Caterham Racing, but we’ll bounce back at Silverstone. We know the areas that we need to improve the situation.\n\"Returning to F1 action is obviously another important step in the plan I’ve worked over a decade for and I take all the opportunities I get very seriously. This will be my first outing in the CT03 and on the 2013 Pirelli tyres in F1 and it’s good that my 2013 F1 debut is on North American soil, in front of a crowd who are seriously passionate about F1 and really know what our sport is all about. I’ve raced and won in Montreal back in Formula BMW and I enjoy the circuit a lot - it will be a special feeling to play an active role in the race weekend with the team.\n\"Even though FP1 sessions always seem to be over in the blink of an eye, it’ll be good to play an important part in the team’s work on track. I was last in an F1 car in the CT02 2012 car in Abu Dhabi, last November for the young driver test so I’m looking forward to see how far the car has progressed since then. This year for the F1 team I’ve done aero testing, simulation work and I drove at the team’s filming day, so this will be a good session for me to use what I learnt about the car in the sim and the aero tests as a comparison to help the team progress this weekend. It will be all about working to the run plan for the session and helping the team set the car up for the race drivers for the rest of the weekend.\n\"I leave Montreal on Friday evening, straight after FP2 and head back to Europe for the first Le Mans sessions. That’s another boxed ticked on my list of things for my CV. It’s great to be taking part in one of the great races with a team that’s already been successful in endurance racing, and to help a bunch of Caterham guys I already know well. Like F1, my aim in the first few days with the Le Mans team will be to learn as much I can and build up to the performance, adding value where it counts. It’s a huge honour to be able to take part and it’s something I’ll remember for ever, but first my main priority is F1.\"\nCharles Pic: \"Straight after Monaco it’s on to another French speaking race as we go to Montreal for the Canadian Grand Prix. Last year was my first time racing in Canada and I have to say it was one of the best races of the year, maybe not so much for the final result but for the atmosphere on track which was really good. We go to a few races where the track is full of fans from Thursday morning, and Montreal is one of those. I guess having Jacques and Gilles Villeneuve as locals to have supported in the past means F1 is very special to fans in Montreal, but whatever the reasons, they love F1!\n\"On track it’s a very good challenge. It’s a semi-street circuit, with the barriers very close for most of the lap, and it’s a very technical circuit. The track surface is smooth and on Friday morning there’s very little grip. It does evolve over the weekend but it’s still hard on tyres all weekend so managing deg levels is going to be even more important than normal. It’s also very hard on brakes - there’s a couple of very heavy braking zones and you need to be able to really attack those to get the best laptime in, so we’ll also be working a lot in the practice sessions on maximising braking stability and, depending on what the weather does, brake cooling.\n\"You also need to be able to attack the kerbs, both to maintain speed and to save time, so that’ll be another area we’ll look at in FP1 and FP2, making sure we can really hit the kerbs hard without losing stability and balance. If you get all that right it’s a very satisfying feeling when you get to the end of the lap as it’s quick, a lap that feels really good in an F1 car!\"\nGiedo van der Garde: \"Next up it’s Canada, a track I’ve never raced at but one I went to last year with Caterham as Reserve Driver. I sat in on all the briefings and debriefs last year so I have quite a bit of information about what it’s going to be like from 2012, and I’ve spent quite a bit of time on my sim at home trying the track, but you obviously don’t really know what it’s like until you drive around it, but it will only take a couple of laps to get used to it.\n\"What I do remember from last year was how hardcore the fans are in Montreal! We have a couple of big North American sponsors, so the team had a lot of guests in the paddock and in the grandstands, but I remember that from early on Thursday morning the whole place was packed! In the city itself it was the same - there’s one street where the whole place is shut down for the race weekend and we had a team dinner there on the Saturday night. It was a fantastic atmosphere, a lot like it is at home in Holland for big sports events, so I felt really comfortable there and am excited about getting back, this time to race!\n\"On track I think it’ll be interesting to see where we are after Monaco. I was glad to bring the car home, but after the best Saturday of the year so far we obviously wanted to finish higher up. Even with that, there were some good signs in the race that we are making decent progress. Personally, for me it was another step in the learning curve, and for the team in general we saw that we’d fixed the rear wing issue we’d found in Barcelona, and had enough pace to get the car into Q2 and to record one of the fastest laps in the race in the early stages. Montreal is a medium to low downforce track and with the constant updates we’re making to the package we took to Spain, I think we could be ok.\"\nAdrian Sutil looks back on Monaco\nMassa, Maldonado to be fit for Canada","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1059817"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7072100639343262,"wiki_prob":0.7072100639343262,"text":"President Obama to appear at $33,400-per-couple…\nPresident Obama to appear at $33,400-per-couple breakfast fundraiser at Hollywood star’s home\nPresident Barack Obama reaches out to meet the crowd as he arrives at Los Angeles International Airport on Thursday, April 7, 2016. The president is in California for a number of fundraisers. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)\nPresident Barack Obama and his daughter Malia arrive at LAX on Thursday, April 7, 2016. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)\nBy City News Service | news@socalnews.com |\nPUBLISHED: April 8, 2016 at 9:28 a.m. | UPDATED: August 28, 2017 at 6:27 a.m.\nLOS ANGELES — President Barack Obama is set to conclude an approximately 17-hour visit to Los Angeles today by raising funds for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.\n• TRAFFIC: Avoid these streets on President Obama’s final day in LA\nThe breakfast roundtable fundraiser will be held at the Brentwood home of actor Tobey Maguire and his wife Jennifer, the entertainment trade newspaper Variety reported. Tickets are $33,400 per couple, according to Variety.\nThe price is based on the $33,400 maximum amount an individual can contribute to a national party committee in a year.\nObama delivered an approximately 15-minute speech Thursday night at a fundraiser for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee at the Bel Air home of Walt Disney Studios Chairman Alan Horn and his wife Cindy.\nObama criticized Senate Republicans for their refusal to hold hearings on his appointment of appeals court Judge Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court.\n“Our democracy only works if there is a respect and appreciation of the process of self-governance,” Obama said.\nObama also told the approximately 90 people at the fundraiser “not to be complacent” about the general election.\n“We can not be cynical because the stakes are too high,” Obama said.\nRobert A. Iger, the chairman and CEO of the Walt Disney Co.; House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco; the Oscar-winning actresses Gwyneth Paltrow and Julia Roberts and Julia Louis-Dreyfus, the Emmy-winning star of the HBO political comedy “Veep,” were among those attending the fundraiser.\nTickets started at $15,000 per couple that included a photo opportunity and dinner. A $66,800 ticket provided a couple dinner, admission to a VIP reception and photo opportunity.\nThe visit is Obama’s 25th to Los Angeles and Orange counties as president. He conducted fundraisers during 22 of his visits. Thursday’s fundraiser was Obama’s 40th in Los Angeles and Orange counties.\nObama is set to leave Los Angeles shortly after noon, bound for San Francisco where he will participate in fundraisers for the Democratic National Committee and Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.\nCity News Service is a regional wire service covering Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Diego counties. Its reporting and editing staff cover public safety, courts, local government and general assignment stories. Contact the City News Service newsroom at 310-481-0404 or news@socalnews.com.\nnews@socalnews.com","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1484278"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.532981276512146,"wiki_prob":0.532981276512146,"text":"What is a residence permit (ikamet)?\nForeign nationals that enter Turkey with a valid passport or a substitute document as a passport are allowed to stay in our country during the term of their visa or a of a visa exemption. However, foreign nationals that wish to stay longer than the term of their visa or visa exemption period are obliged to get a residence permit.\nWhen should you apply for a residence permit?\nForeign nationals that wish to get a residence permit must apply before their visa or visa exemption expires as of the date they enter in Turkey with their passport. Applications after expiration of their visa or visa exemption will not be accepted, and the foreign national will be asked to leave the country.\nWhere should you apply for a residence permit?\nResidence permit applications will be made to our representation offices abroad as of January 1, 2015. However, applications will be made to the police departments or immigration offices, if any, in turkey until the preparations are concluded by the representation offices.\nWhich documents are required for applying for a residence permit?\nForeign national that asks for a residence permit must have entered in the country with a proper visa or visa exemption, and the passport must have been sealed with the last date of entry.\nHow to extend the expired residence permit?\nForeign nationals that have a residence permit are obliged to have it extended in a timely fashion if they wish to stay longer in Turkey. Foreign nationals that ask for an extension should apply for an extension two months before the residence permit expires.\nForeign nationals that fail to have the residence permit extended in the prescribed time may be categorised as “runaways”, and asked to leave the country. However application by foreigner nationals that have a “reasonable” excuse may be accepted.\nWhat should be done in case the residence adress changes?\nForeign nationals that move to another province different from the province of residence permit must file an application in the new province latest in 20 business days for a new residence permit. If the type of residence permit remains unchanged, a new residence permit is issued only, without having to pay for fee a new.\nWhat should be done in case the residence permit is lost?\nIn case the residence permit is lost, stolen or worn out, it will be re-issued. Foreign nationals that get their residence permit lost go t the police department in place of residence, fill out a “lost property report”, and apply to the relevant institution that issued the residence permit as soon as possible. In this case, the price of the residence permit will be fully charged, and the fee will be charged in half.\nFor more information go to http://www.e-ikamet.com/en.\npreviousHealth Insurance for Foreign Nationals in Turkey\nnextBuying Property in Turkey Guide for Foreigners","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line331980"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6716313362121582,"wiki_prob":0.6716313362121582,"text":"To protect us all, babies travelling overseas may need the measles shot at 6 months instead of 12\nNicholas Wood, University of Sydney; Alexis Pillsbury, University of Sydney, and Jean Li-Kim-Moy, University of Sydney\nIf you’re going overseas with your little one, you can vaccinate them against measles early. But they’ll still need their regular jab when they turn one.\nThis year, we’ve seen a resurgence of measles around the globe. The World Health Organisation (WHO) recorded more than 230,000 cases in the first five months of 2019, compared to 160,000 in a similar period in 2018.\nAustralia has had 128 measles cases since the beginning of the year compared to a total of 103 cases for all of 2018.\nMeasles causes fever, cough and a rash. But it can also cause more serious illness and even death. Babies and people with weakened immune systems are at the greatest risk of complications.\nPrepare for a healthy holiday with this A-to-E guide\nThe best protection against measles is vaccination. Two doses of a measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine has a success rate of more than 98%.\nUnder Australia’s National Immunisation Program, children receive two doses of MMR. The first dose is given at 12 months of age and a second dose at 18 months.\nBut given the rise of measles cases around the world, doctors are now calling for infants travelling overseas to be assessed by their GP to see whether they need the measles vaccine at six months.\nMeasles spreads easily\nMany adult Australians may not have received two doses of MMR vaccine, as only one dose was recommended before 1992 (a single dose is around 95% effective).\nUnvaccinated travellers to countries with a higher prevalence of measles can unknowingly bring measles back to Australia. Current measles hot spots include Israel, Thailand, Vietnam, Japan, Ukraine, Philippines and the United States (especially New York).\nPeople can catch up on their measles vaccinations at any age.\nFrom shutterstock.com\nMeasles is highly infectious. Once imported from overseas, it’s adept at seeking out and infecting the unvaccinated in a population.\nThe recent resurgence of measles has led experts to advise that people ensure they have had two lifetime doses of the MMR vaccine prior to travel.\nSix myths about vaccination – and why they’re wrong\nMums protect their babies in the beginning\nAs the first MMR vaccine is not given until 12 months of age, infant travellers who are too young to have received their first dose of MMR are particularly at risk of contracting measles.\nWe don’t routinely recommend MMR immunisation for infants younger than 12 months because of the presence of maternal antibodies. During pregnancy, antibodies which protect against many diseases, such as measles, whooping cough and influenza, are actively transferred through the placenta to the baby.\nMost mothers have antibodies to protect against measles either from receiving the MMR vaccine themselves during childhood or adolescence, or as a result of prior infection.\nBut during the first year of life, the antibodies protecting the baby naturally wane. The antibody levels are usually high enough in the first six months of life to protect against measles.\nOnce an infant reaches 12 months of age, the measles antibodies have usually sufficiently disappeared and can no longer provide protection. For this reason, we give the first dose of MMR vaccine at 12 months old.\nWhy people born between 1966 and 1994 are at greater risk of measles – and what to do about it\nChanging the recommendations\nMaternal antibodies can interfere with and reduce the response to an MMR vaccine given to an infant before 12 months of age.\nThe WHO Expanded Program on Immunisation recommends the first dose of MMR vaccine be given at nine months old. This is because in many countries the rates of measles are higher than in Australia, and the increased risk of infection outweighs any reduced vaccine response because of persisting maternal antibodies.\nThe WHO recommends that for countries like Australia that have achieved low rates of transmission, it’s better to give the first MMR vaccine at 12 months, because higher protection occurs among older infants as there is less interference from maternal antibodies.\nNo, combination vaccines don’t overwhelm kids’ immune systems\nUntil recently, our immunisation handbook stated that children as young as nine months could receive the MMR vaccine in certain circumstances, including travel to highly measles-endemic areas and during outbreaks.\nBut given the rise in measles globally, the recommended age at which Australian infants can receive MMR vaccine in special circumstances has been lowered from nine months to six months.\nThe US and England also state vaccination from six months of age can occur for travellers and to help control outbreaks.\nBabies inherit antibodies that protect against measles from their mums while they’re in the womb, but these wane over time.\nWhile MMR vaccines are normally free, because this early dose is not part of the National Immunisation Program, parents may need to pay an out-of-pocket fee to get it. Check with your GP.\nImportantly, if MMR is given before 12 months old, infants still need two further doses of measles-containing vaccine. This is to account for the possibility the early dose may not have been completely effective because of interference from the maternal antibodies.\nThey should receive the next dose of MMR vaccine at 12 months of age or four weeks after the first dose – whichever is later. They should then receive their final dose of measles-containing vaccine – an MMR and varicella (chickenpox) combination, known as MMRV – at 18 months. Both these vaccine doses are free under the National Immunisation Program.\nMMR is safe and effective for babies\nA recent review of MMR vaccines in infants under nine months found the overall effectiveness was 72%. So it’s not quite as effective as the near complete protection afforded by vaccination at 12 months and older, but still has a very strong chance of being effective.\nMMR vaccine in infants from six months old was considered safe, with no reports of serious events recorded across seven studies in the review. Fever and rash were the most common adverse reactions, occurring in 5-10% of infants. This is similar to vaccination at 12 months old.\nHealth Check: are you up to date with your vaccinations?\nParents of young infants planning international travel should talk to their GP. The GP will consider factors including the length of the trip and destination countries when giving advice.\nAdult travellers, too, should review their own vaccination record and speak to their GP if they are unsure they are fully protected.\nThis article originally said parents would need to pay approximately A$50 to obtain the MMR vaccine for infants under 12 months. The text has been updated to say they may need to pay an out-of-pocket fee, as this can vary, and the cost of the vaccine may be covered in some jurisdictions.\nNicholas Wood, Associate Professor, Discipline of Childhood and Adolescent Health, University of Sydney; Alexis Pillsbury, Senior Research Officer, National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance, University of Sydney, and Jean Li-Kim-Moy, General Paediatrician; Research Fellow, National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance, University of Sydney\nTaggedAlexis Pillsburychild healthJean Li-Kim-MoyNicholas Woodspeaking threadsTravel medicine\nPrevious Article Humanitarians turn sights on climate risk\nNext Article Low-Wage Workers Are Being Sued for Unpaid Medical Bills by a Nonprofit Christian Hospital That Employs Them","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1369167"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6596401333808899,"wiki_prob":0.3403598666191101,"text":"Home » Finance » iStar Inc. (STAR) is primed for evolution with the...\niStar Inc. (STAR) is primed for evolution with the beta value of 0.75\niStar Inc. (STAR) is priced at $25.26 after the most recent trading session. At the very opening of the session, the stock price was $24.69 and reached a high price of $25.33, prior to closing the session it reached the value of $24.58. The stock touched a low price of $24.51.Recently in News on December 1, 2021, iStar Announces Adjustment of Conversion Rate for Convertible Notes. iStar Inc. (NYSE: STAR) announced today an adjustment to the conversion rate of its 3.125% Convertible Senior Notes due 2022 as a result of the common stock cash dividends to be paid on December 15, 2021. You can read further details here\niStar Inc. had a pretty favorable run when it comes to the market performance. The 1-year high price for the company’s stock is recorded $26.41 on 01/03/22, with the lowest value was $23.42 for the same time period, recorded on 01/11/22.\niStar Inc. (STAR) full year performance was 66.51%\nPrice records that include history of low and high prices in the period of 52 weeks can tell a lot about the stock’s existing status and the future performance. Presently, iStar Inc. shares are logging -8.97% during the 52-week period from high price, and 71.25% higher than the lowest price point for the same timeframe. The stock’s price range for the 52-week period managed to maintain the performance between $14.75 and $27.75.\nThe company’s shares, operating in the sector of Real Estate managed to top a trading volume set approximately around 561835 for the day, which was evidently higher, when compared to the average daily volumes of the shares.\nWhen it comes to the year-to-date metrics, the iStar Inc. (STAR) recorded performance in the market was -2.21%, having the revenues showcasing -1.44% on a quarterly basis in comparison with the same period year before. At the time of this writing, the total market value of the company is set at 1.86B, as it employees total of 143 workers.\nSpecialists analysis on iStar Inc. (STAR)\nDuring the last month, 0 analysts gave the iStar Inc. a BUY rating, 0 of the polled analysts branded the stock as an OVERWEIGHT, 0 analysts were recommending to HOLD this stock, 0 of them gave the stock UNDERWEIGHT rating, and 0 of the polled analysts provided SELL rating.\nAccording to the data provided on Barchart.com, the moving average of the company in the 100-day period was set at 25.21, with a change in the price was noted -0.04. In a similar fashion, iStar Inc. posted a movement of -0.16% for the period of last 100 days, recording 555,622 in trading volumes.\nTotal Debt to Equity Ratio (D/E) can also provide valuable insight into the company’s financial health and market status. The debt to equity ratio can be calculated by dividing the present total liabilities of a company by shareholders’ equity. Debt to Equity thus makes a valuable metrics that describes the debt, company is using in order to support assets, correlating with the value of shareholders’ equity The total Debt to Equity ratio for STAR is recording 3.96 at the time of this writing. In addition, long term Debt to Equity ratio is set at 3.85.\nTrends and Technical analysis: iStar Inc. (STAR)\nRaw Stochastic average of iStar Inc. in the period of last 50 days is set at 50.40%. The result represents downgrade in oppose to Raw Stochastic average for the period of the last 20 days, recording 68.84%. In the last 20 days, the company’s Stochastic %K was 50.79% and its Stochastic %D was recorded 44.75%.\nNow, considering the stocks previous presentation, multiple moving trends are noted. Year-to-date Price performance of the company’s stock appears to be encouraging, given the fact the metric is recording -2.21%. Additionally, trading for the stock in the period of the last six months notably improved by 8.88%, alongside a boost of 66.51% for the period of the last 12 months. The shares increased approximately by 4.34% in the 7-day charts and went down by 6.76% in the period of the last 30 days. Common stock shares were lifted by -1.44% during last recorded quarter.\niStar Inc., iStar Inc. (NYSE:STAR), NYSE:STAR, STAR, STAR Shares, STAR Stock","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line732169"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6145293712615967,"wiki_prob":0.3854706287384033,"text":"The future of complementarianism (3): tradition and clarity\nMark Baddeley | 27 April, 2012\nThe third observation is that those of us who disagree with what (at least seems to be) Piper’s approach of linking what men and women should be doing to claims that men more naturally do some things well and women more naturally do other things well need to realize that if that is Piper’s view then that is arguably also the basic way in which pre-feminist Christians for 2000 years explained the logic behind the relevant Biblical commands. (more…)\nThe future of complementarianism (2): the search for the One True Complementarianism\nThe second observation is that the debate over the place of gender in public ministry and the husband/wife relationship is more complex than it can appear on the surface. As I suggested in my previous series, underneath the term ‘egalitarian’ there are a huge number of mutually contradictory positions held for a wide range of mutually contradictory reasons. Underneath the term ‘complementarian’ appears to be a smaller number of positions but which seem to be increasingly concerned to differentiate themselves from each other and which are about as quick to shoot each other for being unbiblical as they are for apparently being egalitarianism. (more…)\nA disturbing review\nLife, Sola Panel\nTony Payne | 23 April, 2012 | 9 comments\nIt was in the Number 1 Bestseller bin at my local Christian bookstore when I strolled in for a browse last week. And it was hard to miss at other places around the store, with its bold, red, attention-grabbing cover: “Real Marriage: The Truth about Sex, Friendship, and Life Together” by Mark and Grace Driscoll. (more…)\nGrace: all the way down\nLionel Windsor | 23 April, 2012\nA well-known scientist (some say it was Bertrand Russell) once gave a public lecture on astronomy. He described how the earth orbits around the sun and how the sun, in turn, orbits around the center of a vast collection of stars called our galaxy. At the end of the lecture, a little old lady at the back of the room got up and said: “What you have told us is rubbish. The world is really a flat plate supported on the back of a giant tortoise.” The scientist gave a superior smile before replying, “What is the tortoise standing on?” “You’re very clever, young man, very clever,” said the old lady. “But it’s turtles all the way down!” (Stephen Hawking, A Brief History of Time (2nd ed.; London: BCA, 1998), p. 1.)\nAll Christians should be like that little old lady. Not, of course, that we should insist on cosmic turtles. But there’s something that Christians should insist on, constantly, in every situation, to ourselves, and to everyone we see. It’s God’s grace. All the way down. (more…)\nThe future of complementarianism (1): feeling, nothing more than (Christianity has a masculine) feeling\nIn case you missed it, there was a minor ripple through the evangelical portion of the web recently. John Piper was reported to have declared that Christianity has a masculine feel in a talk he gave on J.C. Ryle’s ministry to a men’s conference on ministry. Blogs and Facebook lit up as Christians reacted—and as is usual with the social media, with those unhappy with the statement responding first, and then others reacting to the first group’s stated disagreement with Piper. (more…)\nWhen your children are sick\nJean Williams | 18 April, 2012 | 6 comments\nflickr: kourtlynlott\nI woke up this morning with a headache. There’s nothing remarkable about that; but as I stood at the bench and gulped down a couple of pain killers, I was reminded of how unpleasant a headache can be, and how easy it is for me to get rid of it.\nIt’s not so easy for my son. (more…)\nAfter the NIV, then what? The NIV.\nEveryday Ministry, Life, Pastoral Ministry, Sola Panel\nSandy Grant | 17 April, 2012 | 12 comments\nSome time ago I wrote about choosing a Bible translation for public use in church. At my church, St Michael’s Cathedral in Wollongong, we’ve decided to go with the 2011 version of the New International Version (NIV11), recently published by Biblica (a.k.a. the International Bible Society). I’d like to follow up on my previous article to tell you about our decision, and why.\nAmong the apostles\nPastoral Ministry, Sola Panel\nLionel Windsor | 16 April, 2012 | 1 comment\nOur own experiences often affect how we read the Bible. Take Romans 16:7, for example:\nGreet Andronicus and Junia, my kinsfolk and my fellow prisoners, who are of note among the apostles, who also were in Christ before me. (Rom 16:7)\nThere’s something in this verse that often catches the eye of the modern reader: a woman, Junia, is said to be “of note among the apostles.” This means that she was either a person of note to the apostles, or that she was herself “among the apostles.” Either way, the Bible seems to be saying that there was a woman who had a ministry role that was important in the early church. Surely then, as many argue, the example of Junia means that women today, too, can and should have significant ministry roles? At this point, our own experiences can play a big part, particularly our experiences of Christian ministry. (more…)\nProfessor versus Cardinal (#qanda)\nHere in Australia last week’s Q&A on ABC television was an Easter Monday special, featuring Professor Richard Dawkins, author of The God Delusion, and Sydney’s Catholic Archbishop, Cardinal George Pell for a live discussion of faith, science, and morality. The show’s audience was 863,000, its biggest audience since it covered the 2010 federal election. (more…)\nAuthentic wine tasting\nJames Croucher | 9 April, 2012 | 4 comments\n“Thank goodness that’s over,” you sigh, laying your head on your pillow. As the organiser of your church’s ‘wine tasting’ event, your day had been very full. First thing this morning you had been to a number of superstores to chase down the twelve required varieties. As the rain poured down, you loaded the cases into your little old car. Puddle water soaked through your shoes, but you reminded yourself that it was all for the gospel. You arrived at the church and helped arrange the room with a small number of volunteers. Just as you sat down for lunch you received a call from the expert who was going to lead the tasting but now needed to pull out. A few hours, a lot of anxiety, and many phone calls later, you found someone who could fill in for him. Your phone beeped again as you received a message from the friend you invited. Unfortunately she could no longer get away from work in time and wished you a pleasant evening. You felt really disappointed. However, having an official role made it much less awkward for you than for other members of the church family who arrived without a non-Christian. (more…)\nThe Agony\nSandy Grant | 5 April, 2012\nSome people would call me aesthetically challenged: I don’t know much about art and music and poetry and literature—but I know what I like. And I’m more a low-brow sort of guy, crime fiction rather than the English classics. (more…)\nA different centre of gravity\nIan Carmichael | 4 April, 2012\nThis heartwarming feedback just came in from Dave, a pastor here in Sydney:\nI’m not a teary kind of bloke. Last night, though, I was almost at the point of crying as we went around the room and people shared what they’d got out of doing The Course of Your Life. In the week following the weekend away one lady has told virtually everyone she’s met about Jesus and started praying all the time; another lady has cut back her excessive work hours and is praying far more frequently; three men shared how they’ve started speaking about Christian things in conversations at work where in the past they would’ve kept quiet; one of them gets in the car a few minutes earlier each day so he can pray for opportunities to speak about Jesus at work; another guy can’t stop reading Colossians because it’s just so exciting.\nThe hope of the resurrection\nNicholas Markham | Rory Shiner | 2 April, 2012\nFor Christians, the Bible’s teaching on Jesus’ resurrection is often a bit like a mystery box. It’s central to our faith, but in our minds its value often depends on its mystery. In 1 Corinthians 15 Paul urges us to move beyond the surface, open the box and delight in its truths. (more…)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line188059"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9827101230621338,"wiki_prob":0.9827101230621338,"text":"Babynology >> Dutch Baby Names >> Dutch Famous Baby Names Starting with Letter W\nDutch Famous Names Starting with Letter W\nStarting Name\nOrigin/country\n-Select- Academic/Intellectual Actor/Actress Administrator Adventurer/Explorer Advocate/Lawyer Anchor Artists/Performer Bishop/Holyman Business Tycoon Defence/Military engineer/designer Filmmaker Governor/Bureaucrat Historian Leaders/Politician Medical Practitioner Modeling/Advertisement Professional/Specialist Scientist/Researcher Social Activist Sovereign/Dictator Sports Person Writer/Journalist\nMost Famous Dutch People Names for Boys and Girls\nCelebrity Name\nAbout Celebrity\nWalter Baseggio\nIs a Belgian footballer who currently plays for R.E. Mouscron, as a central midfielder.In 2005-06, B\nIs a Belgian footballer who currently plays for R.E. Mouscron, as a central midfielder.In 2005-06, Baseggio was transfer listed, joining Italy's Treviso F.B.C. 1993 in January 2006, being relegated in his first year. However, in the mid-season interval of the next season, he returned to Anderlecht. In his two stints with the Brussels outfit, he won four national leagues, although he was only a fringe player in the last.\nWalter De Greef\nIs a retired Belgian footballer.During his career he played for R.S.C. Anderlecht and Sporting Loker\nIs a retired Belgian footballer.During his career he played for R.S.C. Anderlecht and Sporting Lokeren. He earned 5 caps for the Belgium national football team, and participated in UEFA Euro 1984.\nWalter Godefroot\nIs a retired Belgian professional road bicycle racer and former directeur sportif of Team Telekom, l\nIs a retired Belgian professional road bicycle racer and former directeur sportif of Team Telekom, later known as T-Mobile Team, a professional cycling team. In his competitive cycling days, Godefroot was a specialist in the one-day classic cycle races, w\nWalter Hekster\nIs a Dutch composer, clarinetist and conductor of classical music, specializing in contemporary clas\nIs a Dutch composer, clarinetist and conductor of classical music, specializing in contemporary classical music.Studying composition with Ton de Leeuw and clarinet with Bram de Wilde, he graduated from the Amsterdam Academy of Music in 1961. Upon his graduation he studied clarinet with Keith Wilson and composition with Mel Powell at Yale University, where he received a Master of Music in 1963. In 1966 he studied with Roger Sessions in Tanglewood.\nWalter Meeuws\nIs a retired Belgian footballer. During his career he played for K. Beerschot V.A.C., Club Brugge K.\nIs a retired Belgian footballer. During his career he played for K. Beerschot V.A.C., Club Brugge K.V., R. Standard de Liège, AFC Ajax, K.V. Mechelen. He earned 46 caps for the Belgium national football team, and participated in UEFA Euro 1980 and the 1982 FIFA World Cup. As a player he won 4 championships, 2 with Standard in Belgium, 1 with Bruges in Belgium and 1 with Ajax in the Netherlands. He also won 2 cups and played the final of the European Championship with Belgium in Italy in 1980.\nWalter Meijer Timmerman Thijssen\nWas a Dutch rower who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics.He was part of the Dutch boat Minerva Ams\nWas a Dutch rower who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics.He was part of the Dutch boat Minerva Amsterdam, which won the bronze medal in the eights.\nWalter Middelberg\nWas a Dutch rower who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics.\nWannes Van De Velde\nWas a Flemish singer, musician, poet and artist.His father, Jaak Van de Velde, was a metal worker an\nWas a Flemish singer, musician, poet and artist.His father, Jaak Van de Velde, was a metal worker and talented singer, his mother a housewife and singer. He grew up in the Zirkstraat, near the Antwerp Red Light district. At home the young boy was always surrounded by music.\nWarwick Estevam Kerr\nA Brazilian agricultural engineer, geneticist, entomologist, professor and scientific leader, notabl\nA Brazilian agricultural engineer, geneticist, entomologist, professor and scientific leader, notable for his discoveries in the genetics and sex determination of bees. He is also partially responsible for the accidental release of experimental, Africanized bee queens in 1957, also called killer bees. Africanized bees are hybrids of European and African honey bees. These queens were eventually responsible for the spread of the Africanized bee to continental areas that were previously dominated by the more docile European bee.From March 1975 to April 1979 Kerr moved to Manaus, Amazonas, as director of the National Institute of Amazonia Research (INPA), a research institute of the National Council of Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq). He officially retired from the University of São Paulo in January 1981, but not from scientific life. Exactly eleven days later he accepted a position as Full Professor at the Universidade Estadual do Maranhão in São Luís\nWende Snijders\nA Dutch singer. Her first name Wende is commonly used as her artist name.Wende moved to Indonesia wh\nA Dutch singer. Her first name Wende is commonly used as her artist name.Wende moved to Indonesia when she was four years old and to Guinea-Bissau when she was six. When she was nine years old, she came to The Netherlands, where she lived in Zeist. She gr\nWendel Fräser\nWas a Dutch-Suriname footballer. During his career he served Feyenoord Rotterdam and RBC Roosendaal.\nWas a Dutch-Suriname footballer. During his career he served Feyenoord Rotterdam and RBC Roosendaal. He died at the age of 22, when on June 7, 1989 he was killed in the Surinam Airways Flight PY764 air crash in Paramaribo.Fräser was a postman in Rotterdam and played in the youth squads of Feyenoord Rotterdam. He was known as a talented player and was promoted to the first team of Feyenoord in the 1987-88 season. He did not yet make his debut that season, but remained on the bench. The next season he was transferred to RBC Roosendaal where he made his professional debut. After that season he signed a new contract at SVV for whom he would have been playing from the 1989-90 season.\nBaby Name Meanings for a Meaningful Identity\nChoosing a name for your baby is indeed one of the greatest moments of euphoria for parents. The arrival of a baby in the family is the culmination of many months of planning and anticipation punctuated with periods of anxiety and concern.\nWendy Alane Wright\nA multi-racial actress and singer; and daughter of author W.D. Wright (Crisis of the Black Intellect\nA multi-racial actress and singer; and daughter of author W.D. Wright (Crisis of the Black Intellectual, Racism Matters). Wendy is married to James T. Smith whose daughter Taryn Smith is the great, great, great granddaughter of American abolitionist John\nWendy Jans\nIs a Belgian amateur snooker and pool player.\nWerner Mund\nWas a Belgian Olympic fencer. He competed in the individual foil and team épée events at the 1932\nWas a Belgian Olympic fencer. He competed in the individual foil and team épée events at the 1932 Summer Olympics.\nWesley De Ruiter\nA Dutch football player who currently plays for FC Utrecht.\nA Dutch footballer. He played for Ajax (2002–2007) and currently plays for Real Madrid. He is also\nA Dutch footballer. He played for Ajax (2002–2007) and currently plays for Real Madrid. He is also a regular member of the Dutch national team.Although Sneijder was not born in Amsterdam, he started his career in the Ajax's famous youth academy. He made his debut for Ajax in a 2-0 win at Excelsior on December 22, 2002 when manager Ronald Koeman, troubled by an injury-filled squad called him up, advised by Danny Blind, the then-coach of the Ajax youth-squad. He rapidly established himself in the role of midfield general and occasional left winger. Despite his short height, he is pacy and quick and strong on the ball and his passing range is enhanced by his two-footedness (ambidextrous).\nWesley Sonck\nIs a Belgian football player, who currently plays as a striker for Club Brugge and the Belgium natio\nIs a Belgian football player, who currently plays as a striker for Club Brugge and the Belgium national football team. He played for K.R.C. Genk in the Jupiler League from where he joined AFC Ajax in 2003 for about £5 million. He finished as the top scorer of Jupiler League in 2002 with 30 goals and in 2003 22 goals, which he shared with Cédric Roussel.\nWesley Verhoek\nA Dutch footballer who plays for ADO Den Haag. He is a striker who plays as a winger on both side of\nA Dutch footballer who plays for ADO Den Haag. He is a striker who plays as a winger on both side of the pitch.Verhoek's career began when he signed a professional contract with ADO Den Haag, after the winter break in 2004/2005 he played his first match in the first team of ADO Den Haag. Verhoek also plays for the Dutch youth squad.\nWiebe E. Bijker\nIs a Dutch professor, chair of the Department of Social Science & Technology at the Faculty of Arts\nIs a Dutch professor, chair of the Department of Social Science & Technology at the Faculty of Arts & Culture in the Universiteit Maastricht, The Netherlands.\nWieger Emile Mensonides\nIs a former Dutch swimmer, who won the bronze medal in the 200 Metres Breaststroke at the 1960 Summe\nIs a former Dutch swimmer, who won the bronze medal in the 200 Metres Breaststroke at the 1960 Summer Olympics. For forty years he was the only Dutch swimmer who had won an olympic medal. Pieter van den Hoogenband followed in his footsteps at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney\nWieke Elisabeth Henriëtte Dijkstra\nIs a Dutch field hockey player, who plays as midfielder for Dutch club Laren. She also plays for the\nIs a Dutch field hockey player, who plays as midfielder for Dutch club Laren. She also plays for the Netherlands national team, however most of the time as a defender. She was part of the Dutch squad that became World Champion at the 2006 Women's Hockey W\nWiel Arets\nIs a Dutch architect, theorist and industrial designer from the Dutch-German border town of Heerlen.\nIs a Dutch architect, theorist and industrial designer from the Dutch-German border town of Heerlen. After graduating from Eindhoven University in 1983 he established Wiel Arets Architect & Associates in his hometown a year later and in 1997 the office was moved to Maastricht. In 2004 a second office was opened in Amsterdam, with a third office in Zurich opening in 2008. Bettina Kraus, born 1970 in Nuremberg, has been a partner of Wiel Arets Architects since 2000.[1]\nWiel Coerver\nA football (soccer) manager from the Netherlands, who's the developer of the Coerver coaching method\nA football (soccer) manager from the Netherlands, who's the developer of the Coerver coaching method. He won the UEFA Cup with Feyenoord Rotterdam in the 1973-1974 season.The 1998 FIFA World Cup in France saw the first Coerver student, Boudewijn Zenden who played for the Netherlands national football team, to make the FIFA World Cup.Coerver Coaching Technique is a soccer coaching technique which Coerver created. By analysing videotapes of various great players including Pelé, devised a new concept in football which advocates that skill could not only be inherent with the young players but could also be passed on in a comprehensive academic way. Under this technique, players progress in a structured manner,\nWietske Annechien De Ruiter\nIs a former female field hockey striker from The Netherlands, who represented her native country at\nIs a former female field hockey striker from The Netherlands, who represented her native country at two consecutive Summer Olympics: 1992 and 1996. At the last tournament in Atlanta, Georgia the former player of Hockey Vereniging Victoria in Rotterdam (wh\nWijnand Ott\nIs a Dutch musician.In 1980 Ott joined Diesel as a replacement for Frank Papendrecht. He had taken u\nIs a Dutch musician.In 1980 Ott joined Diesel as a replacement for Frank Papendrecht. He had taken up a career as a bassist only recently before that (switching from guitar) and despite his shy demeanour, he was a quality bassist.\nThe life after delivery,getting used to care about your newborn?\nPregnacy, baby & parenting: how well do you know these fact?\nWhat Kind of Dad Will You Be?\nMeaningful Baby Names\nWhen picking a baby name for your baby son or daughter, please conduct a reality check by looking up its meaning. This exercise should be conducted at two levels. First check the meaning of the name in your own language.\nList of Dutch baby names, Dutch babies names, Dutch baby names and meanings has been compiled from various resources. Please use this up to date list of Dutch name as a reference to name your kid/child. This vast database of Dutch names has been compiled from various references and suggestions provided by our web site users and resources partners. This information is developed to primarily serve as a reference. We are unable to respond on request for personalized assistance at the moment. Thank you for your support. Largest list of Dutch baby names with meanings, numerology, popularity and comments.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line447909"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6757609844207764,"wiki_prob":0.6757609844207764,"text":"native american news, information and entertainment.\nowned and operated by Ho-Chunk Inc., the economic development corporation of the winnebago tribe.\nemail indianz.com\nHo-Chunk Inc\nIndianz.Com > August 12, 2008\nads@blueearthmarketing.com 712.224.5420\n9th Circuit affirms prosecution in O'odham case (August 12, 2008)\nThe 9th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday affirmed federal prosecution of a man who attempted to murder two members of the Tohono O'odham Nation of Arizona. Miguel Angel Ramirez claimed that his victims were not \"Indian\" within the meaning...\nLa Jolla men win rural volunteer award (August 12, 2008)\nTwo members of the La Jolla Band of Luiseno Indians received a $4,000 award for their efforts during the devastating Poomacha fire of October 2007. The fire destroyed 97 percent of the reservation. Brothers Ben and Tom Rodriguez made sure...\nLetter: Sweetheart deal for Suquamish Tribe (August 12, 2008)\n\"Last Thursday, I went to watch the free concert at Port Orchard’s waterfront park. Prior to the show, I went for a walk along the breakwater of the Port Orchard Marina. As I got out to the water, I found...\nRumsey Band donates $500K to womens' safe house (August 12, 2008)\nThe Rumsey Band of Wintun Indians donated $500,000 to help an organization in Sacramento, California, build a safe house for victims of sexual abuse and domestic violence. The 12,000 square-foot WEAVE Safehouse will provide more space to help women and...\nNez Perce Tribe struggles to provide health care (August 12, 2008)\nThe Nez Perce Tribe of Idaho says federal funds fail to meet the health care needs of its people. The tribe receives about $8 million a year from the Indian Health Service. Chairwoman Julia Davis-Wheeler said that's not enough to...\nCherokee council overrides veto on districting (August 12, 2008)\nThe Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma will adopt a new districting plan over the objections of Chief Chad Smith. The plan creates 15 districts, each with one representative. The tribe currently has nine districts. The plan was approved by the tribal...\nLawmaker in Abramoff scandal ending prison term (August 12, 2008)\nFormer Congressman Bob Ney (R-Ohio), the only member of Congress indicted in connection with the Jack Abramoff scandal, will be completing his sentence this weekend. Ney was sentenced to 30 months but only served a total of 17 months in...\nSen. McCain snubs tribes on South Dakota visit (August 12, 2008)\nSen. John McCain (R-Arizona), the presumptive Republican nominee for president, was in South Dakota last week but didn't have enough time to meet with tribal leaders, according to his campaign. The Great Plains Tribal Chairman's Association contacted McCain's campaign last...\nOpinion: MOWA Choctaws are no longer Indian (August 12, 2008)\n\"Woe is me. It has been hard adjusting to the fact that we are no longer Indians as of a few weeks ago. A United States District Court in Alabama recently ruled that the MOWA Band of Choctaw Indians' lawsuit...\nBIA to work with tribal college on law and order (August 12, 2008)\nThe Bureau of Indian Affairs is collaborating with the United Tribes Technical College of North Dakota on law and order issues. The BIA will station an officer to UTTC's campus to work with tribal communities. UTTC is also offering...\nSeminole Nation for domestic violence shelter (August 12, 2008)\nThe Seminole Nation of Oklahoma will build its first domestic violence shelter. The tribal council approved $250,000 towards the safe house. Additional funds will be raised for the $500,000 project. The shelter will be open to tribal and non-tribal...\nHundreds attend Soboba Band forum on Public Law 280 (August 12, 2008)\nA reported 200 people attended a forum hosted by the Soboba Band of Luiseno Indians to discuss Public Law 280. Legal experts and tribal leaders discussed the law, which was passed during the termination era. It grants certain states, including...\nNative woman, missing for four years, found dead (August 12, 2008)\nThe remains of a Native woman who was missing for four years were discovered in Saskatchewan on Friday. Daleen Kay Bosse, a member of the Onion Lake First Nation, was last seen after an Assembly of First Nations function...\nCity won't oppose Cherokee Nation land-into-trust (August 12, 2008)\nThe city council in Catoosa, Oklahoma, voted 6-1 not to fight the Cherokee Nation's land-into-trust application. The city opposed the application when it was first filed in 1996. \"Things have changed since that time,\" Mayor Rita Lamkin was quoted as...\nSeneca Nation opposes tobacco tax bill (August 12, 2008)\nThe Seneca Nation is calling on New York Gov. David Paterson (D) to veto a bill that imposes state sales tax on reservations. President Maurice A. John Sr. said the bill imposes on treaty rights. He promised litigation to prevent...\nOpinion: Wasteful hunting shocks Alaskans (August 12, 2008)\n\"Recently, many Alaskans were shocked and appalled to see front page pictures of caribou calves trying to suckle from their dead mothers near Point Hope and Kivalina, where vandals who live nearby apparently shot and left at least 160...\nNighthorse Campbell stumps for Sen. McCain (August 12, 2008)\nEx-Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-Colorado), a registered lobbyist, is campaigning in Indian Country for Sen. John McCain (R-Arizona). Campbell, a member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe of Montana, recently spoke to the Midwest Alliance of Sovereign Nations to promote the...\nInterior proposes endangered species change (August 12, 2008)\nInterior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne announced a \"narrow\" change to Endangered Species Act regulations that environmentalists and Democrats said would rewrite the landmark law. Kempthorne said the change brings existing regulations in line with recent court decisions and current practices. Federal...\n1 Tribes rush to respond to new coronavirus emergency created by Trump administration\n2 'At this rate the entire tribe will be extinct': Zuni Pueblo sees COVID-19 cases double as first death is confirmed\n3 Arne Vainio: 'A great sickness has been visited upon us as human beings'\n4 Arne Vainio: Zoongide'iwin is the Ojibwe word for courage\n5 Cayuga Nation's division leads to a 'human rights catastrophe'\nPrevious: August 11, 2008\nNext: August 13, 2008\nNative American news, information and entertainment. Owned and operated by Ho-Chunk Inc., the economic development corporation of the Winnebago Tribe. Call us at 202 630 8439 (THEZ)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line178116"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9135633707046509,"wiki_prob":0.9135633707046509,"text":"Cruise CEO Tells Biden to Support US Autonomous Vehicles Companies\nBy Eric Tanenblatt and Chan Creswell\nThis week Reuters reported that Dan Ammann, CEO of Cruise, wrote a previously undisclosed letter to President Biden urging his administration to support the development of autonomous vehicles. In particular, Ammann encouraged the President to raise the cap on the number of vehicle exemptions per company to the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS). He warned that failure to do so would only hurt US autonomous vehicle companies in their race against Chinese manufacturers. Cruise is a majority-owned subsidy of General Motors that has generated buzz in the AV community for its wealthy and connected backers, including Honda and Microsoft, and its “post-car” designs.\nIn 2020, Cruise debuted the “Origin,” a vehicle designed to move past the car. Unlike traditional motor vehicles, the Origin contains no driver’s seat or gas pedals since it is entirely autonomous. Cruise envisions that the Origin will operate as a ridesharing vehicle and its interior simply includes two benches facing one another and screens that display the vehicle’s itinerary. Although it is roughly the size of an SUV, it contains no hood or trunk and is oddly symmetrical.\nUnfortunately for Cruise, FMVSS requires that motor vehicles contain specific mechanisms like a steering wheel. Although these standards were recently revised to accommodate autonomous vehicles, the Origin would still fail to comply. Additionally, Cruise is subject to particular scrutiny because, unlike its competitor Nuro, the Origin would transport passengers. While the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) can offer exemptions to companies, there is a cap at 2,500 exempt testing vehicles per manufacturer per year. In his letter, Ammann called this cap a “U.S.-only impediment to building these vehicles at scale in the United States.”\nWhile there has been congressional interest in raising the cap, no action has ultimately taken place. For instance, in 2017, both the House and Senate extensively debated bills that would have raised the cap over a period of five years to 100,000 and 80,000 vehicles per manufacturer per year, respectively. Although the House bill, the SELF Drive Act, did pass its chamber, neither bill reached the Senate Floor. Recently, Senators Thune (R-SD) and Peters (D-MI) tried to generate momentum to attach an amendment raising the cap to a bill focused on economic competition with China but were unsuccessful.\nAmmann’s letter may provide the first true interaction between the Biden Administration and autonomous vehicles. Although the President has been vocal and active in securing more investment into US infrastructure, including electric vehicle and electric vehicle infrastructure, there has been very little mention of autonomous vehicles. In a unique coincidence, one of Transportation Secretary Buttigieg’s only comments on autonomous vehicles comes from an Axios event, sponsored by Cruise. At the virtual event, he said that his office’s main concern would be safety and that, currently, “the technologies exist to assist drivers, but in the vehicles that exist today, not to replace them.”\nIn his letter, Ammann states that “China’s top-down, centrally directed approach imposes no similar restraints on their home grown AV industry.” Of course, the Chinese Government has actively encouraged the growth of their AV sector and helped guide its development. In his first address to Congress, President Biden categorized the competition between the US and China as a battle between the adaptability of two different philosophies of government in the 21st Century. He said, “[President Xi JinPing] and others, autocrats, think that democracy can’t compete in the 21st century with autocracies, because it takes too long to get consensus.” He later said, “In my discussions with President Xi, I told him we welcome the competition.” Ammann focused on this global dynamic in his letter, saying, “We do not seek, require or desire government funding; we seek your help in leveling the playing field.”\nWhile Mr. Amann’s letter was sent on May 17th, it remains to be seen how the Biden Administration will approach autonomous vehicles. Dentons and the Driverless Commute will continue to track the latest developments in autonomous vehicles both in the US and globally. For more information on the global approach to autonomous vehicles, and the Chinese model in particular, check out our Global Guide to Autonomous Vehicles and subscribe to the Driverless Commute.\nChina, Cruise, Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards, Honda, Microsoft, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Nuro, Pete Buttigieg, President Biden, SELF Drive Act, United States\nAbout Eric Tanenblatt\nEric Tanenblatt is the Global Chair of Public Policy and Regulation of Dentons, the world's largest law firm. He also leads the firm's US Public Policy Practice, leveraging his three decades of experience at the very highest levels of the federal and state governments.\nAbout Chan Creswell\nChan Creswell is a Senior Public Policy Analyst in the Atlanta office.\nDriverless Commute – June 1\nThe Driverless Commute: New Federal Autonomous Vehicle Rules on the Horizon\nBy Eric Tanenblatt, Crawford Schneider, and Matthew Ludwig\nDriverless Commute – January 12","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1445298"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9758660793304443,"wiki_prob":0.9758660793304443,"text":"Appeals Court Appears Skeptical Of Flynn's Bid To Force Judge To Dismiss Case\nFormer Trump national security adviser Michael Flynn, pictured in June 2019, had a hearing on Friday about the government's effort to drop its case against him.\nA federal appeals court appeared skeptical Friday of Michael Flynn's bid to force a judge to dismiss his case after the Justice Department sought to abandon the prosecution.\nA three-judge panel on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit considered Flynn's case after years of twists and turns that began in the first days of President Trump's administration.\nLast month, the Justice Department requested to dismiss its 2 1/2 year prosecution of Flynn, who pleaded guilty in 2017 to lying to the FBI about his contacts with the Russian ambassador. The federal district court judge presiding in the criminal case, Emmet Sullivan, has put a hold on that for now.\nInstead, he's set up a process to evaluate the government's decision to drop the charges.\nCritics have said the Justice Department's intercession in Flynn's case is improper, at least in part, because he is Trump's friend.\nFlynn and the Justice Department, meanwhile, have criticized Sullivan for not yet dropping the case. Flynn's legal team took the matter to the appeals court to ask it to order Sullivan to immediately dismiss.\nDubious judges\nThe hearing on Friday lasted more than 90 minutes. Flynn's attorney, Sidney Powell, argued that Sullivan exceeded his authority by appointing an outside counsel to argue against the government and by scheduling a hearing for mid-July to address the department's decision to drop its charges.\nPowell said the government has the sole authority to make prosecutorial decisions and that Sullivan has no choice but to toss the case since the Justice Department and Flynn both want it thrown out.\nThe Justice Department, meanwhile, called Sullivan's review process \"intrusive\" and said it would cause harm to the government to have to defend its decision publicly in a highly politicized environment.\nDOJ attorney Jeffrey Wall said Sullivan's review and the hearing he's scheduled for mid-July would become a \"public spectacle.\"\nThe Flynn matter is highly political and unusual, not least because Flynn already has admitted his guilt and cooperated with investigators. Attorney General William Barr has said he believes that doesn't matter because of other aspects of the story.\nThe appeals court judges on Friday appeared skeptical about Powell's argument that they should take the extraordinary step of intervening now and ordering Sullivan both to stop his review and dismiss the case altogether.\nJudge Karen Henderson told Powell that a federal judge in a criminal case is \"not merely a rubber stamp\" when the government seeks to dismiss.\n\"There's nothing wrong with him holding a hearing, as far as I know,\" she said.\nJudge Robert Wilkins, like Henderson, noted that Sullivan had not yet ruled on the government's motion to dismiss, only set up a process to evaluate it. That's why Sullivan appointed a former judge to advise him and scheduled another hearing.\nSullivan could assess the counsel he's received, conduct his independent review and still decide to drop the case.\n\"If he denies the motion, then you can come back here on appeal,\" Wilkins told Flynn's lawyers.\nNo, Powell said — the government has quit the case and \"it's time to leave the field.\" She also said the impact of the drawn-out nature of this case on Flynn has to be taken into consideration.\n\"The toll it takes on a defendant to go through this is absolutely enormous,\" she said.\nLatest twist in years-long melodrama\nFlynn served as President Trump's first national security adviser for less than a month. He pleaded guilty in 2017 to lying to the FBI about his conversations with Russian's then-ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, during the presidential transition.\nFlynn cooperated extensively with special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election, but did an about-face last summer after bringing on a new legal team led by Powell, who has been a fierce critic on Fox News of the Russia probe.\nEarly this year, Flynn moved to withdraw his guilty plea, saying he was set up by the FBI. Transcripts of Flynn's phone calls with Kislyak were recently declassified and made public. They showed that the two men did discuss sanctions against Russia—one of the issues Flynn pleaded guilty to lying about.\nIn its motion to drop the case, the Justice Department argued that the FBI never should have interviewed Flynn, and that any false statements Flynn might have made were not material to a legitimate investigation.\nThe outside counsel appointed by Sullivan, former federal judge John Gleeson, disagreed. In a sharply worded brief this week, Gleeson said the department's stated reasons for wanting to dismiss the case are \"so obviously pretextual, that they are deficient.\"\nHe continued: \"Moreover, the facts surrounding the filing of the government's motion constitute clear evidence of gross prosecutorial abuse. They reveal an unconvincing effort to disguise as legitimate a decision to dismiss that is based solely on the fact that Flynn is a political ally of President Trump.\"\nRyan Lucas\nRyan Lucas covers the Justice Department for NPR.\nSee stories by Ryan Lucas","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line291979"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5501214861869812,"wiki_prob":0.5501214861869812,"text":"'Fortress USA': How 9/11 produced a military industrial juggernaut\nSince the September 11 terror attacks, there has been no hiding from the increased militarisation of the United States. Everyday life is suffused with policing and surveillance. This ranges from the inconvenient, such as removing shoes at the airport, to the dystopian, such as local police departments equipped with decommissioned tanks too big to use on regular roads.\nThis process of militarisation did not begin with 9/11. The American state has always relied on force combined with the de-personalisation of its victims.\nThe army, after all, dispossessed First Nations peoples of their land as settlers pushed westward. Expanding the American empire to places such as Cuba, the Philippines, and Haiti also relied on force, based on racist justifications.\nThe military also ensured American supremacy in the wake of the second world war. As historian Nikhil Pal Singh writes, about 8 million people were killed in US-led or -sponsored wars from 1945-2019 - and this is a conservative estimate.\nWhen Dwight Eisenhower, a Republican and former military general, left the presidency in 1961, he famously warned against the growing \"military-industrial complex\" in the US. His warning went unheeded and the protracted conflict in Vietnam was the result.\nThe 9/11 attacks then intensified US militarisation, both at home and abroad. George W. Bush was elected in late 2000 after campaigning to reduce US foreign interventions. The new president discovered, however, that by adopting the persona of a tough, pro-military leader, he could sweep away lingering doubts about the legitimacy of his election.\nWaging war on Afghanistan within a month of the twin towers falling, Bush's popularity soared to 90%. War in Iraq, based on the dubious assertion of Saddam Hussein's \"weapons of mass destruction\", soon followed.\nThe military industrial juggernaut\nInvestment in the military state is immense. 9/11 ushered in the federal, cabinet-level Department of Homeland Security, with an initial budget in 2001-02 of US$16 billion. Annual budgets for the agency peaked at US$74 billion in 2009-10 and is now around US$50 billion.\nThis super-department vacuumed up bureaucracies previously managed by a range of other agencies, including justice, transportation, energy, agriculture, and health and human services.\nRead more: Why is it so difficult to fight domestic terrorism? 6 experts share their thoughts\nCentralising services under the banner of security has enabled gross miscarriages of justice. These include the separation of tens of thousands of children from parents at the nation's southern border, done in the guise of protecting the country from so-called illegal immigrants. More than 300 of the some 1,000 children taken from parents during the Trump administration have still not been reunited with family.\nThe post-9/11 Patriot Act also gave spying agencies paramilitary powers. The act reduced barriers between the CIA, FBI, and the National Security Agency (NSA) to permit the acquiring and sharing of Americans' private communications. These ranged from telephone records to web searches. All of this was justified in an atmosphere of near-hysterical and enduring anti-Muslim fervour.\nOnly in 2013 did most Americans realise the extent of this surveillance network. Edward Snowden, a contractor working at the NSA, leaked documents that revealed a secret US$52 billion budget for 16 spying agencies and over 100,000 employees.\nNormalisation of the security state\nDespite the long objections of civil liberties groups and disquiet among many private citizens, especially after Snowden's leaks, it has proven difficult to wind back the industrialised security state.\nThis is for two reasons: the extent of the investment, and because its targets, both domestically and internationally, are usually not white and not powerful.\nRead more: Calculating the costs of the Afghanistan War in lives, dollars and years\nDomestically, the 2015 Freedom Act renewed almost all of the Patriot Act's provisions. Legislation in 2020 that might have stemmed some of these powers stalled in Congress.\nAnd recent reports suggest President Joe Biden's election has done little to alter the detention of children at the border.\nMilitarisation is now so commonplace that local police departments and sheriff's offices have received some US$7 billion worth of military gear (including grenade launchers and armoured vehicles) since 1997, underwritten by federal government programs.\nMilitarised police kill civilians at a high rate - and the targets for all aspects of policing and incarceration are disproportionately people of colour. And yet, while the sight of excessively armed police forces during last year's Black Lives Matter protests shocked many Americans, it will take a phenomenal effort to reverse this trend.\nRead more: Police with lots of military gear kill civilians more often than less-militarized officers\nThe heavy cost of the war on terror\nThe juggernaut of the militarised state keeps the United States at war abroad, no matter if Republicans or Democrats are in power.\nSince 9/11, the US \"war on terror\" has cost more than US$8 trillion and led to the loss of up to 929,000 lives.\nThe effects on countries like Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, Syria, and Pakistan have been devastating, and with the US involvement in Somalia, Libya, the Philippines, Mali, and Kenya included, these conflicts have resulted in the displacement of some 38 million people.\nThese wars have become self-perpetuating, spawning new terror threats such as the Islamic State and now perhaps ISIS-K.\nThose who serve in the US forces have suffered greatly. Roughly 2.9 million living veterans served in post-9/11 conflicts abroad. Of the some 2 million deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan, perhaps 36% are experiencing PTSD.\nTraining can be utterly brutal. The military may still offer opportunities, but the lives of those who serve remain expendable.\nLife must be precious\nTowards the end of his life, Robert McNamara, the hard-nosed Ford Motor Company president and architect of the United States' disastrous military efforts in Vietnam, came to regret deeply his part in the military-industrial juggernaut.\nIn his 1995 memoir, he judged his own conduct to be morally repugnant. He wrote,\nIn interviews with the filmmaker Errol Morris, McNamara admitted, obliquely, to losing sight of the simple fact the victims of the militarised American state were, in fact, human beings.\nAs McNamara realised far too late, the solution to reversing American militarisation is straightforward. We must recognise, in the words of activist and scholar Ruth Wilson Gilmore, that \"life is precious\". That simple philosophy also underlies the call to acknowledge Black Lives Matter.\nThe best chance to reverse the militarisation of the US state is policy guided by the radical proposal that life - regardless of race, gender, status, sexuality, nationality, location or age - is indeed precious.\nAs we reflect on how the United States has changed since 9/11, it is clear the country has moved further away from this basic premise, not closer to it.\nAuthor: Clare Corbould - Associate Professor, Contemporary Histories Research Group, Deakin University","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line43941"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7554312348365784,"wiki_prob":0.7554312348365784,"text":"De Luca’s election goals\nNov 30, 2021 | Government, Narrabeen ward\nIndependent candidate for Narrabeen ward Vincent De Luca OAM says he is seeking a fourth term on Council to ensure risks of over-development are managed and Council services are improved.\nCouncillor De Luca, who was first elected to Warringah Council in 2008, has become popular with members of the community but a thorn in the side of consecutive Council administrations, often asking specific and difficult questions at Council meetings.\nHe feels his ability to turn over rocks and ask awkward questions is a reflection of his experience as a lawyer and time working in community services and government.\n“I’ve been a solicitor, worked with the Attorney General’s department and I’ve served in Parliament as an advisor. I’ve balanced that with community work at the same time, I was the President of Curl Curl Youth and Community Centre for nearly two decades.\n“Also, my aim is to raise money for causes including women’s refuges and safe houses, and cancer research and supporting cancer patients. I’ve been a cancer patient myself. I’m also a voluntary director of a sporting organisation,” said Cr De Luca.\nCr De Luca feels the promised benefits of the amalgamation have not been realised, with savings and improvements in services not delivered.\n“When Michael Reagan spent $500k of Warringah ratepayers money to campaign for the mass amalgamation of the three councils, he said that unless all three councils were amalgamated, rates would go up, public land would be sold, and services would go down.\n“Unfortunately that has occurred, rates have gone up by $30m, our rubbish fees have gone up as well, and services have definitely diminished. As a Councillor, it’s been pretty important to try and ensure services,” said Cr De Luca.\nCr De Luca said he was pleased with the ability to increase Council’s focus on youth crime and mental health.\n“Coming from a youth worker/social worker background, we’ve had to work very hard because our area has experienced a huge increase in gang crime and drug and alcohol abuse. Sadly, we’ve also had a significant increase in suicide.\n“Some of us have gone to the National Suicide Prevention Conference and we’ve introduced policies that are addressing our younger people, and indeed those older people who are also contemplating suicide. We’ve made it less of a stigma.\n“With gang violence, we have run a successful campaign to preserve Mona Vale Police Station, but also ensure that the Police Commissioner intervened, particularly after the Warriewood attack on the Police Inspector and the gang attack at Newport Beach, and numerous attacks on children across the Northern Beaches to ensure greater police presence north of the Narrabeen bridge,” said Cr De Luca.\nThe implementation of the housing strategy and development planning controls is a key concern for Cr De Luca in the next term of Council.\n“I think the next challenge of Council will certainly be the housing strategy, which I voted against. It’s the housing strategy that sets the destiny of our environment as well as our development targets. We’ve got the LEP [Local Environment Plan] coming up as well. We’ve got to be vigilant to stop over-development and those documents could actually facilitate that if they’re not written in certain ways,” explained Cr De Luca.\nAccording to Cr De Luca the restrictions imposed on the Local Government Election by COVID-19 has made it harder for independent candidates to campaign and be elected.\n“It’s exceptionally hard. I don’t have major resources and unfortunately the system has been changed by the government in such a way that the safety of independent candidates is actually at risk.\n“The minister changed the legislation, whereby you can’t have a PO Box on your authorising material and you’ve got to have a street address. When I questioned that with the Office of Local Government, they said, ‘just hire a hot desk.’ Few people have the money to actually hire a hot desk.\n“I’m concerned about the safety of candidates, particularly female candidates who didn’t have the money to either rent a hot desk or aren’t working. I’ve been able to rent a hot desk and others have as well. What about those people who haven’t been able to, and they’ve had to put their home address?\n“In my lifetime as a public figure, I’ve received heaps of death threats. You just never know what can happen if someone gets your home address. So that’s been one of the biggest barriers.\n“I think this is not an election for the people. We have been prevented from handing out how to vote cards, which will definitely have an adverse effect. So it’s definitely a difficult election and it’s going to be hard for people to know who to vote for, because they won’t have the information on all candidates.\n“A lot of people have said to me that they don’t even know that there’s an election on. Most people wouldn’t know that postal votes closed on 29 November.\n“The other concerning issue too is that usually nursing homes are declared institutions, so people can vote from there. This time they’re not having declared institutions. So I feel for those that would have had the opportunity to vote if the institutions were properly declared and the Electoral Commission would go to them to take their votes. Most of those people now won’t even bother to vote.\n“In all my years in government and standing for office, I think it’s probably the worst election for democracy. It’s actually an insult to democracy that people don’t have the information they need, and some will be disenfranchised and not able to vote,” said Cr De Luca.\nCr Vincent De Luca is standing for the Narrabeen ward and is Group E on the ballot paper.\nThe Local Government Election is being held on Saturday, 04 December. Voting at pre-poll locations is available 9.00am – 5.00pm, Monday – Saturday, from Monday, 22 November until Friday, 03 December.\nImages: Northern Beaches Advocate\nPreviousWhere are the cases?\nNextWSL returns to North Narrabeen","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line85491"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8191555142402649,"wiki_prob":0.8191555142402649,"text":"Locke & Key Season 2 Promotes 2 to Series Regulars, 2 More Join Cast\nLess than two weeks after Darby Stanchfield (Nina), Emilia Jones (Kinsey), Connor Jessup (Tyler), and Jackson Robert Scott (Bode) took to social media to announce that production on the second season of Netflix's Locke & Key was getting underway, we're learning who will be joining the Lockes on Netflix's adaptation of Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez's horror/fantasy comic book series. First up, Deadline Hollywood reports exclusively that Aaron Ashmore and Hallea Jones will be bumped up from recurring to series regulars for the upcoming season. In addition, Brendan Hines (The Tick) has joined as a new series regular while Liyou Abere (The Boys) will guest star.\nHines' Josh Bennett is a charismatic and mysterious new history teacher at Matheson Academy with a secret agenda. Ashmore's Duncan Locke has a history with the keys, helping guide the Lockes in their battle against Dodge. Jones' Eden Hawkins is a former high school \"mean girl\" who's now a newly-minted demon- and a surprising new force of antagonism to reckon with. Finally, we have Abere's Amie Bennett, a spirited 11-year-old who becomes fast friends with Bode and an ally against the evil forces threatening the Lockes.\nLocke & Key is returning for a second season (Image: Netflix).\nDuring an interview from earlier this year, co-showrunner Meredith Averill (with Carlton Cuse) detailed what she would change (and keep) if the series was assigned a second set of keys. Proudly preferring \"suspense and tension\" over \"gory and graphic\" when it comes to horror, Averill revealed that the second season would retain the first season's tone. But with the kids getting older and also more experienced with the keys and their powers, the topics, situations, and enemies they face will have to grow and deepen: \"The first season, we always thought of as being the story of the kids learning that they're the new Keepers of the Keys. With season two, we want to explore what that responsibility means. What does it mean as they get closer to being 18 years old—the age when you age out of magic—what does that mean? What does that look like? We cover so much of the comics in the first season, but there's so much of the lore that we held back on and new keys we created for the show that we're excited to share.\"\nAverill continued, \"Tonally, I think we intend to keep the show the same, but we do want to deepen the characters' lives and the issues they're dealing with. The older kids are moving closer to their graduation, and while grief is something that you never fully let go of, the kids are going to be able to begin moving on because, at least for now, they know the truth of what happened to him. If you can believe it, the Locke kids are going to be dealing with things far heavier than the death of their father in season two.\"\nVideo can't be loaded because JavaScript is disabled: Locke & Key | Official Trailer | Netflix (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_EonRi0yQOE&t=92s)\nNetflix's adaptation of the horror/fantasy comic book series Locke & Key focuses on the Locke siblings – Kinsey (Emilia Jones), Tyler (American Crime's Connor Jessup), and Bode (Jackson Robert Scott) – who move to their ancestral home in Massachusetts with their mother Nina (Darby Stanchfield) after the gruesome murder of their father, only to find the house has magical keys that give them a vast array of powers and abilities. Standing in their way is a devious demon who also wants the keys and will stop at nothing to attain them. The first season also starred Petrice Jones, Thomas Mitchell Barnet, Laysla De Oliveira, Kevin Alves, Asha Bromfield, Griffin Gluck, Steven Williams, Felix Mallard, Coby Bird, Sherri Saum, and Eric Graise.\nPosted in: Netflix, Preview, streaming, Trailer, TV, YouTube | Tagged: bleeding cool, bode, cable, comic books, Comics, Connor Jessup, Darby Stanchfield, Emilia Jones, gabriel rodriguez, Jackson Robert Scott, joe hill, Kinsey, Locke & Key, locke and key, netflix, nina, preview, season 2, streaming, television, tv, tyler","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1856651"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6798492074012756,"wiki_prob":0.6798492074012756,"text":"First-Time Homebuying\nWhere to look for lawns in Boston\nCertain neighborhoods in the city—including West Roxbury and Roslindale—lend themselves to the bucolic expanses\nBy Tom Acitelli@tomacitelli Mar 10, 2020, 8:37am EDT\nBoston Globe via Getty Images\nWith its dense runs of side-by-side townhouses and rowhouses, its apartment and condo buildings one after the other, and its triple-deckers arranged tightly together (whatever the sunlight on four sides), it can be difficult to imagine, let alone find, a sizable lawn in Boston.\nIn fact, a prospective homebuyer’s best bet would be to look beyond the city, to suburbs such as Brookline, Newton, Dedham, and Needham for bonafide lawns—though even there greenswards might be difficult to locate compared with much of the rest of the U.S., never mind quite expensive.\nBut where to look within Boston proper? If you must have a lawn—and there’s a whole school of thought about why you should not—better to look in a handful of neighborhoods that, because of their topography and history, offer the most options.\nAlso, one final note: We’re taking lawns here, not small yards or brick patios. Such accoutrement are pretty common throughout Boston, but they don’t necessarily provide the green.\nAn 864-square-foot single-family on West Street retailing for $499,000.\nBoston Trust Realty Group\nBoston’s southernmost and youngest neighborhood (it wasn’t annexed until 1912), Hyde Park is named for the famous greensward in London. It’s appropriate. The neighborhood is full of smaller single-families and low-rise apartment buildings on neat plots of grass.\nThat lack of density and that distance from the city’s urban core lends Hyde Park to having more such lawns.\nRoslindale resident Steven Gag in 2014 with his backyard orchard.\nThe potential for finding a lawn in Roslindale is right in the final syllable: Locals named it after Roslin, a bucolic village outside of Edinburgh, Scotland. Boston did not annex Roslindale until 1873, and the city has never really drawn the farther-flung neighborhood—one of Boston’s southernmost—into downtown’s aesthetic orbit.\nPart of that’s the topography and the geography—primarily that distance—but also part of it is zoning that has long encouraged the development of single-families and other smaller properties, many of them converted into condos and apartments and touting the access to shared or private greenery.\nWest Roxbury’s Stratford Street is typical of much of the neighborhood.\nRoslindale’s neighbor—the two have had a fierce, though good-natured rivalry stretching back decades—shares much of the same makeup and zoning. In fact, the once-independent town—Boston absorbed it in 1874—has more single-families.\nAnd that brings with it some of the most sizable lawns in Boston proper, generally on streets with a decidedly suburban look and feel.\nWhere Boston housing prices have increased the most\nThe 5 best homebuying apps for the Boston region\nThe 5 types of buyers in Boston’s housing market now\nWhere to look when you’re looking for a loft in Boston\nWhere to live in Boston in 2020\nA newly constructed, 2,800-square-foot single-family on Rockwood Terrace near Jamaica Pond. It’s asking $2.195 million.\nThe Muncey Group\nSome areas of JP are lusher than others in terms of lawns. Look near Jamaica Pond for the most options. The neighborhood is famous for having more public parkland than any other Boston enclave, so the greenery is not that surprising.\nBecause its zoning has long encouraged developments larger than the typical single-family, JP doesn’t have quite the relative abundance of lawn options that a West Roxbury or a Hyde Park might have, but they’re there. And they’re generally in better shape.\nThis 1,664-square-foot colonial in Ashmont sold for $700,000 in late 2019.\nBoston’s largest neighborhood has probably its most diverse housing stock, including likely around one-third of all triple-deckers ever built in Massachusetts. Part of that stock are sizable single-families—Victorians and colonials, a lot of them—and those houses tend to have larger yards. And the houses are not all that expensive compared with similarly sized properties in Boston.\nBecause Dorchester is so big—6 square miles, give or take—we suggest narrowing your search to its Ashmont (including Ashmont Hill), Savin Hill, and Neponset areas. These are your best bets for Dorchester lawns.\nDetroit Land Bank | From Curbed Detroit\nThe Detroit Land Bank and its many controversies, explained\nFirst-Time Homebuying | From Curbed\nCurbed wants to hear your homebuying story\n8 first-time homebuyer programs for the Boston area, explained\nView all stories in First-Time Homebuying","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1310615"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9589566588401794,"wiki_prob":0.9589566588401794,"text":"Published: January 23, 2021, 9:20 AM\nTags: Phil Foden, Sports, Kyle Walker, Ilkay Gundogan, Pep Guardiola, Mikel Arteta, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang, Joao Cancelo, Gabriel Jesus, Kyle Walker-Peters\nFA Cup holder Arsenal eliminated, Man City survives scare\nPublished: January 23, 2021, 9:20 AM Updated: January 23, 2021, 6:28 PM\nPA Wire\nArsenal's Nicolas Pepe, center, battles for the ball with Southampton's James Ward-Prowse, left, and Stuart Armstrong during the Emirates FA Cup fourth round soccer match at St. Mary's Stadium, Southampton, England, Saturday Jan. 23, 2021. (Catherine Ivill/PA via AP)\nSOUTHAMPTON – Last season’s FA Cup winner Arsenal was eliminated from the competition in the fourth round on Saturday thanks to Gabriel’s own-goal in a 1-0 loss to Southampton, while Manchester City survived a scare to beat fourth-tier Cheltenham 3-1.\nIn an otherwise close game, Gabriel's decision to try to block a shot from Kyle Walker-Peters proved decisive for Arsenal losing its hold on the cup.\nRight-back Walker-Peters was allowed plenty of space to overlap the Arsenal defense, but his shot looked to be heading narrowly wide of the far post before Gabriel's failed attempt deflected the ball off the post and in. It was the first goal Arsenal had conceded since Dec. 26 after five consecutive shutouts.\n\"I’m very disappointed because we wanted to continue in the competition, we had a dream to do it again like last year and the dream today is over,” Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta said.\n“I am as well disappointed with the way we conceded the goal in an area where we know we shouldn’t be doing that,\" he added. \"At the same time, I cannot fault the effort of the players, how they tried and how they went to get a goal in the second half.”\nArsenal has won the FA Cup a record 14 times and Arteta before kickoff called it “our favorite competition.” Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang scored both of the team's goals in the 2-1 win over Chelsea in last year's final, but he wasn't available Saturday due to what Arteta called “a personal matter.” Arteta said he couldn't yet predict when Aubameyang might return.\nSouthampton moves on to a fifth-round game away at Wolverhampton, which beat sixth-tier Chorley on Friday.\nCITY UNDER PRESSURE\nCheltenham came close to one of the biggest shocks in the 150-year history of the FA Cup before Pep Guardiola's City team scored three late goals.\nA long throw-in from Cheltenham captain Ben Tozer caused a mix-up in the City defense and Alfie May seized on a deflection to stab the ball into the net.\nIn the 81st minute City finally pulled level as Phil Foden met Joao Cancelo's cross at the far post and knocked the ball into the net. Gabriel Jesus scored City's second three minutes later to avoid extra time, though his goal may have been deemed offside if the video review system — not used in cup games at non-Premier League stadiums — had been in operation.\nFerran Torres added a third in stoppage time to ensure City moves on to play Swansea in the fifth round.\n“We learned to suffer and at the end the quality made the difference. We won the game and we are happy to win this game in this type of competition,\" Guardiola said. “We knew how tough it would be and the response from the players was magnificent.”\nCity had been brilliantly denied an opener after 12 minutes. Tommy Doyle’s cross was half cleared to Benjamin Mendy and the defender’s angled rocket was cleverly — and bravely -- cleared off the line for a corner by Tozer.\nGuardiola tried to use the game to give his young players experience, but ended up bringing Cancelo, Ruben Dias and Ilkay Gundogan off the bench.\n“The players they brought on from the bench probably tells you something, and the way they celebrated the goals probably tells you something as well,\" Cheltenham manager Michael Duff said. \"I think they’ll know they’ve been in a game.”\nThe game was briefly interrupted in the first half with the score at 0-0 because of a nearby fireworks display in Cheltenham's red and white colors. Even in defeat, Cheltenham's battling performance against one of the world's biggest clubs will likely become part of local folklore.\nSHEFFIELD WINS AGAIN\nPremier League clubs Brighton, West Ham and Sheffield United all won their fourth-round games against lower-league teams. Brighton edged out third-tier Blackpool 2-1, while West Ham cruised to a 4-0 win over Doncaster. Sheffield didn't win a game in any competition this season until Jan. 9 but has now won three of its last four following Saturday's 2-1 win over Plymouth.\nVILLA ON THE RISE\nAston Villa beat Newcastle 2-0 to move within three points of sixth-place Everton in the only Premier League game on Saturday.\nOllie Watkins and Bertrand Traore scored first-half goals for the hosts.\nNewcastle lost its fourth straight league game and is in 16th place, increasing the pressure on manager Steve Bruce.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line166986"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9435150623321533,"wiki_prob":0.9435150623321533,"text":"Blog Briefing Room\nOctober 21, 2017 - 01:39 PM EDT\nBiden on McCain being intimidated by Trump: 'Give me a break'\nBy Brandon Carter\nFormer Vice President Joe Biden said in a new interview that President Trump won't be able to intimidate Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.).\n\"The idea that Trump is going to intimidate John McCain? Give me a break,\" Biden told The New York Times.\nBiden was asked about the exchange of words between Trump and McCain this week after McCain gave a speech blasting nationalist forces that was seen by many, apparently including the president, as a thinly-veiled attack on Trump.\n\"People have to careful, because at some point I fight back,\" Trump told WMAL radio host Chris Plante the following day when asked about McCain. \"I'm being very nice. I'm being very, very nice. But at some point I fight back, and it won't be pretty.\"\nMcCain, a former prisoner of war, quickly fired back, saying: \"I've faced far greater challenges than this.\"\nMcCain slammed \"half-baked, spurious nationalism\" in the United States in his Monday speech.\n\"To fear the world we have organized and led for three-quarters of a century, to abandon the ideals we have advanced around the globe, to refuse the obligations of international leadership and our duty to remain 'the last best hope of earth' for the sake of some half-baked, spurious nationalism cooked up by people who would rather find scapegoats than solve problems is as unpatriotic as an attachment to any other tired dogma of the past that Americans consigned to the ash heap of history,\" McCain said after receiving the National Constitution Center's Liberty Medal.\nBiden said McCain's speech was, to him, a \"message to the country.\"\n\"I think he was delivering a message to the country, to his colleagues and to any of the opinion makers that would listen, and that is, 'Look, this is serious stuff, our role in the world is not guaranteed, democracy is not guaranteed, we know how to do this and, damn it, we'd better focus and know what's at stake,'\" Biden told the Times.\nMcCain, who was diagnosed with brain cancer in July, served in the Navy for more than two decades and spent years as a prisoner of war in Vietnam.\nTrump has attacked McCain in the past, notably when the senator voted against a GOP bill to repeal and replace ObamaCare.\nBeijing reports first locally transmitted omicron case in lead-up to Olympics\nWoman pushed in front of NYC subway, killed\nOkinawa, hub for US military bases in Japan, reports record number of COVID-19 infections\nPence says both Capitol riot and nixing filibuster are a 'power grab'\nDeSantis says he disagreed with Trump's decision to shut down economy at start of pandemic","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line465034"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6848999857902527,"wiki_prob":0.3151000142097473,"text":"Christian Engelmann, Ph.D.\nSenior Scientist & Group Leader, Oak Ridge National Laboratory\nxSim – The Extreme-scale Simulator\nredMPI – A Redundant MPI\nProactive Fault Tolerance Framework\nHybrid Full/Incremental System-level Checkpointing\nSymmetric Active/Active High Availability for HPC System Services\n2021-…: An Open Federated Architecture for the Laboratory of the Future\n2015-…: Resilience Design Patterns: A Structured Approach to Resilience at Extreme Scale\n2018-2019: rOpenMP: A Resilient Parallel Programming Model for Heterogeneous Systems\n2015-2019: Catalog: Characterizing Faults, Errors, and Failures in Extreme-Scale Systems\n2013-16: Hobbes – OS and Runtime Support for Application Composition\n2013-16: MCREX – Monte Carlo Resilient Exascale Solvers\n2012-14: Hardware/Software Resilience Co-Design Tools for Extreme-scale High-Performance Computing\n2011-12: Extreme-scale Algorithms and Software Institute\n2009-11: Soft-Error Resilience for Future-Generation High-Performance Computing Systems\n2008-11: Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability (RAS) for Petascale High-End Computing and Beyond\n2008-11: Scalable Algorithms for Petascale Systems with Multicore Architectures\n2006-09: Harness Workbench: Unified and Adaptive Access to Diverse HPC Platforms\n2006-08: Virtualized System Environments for Petascale Computing and Beyond\n2004-07: MOLAR – Modular Linux and Adaptive Runtime Support for High-End Computing\n2004-06: Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability (RAS) for Terascale Computing\n2002-04: Super-Scalable Algorithms for Next-Generation High-Performance Cellular Architectures\n2000-05: Harness – Heterogeneous Distributed Computing\nPeer-reviewed Journal Papers\nPeer-reviewed Conference Papers\nPeer-reviewed Workshop Papers\nPeer-reviewed Conference Posters\nCo-advised Theses\nBibTeX Citations\nHome > Uncategorized\t> About Me\nDr. Christian Engelmann is a Senior Scientist and the Intelligent Systems and Facilities Group Leader at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), which is the US Department of Energy’s (DOE) largest multiprogram science and technology laboratory with an annual budget of $2.4 billion. He has more than 21 years experience in software research and development for extreme-scale high-performance computing (HPC) systems with a strong funding and publication record. In collaboration with other laboratories and universities, Dr. Engelmann’s research solves computer science challenges in HPC software, such as scalability, dependability, energy efficiency, and portability.\nHis primary expertise is in HPC resilience, i.e., providing efficiency and correctness in the presence of faults, errors, and failures through avoidance, masking, and recovery. Dr. Engelmann is a leading expert in HPC resilience and was a member of the DOE Technical Council on HPC Resilience 2013-2015. He received the 2015 DOE Early Career Award for research in resilience design patterns for extreme scale HPC. His secondary expertise is in lightweight simulation of future-generation extreme-scale supercomputers with millions of processing units, studying the impact of hardware and software properties on the key HPC system design factors: performance, resilience, and power consumption. Dr. Engelmann is also an expert in system software for parallel and distributed systems.\nDr. Engelmann is leading ORNL’s Intelligent Systems and Facilities Group, which addresses system software challenges for scientific instruments and facilities. The group collaborates with computer, computational, instrument and domain science experts across ORNL, other national laboratories, and universities to foster scientific leadership in smart systems, instruments, and facilities. The group’s research and development connects scientific instruments and facilities with edge and leadership computing capability and provides operational intelligence with machine-in-the-loop feedback. It enables science breakthroughs with autonomous experiments, “self-driving” laboratories, smart manufacturing, and AI-driven design, discovery and evaluation.\nDr. Engelmann earned a Dipl.-Ing. (FH), a German engineering degree and M.Sc. equivalent, in Computer Systems Engineering from the University of Applied Sciences Berlin, Germany, in 2001, a M.Sc. in Computer Science from the University of Reading, UK, also in 2001 as a conjoint degree, and a Ph.D. in Computer Science from the University of Reading in 2008. He is a Senior Member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). He is also a Member of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) and the Advanced Computing Systems Association (USENIX).\nDownload the NSF-style 2-page bio. Download the full list of publications. Resume available upon request.\nengelmannc@computer.org|engelmannc@ornl.gov\nP.O. Box 2008, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6164, USA Tel.:+1 (865) 574-3132\norcid.org/0000-0003-4365-6416\nScopus ID: 18037364000\n14 Research grants ($31.57M, 6 as lead investigator): 113 Peer-reviewed articles/papers: 4,478 Publication citations:\n6 Current direct reports 13 Journal articles H-index: 33, i10-index: 71\n8 Co-advised M.Sc. theses 55 Conference papers Erdős number: 3\n4 Mentored summer faculty 45 Workshop papers 173 Committees at 47 conference series\n59 Invited talks and seminars 12 Peer-reviewed conference posters 60 Journal article and book proposal reviews\nAwards: 2015 US Department of Energy Early Career Research Award\nOngoing Research Activities\n2021-…: The Open Federated Architecture for the Laboratory of the Future project connects scientific instruments, robot-controlled laboratories and edge/center computing/data resources to enable autonomous experiments, “self-driving” laboratories, smart manufacturing, and AI-driven design, discovery and evaluation. … more.\n2015-…: The Resilience Design Patterns project will increase the ability of scientific applications to reach accurate solutions in a timely and efficient manner. Using a novel design pattern concept, it identifies and evaluates repeatedly occurring resilience problems and coordinates solutions throughout high-performance computing hardware and software. … more.\n2021-03-30: DOE Advanced Scientific Computing Research. New Approach to Fault Tolerance Means More Efficient High-Performance Computers.\n2021-01-04: HPCwire. What’s New in HPC Research: GPU Lifetimes, the Square Kilometre Array, Support Tickets & More.\n2018-11-19: HPCwire. What’s New in HPC Research: Thrill for Big Data, Scaling Resilience and More.\n2018-08-05: inside HPC. Characterizing Faults, Errors and Failures in Extreme-Scale Computing Systems.\n2015-07-15: ASCR Discovery. Mounting a charge. Early-career awardees attack exascale computing on two fronts: Power and resilience.\n2015-07-15: HPC Wire. Tackling Power and Resilience at Exascale.\n2012-11-21: ComputerWorld. Supercomputers face growing resilience problems.\n5 Most Cited Peer-Reviewed Publications\nSymbols: Abstract, Publication, Presentation, BibTeX Citation\nA. B. Nagarajan, F. Mueller, C. Engelmann, and S. L. Scott. Proactive Fault Tolerance for HPC with Xen Virtualization. In Proceedings of the 21st ACM International Conference on Supercomputing (ICS) 2007, June, 2007. DOI 10.1145/1274971.1274978. Accept. rate 23.6% (29/123). 497 citations.\nM. Snir, R. W. Wisniewski, J. A. Abraham, S. V. Adve, S. Bagchi, P. Balaji, J. Belak, P. Bose, F. Cappello, B. Carlson, A. A. Chien, P. Coteus, N. A. Debardeleben, P. Diniz, C. Engelmann, M. Erez, S. Fazzari, A. Geist, R. Gupta, F. Johnson, S. Krishnamoorthy, S. Leyffer, D. Liberty, S. Mitra, T. Munson, R. Schreiber, J. Stearley, and E. V. Hensbergen. Addressing Failures in Exascale Computing. International Journal of High Performance Computing Applications (IJHPCA), volume 28, number 2, May, 2014. DOI 10.1177/1094342014522573. 425 citations.\nD. Fiala, F. Mueller, C. Engelmann, K. Ferreira, R. Brightwell, and R. Riesen. Detection and Correction of Silent Data Corruption for Large-Scale High-Performance Computing. In Proceedings of the 25th IEEE/ACM International Conference on High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC) 2012, November, 2012. DOI 10.1109/SC.2012.49. Accept. rate 21.2% (100/472). 342 citations.\nC. Wang, F. Mueller, C. Engelmann, and S. L. Scott. Proactive Process-Level Live Migration in HPC Environments. In Proceedings of the 21st IEEE/ACM International Conference on High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC) 2008, November, 2008. DOI 10.1145/1413370.1413414. Accept. rate 21.3% (59/277). 228 citations.\nJ. Elliott, K. Kharbas, D. Fiala, F. Mueller, K. Ferreira, and C. Engelmann. Combining Partial Redundancy and Checkpointing for HPC. In Proceedings of the 32nd International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS) 2012, June, 2012. DOI 10.1109/ICDCS.2012.56. Accept. rate 13.8% (71/515). 187 citations.\n5 Most Recent Peer-Reviewed Publications\nM. Kumar and C. Engelmann. RDPM: An Extensible Tool for Resilience Design Patterns Modeling. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science: Proceedings of the 27th European Conference on Parallel and Distributed Computing (Euro-Par) 2021 Workshops: 14th Workshop on Resiliency in High Performance Computing (Resilience) in Clusters, Clouds, and Grids, August, 2021. Accept. rate 66.7% (4/6).\nM. Kumar, S. Gupta, T. Patel, M. Wilder, W. Shi, S. Fu, C. Engelmann, and D. Tiwari. Study of Interconnect Errors, Network Congestion, and Applications Characteristics for Throttle Prediction on a Large Scale HPC System. Journal of Parallel and Distributed Computing (JPDC), volume 153, July, 2021. DOI 10.1016/j.jpdc.2021.03.001.\nS. Hukerikar and C. Engelmann. PLEXUS: A Pattern-Oriented Runtime System Architecture for Resilient Extreme-Scale High-Performance Computing Systems. In Proceedings of the 25th IEEE Pacific Rim International Symposium on Dependable Computing (PRDC) 2020, December, 2020. DOI 10.1109/PRDC50213.2020.00014. Accept. rate 40.9% (18/44).\nG. Ostrouchov, D. Maxwell, R. Ashraf, C. Engelmann, M. Shankar, and J. Rogers. GPU Lifetimes on Titan Supercomputer: Survival Analysis and Reliability. In Proceedings of the 33rd IEEE/ACM International Conference on High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC) 2020, November, 2020. DOI 10.1109/SC41405.2020.00045. Accept. rate 25.1% (95/378).\nM. Kumar and C. Engelmann. Models for Resilience Design Patterns. In Proceedings of the 33rd International Conference on High Performance Computing, Networking, Storage and Analysis (SC) Workshops 2020: 10th Workshop on Fault Tolerance for HPC at eXtreme Scale (FTXS) 2020, November, 2020. DOI 10.1109/FTXS51974.2020.00008. Accept. rate 66.7% (6/9).\nCopyright © 2010-2022 Christian Engelmann, Ph.D.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line117429"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6378918290138245,"wiki_prob":0.36210817098617554,"text":"Mesoblast Limited Proprietary Stem Cells For Heart Failure Highlighted At Major Cardiology Conference\nAustralia's regenerative medicine company, Mesoblast Limited (ASX:MSB)(PINK:MBLTY), announced today that the thirteenth patient enrolled in the ongoing Phase 2 clinical trial for congestive heart failure had been safely implanted with the proprietary adult stem cells during a live case at the American Heart Association's annual conference, currently underway in New Orleans.\nThe procedure was performed by cardiologists from the Texas Heart Institute and broadcast during a satellite symposium titled 'Future Direction of Stem Cells in Cardiovascular Disease'. The annual American Heart Association conference is the premier symposium for American cardiologists.\nThe multi-centre trial is testing the safety and effectiveness of Revascor(TM), the proprietary allogeneic, or \"off-the-shelf\", stem cell product being developed for patients with congestive heart failure by Mesoblast's United States-base! d sister company Angioblast Systems Inc.\nRevascor! (TM) is delivered to damaged areas of the heart by a minimally invasive cardiac catheterisation procedure performed under local anaesthesia while the patient is awake. Patients undergoing the procedure are released from the hospital within 24 hours.\nThe placebo-controlled trial will randomise up to 60 patients suffering from congestive heart failure at various sites in the United States, including California, Arizona, Minnesota, and Texas. The first cohort of patients in the trial is expected to be completed by the end of December.\nAbout Heart Failure\nAlmost six million Americans have congestive heart failure, a progressive form of cardiovascular disease that inhibits the heart from pumping blood throughout the body, with 550,000 new cases diagnosed each year. The extensive morbidity and mortality associated with this disease make it a principal health and economic burden in the Western world. Existing therapies do not result in repair or regenerat! ion of heart muscle. Revascor(TM), a trademark of Angioblast Systems Inc, is being developed to rebuild both blood vessels and heart muscle.\nAbout Mesoblast Limited\nMesoblast Limited (ASX:MSB)(USOTC:MBLTY) is an Australian biotechnology company committed to the development of novel treatments for orthopaedic conditions, including the rapid commercialisation of a unique adult stem cell technology aimed at the regeneration and repair of bone and cartilage. Our focus is to progress through clinical trials and international regulatory processes necessary to commercialise the technology in as short a timeframe as possible.\nMesoblast has the worldwide exclusive rights for a series of patents and technologies that have been developed over more than 10 years and which relate to the identification, extraction and culture of adult Mesenchymal Precursor Cells (MPCs). The Company has also acquired a substantial interest in Angioblast Systems Inc, an A! merican company developing the platform MPC technology for the! treatme nt of cardiovascular diseases, including repair and regeneration of blood vessels and heart muscle. Mesoblast and Angioblast are jointly funding and progressing the core technology. Mesoblast's strategy is to maximise shareholder value through both corporate partnerships and the rapid and successful completion of clinical milestones.\nMesoblast Limited","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1572212"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9234520196914673,"wiki_prob":0.9234520196914673,"text":"Creators, AFF Will Be In-Person in October!\nThe Austin Film Festival & Writers Conference will return to an in-person festival and conference for its 28th year.\nCelebrate! Writers and filmmakers will once again be able to commune at one of the nation’s best events for creators, the Austin Film Festival. The eight-day festival will take place Oct. 21-28 in Austin, Texas.\nAFF will feature four full days of panel conversations and discussions on the art, craft, and business of screenwriting with some of the industry’s biggest names. There will also be eight days of film screenings highlighting some of the best emerging talent and premiere studio films as part of its marquee programming.\nFor those still unable to travel, AFF will offer a virtual badge, which will include a selection of panels and films recorded at the festival.\nAFF has also named Scott Frank as its 2021 Bill Wittliff Award for Screenwriting recipient.\nFrank is an Oscar- and Emmy-nominated writer and director whose screenplay credits include Little Man Tate, Dead Again,Get Shorty, Minority Report, The Interpreter, Marley & Me, The Wolverine, Logan, the Netflix limited series Godless (writer/director), and The Queen’s Gambit (writer/director).\nFrank will be recognized at the 2021 Awards Luncheon on Saturday, Oct. 23, and will participate in festival and conference programming.\nThe Festival also announced several conference guests, including Peter Craig (The Batman), Javier Grillo-Marxuach (Lost), Meg LeFauve (Inside Out), and Nicole Perlman (Guardians of the Galaxy). More panelist announcements are sure to come.\nYou can learn more at the Austin Film Festival website.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line297143"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5249038934707642,"wiki_prob":0.5249038934707642,"text":"Entrepreneurship News\nStudent team places second at Global Grand Challenges Summit\nSeptember 26, 2019 NC State News\nA team of NC State engineering students with a goal of making your morning cup of joe more sustainable finished second in a business plan competition at the National Academy of Engineering’s 2019 Global Grand Challenges Summit in London.\nThe theme for this year’s summit was “Engineering in an unpredictable world,” with a focus on two sub-themes, including one on sustainability as the world’s population increases.\nTo address that sub-theme, the five students created the business Peak Coffee Processing and developed an affordable treatment process to filter wastewater from coffee production into clean water and fertilizer that can be used by coffee growers to increase crop yields and reduce topsoil erosion.\nThe NC State team traveled to London for the competition and finished second overall in the competition and first among teams from the United States, receiving a £7,500 prize. There were 16 finalist teams in the competition — five from the United Kingdom, six from the United States and five from China. Other U.S. teams were from Dartmouth University, Oklahoma State University, UC San Diego, University of Southern California and University of Rochester.\nThe team of five students are: Silvana Alfieri, a senior double-majoring in environmental engineering and environmental policy; Kevin Duke, a junior majoring in civil engineering; Rachel Figard, a junior majoring in industrial and systems engineering; Grant Jordan, a senior majoring in industrial and systems engineering; and Pippin Payne, a senior double-majoring in mechanical engineering and religious studies. Their mentor is Dr. David Parish, assistant dean of academic affairs for the College of Engineering.\nTheir team was selected from more than two dozen U.S. teams to compete in the business plan competition at the summit, which took place Sept. 12-18. The summit occurs every two years and is the result of collaboration among the National Academy of Engineering (NAE), the U.K.’s Royal Academy of Engineering and the Chinese Academy of Engineering. Each academy selected five student teams for the competition.\nThe NC State team aimed to set themselves apart by approaching the issue of sustainability from both individual and societal viewpoints and worked to come up with an idea that united the two interests.\nThis post was originally published in College of Engineering News.\nView Comments 0 total responses\nMore Entrepreneurship News\nStartup Stories: 321 Coffee\nShaping How We Train Arts Entrepreneurs\nLearning Beyond the Classroom: An Alumnus Celebrates a Patent Award Milestone\nEntrepreneurship Home\n1017 Main Campus Drive, Suite 1650\nentrepreneurship@ncsu.edu\naria-hidden=\"false\">\nAbout NC State Entrepreneurship\nAlliance Resources","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line768110"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7082610726356506,"wiki_prob":0.7082610726356506,"text":"The Terms of Order\nCedric J. Robinson 1980-01-01\nPublisher: SUNY Press\nGenre: Political Science\nDo we live in basically orderly societies that occasionally erupt into violent conflict, or do we fail to perceive the constancy of violence and disorder in our societies? Cedric J. Robinson contends that our perception of political order is an illusion, maintained in part by Western political and social theorists who share a dependence on the concept of leadership as a basis for describing and prescribing social order. Robinson uses a variety of critical approaches in his analysis: he synthesizes elements of psychoanalysis, structuralism, Marxism, classical and neoclassical political philosophy, and sociology to support his case for considering Western thought on leadership to be mythological rather than rational. He then presents examples of historically developed \"stateless\" societies with social organizations that suggest conceptual alternatives to the ways political order has been conceived in the West. As an American Black political theorist, Robinson examines Western thought from the vantage point of a people only marginally integrated into Western institutions and intellectual traditions. His perspective on the conceptualization that structures Western thinking on the most basic levels contributes to the questioning on how our conduct, values, and even perceptions may be shaped by our symbolization.\nElements of Social and Political Philosophy\nAuthors: Jan J.T. Srzednicki\nThe general purpose of this book differs from those of most of the works found traditionally in the field of political philosophy. Firstly, the present approach is in no way prescriptive or normative, as the interest centres on explication rather than an evaluative assess ment of this, that or another type of arrangement, or act. 1 It will be clear that I am in complete disagreement with Gewirth when he claims that \"The central concern of political philosophy is the moral evaluation of political power. \" It seems obvious that the under standing of political and social forms of life, and a fortiori of political power, must come before its evaluation. This cannot be provided by moral assessment alone. Thus an analytical or explicative approach which promotes such understanding must come first, and must be the \"central concern\" of the appropriate philosophical discipline. This is not to say that moral assessment is illegitimate, nor even that it cannot be one of the concerns of political philosophy, but it is to deny that it can be central, even though it might be somebody's central interest. To the extent to which this book is successful it will provide an argu mentin my favour - if the job can be done, obviously it is of primary importance. But we should not assume that it cannot be done unless we can show that there is no separate sphere of political and/or social phenomena.\nHegel: Elements of the Philosophy of Right\nAuthors: Georg Wilhelm Fredrich Hegel\nType: BOOK - Published: 1991-10-25 - Publisher: Cambridge University Press\nThis book is a translation of a classic work of modern social and political thought. Elements of the Philosophy of Right, Hegel's last major published work, is an attempt to systematize ethical theory, natural right, the philosophy of law, political theory, and the sociology of the modern state into the framework of Hegel's philosophy of history. Hegel's work has been interpreted in radically different ways, influencing many political movements from far right to far left, and is widely perceived as central to the communitarian tradition in modern ethical, social, and political thought. This edition includes extensive editorial material informing the reader of the historical background of Hegel's text, and explaining his allusions to Roman law and other sources, making use of lecture materials which have only recently become available. The new translation is literal, readable, and consistent, and will be informative and scholarly enough to serve the needs of students and specialists alike.\nAuthors: Cedric J. Robinson\nType: BOOK - Published: 1980-01-01 - Publisher: SUNY Press\nAn Introduction to the Social and Political Philosophy of Bertolt Brecht\nAuthors: Anthony Squiers\nType: BOOK - Published: 2014 - Publisher: Rodopi\nBooks about An Introduction to the Social and Political Philosophy of Bertolt Brecht\nLectures on the History of Political Philosophy\nAuthors: Professor John Rawls, John Rawls\nType: BOOK - Published: 2007 - Publisher: Belknap Press\nThis last book by the late John Rawls, derived from written lectures and notes for his long-running course on modern political philosophy, offers readers an account of the liberal political tradition from a scholar viewed by many as the greatest contemporary exponent of the philosophy behind that tradition. Rawls’s goal in the lectures was, he wrote, “to identify the more central features of liberalism as expressing a political conception of justice when liberalism is viewed from within the tradition of democratic constitutionalism.” He does this by looking at several strands that make up the liberal and democratic constitutional traditions, and at the historical figures who best represent these strands—among them the contractarians Hobbes, Locke, and Rousseau; the utilitarians Hume, Sidgwick, and J. S. Mill; and Marx regarded as a critic of liberalism. Rawls’s lectures on Bishop Joseph Butler also are included in an appendix. Constantly revised and refined over three decades, Rawls’s lectures on these figures reflect his developing and changing views on the history of liberalism and democracy—as well as how he saw his own work in relation to those traditions. With its clear and careful analyses of the doctrine of the social contract, utilitarianism, and socialism—and of their most influential proponents—this volume has a critical place in the traditions it expounds. Marked by Rawls’s characteristic patience and curiosity, and scrupulously edited by his student and teaching assistant, Samuel Freeman, these lectures are a fitting final addition to his oeuvre, and to the history of political philosophy as well.\nThe Political Philosophy of Muhammad Iqbal\nAuthors: Iqbal Singh Sevea\nThis book reflects upon the political philosophy of Muhammad Iqbal, a towering intellectual figure in South Asian history, revered by many for his poetry and his thought. He lived in India in the twilight years of the British Empire and, apart from a short but significant period studying in the West, he remained in Punjab until his death in 1938. The book studies Iqbal's critique of nationalist ideology and his attempts to chart a path for the development of the 'nation' by liberating it from the centralizing and homogenizing tendencies of the modern state structure. Iqbal frequently clashed with his contemporaries over his view of nationalism as 'the greatest enemy of Islam'. He constructed his own particular interpretation of Islam – forged through an interaction with Muslim thinkers and Western intellectual traditions – that was ahead of its time, and since his death both modernists and Islamists have continued to champion his legacy.\nWittgenstein and Political Philosophy\nAuthors: John W. Danford\nCategories: Language and languages\nBooks about Wittgenstein and Political Philosophy\nThe Moral, Social and Political Philosophy of the British Idealists\nAuthors: William Sweet\nType: BOOK - Published: 2017-03-17 - Publisher: Andrews UK Limited\nThe British idealists of the late 19th and early 20th century are best known for their contributions to metaphysics, logic, and political philosophy. Yet they also made important contributions to social and public policy, social and moral philosophy and moral education, as shown by this volume. Their views are not only important in their own right, but also bear on contemporary discussion in public policy and applied ethics. Among the authors discussed are Green, Caird, Ritchie, Bradley, Bosanquet, Jones, McTaggart, Pringle-Pattison, Webb, Ward, Mackenzie, Hetherington, Muirhead, Collingwood and Oakeshott. The writings of idealist philosophers from Canada, South Africa, and India are also examined. Contributors include Avital Simhony, Darin Nesbitt, Carol A. Keene, Stamatoula Panagakou, David Boucher, Leslie Armour, Jan Olof Bengtsson, Thom Brooks, James Connelly, Philip MacEwen, Efraim Podoksik, Elizabeth Trott and William Sweet.\nThe Elements of Law, Natural and Politic (Dodo Press)\nAuthors: Thomas Hobbes\nCategories: Law\nType: BOOK - Published: 2009-06 - Publisher:\nThomas Hobbes (1588-1679) was an English philosopher, remembered today for his work on political philosophy. His 1651 book Leviathan established the foundation for most of Western political philosophy from the perspective of social contract theory. He also contributed to a diverse array of fields, including history, geometry, physics of gases, theology, ethics, general philosophy, and political science. He was one of the main philosophers who founded materialism. He visited Florence in 1636 and later was a regular debater in philosophic groups in Paris, held together by Marin Mersenne. Hobbes's first area of study was an interest in the physical doctrine of motion and physical momentum. Despite his interest in this phenomenon, he disdained experimental work as in physics. He built a good reputation in philosophic circles and in 1645, he was chosen with Descartes, Gilles de Roberval and others, to referee the controversy between John Pell and Longomontanus over the problem of squaring the circle. His other works include: The Elements of Law Natural and Politic (1640) and De Cive (The Citizen): Philosophical Rudiments Concerning Government and Society (1651).\nThe Right to Justification\nAuthors: Rainer Forst\nType: BOOK - Published: 2011-12-27 - Publisher: Columbia University Press\nContemporary philosophical pluralism recognizes the inevitability and legitimacy of multiple ethical perspectives and values, making it difficult to isolate the higher-order principles on which to base a theory of justice. Rising up to meet this challenge, Rainer Forst, a leading member of the Frankfurt School's newest generation of philosophers, conceives of an \"autonomous\" construction of justice founded on what he calls the basic moral right to justification. Forst begins by identifying this right from the perspective of moral philosophy. Then, through an innovative, detailed critical analysis, he ties together the central components of social and political justice freedom, democracy, equality, and toleration and joins them to the right to justification. The resulting theory treats \"justificatory power\" as the central question of justice, and by adopting this approach, Forst argues, we can discursively work out, or \"construct,\" principles of justice, especially with respect to transnational justice and human rights issues. As he builds his theory, Forst engages with the work of Anglo-American philosophers such as John Rawls, Ronald Dworkin, and Amartya Sen, and critical theorists such as Jürgen Habermas, Nancy Fraser, and Axel Honneth. Straddling multiple subjects, from politics and law to social protest and philosophical conceptions of practical reason, Forst brilliantly gathers contesting claims around a single, elastic theory of justice.\nAuthors: John Christman\nThis accessible and user-friendly text will prove invaluable to any student coming to social and political philosophy for the first time. It provides a broad survey of fundamental social and political questions in modern society, as well as clear, accessible discussions of the philosophical issues central to political thought. Topics covered include: the foundations of political authority, the nature and grounds of economic justice, the limits of tolerance, considerations of community, race, gender, and culture in questions of justice, and radical critiques of current political theories.\nAuthors: John Philip Christman\nType: BOOK - Published: 2002 - Publisher: Psychology Press\nThis accessible and user-friendly text offers a broad survey of some of the fundamental philosophical questions concerning social and political relations in modern society.\nBig Book Of Pond Building\nWould You Rather…? For Women\nComparative Law and Regulation\nMedia Studies: Theories And Approaches\nPro ASP.NET MVC 4\nAnatomy of Murder\nThe Physiology of the Carbohydrates\nCurrent Biography Yearbook 2011\nDeep Church\nThe Big Book of Jewish Humor","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1491937"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8749346733093262,"wiki_prob":0.8749346733093262,"text":"2015 – John Polmear\nJohn Polmear\nJohn has had an illustrious career in the Western Australian Cinema Industry spanning some 60 years.\nHe began his career in the Industry in 1951 in the Despatch Department at Metro Goldwyn Mayer in Perth. The following year, he moved to Paramount Pictures as a Despatch Assistant. Here he gained experience as a Film Examiner and Despatch Clerk before progressing through to the Advertising Sales Department to eventually become Head Booker for theatres throughout Western Australia in 1961.\nIn February 1969, after eleven years with Paramount Pictures, John resigned to take up the position of Licensee of the Sandhurst Hotel in Carnarvon, on the north-west coast of Western Australia. Then in November 1969 he was approached by Alfred Jarrett, the then Managing Director of Paramount Pictures, and was offered the position of West Australia Branch Manager, which he accepted. It was obvious that John’s real passion lay with the Cinema Industry. In a Press Release at the time, Alfred Jarrett said …\n“he was pleased indeed to welcome back John Polmear into the Paramount fold, and believed that his long Industry experience equipped him ideally to manage the company’s interests in Perth.”\nJohn returned to Paramount Pictures in January 1970 to take up the position of WA Branch Manager. Then in June that year, he was appointed WA Branch Manager for C.I.C. (Cinema International Corporation Pty Ltd), which was the merger between Paramount Pictures and Universal Pictures. The company was later to become U.I.P. (United International Pictures Pty Ltd) which, in addition to distributing product from the studios of Paramount and Universal, also obtained control of product from United Artists and Metro Goldwyn Mayer. As the WA Branch Manager, John worked closely with exhibitors from both the company chains and independents in programming, film booking, buying, session times, advertising\nbudgets, merchandising, promotions and media outlets, which included TV, radio and Press. John remained the West Australian Branch Manager for U.I.P. for 21 years, when in August 1991, he was transferred to Despatch Services Pty Ltd, where he remained until 1997. He then took up a position with Reading Cinemas as Administration Manager at their new complex at Mandurah, south of Perth.\nJohn retired from managing Reading Cinemas in 1998 to live in Mandurah, but did not bow out of the Cinema Industry altogether. He had joined the Society of Australian Cinema Pioneers in 1977, and was elected Treasurer of the WA Branch in 1996. Then when Arthur Stiles (one of WA’s leading Cinema Pioneers, who held the position of President of the WA Branch of the Cinema Pioneers) retired in 2007, John was duly elected to the Presidency role. He still serves as both\nPresident and Treasurer of the WA Branch today. In 1987, John was elected as a Trustee to the Board of the West Australian Motion Picture Benevolent Fund, becoming Treasurer of the Fund in 1989. Then in 1997, when the Benevolent Fund became a company limited by guarantee, John became a Director at that time. In 2006, John was awarded the “Life Time Achievement Award” by the Directors of the Fund.\nIn 1997, together with the late Col Porter, John received the United International Pictures “Achievement Award”. This was the first time this award had been presented outside the United Kingdom. Then in 2002, John was chosen as the WA Branch’s “Cinema Pioneer of the Year”.\nJohn considers it …\n“… an honour and privilege to be named National Cinema Pioneer of the Year for 2015, especially when you peruse the names of those who previously received this award.”\nCategories: National, Pioneer of the YearBy Kevin Adams - Webmaster October 18, 2015\nPreviousPrevious post:2014 – Jenny WardNextNext post:2015 – Wendy Paterson","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1533812"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6683263182640076,"wiki_prob":0.33167368173599243,"text":"One of only a few maps of the period created from first-hand knowledge\nBy THEVET, Andre, 1575\nQvarte Partie dv Monde.\nAmerica Continent of America\nAuthor: THEVET, Andre\nPublication place: [Paris\nPublisher: L’Huillier\nPhysical description: Double-page and folding woodcut map, two closed tears crossing the image extending from the left-hand margin, lower left-hand margin renewed.\nDimensions: 365 by 480mm (14.25 by 19 inches).\nFrom the first edition, of the fourth volume of Thevet’s ‘Cosmographie universelle’, 1575, here in a state not recorded by Burden, corresponding to his first state, but without the title above the neatline, even though there is a wide and untrimmed top margin.\nAlthough the geography of the map is mainly derived from that of Ortelius, Thevet, in his accompanying text, claims to have based his map of America on his own first-hand observations. Thevet did in fact visit America, returning from Brazil in 1555, and the map contains some interesting information not found in other maps of the period. Thevet has added placenames along the northeastern seaboard of North America. The map’s depiction of southwest south America is a sort of compromise between maps showing the bulge in Chile, first depicted by Mercator in 1569, and subsequent maps that have corrected it, first by Ortelius in 1570.\n“The region in Brazil where France dabbled in trade and prostelytizing is appropriately called ‘France Antartique’, as dubbed by Villegagnon, who considered himself to be ‘King of America’. Here Thevet, long anticipating most mapmakers, introduces the name ‘r. Janairo’. Directly inland, Thevet’s missionary role in the New World is reflected in his knowledge of various Indian peoples. Most prominent is ‘Toupinambaux’, the Tupinamba Indians known to us mainly through the adventures of the German adventurer Hans Staden, whom they had held captive shortly efore thevet’s second trip. Thevet and Staden appear to have witnessed similar rituals in Tupinamba life; e.g., both offer a similar description of a Tupinamba burial (unless the apparent corroboration is an illusion resulting from plagerism on the part of Thevet)” (Suarez).\nIn a break from tradition, the great landmass to the south, “Partie de la Terre Antartique Incongneve”, teams with life: people, animals and lush vegetation. Thevet fudges the relationship between Terra Australis and New Guinea by placing his explanatory text, addressed to the “amiable reader”, within a large strapwork cartouche there.\nAndré Thevet (1516–1590), “was a Franciscan monk who travelled extensively in Europe and made a reputed short journey to South America. Upon his return he records that he sailed along the eastern coast of North America / … The fine map / … relies largely on the Mercator model of 1569, most noticeably with the bulge to the north-west coast of North America. The southern continent, ‘Partie de la Terre Antartique Incogneue’, is full of descriptions of natives hunting, fishing and socialising. The geography and nomenclature of North America are largely derived from other sources. The quality of this block is very high and it is a shame that it is not more easily found” (Burden 46).\nAlden-Landis 575/31\nAlden, J. and Landis, D., eds. (1980). European Americana: A Chronological Guide to Works Printed in Europe Relating to the Americas, 1493–1776, New York: Readex Books.\nBorba de Moraes II, 859\nMoraes, R. (1983). Bibliographia brasiliana. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center Publications University of California.\nSabin 95335\nSabin, J. (1962). A Dictionary of books relating to America. Amsterdam: Israel.\nSuarez, Shedding the Veil, 32\nSuárez, T. (1992). Shedding the veil. Singapore: World Scientific.\nNissen ZBI 4110\nRonsil 2906\nA map of Chicago’s gangs, from Thrasher’s seminal study\nTHRASHER, Frederic M., 1926.\nVenezuela and Curaçao\nBREGANTE, S, 1866.\nA chart of the Bahamas\nQUESADA, Jose Maria de & NOGUERA, Juan., 1858.\nVenezuela, showing Caracas & Curaçao\nDIRECCION HIDROGRAFICA DE MADRID, 1816.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1015148"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5675691962242126,"wiki_prob":0.43243080377578735,"text":"About TSB\nLynne Peacock\nLynne Peacock - Senior Independent Non-Executive Director\nLynne Peacock joined the Board on 22 April 2020 and became TSB’s Senior Independent Director on 1 January 2021. She has held Board level appointments for over twenty years, and is currently a Non-Executive Director of Serco plc (which she joined in 2017 and where she is currently the Senior Independent Director) and Royal Mail plc (which she joined in 2019). She has previously been a Non-Executive Director of Nationwide Building Society, Jardine Lloyd Thompson plc, Standard Life Aberdeen plc and Scottish Water. Lynne was Chief Executive UK of National Australia Bank (NAB) from 2004 to 2011. She was responsible for around 8,500 people in NAB’s businesses in the UK. During that time, she integrated Clydesdale and Yorkshire banks into one entity and kept the business profitable during the financial crisis.\nBefore NAB, Lynne spent twenty years working at Woolwich plc. She started in 1983 and worked in a variety of senior marketing roles within the Woolwich, including Head of Marketing, Marketing Manager and Market Development Manager. She became Group Operations Director in 1996 with accountability for all of the UK businesses. She became Chief Executive of Woolwich plc on completion of the take-over by the Barclays Group in October 2000. Prior to joining the Woolwich, Lynne held marketing roles with Tate and Lyle, and Unilever.\nLynne is also Chair of the Board of Trustees of Learning Disability Network London Limited. Lynne holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Business Studies.\nRemuneration committee (Chair)\nRisk Committee\nRegulatory News Service","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line842734"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6162530183792114,"wiki_prob":0.3837469816207886,"text":"\"Dear Radio\" - A Thank-You from 826Michigan\nDear Radio,\nYou make my day better. Without you, I would sit and be bored. Books can take you places but so can your favorite song. Songs describe the feeling of the places, whether they're good or bad. Some are real and some are make believe. Feelings are also blended into words, describing people's fears, life stories, and hopes. They let me know that I can relate to other people out there. Sometimes I get so lost in the music that I block out everything else. I must admit I enjoy your company a little too much! Thanks for drowning me in your airwaves so I can have a good time. Without you I'd go crazy.\nYour pal,\nAdalia Alvarez\n826michigan is a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting students (ages 6 to 18) with their creative and expository writing skills, and to helping teachers inspire their students to write. http://www.826michigan.org/\nJoin WCBN on the Diag TODAY! 10/22\nWCBN will be occupying the University Diag with a live broadcast from 12-1 PM this afternoon. Please come dance with us, in public! We will have amplified sound so it should turn out to be poodles of fun. I heard something about a dancing hot dog but cannot say more than that...\nThom Yorke and Atoms for Peace Boycott Spotify\nhttp://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2013/07/14/thom-yorke-and-atoms-for-peace...\nSaying they are defending the rights of new and emerging recording artists, Thom Yorke and Atoms for Peace have removed their tracks from Spotify, the commercial music streaming service.\nBest known for his work with Radiohead, Yorke pulled his 2006 solo album “The Eraser” while the band Atoms for Peace, which Yorke leads, took down their ’13 disk “Amok.” As of earlier this afternoon, both tracks from Yorke’s ’09 two-sided single “The Hollow Earth” and “Feeling Pulled Apart by Horses” are still available on the service, as are some of his remixes and guest appearances.\nA representative for Spotify had no comment.\nYorke wrote: “Make no mistake, new artists you discover on Spotify will not get paid. Meanwhile shareholders will shortly begin rolling in it. Simples.”\nOn its website, Spotify, which is reported to have some six-million paid subscribers, claims to pay royalties in relation to an artist’s popularity on the service. “For example, we will pay out approximately 2% of our gross royalties for an artist whose music represents approximately 2% of what our users stream,” it states. “A popular song or album can generate far more revenue for an artist over time than it historically would have from upfront unit sales.” To see the full statements, go here.\nNew Transmitter in 2013\nWCBN's engineering staff is working toward a projected December, 2013 timeframe to deploy our new FM signal. Check out the signal increase on this map. The blue line shows the current signal coverage, while the red line outlines the area we will cover after upgrading our signal to 3000 watts.\nThere are about 274,000 residents in the new coverage area, compared to 118,000 in the current coverage area. We expect improved reception in places like Dexter and Saline.\nSupport from our listeners, volunteers, and the Regents of the University of Michigan has made this upgrade project possible.\nI'll take \"Radio, Radio\" for $800, Alex.\n\"Jeopardy!\" viewers on Wednesday night, April 24, 2013 gained extremely valuable knowledge upon seeing this clue on the screen.\nJust Listen!\nIngenuityPictures has produced a short documentary about WCBN to mark our 40th year of FM broadcasting. Our DJs and volunteers explain the history and current state of the radio station, and why this radio station is important to the culture of Ann Arbor, Michigan. Do you enjoy learning about new music? Want to explore our amazing record library? We are always on the lookout for new student DJs! We have tens of thousands of vinyl records, CDs, and cassettes you can dig through. And dig. Join us! Introductory training sessions are held every Sunday at 4pm in our lobby. Go to the Thompson St. entrance of the SAB (corner of Jefferson) and call 763-3500. Say you're here for training, and we'll buzz you in. Or email training AT wcbn DOT org! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QJyVMiR4Hlc","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line903881"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5301440954208374,"wiki_prob":0.4698559045791626,"text":"Posted on January 2, 2022 by Virginie Pronovost\nEarlier today, I confirmed, thanks to Letterboxd (the social network of cinephiles), that I had seen a total of 199 new-to-me films in 2021. Not bad! That included fiction films, documentaries, short, medium-length and feature films. I might have forgotten to register some. I don’t know. So, let’s say it was around 200. If I could briefly resume my year in films via bullet points, it would sort of go that way:\nWilliam Holden‘s filmography completed (yes!!)\nMany new-to-me films directed by women\nMany new-to-me British films\nGeorge Segal\nAmerican actor George Segal posed in England at a press call to promote his latest film ‘Blume In Love’ circa 1973. (Photo by Larry Ellis Collection/Getty Images)\nDirector Joan Micklin Silver\nAs we just entered 2022, a year during which I hope to discover more films, I thought it would be fun to make a top list of my favourite cinematographic discoveries of 2021. Of course, I won’t do a top 200 because it would be too long to organise, but I decided to limit myself to 15 films. These are all films that I immensely enjoyed and that meant something for me. So, it will be a good representation.\nI’ve decided to include only fiction features. I did see a lot of good documentaries and short films. However, it would be too much like comparing oranges and apples if I included them so it would for another occasion.\nBefore going further, bear in mind that, as usual, this is a list of favourites, not of best. It is purely subjective and based on my own preferences. I’m not claiming that these are objectively the best films but simply that they are the ones I personally prefer. But, in my opinion, this list contains films that are indeed masterpieces and others that aren’t necessary but that remain good entertainment (for me at least)!\nWithout further ado, here we go!\n15. Running on Empty (Sidney Lumet, 1988)\nI had forgotten that Sidney Lumet directed that film. No wonder why it was so good! I watched it on what marked the great late River Phoenix’s birthday. The actor received a well-deserved Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor ( lost to Kevin Kline in A Wish Called Wanda). However, I’m not sure why he wasn’t nominated for Best Actor instead. To me, he’s pretty much the main actor in the film! I’m not an expert on how the Academy evaluates things tho.\n14. Raising the Wind (Gerald Thomas, 1961)\nOk, this is one of those entertaining films without being a masterpiece. But a film in the style of a Carry On, especially one with Leslie Phillips and Kenneth Williams, is almost sure to please me. Yeah, it’s silly as you would expect it to be, but it certainly won’t leave you bored or indifferent!\n13. A Touch of Class (Melvin Frank, 1973)\nI watched that film for the article on the great late George Segal that I wrote for the film magazine Séquences last summer. I have to make a big confession: that was my first Glenda Jackson film! I know, I know, shame on me and blah-blah-blah. She was great and even won the Best Actress Oscar for her performance. So, I’m looking forward to seeing more of her films. PS: I also saw my first Susannah York film in 2021 (The 7th Dawn).\n12. The Revengers (Daniel Mann, 1972)\nI had no expectations whatsoever for that film and thought it would just be meh. Obviously, I quickly changed my opinion, and it turned out to be an agreeable surprise. Directed by the man who also made Come Back Litle Sheba, a film I love, The Revengers is, in my opinion, a very underrated western. It somehow made me think of The Wild Bunch and The Professionals. So if you like those two westerns, I definitely encourage you to give a chance to The Revengers!\n11. Children of a Lesser God (Randa Haines, 1986)\nNot only that film was directed by a woman, but it also stars the first deaf actress who won an Oscar for Best Actress (for that film in question): Marlee Maltin. She’s also the youngest actress to have won an Oscar for that same category. I had seen her previously in my favourite David Bowie’s film, The Linguini Incident, in which she plays a pretty badass character. William Hurt, who plays the new teacher at a deaf and hard of hearing school, is great also and delivers a performance with lots of passion. Too bad to know that he was disagreeable with Marlee Maltin during the making of the film.\n10. Sleuth (Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1972)\nThat film paring two great British actors of two completely different generations: Laurence Olivier and Michael Caine, certainly won’t leave you indifferent. Its execution is simple, yet, it’s a very complex story. Somehow, I didn’t remember Joseph L. Mankiewicz, an American, made it. Anyway, American or not, he was a great director, so the picture benefited from his talents! Sadly, that was his last film. But a brilliant swan song, that’s for sure!\n9. Crossing Delancey (Joan Micklin Silver, 1988)\nThat is another film I watched during my films-directed-by-women marathon last March. Sadly enough, the director, Joan Micklin Silver, passed away about two months after I saw it. That brilliant and free of clichés romantic comedy opposes Amy Irving (Carrie) and Peter Riegert (Local Hero). Among all the many good things we can remember from that film, let’s not forget that hilarious lesson that it’s tricky to put on lipstick in a moving car!\n8. What a Carve Up! (Pat Jackson, 1961)\nAnd here is another film with a bunch of Carry On actors (including the lovely Shirley Eaton, who only appeared in three of them). I especially liked that Kenneth Connor, my favourite Carry On actor alongside Kenneth Williams, had the main role. You feel it was his film. Interestingly British actor Dennis Price mixed himself with that bunch of Carry On actors. He and Shirley Eaton both starred in the 1965 version of Ten Little Indians, and somehow, that film reminded me of What aCarve Up!. If you’re looking for a great horror comedy to watch next Halloween, I certainly recommend that one!\n7. 12 Years a Slave (Steve McQueen, 2013)\nI don’t know why I waited so long before seeing that film. I was obviously missing something great (and moving)! That poignant film was based on Solomon Northup’s memoir. In 1841, he was captured by white men and made a slave in Louisiana for… 12 years. The film puts in your face the terrible injustices that black people were victims of in the US at that time because slavery was a thing. And we all know that injustices still go on for them. They are not represented in the same way, but they are still here. Anyway, 12 Years a Slave is not an easy film to watch. However, it’s an important one that puts the light on a shameful period of US history.\n6. After Hours (Martin Scorsese, 1985)\nThere would be so many things to say to praise that underrated comedy by Martin Scorsese. First of all, if you want to see a film by that director without gangsters, without Robert De Niro or Leonardo DiCaprio (don’t get me wrong, I love them), you should definitely give After Hours a try. I loved that the story evolves thanks to a bunch of crazy and unbelievable coincidences. They truly set the humoristic tone of the film. The story is simple. During a night, a guy played by a very likeable Griffin Dunne (An American Werewolf in London, Who’s That Girl?) is the victim of various misfortunes. Among the people he meets during his journey, the underrated Rosanna Arquette plays one of them.\n5. Too Many Crooks (Mario Zampi, 1959)\nOk, I swear this is the last Carry On-esque film on my list! Too Many Crooks is, in my opinion, not just an entertaining comedy. I’m ready to call it a film of quality. However, among the Carry On actors, there’s only Sidney James and a very young Bernard Bresslaw (he was only 25- and so tall)! Joining them was Brenda De Banzie, the hilarious Terry-Thomas and George Cole.\n4. The Summit of Gods (Le Sommet des Dieux, Patrick Imbert, 2021)\nI saw that film not a long time ago with my two best friends at the Cinémathèque québécoise in Montreal. And what a shock (in the good sense of the term)! That is an A-class animation. It was so well-made that it almost felt real. Add to that the top-notched sound dimension that almost makes us feel as if we were on the snowy mountains with the characters, feeling the icy weather. Plus, it’s really the type of story that keeps you at the edge of your seat. I recommend it to anybody who’s just willing to watch something unforgettable!\n3. Knives Out (Rian Johnson, 2019)\nI don’t remember what made me watch that film, but I’m so glad I did. I loved the story à la Agatha Christie, the colourful cinematography, the casting, the setting. It was one of Christopher Plummer’s last films. There’s a sequel that should be released in 2022, and Edward Norton (one of my favourite “contemporary actors”) is in it. I’m so down for that!\n2. The Mirror Has Two Faces (Barbara Streisand, 1996)\nIt isn’t necessarily a masterpiece. However, in terms of personal tastes, it was a memorable discovery. I watched it on the day George Segal passed away as he plays a supporting role in it. Barbra Streisand and Jeff Bridges play the leading role in this highly enjoyable romantic comedy, and they share great chemistry. Among the supporting cast, there’s also Pierce Brosnan and Lauren Bacall. Not bad Conradl! And guess what? You can watch that little gem on Netflix!\nSuspense!\n1- The Italian Job (Peter Collinson, 1969)\nThat is the type of British film that goes in my chords. It’s a thrilling story, plus it has a touch of well-appreciated British humour. The beginning with the Rossano Brazzi driving his convertible in the Alps is one I could watch over and over again. The main characters are played by Michale Caine and the great Noël Coward. If you’re looking for a bit of action in the form of a heist film, that one should be high on your list. It almost makes me want to own a Mini Cooper! I also liked that it takes place in Torino, a beautiful Italian city I’ve visited on three occasions. Interestingly enough, in 2021, I saw two other films by Peter Collinson, The Earthling (his last film) and Open Season. But I liked The Italian Job much better than those two.\nThat’s it! Of course, I saw many other great films in 2021! And some mediocre ones, but not so many, to be honest. Interestingly, there aren’t any films older than 1959 on that list, but it’s a pure coincidence. I’ll be curious to know what are the best films you discovered in 2021! Let me know in the comments!\nPosted in Movie of the 60's, Movies of the 2010s, Movies of the 2020s, Movies of the 50's, Movies of the 70's, Movies of the 80's, Movies of the 90's, Opinion Text, Top List\tTagged Top of the World\n← An Experience at Montreal International Documentary Festival (RIDM)\n3 thoughts on “Top of the World: 15 Favourite New-to-Me Films Watched in 2021”\nRealweegiemidget Reviews says:\nI ADORE this list and so many to watch now Ginnie – you certainly love your Carry On actors and actresses almost as much as Mr Holden. Hoping you hold a blogathon in both their honours this year. You have reminded me again to watch Sunset Boulevard…\nI really miss hosting and participating in blogathon. I must admit with the job it was just impossible. But I’m gonna try to work on that!\nYay, its thanks to you I’ve discovered so many William Holden films and Arthur Kennedy. Hope you bring both these leading men back.. (and more).","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line245741"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6538065075874329,"wiki_prob":0.34619349241256714,"text":"One Ocean, Two Shades: Perceptions about the Indian Ocean\n/luce.nt/ was established in 2010 as a forum to advance thinking and to promote dialogue in an online symposium for policy makers, scholars, and practitioners within the international security community “on all questions relating to war and to statesmanship connected with war, or the prevention of war.” The thoughts and opinions expressed in this online publication are those of the authors and are not necessarily those of the U.S. government, the U.S. Navy Department, or the U.S. Naval War College.\nCapt. Sameer Saxena, Indian Navy, “One Ocean, Two Shades: Perceptions about the Indian Ocean,” /luce.nt/: A Journal of National Security Studies (Fall 2011).\nThe Indian Ocean and India itself and how the United States views this area of the world is discussed in light of history, India’s recent growth and influence in the region as well as globally, and the opportunities presented through an adjustment to the U.S. lens. The current focus is on China. Should it really be on India? The importance of regional actors working in coordination with the support of extra-regional actors and methods to move in that direction are discussed. …\nA historical preview provides an understanding of past challenges and the present opportunity for a paradigm shift. A study of the economic and geopolitical differences explains the inertia against such a shift, while a reflection of the commonality of national interests demonstrates the imperatives to overcome such inertia. Three instances of divergent policy perspectives are examined so as to appreciate differences and to identify a way ahead. …\nIndo – US bilateral relations have through recent strategic engagement developed mutual trust which renders historical differences of security paradigms irrelevant. India has traditionally had an independent foreign policy yet by virtue of its democratic governance and adherence to international norms, there are considerable commonalities of national interests and an increasing convergence of security objectives. Inadequate appreciation of differences in perspectives has resulted in policy differences that have inhibited synergy in the maritime domain. It is imperative that the leadership of both nations capitalize on mutual capabilities, respective geopolitical strengths, and the mutual reservoir of trust. The United States has been the guardian of the global commons during the latter part of the 20th century. In an environment of state and non-state actors seeking anti access capabilities, the United States must seek new partnerships to ensure freedom in the global commons. The Indian Ocean Region is an area of confluence of dangers: WMD proliferation, radical terrorism, unstable states, piracy and illicit activities. These demand focused attention and synergy of efforts. Failure to do so could result in a catastrophe such as an al-Qaida WMD attack which could be either in New York or New Delhi. Neither is improbable nor inevitable. Cooperative engagement alone can minimize risks.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line896773"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7280556559562683,"wiki_prob":0.7280556559562683,"text":"The Bizarre Link between Your Gut and Parkinson’s\n(WellnessPursuits.com) – What would you think if we told you your gut health might make a difference as to whether or not you’ll develop Parkinson’s disease? Researchers have begun to think just that, and your appendix may play the biggest role. It might seem like a bizarre connection, but that useless tiny organ attached to your intestine could have one more dirty trick up its sleeve. How it all works is just as bizarre as it sounds.\nParkinson’s and GI Problems\nIn hindsight, it seems like a lot of Parkinson’s patients notice an onset of chronic constipation and other stomach issues long before they notice any of the other tell-tale signs of the disease. Up until recently, this was seen as just another symptom. Now, researchers believe it may be evidence of the disease starting in the gut.\nOne piece connecting the gut with Parkinson’s disease is the presence of a specific protein that initially develops there, then later accumulates in the brain. This protein, known scientifically as alpha-synuclein, may collect in response to bacteria in the gastrointestinal tract, and in a lot of cases could even serve as part of the body’s defense against dangerous diseases.\nThere’s a twist, though. Researchers are still trying to figure out why, but sometimes the protein folds into an unusual shape that causes it to clump together, cluttering up the brain. Like prions, the proteins responsible for mad cow disease, misfolded alpha-synuclein proteins infect other proteins they come in contact with, leading to a cascade of destruction.\nStudies on gingivitis and Alzheimer’s, another neurodegenerative disease, could offer another clue. Research has shown that some bacteria, like the one responsible for causing gum disease, can produce toxins that cause certain proteins to misfold, leading to disease. If similar causes are behind the protein misfolding in Parkinson’s, then an infection may be responsible for its symptoms as well.\nInfection Connection\nThere’s more. The infection theory holds a lot of weight. Researchers are still trying to pinpoint the specific infections responsible, although Helicobacter pylori is one possible candidate. The most compelling evidence backing the infection theory comes from a study where scientists injected fecal matter from Parkinson’s patients into the guts of mice. Those mice all developed motor function issues.\nThe inflammation resulting from an infection or imbalance could be another component. Inflammation can cause “leaky gut” and reduce the effectiveness of the blood-brain barrier, making it easier for bacteria to travel to and from those areas. And then, there’s the vagus nerve, which is where things start to get really weird. Researchers believe the clumps of alpha-synuclein may use this nerve, which spans all the way to the stomach, as a highway to the brain. Studies have even shown severing this nerve can prevent some cases of Parkinson’s disease from forming (not that doing so is a valid solution in any way, shape, or form).\nConnecting the Appendix\nSo back the appendix. Otherwise serving no function, that tiny organ appears to play a major role by serving as a reservoir for all those potentially dangerous bacteria. But the bizarreness continues: Depending on the study, having your appendix removed can either drastically increase or decrease your chances of developing Parkinson’s disease. Since these findings have been significant, a connection is clearly there. That connection, and why appendix removal has such varying effects, is still being researched.\nMany of the mysteries behind Parkinson’s disease may still be as unclear as they are strange, but the pieces are slowly coming together. More research into the role of alpha-synuclein could lead to new medications that reduce its production or block it from traveling to the brain. If upcoming drug trials are successful, Parkinson’s disease could soon be managed or even prevented with a pill.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1587380"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9477453231811523,"wiki_prob":0.9477453231811523,"text":"Polartropica on the Challenges of Releasing a Debut Album During a Pandemic\nLove in the Time of Coronavirus\nJun 18, 2020 By Paul Bullock Web Exclusive\nFor Ihui Cherise Wu, one of the leaders of Los Angeles’ emerging queer pop scene, Friday, March 13th, 2020, should have been a triumph. Her musical project, Polartropica, was scheduled to release its debut album, Dreams Come True. The following night she was set to headline LOVE IS GAY, the most recent installment of the touring, all-ages LGBTQ+ festival/fundraiser, at The Bootleg Theater. It was supposed to be the culmination of three years of hustling; of writing, recording, and releasing singles; of playing dozens of hometown-shows and touring the U.S.; of filming elaborate videos and constant, colorful social media promotion. Then, Los Angeles shut down.\n“Everything escalated pretty quickly,” says Wu. “Shows were starting to get cancelled but Tame Impala had just played two shows the two nights leading up, so we were going back and forth. We were like, should we postpone? Should we cancel?”\nWhen it became obvious this installment of the festival was not happening, Wu felt “a wave of relief. I was sad but I was also glad that everyone was on the same page to be safe until the right time.”\nThe acts scrambled to put together a live stream. Twenty-four hours later, with some minor technical difficulties, they managed to pull it off. Looking back now and realizing that it was going to be last time for a while that Wu would see a large group of musicians gathered together, “it kinda felt like a last hurrah.” It was a reassuring event at an uncertain time but an undoubtedly unfortunate way to welcome Dreams Come True into the world.\nFollowing 2016’s Astrodreams EP, Wu had started writing the new material that would become her debut album with the initial goal of just putting out singles for a while. With the help of producer C.M. Rodriguez, she began demoing the new songs in bedrooms and garages around Silverlake during her free time from selling real estate, working at neighborhood restaurants, and teaching music to children.\n“Crystal Ramen,” the first of these tracks, was released in August of 2017. It’s a good example of Polartropica’s sound: dreamy, glittery, synth-y, and accompanied by emotionally complex, often surprisingly dark lyrics.\n“It’s kind of a heavy album,” says Wu, laughing.\nAs the rest of Dreams Come True began to take shape, subjects like animal rights, school shootings, and the USA Gymnastics sex abuse scandal provided intruding inspiration for songs that directly address more personal topics such as witnessing a friend’s emotionally devastating breakup or being forced to deal with a problematic boss.\nIn the middle of these recordings, Rodriguez relocated to Tulsa, OK, shifting their collaboration onto the Internet, with Wu making occasional flights east to complete the work in person. The finished product features guest appearances by her live band’s guitarist Alexander Noice, composer Bobby Halvorson, and singer/songwriter/guzheng player Jett Kwong, whom Wu met when they shared a bill at an event celebrating Asian Pacific American Heritage Month.\n“It’s been quite a process,” says Wu. “Now that I’m looking back, it took quite a while. But I wasn’t in a rush because we were playing a lot of shows, and it felt like everything was organic. So we were pretty busy the whole time.”\nWith the help of her live band and a close-knit group of friends like Lucy & La Mer, WASI, and mini bear, Wu has made Polartropica a distinguished fixture in the diverse LA hipster underground, performing in retro-futuristic costumes with increasingly elaborate staging and choreography at venues such as The Satellite, The Echo, and the wildly popular street festival Chinatown Summer Nights. Along the way she’s been collaborating on a series of ambitious music videos with directors such as White Sitar, Tess O’Connor, and Stephanie Kim, who made “Another Life,” the first of an anticipated trilogy with reoccurring characters and an interconnected storyline. But, that’ll have to wait until it’s safe for her crew to get together again.\nIn the interim, Dreams Come True is finally out, and Wu hopes that people will find some solace in it. “I feel like music really helped me get through hard times,” she says. “So I kind of did that with this record. It’s for everybody. For myself, for my friends, and everyone else too.”\nwww.polartropica.com\nwww.facebook.com/polartropica/\nwww.twitter.com/Polartropica\nwww.instagram.com/polartropica/\n<a href=“http://polartropica.bandcamp.com/album/dreams-come-true” mce_href=“http://polartropica.bandcamp.com/album/dreams-come-true”>DREAMS COME TRUE by POLARTROPICA</a>\nSupport Under the Radar on Patreon.\nMitakshara_Mishra\nJune 23rd 2020\nI found your article on Google when I was surfing, it is written very nicely and is optimized. Thank you I visit your website regularly.\ntinsukia pin code","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1764841"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8090018630027771,"wiki_prob":0.8090018630027771,"text":"Guns N’ Roses: Sweet Child O’ Mine tops 1 billion YouTube views\nThe video for Guns N’ Roses’ 1987 smash, “Sweet Child O’ Mine”, has passed the 1 billion views mark on YouTube.\nThe third track issued from the band’s debut, “Appetite For Destruction” - which remains the group’s only US No. 1 single – was uploaded to the video site on Christmas Eve 2009.\n“This moment is yours,” says Guns N’ Roses on social media. “#GnFnR history is made as Sweet Child O' Mine has hit over 1 billion views on YouTube.”\nYouTube Music also shared a congratulatory video about the latest feat, which marks the second time Guns N’ Roses has reached the landmark milestone online after “November Rain” became the first music video from the pre-YouTube era (the site launched in 2005) to surpass the 1 billion views mark in July of 2018.\nThe all-time top YouTube videos are still led by recent songs, with its top 20 all from this decade, including Luis Fonsi’s “Despacito”, which clocks in with more than 6.48 billion views.\nGuns N’ Roses are currently playing dates on a fall run of shows as part of their ongoing Not In This Lifetime tour.\nONE BILLION VIEWS 🎉 Welcome back @gunsnroses 🏆 https://t.co/dNx7RSDYJ3 pic.twitter.com/YFsPzWvh2a\n— YouTube Music (@youtubemusic) October 15, 2019\nGuns N’ Roses to headline Lollapalooza in Chile, Argentina and Brazil\nVIDEO: Guns N’ Roses perform 1991 rarity for first time in three decades\nVIDEO: Guns N’ Roses play intimate Los Angeles show\nGuns N’ Roses announce intimate Los Angeles show\nSearch Guns N Roses at hennemusic\nLabels: Guns N Roses, Slash","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line152969"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6935742497444153,"wiki_prob":0.6935742497444153,"text":"Erin Tumminello, Staff Writer\nNovember 20th, 2020 was Transgender Day of Remembrance, which was a day dedicated to transgender people whose lives had been lost. Unfortunately, many members of the transgender community face significant discrimination and have been victims of violence and hate crimes. This day serves as a memorial to transgender indivuduals who have been killed as a result of such acts of violence, as well as those who have committed suicide.\nEach year, members of Massapequa High School’s Gay and Straight Alliance (GSA) observes this day by wearing black clothing, wearing black ribbons, and setting up a table with a list of victims who died. Information about the day itself, as well as definitions of transgender and similar terms, are also provided. The GSA also honors those who had died by releasing balloons with the names of the victims written on them. Due to COVID-19, the table setup and balloon release could not occur, but members still recognized the day. “Transgender Day of Remembrance is an important day to the LGBT community, especially the transgender community, because they are often overlooked,” says Laura Philbin, the president of the GSA. “They are the target of violent crimes at disproportionate rates and they are also more likely to attempt suicide due to hate from family, friends, and society as a whole. We should use this day to reflect upon the lives lost and to reflect on our own actions and attitudes towards the transgender community.”\nSadly, transphobia (discrimination and hostility toward transgender people) still exists. But there are ways to help combat it. Making sure to support and accept transgender peers, as well as respecting their pronouns, is incredibly important. Showing support toward organizations such as the Trevor Project and GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian, & Straight Education Network) is also a way to help people in need. An additional way to help is to use resources such as the aforementioned organizations to become more educated about the LGBT+ community and problems that individuals in the community face.\nWorking together in order to make the world a more accepting place is crucial, and it all starts with promoting equality and acceptance for everyone.\nMassapequa High School’s 2021 Pep Rally\nMr. Brian Conboy Returns to Massapequa\nSchool, Stress, and Strive: Is it Too Much for Students?\nAwareness Week at Massapequa High School\nMusic to Our Ears… Students learn Music Theory at MHS\nTelescope at Massapequa Library\nTri-M: Massapequa Music Mentor Program\nChanges to Massapequa Music\nMHS Unite and Show Their School Pride\nMassapequa Goes Virtual…Again","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line126791"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7804573774337769,"wiki_prob":0.7804573774337769,"text":"Home :: Chess :: Openings\nAlekhine's Defence\n1.e4 Nf6\nB02-B05\nAlexander Alekhine, Budapest 1921\nNamed after\nAlexander Alekhine\nKing's Pawn Game\nAlekhine's Defence is a hypermodern chess opening that can begin with the moves:\n1. e4 Nf6\nBlack tempts White's pawns forward to form a broad pawn centre, with plans to undermine and attack the white structure later in the spirit of hypermodern defence. White's imposing mass of pawns in the centre often includes pawns on c4, d4, e5, and f4. Grandmaster Nick de Firmian observes of Alekhine's Defence in MCO-15 (2008), \"The game immediately loses any sense of symmetry or balance, which makes the opening a good choice for aggressive fighting players.\"\nThe Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings (ECO) has four codes for Alekhine's Defence, B02 through B05:\nB02: 1.e4 Nf6\nB03: 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 (including the Exchange Variation and Four Pawns Attack)\nB04: 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 (Modern Variation without 4...Bg4)\nB05: 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 Bg4 (Modern Variation with 4...Bg4)\nThe opening is named after Alexander Alekhine, who introduced it in the 1921 Budapest tournament in games against Endre Steiner and Fritz Sämisch. Four years later, the editors of the Fourth Edition of Modern Chess Openings (MCO-4) wrote:\nNothing is more indicative of the iconoclastic conceptions of the 'hypermodern school' than the bizarre defence introduced by Alekhine ... . Although opposing to all tenets of the classical school, Black allows his King's Knight to be driven about the board in the early stages of the game, in the expectation of provoking a weakness in White's centre pawns.\nIn addition to Alekhine, another early exponent of the defence was Ernst Grünfeld.\nThe popularity of Alekhine's Defence waxes and wanes; currently it is not very common. De Firmian observes, \"The fashion could quickly change if some champion of the opening takes up the cause, as the results Black has obtained in practice are good.\" The opening's current highest-rated proponent is Grandmaster Vassily Ivanchuk, although Lev Alburt played it at grandmaster level almost exclusively during his career and was responsible for many contributions in both theory and practice. De Firmian writes, \"Currently Grandmasters Shabalov and Minasian use the opening with regularity, while Aronian, Adams, and Nakamura will use it on occasion. In the past, great players such as Fischer and Korchnoi included the defense in their repertoire, leading to its respectable reputation.\"\nAfter the usual 2. e5 Nd5, three main variations of Alekhine's Defence use 3.d4, but there are other options for White at this point. Two of the most common versions are the Exchange Variation and the Four Pawns Attack. The Exchange Variation continues 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.exd6. White has some space advantage. Black can capitalise on the half-open centre with ...g6, ...Bg7 with ...Bg4 eventually being played. The Four Pawns Attack continues 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.f4. White has a somewhat larger space advantage though the centre is not fixed. Black has a number of options. Black can play ...Qd7 with ...0-0-0 and ...f6 putting pressure on White's d pawn. Black can play ...Nb4 with ...c5 hoping to exchange the d pawn. Finally, Black can play ...Be7 with ...0-0 and ...f6 attacking the centre. Minor variations include O'Sullivan's Gambit, 3.d4 b5 (intending 4.Bxb5 c5 5.dxc5?? Qa5+), and 3.d4 d6 4.Bc4, the Balogh Variation.\nFour Pawns Attack: 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.f4\nFour Pawns Attack 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.f4\nThe Four Pawns Attack is White's most ambitious try, and the variation which perhaps illustrates the basic idea of the defence best: Black allows White to make several tempo-gaining attacks on the knight and to erect an apparently imposing pawn centre in the belief that it can later be destroyed. The game can become very sharp since White must either secure his advantage in space or make use of it before Black succeeds in making a successful strike at it. Black must also play vigorously because passive play will be crushed by the White centre. The Four Pawns Attack is not particularly popular because many White players are wary of entering a sharp tactical line which Black may have prepared. The main line continues 5...dxe5 6.fxe5 Nc6 7.Be3 Bf5 8.Nc3 e6 9.Nf3\nAn alternative is the sharp Planinc Variation, 5...g5!?. Black hopes for 6. fxg5? dxe5, wrecking White's centre and leaving him with weak pawns. The line is named after grandmaster Albin Planinc, who championed it in the 1970s. Template:Citatation needed It was then taken up in the 1990s by correspondence player Michael Schirmer, whose games were noted in a recent book on Alekhine's Defence by notable British GM and Alekhine exponent Nigel Davies.\nExchange Variation: 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.exd6\nExchange Variation 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.exd6\nThe Exchange Variation is less ambitious than the Four Pawns Attack. White trades pawns, accepting a more modest spatial advantage. Black's main decision is whether to recapture with the solid 5...exd6, which will lead to a fairly strategic position, or the more ambitious 5...cxd6 when Black has a preponderance of pawns in the centre. The third recapture 5...Qxd6 is also possible since the fork 6.c5 can be answered by 6...Qe6+, but the line is considered inferior since Black will sooner or later need to deal with this threat.\nIn the sharper 5...cxd6 line, Black usually aims to attack and undermine the white pawn on d4, and possibly c4 as well. To do this, a usual plan involves a fianchetto of the king bishop to g7, playing the other bishop to g4 to remove a knight on f3 which is a key defender of d4, while black knights on b6 and c6 bear down on the white pawns on c4 and d4. Cox gave the game Jainy Gomes vs. Guillermo Soppe to illustrate Black's intentions.\nA popular setup from White to prevent Black's plan is the Voronezh Variation (named after the Russian city Voronezh, where the line was invented, by players such as Grigory Sanakoev). The Voronezh is defined by the opening sequence 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.exd6 cxd6 6.Nc3 g6 7.Be3 Bg7 8.Rc1 0-0 9.b3. White's setup delays kingside development so that Black has trouble developing pieces in a fashion that harasses White's pieces and assails the centre pawns; for instance there is no knight on f3 which can become a target after ...Bg4, and no bishop on d3 which may be a target after ...Nc6-e5. While 9...Nc6?! is Black's most common reply according to ChessBase's database, after 10.d5 Ne5 Black's knight lacks a target, and will soon be chased out with f2-f4, and this line has scored very poorly for Black. The main line in the Voronezh, and the second most common reply, is 9...e5 10.dxe5 dxe5 11.Qxd8 Rxd8 12.c5 N6d7 (This retreat is forced since 12...Nd5?? loses the knight due to the 13.Rd1 pin) when Black must play carefully to unentangle and challenge the White pawn on c5. Other lines against the Voronezh include 9...f5 leading to sharp play. Other solid moves such as 9...e6, ...Bd7, ...Bf5, and ...a5 are possible as well. According to John Cox, the 9...e5 line is adequate, but Black needs to know the line well.\nThe Voronezh was recommended by John Emms and noted as a big problem by Nigel Davies, leading many players to opt for the more solid 5...exd6 line.\nHowever, the line offers Black less opportunity for counterplay. In this line Black usually develops the king bishop via ...Be7 and ...Bf6, because Bg5 can be bothersome against a fianchetto setup with ...g6 and ...Bg7, e.g. 6.Nc3 g6 7.Nf3 Bg7 8.Bg5.\nModern Variation: 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3\nModern Variation 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3\nThe Modern Variation is the most common variation of the Alekhine Defence. As in the Exchange Variation, White accepts a more modest spatial advantage, and hopes to be able to hang on to it. There are a number of possible Black responses:\n4...Bg4, pinning the knight is the most common response, which White usually parries with 5.Be2. Black will often voluntarily surrender the bishop pair by ...Bxf3 because the white knight is a fairly strong piece, and capturing it undermines the white centre pawns. Champions of this line include Lev Alburt, Vlatko Kovačević and the late Vladimir Bagirov.\n4...g6, preparing to fianchetto a bishop to oppose White's central pawn mass, is also often seen. This variation was played in the thirteenth game of the Match of the Century between Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer. (The nineteenth game of the same match featured the more common 4...Bg4.) Alburt has also played this line frequently. White usually replies with 5.Bc4, the Keres Variation.\n4...dxe5 (the Larsen Variation) is another possibility which can lead to the sharp sacrificial line 5.Nxe5 Nd7 6.Nxf7!? Kxf7 7.Qh5+ Ke6. The sacrifice is, at the very least, good enough to draw after 8.Qg4+; Larsen tried the suicidal 8...Kd6? against Fischer during the Santa Monica Blitz tournament in 1966, and lost quickly after 9.c4. Black should therefore acquiesce to the perpetual check with 8...Kf7 9.Qh5+ Ke6 etc. Instead, 8.c4 can be played if White is aiming to win. White can also simply retreat the knight with 5.Nf3. If Black does not want to allow the sacrifice, other options after 5.Nxe5 are 5...g6 (the Kengis Variation) and 5...c6 (the Miles Variation). The idea behind both moves is to challenge the e5 knight with Nd7 only after the sacrifice on f7 has become unsound. The Kengis variation looks more natural but white has several sharp ideas such as 6.c4 and the wild 6.Qf3!?. Therefore 5...c6 has become more common; despite the passive look this waiting move discourages white most ambitious continuations. Now 6.c4 can be met with the very interesting 6...Nb4!? while 6.Bc4 can either transpose to quieter lines of the Kengis or give rise to independent variations in which black avoids the king's bishop fianchetto. White's most popular move is 6.Be2 (6.Bd3!?) when black continues with either the immediate Nd7 of 6...Bf5. Against the latter an aggressive possibility (introduced by Kasparov against Short and then improved by Judith Polgar) is 7.g4!?. In top level chess, the line with 5...c6 has largely displaced 4...Bg4 as the main line.\n4...c6 is passive but solid, creating a position which is difficult to attack.\nIn most variations, Black can play ...Bg4 to transpose into the 4...Bg4 line.\nBalogh Variation: 3.d4 d6 4.Bc4\nBalogh Variation 3.d4 d6 4.Bc4\nThe first recorded use of this variation was on August 13, 1929, in Carlsbad, Bohemia. Esteban Canal was white and Edgard Colle was black. White resigned after Black's 40th move.\nUnlike several other sidelines, 4. Bc4 is fairly popular. The line contains some traps that can snare the unwary. For example 4...dxe5 5.dxe5 Nb6?? loses the queen to 6.Bxf7!. Instead, the main line is 4...Nb6 5.Bb3, when Black has usually played 5...dxe5 6.Qh5 e6 7.dxe5 (the \"old main line\" according to Cox) or 5...Bf5 when White can among other things try the obstructive pawn sacrifice 6.e6. In either case, White obtains attacking chances, and so Taylor recommends 5...d5 followed by 6...e6 to reach a position akin to the French Defense.\nTwo Pawns Attack: 3.c4 Nb6 4.c5\nTwo Pawns Attack 3.c4 Nb6 4.c5\nThe Two Pawns Attack (also known as the Lasker Attack or the Chase Variation) is also an ambitious try. White may gain attacking prospects, but it might cost a pawn to do so. White's pawns on c5 and e5 secure a spatial advantage, but the d5 square has been weakened. Unlike the Four Pawns Attack, the White centre is not as fluid and the game takes on a more strategic character.\nAesthetically, 4.c5 looks positionally suspect, since White's pawn advances have severely weakened the d5-square. White's intention is to grab space and mobility so that those strategic deficiencies are of little consequence.\nBlack must play 4...Nd5, whereupon White will usually challenge the knight with moves like Bc4 and Nc3. Black can defend the knight with ...c6 or ...e6, sometimes playing both. Typically, Black then challenges White's pawns on e5 and c5 with moves like ...d6 and ...b6.\nThe statistics presented by Cox show this variation scoring poorly for White, with all of Black's main defenses scoring at least 50%.\nTwo Knights Variation: 3.Nc3\nTwo Knights Variation 3.Nc3\nThe Two Knights Variation is a variation where White immediately accepts doubled pawns after 3...Nxc3 for some compensation. After 4.dxc3 this compensation is rapid piece development. Although the line after 4...d6, challenging the e-pawn often can lead to fairly dull positions, the position remains open and Black can quickly succumb with poor defense, for example after 5.Bc4 dxe5?? 6.Bxf7+!, White wins the queen on d8. After 4.bxc3 White's compensation for the doubled pawns is a big centre that can be used as a basis for a kingside attack. The resulting pawn structure leads to position similar to that of the Winawer variation of the French Defense.\nIf Black does not want to defend against White's attacking opportunities against 3...Nxc3 4.dxc3, then 3...e6 is a reasonable alternative that was Alekhine's choice when meeting the Two Knights, and this defense has been advocated by Taylor. If White plays 4.d4, then 4...Nxc3 forces White into the bxc3 line reminiscent of the French. If 4.Nxd5 exd5, Black will quickly dissolve the doubled pawns with ...d6, and the resulting position will tend to be drawish.\nMinor sidelines after 2.e5 Nd5\nIn Endre Steiner-Alexander Alekhine, Budapest 1921, the first high level game with the Alekhine Defense, White played 3.d4 d6 4.Bg5. Cox recommends 4...h6 5.Bh4 dxe5 6.dxe5 Bf5, followed by ...Nc6 and ...Ndb4, targeting c2.\n4.Bg5 from Steiner-Alekhine\nAnother rare line, but one that scores well in practice is 3.d4 d6 4.Be2, preventing Black from playing 4...Bg4 while retaining the option of making the pawn advance f2-f4.\n3.c4 Nb6 4.a4\nAfter 3.c4 Nb6 4.a4, White aims at chasing the Black knight away followed by a pawn sacrifice that impairs Black's development, for example by 4...d6 5.a5 Nd7 6.e6. It is possible for Black to allow this, but it is simpler to prevent it by 4...a5. White's main continuation is to deploy the queenside rook for duties on the kingside with 5.Ra3, followed by Rg3 at some point when the attack on g7 is supposed to tie Black down from developing the bishop to e7. However, after 5...d6 6.exd6 exd6 7.Rg3 Bf5, Black can carry through with 8...Be7 anyway, since after 9.Rxg7 the rook would be trapped and lost to 9...Bg6 and 10...Bf6. The idea for this unusual early \"rook lift\" probably originated with the well-known American International Master Emory Tate. Women's World Champion Grandmaster Maria Muzychuk, World Junior Champion GM Lu Shanglei and GM Nazar Firman have experimented with this line and achieved some success with it.\nAlternatives to 2...Nd5\nAfter 2.e5, the 2...Nd5 is almost universally played. The two other knight moves that do not hang it to the queen on d1 are 2...Ng8 and 2...Ne4.\n2...Ng8, undeveloping the knight immediately, was named the \"Brooklyn Defense\" in honour of his hometown by Grandmaster Joel Benjamin, who calls this his \"pet line\". Although Black might be said to be giving odds of three moves, White only has a small advantage according to theory. The first recorded use of the Brooklyn Variation was in 1905 in Vienna where Aron Nimzowitsch with White checkmated Adolf Albin on the 34th move.\nVery dubious is 2...Ne4?, which John L. Watson and Eric Schiller dub the \"Mokele Mbembe\". They analyze 3.d4 f6 4.Bd3 d5 5.f3 Ng5 6.Bxg5 fxg5 7.f4! g6! 8.Nf3! g4 (they also analyze 8...gxf4 9.Ng5! e6 10.Qg4! Qe7 11.0-0 and 8...Bg4 9.h3, both leading a large advantage for White) 9.Ng5 Bh6 10.Nxh7 Rxh7 11.Bxg6+ Rf7 12.Qd3 Bf8 13.f5 e6 14.f6 Qd7 15.h3! g3 16.Qxg3, with a winning advantage for White. Nunn's Chess Openings concludes that White gets a large advantage with 3.d4 f6 (or 3...e6 4.Nh3 h6 5.Qg4 d5 6.f3 h5 7.Qf4 g5 8.Nxg5 Nxg5 9.Qxg5 Be7 10.Qg7) 4.Qh5+ g6 5.Qh4 d5 6.Bd3.\nAlternatives to 2.e5\nInstead of chasing Black's knight, White may defend the e4-pawn, either directly or through tactical means.\n2.Nc3 is by far White's most common alternative to 2.e5; in fact Cox noted that he saw this move in over half his games with the Alekhine. It is often played by amateurs and those wishing to avoid a theoretical battle on territory more familiar to their opponents. Cox, however, wrote that many White players are bluffing, and in fact know nothing about either the Vienna Game or the Four Knights Game, to which the game can easily transpose if Black plays 2...e5, citing one book which recommended 2.Nc3 while assuring readers that 2...e5 is uncommon. Another transposition Black may enter is 2...d6, which usually leads to the Pirc Defence. But the independent Alekhine line is 2...d5, known as the Scandinavian Variation. After 2...d5, 3.exd5 Nxd5 4.Bc4 Nb6 or ...Nxc3 is considered roughly equal, while 4...e6 is solid but blocks in the light-squared bishop. 3.exd5 Nxd5 4.g3 has been played by the Danish correspondence player Ove Ekebjaerg, when Harald Keilhack recommends 4...Nxc3 5.bxc3 Qd5! 6.Qf3! (6.Nf3 Qe4+ is awkward in light of 7.Be2 Bh3 or 7.Qe2 Qxc2) Qe6+! 7.Qe2 (\"on 7.Be2 or 7.Ne2, 7...Bd7 is unpleasant\") Qxe2+ 8.Nxe2 Bd7! 9.Bg2 Bc6 10.0-0 Bxg2 11.Kxg2 Nc6 12.d3 g6 13.Rb1 0-0-0 14.c4 Bg7, when \"Black has a rather comfortable position\", as in Ekebjaerg-Alcantara Soares, corr. 1989. More combative is 2...d5 3.e5, when Black can choose among 3...d4, 3...Nfd7 (transposing to the Steinitz variation of the French Defence after 4.d4 e6, but 4.e6!? is a sharp alternative), 3...Ne4!?, and even 3...Ng8. While most grandmasters play the mainline 2.e5, Jonny Hector regularly plays 2.Nc3 against the Alekhine, and has scored well against the 2...d5 variation. His ideas have left White with a theoretical edge. Textbook authors of the Alekhine Defence, including Davies, Cox, and Taylor, have therefore encouraged 2...e5 over 2...d5.\n2.d3 (the Maroczy Variation) is less common. Although playable, 2.d3 blocks in White's light-squared bishop, so the variation is considered somewhat passive. If White fianchettoes that bishop, transposition to a King's Indian Attack is likely. Lev Alburt and Eric Schiller call 2.d3 \"insipid\" and recommend 2...d5 (or 3.Nd2 e5 with a reversed Philidor's Defence) 3.e5 Nfd7 4.f4 (4.d4 c5 5.c3 Nc6 leaves Black a tempo up on the French Defence) c5 5.Nf3 e6 6.g3!? Nc6 7.Bg2 Be7 8.0-0 b5 with equality.\n2.Bc4 is rarely seen, since it allows Black to gain the bishop pair and seize space in the center. Alburt and Schiller write that after 2...Nxe4 3.Bxf7+ Kxf7 4.Qh5+ Kg8 or 4...g6 5.Qd5+ e6 6.Qxe4 Bg7 7.Qf4 Ke8! \"Black has nothing to worry about.\" If Black does not want his king chased about, playable alternatives are 2...e5 (transposing to the Bishop's Opening), 2...d5 and 2...e6.\n2.f3 is also rare, but players who like to play the Black side of the Latvian Gambit can in effect wind up playing it after 1.e4 Nf6 2.f3 e5 3.f4!?.\nList of chess openings\nList of chess openings named after people","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line307806"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.900249183177948,"wiki_prob":0.900249183177948,"text":"NHL Trade Rumors\nThe Shane Prince Trade was Unnecessary and Frustrating\nThe Ottawa Senators shipped out one of their best young LWs for a disappointing return\nBy Ross A@Sheer_Rossyness Feb 29, 2016, 4:58pm EST\nShare All sharing options for: The Shane Prince Trade was Unnecessary and Frustrating\nJames Guillory-USA TODAY Sports\nI don't know how you could've missed it, but in case you did, the Ottawa Senators traded Shane Prince and a 7th-round pick to the New York Islanders in exchange for a 3rd-round pick in the dying minutes of trade deadline day. Thus ends a very strange tenure with the team. By all accounts, Prince should've been loved by the organization. He was picked up in the second round of 2011, Ottawa's biggest draft in a long time, and he played his junior hockey locally for the Ottawa 67s. He came to the Binghamton Senators as soon as he was eligible, and over three seasons increased his point totals from 35 to 48 to 65. That last season, 65 points led the Binghamton Senators and had him named to the AHL's second all-star team. In other words, he was named one of the best six forwards in the entire AHL for 2014-15.\nThere were also rumours following Prince. The big rumour was that he wanted an NHL contract, and if he didn't get one he would've bolted to the KHL. There were also rumours about a behind-the-scenes offer-sheet from Tim Murray for one of his favourite players to come join the Buffalo Sabres. But both of these past summers, Prince has said all the right things publicly and re-signed with the team.\nThe first sign that management wasn't so high on Prince came during last year's stretch run. Prince was called up for two games as part of prospects getting a chance to play down the stretch to show what they could do. Matt Puempel would get the next call-up, and he stayed for 13 games because the Sens weren't messing with a winning roster. When Puempel's season ended to a high-ankle sprain, Prince didn't get the spot. It confused many that Prince didn't get a shot despite playing better than Puempel in the AHL and the NHL.\nThis season, Prince started with the big club because he was no longer waiver-exempt. To not risk losing him for nothing, the Sens kept him up, just like Chris Wideman. Except Wideman has eventually managed to work his way into the team's long-term plans, while Prince has continued to get scratched. Prince had a breakout game in November against the Avalanche in which he scored two goals, and it looked like he was finally going to get his shot. But it fizzled out too. We've watched Puempel, Dave Dziurzynski, Max McCormick, Ryan Dzingel, and now Nick Paul all get called up and get more chances than Prince. We've watched Alex Chiasson continue to get played, sometimes on the Mike Hoffman line, despite his inability to handle a pass. Considering Prince led the team in 5v5 shot attempts, and was fourth in 5v5 points-per-60 (among forwards with at least 20 games), he probably deserved more ice and better linemates.\nThe big question this trade brings up was why it had to happen now. Probably the best-case scenario you can think of for a third-round pick is a player like Shane Prince: offensive skill, NHL-capable after a couple years in the minors, able to help out the fourth line or contribute in the top six. Prince will be an RFA for a couple more seasons, so it's not like he was going to be priced out of the team's range in a hurry. Even if his salary demands were ridiculous, his RFA rights would be as valuable in a couple summers as they were now. Last summer, the team traded Eric Gryba essentially for a fourth-round pick. Gryba was more of a sure thing than a fourth-rounder, but the Sens already had enough bottom-pairing defencemen. Conversely, with Clarke MacArthur out, Mike Hoffman was the team's only bona fide top-six left winger. After him, there were a whole lot of unknowns, and to me it makes sense to hold onto Paul, Dzingel, Puempel, and Prince in the hopes that one can consistently fulfill that role. The 3rd-round pick won't help the Sens for years, if at all, meaning the Sens now have fewer lottery tickets they hope work out in the top-six LW role. If the team's best shot at a Cup is any time in the next 5-6 years, Shane Prince would have been in his prime and could have been a contributor. If Dzingel and Paul passed him for sure on the depth chart in a year, not just based on a four-game sample, I highly doubt Prince's return would have decreased. It was unnecessary to trade Shane Prince this season.\nI can only think of a couple reasons this trade makes sense. One is if Prince was disliked in the dressing room, and trading him was the best way to maintain cohesion. Another was if the team knew they were never going to play him again, and decided it was better to get something for him. I guess there's a possibility that he would've gone to the KHL after this season's treatment, but that's a pretty weak argument considering it's based on unproven rumours.\nIn the end, I don't get why you trade him for what at best is a wash, at worst is a huge loss. If the team needed to offload someone, why not Puempel who has been more disappointing in both the AHL and NHL and has a higher draft pedigree? Why not Alex Chiasson, who likely would've got a better return and reportedly was asked about but Bryan Murray refused to deal? I give this trade a solid D. It hurts the team short-term without likely having any kind of future benefit.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line307630"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9122536182403564,"wiki_prob":0.9122536182403564,"text":"Ricardo Bofill, 1939–2022\nJohn Hill\n14. de gener 2022\nRicardo Bofill at Taller de Arquitectura in November 2021. (Photo: Charles Ganz/World-Architects)\nSpanish architect Ricardo Bofill Levi, the founder of the eponymous Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura in Barcelona and the prolific designer of hundreds of buildings in dozens of countries, died on January 14, 2022, at the age of 82.\nBofill's death was announced, simply, on the Taller de Arquitectura's Instagram account, with a photo of a young Bofill relaxing in a desert setting accompanied by his date of birth, December 5, 1939, and death, January 14, 2022. An obituary at El Pais indicates that Bofill died in a hospital in Barcelona after contracting Covid.\nBorn in Barcelona, Bofill studied architecture at the School of Architecture in Geneva, Switzerland, after he was expelled from Escola Tècnica Superior d'Arquitectura de Barcelona (ETSAB) for being anti-Francoist. In 1963 he founded a group that became Taller de Arquitectura (Architectural Workshop), with architects and engineers working alongside artists and professionals from other fields, such as literary critic Salvador Clotas, poet José Agustín Goytisolo, and economist Julia Romea.\nRicardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura in Sant Just Desvern, Barcelona, Spain, 1973–2012. (Photo: Courtesy of Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura)\nTen years later, in 1973, Bofill discovered a disused cement factory in Sant Just Desvern, on the outskirts of Barcelona, and started transforming it into the head office of Taller de Arquitectura and his residence. Consisting of more than thirty silos, subterranean galleries, and huge machine rooms, the partially ruined factory would require two years of remodeling work, though transformations of the industrial relic continued for decades. Nearly sixty years after work started on the project, the home of Taller de Arquitectura is considered \"a built manifesto and remains one of his best works.\"\nWalden 7 in Sant Just Desvern, Barcelona, Spain, 1974. (Photo: Courtesy of Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura)\nAround the same time Bofill turned a place for cement production into his home and studio, Bofill built the Walden 7 housing project on a site bordering the Taller de Arquitectura. Walden 7 is a monumental expression of the plasticity of concrete, with eighteen towers forming a vertical labyrinth with seven interconnecting interior courtyards — \"as far removed as possible from the model of the uniform, repetitive housing block\" in the studio's words. Other residential projects in Spain in the late 1960s and early 1970s, including Kafka's Castle (1968) and The Red Wall (1973), have similar plasticity, labyrinthine qualities, and colorfulness enabled by in situ concrete.\nLes Arcades du Lac in Saint Quentin-en-Yvelines, Paris, France, 1982. (Photo: Courtesy of Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura)\nA dramatic aesthetic shift in the work of Bofill and his Taller de Arquitectura followed the housing projects in Spain, after he opened an office in Paris and worked on a number of large projects in France following from the country's Villes Nouvelles (New Towns) policy. Notable among them are Les Arcades du Lac (1982), Les Temples du Lac (1986), and Belvedere Saint Christophe (1986). Gone were the plastic forms and bright paints of the projects in Spain; in their place were archways, pediments, pilasters, and other classically derived elements made from precast concrete. Furthermore, the postmodern elevations fronted grand squares and other spaces that were the antithesis of the intimate courtyards of his work in Spain.\nUnited Continental in Chicago, Illinois, USA, 1992. (Photo: Courtesy of Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura)\nThe rise of postmodern architecture in the 1980s made Bofill a popular choice for developers outside of France and Spain. In Chicago, the birthplace of the skyscraper, the Taller de Arquitectura designed a 50-story office tower at 77 West Wacker Drive (1992), a prominent site overlooking the main branch of the Chicago River. The gridded facades of glass and stone have proportions meant to recall Giotto’s campanile at the Duomo in Florence, while the most overt classicism is found at the base and the top, the latter described as \"a classically-proportioned temple.\"\nUniversité Mohammed VI Polytechnique in Benguerir, Morocco, 2016. (Photo: Courtesy of Ricardo Bofill Taller de Arquitectura)\nProjects this century have seen Taller de Arquitectura working at home (Terminal 1 at Barcelona Airport, W Barcelona Hotel, Desigual) and abroad, with projects in the Czech Republic, Morocco, and elsewhere. For the last few years Bofill's sons, Ricardo Emilio and Pablo, have been in charge of the studio, which consists of more than one hundred professionals from thirty different nationalities. They will continue to lead the studio their father founded in 1963.\nTaller de Arquitectura has announced that a public memorial will be held on January 26 and 27, when friends, relatives, and admirers of Ricardo Bofill's architecture will be able to visit the studio's headquarters and pay tribute to the architect.\nRicardo Bofill, at left, sitting across from Anne Lacaton and Jean-Philippe Vassal and surrounded by others at Taller de Arquitectura in November 2021. (Photo: World-Architects)\nArchitektIn FH / ZeichnerIn…\nMés feines\nAltres articles d'aquesta categoria\nShortlist for Barbican Renewal Revealed\nhace 3 dies\nReimagining Tate Liverpool\nhace 1 setmana\nFixing the Calatrava Bridge\nMarabar Moving\nRichard Rogers (1933–2021)\nhace 3 setmanas","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line355513"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5596129298210144,"wiki_prob":0.5596129298210144,"text":"May 24, 2013 by David K. Sutton\nPresident Obama Offers To Roll Back Executive Power\nIn a rare move for a sitting president, Barack Obama offered to undo some of the powers given to the executive branch by congress in the aftermath of 9/11. But is this enough?\n“America is at a crossroads. We must define the nature and scope of this struggle, or else it will define us,” said President Obama during a speech at the National Defense University. “We have to be mindful of James Madison’s warning that ‘No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare.’ Neither I, nor any President, can promise the total defeat of terror.” Well isn’t that refreshing to hear! I thought the “War on Terror” would be fought until victory was achieved — no more terrorism. Well, at least that’s the lie we would have to tell ourselves to justify such a war.\nOf course President Obama, as Politico points out, is largely debating himself on issues of national defense post-9/11. He has led an administration just as hawkish on anti-terrorism as the previous administration. In fact, when it comes to use of targeted drone strikes, Obama has one-upped his predecessor. So excuse me for being a bit cynical when I hear this president say, “America’s legitimate claim of self-defense cannot be the end of the discussion.” It sure seems like it is. President Obama might not use rhetoric like when President Bush said, “you’re either with us, or against us,” but the president has conducted his foreign policy in much the same manner as Bush.\n“We were attacked on 9/11. Within a week, Congress overwhelmingly authorized the use of force. Under domestic law, and international law, the United States is at war with al Qaeda, the Taliban, and their associated forces,” said Obama. “We are at war with an organization that right now would kill as many Americans as they could if we did not stop them first. So this is a just war — a war waged proportionally, in last resort, and in self-defense.”\nBut can a nation be at war with an organization? Can a nation be at war against a tactic? Should a country as powerful as the United States allow its foreign policy to be dictated by what amounts to a few fringe radicals dispersed around the globe? And does it make a difference if they are loosely organized?\n“Let’s think about this for a moment. A small group of ragged America-haters, who had one lucky day of mass murder nearly seven years ago, will continue to define the foreign policy of the lone superpower for years, possibly decades to come,” wrote Michael Hirsh in a 2008 Newsweek article.\n“There’s something wrong with this picture. Yes, we can all agree that 9/11 was one of the worst moments in American history. And we can certainly agree that Al Qaeda must be completely eliminated. But the group has never come close to duplicating 9/11; even the train bombings in London and Madrid that were attributed to Al Qaeda-inspired cells were minor by comparison,” said Hirsh.\nIt’s become a comedic theme to say if we do or don’t respond in a certain way to a certain event, then the “terrorists win.” But America’s response to 9/11 is no joke. And regardless of the comedic use the “terrorist win” exposition, I’m still going to present two scenarios followed by a simple question. (a) We respond to 9/11 with intelligence and policing but NOT with open-ended military force, and our foreign policy is not defined by the tactic of a few. (b) We respond to 9/11 with overwhelming military force, in a never-ending war on terror, with no clear exit strategy and no clear path to victory, with a tunnel-vision focus on the tactics of a few, costing us trillions of dollars and counting. — Which one is a win for America and which one is a win for terrorists? You can call them false choices, but I still know which one I’m choosing.\nHirsh asked, “Are Al Qaeda and its ilk still really our number one challenge? What about global warming? What about the emergence of China, the resurrection of Russia, the decline of the dollar, the slackening of free trade, the spread of debt and disease, and the persistence of ethnic cleansing?”\nShould combating a relatively small, on a world scale, loosely organized group of anti-American extremists be our top priority as a nation?\nGovernment • News • Politics\n#9/11#america#congress#drone strikes#Executive Branch#executive power#military#President Obama#terrorism#united states#war#war on terror","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line688726"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8580198884010315,"wiki_prob":0.8580198884010315,"text":"Who Left 'Dancing With the Stars' Last Night and Who Is In The Final?\nBy Molli Mitchell On 11/16/21 at 4:34 AM EST\nCulture TV ABC\nAfter 11 weeks of dazzling performances, perfect scores, and intense eliminations, the final of Dancing With the Stars is almost here.\nLast night's (Monday, November 15) semi-final saw a double elimination, with two couples narrowly missing out on a spot in next week's final.\nNow, just four couples competing in the all-important grand final to take home the Mirror Ball trophy.\nNewsweek has everything you need to know about the semi-final results and the final top four.\nWho left Dancing With The Stars Last Night?\nSix couples were competing in last night's semi-final, hoping to secure their rightful place in the grand final, which is set to take place on Monday, November 22.\nHowever, with six couples competing and just four places up for grabs, sadly two couples were eliminated from the running.\nThe Bold Type actress Melora Hardin and her professional partner, Artem Chigvintsev, were first to be eliminated from the competition after receiving the lowest number of public votes—despite receiving a high 72 out of 80 on semi-final night.\nOlympic gymnast Suni Lee and The Talk co-host Amanda Kloots were the next famous faces to find themselves vulnerable to elimination, with the ultimate decision coming down to the four judges, Len Goodman, Carrie Ann Inaba, Bruno Tonioli, and Derek Hough.\nUnfortunately for Suni and her professional partner Sasha Farber, their time on Dancing With the Stars was officially over after the judges voted unanimously to save Amanda.\nWho Is In The Dancing With the Stars Final?\nJojo Siwa and her partner Jenna Johnson sailed through to the final, alongside basketball star Iman Shumpert and Daniella Karagach, and Fitness Trainer Cody Rigsby and his professional partner Cheryl Burke.\nThey were joined by Amanda Kloots and her partner Alan Bersten after they were saved from elimination.\nTo earn their spot in the final, the couples had to perform two routines for the judges. One dance was the \"redemption round,\" where the couples re-performed a dance they had struggled with earlier in the season, coached by one of the judges.\nFor their second dance, the couples performed a brand new routine in a dance style they had not yet performed. JoJo and Amanda performed a contemporary routine, whilst Iman tackled jazz and Cody performed the Argentine tango.\nNewsweek has a full breakdown of the dances and the scores of the finalists from last night's semi-final below and it looks like the final is set to be very tough competition.\nAmanda and Alan\nFirst dance: Tango\nScore: 39/40\nSecond dance: Contemporary\nJoJo and Jenna\nFirst dance: Argentine Tango\nIman and Daniella\nSecond dance: Jazz\nCheryl and Cody\nFirst dance: Salsa\nSecond dance: Argentine Tango\nThe Dancing With the Stars final 2021 takes place on Monday, November 22 at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line208341"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6301401257514954,"wiki_prob":0.6301401257514954,"text":"Report on Asset Related Savings\nThe Chair stated that two members of the public wished to speak on this item. Mr Murray James read his statement: “Grays has been offered a once in a generation opportunity to connect the town with its Thames foreshore through the £20m Town Fund. This could unlock huge recreational potential on the river – potential that is also recognised by the Port of London Authority through its Active Thames programme which aims to increase participation in recreational activity along the full length of the river. Our stretch of the Thames has some unique advantages for sailing in particular, but strong tides, deep mud, and commercial shipping traffic mean it is a challenging area for novices. A degree of both competence and confidence are required to enjoy our waters safely. Grays is a coastal town with a proud maritime history and at Thurrock Yacht Club we firmly believe that we need to be putting a focus on maritime sports in an area that suffers from high levels of inactivity – a problem that members will know leads to a higher long term demand on scarce council and NHS resources. Thurrock is fortunate in that it already has a fantastic facility at Grangewaters. Following the winding down of sailing at Stubbers in Upminster, Grangewaters is now the only safe learning water within easy reach of Thurrock. It is also ideal as a feeder site for other aquatic sports that can transfer to the Thames including paddle sports and rowing. Our club is currently working with the team at Grangewaters to establish regular recreational sailing activities that span both their site and our established sailing area on the Grays waterfront. A joined up offer of this nature creates opportunity not only for the people of Thurrock – it will attract people to come from surrounding areas to regularly enjoy leisure time in our wonderful borough and prove that we are more than just a place to shop. We urge this committee to do everything within their remit to ensure the full long term financial impacts of disposing of Grangewaters are fully explored before any decisions are made, including its important role in ensuring the Grays Town fund project does not leave Thurrock stranded with a new generation of unproductive public assets. Grangewaters is more than a cherished community asset – it is a vital enabler for bringing recreation to the Thames.”\nThe Chair thanked Mr James for his statement and asked if Grangewaters was listed as an Asset of Community Value. She also asked how many members Thurrock Yacht Club currently had. Mr James replied that Grangewaters was listed as an Asset of Community Value. He explained that membership of the Yacht Club had been growing rapidly due to the closure of Stubbers in Upminster. He stated that there were currently 130 members from across Thurrock, Havering and Brentwood. He added that the Club had also recently been gifted numerous dinghies to ensure that sailing and river activities remained accessible and affordable for everyone.\nMs Samantha Byrne then read her question: “the report talks about the importance of arts and culture. Can you please explain how you can consider closing the Thameside Complex that houses the theatre and museum before the elements of the new culture strategy, details of which haven't been released, are successfully running in its place?” The Corporate Director Resources and Place Delivery thanked Ms Byrne for her question and stated that Cabinet would be making the final decision in December, but her question and comments would be included as part of the consultation with scrutiny for Cabinet Members to consider when making their decision. He stated that the report set out what work had already been taking place with interested parties, and one roundtable meeting with community representation had taken place, with another planned for the next couple of weeks. He added that papers on the draft Cultural Strategy would be taken to the relevant Overview and Scrutiny Committee when completed. Ms Byrne thanked the Corporate Director Resource and Place Delivery for his response and stated that the roundtable meeting had taken place in September. She explained that a second meeting had been planned, but had been cancelled due to the tragic death of Sir David Amess MP, along with all Council meetings in Thurrock and across Essex. She stated that the next roundtable meeting was scheduled for the end of November at High House Production Park, and concern was being felt amongst residents that this would not be enough time for their feedback to be considered by Cabinet at their meeting in December. Ms Byrne stated that the report discussed issues with the building, not with the service itself, and asked if income received from the Thameside Theatre had been included in funding figures. The Corporate Director Resources and Place Delivery replied that the service itself would be included in the Cultural Strategy, which was still being debated, but the building itself came under the remit of the Corporate Overview and Scrutiny Committee. He stated that comments made at the roundtable meeting on 30 November 2021, would be included either within the Cabinet report, or updates would be provided by the Portfolio Holders at the meeting verbally.\nThe Corporate Director Resources and Place Delivery introduced the report and stated that it covered three areas, the first being the Thameside Complex. He stated that the capital cost of the Thameside Complex was £16mn, and 3.3 of the report outlined the outturn of the Complex in 2020/21 was £601,970 and the budget in 2021/22 was £629,566, which was similar to previous years. He stated that as the cost of utilities had increased and there had been limited use during 2020 due to the pandemic, which had affected the Complex’s revenue and income streams. He stated that a breakdown had also been provided of work that needed to be undertaken, and these figures had been produced by mechanical and technical engineers. He added that a modernisation and refurbishment assessment had been carried out approximately five years ago, and these figures had been outlined in the report, although these could have changed due to inflation and other issues. The Corporate Director Resources and Place Delivery added that only £300,000 had been spent on maintenance work on the Thameside Complex within the past ten years, with only £100,000 of this being spent within the past eight years. He explained that the proposals would move the library and registrars service to the Civic Offices, but the Complex would not close before the end of March 2022, if agreed at Cabinet.\nThe Corporate Director Resources and Place Delivery explained that the second area within the report was Grangewaters, which would also be included in the December Cabinet report. He explained that no direct plans had been agreed for the Grangewaters site, but it had been identified for examination in July. He stated that no immediate plans for development had been agreed, but this process could be explored as the site would remain open for the foreseeable future. He stated that the third area outlined in the report was regarding libraries, which would remain open. He explained that this was the reason why the savings target for assets had been reduced from £1mn to £850,000.\nThe Chair questioned if the Thameside Complex was an Asset of Community Value. The Corporate Director Resource and Place Delivery explained that Grangewaters was an Asset of Community Value, which meant that should Thurrock Council decide to dispose of the site, the community organisation would get first refusal and a six month decision period. He explained that an application for the Thameside Complex to be an Asset of Community Value had been received and returned for amendment. He explained that these amendments had now been made and application returned. He stated that the application would now be assessed and a decision made within the next three to four weeks. He added that the Council had also been approached by a community group regarding a Community Asset Transfer for the Thameside Complex, and a meeting was scheduled for later in the week to better understand these proposals.\nCouncillor Kent queried if progress had been made regarding the sale of other assets that had been listed in the Cabinet reports in March and July. The Corporate Director Resource and Place Delivery responded that some assets had had no revenue costs, so had been disposed. He explained that Thurrock Adult Community College had already moved from the building on Richmond Road. He explained that the site was now being demolished and asbestos being cleared, although this would not bring any direct savings. He explained that the additional £250,000 needed to reach the asset savings target would mostly come from the decision not to renew the lease with the multi-story car park. Councillor Kent stated that any asset disposal would incur legal costs, which were not outlined in the report. He stated that some assets also brought income into the Council, and asked how much income would be lost from the sale of these assets. The Corporate Director Resource and Place Delivery responded that any legal cost from disposal would be capitalized against future capital receipts. He added that any income generated from the assets, including the Thameside Complex, had been included in the budget calculations. He stated that the Thameside Theatre had seen an income reduction of £50,000 in 2020 due to COVID-19.\nCouncillor Kent stated that he was opposed to the closure of the Thameside Complex, but felt that it did not need to be operated by Thurrock Council. He felt that the timescales presented in the report were tight, and felt that the Council should not work towards making the full saving this year to allow time for conversations with community groups and partners to conclude satisfactorily for everyone’s needs. He felt that the Thameside Complex did not need to be demolished as it was structurally sound and watertight, and could be refurbished. He added that it would be more environmentally friendly to refurbish the building rather than demolish it, and would reduce carbon emissions in the borough. Councillor Kent commented that if the Thameside complex were to close, it should not do so until a new complex had been opened. The Chair felt that the borough could have a new theatre complex, as the current offer did not meet the need of the community. She stated that the current theatre could not hold larger audiences, and a new library setting could increase engagement. The Corporate Director Resources and Place Delivery stated that there were currently no plans in place regarding the building and future of the site, including any plans to demolish or renovate.\nCouncillor Halden welcomed the statement and questions from local residents, and queried if the figure of £16mn was for refurbishing or maintaining. The Corporate Director Resource and Place Delivery replied that the majority of this figure was for maintenances, but did include some elements of modernisation and refurbishment. He stated that this was outlined in the table on page 31 of the agenda, and the figure of £6.6mn for refurbishment was based on a study completed in 2015, and could be more or less now. Councillor Halden stated that he had recently toured the new Civic Offices and had felt the new registrar’s area was more spacious and private than the offer within the Thameside Complex. He stated that theatre provision within Thurrock should be modern and improve the cultural offer of the borough.\nCouncillor Okunade felt it would be good to see the outcome of the roundtable meeting being held on 30 November 2021, and felt the community needed to agree with the Council on the decisions made regarding the Thameside Complex. Ms Byrne queried the timeframe for the £16mn spend on the Thameside Complex. The Corporate Director Resources and Place Delivery replied that all comments from scrutiny and residents would be included in the report to Cabinet. He added that Councillor Coxshall and Councillor Huelin would be attending the roundtable meeting on 30 November 2021 and would be reporting back to Cabinet. He stated that the figures on page 31 covered a period of ten years, but the majority of the work would need to be carried out in the next five years, as some work was quite urgent.\nCouncillor Kent moved to add a second recommendation reading: “The Corporate Overview and Scrutiny Committee ask Cabinet to give adequate time for conversations between community groups and the Council to reach conclusion, even if no in-year savings can be made.”\nA vote was held, with two voting in favour of the proposed recommendation and four voting against the recommendation. The proposed recommendation was not agreed.\n1. Commented on the report for consideration by Cabinet at their meeting on 8 December 2021.\nCorp O&S - ITEM 6 - Report on Asset Related Savings - 16 Nov 2021, item 17. PDF 235 KB","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line772559"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7917343378067017,"wiki_prob":0.7917343378067017,"text":"Withering Surface – The Wolves Have Been Fed\nTuesday, 23rd June 2020 By David E Gehlke\nFlying just ever-so-slightly out of radar’s view during the late ’90s/early ’00s melodic death metal boom, Denmark’s Withering Surface pulled together a string of albums that warranted further inspection, namely 1999’s Nude Ballet and its 2001 follow-up, Walking on Phantom Ice. Here, the Danes merged the melodic framework of their Swedish contemporaries with pangs of atmospheric keyboard action. They were, in a sense, a less brazen At the Gates, but a more melodic Dark Tranquillity, and capable of being as catchy as In Flames. The band split in 2004 after the release of Force the Pace and was relegated to the melodic death metal history books.\nWithering Surface, though, saw fit to reunite in 2018 and have returned with a new platter, Meet Your Maker. A logical extension of Force the Pace, Meet Your Maker is melodic death metal for the mature — Withering Surface has updated their sound while not sounding the slightest bit dated. Here’s guitarist Allan Tvedebrink to discuss the band’s comeback, Meet Your Maker and what lies ahead in these uncertain times…\nDead Rhetoric: The band split in 2004. Looking back, was it the right decision at the time?\nAllan Tvedebrink: Yeah, it was. We’d grown tired of the whole thing, worn each other out on different levels. There was lots of bad energy and everything we did felt like beating a dead horse… for me personally, the focus had shifted and I kinda lost track of where we were going, musically and as a group of good friends. Either we split or replaced some members, but as there was nothing wrong with the individual members, it would be impossible to pick out who should leave. Does it make sense?\nDead Rhetoric: What did each of you do once Withering Surface dissolved? Did you remain friendly with one another in the intervening years?\nTvedebrink: Besides Morten [keys], who kinda just disappeared after the spilt, we all went in different directions. Both in other projects and together in various bands. We have all been playing together in several installments over the years. Right after the break, KB Larsen [bass] and I formed a band called The Downward Candidate, which musically was a counterpoint to Withering Surface and what we needed at that point. It later turned into The Kandidate who released two albums and toured intensively until we quit because of the long-distance relationship we had with the drummer and singer. At more or less the same time, we released the third album with Michael’s [Anderson, vocals] and my death metal band Thorium, now with both Nikolaj Borg [drums], KB and Marcel [guitar] in the band. Later, KB and I started a crust band called Parasight together with Nikolaj [of which Jakob Krogholt released the latest album on hos record label Indisciplinarian]. On top of that, Nikolaj, KB and Jacob Krogholt have a grind/crust project called Anti Ritual and Michael and Nik played in a doom band named A Sun Traverse until recently. It’s really messy and almost incestuous, ha-ha! So yeah, we are all good friends still…\nDead Rhetoric: Oddly enough, the brand of melodic death metal you were playing since your inception became popular around the time of your split. Did you have any idea melodic death metal would take off the way it did?\nTvedebrink: In my book, it took off way before we split. In fact, melodic death metal as I was inspired by at the time peaked in the late ’90s early ’00s. Afterward of course some of the original bands evolved and had a much more commercial [in lack of better words] approach and gained a lot of fans, especially in the U.S. market. The sound became slicker and the songwriting, singing and production was targeted to a broader audience, which is why it got popular. Nothing wrong with that, I dig it, but it’s a different genre within the genre. I think this was more of a driver for success than the genre description. Also, at that point, social media and the internet were raging making reaching a lot of people got very easy – also for sub-genres like ours. And no, I would have no idea, that bands could headline tours and festivals in a scale as we see it today, but that goes for the whole genre of metal. It is great!\nDead Rhetoric: To the present, what set the wheels in motion for your reformation?\nTvedebrink: The band I mentioned earlier, Thorium, which I am no longer a part of, released their fourth album two years ago. And to get more into the incestuous relationships in the scene, Jakob Gundel produced it. So, him and Michael hit it off and as KB was playing the bass on that album, they got started thinking about the old days and talking about reuniting the band. So, they reached out to me as an original member and the wheels were running. I had to think about it for a while, as I had announced that we would never reform the band. But at that time, it fit perfectly in my life. I was in a hiatus with my other band and I was writing melodic music for a new project…\nDead Rhetoric: Was it always your intention to record a new studio album after you got back together?\nTvedebrink: Yes, one-hundred percent. None of us were interested in reuniting and just playing shows. We agreed that we would give it a shot and see if we had what it would take to make everybody feel comfortable. So, if we didn’t have anything relevant to put on the table in 2018, we would just forget about the whole thing and just grab a beer once in a while.\nDead Rhetoric: Was it easy getting back into songwriting mode for Withering Surface?\nTvedebrink: It was really easy! When we agreed to give it a go, it took me a few days to get into it. As I knew I would be the one writing all the music, I thought about which approach I should take when writing new material. I also listened to some of the old stuff to recollect what we were actually doing back then. As I sat down, I just went “Fuck it, let’s see where this goes without all the thinking” and suddenly, the first track had written itself in a few days. It was an awesome feeling and I still think that that song is one of the best tracks on the album. I was relieved to experience that it was really easy to get into WS mode without thinking too hard about it. Maybe because of this it was a success and the others dug what I was doing. After three or four demos where Michael and Jakob worked on their parts, we all agreed that it felt totally natural and totally right and that we should go on with the project. So during 2018/2019, I wrote the rest of the tunes while we were gathering the rest of the members for the new version of Withering Surface.\nDead Rhetoric: What was the goal with Meet Your Maker? To carry on from Force the Pace, or, try new things?\nTvedebrink: Now that you mention Force the Pace, it was our swansong on many levels. I’m still proud of the album, but for me it is associated with a lot of bad energy in the band. It was not really an option to do a continuation from this and as we were heading towards a reunion of the original lineup with Jakob back in the band, it was natural to seek out our roots mixed with our modern lives and the experience we have gathered throughout the years… we wanted this to be awesome and we wanted to prove that this reunion is justified. We wanted to create music that had the Withering Surface DNA and make it present and relevant in 2020, without jumping any bandwagon or forcing it to me modern or something that is not us to please the masses.\nDead Rhetoric: Have you started to think toward 2021 in regards to playing shows? I’m sure the band was disappointed to not be able to support the new album with shows…\nTvedebrink: Yeah, we are working on shows in 2021 already. We have a few club shows in the fall and two festivals that still might happen in September and in November. The release of the album on the 19th of June coincided with our gig at Copenhell which is one of the biggest festivals in Denmark – by far the biggest metal festival. That would have been an awesome way to kick off the reunion! We are still hoping that the album will be pretty fresh in peoples mind when we hit the road in Denmark in the fall and hopefully Europe in the spring of 2021, but it is with great regret that we could see all our festival appearances over the summer vanish one by one… But being a band that is not relying on incomes from touring, it is nothing compared to the musicians, bands, crews and venues that are living from touring. I really, really feel bad for them!\nDead Rhetoric: Is there an album in your discography that you hold most dear? I’ll point to The Nude Ballet — some seriously great songs (“Ode for You,” “Breathing Purple,” “Nude & Humble,” “Her Valley & Sea”)\nTvedebrink: I guess it is like choosing a favorite between your own children, ha-ha. Of course, Scarlet Silhouettes will always have a special place in my heart as it was the first album I ever did and there are so many great memories. Also Walking on Phantom Ice is dear to me, as this was a strong band effort having us signed and touring internationally, playing Wacken Festival and lots of other great experiences. But thanks for the compliment on The Nude Ballet. It is definitely up there in my book as well as it was lots and lots of hard work a big leap in our playing abilities, pretty technical and practically written all by myself. It also got an incredibly good response, a nomination for the best hard rock album at the Danish Grammys and saw us playing at the legendary Roskilde Festival.\nDead Rhetoric: Finally, how is the rest of 2020 looking?\nTvedebrink: As I mentioned, we still have some gigs booked for the fall. I just hope that we can move forward with those. Not much more going on touring wise, as no one is booking more gigs for the rest of the year – besides streaming and drive-in concerts which we are not going to do at this point. Otherwise, we are of course looking forward to releasing Meet Your Maker and receiving the response for it! We have tons of promotions to do and when that is over and summer starts, we’ll start rehearsing for our shows – I just can’t wait to get on with that!\nWithering Surface on Facebook\nWithering Surface – Meet Your Maker (Mighty Music)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line582857"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5306461453437805,"wiki_prob":0.4693538546562195,"text":"Waste-To-Energy (WTE) Market Is Expected To Reach A Market Size Of USD $13.6 Billion By 2026\nBy: FinancialNewsMedia.com Newswire for Stock Alerts, Public Company News Alert\nPalm Beach, FL – November 3, 2021 – FinancialNewsMedia.com News Commentary – Across the globe, many governments are focusing on ways to turn waste into energy. It is an area where governments are seeing positive results from such endeavors, and the market is expected to grow over the coming years. In fact, a report from Mordor Intelligence said that The waste-to-energy (WTE) market is expected to register a CAGR of 6.45% during the forecast period of 2021 – 2026, reaching a market size of USD 13.6 billion by 2026, up from USD 8.78 billion in 2019. The report said that he COVID-19 pandemic affected the market negatively in the form of supply chain disruptions and delays in project implementation. However, the market is expected to recover from 2021, owing to the increasing efforts to promote waste-to-energy plants by various countries across the world. In addition to this, an increasing amount of waste generation and growing concern for waste management to meet the need for sustainable urban living and increasing focus on non-fossil fuel sources of energy are driving the demand for the waste-to-energy market. Another report from Grand View agreed adding that: “The global waste to energy market size was valued at USD 31.0 billion in 2019 and is projected to register a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 7.4% from 2020 to 2027. Favorable regulatory policies encouraging proper waste disposal combined with energy production along with growing energy demands from the end-use sector are projected to play a vital role in the market growth over the forecast period. Active stocks in the markets this week include SusGlobal Energy Corp. (OTCQB: SNRG), The Scotts Miracle-Gro Company (NYSE: SMG), The Mosaic Company (NYSE: MOS), Nutrien Ltd. (NYSE: NTR) (TSX: NTR), CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: CF).\nGrand View continued: “Governments are focusing on commercializing alternate sources of energy such as Waste to Energy (WTE) technology owing to the rapid depletion of conventional energy sources. In addition, the implementation of environmental policies regarding the reduction of carbon emissions from fossil-fuel usage is expected to further provide a boost to industry growth. Industry players are focusing on research and development activities in order to reduce the technology cost associated with waste to energy power plants. Few companies are into vertical integration in order to strengthen the services. The companies are involved in the expansion of their facilities to increase their waste solution capabilities. North America occupied a prominent market share (recently) owing to growing consumer awareness regarding environmental protection and climate change. Moreover, increasing government emphasis on integration and enhanced utilization of clean electricity generation sources is anticipated to increase the deployment rate of waste to energy plants across the region. According to Energy Information Administration, in 2018, 29.5 million tons of municipal solid waste was burnt in 68 U.S. waste to energy plants to generate around 14.0 billion kWh of electricity.”\nSusGlobal Energy Corp. (OTCQB: SNRG) BREAKING NEWS: SusGlobal Signs Offset Development and Marketing Agreement with Bluesource to Monetize Carbon Credits – SusGlobal Energy Corp “Company”), (“SusGlobal”) or (the “Company”), an award winning, revolutionary and pathogen free organic liquid fertilizer, today announced that its wholly-owned subsidiary SusGlobal Energy Belleville Ltd. (“SusGlobal Belleville”) has signed an Offset Development and Marketing Agreement (the “Agreement”) with Blue Source Canada ULC (“Bluesource”) to develop and market greenhouse gas offset credits from the Company’s 49-acre Organic & Non-Hazardous Waste Processing & Composting Facility in Belleville, Ontario, in order for the Company to monetize and realize benefits from its voluntary activities.\nThis monetization is an exciting development for the Company’s mission to reduce organic wastes from wood, leaf and yard material, treated municipal sewage waste (biosolids), residential curbside green bin material or source separated organics (“SSO”) and paper sludge otherwise destined for landfills and, we believe, will also allow the Company to expand this mission.\nBluesource has pioneered creative solutions to climate change for over 20 years. Today, this partnership complements Bluesource’s portfolio of high-quality environmental products from over 20 different technologies in over 100 locations across the United States and Canada. The partnership with SusGlobal is a core example of Bluesource’s experience in identifying, creating, acquiring and marketing offsets, where there is a tangible environmental benefit.\n“We identified Bluesource as the right partners for our Company’s carbon credits monetization initiative, based on their extensive experience and success,” stated Marc Hazout, Executive Chairman, President and CEO of SusGlobal Energy Corp. “We anticipate reflecting the value of these credits in our first quarter 2022 reporting and are excited to meet this milestone and maximize shareholder value.”\n“SusGlobal’s model of diverting organic waste streams from landfills, reducing greenhouse gas emissions as part of climate change objectives while producing regenerative products is the ideal opportunity we look for to reward proactive environmental action,” says Ben Massie of Bluesource. “We have identified SusGlobal’s Belleville facility as a promising offset development project and believe this can inspire others to do the same.”\nAs municipalities look to significantly divert organic waste from landfills, there will be a necessity of diversion. Composting facilities, their management model, and its level of sustainability, will play a key role in this redistribution of waste. The revenue from these credits is anticipated to drive technological advancements that will expand composting efforts in the facility and the province of Ontario. CONTINUED… Read this entire release and more news for SusGlobal Energy (SNRG) at: https://www.financialnewsmedia.com/news-snrg/\nOther recent developments in the markets include:\nThe Scotts Miracle-Gro Company (NYSE SMG) recently announced that it has acquired Rhizoflora’s leading nutrients business including its Terpinator and Purpinator brands, further bolstering The Hawthorne Gardening Company product portfolio.\nSeparately, the Company announced that its subsidiary, The Hawthorne Collective, has purchased a warrant to buy equity in Dewey Scientific for $3.2 million, which will help advance Dewey’s industry-leading cannabis genomics and cultivation. The investment from the Hawthorne Collective will be used only for purposes permitted by applicable laws of the United States.\nNutrien (NYSE: NTR) (TSX: NTR) and EXMAR (EXM) recently announced that they have signed a Collaboration Agreement to jointly develop and build a low-carbon, ammonia-fueled vessel. Partners for over three decades in transporting ammonia globally, Nutrien is one of the world’s largest producers of low-carbon ammonia and EXMAR is a leading player and innovator in the transportation of liquefied gas products.\nNutrien and EXMAR support the decarbonization of shipping and the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) Green House Gas (GHG) Strategy to reduce emissions. Their new collaboration aims to significantly reduce Nutrien’s maritime transportation emissions and enable the commercial development of an ammonia-fueled vessel. Together, they will chart a clear path for wide adoption of low-carbon ammonia as a clean fuel for the maritime industry.\nThe Mosaic Company (NYSE: MOS) recently announced that North American phosphate operations are expected to be negatively impacted by damage caused by Hurricane Ida.\nWind damage to the Faustina and Uncle Sam facilities from the storm is expected to result in reduced production as repairs are completed. The following expectations also include estimates of production loss from an August equipment failure at the company’s New Wales facility in Florida. In the third quarter, relative to historical averages, production is expected to be down by approximately 300,000 tonnes. Fourth quarter operating rates are expected to improve sequentially, but production may still be down from historical averages. Mosaic plans to provide an update, including estimated financial impacts of the hurricane, when it reports third quarter results.\nThe hurricane also caused navigational issues on the Mississippi River, which could cause congestion during the busy fall application season and create logistical risks for Mosaic’s production.\nAs Mosaic completes repairs to operations, the company is also supporting its employees and communities through a $100,000 disaster relief grant to the Capital Area United Way and by providing affected employees with access to funds through the company’s employee-to-employee assistance plan.\nCF Industries Holdings, Inc. (NYSE: CF), a leading global manufacturer of hydrogen and nitrogen products, recently announced that its Billingham Complex in the United Kingdom will continue to operate through at least January 2022 after its UK subsidiary reached carbon dioxide (CO2) pricing and offtake agreements with its industrial gas customers in the country.\nThe agreements between the UK subsidiary and its industrial gas customers run through the end of January 2022. During this period, it is expected that the UK government and industrial gas customers will develop robust alternative sources of CO2 as part of a long-term solution for meeting demand in the country. The Billingham Complex is capable of producing 750 tonnes of CO2 per day for commercial use as a byproduct of the ammonia production process.\nDISCLAIMER: FN Media Group LLC (FNM), which owns and operates FinancialNewsMedia.com and MarketNewsUpdates.com, is a third party publisher and news dissemination service provider, which disseminates electronic information through multiple online media channels. FNM is NOT affiliated in any manner with any company mentioned herein. FNM and its affiliated companies are a news dissemination solutions provider and are NOT a registered broker/dealer/analyst/adviser, holds no investment licenses and may NOT sell, offer to sell or offer to buy any security. FNM’s market updates, news alerts and corporate profiles are NOT a solicitation or recommendation to buy, sell or hold securities. The material in this release is intended to be strictly informational and is NEVER to be construed or interpreted as research material. All readers are strongly urged to perform research and due diligence on their own and consult a licensed financial professional before considering any level of investing in stocks. All material included herein is republished content and details which were previously disseminated by the companies mentioned in this release. FNM is not liable for any investment decisions by its readers or subscribers. Investors are cautioned that they may lose all or a portion of their investment when investing in stocks. For current services performed FNM has been compensated forty six hundred dollars for news coverage of the current press releases issued by SusGlobal Energy Corp. by the company. FNM HOLDS NO SHARES OF ANY COMPANY NAMED IN THIS RELEASE.\nThis release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended and such forward-looking statements are made pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. “Forward-looking statements” describe future expectations, plans, results, or strategies and are generally preceded by words such as “may”, “future”, “plan” or “planned”, “will” or “should”, “expected,” “anticipates”, “draft”, “eventually” or “projected”. You are cautioned that such statements are subject to a multitude of risks and uncertainties that could cause future circumstances, events, or results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements, including the risks that actual results may differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements as a result of various factors, and other risks identified in a company’s annual report on Form 10-K or 10-KSB and other filings made by such company with the Securities and Exchange Commission. You should consider these factors in evaluating the forward-looking statements included herein, and not place undue reliance on such statements. The forward-looking statements in this release are made as of the date hereof and FNM undertakes no obligation to update such statements.\nMedia Contact email: editor@financialnewsmedia.com – +1(561)325-8757\nSOURCE Financialnewsmedia.com\nThe post Waste-To-Energy (WTE) Market Is Expected To Reach A Market Size Of USD $13.6 Billion By 2026 appeared first on Financial News Media.\nCF Industries Holdings Mosaic Co Nutrien Ltd Nutrien Ltd Scotts Miracle-Gro Company Westshore Terminals Investment Corp","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line518540"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6904340386390686,"wiki_prob":0.6904340386390686,"text":"Politics and Prejudices: Primary sources\nIn a very real way, Bernie Sanders is the only conservative in this race.\n\"There is something profoundly wrong when the top one-tenth of 1 percent owns almost as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent.\" — U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders\nRemarkably, Donald Trump agrees with Bernie on this one, as do most of the other Republican presidential pretenders.\nExcept they think it is wrong because the one-tenth of 1 percent doesn't own more. America is in big-time trouble, comrades, as much so as during the Great Depression or the Civil War, maybe even more. Back during those crises, everybody in the nation knew we were in really, really deep shit.\nToday, we are being destroyed, and the average Joe is mad as hell and doesn't have a clue why.\nThat's why Donald Trump and his lesser imitators are doing so well. Trump acts out every blue-collar cashier or factory rat's biggest fantasy: Tell your bosses to go to hell and fuck themselves on the way down.\nThat's what Trump's doing, with his baseball cap and newfound slob chic. You might think the average worker would recognize him for the phony he is, and want to whack him with a tire iron, but no. They think he knows something, since he has billions. He does indeed know something: He knows he wants even more money and power. So he tells us that our declining standard of living is not due to his own greed and that of his friends, but because of some filthy immigrants.\nAnd too many of us go wild with applause.\nOur window of opportunity to save this state and nation is being rolled up rapidly, and unless we do something soon, it may be slammed shut forever. We are becoming a plutocracy in which the rich buy elections, conceal their identities and the source of the money, and the courts find all that perfectly legal.\nPresident Barack Obama wanted to do something to halt this, or at least talked as if he did. He did rally millions to his message of hope, and got legislation passed to give more Americans health care coverage than ever before, a huge achievement.\nYet he tried to play by the establishment's rules, only to discover that the game was rigged. Bernie Sanders thinks Obama made a mistake in not keeping the millions who rallied behind him united as an effective force for change.\nThat's likely right, though I suspect that Obama also really wanted to be accepted and belong to the ruling class, once he had battered his way onto center stage.\nHe wanted them to respect his achievement, and find a compromise to preserve most of their power and wealth and save the rest of us at the same time.\nThat might have been possible once, but not now. For one thing, too many hate Obama just because he is black.\nFor another, the reasonable moderates who used to run the GOP have died off or been driven out of Washington.\nToday, irrationality rules the Republican Party, and the party rules Washington, all except the presidency, that is.\nMeanwhile, while we listen to the candidates bray, the nation continues sliding down a drain from which there may be no escape. Contrary to what some think, this country really was the last best hope of mankind for many years.\nYes, we started with slavery and have been horribly racist and sexist and it never has been a level playing field. Yet it was possible for a smart poor kid, with enough pluck and determination, to make it and realize the American dream.\nPlus, things really did get gradually better. Slavery was outlawed and women began to claim their rights. Even today, we are still seeing progress on some social issues.\nGays can marry and adopt and raise children. But the living standard of everyone not in the highest income strata is being slowly strangled to death. Consider this: I started as a freshman at Michigan State University in the fall of 1969.\nTuition then was a mere $15 a credit hour! Now, when you adjust that for inflation, it is more like $97 in today's money. Know what tuition is at MSU now? For freshmen and sophomores, $452.90; for upperclassmen, $503.50.\nThat works out to more than $102,000 for a four-year bachelor's degree, which usually isn't enough to enter any well-paying profession; you need graduate school after that.\nWho can afford that? Nobody except the rich. The rest drop out or come out owing vast amounts in student loans.\nMoney they realistically will never be able to pay back. Hell, they aren't even allowed to renegotiate the interest rate.\nWe are committing suicide as a democracy, and ceasing to be a nation that cares about its own people.\nAlone among the candidates, Bernie Sanders seems to get that. Now, a prudent disclaimer: However inspiring he may be, he is still a politician — and H.L. Mencken famously said the only way a journalist should look at a politician was down his nose. More than one reporter has fallen in love with a politician and then ended up feeling burned and horribly betrayed. Were he to make it to the White House, he'd be far older — 75 — than any new president has ever been. Given the stress level, that's something that normally ought to worry a responsible voter.\nBut here's the bottom line. This country has gotten badly off the track, and gets further away from fairness every day. Bernie Sanders is the only one talking honestly about real issues with real programs designed to restore America.\nIn fact, in a very real way, he is the only conservative in this race; he wants to bring back a nation where the average person can make a living wage and hope to send her kids to school. Sanders, by the way, wants college tuition to be free.\nGiven our educational and infrastructure needs, that would be the best investment our society could make, one that would cost us far less than the trillions spent on the stupid little wars that have done our nation far more harm than good.\nNearly half a century ago, a candidate who was as young as Bernie is old challenged this nation to do better. He had the guts to tell the rich they would need to pay more; told us all that the United States could afford to walk away from a losing war, but couldn't afford to turn our backs on our poor children.\nHis name was Robert Francis Kennedy, and he might well have been president and we have taken a very different path, had he not caught a bullet in the head on June 5, 1968.\nNow we have an old guy who calls himself a \"socialist,\" by which he means he'd force capitalism to have a human face, and do awful things like provide sick leave and vacation pay.\nBy the way, Bernie's biggest mistake is probably not abandoning the \"socialist\" label; as the late great Tony Judt said, thanks to the Soviet horrors, that word is sadly too tainted in the public mind to be easily redeemed.\nBut do yourself a favor. Go to Bernie Sanders' website and read where he stands on the issues — all of them.\nThen go see The Big Short, possibly the most socially important movie made in the last 10 years.\nAfter that, if you still think Hillary Clinton is the answer, cheers. This system may outlast me. I got to experience the last best years of America. But if present trends continue, your kids won't have a chance. Think about that.\nPolitics & Prejudices Bernie Sanders Donald Trump election 2016","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line36212"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6187678575515747,"wiki_prob":0.6187678575515747,"text":"Senate unanimously passes 'right-to-try' trial drugs legislation\nLEGISLATURE 2015\nINDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Senate on Tuesday unanimously approved a proposal to give terminally ill patients access to experimental drugs that are not on the market, a change the bill’s sponsor says would help restore hope to those who are dying.\nThe bill would give patients access to treatments years before they receive federal approval, a process that includes three phases and can take about 10 to 15 years to complete.\n“We truly have a bill that will affect the lives of Hoosiers and at the very minimum will give hope to the hopeless,” said state Sen. Ed Charbonneau, a Valparaiso Republican who sponsored the bill.\nAlthough the House unanimously approved a nearly identical proposal last month, members of that chamber must pass it again to send it on to Gov. Mike Pence. That’s because a Senate committee adopted an amendment that clarifies nurses would be among the medical professionals who would be protected from liability under the measure.\nIndiana is one of about two dozen states considering the legislation, more commonly known as “right-to-try” laws, this session. Eight others have either adopted or approved similar laws, including Colorado, Louisiana, Michigan and Missouri.\nIf it passes, patients would be able to try drugs that have cleared at least Phase 1 of the Food and Drug Administration’s approval process, which determines a treatment’s safety level. Drugs also must remain in the federal process after completing the first phase to be available.\nSupporters say this would shorten the time patients have to wait for potentially lifesaving drugs. They must be terminally ill with no other comparable treatment option to be eligible, and drugs should be considered a last-ditch effort to improve their condition or disease.\nThere has been little opposition, but some lawmakers expressed concerns in committee hearings about overstepping the approval process.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line515709"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7193161845207214,"wiki_prob":0.7193161845207214,"text":"BURNA\nDamini Ebunoluwa Ogulu, known professionally as Burna Boy, is a Nigerian singer, songwriter, rapper and dancer. He rose to prominence in 2012 after releasing \"Like to Party\", the lead single from his debut studio album L.I.F.E (2013). In 2017, Burna Boy signed with Bad Habit/Atlantic Records in the United States and Warner Music Group internationally. His third studio album Outside marked his major-label debut.[3] In 2019, he won Best International Act at the 2019 BET Awards, and was announced as an Apple Music Up Next artist. His fourth studio album African Giant was released in July 2019; it won Album of the Year at the 2019 All Africa Music Awards and was nominated for Best World Music Album at the 62nd Annual Grammy Awards. He was awarded the African Artiste of the year at the 2020 VGMA's.\nBurna Boy became a Fair Play Ambassador in 2020, due to his passionate social engagement throughout his career bringing attention to social issues in his home country Nigeria, promoting African solidarity and upliftment as well as his campaigning to #EndSARS and increase police accountabiltyin Nigeria.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line566076"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5796477794647217,"wiki_prob":0.5796477794647217,"text":"$10 Million To Be Whipped Into Ice Cream Brand Four Winters Following Acquisition\nNew Global Chairman Omar Alkhawaja (L) and co-founder and CEO ZeidZabian (R) lay out ambitious growth plans for the business, including openings in the US and North Africa, with further UK and Jordan expansion\nSince its inception in late 2013, Four Winters and its innovative ice cream offering has grown from strength to strength. Harnessing the power of liquid nitrogen and other technologies such as steam frothing, Four Winters is able to create super-smooth ice cream and frozen desserts that capture the exact taste of the fresh ingredients for a superior serve. Four Winters has proven to be a hit with UK foodies, with three London parlours open to date and a site in Kent to be unveiled in January 2018.\nLondon based Investor Omar Alkhawaja has now acquired majority in Four Winters Global in a management take-over conducted by current co-founder and CEO, ZeidZabian. Alkhawaja purchased the shares from Retail Saudi Conglomerate Fawaz Al Hokair for an undisclosed amount resulting in Alkhawaja being appointed as Global Chairman. Co-Founder of Four Winters, ZeidZabian, will remain as CEO of the business overseeing the ambitious growth plans for existing and new territories. The new board of directors are committed to investing $10 million into the business over the next 3 years, with the aim of opening 50 new parlours. The acquisition will see a new company structure developed, and a key focus will be on enhancing the brand internationally, continuous product innovation, and identifying qualifying candidates for franchise partnerships.\nThe board have already identified new sites in LA, New York and North Africa in addition to the further sites under construction in Jordan and the UK. The Four Winters head office will now move from Jordan to London with immediate effect.\nSpeaking about the acquisition, ZeidZabian said:\n“I am extremely excited about the acquisition and having worked with Omar for the past few years, I know that with his leadership we are now fully equipped as a team to move forward with the shared vision we have for Four Winters. In an environment where we are growing at a rapid pace, increasing flexibility and speed to market is critical for us. Our goal is to make sure we have the right organisational structure in place to strengthen our performance, which includes our 50 company-owned parlour target, and the development of a franchising platform. Whilst our growth plans are ambitious, we believe in our product and have a stellar global team to ensure expansion targets are met. We are looking forward to continued brand growth and success in 2018 and beyond.”\nOmar Alkhawaja, added:\n“This acquisition shows just how much I believe in Four Winters and everything the brand represents. I would like to thank Zeid for his committed leadership of the Four Winters global management team and I am looking forward to executing our growth plans. Expanding in North America, Europe, North Africa and the Middle East as well as other potential territories is very exciting, but we do have our work cut out for us. That is why working with strong and committed partners as well as investing a substantial amount of our capital in our supply chain is very important. I am sure with the team we have and the vision in place, we are well poised to expand to all corners of the globe!”\nWeek Commencing 18th could be the busiest expense week ever for UK businesses\nWhat to expect from markets in 2018 – Colin McLean, SVM Asset Management","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1561113"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6167654395103455,"wiki_prob":0.6167654395103455,"text":"California needs to invest in its school facilities\nWhy I’ll be on strike from Kaiser on MLK Day\nOpinion // Open Forum\nTom Torlakson and Jack O’Connell\nJan. 6, 2016 Updated: Jan. 6, 2016 3:40 p.m.\nStudents on the playground at George Peabody Elementary School in San Francisco in April 2015.Michael Short/Special To The Chronicle\nResearch shows that children perform better in safe, modern learning environments. However, a recent study published by UC Berkeley’s Center for Cities and Schools rang the alarm that school districts are struggling to keep up with basic facility maintenance. The report states that the majority of districts are underspending on maintenance, which could lead to decaying school buildings. The report also found an alarming trend that many districts are disproportionately spending operating budget resources on building maintenance — taking dollars away from academic programming.\nAs the current and former California state superintendents of public instruction, we remain concerned with the persistent achievement gap — the disparity in academic performance between groups of students caused in part by availability of resources — that can create reverberating consequences for a child’s life. It is our responsibility to advocate for policies that help ensure every child has access to a high-quality learning environment. That is why we are both supporting the Kindergarten Through Community College Public Education Facilities Bond Act of 2016.\nCalifornia schools\nOakland preschool on wheels seeks to bridge access gap\nSchool districts can reduce suspensions to increase achievement\nThis initiative will invest $9 billion in school facilities by replenishing the fund that provides matching state grants to districts that have already raised local dollars. The money will go directly where it is needed: helping districts complete capital renewal projects, upgrading decaying classrooms, and providing technological upgrades, including better Internet access and well-equipped career education centers. The measure will also finance new buildings and schools to keep up with growth where needed.\nWhile some districts can access today’s technology and offer well-maintained learning environments, too many children go to school in run-down, outdated schools. Two-thirds of our K-12 schools are more than 25 years old, and many are in need of critical upgrades to meet current health, safety and education standards, such as seismic retrofits and modernized classroom technology. But the latest data from the Center for Cities and Schools shows that districts cannot afford to go it alone and need the state to continue its role as a reliable investment partner.\nThis is especially true for those districts serving lower-income communities. We both have seen firsthand how the investment partnership between districts, the state and the business community has helped level the playing field for smaller and lower-wealth districts through its Financial Hardship program where eligible school districts can apply for grants that cover up to 100 percent of construction projects.\nHowever, it’s been nearly a decade since California last replenished the account, and the funds for school improvements are depleted. As a result, there is a growing $2 billion backlog of K-12 school district applications that have been submitted for state funding with another $500 million in approved community college projects, with billions more in identified need. If the state reneges on its obligation as an investment partner, we face the prospect of returning to the days where wide differences in school district wealth resulted in uneven and unequal educational experiences.\nThe good news is that if voters pass the state school bond in November, we can replenish the state fund so that all eligible districts again can partner with the state and invest in creating optimal teaching and learning environments. The state’s continued participation in school facility investment is vital if we are to meet our goals of graduating all our students to be career- and college-ready and adequately preparing them to compete in a highly competitive global economy.\nAbout Opinion\nGuest opinions in Open Forum and Insight are produced by writers with expertise, personal experience or original insights on a subject of interest to our readers. Their views do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Chronicle editorial board, which is committed to providing a diversity of ideas to our readership.\nRead more about our transparency and ethics policies\nTom Torlakson has served as the state superintendent of public instruction since 2011. Jack O’ Connell was the state superintendent of public instruction from 2003 to 2011.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line552146"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5025812387466431,"wiki_prob":0.5025812387466431,"text":"genetic variants\nLargest-Ever Genetic Study of Autism Yields New Insights\nPosted on February 4th, 2020 by Dr. Francis Collins\nAnyone who’s spent time with people affected by autism spectrum disorder (ASD) can tell you that it’s a very complex puzzle. The wide variability seen among individuals with this group of developmental brain disorders, which can disrupt communication, behavior control, and social skills, has also posed a huge challenge for researchers trying to identify underlying genetic and environmental factors. So, it’s no surprise that there’s been considerable interest in the recent findings of the largest-ever genetic study of ASD.\nIn a landmark study that analyzed the DNA of more than 35,000 people from around the world, the NIH-funded international Autism Sequencing Consortium (ASC) identified variants in 102 genes associated with increased risk of developing ASD, up from 65 identified previously. Of the 102 genes, 60 had not been previously linked to ASD and 53 appeared to be primarily connected to ASD as opposed to other types of intellectual disability or developmental delay. It is expected that this newfound genetic knowledge will serve to improve understanding of the complex biological mechanisms involved in ASD, ultimately paving the way for new approaches to diagnosis and treatment.\nThe study reported in the journal Cell was led by Joseph Buxbaum, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York; Stephan Sanders, University of California, San Francisco; Kathryn Roeder, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA; and Mark Daly, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA. These researchers and their teams faced what might seem like a rather daunting task.\nWhile common genetic variants collectively are known to contribute substantially to ASD, rare variants have been recognized individually as more major contributors to a person’s risk of developing ASD. The challenge was how to find such rare variants—whether inherited or newly arising.\nTo do so, the researchers needed to analyze a enormous amount of DNA data. Fortunately, they and their ASC colleagues already had assembled a vast trove of data. Over the last decade, the ASC had collected DNA samples with full consent from thousands of people with and without ASD, including unaffected siblings and parents. All were aggregated with other studies, and, at the time of this investigation, they had gathered 35,584 unique samples. Those included more than 21,000 family-based samples and almost 12,000 samples from people diagnosed with ASD.\nIn search of rare genetic alterations, they sequenced whole exomes, the approximately 1.5 percent of the genome that codes for proteins. Their search produced a list of 102 ASD-associated genes, including 30 that had never been implicated in any developmental brain disorder previously.\nBut that was just the beginning. Next, the ASC team dug deeper into this list. The researchers knew from previous work that up to half of people with ASD also have an intellectual disability or developmental delay. Many of the associated genes overlap, meaning they play roles in both outcomes. So, in one set of analyses, the team compared the list to the results of another genetic study of people diagnosed with developmental delays, including problems with learning or gross motor skills such as delayed walking.\nThe detailed comparison allowed them to discern genes that are more associated with features of ASD, as opposed to those that are more specific to these developmental delays. It turns out that 49 of the 102 autism-associated genes were altered more often in people with developmental delay than in those diagnosed with ASD. The other 53 were altered more often in ASD, suggesting that they may be more closely linked to this condition’s unique features.\nFurther study also showed that people who carried alterations in genes found predominantly in ASD also had better intellectual function. They also were more likely to have learned to walk without a developmental delay.\nThe 102 new genes fell primarily into one of two categories. Many play a role in the brain’s neural connections. The rest are involved primarily in switching other genes on and off in brain development. Interestingly, they are expressed both in excitatory neurons, which are active in sending signals in the brain, and in inhibitory neurons that squelch such activity. Many of these genes are also commonly expressed in the brain’s cerebral cortex, the outermost part of the brain that is responsible for many complex behaviors.\nOverall, these findings underscore that ASD truly does exist on a spectrum. Indeed, there are many molecular paths to this disorder. The ASC researchers continue to collect samples, so we can expect this list of 102 genes will continue to expand in the future.\nWith these gene discoveries in hand, the researchers will now also turn their attention to unravelling additional details about how these genes function in the brain. The hope is that this growing list of genes will converge on a smaller number of important molecular pathways, pointing the way to new and more precise ways of treating ASD in all its complexity.\n[1] Large-scale exome sequencing study implicates both developmental and functional changes in the neurobiology of autism. Satterstrom FK, Kosmicki JA, Wang J, Breen MS, De Rubeis S, An JY, Peng M, Collins R, Grove J, Klei L, Stevens C, Reichert J, Mulhern MS, Artomov M, Gerges S, Sheppard B, Xu X, Bhaduri A, Norman U, Brand H, Schwartz G, Nguyen R, Guerrero EE, Dias C; Autism Sequencing Consortium; iPSYCH-Broad Consortium, Betancur C, Cook EH, Gallagher L, Gill M, Sutcliffe JS, Thurm A, Zwick ME, Børglum AD, State MW, Cicek AE, Talkowski ME, Cutler DJ, Devlin B, Sanders SJ, Roeder K, Daly MJ, Buxbaum JD.Cell. 2020 Jan 23. {Epub ahead of print]\nAutism Spectrum Disorder (NIH/National Institute of Mental Health)\nJoseph Buxbaum (Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York)\nSanders Lab (University of California, San Francisco)\nKathryn Roeder (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA)\nMark Daly (Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA)\nAutism Sequencing Consortium (Emory University, Atlanta)\nNIH Support: National Institute Mental Health; National Human Genome Research Institute\nTags: ASD, autism, Autism Sequencing Consortium, Autism Spectrum Disorder, behavior, brain, cerebral cortex, childhood disorder, development, developmental delay, developmental neurobiology, DNA, exome sequencing, genes, genetic variants, genomics, neuro-developmental delay, neurons, neuroscience, social skills\nGene-Editing Advance Puts More Gene-Based Cures Within Reach\nPosted on November 5th, 2019 by Dr. Francis Collins\nCaption: The prime editing system (left) contains three parts: two enzymes, Cas9 and reverse transcriptase, and an engineered guide RNA, pegRNA. Unlike regular CRISPR gene editing, prime editing nicks just one strand of the DNA molecule (right) and then uses RNA and reverse transcriptase to direct highly targeted changes to a cell’s DNA. Credit: Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA.\nThere’s been tremendous excitement recently about the potential of CRISPR and related gene-editing technologies for treating or even curing sickle cell disease (SCD), muscular dystrophy, HIV, and a wide range of other devastating conditions. Now comes word of another remarkable advance—called “prime editing”—that may bring us even closer to reaching that goal.\nAs groundbreaking as CRISPR/Cas9 has been for editing specific genes, the system has its limitations. The initial version is best suited for making a double-stranded break in DNA, followed by error-prone repair. The outcome is generally to knock out the target. That’s great if eliminating the target is the desired goal. But what if the goal is to fix a mutation by editing it back to the normal sequence?\nThe new prime editing system, which was described recently by NIH-funded researchers in the journal Nature, is revolutionary because it offers much greater control for making a wide range of precisely targeted edits to the DNA code, which consists of the four “letters” (actually chemical bases) A, C, G, and T [1].\nAlready, in tests involving human cells grown in the lab, the researchers have used prime editing to correct genetic mutations that cause two inherited diseases: SCD, a painful, life-threatening blood disorder, and Tay-Sachs disease, a fatal neurological disorder. What’s more, they say the versatility of their new gene-editing system means it can, in principle, correct about 89 percent of the more than 75,000 known genetic variants associated with human diseases.\nIn standard CRISPR, a scissor-like enzyme called Cas9 is used to cut all the way through both strands of the DNA molecule’s double helix. That usually results in the cell’s DNA repair apparatus inserting or deleting DNA letters at the site. As a result, CRISPR is extremely useful for disrupting genes and inserting or removing large DNA segments. However, it is difficult to use this system to make more subtle corrections to DNA, such as swapping a letter T for an A.\nTo expand the gene-editing toolbox, a research team led by David R. Liu, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA, previously developed a class of editing agents called base editors [2,3]. Instead of cutting DNA, base editors directly convert one DNA letter to another. However, base editing has limitations, too. It works well for correcting four of the most common single letter mutations in DNA. But at least so far, base editors haven’t been able to make eight other single letter changes, or fix extra or missing DNA letters.\nIn contrast, the new prime editing system can precisely and efficiently swap any single letter of DNA for any other, and can make both deletions and insertions, at least up to a certain size. The system consists of a modified version of the Cas9 enzyme fused with another enzyme, called reverse transcriptase, and a specially engineered guide RNA, called pegRNA. The latter contains the desired gene edit and steers the needed editing apparatus to a specific site in a cell’s DNA.\nOnce at the site, the Cas9 nicks one strand of the double helix. Then, reverse transcriptase uses one DNA strand to “prime,” or initiate, the letter-by-letter transfer of new genetic information encoded in the pegRNA into the nicked spot, much like the search-and-replace function of word processing software. The process is then wrapped up when the prime editing system prompts the cell to remake the other DNA strand to match the new genetic information.\nSo far, in tests involving human cells grown in a lab dish, Liu and his colleagues have used prime editing to correct the most common mutation that causes SCD, converting a T to an A. They were also able to remove four DNA letters to correct the most common mutation underlying Tay-Sachs disease, a devastating condition that typically produces symptoms in children within the first year and leads to death by age four. The researchers also used their new system to insert new DNA segments up to 44 letters long and to remove segments at least 80 letters long.\nPrime editing does have certain limitations. For example, 11 percent of known disease-causing variants result from changes in the number of gene copies, and it’s unclear if prime editing can insert or remove DNA that’s the size of full-length genes—which may contain up to 2.4 million letters.\nIt’s also worth noting that now-standard CRISPR editing and base editors have been tested far more thoroughly than prime editing in many different kinds of cells and animal models. These earlier editing technologies also may be more efficient for some purposes, so they will likely continue to play unique and useful roles in biomedicine.\nAs for prime editing, additional research is needed before we can consider launching human clinical trials. Among the areas that must be explored are this technology’s safety and efficacy in a wide range of cell types, and its potential for precisely and safely editing genes in targeted tissues within living animals and people.\nMeanwhile, building on all these bold advances, efforts are already underway to accelerate the development of affordable, accessible gene-based cures for SCD and HIV on a global scale. Just last month, NIH and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation announced a collaboration that will invest at least $200 million over the next four years toward this goal. Last week, I had the chance to present this plan and discuss it with global health experts at the Grand Challenges meeting Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. The project is an unprecedented partnership designed to meet an unprecedented opportunity to address health conditions that once seemed out of reach but—as this new work helps to show—may now be within our grasp.\n[1] Search-and-replace genome editing without double-strand breaks or donor DNA. Anzalone AV, Randolph PB, Davis JR, Sousa AA, Koblan LW, Levy JM, Chen PJ, Wilson C, Newby GA, Raguram A, Liu DR. Nature. Online 2019 October 21. [Epub ahead of print]\n[2] Programmable editing of a target base in genomic DNA without double-stranded DNA cleavage. Komor AC, Kim YB, Packer MS, Zuris JA, Liu DR. Nature. 2016 May 19;533(7603):420-424.\n[3] Programmable base editing of A•T to G•C in genomic DNA without DNA cleavage. Gaudelli NM, Komor AC, Rees HA, Packer MS, Badran AH, Bryson DI, Liu DR. Nature. 2017 Nov 23;551(7681):464-471.\nTay-Sachs Disease (Genetics Home Reference/National Library of Medicine/NIH)\nSickle Cell Disease (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute/NIH)\nCure Sickle Cell Initiative (NHLBI)\nWhat are Genome Editing and CRISPR-Cas9? (National Library of Medicine/NIH)\nSomatic Cell Genome Editing Program (Common Fund/NIH)\nDavid R. Liu (Harvard, Cambridge, MA)\nNIH Support: National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; National Human Genome Research Institute; National Institute for General Medical Sciences; National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering; National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences\nTags: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, chemical bases, CRISPR, CRISPR/Cas9, gene editing, genetic variants, Grand Challenges, HIV, muscular dystrophy, mutations, nucleotides, pegRNA, prime editing, rare disease, reverse transcriptase, sickle cell disease, Tay-Sachs disease\nA New Piece of the Alzheimer’s Puzzle\nCredit: National Institute on Aging, NIH\nFor the past few decades, researchers have been busy uncovering genetic variants associated with an increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) [1]. But there’s still a lot to learn about the many biological mechanisms that underlie this devastating neurological condition that affects as many as 5 million Americans [2].\nAs an example, an NIH-funded research team recently found that AD susceptibility may hinge not only upon which gene variants are present in a person’s DNA, but also how RNA messages encoded by the affected genes are altered to produce proteins [3]. After studying brain tissue from more than 450 deceased older people, the researchers found that samples from those with AD contained many more unusual RNA messages than those without AD.\nTags: AD, aging, aging brain, alternative splicing, Alzheimer's, Alzheimer’s disease, brain, dementia, genetic variants, introns, memory, Memory and Aging Project, messenger RNA, Mount Sinai NIH Brain and Tissue Repository, prefrontal cortex, Religious Orders Study, RNA, RNA map, RNA splicing, spinal muscular atrophy, transcriptome\nBig Data Study Reveals Possible Subtypes of Type 2 Diabetes\nPosted on November 10th, 2015 by Dr. Francis Collins\nCaption: Computational model showing study participants with type 2 diabetes grouped into three subtypes, based on similarities in data contained in their electronic health records. Such information included age, gender (red/orange/yellow indicates females; blue/green, males), health history, and a range of routine laboratory and medical tests.\nCredit: Dudley Lab, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York\nIn recent years, there’s been a lot of talk about how “Big Data” stands to revolutionize biomedical research. Indeed, we’ve already gained many new insights into health and disease thanks to the power of new technologies to generate astonishing amounts of molecular data—DNA sequences, epigenetic marks, and metabolic signatures, to name a few. But what’s often overlooked is the value of combining all that with a more mundane type of Big Data: the vast trove of clinical information contained in electronic health records (EHRs).\nIn a recent study in Science Translational Medicine [1], NIH-funded researchers demonstrated the tremendous potential of using EHRs, combined with genome-wide analysis, to learn more about a common, chronic disease—type 2 diabetes. Sifting through the EHR and genomic data of more than 11,000 volunteers, the researchers uncovered what appear to be three distinct subtypes of type 2 diabetes. Not only does this work have implications for efforts to reduce this leading cause of death and disability, it provides a sneak peek at the kind of discoveries that will be made possible by the new Precision Medicine Initiative’s national research cohort, which will enroll 1 million or more volunteers who agree to share their EHRs and genomic information.\nTags: big data, chronic disease, clinical data, cohort, diabetes, diabetes subtypes, diabetic complications, diabetic heart disease, diabetic nephropathy, diabetic neuropathy, diabetic retinopathy, electronic health records, genetic variants, genome-wide analysis, genomics, obesity, precision medicine, Precision Medicine Initiative, translational medicine, type 2 diabetes\nPrecision Medicine: Who Benefits from Aspirin to Prevent Colorectal Cancer?\nIn recent years, scientific evidence has begun to accumulate that indicates taking aspirin or other non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) on a daily basis may lower the risk of developing colorectal cancer. Now, a new study provides more precise information on who might benefit from this particular prevention strategy, as well as who might not.\nPublished in the journal JAMA, the latest work shows that, for the majority of people studied, regular use of aspirin or NSAIDs was associated with about a one-third lower risk of developing colorectal cancer. But the international research team, partly funded by NIH, also found that not all regular users of aspirin/NSAIDs reaped such benefits—about 9 percent experienced no reduction in colorectal cancer risk and 4 percent actually appeared to have an increased risk [1]. Was this just coincidence, or might there be a biological explanation?\nTags: aspirin, cancer, colon cancer, colorectal cancer, DNA, genetic variants, inflammation, NSAID, precision medicine, Precision Medicine Initiative, prevention, prostaglandins, rectal cancer","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1601402"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9953421950340271,"wiki_prob":0.9953421950340271,"text":"Burnley signed a two-year veteran goalkeeper Hennessey.\nBurnley sign Wales goalkeeper Wayne Hennessey that has become a free agent already. Burnley have announced the signing of 34-year-old veteran goalkeeper Hennessey on a two-year contract. Become a local goalkeeper at Turf Moor until the end of the 2022-23 season. Hennessey’s contract with Crystal Palace officially\nJul 29, 2021 by admin in Sportnews\nManchester City have signed a one-year contract\nManchester City have signed a one-year contract with veteran goalkeeper Scott Carson. Extend the service life until the summer of 2022. Carson has officially expired with Derby County this summer. After spending two seasons at Manchester City on loan, City have announced a one-year contract with the\nTottenham Hotspur are close to reaching an agreement with Sevilla over the swapping of Argentine winger Eric Lamela with young Spanish winger Brian Kil. Sky Sports reports that Tottenham Hotspur will be reinforcing their first squad this summer. By seizing the 20-year-old left-wing Kyle from Sevilla\nRennes are delighted to open talks with Manchester United\nRennes are delighted to open talks with Manchester United over the sale of 18-year-old midfielder. Eduardo Camawinga as his contract enters the final 12 months. According to ESPN, Rennes chairman Nicolas Olvek has made no secret of his desire to open talks to sell Gamawinka\nBraim delighted to receive number 10 for Milan in the new season\nBraim delighted to receive number 10 for Milan in the new season. Braim Diaz, an attacking midfielder who recently signed a new loan at AC Milan, is delighted to switch to the number 10 shirt next season and insists he will do his best. Braim\nKristoffer Ayer examines Brentford\nKristoffer Ayer is set to become another Brentford newcomer after undergoing a medical, awaiting a £13.5m move from Celtic. The agreement of the 23-year-old star player between the two teams has been reached. For now, only the final detail remains to be summarized. Ayer,\nEverton signed a one-year contract with Begovic\nEverton signed a one-year contract with Begovic. Everton have announced the signing of Bosnian goalkeeper Asmir Begovic on a one-year contract. The 34-year-old has moved to Goodison Park on a free transfer after his contract with Bournemouth at the Championships expired. That makes him the\nDalbert Lagui joins Cagliari on loan with an option to buy\nDalbert Lagui joins Cagliari on loan with an option to buy. Brazilian left-back Dalbert has moved from Inter Milan to Cagliari with a loan agreement. Its with an absolute purchase price of 7 million euros. The deal was finalized last week. But details will take some\nManchester United are among the favorites ahead of Arsenal\nManchester United are among the favorites ahead of Arsenal in the race for Wolves midfielder Ruben Neves. ufabet has revealed that the Red Devils are in search of a new midfielder this summer. Regardless of whether Paul Pogba leaves the club or not.\nFerland Mendy is unhappy at Real Madrid\nFerland Mendy is unhappy about his contract at Real Madrid, insisting the midfielder still wants to play for the Spanish club. Earlier, reports from Sport revealed that the 26-year-old left-back was unhappy about his contract at Real Madrid as Los Blancos had to cut his\nAC Milan has not given up on a new plan to hunt down Botman.\nRalph Rangnick wants to improve the team.\nJesse Lingard Did not receive any offers from West Ham","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1332426"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6572048664093018,"wiki_prob":0.34279513359069824,"text":"Person Detail: Colin Powell\nFull Name: Colin Powell\n(1937-2021) Military leader, memorist. Colin Powell was born in Harlem, Manhattan, New York, and died in Bethesda, Maryland.\nColin Luther Powell was born in Harlem, Manhattan, New York, on April 5, 1937.\nMr. Powell graduated from City College of New York in 1958.\nColin Powell died at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, on October 18, 2021.\nMy American Journey: An Autobiography\n(Pub: Random House ISBN: 9780679432968 / 978-0679432968 )\nAutobiography written with Joseph E. Persico.\nIt Worked for Me, Lessons in Life and Leadership\n(Pub: Harper ISBN: 0062135120 / 978-0062135124 )\nMemoir.\n? Bronx County\nAs a child, Mr. Powell lived in Hunts Point section of South Bronx, New York.\nMr. Powell graduated from Morris High School in the Bronx, New York.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1646419"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6792597770690918,"wiki_prob":0.6792597770690918,"text":"Home › NYC \"Cat Whiskers\"Logo Shirt\nNYC \"Cat Whiskers\"Logo Shirt\nsmall - $20.00 USD medium - $20.00 USD large - $20.00 USD X-Large - $20.00 USD 2X-Large - $22.00 USD 3X-Large - $22.00 USD 4X-Large - $24.00 USD 5X-Large - $24.00 USD\nNYC \"Cat Whiskers\" Logo Shirt\nLogo Printed on Front\nShirt Color - NYC Black\nThe New York Central Railroad (reporting mark NYC) was a railroad operating in the Northeastern United States. Headquartered in New York City, the railroad served most of the Northeast, including extensive trackage in the states of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Massachusetts and West Virginia plus additional trackage in the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec.\nThe railroad primarily connected greater New York and Boston in the east with Chicago and St.Louis in the midwest along with the intermediate cities of Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland, Cincinnati, and Detroit. NYC's Grand Central Terminal in New York City is one of its best known extant landmarks.\nIn 1968 the NYC merged with its former rival, the Pennsylvania Railroad, to form Penn Central (the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad joined in 1969). That company went bankrupt in 1970 and was taken over by the federal government and merged into Conrail in 1976. Conrail was broken up in 1998, and portions of its system was transferred to the newly formed New York Central Lines LLC, a subsidiary leased to and eventually absorbed by CSX and Norfolk Southern. Those companies' lines included the original New York Central main line, but outside that area it included lines that were never part of the New York Central system. CSX was able to take one of the most important main lines in the nation, which runs from New York City and Boston to Cleveland, Ohio, as part of the Water Level Route, while Norfolk Southern gained the Cleveland, Ohio to Chicago, Illinois portion of the line called the Chicago line.\nAt the end of 1925, the New York Central System operated 11,584 miles (18,643 km) of road and 26,395 miles (42,479 km) of track; at the end of 1967 the mileages were 9,696 miles (15,604 km) and 18,454 miles (29,699 km)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line225497"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9243627190589905,"wiki_prob":0.9243627190589905,"text":"NewsWorldAmericas\nObama calls for inquiry into vice claims against Secret Service\nEleven élite agents allegedly brought prostitutes to their hotel ahead of summit\nMonday 16 April 2012 22:40\nThe US Secret Service was yesterday stepping up its investigation into claims that agents dispatched to Colombia ahead of a weekend summit consorted with prostitutes, after President Barack Obama said he would be \"angry\" if the allegations turned out to be true.\nAt least 11 élite agents with the Secret Service who were in Cartagena ahead of the President's arrival at the Summit of the Americas face possible disciplinary action for allegedly bringing local prostitutes to their rooms at the fancy Caribe Hotel, where the US delegation stayed.\nLurid reports of secret agents \"gone wild\" in the resort town overshadowed the summit of leaders from North and South America and threatened to become a major embarrassment for the Secret Service. According to the Daily News in New York, the agents found the women in a dingy local \"love club\". The Defence Department said it was also looking into whether five of its personnel may have violated a curfew and participated in wider misconduct.\nMr Obama was forced to address the affair at an end-of-summit press conference. \"When we travel, we have to observe the highest standards,\" he said. \"We're not just representing ourselves. We're here on behalf of our people. If it turns out that that some of the allegations made in the press are confirmed, then of course, I'll be angry.\" He made it clear that he expected a \"rigorous\" investigation into all the claims.\nThe scandal may prompt calls from Congress for an overhaul of the leadership structure in the Secret Service, an élite cadre of agents that, according to its critics, has long escaped proper scrutiny. \"This really is the biggest scandal in the history of the Secret Service,\" Ron Kessler, author of In the President's Secret Service, said. \"There's a culture in the Secret Service that's fostered by the management of just nodding, winking, favouritism.\"\nDarrell Issa, a Republican and chair of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, said: \"They don't just protect the President, of course; they protect the cabinet members, the Vice-President, the first family, candidates. When you look at this, you realise if you can have this kind of breakdown, one that could lead to blackmail... then we've got to ask: where are the systems in place to prevent this in the future?\"\nThe incident occurred a few days before the start of the summit and Mr Obama's arrival. Prostitution is legal in some designated zones in Colombia. Women brought to the Caribe Hotel would have been expected to leave their IDs at the front desk and retrieve them after leaving before 7am.\nOne of the prostitutes failed to meet the 7am deadline after getting into an argument with an agent about payment. That was reported to the police, who informed the US embassy.\nAlbanyEspionage And IntelligenceGeorgia (usa)HotelsProstitutionUSAUS TV\n1/0Obama calls for inquiry into vice claims against Secret Service","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line424666"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9536179900169373,"wiki_prob":0.9536179900169373,"text":"Dr Kamal Munir of Cambridge Judge Business School has been appointed a Pro-Vice-Chancellor (University Community and Engagement), for a first term of three years with effect from 1 October 2021.\nDr Kamal Munir\nDr Kamal Munir is a Reader in Strategy and Policy at Cambridge Judge Business School, and is Academic Director at the Centre for Strategic Philanthropy based at the Business School, and will remain in those roles during his new appointment. He is a University Race and Inclusion Champion, and is a Fellow of Homerton College.\nIn his role as Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Dr Munir will provide leadership on matters relating to the University’s community, with an emphasis on staff and public engagement. These areas of responsibility have increased significantly in recent years and are a priority area for the University.\nDr Munir’s new role takes over from Professor Eilis Ferran, who will complete her term in office as Pro‑Vice‑Chancellor for Institutional and International Relations at the end of this academic year. The international portfolio will be combined with the Pro‑Vice‑Chancellor (Research) role, since there are important synergies between the University’s international and research activities.\nDr Munir will lead the development and implementation of strategy and policy relating to all staff (academic and professional services). Building on the foundations put down during Professor Ferran’s tenure, he will have a focus on equality and diversity. The University’s aim is to stand out among its international peers for the excellence of its practice in this area. Dr Munir will also further develop the University’s considerable collections both as an important teaching and research resource, and in public engagement with those outside the University community: locally, regionally, nationally and internationally.\nThere are five Pro-Vice-Chancellors, whose roles provide academic leadership to the University and support the Vice-Chancellor. They work as a team with the Heads of the Schools, the Registrary, the Chief Financial Officer and other senior colleagues, to ensure that the University maintains and enhances its contribution to society and its global academic standing.\nVisit Dr Kamal Munir’s faculty webpage\ncommunities diversity engagement inclusion Kamal Munir","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line867466"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8208717107772827,"wiki_prob":0.8208717107772827,"text":"www.arcamax.com\nRoadshow: 2022 Volvo C40 Recharge makes style count\nDaniel Golson, Roadshow on Oct 25, 2021\nIt might drive just like the XC40, but Volvo's latest crossover has looks that are worth the premium.\nThe 2022 Volvo C40 Recharge is full of firsts for the Swedish brand. It's Volvo's first car that's only available with a fully electric powertrain, with pretty much every upcoming model to follow suit. It's Volvo's first entry into the crossover-coupe market, and it's the first Volvo to only be available with a leather-free interior, like all future Volvo EVs will be. The C40 is also the company's first car that's only available to purchase online. Despite all of these firsts, the C40 Recharge just feels like, well, a regular Volvo — and a great one at that.\nDriving impressions and technical data aren't what matters most with the C40. The coupeover is available with one powertrain configuration that uses a 78-kilowatt-hour battery pack and a pair of electric motors, one at each axle. The setup is identical to the XC40 Recharge, but with 408 horsepower and 487 pound-feet of torque the C40 is slightly more powerful than the XC40. Volvo quotes a 0-to-60-mph time of 4.5 seconds, a couple tenths quicker than the XC40. While the EPA hasn't officially rated the C40 yet Volvo estimates a range of 225 miles, also slightly better than the XC40's estimated 208 miles.\nThe C40 seems quieter on the highway than the XC40, likely helped by its better aerodynamics. The 20-inch wheels with a cool aero design and all-season tires will be standard in the US, and the C40 has nonadaptive dampers. Its ride is firm but smooth and comfortable, even on the cobblestone roads of Ghent, Belgium. There are no drive modes beyond Off-Road, though you can make the steering weight heavier and adjust the level of regenerative braking — I love the C40's true one-pedal capability. Overall, the C40 drives pretty much exactly the same as its XC40 sibling, and that's a good thing.\nNow, the good stuff. Nearly every body panel is unique to the C40: Its front end is similar to that of the XC40, but the blocked-off grille is more sleekly integrated and the standard pixel LED headlights are more angular. The logo in the grille is heated so the camera and sensors within won't get grimy in lousy weather. The lower surfacing has a more horizontal line that's continued on at the rear bumper, but the bumper itself remains the same. Exclusive to the C40 is the new Fjord blue color that was inspired by, you guessed it, the waters of Sweden's fjords, which are a deeper blue color than the dark water of lakes or the greener ocean. The blue was chosen partially because it's currently on trend, but also because it's indicative of the C40's eco-conscious vibe.\nAll that said, the roofline is obviously the main event. It's one continuous curve from the base of the hood to the tail, and the side windows kick up at the C-pillar to line up with the roof spoiler. The C40 will only be offered with a black roof no matter the paint color, and I think it really works. The dual upper spoilers are stylish and functional, increasing aerodynamics and hiding the hinges, while the lower spoiler at the base of the window is purely functional, improving stability. My favorite design feature is the new taillights, which extend all the way up the hatch with segmented LEDs and have cool body color inserts on the tailgate.\nThe C40's cabin doesn't stray as far from the XC40, but it gets some unique touches. The car is launching with an all-black color scheme consisting of suede and Microtech upholstery. And while the C40's interior is completely leather-free, Volvo is careful not to call the interior vegan. (There are animal byproducts used in the interior's creation.) Similar to what's in the Polestar 2, the Microtech material feels durable and high-end, kind of like a wetsuit or fancy bag. Coming next year will be this same material combo in another color, two textile choices and even a stunning silver wool option, though I don't know which (if any) will come to the U.S.\nSpicing up the black interior are the available Fjord blue carpets and felt door inserts, which are a no-cost option and an absolute must-have. A large, fixed panoramic roof is standard, and though it's UV tinted I still wish there was a sunshade. The front cabin gets cool 3D trim pieces on the dashboard and doors that have a geometric motif, and the plastic is illuminated from behind, a very cool effect when it comes on at night. The pattern is an actual section of topographical map from the Abisko National Park in Sweden.\nStandard on the C40 is a 9-inch portrait touchscreen running Volvo's new Google-based infotainment system, which is a big upgrade over the old Sensus software. The C40 does have a few new features that will come to the XC40 via over-the-air update, like a new range optimization button that adjusts the climate control for better efficiency without completely turning it off. Volvo says that more apps are in the works, including more than just the media apps currently available.\nObviously the coupe-like roof cuts into the C40's cargo space compared to the XC40, but honestly not by much. The XC40's rear hatch is already pretty raked and the C40 still gets a three-way split bench seat that folds completely flat, though rear headroom is definitely tighter for those over 6 feet tall. There are a couple of storage cubbies underneath the cargo area floor, too. Rear visibility is quite a bit worse in the C40, mostly because of the much smaller rear window, and I wish the C40 had a rear wiper. But the styling to me is worth the practicality trade-off, especially when you get to the price.\nThe C40 starts at $59,845 including a $1,095 destination charge, and it only comes in one trim level and no options beyond metallic paint, which costs $695 (the only no-cost color is black). Otherwise the C40 comes fully loaded, including features that are optional on the XC40. The XC40 Recharge starts at $56,395, but add those options and it's only a few hundred bucks cheaper than the C40.\nIncluded in the C40's near-$60K price tag is dual-zone automatic climate control, heated front and rear seats, a heated steering wheel, a 12-inch digital gauge cluster, power front seats, power-folding rear headrests, an excellent Harman Kardon sound system, a wireless charging pad, a power liftgate and a heat pump for better cold weather efficiency. Also standard is Volvo's Pilot Assist adaptive cruise control system with stop-and-go, blind-spot monitoring, lane-keeping assist, road sign recognition, a 360-degree camera system and front and rear parking sensors.\nThe C40 Recharge is available to reserve now with a refundable $500 deposit. No C40s will be stocked at dealerships as the car is only available to purchase online, a move that Volvo will use for future EVs as well. Volvo says this is achievable thanks to the C40's small options list, and while I don't have much info on the delivery process yet, it's said to be \"quick.\"\nThe C40's styling and purchase process won't be for everyone, but for design-conscious and tech-forward folk that want a solid EV, this new Volvo is a great option — and it foreshadows a lot of what's to come from the brand's more mainstream offerings.\nEditors' note: Travel costs related to this story were covered by the manufacturer, which is common in the auto industry. The judgments and opinions of Roadshow's staff are our own and we do not accept paid editorial content.\n©2021 Roadshow. Visit at cnet.com/roadshow. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line171527"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9796534180641174,"wiki_prob":0.9796534180641174,"text":"Bob Saget, ‘Full House’ Star and Comedian, Dies at 65\nBob Saget, a stand-up comedian and actor beloved for his role as Danny Tanner on the 1990s sitcom “Full House,” died Sunday at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Orlando, Fla., police confirmed to Variety. He was 65.\nShortly after 4 p.m., police officers responded to a man-down call at the Ritz-Carlton Orlando, Grande Lakes hotel and discovered Saget unresponsive in a hotel room, the Orange County Sheriff’s Office told Variety. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The sheriff’s office did not have any information on a cause of death, and detectives did not find any signs of foul play or drug use in the case. The Medical Examiner’s Office will determine a cause and manner of death at a later date.\nRead more: “Full House” stars John Stamos, Candace Cameron Bure and more pay tribute to Bob Saget.\nSaget had recently kicked off a nationwide stand-up tour in September, 2021 that was set to run through June, 2022. According to his most recent post on Twitter, Saget had performed Saturday evening at Ponte Vedra Concert Hall in Jacksonville, Fla.\n“We are devastated to confirm that our beloved Bob passed away today,” his family said in a statement. “He was everything to us and we want you to know how much he loved his fans, performing live and bringing people from all walks of life together with laughter. Though we ask for privacy at this time, we invite you to join us in remembering the love and laughter that Bob brought to the world.”\nIn 1987, Saget was cast as patriarch Danny Tanner on ABC’s “Full House,” where he played the father of D.J. (Candace Cameron), Stephanie (Jodie Sweetin) and Michelle Tanner (Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen). In the show, he raises his daughters as a single dad after the death of his wife, and he was joined by his brother-in-law Jesse Katsopolis (John Stamos) and his best friend Joey Gladstone (Dave Coulier) to run their adorably dysfunctional sitcom family. The show ran for eight seasons and 192 episodes from 1987 to 1994, reaching more than 17 million viewers during its peak in Season 5. From Season 3 onwards, “Full House” was in the Nielsen Top 30 TV shows.\nRelated: Watch Bob Saget’s Funniest Moments, From ‘Full House’ to Dirty Jokes\nNetflix launched a sequel series, titled “Fuller House,” which ran for five season and 75 episodes from 2016 to 2020. Saget reprised his role on the show in 10 episodes of the follow-up, including the series premiere and finale. The show followed D.J. as she raised her own children, and most of the original cast members, excluding the Olsens, appeared on the show.\nFrom 1989 to 1997, Saget hosted “America’s Funniest Home Videos,” showcasing hilarious homemade videos of pranks, pratfalls and cute pets. Saget was the inaugural host of the show as it started out as an hourlong special, and he kept the emcee duties for eight seasons. After he departed, the show was co-hosted by John Fugelsang and Daisy Fuentes for two seasons. Tom Bergeron took over in 2001 for a 13-year run, followed by Alfonso Ribeiro starting in 2015.\nBesides “Full House” and “AFHV,” Saget was also known for narrating CBS’ “How I Met Your Mother,” where he voiced the future Ted Mosby (Josh Radnor) telling his children the story of how he met his wife. The show ran for nine seasons from 2005 to 2014, and Hulu is set to release a follow-up, titled “How I Met Your Father” starring Hilary Duff, on January 18.\nHe directed the 1998 film “Dirty Work,” starring Norm Macdonald and Artie Lang, which was largely panned by critics and a flop at the box office but has since reached cult status among fans. In the comedy documentary “The Aristocrats,” his telling of one of comedy’s notorious jokes was noted for its raunchiness.\nHe also helmed the parody film “Farce of the Penguins,” played a fictionalized version of himself in HBO’s “Entourage,” hosted the game shows “1 vs. 100” and “Nashville Squares” and appeared on the mystery singing competition “The Masked Singer” in 2020.\nKnown for his dark, sarcastic humor, Saget’s 2014 “That’s What I’m Talkin’ About,” was nominated for best comedy album at the Grammys. He dedicated his 2007 HBO comedy special, “That Ain’t Right,” to his father, Ben Saget, who had died months earlier due to complications from congestive heart failure.\nSaget was also a board member of the Scleroderma Research Foundation and raised money to help fight the autoimmune disease. His sister, Gay Saget, was diagnosed with scleroderma and died in 1993.\nHe is survived by his wife Kelly Rizzo and children Aubrey Saget, Jennifer Belle Saget and Lara Melanie Saget.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line451043"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5920584797859192,"wiki_prob":0.4079415202140808,"text":"About Hayti Reborn\nBooker T Washington referenced Durham, North Carolina as a “City of Negro Enterprise.” When he visited in 1910, he cited the ambition and tenacity of its residents to build and grow a bustling community. When W. E. B. Du Bois came to Durham in 1912, he expressed similar sentiments, he said this area of North Carolina had an “unparalleled level of black entrepreneurship”. Unfortunately, as with many urban areas in the United States this community was not left unscathed by Urban renewal initiatives in the 1960s which had a destructive effect on Durham’s black business community, especially in the Hayti and Parrish Street communities.\nHayti Reborn is a revitalization project inclusive of the redevelopment of the community surrounding Fayetteville Street Corridor without displacing the community and while ensuring their needs are at the core of all development plans.\n“If capitalism can be fashioned around the idea of suppressing black lives, can it be refashioned around the idea of black parity? Can we create a new American way of life, and subsequently transform the world?” -Henry McKoy, Ph.D\nInterested in Learning More? Click Here.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line566295"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9307082891464233,"wiki_prob":0.9307082891464233,"text":"How Martin Luther King Inspired Nichelle Nichols to Stay on Star Trek\nAaron Savage Published: January 18, 2021\nWhen Star Trek debuted on television in 1966, it brought with it a new vision of the future and humanity's place in the universe.\nUnlike most sci-fi properties at the time, it wasn't just a show about zapping aliens and conquering the stars. It was about peaceful exploration for the sake of discovery and innovation, and about finding humane solutions to very real moral and ethical conundrums.\nSure those conundrums played out on cheesy cardboard sets that were supposed to be flashy spaceships or exotic planets, but the show was firmly rooted in the moral and political questions and crises of the time.\nHere on Earth, and in America in particular, people of color were uniting to battle systemic and cultural injustices and to demand the respect and basic dignity that should be afforded to every human being. It was a time when many people probably felt American society was tearing itself apart (sound familiar?), and Star Trek didn't shy away from issues of race and discrimination.\nBut it wasn't just the drama of episodes like \"Let That Be Your Last Battlefield\" that shined a spotlight on the absurdity of racism and how it can cost people their freedom and their lives. The mere presence of one Enterprise crew member in particular served as a way of normalizing the idea of not only women having an important role to play in humanity's future, but people of color as well.\nNichelle Nichols, who'd already made waves with her acting, modeling, and singing, was cast as Lieutenant Nyota Uhura, who served as a member of the Enterprise bridge crew. This was 1966, at a time when leaders of the Civil Rights movement were still being killed or were in constant danger simply for asking that they be afforded basic rights, and here was a Black woman not only serving on what was essentially a submarine crew in space, but acting as a respected senior officer. She was the ship's chief communications officer, as a matter of fact.\nRatings for the first season of Star Trek were respectable, but never great, and by the time Nichelle Nichols met Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at an NAACP fundraiser, she was thinking of leaving the show to pursue opportunities on Broadway.\nDr. King asked to meet Nichols at the event because, as it turned out, he was a big fan of the show. According to Nichols, he said it was the only television program he allowed his children to stay up late and watch.\nWhen Nichols told Dr. King she planned to leave the show, he convinced her that what she was doing was of vital importance, and that she couldn't leave the Enterprise.\n\"He said, 'You cannot'\", Nichols recounts in the interview below. \"He said, 'Don't you understand what this man (Star Trek creator Gene Rodenberry) has achieved? For the first time on television, we will be seen as we should be seen every day - as intelligent, quality, beautiful people who can sing, dance, yes, but who can go into space, who can be lawyers, who can be teachers, who can be professors, who are in this day, and yet you don't see it on television until now.'\"\nDr. King said that Rodenberry and Nichols had opened a door for the world to see Black people, and that the door could be closed if she were to leave.\n\"Your role is not a Black role, and it's not a female role,\" King said. \"He can fill it with anything, including an alien.\"\nNichols had recently handed Gene Rodenberry her resignation. He'd told her to take the weekend to think about it, and when she returned Monday after her encounter with Dr. King, she took it back. Rodenberry, she says, was relieved to hear the story, because he felt that at last a prominent figure had realized what he was trying to achieve with Star Trek.\nThroughout history, humans have used the stories they share with one another as a way of not only depicting the world as it is, but how we think it ought to be. In our time, Star Trek has been doing that for decades.\nNichols' role in the show not only inspired other performers like LeVar Burton and Whoopie Goldberg (who both played beloved characters in Star Trek: The Next Generation), but real life space explorers as well. Nichols formed a group called Women in Motion, which worked with NASA to recruit women and people of color into the space program. Among those recruited under her watch were Sally Ride, the first American female astronaut, and Guion Bluford, the first African-American astronaut.\nThese days, Star Trek: Discovery features the most diverse crew in the franchise's history, with a woman of color serving as the central character. While that's definitely cause for celebration, it's always worth looking back at the woman who paved the way for that spirit of inclusion and representation and the great leader who encouraged her to stick with Trek at a time when that spirit mattered the most.\nLOOK: TV Locations in Every State\nFiled Under: Martin Luther King Jr, nichelle nichols, star trek","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line478724"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5826111435890198,"wiki_prob":0.5826111435890198,"text":"Buying Homeland Insecurity\nFri 7:08 am +00:00, 6 Oct 2017\nOctober 3, 2017 – 12:24pm — lindorff\nAmerica’s $50-plus billion annual boondoggle:\nThank god for the US Department of Homeland Security!\nThanks to its $40-billion annual budget, and Homeland Security laws like the PATRIOT Act that Congress passed quickly after the horrific attacks on Sept. 11, 2001 on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, we have not had a major terrorist attack in the US in the ensuing 16 years.\nOh, wait a minute. My bad.\nWe have had some major mass murders over the ensuing years, haven’t we, including some being officially labeled “acts of terrorism.”\nThere was the sniper shootings of 10 people in suburban Washington, DC back in 2002. There was the execution of 5 Amish schoolchildren in their one-room schoolhouse by a gunman in 2006. There followed the 32 students and faculty killed at the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, the lone gunman who opened fire at an open-air meet-and-greet session hosted by Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords which killed six people and gravely wounded Rep. Giffords in 2011, the 12 killed in the Aurora, Colorado theater shooting in 2012, the Vietnamese immigrant who shot and killed 13 people in Binghamton, NY in 2009, the 20 grade-school kids and a teacher murdered in the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting, also in 2012, and the Navy contractor and former sailor who killed 13 in a Washington, DC industrial complex, the murder of 9 people in their church in Charleston, SC in 2015, and now this latest killing of over 58 people in Las Vegas. I’m just naming the big ones here, or particularly outrageous one like those that focused on killing little kids.\nThank god not one of these horrible incidents was considered an act of terrorism!\nAmerica’s biggest mass killers in the past quarter century: one, a terrorist, killed 49; the other, not a terrorist, killed 59. $50 billion a year spent on ‘homeland security’ didn’t stop either one. Both used legally purchased assault rifles\nOf course there were some at least nominally terrorist mass killings too — the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing, which killed three or four depending on whether you count the killing of a police office during the later manhunt part of the deal, the 2014 attack at Fort Hood by a deranged Army psychologist who slayed 13 people, the 2015 San Bernardino rec center attack which killed 14, and the 2016 murder of 49 at a disco in Orlando. But in most of these cases the link to organized terror was tenuous at best, and in the Orlando case in particular, which was touted at the time as the worst mass killing in modern US history (at least until this latest Las Vegas incident), the killer appears to have had no connection to ISIS and was probably just claiming a link in order to ensure that he would be killed by police, and not captured (he succeeded in that plan). We know these were acts of terrorism not just because the government calls them that, but because, well, they were committed by Muslims, which for the US government terrorism “experts” means it must be terrorism.\nThe few actual or supposed “terrorist’ attacks aside, what all these mass murders in the US not committed by Muslim terrorists have in common, along with many more that I did not list either because the number killed was less than 10, or because the cause was so mundane — worker laid off and went postal, family dispute, road rage or whatever — is that they were the work of lone usually deranged (and usually white) men using guns — and often guns designed for killing people.\nThe New York Times reports that since 2000, mass shootings and the deaths caused by mass shootings in the US have been on the rise, with the rise being especially sharp in the last six years ended in 2014 when the article was published (and when Homeland Security was supposedly fully staffed up and running like a finely oiled machine). And that rise has continued since over the next three years, especially with the help of this week’s epic Las Vegas slaughter.\nSo what has all that money spent on “homeland security” gotten us? What has the surrender of our right to private phone and internet conversation, our right to be left alone in our homes, our right not to be monitored in our travels, and our right not to have massive dossiers gathered on our lives, what has the militarization of our local police forces, and the training of cops to behave as occupiers and centurions instead of peace officers gotten us?\nAre we more safe now?\nActual terrorist attacks have occurred, or at least the government is calling them that, while most of the alleged planned terror attacks the FBI says it “foiled” have turned out to be the creations of FBI “informants” — that is, people paid and planted among unfortunate low0-wattage or psychologically vulnerable people the Bureau hoped to induce into attempting some act of terror that the FBI could then swoop in and bust up, then claiming to have saved the day. That means that for all its awesome invasive technology and its multi-billion-dollar assets and interlinked law enforcement personnel, and the simultaneous erosion of our supposedly Constitutionally protected freedoms, America’s Homeland Security Industrial Complex has been remarkably unable to prevent terrorism and mass deaths.\nAnd meanwhile, mass shootings — terrible even if they don’t get called terrorism because they are committed, for the most part, by American white men like Stephen Paddock— are becoming increasingly common and also increasingly deadly.\nTo me, it appears obvious that the War on Terror has been a spectacular bust — and not just the $40 billion a year spent on Homeland Security, but the $10 billion a year (at least) that we are told is spent on the National Security Agency, as well as a fair amount of what is spent on both the FBI the CIA, the National Security Council’s Office of Counterterrorism, and of course all the anti-terror budgets of state and local police.\nWhat is really making this country unsafe, let’s just face it, is the ready availability of really deadly firearms — let’s call them Guns of Mass Destruction (GMDs).\nThe only reason so many people died in Las Vegas is that wack-job Las Vegas mass killer Stephen Paddock was reportedly able to obtain and bring, unimpeded, into his hotel room, some 23 high-powered rapid-fire weapons, including at least one fully-automatic rifle capable of firing dozens of rounds per second, as well as tripod mounts to make them more accurate to shoot. (That’s in addition to some 19 more such weapons police found in his home and car, including, reportedly, explosives.)\nWhat’s nuts is that in some parts of this country, Nevada being one of them, guns, including military weapons, are so ubiquitous and so unregulated that the sight of someone checking into a hotel with enough deadly military weapons suitable for mass murder to fill several large golf bags wouldn’t raise an eyebrow. Heck, he probably asked at check-in for a bellhop to carry them for him. No doubt the hotel staff just figured the old duffer was headed for a gun show or was a salesman with product to show to gun dealers.\nHey, if the guy doesn’t look or dress like a Muslim, what’s to worry, right? Nice older white dude with a friendly southern accent? He should be okay.\nMaybe now that we have a case of a friendly-seeming older white guy mowing down good decent white folks attending a good-ol’ American country and western music concert, the pro-National Rifle Assn. crowd will start to re-evaluate their absolutist position on GMDs.\nMy suggestion would be not banning guns, an extremist idea which will never fly in this country and which isn’t even done in Europe, but at least registering every single weapon from its point of import, sale or manufacture until it ends up in private hands. I would make it illegal to transfer a gun to someone else without that transfer being registered with the government. I’d eliminate the gunshow loophole to registration too. I have little hope that such measures could be passed, though. There is too much political opportunism among Republicans in Congress who want that NRA money and the votes of the gun-toting yahoos of Middle America who think registration is akin to giving up their right vote (though they do want everyone to have to register to do that, suggesting that they see ballots as far more dangerous than bullets!).\nBut if we could at least limit our American-grown terrorists to single-round-per-trigger-pull weapons, and outlaw high-capacity clips that allow them to kill more than, say, five people without reloading, we’d all be a hell of a lot safer in America. At least more of us would be able to run out of a crowded area safely when an attack happens, and there’d be more opportunity for heroic types to tackle a guy who has to stop and reload all the time.\nAlso, keeping America safe wouldn’t cost us in excess of $50 billion a year for an army of spooks and federal investigators, or require the surrendering of our hard-won freedoms either, so more money could be made available for treating mental health problems. And I’m not even counting here the probably hundreds of billions a year in military spending that the public somehow accepts as being necessary to combat “terrorism.”\nWe should give it a try. It’s obvious that the Homeland Security/War on Terror approach has been a bust. It sure hasn’t provided security in the “homeland,” and, as the spread of ISIS and al Qaeda/al Nusra or whatever they’re calling themselves demonstrates, the “War” on terror has clearly been lost. (There’s another example of wasted treasure. With just a fraction of the trillion-plus dollars spent on the 16-year US war in Afghanistan to date, the US could have paid that country’s impoverished 10 million families, who eke by on an average of $400 a year, an income of $2500 a year back in 2001 for the next decade— enough to turn the country overnight into an economic powerhouse and its people from virtual serfs to a bustling middle class and into America’s BFFs.)\nWe’ll never be able to prevent the domestic American nut jobs who snap and decide they need to kill a lot of people or do enough damage to be killed by the police. But at least we could reduce the carnage they can do here at home if we made it a little harder and slower for them to cause their desired mayhem.\nSource: http://thiscantbehappening.net/node/3664?page=4","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line110774"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.536165714263916,"wiki_prob":0.536165714263916,"text":"Whoa, this sweater has a 1,000+ person waitlist. Here's why.\nSammy Nickalls Updated Oct 10, 2015 @ 3:01 pm\nSomewhere, in this big, giant world, exists a sweater. . . the sweater. The sweater that is worshipped by women everywhere for its beauty and intrigue. The sweater that has more than 1,000 people on its wait list. No, it’s not made of gold, nor does it change color to match your outfit perfectly, nor does it have a mind of its own. It’s just a perfectly ordinary, crew-neck sweater that’s just really, really darn cute.\nThe “.01 The Sweater” by Zady was introduced last fall as part of their The Essentials collection, and the Internet lost its mind. It sold out within 48 hours of the first two installments, according to Elle, and over 1,000 fans signed up on the waitlist. Costing $160, the sweater is all kinds of versatile — it is perfect for layering, but still can keep you warm if you decide to wear it all on its own. It’s not too tight, nor too loose, and can be thus worn in the office, out on the town, or as a cozy Netflix sweater.\nTBH, we get it — it DOES seem like the perfect layering sweater that’s simple, classy, and cute. Sweaters are in abundance in fall, but the *perfect* sweater is quite the holy grail indeed.\nAs you’d probably expect, it’s been sold out for some time. . . but guys, the .01 The Sweater is coming back. And soon! Tomorrow, October 11th, as a matter of fact, so you might want to set an alarm, because you can expect over a thousand people to jump on that sweater like it’s the end of the world. In fact, we can’t help but wonder if Zady has some extra tech people on their team for Sunday to make sure the site doesn’t crash from all the traffic.\nEither way, if you’ve been one of the thousand on the wait list or you just fell head-over-heels while reading this article, make sure to hit the site tomorrow and get it while you still can!\n(Image via Zady, Twitter)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line857225"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8464699983596802,"wiki_prob":0.8464699983596802,"text":"What will happen to the marine animals in Mexico City after ban?\nAlthough Mexico City has no outlet to the sea, it has long been home to marine mammals such as dolphins and sea lions. Until this month, parks like Six Flags offered shows and dolphin swim, but this will now be banned in the capital by two law reforms passed in the Legislative Assembly of the Federal District.\nThe amendment to the laws prohibits marine mammals from being used in shows or therapies with dolphins because of the proposal of Xavier López Adame, deputy of the Green Ecologist Party of Mexico, who said Six Flags should transfer four dolphins and five sea lions to other facilities in Quintana Roo and Baja California. “Dolphins are not owned by the company because they are wild animals, they are not like cows, permits are required to have such a species. It is the responsibility of the company to take care of it “, he said.\nMexico City bans dolphin shows\nAccording to the deputy, the dolphins of Six Flags belongs to the company Dolphin Discovery, which will have to transfer these nine animals to other dolphinariums. This is the only company that has the marine animals in Mexico City, so it will seek a legal exit, according to a company representative. “Our habitat in Mexico City has all the permits and authorizations that are required, so for the moment we have no position on what the assembly approved, our lawyers are evaluating the situation,” Dolphin Discovery reps stated via email.\nDolphin Discovery has 21 dolphinariums in various states of Mexico, including Quintana Roo and Baja California, where lawmakers considered optimal transfer of animals. “They have much better facilities for the simple reason that here […] in Quintana Roo and Baja California are in sea water pens,” Lopez says. The decision of the transfer, however, will be of the company under the supervision of the Federal Office of Environmental Protection in a period of three to six months.\nLast November, Profepa toured the Atlantis Water Park, closed to the public for a decade, but still with marine mammals under its care. Although they found that the facilities were suitable for three sea lions that lived there, they were transferred to Dolphin Discovery in Puerto Vallarta in February of this year. According to the communication of the unit , the water park handed them over to the authorities voluntarily.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line465611"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6358221769332886,"wiki_prob":0.3641778230667114,"text":"If the content here has enriched your life in some way, consider making a donation to help sustain the time and cost of publishing Made in Isolation. Thank you!\nMADE IN ISOLATION\nBeth Secor\n\"Art is a comfort ...\"\nRight now I mostly work in gouache on paper although in the past I have painted in oil and acrylic, and also made embroideries. I am working on a giant painting of a rabbit. It's one of a series of animals I either had as a kid, or was around during my childhood.\nHas your art making shifted in response to the pandemic? How?\nMy work hasn't really shifted much during the Coronavirus outbreak, however I have more time to paint, and it serves to calm me, as like everyone else, I feel pretty anxious.\nWhat is the role that art can play in helping us confront our new reality?\nI think it's nice for other people, as well as ourselves to see and to have something positive happening in our lives. I know a lot of people who don't normally make art or have time to make art, who are turning to it now. Art is a comfort, and it's healing, and a positive distraction.\nBeth Secor is an artist and a visual arts professor living in Houston. She has been making art since she first drew on her bedroom wall when she was two years old. See more of her work here.\n© 2022 by Made in Isolation","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1831879"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7862082123756409,"wiki_prob":0.7862082123756409,"text":"Defense Cuts Turn this Small Community into a \"Welfare Town\"\nCategories: Videos, DoD, Budget\nMany Americans may think of Washington, D.C. as the place where the majority of government employees work. In reality, more than 85% of federal workers live and work outside of the nation's capital. Those employees help power communities all across the country—like Fort Huachuca in Arizona.\nFort Huachuca and its neighboring city, Sierra Vista, have long worked together to build a thriving community. In fact, Sierra Vista's motto is \"a community, a commitment - we support the fort.\" The city prides itself on being home to active duty service members and the families that support them. Veterans who call Sierra Vista home take advantage of the good weather, numerous places to hike and a lively arts scene.\nA Community Partnership At Risk\nThe town's visitor guide says that \"the Fort and the community have accomplished a great deal and look forward to achieving even more in the future to guarantee the exceptional quality of community life that all who live here enjoy.\" The small-town charm is undeniable, but those happy days of a prosperous partnership may soon come to an end.\nThe Pentagon is planning to cut its workforce to meet the demands of a Congress focused on the draconian budget cuts known as sequestration.\n\"If sequestration continues and we start to plan for the 2020 budget cuts, there won’t be anything left here,\" said Katie Rasdall, AFGE Local 1662 President. \"It's devastating to me, it's such a beautiful place and it was such a tight-knit community and it's just getting smaller and smaller.\"\nWhile some cuts due to the drawdown of forces in Iraq and Afghanistan are understandable, the planned across-the-board cuts would undermine the Army’s ability to face future mission requirements. So far, Fort Huachuca has already lost 1,100 positions in the last year and a half.\nAFGE supports the bipartisan budget deal announced Oct. 26 that would suspend sequestration for the next two years and provide much-needed increases in military and domestic spending.\nLocal Family-Owned Businesses Face Up-Hill Battle\nThough the worst has yet to come, recent cutbacks have already set off a domino effect on all of the businesses and service providers who depend on the base and to make their own living.\n\"It's like every time I drive down there is another business going under there was a closed sign or a for sale sign out in front of it\" said Connie Smith, a 20-year-resident of the area. \"Everyone has a dream and for some people that's owning a restaurant, running a print stop - whatever it might be, that's what they want to do and a lot of them are military retirees. Well, if the town dies where are they going to go?\"\nUnless we do something to stop these cuts, communities all across America need to prepare for the worst. '\n\"We are not alone,\" said Rasdall. \"There are 27 other installations that could be facing what we're facing here.\"\nWhat can you do to stop sequestration once and for all?\nCall your lawmakers to tell them to end sequestration (Never use government resources or call your lawmakers on duty time).\nAsk your co-workers to join AFGE to grow our movement and fight these cuts.\nThe cuts, scheduled for 2016 and 2017, will mean the loss of 17,000 civilian jobs and 40,000 active duty troops — enough people to fill Madison Square Garden three times over. But it is just the beginning.\nAccording to the Army’s 2020 plan, sequestration would result in cutting another 30,000 soldiers and an even higher percentage of civilian employees, creating a recession that no local economy could survive.\nIt's unclear where the actual cuts will take place for civilian employees, because those figures have yet to be published. We do however have details where military personnel will be hit the hardest, and it doesn't take much imagination to anticipate the major civilian cuts that will likely follow.\nLocation Number of Personnel to be Cut Percentage of Total Personnel\nFort Benning -3,402 -29%\nFort Hood -3,350 -9%\nJoint Base Elmendorf-Richardson -2,631 -59%\nJoint Base Base Lewis-McChord -1,251 -5%\nFort Bliss -1,219 -5%\nContractors, Although More Expensive, Escape Major Cuts\nIt's almost a bad joke: the Pentagon claims to need to cut costs and close major installations, yet, of its three workforces— military, civilian and contractor personnel —the most expensive, contractors, has remained relatively unscathed.\n“If cutting expenses is the number one priority, then the first place DoD should target is the vast bureaucracy of contractor personnel who cost more than federal workers and are less accountable to taxpayers.”\n- AFGE National President J. David Cox\nRasdall and other members of AFGE Local 1662 continue to speak out and expose what the arbitrary cuts have done to their community. She hopes that the voices of Americans in other military communities can change the course of action when it comes to military installations like hers.\n\"This is a real eye opener for people to fight back and open their mouth to try and change what's going on,\" she said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line868741"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8964173793792725,"wiki_prob":0.8964173793792725,"text":"India: India’s biggest companies are moving away from big data and into real-time analytics\nIndia’s largest companies are making big strides towards real-timing their data analytics, with the country’s top 20 companies using technology to track sales, increase sales efficiency and drive more revenue, as per the latest survey of the industry.\nThe survey by market research firm IDC and the countrys top tech companies, including Flipkart, Snapdeal, GoPay, Uber and Ola, is the second of the year and includes the data of nearly 100,000 online consumers across 24 sectors, including commerce, IT, media, retail, healthcare and more.\nThe results, obtained by Business Line, show that online commerce is the biggest sector for which India’s top companies are now making use of the new tools.\nFlipkard is the top company in the online retail sector, which has seen its revenues rise from Rs 3,000 crore in 2016 to Rs 4,000 crores in 2017.\nWhile the total revenues of Snapdeal rose from Rs 5,000crores in 2016, it grew from Rs 2,500crores to Rs 3.8 lakhcrores during the past year.\nSnapdeal also saw a 30 per cent increase in revenue during 2017.\nThe top 20 Indian online companies using the data include Flipkarn, Snap, Ola and Omidyar Network.\nThe data also shows that online shopping has become the number one source of revenue for most of the companies in the top 20, with Flipkashart and Snapdeal taking the two biggest leads with Rs 1,000 and Rs 1 lakh, respectively.\nThe top 20 online shopping companies in India have a total revenue of Rs 4.1 lakhcrore, and revenues are growing by 30 per per cent and 30 per percent respectively in the past six months.\nFlipkyard was the number two online retail player in India, with revenues growing from Rs 1.6 lakh crore to Rs 2.8 crore in the last six months, and Olowyar had a 33 per cent jump in revenues during the same period.\nGoPay, meanwhile, is growing at the fastest rate in India with revenues rising by 40 per cent in the year to date, and the company is the number four player in the country with revenues increasing by over 40 per% in the same time period.\nThe company is also the biggest player in IT, with revenue growing by 33 per, and is now the number five player in health care, with a 36 per cent growth.\nUber, meanwhile saw its revenues increase by 27 per cent during the last year, while Ola’s revenues grew by 40 percent.\nThe Top 20 online retailers in India include Snapdeal (Rs 3,800 crore), Flipkall (Rs 1,900 crore), Snapdeal Paytm (Rs 800 crore), Ola (Rs 750 crore) and Omo (Rs 500 crore).\nThe top 10 online retailers globally are Amazon (Rs 9,300 crore), eBay (Rs 8,200 crore), Facebook (Rs 6,500 crore), Twitter (Rs 5,300 per share) and Pinterest (Rs 4,600 per share).\nHow do you keep up with all the latest news from the American news portal?\nWhy do some people still need to use a prescription for painkillers?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line611481"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5278892517089844,"wiki_prob":0.4721107482910156,"text":"Which music stores have a new HFT coupon database?\nHFT is a term used to describe a financial transaction that allows an individual or company to buy or sell a specific commodity at a higher or lower price than would otherwise be possible.\nThese transactions can be conducted online or at physical retail stores.\nA few months ago, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) announced it had launched a database to help consumers spot HFT scams and to help prevent consumers from losing valuable data in the process.\nBut now, it appears the FTC may be making some changes to the system in a bid to protect consumers.\nIn a recent report, the FTC noted that the HFT system may have created “significant” vulnerabilities in the data it holds about consumers.\nFor example, the system allows companies to track the number of times an individual has visited certain sites and the type of search term they used.\nIn the report, FTC Deputy Director Julie R. Naughton noted that HFT was not designed to provide any “financial incentive” for businesses to use the system.\nInstead, the “incentive is to help them maximize profits by making money from the HFA transaction.”\nFor example, if you purchase a CD for $30 on Amazon.com, Amazon may pay you a commission for the sale of the CD.\nHowever, if the CD is returned to Amazon.co.uk for a refund, the retailer will receive the CD back.\nIf the refund is made after the CD has been returned to the seller, Amazon.ca will pay a fee, which is usually between 0.1 and 0.3 percent.\nIf the return is made by a third party, the company will pay the buyer a commission of between 0 and 1.5 percent.\nIn some cases, the third party may also pay an administrative fee for processing the refund, although it is not clear how much.\nAccording to Naughson, the commission system allows HFT to make a profit.\nShe said, “The problem is that this system does not reward those who are most productive, so the incentive for those who can generate the most money goes to the companies that have the best algorithms.”\nThe FTC also noted that this incentive system does create “significant risks for consumers.”\nAccording to the FTC, HFTs could “inhibit the discovery of fraud or other misconduct by preventing them from learning about the use of this fraud protection scheme and potentially allowing them to circumvent the rules to commit fraud.”\nIn the case of a “corporate data breach,” a company could potentially be liable for up to $1 million in fines and a civil penalty of up to one percent of a company’s profits.\nThe FTC report did not address whether or not other states have begun to take steps to protect against HFT.\nHowever the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) announced last year that it is launching a data breach response program.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line884048"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5875211358070374,"wiki_prob":0.41247886419296265,"text":"An Essential for Every Pastor: Being a Man of the Word (Titus 1:9)\nDavid Huffstutler | September 21st, 2020 | 0 Comments\nTitus 1:6–9 is a key passage for determining who may or may not be a pastor in a church. Titus 1:6 describes how a pastor leads his family, and Titus 1:7–8 describes his character. Titus 1:7 lists five character traits that a pastor should not have, and Titus 1:8 lists six that he should. In the Greek, Titus 1:9 continues the sentence from Titus 1:7–8 and assumes the imperative verb “must” (dei) to give us a seventh positive requirement for the pastor: “He must hold firm to the trustworthy word as taught, so that he may be able to give instruction in sound doctrine and also to rebuke those who contradict it.”\nWe could generally sum of Titus 1:9 with this—a pastor must be a man of the word. More specifically, we could explain this verse with four statements.\nA pastor has been taught the trustworthy word.\nNew Testament Greek sometimes uses whole prepositional phrases to describe a noun. Literally put, a pastor must be “holding fast to the according-to-the-teaching trustworthy word.” So, when Titus 1:9 requires that a pastor hold fast to the word, it’s a word that is described in two ways. It is according to the teaching, and it is trustworthy. And if it is according to the teaching, the pastor himself has been taught this word so as to be able to hold fast to it and teach it himself. Churches and their pastors should teach men who are able to teach. Bible colleges, seminaries, and institutes can aid this teaching, but however it is done, a pastor is someone who has been taught the trustworthy word.\nThe phrase “the trustworthy word” uses the same Greek words (pistos, logos) that Paul uses in the Pastoral Epistles when he says “This saying is trustworthy” (1 Timothy 1:15; 3:1; 4:9; 2 Timothy 2:11; Titus 3:8). These “sayings” always refer to a summary statement about the gospel or to a statement about the one who proclaims it. These passages show us that the “trustworthy word” is the gospel that leads sinners to salvation in Christ and to subsequent life of godliness.\nSimilarly, Paul commends Timothy as a “good servant of Christ Jesus” for teaching the brothers in that which he had been trained, “the words of the faith,” a phrase which uses these words again (1 Timothy 4:6). Timothy was an example of someone who preached the trustworthy word because he was trained to do so. Like Timothy, pastors must know this trustworthy word inside and out and all of its related doctrines as best they can. A pastor is someone who has been taught the trustworthy word.\nA pastor holds firm to the trustworthy word.\n“Hold firm” is technically a participle, an “-ing” kind of word in the English. Mentioned earlier, the main verb of Titus 1:7–9 is “must,” so the pastor “must” be “holding firm.” This same verb (antechō) is used to describe one being “devoted” to a master (Matthew 6:24; Luke 16:13) and how we should “help” the weak (1 Thessalonians 5:14). It literally means to “hold against” one’s self whatever the object may be. As Titus 1:9 demands, a pastor must firmly hold the trustworthy word to himself. By doing so, he will save himself and his hearers (cf. 1 Timothy 4:15–16).\nA pastor instructs in sound doctrine.\nTo fully understand this point and the next, we should note that a pastor will not be “able” (dunatos) to instruct in sound doctrine or rebuke those who contradict unless he first holds firm the trustworthy word. The two small words “so that” indicate that one action leads to two others—the pastor holds firm the trustworthy word “so that he may be able” to “give instruction” and “rebuke.” A pastor cannot instruct something that eludes his grasp, let alone know how to rebuke someone who is contradicting.\nThe translation “give instruction” is an interesting choice for the ESV since it is the only one of 109 instances of parakaleō to be translated this way. To be fair, parakaleō has a range of translations, shaped by context, varying quite a bit—comfort, urge, beg, invite, ask, appeal, exhort, entreat, plead, and encourage. So, when the action of parakaleō involves “sound doctrine,” it would mean at the least to “give instruction,” but these other choices are not far behind. “Sound doctrine” comes from the Lord Jesus Christ (1 Timothy 6:3), “follows… the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus” (2 Timothy 1:13), and thus “accords with godliness” (1 Timothy 6:3). It opposes sin (1 Timothy 1:10; cf. 1:9–10), rebukes sinners (Titus 1:13), and cannot be endured by those who are ruled by their passions (2 Timothy 4:3). Thus, sound doctrine must be instructed and exhorted, and those who hear it should be urged, invited, and asked to submit thereto.\nA pastor rebukes those who contradict sound doctrine.\nA pastor who is taught, holds firm, and instructs the word of God will be opposed by unbelievers. In Titus’s context, some of these unbelievers professed to know God, upset families in the churches, used the church for personal gain, and needed to be silenced through rebuke (Titus 1:10–16; cf. 1:9, 13). Titus was to do so “with all authority” (Titus 2:15) and avoid those who persisted in strife (Titus 3:10–11; cf. Romans 16:17–18; 2 John 10–11). Titus was to name the sinner and the sin, just as John the Baptist did with Herod for his unlawful marriage “and for all the evil things that Herod had done” (Luke 3:19).\nTitus 1:9 is just one verse, but it teaches much about how a pastor is to be a man of the word. A pastor must have been taught the word, hold firm thereto, and instruct others in sound doctrine. When opposed, the pastor must rebuke those who contradict. May God help all of us as pastors and Christian leaders to live according to Titus 1:9.\nAbout David Huffstutler\nDavid pastors First Baptist Church in Rockford, IL, serves as a chaplain for his local police department, and teaches as adjunct faculty at Bob Jones University. David holds a Ph. D. in Applied Theology from Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. His concentration in Christian Leadership focuses his contributions to pastoral and practical theology.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line718563"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7684110999107361,"wiki_prob":0.7684110999107361,"text":"House of Bribes: How the United States Led the Way to a Nuclear Iran\nPosted on October 3, 2015 by Baron Bodissey\nEarlier this year the Qatar Awareness Campaign produced an extensive report on the Islamic infiltration of American public life, The Betrayal Papers (Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, and Part 6). The New Coalition of Concerned Citizens is an outgrowth of that earlier project. Its latest report investigates the corrupt process by which the American nuclear deal with Iran was put together. The authors deserve our gratitude for going public with their important research.\n“I think that the American companies will be welcomed in Iran… This is not a game for junior companies, and I call juniors anything below a billion-dollar market cap. This is a big-money game.”\n— An American Portfolio Manager, July 2015\nThe Iranian nuclear deal is a full capitulation to Iran’s terrorist mastermind Mullahs, and the latest in a series of betrayals of the American people and allies by the Obama administration. At the highest level of the administration, Barack Obama’s Senior Advisor, the Iranian-born Valerie Jarrett, prioritized rapprochement with the terror state. Throughout the process and negotiations, she had the backing of billionaire investor (and Obama-backer) George Soros, and his multi-headed network of tax-exempt foundations. Their efforts were driven by deep-rooted anti-Semitism and personal greed. Meanwhile, since the mid-1990s, a small but very connected Iranian lobby (funded, in part, by George Soros) has been laying the groundwork for normalizing relations with Tehran. Operating through a variety of non-governmental organizations and political action committees, the lobby courted Democrat and Republican politicians. With the election of (Soros-backed) Obama in 2008, the Iranian lobby had very receptive ears in the White House. International business interests were courted and effectively bribed with access to Iranian markets, until finally the deal was realized, approved, and sealed by a vote of the United Nations Security Council.\nThus far, the reports and exposés issued by the New Coalition of Concerned Citizens have focused on the threat posed by Islamists to American sovereignty. The Qatar Awareness Campaign brought to light extensive influence network of the State of Qatar and their ruling al-Thani family. The Betrayal Papers explained the Muslim Brotherhood’s domination of the Obama administration’s agenda and policies, foreign and domestic.\nThis report will detail the sinister influence of the small, yet well-connected and very powerful, Iran lobby. Though the Iran lobby’s highest level contacts are prominent Democrats, their reach spans both major political parties. Like previous exposés, this investigation will mention familiar names, including George Soros, Valerie Jarrett, and the United Nations.\nIran is widely regarded by counterterrorism experts as the heart of Islamic radicalism, and the point of origin for terrorism with a specific geopolitical agenda (i.e., the creation of an Islamic Caliphate, much like the Islamic State, but dominated by Shiites, not Sunnis). With the eager embrace of a legacy-hungry Obama administration, the Iran lobby managed to achieve a deal which makes the United States the de facto most powerful backer of Islamic terrorism in the world.\nSince its 1979 Islamic revolution, Iran has been the epicenter of Islamic terrorism throughout the region and the world. Immediately following Ayatollah Khomeini’s return to Tehran from France and ascension to power, Iran took American hostages at the embassy in Tehran. In 1983, Iranian terror proxy Hezbollah bombed the Marine barracks in Beirut, killing 307, including 241 American servicemen. In 1994, Iran’s proxy Hezbollah bombed a Jewish center in Buenos Aires, killing 85 and wounding more than 300. Sponsors of both Hamas and Hezbollah, a New York court found that Iran materially supported and directed Al Qaeda in the 9/11 attacks.\nIn the decades since the Islamic Republic came into existence, Tehran has proved eager to embrace terror, partnering with various factions around the world. Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, translated the work of the Muslim Brotherhood’s leading author and theorist, Sayyid Qutb, into Persian, proving that Sunnis (Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, Al Qaeda, etc.) and Shiites (Iran, Hezbollah) will gladly cooperate in terrorizing the West.\nToday, Iran’s presence in Latin America is also strong. In countries such as Venezuela, Mexico, Peru, and Argentina, Iranian-backed Islamic terror cells work hand-in-hand with drug cartels. The tri-border region between Paraguay, Argentina, and Brazil is Hezbollah’s main hub in South America. Terrorists, cartels, and organized crime “move liquor electronic goods, cocaine, refugees, even babies” across the region’s three frontiers. Following the 1992 and 1994 bombings in Buenos Aires, western intelligence tracked Islamic terrorist activity to the tri-border region. Today, although intelligence continues to operate in the area, the criminal activity is so rampant that local authorities rarely interfere.\nPartnering with South American cartels and organized crime provides a revenue source for terror, while increasing Iran’s strategic footprint in our southern hemisphere. It also highlights a unique problem related to the non-enforcement of security on America’s southern border.\nThe Trailblazers: Namazi & Nemazee\nThe Iran lobby of today appears to have its origins in the work of two individuals. One of those individuals is Baquer Namazi, who heads a central and critical Iranian non-governmental organization (NGO). Namazi’s son, Siamak, co-founded the National Iranian-American Council (NIAC) with Trita Parsi, who was a consultant to Republican Congressman Bob Ney of Ohio.\nThe other individual is Hassan Namazee, who was a major political fundraiser, especially (but not exclusively) for Democrats. He is now serving a prison sentence after admitting guilt in committing bank fraud.\nBaquer Namazi and Hamyaran — Corruption and Influence through NGOs and the United Nations\nIn 1998, elements within the Iranian government, Iranian NGO community, and international organizations (including the United Nations) formed the NGO Hamyaran. It was conceived as, and operates as, an “umbrella” NGO for all other Iranian state-connected NGOs.\nAs one source explains:\nIn addition to monitoring and controlling the Iran’s NGOs, Hamyaran is charged with channeling all contacts and relations of the NGOs with the international organizations and the UN. Under the supervision of the government, Hamyaran is also charged with creating communication channels with the Iranians living in the US.\nIn a word, Hamyaran is Tehran’s organization to police and propagate the pro-Iranian (and thus pro-Mullah) message within the United States, and more broadly to the West. It does this under the auspices of the United Nations.\nSince Hamyaran’s founding in 1998 by Dr. Hossein Malek-Afzali, a high ranking Iranian government official who at one time served in President Ahmadinejad’s cabinet, the NGO has been co-led by Malek Afzali and Baquer Namazi.\nLike Malek-Afzali, Baquer Namazi is closely tied to the government in Tehran. Baquer was previously the governor of the province of Khuzestan, in addition to holding multiple other high level positions in the government. He has also held positions with the United Nations, including being a Member of the Advisory Panel of U.N. Center for Regional Development, Nagoya.\nNamazi’s son, Siamak, founded the International Association of Iranian Managers (I-AIM). The organization is dedicated to recruiting high-powered “Iranian elites” in the United States.\nSiamak’s partner in I-AIM, Ali Mostashari, was a strategic advisor to the Assistant Secretary General and Director of the Regional Bureau for Africa at the United Nations Development Program. He has been accused by reporters of directing U.N. funds into Iran for his own benefit and the benefit of the ruling Mullahs.\nSiamak Namazi, with Republican consultant Trita Parsi, founded the National Iranian-American Council. It is arguably the primary lobbying arm of Tehran in Washington, D.C.\nLike many of the Obama administration’s other scandals, it is clear from the facts above that the United Nations was used to supersede American law and sovereignty. Furthermore, in keeping with the trends of Obama scandals, several tax-exempt NGOs were central to the plan. This points to an inept, if not complicit, I.R.S.\nHassan Nemazee & Iranian- American PAC (IAPAC): Democrat Fundraiser Extraordinaire\nIf Baquer Namazi, his son Siamak, and their associates cemented the relationship between the Iran lobby and United Nations, Hassan Nemazee[1] was the Iran lobby’s man in the Democrat Party. Before admitting to bank fraud in 2010, Nemazee was a star fundraiser for top Democrats.\nIn 2008, Nemazee served as one of Hillary Clinton’s national fundraising chairmen when she was running against Barack Obama in the Democrat primary.\nNemazee was eventually credited by the Obama campaign with helping raise $500,000, following Clinton’s defeat in the primary. He donated an additional $50,000 to Obama’s inauguration committee.\nAlso in 2008, Nemazee donated $9,200 to Biden for President Inc.\nIn 2007, Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY) was the featured guest speaker at IAPAC’s annual New York City reception.\nIn 2006, Senator Chuck Schumer asked Nemazee to serve as finance chairman for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Nemazee raised $119 million, helping to retake the Senate for Democrats and installing Harry Reid as Senate Majority Leader.\nIn 2004, Nemazee raised $500,000 for Democrat nominee (and current Secretary of State) John Kerry. Kerry, of course, was the lynchpin in securing the Iranian nuclear deal.\nIn 2000, Nemazee donated $50,000 to the Gore-Lieberman Recount Committee.\nHassan Nemazee (right) with Terry McAuliffe\nYet Nemazee’s influence was not limited exclusively to the Democrat Party, and neither is the Iran lobby’s influence in general. He and his partner, Alan Quasha had a history of giving to Republicans, too.\nBefore joining with the Clintons, Nemazee gave to Republican senators, including: Jesse Helms (R-NC), Sam Brownback (R-KS), and Alfonse D’Amato (R-NY).\nNemazee was represented in his fraud case by attorney Marc Mukasey, son of former Attorney General Michael Mukasey, who was appointed by President George W. Bush in 2007.\nIn the 1980s, Namazee’s business partner, Alan Quasha, provided George W. Bush a spot on the board of his oil company, Harken Energy.\nQuasha is a decidedly bipartisan donor: he gave to Bush and Gore in 2000, to Mitt Romney and Rudy Giuliani, and Barack Obama and Chris Dodd in 2008.\nHassan Nemazee was on the board of the Iranian-American Political Action Committee (IAPAC) until 2009. Public disclosures of IAPAC highlight the bi-partisan nature of their enterprise; from 2008-2014, it gave significantly to Republicans and Democrats.\n» 2014 Total Spent: $87,668 Democrats: 63% Republicans: 37%\n» 2008 Total Spent: $395,852 Democrats: 52% Republicans: 48%\nSource: OpenSecrets.org\n(See here for more information related to IAPAC campaign contributions; also available on a per-candidate basis. A full list of IAPAC endorsed candidates can be found on their website, here.)\nNote that the greatest sum of money was spent by IAPAC in 2008, the year that Barack Hussein Obama was elected to the Presidency. He brought with him his Iranian-born advisor, Valerie Jarrett.\nNational Iranian-American Council (NIAC)\nThe Iranian lobby that convinced Washington to thaw relations with the world’s most prolific state sponsor of terror evolved out of the work of Baquer Namazi and Hassan Nemazee, as well as the guiding hand and money of George Soros.\nThe National Iranian-American Council (NIAC) is the primary conduit for Tehran’s lobby efforts in Washington, D.C. NIAC managed to pressure the U.S. government to subordinate international security and stability to narrow corporate interests, access Iranian markets, and the revenues that it can potentially provide.\nLet’s take a closer look at one of NIAC’s co-founders, Siamak Namazi.\nSiamak Namazi — Background Information\nSon of Baquer Namazi. Family is close to Iranian regime; in particular, they are a core part of the (former president) Rafsanjani faction within Iran.\nCo-founder of NIAC with Trita Parsi.\nWorks for family company, the Iranian-based consultancy called Atieh Bahar Consulting (AB). The consultancy serves as a facilitator for outside business interests looking to enter the Iranian market. It does so by brokering relationships with key officials and Iranian powerbrokers.\nCurrently the Head of Strategic Planning at the United Arab Emirates Crescent Petroleum. Gulftainer, which, like Crescent Petroleum, is owned by the Crescent Group, recently acquired a long-term lease of Port Canaveral for container operations. It is in the immediate vicinity of a nuclear sub pen, a USAF base, and NASA.\nThe Namazi family business, Atieh Bahar Consulting, depends on foreign business interest in Iran to generate revenues. Their work is done with the blessing of Tehran, and thus they are in good graces with the Islamic Republic and its ruling Mullahs.\nFollowing first President Clinton’s sanctions on Iran, and then the nuclear issue, American business was blocked from entering the Iranian market. Siamak needed a way to circumvent Clinton’s sanctions. He found an academic partner in Trita Parsi, who also brought his critical experience as a Washington-based political consultant.\nSiamak Namazi\nIn 2002, Siamak Namazi, son of Baquer, co-founded the National Iranian-American Council (NIAC).\nHis partner in this new enterprise was Trita Parsi, an Iranian Swede, then employed as a political consultant to Congressman Robert Ney (R-OH). (Note: In 2006, Ney pled guilty to corruption charges related to the lobbyist Jack Abramoff, and served 17 months in prison.)\nBeginning in 1997, Parsi systematically convinced Ney to lobby for the normalization of Iranian diplomatic and economic relations. He did this through his original organization, Iranians for International Cooperation (IIC).\nIn the words taken from a document prepared by Parsi himself:\n“The first achievement of IIC can be traced back to the summer of 1997 when Trita Parsi worked as a political consultant for Congressman Robert Ney of Ohio. Congressman Ney was at the time a proponent of the US’s isolation policy of Iran and had contacts with the Mujahedine Khalq terrorist organization. Mr. Parsi was hired to consult the Ohio Congressman on his policy vis-à-vis Iran, and persuade him to reconsider his position in favor of a pro-dialogue, pro-engagement policy.”\nLike Hamyaran, which is at the center of the Iranian NGO web, NIAC is at the center of the Iran lobby’s web. It serves as a magnet for Iranian Americans who are sympathetic to Tehran, and in many cases have a financial interest in normalizing relations.\nNIAC’s Influence in the United States\nNIAC has approximately 5,000 dues paying members, and access to tens of thousands of additional fellow travelers. The below profiles some of NIAC’s most accomplished associates.\nTrita Parsi — In addition to the information above, Trita Parsi has courted the leading presidential advisors, Republican and Democrat, including those to George W. Bush and Barack Hussein Obama. In 2003, Trita had Congressman Ney present a “grand bargain” to Karl Rove from the Iranian government. Parsi is a practical VIP in the Obama White House, reportedly consulting with Valerie Jarrett and advising both the State Department and the CIA.\nReza Marashi — A former employee of AB Consulting, Marashi found employment with the Institute for National Strategic Studies at the National Defense University, which functions as a think tank for the Pentagon. Later he worked for the Office of Iranian Affairs at the U.S. Department of State “as a desk officer overseeing Iran democracy and human-rights programs.”\nSahar Nowrouzzadeh — A top advisor to Obama on Iran policy, Nowrouzzadeh is National Security Council director for Iran at the White House. Prior to this position, she worked at the State Department and Department of Defense.\nOf course, NIAC propagandists like Marashi and Nowrouzzadeh had a more than friendly audience in the Obama administration: they had a White House willing to finish their work for them. The whole history of the administration showcases Obama’s and Valerie Jarrett’s infatuation with Iran.\nPrior to the 2008 election, the Obama team dispatched former ambassador William G. Miller to Iran, informing the Mullahs that they would get a better deal once Obama was in office.\nObama ignored the revolutionary Green Movement in 2009, and let the Iranian government kill and imprison the reform-minded protestors.\nHillary Clinton, Secretary of State at the time of the Green Movement’s uprising, was advised by Trita Parsi not to support the protesters.\nJohn Kerry’s son-in-law’s best man at his daughter’s wedding is the son of Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, the Iranian’s main negotiator in nuclear talks.\nMinutes from a 2007 NIAC Board of Directors meeting make it clear that NIAC was in contact with and supportive of Hassan Nemazee’s lobbying efforts. From the minutes:\n“Goli Ameri initiative and the creation of PAAIA with Hassan Nemazee and others… Trita mentioned key Silicon Valley’s IA’s as having contributed… and expressed admiration for Goli Ameri’s fundraising ability… Kami wondered whether we could ask PAAIA to join us in the ‘stop the war’ cause.”\nFinally, as if it was written in the stars that the Obama administration would usher in an Iranian nuclear regime, Valerie Jarret was born in Shiraz, Iran, in a hospital named after Hassan Nemazee’s father.\nTrita Parsi\nNIAC Action — NIAC’s New Political Action Committee\nIn the opening weeks of the controversy over the Iranian nuclear deal this year, NIAC launched its own political action committee. A 501(c)(4) organization (i.e., tax exempt), NIAC Action “aims to direct money from the Iranian-American community, which is relatively well-off compared to other immigrant groups, toward more concerted political activism.”\nFrom his earliest days as a pro-Iranian activist, Trita Parsi was deeply impressed by the American-Israeli Political Action Committee (AIPAC). Perhaps the clearest indication of the pro-Iranian lobbyists’ awe of the Israeli lobby was the name chosen to be AIPAC’s Iranian counterpart — IAPAC (mentioned above).\nNIAC Action is “explicitly meant to counter the influence of AIPAC.” Minutes from the 2007 NIAC Board of Directors meeting convey NIAC’s near obsession with the Israeli lobby:\n“Trita clarified the fact that AIPAC does not debate — they are all-action and only move forward with their clear agenda. Alex raised the fact that AIPAC is successful in some measure because they operate ‘under the radar’ and employ the axiom ‘don’t do it publicly.’ ‘A lobby is a night flower’ quote was mentioned by Trita as another example of how to lobby effectively.”\nIndeed, the origins and thinking of the Iran lobby have been anti-Israel, and anti-American, from the outset.\nThe Open (Iranian) Society of George Soros\nBillionaire investor and political manipulator George Soros played a significant role in shaping and funding the Iranian lobby. As in the Arab Spring, Soros deliberately sided with the most extreme elements in Iran, who, like the Muslim Brotherhood, also happen to be the most anti-Semitic.\nSoros, whose wealth from investing and hedge fund management exceeds $20 billion, has used his political influence to affect political “change” in multiple countries. For example, in Ukraine, he has funded NGOs going back to the Cold War. In Egypt, he was instrumental in ousting long-time American ally Hosni Mubarak, and beginning the so-called Arab Spring.\nLikewise, Soros has funded, and supported otherwise, various organizations that have been influential in opening Iran to the West.\nIn 2006, the National-Iranian American Council (NIAC), led by Trita Parsi, received $50,000 from Soros’s Open Society Institute.\nIn 2009, NIAC received $125,000 from the Open Society Institute, and an additional $25,000 from its foundation, the Foundation to Promote Open Society.\nMinutes from a 2007 NIAC Board of Directors meeting indicate that Parsi spent a weekend strategizing with Steve Clemons (spelled “Clemence” in linked document) of the Soros-funded New America Foundation. They discussed how to counter the $75 million that the U.S. government had allocated to support regime change in Iran.\nNIAC hosted Ambassador Thomas Pickering to lead a panel discussion on “finding the nuclear fix,” a reference to Iran’s standoff with the West. Not only is Pickering a trustee at Soros’ International Crisis Group, but he helped cover up the Benghazi scandal, and has ties to the Council on American-Islamic Relations (a Muslim Brotherhood front organization).\nIn June 2015, Pickering argued on NPR that the Iranian nuclear deal was good policy.\nSoros and the National Endowment for Democracy\nMoreover, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) is known to be closely associated with George Soros. It also funded NIAC.\nIn 2012, documents released by a Malaysian press outfit detailed receiving grants from the National Endowment for Democracy. Evidencing the corruption that Soros money brings to media, a former news editor of the outfit had resigned a decade earlier because of the NED’s relationship with Soros.\nSimilarly, NED’s connection to Soros and various “color revolutions,” which have occurred since 2000 (e.g., Georgia’s 2003 Rose Revolution and Ukraine’s 2004 Orange Revolution), caused Russia to ban the NED this summer.\nNED is technically a private institution that receives an annual appropriation from the U.S. Congress through the State Department. Many speculate it is also funded privately by Soros.\nIn 2002, shortly after NIAC was formed by Trita Parsi and Siamak Namazi, the National Endowment for Democracy expedited an application for grant money to NIAC.\nNIAC is estimated to have received approximately $200,000 in grants from the NED.\nNIAC’s spent the NED grant money on sending two NIAC members to work with Baquer Namazi’s Hamyaran, the Iranian government’s umbrella NGO. Allegedly NIAC was teaching Hamyaran to use “computer based digital media.”\nThe Ploughshares Fund\nThe Ploughshares Fund, an international charity, characterizes itself as “a global security foundation. [Ploughshares] support[s] experts and advocates who implement smart strategies to secure a more peaceful world, including one free of nuclear weapons.”\nThe Ploughshares Fund describes the Iranian nuclear deal as “a major advance for global security.” Joe Cirincione, its president, is quoted as saying on July 14, 2015:\n“This is a very good deal. It is a major victory for American national security. We have a once-in-a-lifetime chance to stop Iran from building a nuclear bomb, without putting a single U.S. soldier in harm’s way.”\nThe Ploughshares Fund, besides being a strong proponent of the Iranian nuclear deal, is a Soros-funded operation, with several key connections to American policy makers, and NIAC.\nFormer Secretary of Defense under Obama, Chuck Hagel (a Republican), was on the Board of the Ploughshares Fund when nominated by Obama. (He joined Ploughshares in 2009.) Ploughshares applauded his nomination to Secretary of Defense.\nOne of the primary advocates of the Iranian nuclear deal for the Obama administration is Robert Creamer. The Wall Street Journal reviewed a transcript of a conference call hosted by Ploughshares, which quoted Creamer as saying: “The other side will go crazy. We have to be really clear that it’s a good deal.”\nAccording to Aaron Klein at WND, “a primary Ploughshares donor is the Tides Foundation, a money tunnel in which leftist donors provide funds to finance other radical groups. Tides is itself funded by Soros.”\nOne of Ploughshares other benefactors is Soros’s Open Society Institute.\nThe Ploughshares Fund has partnered with other Soros-funded and anti-Israel groups including Code Pink, the Institute for Policy Studies, and the U.S. Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation.\nFormer CIA covert officer Valerie Plame, who accused President George W. Bush of outing her in an attempt to intimidate, was hired by Ploughshares Fund in September 2015. In fact, it was Undersecretary of State, Richard Armitage, who, while serving under Colin Powell, “outed” Plame. The manufactured scandal was used to smear and discredit President Bush, who, at the time, was trying to counter Iran’s influence in Iraq.\nPowell has come out in support of the Iranian nuclear deal: his support is touted by Ploughshares.\nFinally, a recent attack piece on one of the deal’s critics provides additional evidence of Soros’s determination to seal the deal. Media Matters, a Soros-funded operation, published a weak retort to an exposé in The Daily Beast. Among other claims, it attempts to dismiss the overwhelmingly obvious connection between the Namazis and NIAC.\nOn more than one occasion (see here and here), Soros has used his relationship with the American government for his own financial benefit. Opening Iran, with the world’s second largest natural gas reserves and fourth largest oil reserves, could prove a windfall for businesses with the right political connections.\nIs it Soros’s greed that caused him to support this deal? Is it his anti-Semitism? Perhaps, most likely, it is the twisted intersection of both.\nMartin Indyk: The Soros-linked, Foreign-funded Salesman for the Iranian Deal\nAmbassador Martin Indyk has served as U.S. Ambassador to Israel twice (April 1995 to September 1997 and January 2000 to July 2001), appointed both times by President Bill Clinton. In July 2013, when Indyk was at the Brookings Institution, Obama appointed Indyk to be Washington’s special Middle East envoy for the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. Indyk has been a vocal critic of Israel — to the point of being insulting — and one of the strongest voices in favor of the Iranian nuclear deal.\nIndyk is the Executive Vice President at the Brookings Institution and a founding director of the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at Brookings (located in Doha, Qatar).\nThe President of the Brookings Institution is Strobe Talbott, a friend and advisor of George Soros who has interviewed him on the War on Terror.\nIn September 2014, The New York Times ran a story about the influence of foreign governments on American think tanks. The Brookings Institution was one of their focuses.\nIn March 2013, Indyk was a panelist at the Soros-funded Center for American Progress. The topic of the discussion was U.S. policy in the Middle East.\nIn 2013, while Indyk was serving as Obama’s special envoy, the Brookings Institution accepted a $14.8 million check from the State of Qatar, a known backer of Hamas in Gaza.\nIndyk has a history of degrading and insulting comments directed at Israel. He has used the analogy of the United States as a “circus master” who “crack[s] the whip” and gets Israel and other countries in the Middle East to “move around in an orderly fashion.”\nHe has also justified terrorist violence against Israelis, calling it “a plausible safety valve” through which Palestinians can “vent their anger.”\nOn the topic of the Iran nuclear deal, Indyk has written a pro-deal position paper for Brookings, the most influential think tank in Washington, D.C., (Parts One and Two). Calling for collaboration with the terror state as a means to avoid war, Indyk writes, “Without an agreement, it is impossible to imagine cooperation with Iran on regional issues… With an agreement, collaboration… becomes possible.”\nAmbassador Martin Indyk with John Kerry\nThe folly of engaging a soon-to-be nuclear terror state notwithstanding, Indyk proved that he was completely uninterested in the Israeli perspective (which is driven by self-preservation) through an interchange with the former Israeli Ambassador to the United States, Michael Oren. Following the release of Oren’s book, in which he criticized the Obama administration, Indyk penned a critical review for Foreign Affairs. He then verbally sparred with Oren on CNN. Throughout, there is little indication that Israeli and regional (e.g., Jordanian, Saudi Arabian, Egyptian) security concerns figure into Ambassador Indyk’s thinking.\nValerie Jarrett — The Puppetmaster\nPresident Obama’s Senior Advisor is the Iranian-born Valerie Jarrett. It was Jarrett who, when working for Mayor Richard Daley in Chicago, first introduced a young Michelle Robinson to Barack Obama. Ever since then, her influence over the first couple is legendary. Likely as a result of this domineering influence, other Presidential advisors do not trust Jarrett, nor appreciate her voice in Obama’s ear. In the words of one former administration official, other presidential advisors “think she’s a spy.”\nReinforcing this view of Jarrett, Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT), says in regard to Jarrett “She seems to have her tentacles into every issue and every topic… Her name ultimately always comes up.”\nThe Iranian deal is no exception to the rule:\nIn 2012, news broke that Valerie Jarrett had been acting personally as an emissary to Iran. According to the Israeli newspaper Yediot Ahronot, Jarrett held meetings with Iranian officials in Bahrain over a period of several months.\nA month prior to the report in Yediot Ahronot, an unnamed source reported that negotiations between Iran and the United States had occurred in Doha, Qatar. (Note: Doha is the home of the Muslim Brotherhood’s spiritual leader, Yusuf al-Qaradawi. It is also where the Taliban opened an embassy in 2013.) In hindsight, it is very likely Jarrett was the American representative at these talks.\nFormer Secretary of Defense, Robert Gates, wrote in his memoir that Jarrett (as well as other advisors such as David Axelrod and Robert Gibbs) “[has] a role in national security decision making that I had not previously experienced.”\nJarrett has earned the menacing nickname “Night Stalker” because of her exclusive, regular visits to the White House’s private residence after dark.\nMaj. Gen. Paul E. Vallely (Ret.) believes that Valerie Jarrett is responsible for the purge of top-level military commanders over the last several years.\nJarrett comes from a family of spies, subversives, and aspirational totalitarians. The FBI had a lengthy file on Jarrett’s father, James Bowman, because he was a Big “C” Communist. Bowman, for example, was in communication with the paid Soviet agent, Alfred Stern.\nJarrett’s grandmother, Dorothy Taylor, was an early activist with Planned Parenthood. Planned Parenthood’s founder was eugenicist Margaret Sanger, who published in her magazine Birth Control an article submitted by Ernst Rüdin, founder of the Nazi Society for Racial Hygiene. The pseudo-science of “racial hygiene” was the Third Reich’s way of justifying their policy of exterminating “undesirables” — the Holocaust — including Jews, Slavs, Gypsies, homosexuals, etc. (More on Jarrett’s family available here.)\nWho is really pulling the strings?\nThe elusive and mysterious Jarrett, dubbed by The New Republic as “The Obama Whisperer,” undoubtedly found a willing partner in George Soros to help realize her dream of normalizing relations with Iran, thus paving the way for Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. Soros has provided the financial and organizational means to Jarrett, who controls the President of the United States of America. Together, the two of them leveraged the Iranian lobby as a counterweight against Israel. Throughout the ordeal, Jarrett’s puppet responded expertly as his strings were pulled.\nIn the haunting words of Jarrett herself, regarding Obama, “We have kind of a mind meld… And chances are, what he wants to do is what I’d want to do.“\nOr else….?\nComplicity of the GOP\nAlthough the preponderance of the responsibility for the Iranian nuclear deal rests with the progressive left, especially with Barack Obama, Valerie Jarrett, and George Soros, it behooves recounting the key ways in which Republicans have helped make this disastrous deal a reality.\nDisgraced Republican Representative Robert Ney helped Trita Parsi to establish the National-Iranian-American Council. Indeed, without Ney and his connections to the establishment (including Karl Rove), it is difficult to conceive how Parsi would have been able to succeed in founding NIAC.\nSeveral Republican members of Congress have accepted campaign donations from the Hassan Namazee-connected IAPAC (see above).\nObama-appointed Secretary of Defense, Republican Chuck Hagel, was a board member of the Ploughshares Fund, and thus connected to George Soros and various pro-Islamic organizations.\nFinally, as Andrew McCarthy points out, The Boeing Company is one potential big winner in the deal. They’re also a big GOP donor. Updating even a fraction of Iran’s commercial airline fleet would be a huge contract. Specific language was included in the final deal to allow U.S. aircraft manufacturers to sell to Iran, likely to benefit Boeing. (It is worth noting here Boeing’s massive contracts with the terror-finance center of Qatar.)\nMitch McConnell and John Boehner control Congress, and therefore the power of the purse. This gives them far more than the ability to merely throw sand in Obama’s gears. If they had the will, the Iranian deal could have been stopped by threatening to defund Obama’s agenda, period.\nInstead, McConnell lamely surrendered and Boehner passed a series of useless resolutions designed to make the Republican base feel good. Symbolic votes, however, will not stop Iran.\nThe Republican-controlled Congress put on a decent show for voters, but has done nothing, and apparently has no intention, to stop this disastrous agreement from becoming accepted American policy.\nSellout of Sovereignty to International Business Interests\nA few words should be included here on the legal and commercial nature of the Iranian nuclear deal. The deal’s highly abnormal formulation (not technically a treaty, not strictly a U.N. agreement) creates a number of new paradigms that suggest American sovereignty was not even a thought among the negotiators. Indeed, it is not even clear that American companies stand to gain much from the deal, in comparison to their European, Russian, and Chinese counterparts.\nInstead of a traditional treaty, which requires ratification by the U.S. Senate, this deal is a complex of U.N.-centered agreements, overlapping with bi-lateral agreements.\nDue to the deal’s unusual structure, the Senate was basically powerless to stop it. (To defeat it, Congressional Republicans could have used political guerilla tactics, such as defunding Obama’s agenda.) This impotence was reinforced once the U.N. Security Council blessed the deal shortly after it was agreed upon by the negotiating parties.\nThe agreement included secret “side deals” that were not presented to the Senate. Included in the deal’s provisions are guarantees for business that, regardless of Iran’s compliance with the agreement, companies would be allowed to continue to do business with Iran. The agreement also severely limits Congress’s ability to re-impose sanctions on Iran.\nAlmost immediately after the deal was complete, Russia announced that it lifted a ban on the sale of a sophisticated missile system used for air-defense.\nLikewise, China announced that they would sell Iran 24 J-10 fighter jets. The value of the deal is estimated at $1 billion.\nEurope is eager to embrace the newly legitimated Iran. Germany, France, Italy, Britain, Austria, Spain, Poland, and Sweden all have plans for Iranian business.\nAccording to one U.S.-based portfolio manager: “I think that the American companies will be welcomed in Iran… This is not a game for junior companies, and I call juniors anything below a billion-dollar market cap. This is a big-money game.”\nYet, strangely, U.S. sanctions on the Iranian regime will remain in force:\n“After years of painstaking negotiations and at great political cost, the Obama administration has created a means for foreign businesses to re-enter Iran—but U.S. law still sidelines all but the biggest American multinationals.\nEven in the case of big U.S. corporations with foreign subsidiaries, any U.S. citizen employed by an overseas unit would likely be prohibited from participating in transactions with Iran unless granted permission by the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Asset Controls, experts said.”\nIn effect, the deal secures Iranian markets for foreign companies, while American firms still face complex legal and regulatory hurdles should they choose to engage the Iranian market.\nConsequences/Conclusions\nThe information presented above demands that certain observations are called out, and conclusions drawn.\nValerie Jarrett, John Kerry, and George Soros have used Barack Hussein Obama and the Presidency to legitimize Islamic terror. Their plans were helped along by a patient and methodical domestic Iranian lobby.\nThe United States government, in particular the White House and Congress, are deeply corrupt. The representatives of the American people put a higher value on personal profit and reelection than they do on national security and the security of America’s allies. According to a recent Gallup poll, a full 75% of Americans see “widespread corruption” in their government.\nThe sovereignty of the United States has been sold to the international highest bidder. Congress no longer serves as an effective check on treaty-making. The U.S.A.’s foreign policy is now largely directed by the United Nations, which is, in turn, dominated by the 57-state Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC).\nThe Obama administration seems to be more interested in the profitability of foreign companies as opposed to domestic companies. Indeed, a reasonable reading of events indicates that Obama viewed foreign business interests as his best allies in securing the Iran nuclear deal.\nIAPAC (Iranian-American Political Action Committee) donated the most money to political candidates in 2008. This was certainly to ensure the election of Barack Hussein Obama.\nFrom the beginning, the bi-partisan Iranian lobby was tied to Tehran, the United Nations, and George Soros.\nThe United States’ reputation is now tied to that of Iran, the most prolific state sponsor of Islamic terror. Unless a military strike cripples the Iranian nuclear facilities, the terror regime will very soon have nuclear weapons with which to strike Israel, the Gulf region, Europe, and any other enemy within range.\nFinally, while it is impossible to predict the future, a few outcomes appear almost certain as a result of the deal.\nWar is more, not less, likely — the arms race has already begun in the region, beginning with a $1 billion deal agreed upon in September between the United States and Saudi Arabia.\nThe United States has lost the trust of Israel. Russia is filling the American vacuum in the Middle East and Africa (i.e. Egypt, Libya, etc.).\nAmerica’s traditional Gulf allies, who view Iran and their designs for regional hegemony with great trepidation, are rethinking their alliance with Washington. The ice is melting fast, and previously unthinkable alliances and/or cooperation at various levels are taking place.\nPolitical Islam is fully legitimized, rather than reformed to be peaceful. Obama’s acquiescence of Tehran is in direct contrast to his harsh treatment of Cairo, and the reform-minded Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.\nRegardless of who the next American President may be, what will he or she do to rectify this world class nuclear debacle?\nHouse of Bribes: How the United States led the way to a Nuclear Iran is a product of the New Coalition of Concerned Citizens. Contributors are available for interviews to interested radio shows and television programs.\nAdina Kutnicki\nDr. Ashraf Ramelah\nCharles Ortel, Denise Simon\nDick Manasseri\nGary Kubiak\nHannah Szenes\nRight Side News\nMarcus Kohan\nGeneral Paul E. Vallely\nRegina Thomson\nScott Smith\nTerresa Monroe-Hamilton\nColonel Thomas Snodgrass\nWallace Bruschweiler\nWilliam Palumbo\n1. Namazi and Nemazee: A Note on Names. It may be that Namazi and Nemazee are different transliterations of the same Persian name. One internet source suggests that ‘Nemazee’ was the spelling of the name for branch of the family residing in Hong Kong. Indeed, the Nemazee family was in China and involved with the opium trade. Though the authors make no claim at a relationship, the possibility seems plausible given the same phonetics and overlapping relationships, interests, and objectives regarding Iran’s relationship with the United States.\nThis entry was posted in Arab Spring, Civil Liberties, Counterjihad, Domestic terrorism, Enrichment, Holy War, Legal action, Media, Middle East, National defense, News, PC/MC, Politics, USA by Baron Bodissey. Bookmark the permalink.\n15 thoughts on “House of Bribes: How the United States Led the Way to a Nuclear Iran”\nmax denken on October 3, 2015 at 10:04 pm said:\nWhy is this not on the front page of the NYT? WaPo? HuffPo? NBC nightly news? Reuters? AP? Yahoo? How can this whole vehicle survive the road hazards if its brakes, headlights and wipers have been rigged not to respond to inclement weather?\nDymphna on October 3, 2015 at 10:35 pm said:\nBecause Soros.\nPeople think he’s (a) not “that” bad; and (b) couldn’t be “that” powerful.\nSoros is the personification of fathomless evil and he likes that.\np.s. Go here: http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/individualProfile.asp?indid=977\nAnonymous on October 4, 2015 at 10:43 pm said:\nSee my comment below. I think that Wiki entries tend to help marginalize certain groups and their findings.\n“Conservatives” really need to pay more attention to this!\nBig Frank on October 3, 2015 at 10:56 pm said:\nMy Goodness! I was mistaken I always was lead to believe that the Saudis ‘owned’ DC, it looks like the Iranians outbid them. This is sickening deceit and treachery at the highest level. We have become a ‘banana republic’ selling out to the highest bidder.\nI have always maintained that Ms. Jarrett is our ‘Dear Leader’s’ Rasputin.\nDiMu on October 4, 2015 at 11:06 am said:\nThis confirms my deepest suspicions! It’s always about the money! Tehran has one of the strongest stock exchanges in the world and the financiers have been salivating to get back in there.\nHuman rights is only an issue when it can be used to vilify enemies of the government, domestic or foreign, or at least pretend to.\nThe nexus of global finance, Post-Modern liberalism, science as the obedient servant of Power and the need for draconian measures to stabilize the rebellious youth population bulges (Arab Spring) of Second and Third World nations so that the global empire can be secure in its investments (by incarcerating them in the biggest world prison – the EU), is what will create the nightmare of the 21st century.\nI doubt Middle Class society will survive. We’ll be reduced to Muslim over-lorded wage-serfs.\nmanatthepub on October 4, 2015 at 12:35 pm said:\nWith hardly any effort made to keep it hidden. Hubris.\nAnonymous3 on October 4, 2015 at 1:37 pm said:\nKissinger.\nNemesis on October 4, 2015 at 8:06 pm said:\nKissinger has always been a mentor to those at the Council on Foreign Relations/Bilderbergs, and to ‘receptive’ Presidents.\nDiMu on October 4, 2015 at 2:12 pm said:\nMuslims are given Georg Soros’ book ‘W2EU’ (Welcome to Europe) BEFORE they embark on their invasion!\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRMlSjqEVNQ\nAnonymous on October 4, 2015 at 3:22 pm said:\nWikipedia’s entry for Coalition for Concerned Citizens:\n“The Coalition of Concerned Citizens was a New Zealand Christian conservative pressure group, and one of several attempts to form pro-censorship, anti-abortion, anti-gay and sex education opponents into a comprehensive social conservative political coalition. Its founders included Keith Hay, Peter Tait, Barry Reed, and Bill Subritzky.[1]”\nIs is the same group? If so, then it’s no wonder it’s not getting front page news in the mainstream media.\nIf it’s the same group, someone should see to the re-writing of the wiki entry. I can’t find a NEW Coalition of Concerned Citizens online; maybe I didn’t look hard enough.\nWilliam Palumbo on October 21, 2015 at 4:15 pm said:\nThe Wikipedia entry you mention is unrelated to the group that published the paper. We are a group of Americans who research and publish information related to national security, Islamic infiltration, and terrorism.\nYou can see our “About” page here:\nhttp://usatransnationalreport.org/wp/new-coalition-of-concerned-citizens/\nMark H on October 4, 2015 at 3:50 pm said:\nIt would be interesting to know whether Iranian-born, UK based atheist, communist and anti-sharia activist Maryam Namazie is related to those with similar names above. Her biography on Wiki & elsewhere is silent about her family background.\nMinor disclaimer: I’ve attended a couple of demos in London where she was involved, against gender segregation in lectures at UK universities, and the Law Society’s issuing guidance to solicitors on how to give advice to clients regarding sharia/secular law. Both causes were eventually won, but I claim no credit!\nA powerful piece that lays bare the pure evil of those who live for greed, power and the ultimate control of the citizenry.\nacuara on October 4, 2015 at 11:06 pm said:\nwith most of the governments of the world broke, in debt, corrupt, or all of the above, it is no wonder that corporations that have the billions necessary to effect their will are stepping in to fill the void. Maybe that was the idea all along. I am beginning to this that the events of 75-80 years ago was either a dress rehearsal or a case study to learn what methods would work and which would not in the takeover and control of the world. No, the narrative we are given about World War II is simply that, a narrative. The truth is far scarier. We had a glimpse of its monstrous reality with Johnson and Nixon and the forces that supported them. I rather think that all of this is the end game. God help my grandchildren.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line956847"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5468029975891113,"wiki_prob":0.45319700241088867,"text":"The miracle for which she is blessed\nThe Congress of Doctors in Rome was on November 23, 2017 where an inexplicable cure was approved.\nOn the afternoon of May 22, 2008, Mr. Jorge Treviño, through the prayer made to the Lord through Conchita's intercession, was inexplicably cured of a general paralysis that he had, which did not allow him to move, walk, etc ... Paralyzed, practically the next day he walked out of the San José hospital in Monterrey, NL.\nOn March 1, 2018, the Congress of theologians of the Congregation for Causes approved that the miracle was through the intercession of the Venerable Servant of God, and in the Ordinary Congress of Cardinals and Bishops on June 5, 2018, they approved the aforementioned and presented it to the Pope for the promulgation of the decree that speaks of such a miracle.\nSuch decree has been issued on June 8, 2018, Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. The exact date of the Beatification, which will be celebrated in Mexico City next year, has not yet been specified.\nConchita's History\nConchita Armida was born on December 8, 1862, in San Luis Potosí, she was the seventh of twelve siblings. She was born on the feast of the Immaculate Conception of Mary, hence the origin of her name.\nFrom a very young age, she was very devoted to Jesus and she loved teaching people how to read, and catechizing the poorest. She married Francisco Armida with whom she had 9 children, despite being a mother and wife, her devotion was never diminished. One day while in spiritual exercises, she heard, clearly and without hesitation, a voice that said: Your mission is to save souls. All her longing was to belong to the Lord. He engraved the Holy Name of Jesus on his chest, a new and great feeling made her exclaim: \"Jesus, savior of men, save them.\"\nGod and his family\nAll life she lived for Jesus and her family, even though her husband dies and faces very adverse economic situations throughout her life, at all times she kept her faith in God who at all times helped her and allowed her to leave ahead.\nInspirator of the works of the Cross\nConchita was the inspiration for the five works of the Cross: Apostolate of the Cross (1894), Religious of the Cross of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (1897), Alliance of Love (1909), Fraternity of Christ the Priest (1912), and Missionaries of the Holy Spirit (1914). After a while Conchita also lost her children, loneliness began for her and with it the last stage of her life. She had God who would never leave her alone. Her spiritual directors ordered her to write down all the communications she received from God. This is how she wrote several books. Conchita's fecundity was prolonged, not only in her blood family and in her writings, but also in her spiritual family. From her spirit live the five Works of the Cross, nine Religious Congregations, and Pastoral Movements.\nThe Works of the Cross were inspired by Conchita Armida, she received many communications from God and it is from these communications that all these works were developed. The Works of the Cross are part of her legacy and are the greatest example of her devotion to God.\nApostolate of the Cross\nFounded in 1895, it's the first branch of the Works of the Cross, it's characterized by being open to all the Christian faithful who seek to live their baptismal consecration.\nReligious of the Cross of the Sacred Heart of Jesus\nFounded in 1897, it is made up of consecrated contemplatives who dedicate their lives to the perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.\nCovenant of Love with the Sacred Heart of Jesus\nFounded in 1909, the members are called to consecrate themselves to the Father in union with Christ, Priest, and Victim, in a constant offering of their secular life.\nFraternity of Christ the Priest\nFor bishops, priests and deacons, founded on January 19, 1912.\nMissionaries of the Holy Spirit\nFounded in 1914, although it is the last of the works, it is the one that animates the rest. The Missionaries of the Holy Spirit, priests, deacons, and coadjutor brothers, live and share in the community the Spirituality of the Cross in its total consecration through their religious vows and apostolic action.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line25382"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.907711923122406,"wiki_prob":0.907711923122406,"text":"50.50: Investigation\nUS groups linked to COVID conspiracies pour millions of ‘dark money’ into Latin America\nSome Christian right groups have denied that coronavirus cases exist – while others have claimed the virus was deliberately made by China. Español.\nIsabella Cota Diana Cariboni\n29 October 2020, 8.55am\nA satirical poster of President Jair Bolsonaro saying COVID-19 ‘is just a flu’ in Brazil, where US-linked groups have also denied the virus exists.\nCris Faga/NurPhoto/PA Images\nHalf a dozen US Christian right groups have poured millions of dollars into Latin America and have promoted misinformation about COVID-19 and other health and rights issues, openDemocracy can reveal today.\nThese groups are part of a bigger number of twenty Christian right groups that have spent at least $44 million of ‘dark money’ into Latin America since 2007. Several of them are linked to President Trump’s administration.\nNone of these organisations disclose the identities of their donors or details of how exactly they spend their money in Latin America. Many do not mention their Latin American operations on their websites.\nOne group has called COVID-19 “the most monumental social engineering and ideological... effort in history”. The leader of another group also sits on an anti-China lobby group with former Trump adviser Steve Bannon – and claims that coronavirus was man-made in a Chinese lab.\nAt least three of these US groups have attacked the World Health Organisation (WHO) during the pandemic, claiming for instance that it is “using COVID-19 to spread abortion”. The Trump administration announced earlier this year that it would halt US funding to the global health body.\nTwo groups have also supported anti-abortion projects across Latin America that have been accused of using “deception and manipulation” against vulnerable women. Another organisation has funded a controversial app that employs “misleading” advice to discourage the use of contraception.\nAll of these US groups promote a strict vision of a “traditional family” against abortion and LGBT equality. Latin America already has some of the world’s highest rates of adolescent pregnancies and murders of LGBT people; many rights advocates say these groups are aggravating the situation.\nAlejandra Cárdenas, from global advocacy group Center for Reproductive Rights, said these findings “prove a manipulation we’ve been seeing for years by the US Christian right in Latin America and Africa, meant to break the social fabric and human rights protections that popular movements fought for”.\nThese groups “use the Global South as a laboratory for misinformation campaigns,” she said, with “incalculable costs for lives and well-being.”\nSenator Humberto Costa from the Brazilian Workers Party added that “these findings confirm that there is an international network behind orchestrated actions to misinform and attack specific groups with hate messages.”\nCOVID-19 conspiracies\nIn February, as coronavirus infections began to swell globally, a veteran US anti-abortion activist claimed that the virus was created in a Chinese lab as a bioweapon and then released, either intentionally or accidentally. President Trump has also shared this theory.\nThe activist is Steven Mosher. He directs a US group called Population Research Institute (PRI), which has published an online book in English and Spanish claiming that China’s fabrication of the virus has the “clear intention… of radically modifying the known world through social engineering”.\nMosher also sits on the board of an anti-China lobby group that he co-founded with Steve Bannon, Trump’s former campaign director. Bannon was earlier this year charged with fraud over a fundraising campaign to build a wall between the US and Mexico. He has denied these charges.\nPRI has spent more money in Latin America than it has anywhere else in the world, outside the US – more than $1 million between 2008 and 2017. While it is not one of the biggest spenders in the region, it appears to be one of the most active.\nAmong its activities, PRI says it has trained staff of CitizenGo, a Spain-based global conservative group that has links to far-right parties across Europe. PRI trained CitizenGo “in the use of political strategy tools, communicational and scenario analysis”, and PRI’s Latin America director, Peruvian Carlos Polo Samaniego, is also on the board of CitizenGo.\nPolo is accused by his son, LGBT rights activist Carlos Polo Villanueva, of having taught him to manipulate the results of an online survey about the legalisation of abortion in Peru.\nHis son told openDemocracy: “I was ten or twelve years old, and my father asked me if I wanted to help him with his job. He put me in front of a computer, saying ‘you vote here against abortion, then go to cookies, disable cookies, return to the webpage and vote again. Do it as many times as you can’.”\nPolo’s son also claimed that Catholic and evangelical schools pushed their students to attend the “marches for life” that his father and other ultra-conservatives organised. He said: “I marched against abortion as a child because our school took roll calls. I was forced to march in 2009 and 2010.”\nPolo did not deny his son’s accounts when asked about them by openDemocracy. He said: “Obviously, there are a lot of differences between the points of view of LGBTI activists and PRI’s. LGBTI activists are free to express their views. I know what my son Carlos thinks. I love him as a son and respect him as a person, despite our conflicting opinions. PRI defends and promotes the freedom of expression for all peoples”.\nIn April, CitizenGo launched an online petition to “defund” the World Health Organisation, alleging that it uses public money to “promote Communist China's false COVID information” as well as to “teach masturbation to children from ages 0 to 4… and force doctors to perform sex reassignment surgery on children”.\nAnother one of the groups analysed by openDemocracy is the American Society for the Defense of Tradition, Family and Property (TFP), which has disclosed spending at least $2.7 million in Latin America since 2007.\nFounded in 1960 in Brazil as an anti-communist, Catholic network, its US branch has called the ongoing coronavirus crisis “the most monumental social engineering and ideological... effort in history”.\nA Brazilian member of the TFP network has published articles denying the existence of COVID-19 cases in Rio de Janeiro and claiming that coronavirus mortality figures have been “inflated and manipulated” by the media and politicians to fuel “fear and hopelessness”.\n“With the justification of fighting the virus, the church and the good people are persecuted,” said one of the articles published by TFP’s Instituto Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira in Brazil, referring to temporary closures of churches in the country – which currently has the world’s second-highest number of COVID-19 deaths, after the US.\nCárdenas, from the Center for Reproductive Rights, said: “The public must know who is behind these campaigns, and understand their alignment with political causes. Why are they interested in weakening public health protection systems, like the WHO? What benefit can be drawn from it?”\n\"Misinformation is instrumental to the Latin American right-wing tactic of dismantling rights,” added Thiago Amparo, law professor at educational institute Fundação Getulio Vargas of São Paulo. “Being funded transnationally, these misinformation tactics function as disruptive tools in the region’s democracies.\"\n“We are not behind or aware of any campaigns and certainly deny wanting to weaken or take any actions against public health”, the American TFP group told openDemocracy. It added that the articles published by its “autonomous sister organisation” in Brazil “are not official statements” from the group.\nOne of the articles was authored by a Catholic priest that is not a member of TFP, it said, and the other is a commentary on government statistics.\nMisleading women about reproductive health\nThe president of the US Catholic conservative group Human Life International has also claimed that the WHO is “using COVID-19 to spread abortion”.\nThis group has spent $2.3 million in Latin America since 2007. Together with another US anti-abortion group, Heartbeat International, it supports a network of ‘crisis pregnancy centres’ that have been accused of misleading and manipulating Latin American women, as openDemocracy revealed this year.\nAnother US group, the World Youth Alliance (WYA), has spent a more modest $640,000 in Latin America – but it has also been involved in activities condemned for “misleading” women about their health. It is promoting a controversial fertility app (the FEMM app) that dissuades women from using birth control and emergency contraception, claiming it is dangerous.\nIf a user asks the FEMM app specifically for information on contraception, it says it doesn’t provide this as “artificial means” of preventing pregnancy “can be detrimental to a woman's health by suppressing hormone function. Hormones are needed in sufficient levels to promote optimal health in the body”.\n“The app is clearly misleading,” said Grazzia Rey, associate professor of gynaecology at Uruguay's University of the Republic, “as it circumvents the scientific evidence provided by the WHO and Uruguay’s ministry of health guidelines, on the efficacy and security for all contraceptive methods.”\nIf a user says they want to avoid pregnancy, the app tells them to abstain from sex completely or on days when they are most fertile. Anita Román, president of Chile’s Midwifery Society, said such ‘fertility awareness’ methods “have a high margin of insecurity,” while sexual abstinence “is unnatural.”\nIn a “training course” from WYA’s sister group FEMM, which created the app, a Catholic gynaecologist from Chile claimed that young women take birth control “not because they don’t want to have babies, but because they want to be beautiful”. (A study by the US Guttmacher Institute found that 86% of women use contraceptive pills primarily to prevent pregnancies.)\nSpending not disclosed\nGlobally, openDemocracy found that 28 US Christian right groups have poured at least $280 million into activities around the world since 2007 – led by their spending in Europe (almost $90 million).\nHowever, this data underestimates the US Christian right’s influence and spending internationally. Money sent via churches, or groups registered as ‘church affiliates’, for example, is not included in the total because these organisations are not required to publicly disclose their spending.\nThis content is not shown because we don't have your consent to use cookies. You can check your cookie settings here or...\nAllow 3rd party cookies\nThe Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA) is the biggest spender in Latin America, spending at least $21 million in the region between 2007 and 2014, plus almost $10 million in Mexico and Canada. It’s led by the late American televangelist’s son Franklin Graham – an outspoken supporter of President Trump who said that God was behind the 2016 election.\nGraham – who called the cancellation of his festivals in Europe due to COVID-19 “spiritual warfare” – was also in Russia last year meeting a Kremlin official who is under US sanctions, on a trip that he said was personally signed off by Trump’s vice president Michael Pence.\nAfter 2014, the BGEA stopped disclosing its financial information as it obtained a reclassification as an “association of churches”.\nFocus on the Family, the second-largest spender in Latin America ($6.2 million between 2008 and 2018), offers online shows, podcasts and counselling in Spanish with the message that homosexuality is “not normal” and trans identity is a “disorder and has to be treated”.\nThis group’s founder James Dobson has spoken out against Trump’s impeachment and celebrated his anti-abortion and pro-Israel positions. In early 2020, Jenna Ellis, who once worked for Dobson, was appointed Trump’s campaign legal advisor.\nCárdenas, from the Center for Reproductive Rights, accused all these groups of working “to break down the entire human rights protection system, which is their hidden and ultimate goal”. She said: “I hope this investigation is widely shared and helps us to open eyes at their full agenda.”\n‘To break down the entire human rights protection system, is their hidden and ultimate goal’\nIn response to openDemocracy’s questions, Polo at PRI said the group “complies with the US and Peru’s laws” and that all their financial information was “publicly registered and available to any citizen, as is established by law”.\nHe said that Facebook’s removal of PRI director’s Steven Mosher’s article – on the origins of COVID-19 – was later reversed, “without explanation, proving that censoring Steven Mosher publication was an error beyond any doubt.”\n“We are in full compliance with US law in what we disclose or not disclose” the American TFP told openDemocracy. About LGBT rights it said: “Our position is that of the Catholic Church, which calls homosexual acts a grave sin.”\nBGEA told openDemocracy that was reclassified as an association of churches because it had been operating in that way “for years, as virtually everything BGEA does is in cooperation with churches” – and because such registration offers groups more protection from government interference.\nFiling non-profit disclosures had become “increasingly onerous”, it added, though it “continues to submit to an independent financial audit each year and posts a consolidated financial statement on its website for public review.”\nFocus on the Family said: “We believe in the inherent worth and value of every individual, which is why we so passionately support policies designed to strengthen families all across the world.”\nHLI, WYA and CitizenGo did not respond to openDemocracy’s requests for comments.\nPublished in: 50.50\nIs American democracy on the brink of collapse?\nWritten by: Chrissy Stroop All articles by: Chrissy Stroop\nPublished in: Podcasts\nDance and despair for India in memory of murdered journalist Gauri Lankesh\nChina’s government is targeting ‘sissy’ men, with devastating consequences\nWritten by: Xintian Wang All articles by: Xintian Wang\nAshling Murphy’s murder must bring change to Ireland\nWritten by: Una Mullally All articles by: Una Mullally\nView all in 50.50\nGet 50.50 emails Gender and social justice, in your inbox. Sign up to receive openDemocracy 50.50's monthly email newsletter.\nTracking the Backlash\nUS Christian Right","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1142792"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5606343150138855,"wiki_prob":0.4393656849861145,"text":"Indiana All Destinations\nExplore Indiana\nIndiana Tours\nAll Indiana Tours\nThings to do in Indiana\nHard Rock Cafe Indianapolis Tours & Tickets\nChildren's Museum of Indianapolis Tours & Tickets\nLucas Oil Raceway Tours & Tickets\nChildren's Museum of Indianapolis\nLucas Oil Raceway\nHard Rock Cafe Indianapolis\nA top children’s museum, the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis contains five floors of whimsical, interactive exhibits ranging from a dinosaur habitat to a journey through contemporary China. Learning experiences abound, whether your child is playing an astronaut in Beyond Spaceship Earth or digging up the Treasures of the Earth.\nIndianapolis is home to the Indy 500 race, and there is admittedly no shortage of great racing tracks in the city. The Lucas Oil Raceway, situated just outside the downtown area, is considered one of the top special event auto racing facilities in the world. It has three separate tracks, including a paved oval track, a quarter mile drag strip, and a 2.5 mile long course. The speedway hosts more than 100 auto racing events each year, including major NRHA events.\nEach season brings a little something different, both testing new race types and continuing established traditions. The high quality and maintenance of the track ensures that the desired high speeds can be reached as safely as possible. The grandstands and drag strip tower allow for maximum visibility of the races by spectators. Many of the world’s top race car drivers have participated in races here.\nServing up classic American fare alongside some of rock and roll’s top music memorabilia, the Hard Rock Cafe Indianapolis sits at the heart of downtown in the historic Morrison Opera House building. It’s in a central and fun area of the city, always drawing in a lively crowd. Their menu includes appetizers such as nachos, wings, and potato skins and tasty entrees that range from burgers and sandwiches to barbecue. Vegetarian options are also available.\nThe cafe also has two large event rooms, a dozen large screen televisions, a full bar with premium cocktails, a fun atmosphere, store, and of course, great music playing. Memorabilia on display rotates but includes musical instruments and stage costumes played and worn by the greatest musicians in rock and roll. With music, sights, and flavors, the Hard Rock Cafe is always a feast for all the senses.\nMore Tours in Indiana\nThings to do near Indiana\nThings to do in Illinois\nThings to do in Cleveland\nThings to do in Minnesota\nThings to do in North Carolina","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line295337"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7489833831787109,"wiki_prob":0.25101661682128906,"text":"Daniel Radcliffe Reveals Who He’d Want to Play in a ‘Harry Potter’ Reboot\nScreenCrush Staff Published: August 2, 2021\nDaniel Radcliffe is and forever will be associated with the role of Harry Potter. But Daniel Radcliffe is now — and this is going to be upsetting, so you might want to make sure you’re sitting down before you read this — 32 years old. If the Harry Potter series were ever rebooted in the 2020s, another actor would have to play Harry Potter. (Motion capture is good, but it’s not that good.)\nSo who would Radcliffe play in a hypothetical Potter reboot instead of Harry? He had an answer to that question for the Happy Sad Confused podcast (via TheWrap). He said:\nI would probably want to go with like, Sirius or Lupin. Those were always the two characters that I was like ‘They’re great.’ And also like, I’m obviously biased by my experience of filming those scenes, with those people, and they’re like some of my favorite memories.\nThat does not mean a reboot is happening. Nor does it mean you should expect Radcliffe to pop up in the upcoming live-action Harry Potter series that’s reportedly in development at HBO Max. And it apparently doesn’t mean you should expect some sort of grand celebratory reunion of Radcliffe and the rest of the original Harry Potter cast this year for the 20th anniversary of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. (Yes, the first Harry Potter is 20 years old. Hopefully you were still sitting down when you read that.) Radcliffe has already said he’s going to busy filming different roles throughout the rest of the year. “I’m sure there will be some sort of celebration,” he said last month, “but I don’t know if we will be getting together or anything. I’m sorry if that’s a bit of a disappointment to anyone.” The world really is in a sorry Mugglish state these days.\nThe Most Influential Movies of the 21st Century\nSource: Daniel Radcliffe Reveals Who He’d Want to Play in a ‘Harry Potter’ Reboot\nFiled Under: Daniel Radcliffe, harry potter\nCategories: Movie News","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line619142"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7204479575157166,"wiki_prob":0.27955204248428345,"text":"(-) Clear (585)\nMedicine & Health (492)\nNeurosciences (455)\nRehabilitation (16)\n(-) Semantic Web (15)\n(-) Computer Sciences (6)\nLabs (3)\nLD Connect (1)\nSemantic Web Journal 10-Year Award 2021\nAmsterdam, NL – We are pleased to announce that the winners of the Semantic Web journal's 10-year award 2021 are Matthew Horridge and Sean Bechhofer.\nCurrent Global Environmental Law and Policy Are Failing, Experts Say\nAmsterdam, NL – On the eve of the 50th anniversary of the 1972 Stockholm conference that created the United Nations Environmental Programme, it is clear that...\nIOS Press Announces the Relaunch of LD Connect\nAmsterdam/Santa Barbara – IOS Press, an international publisher providing content and services for scientific, technical, and medical (STM) communities, is...\nSecond Edition of the Classic Handbook of Satisfiability Just Published\nAmsterdam, NL – IOS Press is pleased to announce the publication of the second edition of the classic Handbook of Satisfiability. Originally published in 2009...\nComputer Science Professor funded by NSF for Open Science Research Project\nManhattan, KS, USA – Open science is the movement to make scientific research and data accessible to all, with an end result of sharing this knowledge through...\nTowards FAIR Principles for Research Software\nThe most viewed article in Data Science in the first half of 2020 focuses on FAIR principles in relation to research software. The position paper analyzes where...\nSemantic Web Outstanding Paper Award 2018 Announced\nThe recipients of the Semantic Web journal's Outstanding Paper Award 2018 were announced at the International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC) in Monterey, CA...\nIOS Press Publishes Inaugural Issue of Open Access journal Data Science\nAmsterdam, NL – IOS Press is proud to announce the publication of the first issue of Data Science, a new interdisciplinary peer-reviewed open access journal...\nThe winners of the Semantic Web journal Outstanding Paper 2017 have been announced at the International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC) in Vienna, Austria.\nSemantic Web Journal gets its First Impact Factor\nThe first Impact Factor for our Semantic Web journal has been released by Thomson Reuters.\nELPUB Scientometrics Portal Launched\nIn convergence with the 20th anniversary of the International Conference on Electronic Publishing (ELPUB) , a scientometrics installation was created to...\nTen years of Applied Ontology: Special issue now online\nIOS Press is happy to announce the tenth anniversary Special Issue of Applied Ontology.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line796976"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7483211159706116,"wiki_prob":0.7483211159706116,"text":"War Without End, Alas\nIt’s Not Over\nNobody in America wanted to spend generations fighting terrorists, but that’s what it’s going to take.\nAaron David Miller\nUpdated Apr. 14, 2017 12:24PM ET / Published Jan. 16, 2015 12:20PM ET\nGoran Tomasevic/Reuters\nIn 2013, there were 16 Americans killed in terrorist attacks around the world, according to State Department figures. In the same time period, 33 Americans died here at home when lightning struck them. Such numbers should make it clear that terrorist violence in and of itself does not present an immediate strategic threat to the United States. Indeed, since 9/11 there hasn’t been a single successful attack by a foreign terrorist organization on American soil.\nBut last week’s attacks in Paris and the disruption of another plot in Belgium on Thursday night show, all too tragically, that the danger must not be trivialized.\nThe fact is, we are living in an age of jihadi terror. And the threat and likelihood of more attacks will be with us for years to come.\nPresident Obama has said that we will “ultimately defeat ISIL,” the self-declared Islamic State also known as ISIS. Back in 2013 the president went so far as to suggest that that the war on terror was over. But he’s wrong on both counts. And here’s why.\nFirst, we have yet to take care of old business. Talk to any terrorism analyst or CIA or FBI counterterrorism expert and they’ll tell you that the most immediate threat to the United States comes not from ISIS but from an al Qaeda affiliate, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Sure we‘ve had great success against the old core al Qaeda in Afghanistan and Pakistan, killing Osama Bin Laden and most of his top lieutenants, and dismantling infrastructure. But the Paris attacks were either directed or inspired by AQAP, making it obvious that almost 15 years after 9/11 we have yet to “defeat al-Qaeda.”\nIndeed, if French intelligence about the Paris attacks is accurate then dead men like the American born jihadi Anwar al Awlaki—killed in a U.S. drone strike in Yemen in 2011—continue to live on, encouraging and inspiring minions like the Charlie Hebdo killers. And a perfect European storm is gathering strength from the convergence of rising right wing, nativist, anti-immigration sentiment, increasing economic dislocation, and an already alienated and disenfranchised pool of European Muslims vulnerable to jihadi recruitment.\nSecond, jihadi terror didn’t grow in a bell jar. It’s the product of an angry, broken and dysfunctional Middle East where large ungoverned spaces in Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and Libya, and widespread bad governance or no governance at all, combine with a growing sectarian divide between Sunni and Shia to feed extremism and violence. By killing his own Sunni citizens, Syria’s Bashar Assad creates new recruits for ISIS faster than the U.S. and its allies can train Syrian rebels to oppose him.\nFor years, Saudi Arabia tried to co-opt radical Islamists by financing them. And Saudi and other Gulf states have spread their own form of fundamentalism by supporting Islamic schools and mosques throughout the Middle East and South Asia. The Qataris, Saudis and Kuwaitis all provide money and guns to a variety of Islamist fighters in Syria. The key to beating ISIS is good governance on both sides of the Syrian and Iraqi border, including security, stability, prosperity, inclusiveness and respect for minorities. And yet today the first state has failed; and the second will remain at best a perennially fraught enterprise. The Arab Middle East is likely to remain a perfect breeding ground for jihadi enterprises for years to come.\nThird, it’s unfashionable and politically incorrect these days to talk about a clash of values, let alone of civilizations, when it comes to analyzing the West’s conflicts with the Middle East. Better, we’re told, to talk about clashing interests which, unlike values, can be reconciled and ameliorated. But for a disturbingly large minority of Muslims and many more who are prepared to acquiesce, there is no tolerance or respect for the West’s conception of free speech or freedom of religion, let alone freedom of conscience. Of the 21 countries that have laws against apostasy, all have Muslim majorities. And of the 24 countries with the most restrictive provisions against religious freedom, 19 are Muslim.\nThe attacks against Charlie Hebdo’s irreverent cartoonists weren’t the first by Muslims against Westerners who dared offend their religious sensibilities; and, tragically, they won’t be the last.\nModernity requires —even demands—the late Fouad Ajami insisted —the capacity to be offended. Societies flourish and grow through critical inquiry, freedom of expression, artistic creativity that breaks icons and challenges convention through the use of humor and satire that often offends. However objectionable willful offense to religion may be, it cannot justify in a civilized society violence and terror. The Paris attacks were very much driven by a fundamental clash of values and gets to the heart of what it means to live, and yes to thrive in a modern world. When Saudia Arabia a close ally of the us sentences one of its citizens to 1,000 strokes of a cane for his liberal views, it cannot be described as anything else but a clash of values between the right to freedom of speech and conscience and intolerance and repression.\nFourth, radical Islam and much of the mainstream opinion in the Arab world has a major problem with the West, particularly with the United States, Britain and France. The colonial legacy still hangs heavy in the lands of the Arabs, complete with the kind of conspiracy theories that have the CIA or Mossad responsible for much that occurs there.\nAt times U.S. policies seem to validate those views and make an already bad situation worse. However well intentioned, the 2003 invasion of Iraq is one example of that heavy hand, and became paradigm for modern-day colonialism, even though it freed Iraqis from a brutal master. The invasion actually led to the creation of al Qaeda in Iraq, the progenitor of ISIS. And the occupation of Iraq helped feed the conspiracy theory that Washington was supporting new Shia masters in Iraq, Sryia, and Iran against the Sunnis.\nIt is no coincidence that America’s two closest Middle East allies—Israel and the Saudi Arabia—have starring roles in the jihadi narrative, the first in al Qaeda tropes as an illegitimate Islamic regime (the near enemy); and the second as the oppressor of Palestinians and, perhaps worse, in anti-Semitic conceits as the despised Jews.\nThe long war against jihadi radicalism has already emerged as one of the most formidable security and political challenges of the 21st century, much as the Cold War was to the latter half of the 20th. Indeed, in this regard, the Paris attacks were less game changers than a painful reminder of how terrifying and tragic the long war is likely to become.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line369657"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5183533430099487,"wiki_prob":0.5183533430099487,"text":"Tag Archives: Lon Chaney\nHigh Noon (1952)\nPosted on September 22, 2015 by badblokebob\nFred Zinnemann | 81 mins | streaming (HD) | 4:3 | USA / English | U / PG\nOn the day marshal Will Kane (Gary Cooper) marries his young bride Amy (Grace Kelly), hands in his badge and plans to leave town, word reaches Hadleyville that a criminal he arrested, Frank Miller (presumably Will read DK2 and arrested him for crimes against literature), will arrive on the noon train, bent on revenge. Afraid that Miller and his cronies will terrorise the town and/or hunt down the newlyweds wherever they go, Will elects to stay and face the gang. But will any of the townspeople stand alongside him to defend their home?\nWell, you probably know the answer to that — it’s one of the film’s more (in)famous facets. If you somehow don’t know and want to remain spoiler free, look away now, because the answer is: no. No one will stand with Will. Interpreted by the American left as an analogy for people being afraid to stand up to McCarthy’s HUAC witch-hunt, some on the right were less impressed: John Wayne and Howard Hawks made Rio Bravo as a direct riposte. Both are regarded as classic Westerns, so in that respect there’s no ‘winner’ there. Besides, High Noon was eventually embraced by the right as well, turning it around to see it as a celebration of one man’s dedication to his duty.\nSome would contend it’s impossible to engage with High Noon and ignore that political allegory; others, like Mike at Films on the Box in his eloquent take on the film, would say it’s more than good enough to stand apart from such concerns. I have sympathy with both sides: the parallels are surely there, but it’s also a fine Western thriller in its own right. You certainly don’t need to know about the contemporaneous events it was reflecting to enjoy it. As to whether that subtext is a beneficial added dimension or a needless distraction, that’s down to personal preference.\nThere’s plenty else going on to keep a viewer engaged, anyway. It’s not an action-packed Western, the style many people at the time were accustomed to: according to Wikipedia, it faced criticism for its shortage of “chases, fights, and picture-postcard scenery”. In its place there’s the slow-burn tension of the clock ticking towards midday and the inevitable confrontation, as well as the moral and emotional dilemmas of the townsfolk, who’ve been happy to rely on Will’s marshalling ability for so long but refuse to help when he needs them.\nThere are personal relationships to contend with too: Amy is a Quaker and so a pacifist, and just wants to leave rather than face a violent confrontation; Will’s deputy, Harvey (Lloyd Bridges), refuses to help because Will refuses to recommend him for promotion; and then there’s hotel owner Helen Ramírez (Katy Jurado), who’s currently Harvey’s lover, but used to be Will’s, and before that was Miller’s. She’s planning to flee town too because, well, wouldn’t you?\nTo top it all off, the film takes place in near-as-damn-it real time. Regular readers will know this is a plus for me, for reasons I still can’t quite fathom. In a narrative such as this, however, it only adds to the tension: you know it isn’t going to jump from 11:30 to the titular time, for instance — you’re going to live every one of those minutes with the characters; that’s exactly how much, or little, time Will has left to get ready.\nThen it all culminates in a strong extended action sequence. Surely anyone feeling deprived of such thrills was satiated at that point? Maybe the now-more-familiar structure of building to a single big sequence at the end was less accepted back in 1952.\nAnd the attitudes of 1952 do continue to surround the film. The activities of HUAC had a serious, enduring impact on Hollywood (you only have to see the footage of Elia Kazan receiving his honorary Oscar in 1999, and the varying reactions it provoked from the audience, to appreciate that), so it’s no surprise that a film that engages with those events, however allegorically, can’t wholly shrug off such an association. For those who aren’t interested in those affairs, however, it still has a tense story and powerful character drama. Either way you look at it, High Noon is a rich, well-made, rewarding picture.\nHigh Noon is on Film4 this afternoon at 2:55pm.\nPosted in 1950s, 2015, 5 stars, adaptations, Drama, Thriller, Western\t| Tagged Do Not Forsake Me O My Darlin ', Elia Kazan, Frank Miller, Fred Zinnemann, Gary Cooper, Grace Kelly, High Noon, Howard Hawks, HUAC, John Wayne, Katy Jurado, Lee Van Cleef, Lloyd Bridges, Lon Chaney, McCarthy, Rio Bravo, The Ballad of High Noon, Western\t| 5 Replies","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line73181"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8314744234085083,"wiki_prob":0.8314744234085083,"text":"PLN quoted in article on HRDC's joint letter re rising levels of violence in TN prisons\nThe Contributor, Jan. 1, 2012. www.thecontributor.org\nPLN quoted in article on HRDC's joint letter re rising levels of violence in TN prisons - The Contributor 2012\nNew prison policies lead to increased violence, group reports\nFood Stamps, Welfare and the ‘Culture of Dependency’\nVol 6, No. 19 – October 11-31, 2012\nBy JESSE CALL\njesse@thecontributor.org\nThe Tennessee Department of Correction (TDOC), which oversees all of the state’s private and public prisons, says it has designed new policies to help those incarcerated “increase positive commitments to their communities,” but local advocacy groups contend that TDOC’s new policies make it more likely for those incarcerated to become victims of violence. Consequently, the rehabilitation of those inmates may be impaired by the fear and frustration those incidents create.\nThe number of incidents of violence in Tennessee prisons has “substantially increased” in the past two years, to about 367 incidents per month, according to the Human Rights Defense Center (HRDC), which collaborated with other advocacy organizations to examine public records between January 2010 and June 2012. Comparatively, in 2010, there was an average of 294 incidents of violence per month. The data indicates that violence increased in three key areas: prisoner-on-staff violence, prisoner-on-prisoner violence and institutional disturbances.\nHowever, according to TDOC spokeswoman Dorinda Carter, this rise in violence is not as consequential as HRDC would like people to believe. In a statement, she writes that the rate of change in violent incidents in Tennessee prisons is not statistically significant. “While some critics may contend the steps have led to escalating violence in prisons, data points to the contrary,” she said.\nNonetheless, there were more victims of violence during that time period, and for HRDC, the reason for the increase in incidents of violence seems clear.\nIn January 2001, Governor Bill Haslam appointed a new TDOC commissioner, Derrick Schofield, who instituted a series of new policies related to prisoner behavior. These changes included: requiring inmates to line up and stand outside no matter the weather conditions to wait for their turn to enter the dining facility; forcing prisoners to leave their hands out of their pockets during cold weather and not offering them gloves; daily cell inspections; and new restrictions on the kinds of property prisoners may have and the kinds of arts activities in which they can participate. During most of these activities, prisoners are prohibited from speaking.\nSchofield says these new enhanced security measures—or transformations, as he calls them—will make it easier for inmates when they are released.\n“Transforming program services builds offender accountability while providing an opportunity to change. The results can be lower rates of return to prison and increased positive contributions to their communities,” Schofield said in a statement. “Strengthening security, developing a more sustainable mechanism for program delivery, and creating a consistent manner of handling offenders from admission to community supervision have been at the forefront of our agency’s reorganization.”\nHRDC writes in its letter to Schofield that these “militaristic” policy changes may be leading to the increase in violence, as people incarcerated become frustrated with what they perceive to be punitive, and not preventative, measures.\n“We believe that the policy changes you have implemented may have significant unintended consequences,” the organization wrote. “[I]f the policy changes are intended to improve safety and security at TDOC facilities, they may be having the exact opposite effect.”\nHRDC also points to national research that shows these tactics do not help prevent recidivism. “Research by the National Institute of Justice, among other agencies, has found that boot camp type programs generally fail to reduce recidivism. This is in part because the strict discipline and militaristic policies imposed during incarceration are absent after prisoners are released, when they return to an unstructured environment.”\nHRDC adds that it is not alone in its concerns. “At least four wardens have resigned or retired since you were appointed Commissioner, some due to the implementation of your new policies,” the organization said.\nHRDC contends that even if Schofield is right about his claims, his plans have yet to decrease violence in Tennessee’s prisons.\n“Questions that need to be answered include why levels of violence are increasing, whether that increase is a result of the new policies implemented by Commissioner Schofield, and if not, what is behind the escalating violence. Also, most importantly, why the Commissioner apparently has been unable to curb violence in state prisons, particularly against staff,” said Alex Friedmann, HRDC associate director, who served time in Tennessee prisons in the 1990s\nprior to his release in 1999.\nTDOC maintains that its new standards are not only the way to go, but are being developed into a national model. “The Department [of Correction] is making good progress in building a set of procedures that will become national industry standards and have the greatest potential for both taxpayer savings and successful outcomes,” spokeswoman Carter wrote.\nHRDC is requesting that Schofield sit down with HRDC and other organizations to discuss the impact of his new policies, a request he has yet to accept. The organization also seeks to increase government oversight of TDOC. In 2011, the Tennessee General Assembly dissolved the Select Oversight Committee on Corrections, leaving supervision\nto the Governor’s office and the time-consumed Judiciary Committee.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1035890"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9852809906005859,"wiki_prob":0.9852809906005859,"text":"We interview Portishead Town winger Keiana Jones ++ Arsenal sign Stina Blackstenius ++ Heritage programme to celebrate women's football ++ Steph Houghton signs new Man City contract ++ Actonians end Hashtag United's unbeaten run ++\nArsenal sign Swedish star Blackstenius\nArsenal are delighted to announce the signing of Swedish international forward Stina Blackstenius.\nThe 25-year-old striker – who will wear the No. 25 shirt at Arsenal – joins following the expiry of her previous deal with Swedish side BK Hacken.\nStina won two Swedish league titles and three Swedish Cups across stints with Hacken and Linkopings FC in her home country, finishing the 2021 season as the top scorer in the domestic league.\nAt international level, Stina helped Sweden to successive silver medals at the 2016 and 2020 Olympic Games, and was part of the side that finished third at the 2019 World Cup.\n“It feels amazing to be here, I’m so happy to join such a big and great club like Arsenal.” Stina told www.arsenal.com. “I got a really good first impression about this club, they play really good football and I wanted to be a part of that. I feel like I can become a better player in this environment.”\n“We’re delighted to have signed Stina,” said head coach Jonas Eidevall. “She is a world-class talent who will add even more quality to our team. Her game is well-suited to the style we are implementing here at Arsenal, and I’m confident that she will take her game to an even higher level here with us.”\n“Everyone at the club is thrilled to announce the signing of Stina,” said head of women’s football Clare Wheatley. “She is one of the best forwards in the world and a significant number of clubs were interested in securing her signature this summer, so we are delighted to have made her an Arsenal player. We are all looking forward to seeing her in action soon.”\nThe deal is subject to the completion of regulatory processes.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line470485"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8377691507339478,"wiki_prob":0.8377691507339478,"text":"Local physician Dr. Nancy Anderson recognized for Excellence in Rural Medicine\nWhen Dr. Nancy Anderson and her husband Alistair came to Bella Coola in 1989, a “working holiday” was what they had in mind.\nCaitlin Thompson\nNow retired\nWhen Dr. Nancy Anderson and her husband Alistair came to Bella Coola in 1989, a “working holiday” was what they had in mind. With a new daughter and several years experience in Calgary under their belt, the two young GP’s were looking for a new type of practice.\n“I ate most of my meals in the car,” she shares. “We had a young daughter and it was hectic, I was working between three different hospitals in Calgary, and we were looking for a change.”\nDeciding to make a move to such a remote community would be daunting for some, but having decided become a doctor at age 13, Anderson was used to facing obstacles.\n“My mother was a nurse and I used to wait up for her to come off night shift so she could share her stories with me,” Anderson recalls. “I found it fascinating, and knew I wanted to get into medicine. I was 13 years old when I made the decision to pursue it.”\nBut the path to medical school wasn’t easy. Anderson, one of four children, was raised in Ontario and graduated there with plans to attend McMaster on a scholarship. Her parents, however, decided to move out to B.C. with plans to build a sailboat. She found herself along for the ride, ending up in French Creek on Vancouver Island, with the sailboat taking much longer than expected.\n“It was supposed to be a year but it ended up much longer,” she said. “It really complicated my life, as during that time I was still trying to get into school for my undergrad, but B.C. decided I wasn’t a resident and so did Ontario, so no universities would accept me.”\nAnderson put school on hold for a while and sailed to Mexico with her parents and two other siblings once the boat was complete, but the goal was still firmly in place.\nOnce the trip was over she went on to complete her undergrad in Biology at McMaster, but the next step proved to be equally as challenging.\n“In those days women couldn’t get bank loans to go to med school,” she explained. “I went through countless interviews, often being asked how I would manage the career if I decided to get married or have children. I think people often don’t realize how things have evolved since those days!”\nAnderson was soon accepted into an intensive three-year program in Calgary, but still lacked the funds to pay for it. A new option then presented itself: the Canadian military. So she joined up.\n“It was a really good option for me at the time,” she recalls. “The military trained us Medical Officers, and in exchange for our training we were required to serve three years.”\nHer husband Alistair joined as well, and the pair completed their training together. Having been stationed last on the west coast, they requested to stay there, or perhaps to be transferred to the east coast, as they’d never been.\n“They sent us to Winnipeg,” she remembers, laughing. “But we were really lucky at the time because Canada was in a very active peace-keeping role, so there was no real danger of conflict, and we received very good training during our service. I don’t regret the choice at all, in fact I now remember it quite fondly.”\nThey eventually settled back in Calgary with their first daughter, and began the busy lives of two young doctors. Anderson took a real interest in obstetrics, and began understudying with local specialists and GP’s in the area. It turned out to be a perfect fit for their move west to Bella Coola.\nWhile the two were excited to begin a new chapter in their careers at the Bella Coola General Hospital and Clinic, Anderson describes the experience of remote medicine as both intensely challenging and rewarding, but also terrifying.\n“I think a lot of people don’t realize the challenges of rural medicine,” she says. “It takes a certain type of person to face the obstacles of working in such an isolated location.”\nUnlike their urban counterparts, rural doctors do not have access to specialists or specialized equipment to deal with situations that arise. It’s up to them to be the “jack of all trades” when it comes to medicine, and they require a real willingness to face whatever arises.\nFortunately for Anderson, her love of obstetrics turned out to be just what the Valley needed. It is probably this role for which she is remembered most fondly, as she was the caregiver for hundreds of local women during their pregnancies and through their childbirth.\n“I did a whole year of surgery in the military, which gave me the confidence and experience to offer C-sections,” she said. “Many people don’t realize this but we were the smallest community in all of Canada offering C-sections, and we had a very low rate, about eight percent, compared to the urban centres which average about 20 percent.”\nAlthough disappointed that birthing services are no longer offered in the community, Anderson says the situation is complicated. The team that was able to offer C-sections has mostly retired, and the weather dictates whether flights out are even possible. This combination of factors and more simply makes birthing a risk no one will take, and unless things change it’s likely to remain this way.\n“Nobody is willing to risk a fetal or maternal death,” Anderson said. “We did between 20 and 40 deliveries a year when we had the right team, but that makes all the difference.”\nAnother aspect of medicine she really cared about turned out to be palliative care.\n“Palliative care is another area where your presence can really make a difference,” she explained. “It’s less about trying to ‘fix’ things and more about focusing on the person’s choices and comfort.”\nRetired now since 2008, she describes the departure from the clinic and hospital where she and her husband served for over 20 years as less than perfect, but remains satisfied with their decision.\n“As we neared retirement age we had requested that Vancouver Coastal Health change some of the working conditions to attract new physicians, particularly altering the on-call schedule to match that of the rest of the province,” said Anderson. “Unfortunately they refused to listen and we ended up resigning, which was upsetting. However, after a year they did finally come around and implemented our recommendations.”\nNow having spent 25 years in Bella Coola, Anderson says that she remains astonished at the level of care delivered through our tiny hospital, crediting the outstanding individuals for their dedication to the community and their positions.\n“I’d really like people to understand how special these services are,” she said. “People like Pat Lenci, Donna Ratcliff, Barb Cornish, the Schimdts and many others, they are the dedicated individuals that have the innovation and talent to maintain this level of care.”\nIt is precisely this type of dedication that the Rural Coordination Centre of BC (RCCbc) has recognized with its award to Dr. Anderson for Excellence in Rural Medicine at their annual conference – the Rural Emergency Continuum of Care.\nThe five chosen physicians were honoured for their “outstanding service, their facilitation of best clinical practices, their role as opinion leaders in their communities, and their personal and professional excellence in rural medicine” at an awards ceremony in Penticton last May.\n“Nancy has been an excellent role model for dozens of young women locums and residents in rural medicine,” said her coworker, Dr. Harvey Thommasen. “I have spoken with many female doctors, including my own daughter, who cite her as an inspiration for pursuing rural medicine.”\nAlthough she still does locums, these days you are able to find Nancy thoroughly enjoying herself – her many hobbies keep her busy. Gardening, horseback riding, and spending time with her grandchildren top her list.\n“I am really enjoying my life,” she shares. “I feel really fortunate to have chosen such an amazing career and ended up in community I love.”\nAnahim Lake’s Carey Price wins Canadian Athlete of the Year\nB.C. seeks relief for aging population costs","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1726621"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5287637114524841,"wiki_prob":0.5287637114524841,"text":"Jay Justice\nBlack Girls Create Creator, Features Black Woman Creator\t0\nWho are you, Jay Justice?\nI am a Jamaican American queer disabled Black woman who is into comic books, sci-fi, and baseball. (Yes, I am familiar with the sportsball, I used to work for the Yankees for three seasons, I’m really really into baseball. I was so salty with Pitch got canceled.) I’ve been getting into doing more editing. I’m really proud to say that I contributed to the editing on a New York Times Bestseller — if you’re familiar with The Adventure Zone, I was brought in for a second to help with some sensitivity reading and some of the editing on that book. I also helped do social media for the McElroys during the publishing process for the book, so it was really exciting. I want to do more of this work for sure. We did this work last year, so it’s been really great seeing the fandom go crazy for the work that we did and it’s awesome.\nCredit: Ann Eshilana\nWhat do you create?\nI create costumes, I create narratives, I help people to promote their work. Basically I try to create a space within fandom so people who are marginalized can feel more welcome and be more successful. Sometimes it takes just one person to listen to someone go on about the game they’re developing and say “no this game is good, I believe in this game, I think it should be seen by people who can get it further than I can.” I like to reach out to people who think that just because they’re a woman or they’re trans or they’re queer or they’re Black that their work is not as valid as everyone else’s and I’m like, “no it is.” And I may have a smaller platform because I do cosplay and I’ve done promotion and marketing for other companies, but I feel like it doesn’t matter how small you think you are, it’s how big you make other people feel with your presence.\n“It doesn’t matter how small you think you are, it’s how big you make other people feel with your presence.”\n— Jay Justice\nIt’ll be my ten year anniversary of cosplaying next year and my first cosplay ever was Storm. I want to do a side by side of before Jay knew anything about makeup because dear God I was a hot mess. Someone tell baby Jay you don’t have to have white eyebrows to be Storm. I would like to do a much better Storm costume with a better wig, makeup, one that wasn’t hand-sewn and safety pinned and hot glued and stapled together, made out of literally coat-hangers and upholstery from a car.\nWhy do you create?\nI create because I feel like sometimes you’re just about to explode with the need to do something with what you have inside of yourself. With me that can be released in comic books, it can be released in costumes, it definitely gets released in a lot of, you know, trash posts on Tumblr but for the most part it’s my way of expressing how much I love the medium of comics. I was kind of scared and lonely as a kid and wanting to do something with myself that wouldn’t get me in trouble and comics were a safe way to create something and enjoy something and to just read. Just building literacy itself is so important. I know a lot of kids who didn’t really like reading, but I would tutor back in the day so I helped them increase their reading comprehension with comic books. Free Comic Book Day is how I lured the little suckers in and the next thing you know they’re spending all their lunch money on Spider-Man. But they’re reading though.\nWho is your audience?\nWhat’s interesting is that my so-called built in audience would be people like me who are disabled or Black or female or queer who just want to support someone who is like them and out there doing the thing. That’s me in a nutshell, I am my own audience. Sometimes I reach people who are outside of my so-called demographic, I’ll get people who are white, cis, straight, whatever and they’re just like “I like this, I think this is cool,” and they may want to support just because they enjoy the art, but occasionally they’ll make a point of supporting someone outside of their usual zone. For example. I was hired to speak at MIT about advocacy and modern media to help them with their own queer community and to help them be more seen and heard at MIT because Boston is extremely white and very racist. A lot of the students there were telling me about their experiences and just helping them to understand that I understand how sucky it is to have a project going on and you’re super qualified for this but the person in charge is only going to ever hire or place within their own circle.\nPeople don’t realize that we’re not saying “you yourself are a racist.” You are not defined by this. [But] you’re capable of partaking in this because you have the privilege to not have to worry about someone noticing you for a project because you’re the default. You’re a white person so of course you’re hirable automatically. A lot of the things that I do with my audience is teaching them to unlearn this stuff because not only are you making a better place but it literally enables you to enjoy art on a deeper level because you’re not being hindered by your own privilege. And watching somebody wake up to that fact is just — I’ve seen it so many times. I hope I keep seeing it because people really go, “wow, I was ignoring this because I thought it was a Black thing, I thought it wasn’t for me but my money is good here.” Yes! Your money is very good here, pay a Black person, it’s fine. Your white money is good everywhere, we will happily accept it. Buy Black products!\nWhat or who inspired you to do what you do?\nCredit: Jason Colflesh\nI mean I don’t know because when I first started cosplaying I wasn’t really thinking of a particular person in mind I was working promo and marketing for Activision at NYCC to promote Ultimate Alliance 2, the video game. I was at the booth doing my thing and looking at all the cosplayers — and I was in regular clothes. I had just been hired for my comic book knowledge and nerdiness and not for any costume because I had never cosplayed before. And I thought it was pretty fun and that I should try it. My main goal was to be a character not a person, so I don’t really have a cosplaying senpai or whatever. It’s really always been about trying to match the costume or the character. Even if I don’t match 100% the way it is in the picture, it’s more about being that character.\n[With regard to disability advocacy,] Annie Segarra (@annieelaney). She’s an amazing disability advocate who has done so much work to support the community. She’s the one who started the #AmbulatoryWheelchairUsersExist and I have so many of her t-shirts with her catchy hashtags on them. She’s just so great and so positive and super encouraging. She’s definitely someone I admire in terms of just being a cool person to support in social media and to listen to because her experiences are valid.\nWe all have a lot of experiences as disabled people trying to move through a world that is extremely inaccessible and dealing with people who look at you and think that you’re entitled. I’ve actually been told that I seem entitled and I was like “I’m literally just trying to make your company comply with the law?” I don’t understand. I’m working a convention at a university and they have blockaded the only wheelchair accessible door. If the building is on fire I wouldn’t be able to escape. I almost missed my Lyft because they couldn’t find me because I couldn’t get out. I had to manually remove a stack of parking cones from this door and then the security guard yelled at me and I’m like sir this is the only way I can escape the building, you need to not have this door blocked. I’m not trying to anything besides hold your company accountable.\nI’ve encountered that problem a lot: they’ll block off access for their own convenience. Stop all the elevators so no one can sneak into the con, but then you’re also not allowing disabled vendors, attendees, exhibitors, guests of this hotel who may use a wheelchair to access the entire lower floor of the convention. Every single day, they never fixed this. For a three-day con!\nIn my opinion, accessibility is independent accessibility where you do not require an adult to allow you access to a part of the library, a part of the school, a part of the hotel, whatever it is. If I have to find someone who has a key to the special elevator lift and you don’t know where the key is, you don’t know how to operate it, that’s not accessible to me. That is, the building’s on fire and I’m going to die because I can’t get out of here because you don’t know how to help me.\nThat’s why I really admire Annie because a lot of her work talks about that in a way that is easy to understand and, I’m not going to say doesn’t rile up able-bodied people because you know what, you should be riled up, you should feel upset on behalf of the people who have to deal with this crap every day. But then it makes us seem like we’re attacking them. No one’s attacking you for being able to walk without impediment or pain, we’re attacking the system that makes it difficult for us to get access to things that we need, which is again the law, but not always followed.\nWhy is it important as a Black person to create?\nCredit: Patrick Sun\nBecause you are the inheritance of thousands of years of oppression and misery and pain and it’s up to us to really speak for everyone that wasn’t able to speak before us. We’ve been told that our voices aren’t valid, that we don’t deserve a right to speak, and so I feel like our creativity is something that has been a long time coming and needs to be shared with everyone. It’s not just about us teaching ourselves, it’s about teaching our children and the children of those who inherit the so-called right of oppression. The people who have the privilege to do more and don’t, they need to hear our voices so that they do.\nIt’s all about maintaining integrity with your work, and someone saying that forced diversity is a lack of integrity is really not paying attention. Because nothing is forced it’s literally representing the exact world that we live in and there’s no white fantasy in New York, it full of people of color, I don’t know where you got this from but this white fantasy never actually happened. I’m really over this white feminist nonsense of everything having to be white. I’m over the idea that I should support a white female character when the Black ones get sidelined all the time. As a Captain Marvel fan, it’s extremely frustrating to know that Monica [Rambeau] is never going to be seen in the eyes of the younger generation as who she is, a former leader of the Avengers, the first female Captain Marvel. She’s basically being marginalized in the narrative of Carol — which I support, I love Kelly Sue DeConnick I think Captain Marvel is a great book. It’s just frustrating as someone who was a really big fan of the Captain Marvel before her to know that this kind of support and love is something Monica is never going to get. And I hope that when Monica appears in the movies that she has her own narrative but it really does feel like she’s going to be some kind of person who really looks up to Carol and this ain’t it.\nWhy do you think it’s important for disabled people to create?\nIt is important because we’re seen as disability meaning lack of ability to do anything, when really it means an inability to access things that are made for able-bodied persons. Being disabled doesn’t mean that you can’t create or build or discover or learn or teach. It just means that you require different tools to be able to do those same things. And that you require those things to be accessible so that you can reach your full potential and not be seen as just your limitations but for the whole of who you are. Your limitations and your strengths.\nI think it’s important to fight against the narrative of the “good disabled person” to show that everyone has different abilities. It really frustrates me because people assume that if you can do something you’re not disabled and if you can’t do it, you’re not trying hard enough, there is no middle ground. It is one or the other. I think it’s important for folks to read the words we create rather than the things written about us, especially with mental disabilities. There are people with autism writing wonderful works explaining their experiences and people are ignoring them and listening to Autism Speaks and the parents or families of disabled people and not the people living with the trauma of the ableism they’re facing, which can be worse than your actual illness in many cases.\nWe don’t live in a country with basic income we have to start from nothing and get something out of that. To tell me that my mind is useless because my body doesn’t work is absolutely missing the point, people think you can’t you can’t create because you’re sick, that’s why we have to, to show them that we can. We have value regardless of how our bodies and minds operate.\nYou mentioned accessibility in getting to cons, are there any other struggles that you face as a disabled creator?\nPeople look at me and see someone who looks healthy, because they don’t know what disability looks like — the answer is it has no look. I’m going to quote Nyle DeMarco who is a deaf model/activist who was told he doesn’t look deaf, which is like what does deaf look like? Disability doesn’t have any particular appearance. People sometimes assume I’m faking or I just have a cane for fun, I deal with stuff like that.\nAt this job I used to have, I got a new manager, who was told “this is Jay she’s going to be a great employee, all you have to do is carry this one thing for her because she physically can’t do it, but everything else she can do.” They were like “trust me, she’s a great seller, you’re going to love working with her.” He actually didn’t, because he just really hated disabled people. People think that’s not a thing, it is. Because he had to do one single thing to assist me, which my previous bosses were happy to do until they got transferred to other departments. I literally did everything else, like I literally bought attachments to my scooter — that cost me money out of my own pockets — so that I could carry more stuff so he didn’t have to do all those things for me. But this was one thing I couldn’t do. And he told me that I was useless, that I couldn’t help him from that chair that I was in, and that I didn’t deserve to get full wages, that he was going to dock my pay because of my disability. I later left that company because I didn’t feel taken care of well enough there, but I’ve experienced stuff like that in other jobs too.\nThat’s honestly why I prefer to work for myself or do social media, editing, or stuff online, because I can’t deal with being in that environment. You feel like you’re going to have a panic attack because you’re being told to your face by someone who — I mean he was racist too, he would show me KKK pictures, thinking it was funny, it was real bad. The ableism was what stuck with me the most, being told that I was basically furniture by someone who had the ability to take away my actual income was terrifying. It’s why I fight so hard, I don’t want anyone to have to go through that, it’s really sickening. I know that the law in many states is that they can pay disabled people less than minimum wage because “oh it’s fine, they don’t know any better, they’re just happy to have a job.” And that’s legal!\nHow do you balance creating with the rest of your life?\nBalance? What is that? With me it’s more like how many spoons do I have? If I don’t have enough energy to do a thing that day, it’s not happening. There are days where I’m having a flare up and I can’t move or I can’t stop shaking and I can’t shower or cook or do anything besides, if I’m lucky, open the protein shake by my bed that I hopefully remembered to leave there so I don’t die. So I can’t work on costumes, I can’t take commissions because I don’t know how much mobility I’m going to have, and I don’t want to make anyone miss their deadline. I’ve had to refund orders because I wasn’t able to get it out in a certain amount of time. That’s why I really like to do things that require me just to be able to use a computer, although my disability is one that affects my whole body — it’s one of those systemic ones — so sometimes I lose the ability to use my hands, so I can’t type. And you then have to spend time convincing yourself and others that you’re still worth hiring, despite all of this. Because the days I am on, I am on, I am in it.\nIt’s all about working when I can and leaning on the people that are there for me emotionally speaking because sometimes it’s hard. Trying to manage your schedule, trying not to make too many things too fast, especially with costumes. I’ve been cosplaying since 2009 and I have like 80-something costumes so it’s one of those “maybe just wear this old one and don’t make a new one because you don’t really have time for this.” And I haven’t even worn all of them yet.\nDo you have any advice for young creators or ones just starting out?\nDo not measure yourself against your peers or idols. Measure yourself against your own progress. Work on being the best version of yourself that you can be and don’t get caught up in trying to keep up with the Joneses or whatever because that way lies pain and misery, don’t do it. Definitely don’t do anything outside of your own means — stretch a little bit but not too much.\nRemember that you started in this for fun and then get good at it and somebody offers you money and then you take the money. That is how it worked for me. That’s probably how it’ll work for you. Maybe with comic book writing and art it’s different, but it’s not though because you did draw it for fun, you didn’t draw it because you were trying to be famous. You drew it because you wanted to create something and you wrote because you were trying to create something. You wrote a fan fiction because by god they should’ve been gay in the story, they’re gay now! That’s why you wrote it and what you write may be good enough to get published but you have to keep writing for yourself before you do anything else. That’s what I’m doing I’m still writing for myself. Eventually my story will be good enough for other people to see it and it’ll get published, I’ve already talked to someone about that so that’s exciting, but it’s really about doing art that you love and then maybe other folks will like it too. But it’s okay if they don’t because you made it for you.\nWhat has been your favorite or most memorable cosplay experience?\nCredit: DTJAAAAM\nThere’s a couple that really stand out. The building process of (Commander) Shepard (from Mass Effect) was absolutely horrible and I never want to do it again because I was someone who primarily sewed costumes and that was the first suit of armor I’d ever made. I cut and burned myself many many times. I famously cut and burned myself at the same time using what basically a pocket lightsaber. Mistakes were made. It was an exacto-knife that heats up to 400 degrees. I was cutting and gluing and heat forming at the same time with three different heat tools with no gloves! Children don’t do it, use protective gloves. And I reached without looking and I picked up the blade by the wrong end. And it removed a fingerprint and a chunk of finger was just gone. And I screamed so loud that my roommate who was on Ambien woke up. And he was like I’m just going to go to the store and get you some burn cream. God bless that man, he saved me, he’s a hero to us all. The best part was that the costume wasn’t done, and the con was in four days, so I finished it with my left hand. And I wore it, and I got to meet half the cast of the game so it was all worth it.\nBut my favorite experience in a costume: cosplaying Nakia from Black Panther has been the best experience ever, no matter which version I’m in it’s always positive feedback and it’s really great. And I get to cosplay with my friends because of course we’re all the Wakandan high council, we get to cosplay Wakanda together. We always have a great time with it. Just getting to be a positive Black hero that everyone knew was so great.\nDo you have any future or current projects you want to plug?\nEveryone should buy The Adventure Zone because everyone worked super hard on that book and it’s amazing, if you love D&D, if you love podcasts, if you love really good graphic novels, go get The Adventure Zone.\nI’m going to be at NYCC at booth 1483 promoting my company LGBTHQ, I’m one of the codirectors and cofounders, we like to promote queer comic book writers and gaming people all over the industry. If you’re queer we’re here for you, we want you to get your work out there. Buy Kid Riot Comics, they are New Jersey’s premiere queer superhero team, we’ve got some awesome superheroes, we actually did one, their new superhero is from Ghana and they looked for Ghanaian sensitivity readers to make sure she was written accurately, I really support that I love them for that. They have a trans superhero called Riot Diva, I love her design, and they did a lot of work speaking to trans people to make sure that she was written correctly. So I really like Kid Riot comic books, their new book is called Riot Squad because they wanted to do a team book not just one person. They’ll be at NYCC as well.\nI will be the Cosplay Guest of Honor at Geek Girl Con in Seattle. I’ll be doing some panels there, one is about Disability and Cosplay in Media. I have a lot of cons coming up. I want to try to plan for the future because I want people to know that even if your disability gets to the point where you literally can’t do anything, don’t think of yourself as bedridden because you can escape, you can do things that bring your reach outside of your general area, and you can still affect people even if you yourself aren’t physically there. But I want to be physically there for as much as I can.\nJay Justice (@ThatJayJustice) is a Jamaican-American cosplayer, editor, and advocate. Her work has been featured by SyFy, BBC America, and Marvel Comics, and she has been the inspiration for new characters in DC Comics and Boom Studios. Since 2009 she has crafted over 70 costumes and created panels at conventions across the country on the topics of comics, gaming, diversity in media and costuming. As an outspoken POC, LGBTQIA+ and disability advocate, Jay is dedicated to creating lasting change within her community & inspiring others to do the same.\nShop: email thatjayjustice @ gmail to order\nYouCaring: http://www.youcaring.com/jayjustice-1066395\nPaypal: http://www.paypal.me/ThatJayJustice\nKofi: http://ko-fi.com/thatjayjustice\nWishlist: http://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/39CF70CLIQCDD/\nCreator, Features\nVegalia\nAuthor Spotlight: Dr. Johnnetta Betsch Cole & Nelda LaTeef\nSierra Elmore","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1284616"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5587631464004517,"wiki_prob":0.44123685359954834,"text":"The pivotal role of Azerbaijan oil and Baku\nStart » The pivotal role of Azerbaijan oil and Baku\nBy Jabi Bahramov and Haji Hasanov, published 15 Aug 2011\nAs early as the 15th century, Baku was an important international trading centre for merchants travelling between the East and Europe. Caravans of camels and merchant ships transported oil, salt, madder and saffron. In the 19th century, the rapid growth of the oil industry caused a total modernization. By the turn of the 20th century, Baku was one of the biggest industrial cities of the world.\nThe oil wells drilled in 1846 at Bibiheybat in the Baku region were the first mechanically-drilled oil wells in the world and represented an important technical innovation. It is worth pointing out that the USA, the world’s first oil producer, started using this mechanical-drilling method 13 years after Baku. In 1860, the volume of oil produced in Baku was 247,814 puds, in 1862 this figure reached 337,926 puds (approximately 5,500 tons) and it continued to increase. In 1870, Baku oil fields were producing 1,482,100 puds (24,000 tons) a year.\nOne of the reasons for the rapid development in oil production was the growing demand for paraffin in the Russian Empire. From this period onwards, paraffin was used not only for oil lamps, but also as a fuel for the Russian Empire’s developing industry. This increase in oil production resulted in the emergence of an oil-refining industry.\nIn 1858, the Transcaspian Company, owned by the Russian capitalists Kokorev and Gubonin, built the first oil refinery at Surakhany in the Baku region. In 1861, N.I. Vitte, a Tbilisi pharmacist, built a paraffin factory on Pirallahi island and, in 1863, Javadaga Malikov built an oil-distillation plant in Baku to produce paraffin. By 1867, there were 15 oil refineries in the Baku region and in 1873 it had increased to 50.\nThe start of the distribution of oil fields acquired at auction in 1872 changed the oil industry into a capitalist production sector and oil production doubled. In 1876, the volume of oil produced in Baku was 24,000 tons and by 1882 it had multiplied to 816,000 tons. Oil production in Baku was now outstripping the oil industry of the USA, which was the most powerful oil producer at that time. While the productivity of Azerbaijan’s oil industry in the 1870s was 20 times less than that of the USA, in 1894 it equalled US oil production, reaching 5.55 million tons a year.\nThis increase in oil production was accompanied by the utilization of new drilling techniques. In the 1870s, the oil industry entered a phase of technological innovation and the expansion of production processes. Originally oil was extracted from hand-dug wells using buckets. Bailers substituted these and from 1871 the Baku oil wells were drilled using the borehole method. The introduction of steam engines in 1873 also played an important role in the development of Azerbaijan’s oil industry.\nThe tremendous upsurge in the oil industry demanded considerable investment. This attracted foreign entrepreneurs that were capable of investing in fields and factories, and especially in storage and the transportation of oil. The imperial government, which favoured foreign entrepreneurs, adopted a resolution on 1 May 1880 admitting foreigners to oil fields within the Baku region. The biggest representative of foreign investment in the Baku oil industry in the second half of the 1870s was the Nobel brothers’ company, Branobel, with 3 million roubles of share capital.\nThe Swedish capitalist Ludvig Nobel and the St. Petersburg baron and manufacturer P.A. Bilderling, who was also Nobel’s partner in the Izjevsk armaments factory, founded Branobel. In the mid-1880s, the French banking house of the Rothschild’s established another large enterprise in Russia – the “Caspian – Black Sea Industry and Commerce Society”. In the 1890s, British capital, represented by the honorary citizen of St. Petersburg, James Vishau, made inroads into Azerbaijan’s oil industry. In this fashion, most local concerns came under the control of foreign capital, which resulted in the expansion of foreign capital in the oil industry. The second half of the 19th century can therefore be regarded as a new stage in the history of Baku.\nThe rapid development of capitalism, the increase in demand for oil, the intensive development of oil fields and the construction of new factories and plants, turned Baku into one of the biggest industrial cities in the world. Within a short time, a number of Swedish, British, Belgian, German, Dutch and US companies opened their representative offices in Baku. The Baku industrial region with several “oil villages” emerged. By the turn of the 20th century, Baku was producing 50 per cent of the world’s oil.\nBesides the oil industry, other branches of the economy were flourishing. The world’s first oil tanker, oil pipelines, railways, telephone stations, horse-drawn cars and trams were all to be found in Baku. As a result of this economic growth at the end of the 19th century, Baku became the biggest and most important city of the Russian Empire in the Caucasus.\nEven before the oil fever Baku was an important trading centre for merchants travelling with their caravans of camels transporting oil, salt, madder and saffron.\nThe water well in the middle of the desert landscape outside Baku symbolize the days when Absheron still was relatively sparsely populated with a long distances between villages and without fixed routes.\nIt took less than half a century for a large and modern industrial city to grow up. Railroad tracks and telegraph wires cut through the town and factory smoke lay heavily over it.\nThe intensive growth of the city, development of oil fields, construction of new plants demanded a quick solution to the transport problems. Some claim that horse-drawn cars and trams were all to be found in Baku.\nA general view over Baku. New liberal legislation encouraged the inflow of foreign capital, which resulted in the dramatic expansion of the oil industry. By the turn of the 20th century, Baku was producing 50 per cent of the world’s oil.\nSkilled specialists were important to Nobels’ success\nPetrochemical production on a grand scale","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line275594"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5117618441581726,"wiki_prob":0.5117618441581726,"text":"Japan correct to fear TPP impact on rice production\nJapanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda announced his decision to join the Trans-Pacific Partnership before leaving Tokyo for the APEC 2011 meeting in Honolulu. If Japan goes forward with placing all of its commodities under the TPP, it would mean the end of centuries of rural rice farming and threaten the country’s food security. Of course, Noda is supporting corporate interests which, under the rubric of restoring “prosperity” to Japanese exports, are quite willing to throw tradition and food security aside in the interests of restored profitability.\nRice is one of the few crops in which Japan is self-sufficient, and opponents of the TPP argue it would destroy the country's agricultural sector and reduce food self-sufficiency to 13% from the current 39%.\n[Wall Street Journal, New Zealand: Japan Must Include Rice in TPP Talks, 11/14/2011]\nVultures are already salivating at opportunities presented by the likely death of Japan’s rice farming promised by the TPP.\nJapan must put its main staple on the table if it wishes to join talks over the Trans-Pacific Partnership free-trade agreement, New Zealand Trade Minister Tim Groser said.\n\"The negotiation must include rice,\" he said in an interview Sunday, if the TPP is to set a comprehensive market-opening example for the rest of the region.\nJapan must maintain high tariffs to fend off subsidized exports of countries eager to break into a lucrative market. There is no question that without the support of import tariffs, rice farming would rapidly come to an end, first devastating rural economies and then savaging Japan’s ability to feed itself.\nJapan’s rice farmers have long developed cooperative methods of producing rice, but the costs of domestic production are still high. Japan has no equivalent to the huge industrial ag tracts of the American midwest. Farmers typically share cultivating equipment, which moves from farm to farm during the harvest season, for example. Still, they could not compete with cheap imports.\nThey would not be alone. There are plenty of examples of the effects of predatory exports on the core agricultural economy of formerly self-sufficient countries.\nWe need look no further than Haiti, in our own hemisphere. Most of the loss of life in the Haitian earthquake took place in the shantytowns where displaced rural families fled in search of jobs. What happened to rice cultivation in a country\nNearly two centuries of rice cultivation shows that Haiti was self-sufficient in its rice supply up until 1980. However, following a severe flood in the 1970’s that drastically reduced the island’s yield, U.S. companies began to send shipments of rice to the island, soon using their subsidized crop to undersell local farmers.\nThe next major development affecting the Haitian rice market took place after February 7, 1986 when President Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier was ousted from power following a coup d’état. Shortly thereafter, General Henri Namphy took over control of the country. Once in power, the U.S. government coaxed his regime to liberalize Haiti’s economy by slashing import tariffs, closing state-owned industries, reducing the budget of the government agricultural agency in the Artibonite Valley (the primary region where rice is grown), and opening all of its ports to commercial activity.\n[Worldhunger.org, Has the US rice export policy condemned Haiti to poverty?, 4/23/2010]\nThat loss of food security can devastate a country. The Haitian example is clear.\nIn 1994 the Haitian government entered into a new agreement with the IMF that contained a \"medium-term structural adjustment strategy\" which \"included sweeping trade liberalization measures.\" In 1995 when this agreement went into affect, Haiti's tariffs on rice imports were cut dramatically from 35% to the current level of 3% (the bound tariff on rice imports is 50%). By comparison, the Common External Tariff on rice in the CARICOM (Caribbean Community) zone for rice in 1999 was 25%.\nRice import tariff reductions in Haiti has made it more difficult for local rice producers to compete with imports. An article published in 1999 after evaluating agricultural and food price policy in Haiti concluded that \"reducing tariffs on both rice and corn, decreased retail and farm prices and increased consumption and imports.\" This is also confirmed by the IMF which in a report 2001 states \"Trade liberalization has contributed to a large increase in imports of rice. At the same time, domestic production has gone down substantially.\"\nSome argue that the resulting flood of relatively cheap rice imports originating mostly from the United States has had a negative impact on Haiti. The decline in the demand for Haitian rice has been devastating to an already desperate rural population. Rice farmers are some of the most vulnerable members of the population; the alternative employment options for farmers in Haiti are extremely limited.\nFurthermore, competition between Haitian and American rice growers is not exactly fair. While US rice production is \"subsidized through a variety of mechanisms\", the small, struggling domestic rice industry in Haiti receives no support from the government. Rice farmers do not receive export subsidies or other types of domestic support. According to Mark Weisbrot, Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, \"You can't expect a country like Haiti to compete on world markets immediately. If you look at those countries that have succeeded in dramatically increasing their per capita incomes -- countries like Japan, South Koreas, and Taiwan -- you will find hey all did it under some kind of protection.\"\n[american.edu, Trade and the Disappearance of Haitian Rice, 6/2004]\nThe Haitian example is one of many. US corn exports increased dramatically as a result of NAFTA, which resulted in the flood of workers into the USA seeking what work they can get. Yet Mexico has expressed an interest in joining the TPP pact.\nCanada is reported to have shown an interest in the TPP at the APEC talks, after months of dragging its feet. Should Canada join, it would have to give up protection for its dairy and poultry industry. But because Japan may join the TPP, Canada may find other TPP countries may gain access to a lucrative Japanese market and displace Canadian exports. Canada may decide to kiss its chicken farmers goodbye and aim for the promises of a newly opened Japan.\nNowhere in the negotiations in Honolulu has the issue of job loss due to imports come up. Obama touts job gains for American workers but omits the losses caused by floods of cheap imports that destroy American industries. TPP would be NAFTA all over again, and arguably would mean net job losses in this country and in other signatory nations. Just what jobs will Japan offer to out-of-work farm families throughout its large rural population? The numbers touted by Obama and other leaders are always one-sided: exports will be boosted. The problem, of course, is the job devastation resulting from imports.\nPermalink posted by Larry @ 11/14/2011 08:05:00 AM\nMexico is another example of \"Free Trade\" destroying a countries ability to feed itself. Those former Mexican farmers are now roaming the streets of Mexico looking for work.\n# posted by Old Diver : November 14, 2011 at 10:13:00 AM HST\nI understand they roam Hawaii as well. Immigration attorneys have Spanish on their voicemails/email sigs.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line813313"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7309646606445312,"wiki_prob":0.26903533935546875,"text":"Jasienica Model United Nations JASMUN 2019\nKarolina Sasim\nDelegate: Karolina Sasim\nCommittee: Human Rights Council\nTopic: Addressing mass surveillance carried out by governments\nCountry: Republic of India\nHonourable chairs, distinguished delegates,\nthe delegate of Republic of India is honoured to take part in the conference on the subject: „ Addressing mass surveillance carried out by governments” and join Human Rights Council at the debate. In the name of government of India the delegation feels urged to do anything in its power to help finding a solution to this controversial problem. Republic of India has always been concerned about its people’s security but uses multiple measures of surveillance as it becomes more and more necessary with passing years.\nMass surveillance is the distributive close observation of an entire population, or a substantial fraction of the entire population. By its nature it impacts on people’s privacy and violates human rights in its core meaning. The definition of mass surveillance doesn’t only apply to government of a country’s citizen but also to governments of foreign nations. Surveillance is usually carried out by local and federal governments or organisations that come under the government of a country (like the NSA or FBI). Its purpose is to fight terrorism, prevent crime and","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1352512"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6454232335090637,"wiki_prob":0.6454232335090637,"text":"The Railroad That Wasn’t in Morris County\nBy new_view_media on December 10, 2021 No Comment\nOften the fugitive slave had the clothes on his back as his only possessions. (New Jersey Historical Commission)\nThe fear that traveled with the runaways was being captured and returned to the slave auction block. (Library of Congress)\nBy Henry M. Holden\nThe Underground Railroad is an epic American story featuring the forces of righteousness against evil, locked in a moral combat. The fight would eventually eliminate one of the greatest expressions of inhumanity: the ownership of one human by another.\nIn the years up to the start of the American Civil War (1861), New Jersey was a major route for slaves escaping their masters in the South. The legendary Underground Railroad (UGRR), which was neither underground nor a railroad, is preserved today at sites throughout the region including Morris County.\nMost Underground Railroad fugitive slaves came from Kentucky, Missouri, Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia. Most were males between the ages of 15 and 30, who traveled alone, by foot, horseback, wagon, stagecoach, train, and boat—and at night, often guided by the North Star.\nWhile most people have heard of the Underground Railroad, few people know that it came as far north as Sussex County. Most UGRR books list Jersey City as the railroad terminus.\nThere were people like Harriet Tubman who was a major figure in the Abolitionist movement. Maryland put a $40,000 bounty for her capture because she encouraged and strongly advocated freedom for the African slaves. She is credited with helping over 300 slaves reach freedom. She was never apprehended.\nThere was always a bounty on the head of the runaway slave, from $50 to $500, depending on the value of the slave as a chattel, as was the horse.\nUntil the outbreak of the Civil War, New Jersey continued to bear witness to the presence of runaway slaves. However, with the passage in 1804 of the New Jersey Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery, these fugitives saw New Jersey as part of the “Promised Land,” where they escaped their master’s lash, or worse.\nThere are several sites in Morris County which are documented by the New Jersey Historical Commission and listed as “Communities with extant Underground Railroad Sites.” Boonton and Boonton Township are two sites that are preserved.\nOne of the more conspicuous stops on the Underground Railroad was the Boonton home of abolitionist Dr. John Grimes. There, at the corner of Main and Liberty streets, the doctor harbored fugitive slaves, according to Grimes’ 1875 obituary in The Jerseyman. The railroad’s “Boonton Station,” is now home to a commercial business, and never was underground.\nBoonton was an epicenter of anti-slavery work. It was considered an important Underground Railroad link in the New Jersey chain that moved some 40,000 slaves north to freedom in Canada.\nGrimes lived there while publishing his monthly newspaper, The New Jersey Freeman, an abolitionist newspaper, and he sheltered runaway slaves in his home.\nThe Grimes Homestead, in Mountain Lakes, is one of the few documented physical remnants of the UGRR, and the Abolition movement of the 19th century in New Jersey.\nNear Grimes’ home, in neighboring Boonton Township, is another station, the Powerville Hotel. It was owned by Nathan Hopkins, whose son Charles became involved in the railroad as a teenager.\nHe chronicled his Underground Railroad experiences in the 1910 publication Boonton: Gem of the Mountain, which identified individuals and communities involved in the Boonton area’s Underground Railroad.\nHopkins indicated there were Underground Stations at Rockaway, Dover, Pequannock, Newfoundland, Stockholm, Canistear and Charlotteburg, areas at the convergence of Morris, Passaic and Sussex counties.\nIn the Northeastern part of the state, in Morris County, are Dover, Rockaway, Pompton Plaines, which were UGRR communities. However, there was no town called Randolph, until it was split off from Mendham in 1805, and it is there where a UGRR site and a probable extant building remains.\nFor decades a rumor floated that the (Quaker) Friends Meeting House (circa 1757) in Randolph was an Underground Railroad station. James Brotherton, a member of one of the founding families, speaking of his father Richard in A History of Randolph said, “Richard was a kindly man, often helping those in need. He felt that slavery was a great wrong and his house, along with the Quaker Meeting House became one of the stops on the Underground Railroad…”\nThe popular story states that fugitive slaves on the way to freedom in Canada, would stop and rest at the Brotherton house. Richard would feed them, clothe them, and give them a little ready cash, according to his son.\nTo protect these unfortunate persons from search and seizure by authorities, a secret passage from the Brotherton house to the Quaker Friends Meeting House supposedly existed. With the physical altering of the landscape by developers, it may never be known where exactly that secret passage was.\nShould the authorities enter the meeting house itself, with or without respect for the sanctuary, fugitive slaves could be concealed in the gallery with the “shutters” closed, or in a space under the seat where the elders sat.\nNo fugitive slave was ever reportedly recovered, and the number of slaves sheltered at the Friends Meeting house remains unknown.\nThe story is derived from Richard Brotherton, who is later repeated as a Newark News feature story.\nToday, the Brotherton house is gone, replaced by apartment houses. It is reasonable, based on the proximity of the apartment houses to the Friends Meeting House, that was within walking distance of the Brotherton house.\nThose slaves who were not rescued by the Underground Railroad would have to wait until the end of the Civil War and the ratification of the 13th Amendment, on December 6, 1865, for their freedom.\nThe Underground Railroad was for the slaves who had escaped the terror of recapture, an opportunity to befriend people who were sympathetic to their plight, and to live free.\nThe Railroad That Wasn’t in Morris County added by new_view_media on December 10, 2021","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1481555"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7314342856407166,"wiki_prob":0.26856571435928345,"text":"Rhest for the Wicked and other books\nPosted byRobert V Aldrich March 24, 2014 Posted inBlog 2014Tags:Elsewhere on the Web, publishing, real world, rhest for the wicked, writing craft\nIn case you missed the announcement, Rhest For The Wicked is now available for the Kindle and other ebook readers, with the print version to come shortly (possibly this week). But that’s not all! Haven Publishing House, (aka my publisher) has also released The Pack by Dan Coglan and I Think? No, I’m Sure…God Hates Me by Manny Camacho. The Pack is a fantasy story, while God Hates Me is a collection of various tales about conventions and the wacky world surrounding conventions. Please check them both out…as well as Rhest For the Wicked, of course!\nAgain, these are all ebooks; the print editions will be available soon.\nI first published Crossworld in 2001, so it’s a weird experience being a ‘new author’ a second time around. Given the gap since my last novel came out, I feel like I’m almost starting my career over again. I’m not sure that’s a bad thing. In the intervening years since my first book, I’ve learned a lot about the industry. But it was always as an independent author. I failed more than I succeeded and I have the personal and professional scars to show for it. But I also had a lot of fun and got to realize a dream.\nNow signed with Haven, an indie company (and an upstart in its own right), it’s been interesting seeing many of the growing pains I went through when I was first published, only now on a company scale. It’s been a hell of a ride just getting to this point. But now that I/we are here, it’s like cresting a mountain. It’s been long, hard, and arduous, but now we get to look out over the possibility that lies ahead.\nThis is an incredibly exciting time; professional, artistically, and personally. Having the serials back online, being back in print, and now having a publishing house behind me, a new set of challenges and opportunities presents itself. It’s exciting, to say the least.\nFor those of you who have been here with me through it all, thank you for sticking by me. For those of you who are just now joining the adventure, welcome aboard. We’re just getting started and there’s a LOT of fun stuff on the way.\nAnd some of it will be showing up sooner than you think! 🙂\nTools of the Imagination — The Hobbit\nTools of the Imagination — Steins;Gate","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1875154"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.521817684173584,"wiki_prob":0.478182315826416,"text":"What does it mean when a guy says he wants you?\nIf a guy recently told you that he wants you, this post will show you likely reasons why and what you can do about them.\nSo, what does it mean when a guy says he wants you? Likely reasons why a guy will say that he wants you are that he is attracted to you, he wants to be more than just friends or that he is being dominant.\nThere are a number of possible reasons why a guy will say that he wants you. However, there are some things you can consider to help figure out the main cause.\nBelow are likely causes and what would make them more likely.\nThe reason why he said he wants you could be that he is attracted to you.\nThis would be more likely if he only said it to you, he said it when he was alone with you, he shows different body language around you than he does with other people and if he also says similar things only to you.\nIf he is attracted to you, it would be likely that he would show signs of being attracted to you, when he is around you, in his body language by doing things such as:\nGlancing at you a lot\nHaving dilated pupils when looking at you (people’s pupils will often become more dilated when looking at someone that they are attracted to)\nHe wants to be more than just friends\nIf he has been your friend for a while, the reason that he said he wants you could be that he wants to have more than just a friendship with you.\nIf he does want to be more than just friends he would likely show signs of being attracted to you and you might not have picked up on them.\nIf he did say it because he’s attracted to you, it would be especially likely that he would get anxious while you are with other men your age, that he would become defensive while they’re around you both and that he would base his schedule around yours.\nHe is being dominant\nThe cause might have been that he was being dominant. This would be more likely if he said it when you were both around other people.\nIf he was being dominating then he would be likely to show other signs of dominating behavior such as:\nTaking up lots of space\nTouching other people\nPutting his hands or feet on things that aren’t his\nTalking over people\nTalking loudly with a deeper voice\nTelling people to do things\nSquinting\nTight lips\nTension in the jaw\nWhen trying to figure out why he said that he wants you and how he feels about you it would help to consider how he reacts to seeing you.\nIf he, noticeably, changes his body language and behavior then it would make it more likely that he has particularly good feelings for you.\nIf he reacts to seeing you by doing things such as:\nThen it would be more likely that he said that he is attracted to you because he is attracted to you.\nConsider when and where he said that he wants you\nThe timing of when he said that he wants you would be something to consider.\nIf he said it when you were around other people, it would make it more likely that he was saying it because he was being dominant. He might also have said it because he was trying to make someone else jealous which would be more likely if he said it when there were other girls with you both.\nIf he said it to you when you were alone with him then it would make it more likely that he was showing attraction to you.\nPeople can show certain body language signs naturally. This is why it would help to compare how he interacts with you with how he interacts with other people.\nIf he shows the same body language around his other friends as he does with you, it would make it more likely that he said it because he considers you as a friend.\nWhereas, if he shows different body language around you then it would make it more likely that he said he wants you because he is attracted to you and he wants to date you.\nLook for a number of body language clues\nWhen considering what he could be showing with his body language it would help to consider multiple signs at the same time.\nThe reason for this is that a single body language sign can have many different meanings. This can cause single body language signs to be less reliable on their own.\nWhereas, if someone shows a number of body language signs that all suggest the same thing then it would make it more likely that they are showing them for that reason.\nWhen a guy gets jealous what does it mean?\nWhat does it mean when a guy makes you laugh?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1068821"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7426546812057495,"wiki_prob":0.2573453187942505,"text":"Webinar – Joint ESIL IG on the EU as a Global Actor/ ILAG Workshop\nJune 3, 2020 HD IG Events\nThe City Law School, International Law and Affairs Group (ILAG) and the ESIL Interest Group on the EU as a Global Actor will host a webinar on ‘The European Union’s External Action and International Law: A View From the Outside’ on 12 June 2020.\nHow is the European Union and its external action viewed from the ‘outside’? As the European Union’s external action continues to expand and evolve, this raises ever more questions about how such practice fits within the state-centric system of international law.\nSome practices in the EU’s external action have been criticised as examples of ‘European exceptionalism’, in which the EU receives exceptions from its international partners. The use of disconnection clauses in international agreements; the EU’s insistence that the autonomy of the EU legal order be preserved in dispute settlement bodies; the practice of concluding mixed agreements; among others, have raised concerns for the EU’s external partners. In these instances, the EU seeks certain exceptions under international law to take account the EU’s internal law. The EU’s external action has also attracted certain criticism from international lawyers who have pointed to fields of EU action may contravene international law.\nWhile much of this has been considered from the ‘internal’ perspective, especially by EU law experts, there has been less reflection on how the EU and its external action is viewed from the ‘outside’. This event understands ‘outside’ as a broad term to include opinions and approaches from outside the EU geographically, but also in terms of academic discipline. It may also involve critical and non-Western approaches to the understanding the EU’s external action. The event aims to open up the study of the EU’s external action to outside reactions and perspectives.\nParticipation in this webinar is possible for a limited number of participants. Please register to receive a link (in case you decide not to participate after all, please let us know as soon as possible to allow for your place to be used by someone else).\nCALL FOR PAPERS (now closed)\nESIL 2019 Annual Conference Report\nNew Journal – European Convention on Human Rights Law Review","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1670690"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7813354134559631,"wiki_prob":0.7813354134559631,"text":"Xi Jinping targets serious inequality in China’s “Gilded Age”\nChina Social Update\nRegister for myFT Daily Digest to learn about Chinese social news for the first time.\nThe new style of egalitarianism sweeping China will never work Kweichow Moutai, The manufacturer of spirits. The problem is not only that drunk business banquets were officially labeled “disgusting”, or there was a corruption case involving an official bribes 4,000 bottles of wine.\nA deeper problem is that the company found itself on the wrong side of China’s latest great social enterprise. It took four years to create one of the most unequal societies on the planet, and Beijing is now attracted by the slogan of “common prosperity”—or, in other words, redistributing the spoils to hundreds of millions of poor people.\nMoutai, drunk in a small glass, costs thousands of dollars a bottle, and has always been a spicy symbol of China’s “gilded age”. Toasting helps to consolidate the comfortable symbiotic relationship between elite traders and government officials, creating amazing wealth for a few charming people.\nTherefore, the recent sharp reversal of the fate of Kweichow Moutai may herald the scale of the social engineering project in the minds of President Xi Jinping. The market value of the world’s most valued beverage company has shrunk by US$207 billion since its peak in early February-more than the combined market value of Suntory in Japan and Heineken in the Netherlands.\n“The way the Chinese Communist Party views its legitimacy has changed drastically,” said Yu Jie, a researcher at the Chatham Institute, a think tank in London. “Xi Jinping is solving the suffering of ordinary people due to uneven income distribution and the inability to equal access to basic social welfare and certain services.”\nA committee led by Xi Call for this week. It stated that China will “regulate excessively high incomes and encourage high-income groups and enterprises to give back to society more.” For a long time, the party allowed some people and regions to “get rich first,” but now it puts “common prosperity” first.\nYu said that the key lies in the social contract between the CCP and the Chinese people. “If the party defends the current status quo, which is clearly unfair in the distribution of wealth and opportunities, the trust of ordinary people will collapse.”\nBut the task before Beijing is huge. Last year, the number of Chinese billionaires reached 1,058, surpassing the 696 in the United States. Hurun Global Rich ListHowever, about 600 million Chinese live on a monthly income of about 1,000 yuan ($154).\nDetailed information on how and at what speed China plans to resolve such inequality issues is sketchy or non-existent. But it is clear that some of China’s wealthiest private entrepreneurs are all aiming.Tens of billions of dollars have been wiped out of the tycoon’s wealth, such as Ma YunAlibaba founder Ma Huateng and Tencent founder Ma Huateng, because the new regulations depressed their company’s stock price.\nThe reaction of some savvy entrepreneurs is to fall behind Beijing’s agenda. Wang Xing, the founder of the food delivery group Meituan, donated US$2.3 billion to a charity fund that supports education and science. Tencent announces the establishment of a $7.7 billion fund Committed to “common prosperity”, it defines it as increasing the income of low-income groups, health care coverage, rural economic development, and education for disadvantaged students. “As a Chinese technology company blessed by China’s reform and opening up, Tencent has been thinking about how to use its technology and digital power to help society develop,” the company said.\nOther potential measures to narrow the gap between rich and poor in China may include major changes to the tax law.Loose tax treatment for technology companies may be completely or partially removed, forcing them to be closer to The national corporate tax rate is 25%, The analyst said. Another measure under consideration is the collection of property sales tax.\nBut no matter what specific measures are taken, the overall policy direction is firm. This is because of the special way the party issues and formulates its rules.\nAt the 19th CPC National Congress in 2017, Xi Announce the change In the party’s “main contradiction”-the philosophy that guides all its efforts. The previous concept formulated in 1981 emphasized accelerating economic growth. Since 2017, the party has focused on reducing the inequality that threatens its legitimacy and improving the quality of life of the people.\nChinese analysts say it took Xi Jinping four years to fully support the new policy direction, but he now seems determined. At the 20th Party Congress to be held next year, he must show the progress he has made in achieving his newly set goals.\nHowever, Yuen Yuen Ang, an associate professor at the University of Michigan, said that overall, the clearest way to understand what is happening in China is to compare it with the history of the United States in the 19th century.\nThe Gilded Age lasted approximately from 1870 to 1900. As millions of impoverished immigrants arrived in the United States, wealth was concentrated in the hands of powerful industrialists. This was a period of rapid growth and severe inequality.That period gave way to Progressive age, An era of extensive social and political reforms. “Xi Jinping is trying to summon China’s own progressive era,” Ang said.\nSaudi Arabia’s ambitious climate plan is difficult to take off\nThis year, when Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman …\nCoronavirus Update: Due to the exponential increase in cases, Louisiana has instituted mask requirements\nSan Francisco and the other six counties in …\nAs Vietnam intensifies Brazil’s woes, coffee roasters bitterly brew\nAgricultural products update Sign up for myFT Daily …","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1411065"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.60465008020401,"wiki_prob":0.60465008020401,"text":"According to a UNICEF report, armed groups most often recruit children in West and Central Africa\nAfrica – Children in West and Central Africa have become the most recruited by armed organizations, with the largest number of sexual abuse victims in the world, according to a new report released Tuesday by the United Nations Children’s Fund. According to the report, the region has seen an increase in the number of new and protracted conflicts over the last five years, with more than 21,000 children recruited by government forces and armed groups, more than 2,200 victims of sexual violence, and more than 3,500 abducted, making it the world’s second most abducted region.\n“We have the largest number of children in our region that have been recruited and used by armed groups.” We have the largest number of youngsters who have been sexually abused or raped. We are the second region in which children have been kidnapped. “ The Associated Press spoke with Marie-Pierre Poirier, UNICEF’s regional director for West and Central Africa. Because these infractions are cumulative, it is quite rare for a child to be subjected to just one of them, she said. Since the United Nations developed a system to monitor and report on grave breaches against minors, such as recruitment, abduction, rape, and attacks on schools and hospitals in 2005, West and Central Africa have committed one out of every four violations worldwide.\nAccording to the United Nations, violence has had devastating humanitarian consequences for children and communities in conflict-affected countries such as the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the Sahel and Lake Chad Basin regions, with the pandemic exacerbating the situation. As a result of conflict and the coronavirus, more than 57 million children require humanitarian aid, a number that has risen since last year. While the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has the highest rate of children recruited and employed by armed groups in the world and where children are in a particularly vulnerable position, UNICEF is concerned about the situation in other countries.\nBurkina Faso’s President appoints a new Prime Minister\nGuinea: President Alpha Conde Takes Coronavirus Vaccine\nIn Nigeria, gunmen abducted 73 students just days after another group was released\nIn the Central African Republic, palm wine benefits the economy\nKenya: Parents Financially Handicapped As Schools Reopens\nLocals from Goma region, Africa leave as volcano tremors continue\nMozambique: “Over 30,000 May Be Affected By Floods” – INGRD\nSouth Sudan set to campaign against child marriage\n“The DRC continues to account for 71% of all recruitment and utilization of children in armed conflicts. However, Mali and the Central African Republic have seen the most rapid growth in recent years, “Poirier explained. For nearly a decade or more, some countries have been a source of concern. This year, Cameroon, Burkina Faso, and the Lake Chad Basin were added to the United Nations’ annual report on children and armed conflict. The report emphasizes the issue of armed organizations recruiting or kidnapping girls. According to the survey, they account for 30 to 40 percent of the children in those groups’ care, and they are the ones who have experienced the most rape and sexual assault.\n“The majority of the victims of rape and sexual abuse are females,” the UNICEF regional director noted, “but these girls have great hesitancy even after they flee, even when they are reintegrated.” Many people are hesitant to seek help, and many people are hesitant to use services because of the enormous shame connected with what occurred to them. The United Nations is urging parties to the conflict to prevent and end violations against children, to hold perpetrators accountable, and for aid organizations to increase documentation of violations, as well as prevent and respond to them, by providing not only health and education, but also psychological support.\nMore than $92 million is needed for child protection in emergencies across West and Central Africa, with more than half of that amount still unfunded. Poirier stated, “The situation is basically snowballing in the wrong direction.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line738457"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8320657014846802,"wiki_prob":0.8320657014846802,"text":"Russell Crowe in “Fathers and Daughters” by Gabriele Muccino 18/10/2013 15:24 (By Etienne Jean de la PERLE)\nRussell Crowe in “Fathers and Daughters” by Gabriele Muccino\n“Fathers and Daughters”, the drama film to be directed by Gabriele Muccino for Voltage films will have Russell Crowe (The Gladiator, A Beautiful Mind, The Man of Steel) in the main role.\nBeing one of Hollywood’s most talented actors, Russell Crowe is will be able to play this role with much dexterity. Before he is seen in “Fathers and Daughters”, his fans will be able to see him in Darren Aronofsky’s “Noah”.\nRussell Crowe being selected to be one of the two main characters of this film is no coincidence. The team being built by Voltage for this project is very specific. Muccino, for example, is the director who has delivered such films as “Seven Pounds” and “The Pursuit of Happyness”. It is therefore a given that “Fathers and Daughters” will be a very potent drama film.\nWhen speaking about Russell Crowe’s involvement in “Fathers and Daughters”, Muccino said: “This is a performance-driven movie, and therefore I couldn’t ask for a better actor than Russell to deliver this intensely emotional drama. It’s edgy, heart-wrenching, and uplifting at the same time. To me, it feels like a classic American movie that recalls the great character dramas of the 70s like Kramer vs. Kramer and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest.”\nThe role of the daughter, the secondprotagonist of the movie, has not yet been allocated. However, according to Deadline.com, it will go to a high profile actress. There have not yet been any rumours regarding this role, but it will surely not be long before they start!\nTypos: russelcrowe, russell crow, fathers and dorters, faathers and daughters\nRussell Crowe official Twitter page\nImage credit:©AFP PHOTO / Robyn Beck","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1383178"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9789068102836609,"wiki_prob":0.9789068102836609,"text":"Kenya: Leading By Example\nAfrica In Fact (Johannesburg)\nanalysis By Mark Kapchanga\nOnyango Okoth was diagnosed with COVID-19 on 14 July after he visited a hospital in Kisumu for what he claims was a routine medical check. The father of four, who works as a fisherman in Lake Victoria in the western part of Kenya, says he had experienced shortness of breath and high fever the previous day, prompting him to look for treatment. \"After receiving initial medical assistance, I was advised to go back home as the hospital facilities were packed,\" says Okoth. \"The doctors said I was to self-isolate for at least 14 days.\" But Okoth, 45, did not know where to start; he'd never heard of self-care. \"It was a long, tough and draining struggle with my meagre resources, which had to compete for food, medical equipment and sanitary products,\" he told Africa in Fact. Faced with this financial pressure, he says he opted to look for alternative and affordable solutions, particularly a special bed that he had been advised to obtain. Okoth's story mirrors the daily struggle of many Kenyans in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.\nWhile more than 30,000 Kenyans had contracted the disease by the first week of September, and there had been 581 deaths, many people had also lost their livelihoods, which has translated to escalated poverty rates. On 1 September, the Kenya Bureau of Statistics said in its Quarterly Labour Force report that unemployment had increased to 10.4% between April and June 2020 compared to the 5.2% recorded in the first quarter of 2020. But even though the crisis has meant sweeping changes to Kenyan society, daily routines and work life, it has also acted as a powerful driver of creative thought and innovation, especially among young people. \"As much as we are working around the clock to ensure Kenyans adhere to the COVID-19 protocols and guidelines to contain its spread, we are also challenging young people to come up with innovations in response to the outbreak to stimulate economic and job growth,\" says Julius Korir, the Principal Secretary, State Department for Youth.\nAmong the eight innovators was Gordon Ogutu, 34, from Nairobi's Githurai slums, who turned to YouTube to learn how critical care beds could be made and improvised locally to fit the demands of the market for people like Onyango Okoth. Ogutu says it was his anger that the Kenyan government was spending billions of shillings to import critical care beds that inspired him to come up with a local solution. Using the know-how he gathered from YouTube, he now makes critical care beds from locally assembled materials. Celebrating the creativity of Ogutu's work during the event, WHO regional innovation advisor Moredreck Chibi said they aimed at continuing to integrate African innovators into the regional COVID-19 response strategy. Ogutu's metal critical care beds are designed to provide comfort and safety to both the patient and the caregiver. The design includes a release feature that allows medical teams to flatten the bed at the push of a button or lever and IV poles with hooks to hang fluids and other medication administered via a drip.\nKenyan fashion desiner of \"Lookslikeavido\" David Avido, 24, creates masks from remnant of cloth he uses, to hand out to people for free so that they can wear it as a preventive measure against the COVID-19 coronavirus, in Kibera, Nairobi, on March 18, 2020. (Photo by Gordwin ODHIAMBO / AFP)\nThe beds also have removable heads and footboards, which lock safely into place allowing caregivers to tilt the bed and also to adjust the height. \"If they (western countries) can do it, then I knew I could also, perhaps even better,\" says Ogutu, who graduated from the Kenya Polytechnic in industrial chemistry in 2010. \"I gained a lot of knowledge from various online platforms; it was not as complex as I had thought initially.\" He told Africa in Fact that the demand for his beds had grown exponentially, with small hospitals as well individuals among his customers. \"Impressed by my workmanship, customers have come from as far as 500 km away to order their beds. As a result, I have expanded my workshop labour pool to six, sometimes as many as 15 depending on the orders to be made.\" Among his individual customers is Michael Ndwiga, 54, from Embu in central Kenya, who in June had two suspected COVID-19 cases in his family.\nHe says he purchased the locally made critical care beds from Ogutu after the government announced the plan for patients to be looked after at home due to congestion in hospitals. \"Apart from being affordable, they are of good quality, and (quite) similar to those that are imported from abroad,\" he said. Ogutu hopes to benefit from President Uhuru Kenyatta's call on 15 July, which instructed the government to procure 500 hospital beds from local innovators. \"The locally made critical care beds are a vital aid to public hospitals that are reeling under the pressure of COVID-19-related admissions,\" President Kenyatta said then. The opportunities arising from the pandemic for young innovators have extended beyond critical care beds to locally made surgical masks, which were initially imported, at a relatively higher cost, from the United States, Europe and Asia.\nDavid Avido, 24, a designer and proprietor of the LooksLikeAvido, a Kibrabased fashion firm that focuses on African fabrics, says he took matters into his own hands to produce masks for the people of the Kibra slums after he realised the gravity of the coronavirus. Unlike other businesses driven by return on investment, he told Africa in Fact that he makes and distributes the masks for free. Since March, Avido said, he had distributed more than 20,000 of the items. For his philanthropy, Avido has received a special commendation from President Kenyatta, listed in the 2020 Presidential Citations Order for Outstanding Professionals in Kenya's response to the coronavirus pandemic. Also among the 68 on the list for the Presidential Order of Service - Uzalendo Award was nine-year-old Stephen Wamukota from Mukwa in Bungoma, western Kenya, who came up with a wooden hand-washing machine to help check the spread of coronavirus.\nTop Headlines Kenya Coronavirus Innovation\nWamukota, who came up with the idea after learning on television about ways to prevent catching the virus, says the machine allows users to tip a bucket of water using a foot pedal to avoid touching surfaces, thus reducing the chance of infections. In a bid to enhance innovation, Deputy President William Ruto, in a 24 July tweet, said the government would step up the mentoring and resourcing of micro-, small- and medium-sized businesses and startups \"with an appreciation that they are the arteries of our development\". He noted that, due to the biting effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the economy, the government would support and forge partnerships with creative entrepreneurs and businesses, big and small, to support their sustainable growth. Young people across Africa, he said, were exposed to environments that encouraged innovation.\n\"No doubt in the near future, given proper attention and the right environment, Africa will be the centre of global innovations and inventions, where even vaccines for stubborn pandemics like COVID-19 can be found,\" he said.\nRead the original article on Africa In Fact.\nCopyright © 2021 Africa In Fact. All rights reserved. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com). To contact the copyright holder directly for corrections — or for permission to republish or make other authorized use of this material, click here.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line377820"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6289456486701965,"wiki_prob":0.37105435132980347,"text":"Laboratory Techniques, Protocols, Science\nClinical Cytogenetics – Pt.1: A study of chromosomal aberrations\nAs we know, cytogenetics is the study of chromosomal structure and behavior by using different staining techniques. In the year 1962, Lejeune proved Waardenburg’s hypothesis (the cause of Down syndrome could be a chromosomal aberration) by reporting the first case of syndrome due to chromosomal aberrations. It was a major breakthrough in cytogenetics research.\nWith the discovery of the chromosome and related syndromes, researchers wanted to dive deep into the structural and behavioral details of chromosomes. The introduction of cytogenetics helped researchers to study the chromosomes by using color technologies. Later, research advancement bifurcated cytogenetics into molecular and clinical cytogenetics. Molecular cytogenetics refers to the study of chromosomes at the molecular level whereas clinical cytogenetics deals with the study of chromosomal aberrations and related disorders.\nAfter the first report of Down’s syndrome, it didn’t take long to detect several other syndromes due to chromosomal aberrations. Clinical cytogenetics became a very crucial field to study these diseases and their treatments. Different techniques were developed to study the chromosomal aberrations such as Karyotyping, fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH), Combined genomic hybridization (CGH), and Multiplex-Fluorescent in situ hybridization(M-FISH).\nIn this article, we will study variant chromosomal syndromes/diseases (for example, Down’s syndrome and turner’s syndrome) due to different chromosomal aberrations (for example aneuploidy and polyploidy), and represent the different techniques that are used to study these diseases.\nClinical Cytogenetics\nClinical cytogenetics is the branch of cytogenetics that deals with the study of diseases due to chromosomal abnormalities to find the medication of different genetic disorders. It is a major area of concern for researchers, as it is difficult to prevent and find a cure for genetic disorders.\nFew categories of chromosomal aberrations are given below:\nAutosomal aneuploidy\nStructural chromosome rearrangements\nSex chromosomal disorders\nPrenatal cytogenetics\nChromosome instability.\nLet’s look at the first three categories and their examples one by one, which should give you an overview of how chromosomal aberrations occur and what diseases they cause. The remaining categories are discussed in part-2 of this article.\n1. Autosomal aneuploidy\nEuploidy is defined as the presence of a complete set of chromosomes in an organism. Any deviation from the normal number of chromosomes in somatic cells (excluding sex chromosomes) leads to a condition called autosomal aneuploidy. Aneuploidy results in an extra (trisomy) or missing chromosome and is a common cause of genetic or birth disorders.\nIt is estimated that there are 0.2% chances of occurrence of autosomal aneuploidy in newborns. It is also observed that the total estimation of the occurrence of autosomal aneuploidy in different chromosomes ranges between 0.26–0.34%. The most common abnormalities are the result of an extra chromosome in chromosomes 21, 18, and 13. Compared to all the other chromosomes, chromosome 21 was found to have a higher frequency of about 0.29% for the occurrence of aberrations. These studies were done by using cytogenetic techniques like Fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) and Primed in situ labeling (PRINS).\nMechanism of Aberrations\nThe major cause of the occurrence of aberrations in the chromosomes is Nondisjunction. It is defined as the failure of the separation of chromosomes/chromatids during Meiosis I/Meiosis II. Nondisjunction is mostly observed to occur during meiosis I. The nondisjunctions can be studied by using techniques such as FISH and M-FISH in cells undergoing division.\nFigure: The image shows how nondisjunction in the chromosomes during meiosis I and meiosis II lead to aneuploidy conditions in the cells. Source: http://www.scielo.org.co/pdf/sun/v26n1/v26n1a12.pdf\nTrisomy, in autosomal aneuploidy, refers to the presence of three copies of a particular chromosome instead of two copies, as usual.\nExample of Autosomal trisomies\nTrisomy of chromosome 21 , 95% of the time, causes Down’s syndrome. It was estimated that Down’s syndrome occurs more in males compared to females in the ratio of 1.2:1 (this study was done by using the multicolor FISH technique). It was also estimated that the trisomy 21 in newborns is associated with maternal age. The other abnormalities due to trisomy 21 are Robertsonian translocation and mosaicism. By using the karyotype technique, the trisomy of the chromosome can be observed.\nThe phenotype of down’s syndrome includes craniofacial appearance, flat nasal bridge, small-mouth, thick lips, and protruding tongue. Hands and legs small, having palmar crease; the child also shows short stature and mental retardation.\nTrisomy of chromosome 18 causes Edward’s syndrome; named after the scientist Edward whose team first described this disease. This disease is found in 1 in 6000-8000 births and most likely to occur in females rather than males in the ratio of 1:3-4.\nThe phenotype of Edward’s syndrome includes craniofacial dysmorphism, cardiac anomaly, mental retardation, small-mouth, and clenched hands. It is estimated that the frequency of survival of the child (with trisomy 18) for up to 1 week ranges between 25-35% and 10% or less only survive for at most one year.\nTrisomy of chromosome 13 causes Patau’s syndrome; named after the scientist Patau whose team first described the disease. This occurs in 1 in 12,000 births and chances of occurrence is more in females than males. It is found that the chances of occurrence of this syndrome in the fetus increase with maternal age.\nThe phenotype of this disease includes microcephaly, defective scalp, hernia, polydactyly, cardiac anomaly, polycystic kidneys, mental retardation, and bicornuate uterus. The chances of survival of the child (with trisomy 18) are 5% (for up to 6 months). In maximum cases, it is observed that the newborn could not survive more than 3-7 days.\n2. Structural chromosome rearrangements\nStructural chromosome rearrangement is defined as relocation/reordering of a part of a chromosome from its own location to the other part of the same/other chromosomes, or it can also occur due to gain or loss of a part of the chromosome. The structural rearrangements are of different types which include: deletion, insertion, inversion, translocation, isochromosome, and ring chromosome.\nMechanism of rearrangements\nChromosomal rearrangements occur due to the exchange of regions between non-sister chromatids or non-homologous chromosomes.\nFigure: The image shows all forms of structural rearrangements of the chromosome. Source: DOI:10.1016/b978-0-323-35775-3.00001-1\nExamples of structural chromosome rearrangements\na. Deletions\nDeletion is the loss of genetic material of a chromosome of an organism. But, not all losses of the chromosomal region lead to abnormalities, i.e. the loss of region od short arm of the acrocentric region and the loss of gene-poor region do not show any major abnormalities or differences in the phenotype of an organism. High resolution molecular cytogenetic techniques are needed to visualize the deleted region of a chromosome.\nFew examples of deletions that result in disease conditions are given below:\nWolf-Hirschhorn syndrome: This condition arises due to a deletion in the short arm of chromosome 4 . The phenotype includes mental retardation, cardiomyopathy, hypotonia, growth delay, flat nose bridge, and seizures.\nCri du chat syndrome: This disease occurs due to the loss of a chromosomal region from the short arm of the 5th chromosome . The phenotype includes infant crying like a cat, mental retardation, growth delay, and hypertelorism.\nWilliams syndrome: This disease arises due to the loss of region 3 from the long arm of chromosome 7 . The phenotype includes short stature, mental retardation, hypercalcemia, hoarse voice, and stellate pattern in the iris.\nb. Duplication\nDuplication is the gain of a region of a chromosome (an extra copy of the genomic segment) of an organism. Duplications are of two types: direct and inverted. Direct duplications are a copy of a segment of a chromosome in the same order as it exists in the normal chromosome. Inverted duplications are a copy of a chromosomal segment in the opposite/reverse order. Duplications of a segment are generally less severe than the deletion of a segment of a chromosome.\nSome of the diseases that are caused due to duplication of a segment of a chromosome are listed below:\nBeckwith-Wiedemann syndrome: This disease occurs due to the duplication of the 15th region of the short arm of chromosome 11 . The phenotype of the disease includes hypoglycemia, ear creases, macrosomia, susceptible to the tumor, and learning difficulties.\nPallister-Killian syndrome: This disease occurs due to the duplication of a region of the short arm of chromosome 12 (mosaic tetrasomy) . The phenotype includes hyper or hypopigmentation, mental retardation, prominent forehead, and protruding lower lip.\nPotocki-Lupski syndrome: This disease occurs due to the duplication of the 11th region of the short arm of chromosome 7 . The phenotype of this disease includes hypotonia, cardiac anomalies, mental retardation, abnormal behavior, and dysmorphic features.\nc. Inversions\nInversion is a type of structural rearrangement in which a segment of a chromosome breaks at two places and then rejoins in an opposite/reverse order. Inversions are of two types: pericentric and paracentric. Pericentric inversions involve centromere and the inversion in the segment changes the banding pattern of the chromosome and centromeric position (two breaks on the two sides of centromere). Paracentric inversion does not involve centromere and the two breaks occur on the same side of centromere.\nThe inversions in the chromosomes can be studied by using banding techniques (karyotype or multicolor/karyotyping). The examples of Inversions are: inv(3)(p25q21), inv(5)(p13q13), and inv(2)(p12q13).\nSome of the disorders caused due to inversions in the chromosomes are given below:\nHemophilia A: This disease occurs due to the homologous recombination between gene A (located within intron 2) and a segment of other copy of gene A (located 500 Kb telomeric position). This recombination creates a defect in factor VIII gene which is present at the long arm of the X chromosome. This causes Hemophilia A.\nHunter Syndrome (or mucopolysaccharidosis type II): This disease occurs due to the homologous intrachromosomal recombination between two locus of the X chromosome, which are IDS and IDS-2 loci. The recombination causes improper functioning of the enzyme iduronate-2-sulfatase that leads to a lysosomal storage disorder.\nd. Translocation\nTranslocations are the exchange of segments between two non-homologous chromosomes. It is of two types: reciprocal and non-reciprocal translocation. Reciprocal translocation is the exchange of a part of a chromosome with the other non-homologous chromosome. This generates two mutations or translocated chromosomes in one event. The non-reciprocal chromosome is a direct (one way) transfer of a part of the chromosome from one chromosome to the other.\nThere are two types of segregation involved in the meiosis event of heterozygote (which include translocated chromosome and normal chromosome) and they are adjacent segregation and alternate segregation. The adjacent segregation (segregation of chromosomes by the side/adjacent to the other chromosome) generates inviable products because of the presence of duplicated or deleted regions in the chromosome. The alternate segregation (segregation of chromosomes alternates to each other) generate viable products.\nRobertsonian translocation\nThis is a type of reciprocal translocation that involves two acrocentric chromosomes. In this translocation, breaks occur near the centromere that affects the short arm of both the chromosomes. The transfer of a segment takes place between both the chromosome that generate one very large chromosome and one very short chromosome. This pattern of translocation has been seen between chromosomes 13 and 14, 14 and 21, and 14 and 15.\nThe abnormalities related to the translocations of chromosomes are given below:\nBurkitt’s lymphoma: This disease occurs due to the translocation of a region of chromosome 8 that contains the Myc gene to chromosome 14. The translocation disturbs the normal functioning of the Myc gene to control cell growth and proliferation. The overexpression of the Myc gene occurs that leads to cancer.\nChronic myeloid leukemia: This is a type of cancer that occurs due to the transfer of a segment from chromosome 9 that contains the BCR gene to chromosomes 22. This translocation causes an abnormal fusion between BCR and ABL (located at chromosome 22) and causes cancer.\ne. Isochromosome and ring chromosome\nIsochromosome is a type of structural rearrangement of chromosomes in which the centromere is divided transversely rather than longitudinally. This way, the two copies of the chromosome arms look like mirror images of each other.\nA ring chromosome is formed when two breaks occur in a chromosome, giving rise to two sticky ends that reunite to form a ring.\n3. Sex chromosomal disorders\nThe sex chromosome (X and Y) contains hereditary information and decides the gender of an organism. The abnormalities of the sex chromosomes are less severe than the autosomal aneuploidies but are most common among living beings. It is estimated that the numerical abnormality of the sex chromosome occurs at the frequency of 1 in 500 births.\nFew examples of the numerical abnormality of the sex chromosome are explained below, in brief:\nTurner syndrome: This disease appears due to one missing X-chromosome . The frequency of occurrence of this disease is 1 in 2500 births. The phenotype of this disease includes congenital heart anomaly, neck webbing, edema in hand and leg, and renal anomaly. An adult having this disease will have short stature, dysmorphic features, and ovarian failure.\nKlinefelter syndrome: This was the first identified sex chromosome disorder. This disease results due to the appearance of an extra X chromosome. The frequency of its occurrence is estimated to be 1 in 575-1000 newborn males. The phenotype of this disease includes small testicles and penile, infertility, pear-shaped hips, gynecomastia, and decreased facial and body hair.\nThere are more numerical disorders of sex chromosome such as XXX, XXXY, and XXYY. All these disorders are studied by the Karyotyping technique, which helps the researcher to have a clear view of the genome of an organism and detect the numerical abnormalities.\nCytogenetic techniques are crucial in helping researchers to have a deep insight into the structure and function of the chromosome. Clinical cytogenetics provides information regarding chromosomal disorders, the cause of the disease, and helps the doctors in genetics counseling. It is also helpful in finding the cure of the disease and to diagnose and monitor the effects of treatments (such as in the case of cancer). There is a huge scope of evolution of this technique and the combination of high throughput technologies can provide precise and high-resolution results in the future.\nSo far, we looked into the structural and numerical chromosomal disorders and the diseases they cause. In Clinical Cytogenetics – Pt. 2, we discuss prenatal cytogenetics, the cause of spontaneous abortions, and how it helps in detecting diseases in the fetus, as well as in the process of genetic counseling.\nBondeson, M.-L., Dahl, N., Malmgren, H., Kleijer, W. J., Tönnesen, T., Carlberg, B.-M., & Pettersson, U. (1995). Inversion of the IDS gene resulting from recombination with IDS-related sequences in a common cause of the Hunter syndrome. Human Molecular Genetics, 4(4), 615–621. DOI:10.1093/hmg/4.4.615\nGersen Steven L. and Keagle Martha B. (2013). The Principles of Clinical Cytogenetics (3rd ed.), Springer, New York.\nMiller, M. A., & Zachary, J. F. (2017). Mechanisms and Morphology of Cellular Injury, Adaptation, and Death1. Pathologic Basis of Veterinary Disease, 2–43.e19. DOI:10.1016/b978-0-323-35775-3.00001-1\nMostapha Ahmad, Silvera-Redondo C., Muna Hamdan Rodríguez (2010). Nondisjunction and chromosomal anomalies. Salud Uninorte, 26 (1): 117-133.\nRosslter, J. P., Young, M., Kimberland, M. L., Hutter, P., Ketterling, R. P., Gitschier, J., and Antonarakis, S. E. (1994). Factor VIII gene inversions causing severe hemophilia A originate almost exclusively in male germ cells. Human Molecular Genetics, 3(7), 1035–1039. DOI:10.1093/hmg/3.7.1035\nAnjali Singh is a freelance writer. Following her passion for science and research, she did her Master’s in Plant Biology and Biotechnology from the University of Hyderabad, India. She has a strong research background in Plant Sciences with expertise in Molecular techniques, Tissue culture, and Biochemical Assays. In her free time outside work, she likes to read fictional books, sketch, or write poems. In the future, she aspires to pursue a doctorate in Cancer Biology while continuing her excellence as a scientific writer.\nInverted Light Microscope: A Comprehensive Guide for Students of Microbiology and Laboratory Technicians\nA microscope is an essential tool that is used in most laboratories. We would know nothing about the microorganisms around us if this incredible instrument\nLab Basics\nComprehensive Pipette Guide\nNeed Pipettes for your Lab? Click here As an Amazon Associate Conductscience Inc earns revenue from qualifying purchases The modern pipette has had a colorful\nAnimal Identification Techniques\nScientific investigations, preclinical research, and pharmacological studies use a number of laboratory animals as subjects. Therefore, proper animal identification becomes the necessity. Animal identification techniques\nThe Light Microscope\nIntroduction The light or optical microscope is a common lab tool that can be used to visualize structures with sizes below that which can be","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1246364"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.528407871723175,"wiki_prob":0.47159212827682495,"text":"Biblioctopus was conceived in the mid 1970s by Mark J. Hime, they published their first Catalog (Biblioasis One) on May 1, 1980, exhibited at their first bookfair in 1981, and continue to do both to this day.\nThe back story is dull but here is a terse recounting. Mark was born in Los Angeles (1944), was always immature compared to his peers, graduated high school in 1961, attended Santa Monica City College and U.C.L.A. and after 2 years of playing hard and studying little drifted into his father’s fine jewelry business (Marvin Hime & Co., Beverly Hills) where he worked (again off and on, and without aims) throughout the 1960s. As the ‘60s disintegrated he circled southern California with his girlfriend of the moment (Melissa Montgomery, 1948–) looking for a place to live where they could try to grow up, away from the turmoil that had fallen upon their generation. By 1972 they had settled in Idyllwild, California, a small forest town of 2,000, surrounded by National and State Park land, half way up Mt. San Jacinto (10,834 feet at the peak). They married in 1973, made babies in 1974 (Jennefer) and 1976 (Adam) and recognized that sleepy Idyllwild would not supply a reasonable source of income, so they would have to find some way to support themselves with money made in the wider world. A simple (purely practical) search began for the most expensive thing per pound that was traditionally sold by catalog, and delivered through the mail. They compromised their criteria by adding to their initial principles, that their product be something they liked and respected, and for which, perhaps, they would be liked and respected, and thus was conceived, Biblioctopus and its 1st editions of the classics of fiction. By 1984 they were book–world famous (something like being the prettiest girl in Antarctica), in 1987 they had a third child (Alexandre), in 1991 they opened a new location (Beverly Hills) so as to be more accessible to collectors, divorced in 2001, and under the leadership of Jennefer and the directorship of Alexandre (carrying the now aging and increasingly quirky Mark), settled in their current location (Century City) in 2012. Mark continues to write the catalogs and shows up at an occasional book fair, but Jen and Alex now pilot Biblioctopus.\nSo what of the future?\nWe have got,\nAlex and Jen,\nAnd they have not.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1502304"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5024583339691162,"wiki_prob":0.5024583339691162,"text":"Italy’s leather sofa: The embossed Italian leather sofa was the best thing ever?\nItalian leather was the most popular furniture in the 1950s and 1960s, and today, the leather sofa is still popular.\nAs with many things in Italy, the best quality leather has always been the one most affordable.\nThe problem was that it wasn’t always available in the same condition as the rest of the world’s furniture.\nIn the mid-1950s, the Italian government was looking to develop the country’s economy and it was looking for a way to reduce its dependence on foreign imports.\nThe government was in the process of opening up its textile industry to foreign competition, and the new factory in Naples was the first step in that direction.\nThe Italians had an interest in reducing their dependency on foreign suppliers, and so the factory was equipped with the most modern machinery, which allowed for a higher quality of leather.\nThe Italian leather furniture was called the Embossed Leather Stools.\nThey were made from a thick, black leather that had been treated with a special substance to improve its leather quality.\nBut the Embazoned Leather Chair, which is also known as the Embroidered Leather Chair or the Emboiled Chair, was the one that was widely known to the public, because it was a popular item in the U.S. It was also known in Italy as the Leather Chair.\nThe Emboidered Leather Stool is the standard furniture in Italy and is made from leather from an animal that’s been dyed white and embosses with a diamond shape, which means it’s an embossing.\nThis emboss can be found on all of the Italian leather chairs, which have a diamond shaped design on the back, and on some of the leathers used in the Embozed Leather chairs.\nIt’s also available in different colors and sizes, as well as being available in a wide variety of finishes.\nThe leather chair has a smooth leather back and is designed to hold up to a 15-inch weight.\nYou can also find a number of different types of leather, such as the leather in the chair’s handle, which has a very light texture.\nThe embroidered leather chair can be made from any number of materials, but in the United States, the Embosored Leather Chair is the most common.\nThe price of an emboored leather chair ranges from $300 to $1,200.\nThe most expensive leather chair is the Embotic Chair, a chair with a black leather back.\nThe chair is made of an exotic and unique animal, which was dyed white.\nIt has a diamond-shaped design on both the back and on the seat.\nThis leather chair also has a thick leather backing that is covered with embossings.\nIf you want to buy an Embotic Leather Chair from Amazon, the seller recommends that you purchase an Emboored Leather chair because the chair is available in many different finishes.\nIf your leather chair doesn’t have an embosored leather back, the embossers can be bought in the stores or at your local hardware store.\nThe best way to keep up with all the latest news about the leather industry is to subscribe to the Leather Brief Newsletter.\nTagged: embossed leatheritalian leather sofaleather hole punch\n← Leather Bomber Jacket: What it does, when to wear it, and how to get it\nApple CEO Tim Cook to be a ‘regular person’ in 2018 →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line289160"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9658561944961548,"wiki_prob":0.9658561944961548,"text":"Falcons get a little extra time to get ready for Ohio\nNCAAF Team Report - Bowling Green - INSIDE SLANT\nAfter nine consecutive Saturdays with a game, Bowling Green has some extra time to prepare for its November stretch run.\nThe Falcons, 6-3 overall, have won five straight games and are in second place in the Mid-American Conference at 4-1 after beating Eastern Michigan, 24-3.\nBowling Green is idle until Nov. 7 at Ohio. Ohio suffered a 23-20 loss to Miami on Oct. 27, knocking the Bobcats from the ranks of the unbeaten and out of the Top 25 national rankings.\n\"We've played very well in October and we're on a little bit of a winning streak; sometimes when that's happening you want to keep playing,\" Bowling Green coach Dave Clawson said.\n\"But like everybody else in the conference ... our guys are a little banged up so we're hoping to get them some rest, get them off their feet, and allow them to heal. That will give us a little more energy and juice as we head into November.\"\nFundamentals on the base offense and defense will be the focus of the Oct. 31 practice. Then the work begins on the Ohio game plan, Clawson said.\n\"With having the 11 days we will be able to get an extra practice in against Ohio,\" Clawson said.\nAfter the Ohio game, the Falcons have another long layoff before hosting Kent State on Nov. 17.\nNCAAF Team Report - Bowling Green - NOTES, QUOTES\n--Bowling Green continues to add to its future schedules with a home-and-home series against Memphis in 2015 and 2016, a home-and-home series with South Alabama in 2021 and 2022, and a game at Kansas State in 2019. Earlier in October, the Falcons added a game against Oregon in 2018.\n--Despite a 9-of-20 passing effort for 78 yards against Eastern Michigan on Oct. 27, QB Matt Schilz has moved to fourth on two Bowling Green career passing lists. Schilz has 1,076 passes, going past Rich Dackin's total of 1,056 (1986-89) and 6,999 yards passing, going ahead of Omar Jacobs' total of 6,938 (2003-05).\nSERIES HISTORY: Bowling Green leads Ohio, 36-25-2 (last meeting, 2011, 29-28 Ohio).\nSCOUTING THE OFFENSE: Bowling Green has moved the ball with its running game during its five-game winning streak. In the last five games, Bowling Green has rushed 205 times for 1,068 yards (213.6 yards per game average) and seven touchdowns. In four of the last five games, the Falcons have rushed for 200 or more yards. The Falcons started the season with five running backs, but have lost Jamel Martin (knee) for the season. Anthon Samuel missed Bowling Green's last game because of a neck injury and Andre Givens had to leave the Eastern Michigan game on Oct. 27 after being hit in the back. However, the running game still produced 225 yards against Eastern Michigan, with John Pettigrew picking up a career-high 136 yards and Jordan Hopgood chipping in with 61 yards. In the fourth quarter, Bowling Green had two long drives that took 12:17 off the clock. While the Falcons' final drive didn't net any points, it used up the final 9:10 of the game.\nSCOUTING THE DEFENSE: Bowling Green's defense has been the catalyst for the current five-game winning streak. In the last five games, the Falcons have allowed some mind-boggling numbers -- 33 points, including three touchdowns; 56 first downs; 207.8 yards per game in total offense (140.6 yards rushing and 67.2 yards passing); a 24.3 percent success rate on third-down conversions (18-of-74); while getting 16 quarterback sacks and seven interceptions. Improved tackling has been one of the keys to the success. \"We are getting much better play up front, so there are fewer plays getting to the third level of our defense,\" coach Dave Clawson said. \"Where we really struggled the past two years was so many missed tackles in the back end at safety and corner. When you miss a tackle back there, it's a big play and a lot of times a touchdown. Our secondary is doing a much better job tackling.\" Clawson said Jerry \"BooBoo\" Gates and Ryland Ward at safety and Darrell Hunter, DeVon McKoy, and Cameron Truss at cornerback have been much better tacklers this season.\nQUOTE TO NOTE: \"We are certainly going to have some challenges ahead. Ohio is a team we haven't tackled well the previous two years. ... They are going to present a great challenge to us.\" -- Coach Dave Clawson.\nNCAAF Team Report - Bowling Green - STRATEGY AND PERSONNEL\nTHIS WEEK'S GAME/NEXT GAME: Bowling Green at Ohio, Nov. 7 -- Bowling Green heads into November with all its goals, winning the Mid-American Conference East and getting to the MAC championship game in Detroit, intact but face a challenge at Ohio, which won its first seven games of the season and was ranked in the Top 25.\nKEYS TO THE GAME: If Bowling Green can continue to do the things that have worked during its five-game winning steak -- a ball-control offense and a stout defense -- then they should be in the game against Ohio. It will be the fourth time in the last five games the Falcons have face a challenging offense and Bowling Green must stop QB Tyler Tettleton and Ohio's skilled players.\nDT Chris Jones -- The senior leads the nation with 11 1/2 sacks and has been a disruptive force all season.\nLB Paul Swan -- The redshirt junior has come into his own this season and leads the Falcons with 52 tackles.\nR Gabe Martin -- The redshirt sophomore is coming off the biggest game of his career against Eastern Michigan on Oct. 27, as he led the Falcons with seven tackles, had an interception, and forced a fumble that was returned for the touchdown by teammate Chris Jones.\nQB Matt Schilz -- The redshirt junior hasn't been called upon to make many plays during the five-game winning streak, but he has to be ready in case the Falcons need to complete some passes in a crucial situation.\nROSTER REPORT\n--RB Anthon Samuel, Bowling Green's leading rusher with 725 yards and leading scorer with nine touchdowns, missed the Eastern Michigan game on Oct. 27 because of a neck injury. Coach Dave Clawson said Samuel is listed as probable for the Ohio game on Nov. 7.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line692235"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9019103050231934,"wiki_prob":0.9019103050231934,"text":"Get Pro Football Hall of Fame essential facts below. View Videos or join the Pro Football Hall of Fame discussion. Add Pro Football Hall of Fame to your PopFlock.com topic list for future reference or share this resource on social media.\nProfessional sports hall of fame in Canton, Ohio\nLocation in the United States\nShow map of the United States\nLocation in Ohio\nShow map of Ohio\nSeptember 7, 1963; 58 years ago (1963-09-07)\n2121 George Halas Dr NW, Canton, Ohio\n40°49?16?N 81°23?52?W / 40.82111°N 81.39778°W / 40.82111; -81.39778Coordinates: 40°49?16?N 81°23?52?W / 40.82111°N 81.39778°W / 40.82111; -81.39778\nProfessional sports hall of fame\nJim Porter\nThe Pro Football Hall of Fame is the hall of fame for professional American football, located in Canton, Ohio. Opened on September 7, 1963,[2] the Hall of Fame enshrines exceptional figures in the sport of professional football, including players, coaches, franchise owners, and front-office personnel, almost all of whom made their primary contributions to the game in the National Football League (NFL).\nAs of the Class of 2020, there are a total of 346 members of the Hall of Fame.[3] Members are referred to as \"Gold Jackets\" due to the distinctive gold jackets they receive during the induction ceremony. Between four and eight new inductees are normally enshrined every year. For the 2020 class, an additional 15 members, known as the \"Centennial Slate\", were inducted into the Hall of Fame to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the NFL.[4]\nOriginal entrance to the Pro Football Hall of Fame\nThe city of Canton successfully lobbied the NFL to have the Hall of Fame built and has cited three reasons. First, the NFL was founded in Canton on September 17, 1920,[5] (at that time it was known as the American Professional Football Association). Second, the now-defunct Canton Bulldogs were a successful pro football team and the NFL's first repeat champion (in 1922 and 1923). Third, the Canton community held a fundraising effort that garnered nearly $400,000 (equivalent to $2,640,000 in 2019) to get the Hall of Fame built.[6] Groundbreaking for the building was held on August 11, 1962,[7][8] and the Hall of Fame was opened to the public on September 7, 1963.[2]\nThe original building contained just two rooms, and 19,000 square feet (1,800 m2) of interior space.[9] In April 1970, ground was broken for the first of many expansions. This first expansion cost $620,000, and was completed on May 10, 1971.[2] The size was increased to 34,000 square feet (3,200 m2) by adding another room. The pro shop opened with this expansion. This was also an important milestone for the Pro Football Hall of Fame, as yearly attendance passed the 200,000 mark for the first time. This was at least in some part due to the increase in popularity of professional football caused by the advent of the American Football League and its success in the final two AFL-NFL World Championship games.[9]\nInside the original structure in 2008\nIn November 1977, work began on another expansion project, costing $1,200,000. It was completed in November 1978, enlarging the gift shop and research library, while doubling the size of the theater. The total size of the hall was now 50,500 square feet (4,690 m2), more than 2.5 times the original size.[9]\nThe building remained largely unchanged until July 1993. The Hall then announced yet another expansion, costing $9,200,000, and adding a fifth room. This expansion was completed on October 1, 1995,[2] and increased the building's size to 82,307 square feet (7,647 m2). The most notable addition was the GameDay Stadium, which shows an NFL Films production on a 20-by-42-foot (6.1 m × 12.8 m) Cinemascope screen.[9]\nIn 2013, the Hall of Fame completed its largest expansion and renovation to date; the total size of the hall is now 118,000 square feet (11,000 m2).\nHall of Fame Village, an estimated $900 million expansion project adjacent to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, has completed Phase I of construction; preparations for beginning Phase II are currently[when?] underway.[10][11]\nExecutive directors or presidents\nDick McCann (April 4, 1962 - November 1967)\nDick Gallagher (April 1968 - December 31, 1975)\nPete Elliott (February 1979 - October 31, 1996)\nJohn Bankert (November 1, 1996 - December 31, 2005)\nSteve Perry (April 24, 2006 - January 2014)\nDavid Baker (January 6, 2014 - October 16, 2021)[12][13]\nJim Porter (2021-)\nThe Hall is made up of several sections, with display of inductees at its heart\nThrough 2021, all players in the Hall, except Buffalo Bills guard Billy Shaw, played at least some part of their professional career in the NFL; Shaw played his entire career in the American Football League (AFL) prior to the 1970 AFL-NFL merger.\nThough several Hall of Famers have had AFL, Canadian Football League, World Football League, United States Football League, Arena Football League and/or Indoor Football League experience, and there is a division of the Hall devoted to alternative leagues such as these, to this point no players have made the Hall without having made significant contributions to either the NFL, AFL, or All-America Football Conference.\nFor CFL stars, there is a corresponding Canadian Football Hall of Fame; only one player, Warren Moon, and two coaches, Bud Grant and Marv Levy, are enshrined in both halls.\nAgain for the Arena Football League, there is also a corresponding Arena Football Hall of Fame; similarly, only one player, Kurt Warner, has been enshrined into both halls. The Indoor Football League, in which Terrell Owens played one season,[14] has also established a Hall of Fame.\nThe Chicago Bears have the most Hall of Famers among the league's franchises with either 37 or 30 enshrinees depending on whether players that only played a small portion of their careers with the team are counted.[15]\nEnshrinees are selected by a 48-person committee, largely made up of media members, officially known as the Selection Committee.[16]\nEach city that has a current NFL team sends one representative from the local media to the committee; a city with more than one franchise sends one representative for each franchise.\nThere are also 15 at-large delegates, including one representative from the Pro Football Writers Association. Except for the PFWA representative, who is appointed to a two-year term, all other appointments are open-ended, and terminated only by death, incapacitation, retirement, or resignation.[16]\nVoting procedure\nTom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium with the Hall of Fame in lower right\nTo be eligible for the nominating process, a player or coach must have been retired for at least five years; any other contributor such as a team owner or executive can be voted in at any time.[17]\nFans may nominate any player, coach or contributor by simply writing via letter or email to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The Selection Committee is then polled three times by mail (once in March, once in September, and once in October) to eventually narrow the list to 25 semifinalists. In November, the committee then selects 15 finalists by mail balloting.\nA Seniors and Contributors Committee, subcommittees of the overall Selection Committee, nominate Seniors (those players who completed their careers more than 25 years ago) and Contributors (individuals who made contributions to the game in areas other than playing or coaching). The Seniors Committee and Contributors Committee add one or two finalist(s) on alternating years, which makes a final ballot of 18 finalists under consideration by the full committee each year.[17] Committee members are instructed to only consider a candidate's professional football contributions and to disregard all other factors.[18]\nThe Selection Committee then meets on \"Selection Saturday\", the day before each Super Bowl game to elect a new class. To be elected, a finalist must receive at least 80% support from the Board. At least four, but no more than eight, candidates are elected annually.\n2020 Centennial Slate\nIn 2020, a special Blue-Ribbon Panel selected an additional 15 new members, known as the Centennial Slate, to be inducted into the Hall of Fame to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the NFL. Among these 15 members, ten would be seniors.[19] On January 11 during the weekend of the NFL Divisional playoffs, Hall of Fame president David Baker went on the set of The NFL Today to personally tell Bill Cowher, who was working as an analyst on that pregame show, that he was selected as one of the members of the Centennial Slate.\nOne day later, Baker went on the set of Fox NFL Sunday to inform Jimmy Johnson, working as an analyst on Fox's studio show, that he was also selected.[20] The rest of the Centennial Slate members were revealed on January 15.[4]\nThe remaining 13 members of the Centennial Slate elected to the Hall of Fame in 2020 are: Jim Covert, Winston Hill, Harold Carmichael, Duke Slater, Ed Sprinkle, Steve Sabol, Alex Karras, Bobby Dillon, Donnie Shell, George Young, Cliff Harris, Mac Speedie, and former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue.[21]\nThey were enshrined in 2021 due to Covid-19, but are still considered part of the Centennial Class of 2020.\nEnshrinement ceremony\nA football signed by the 1974 Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinement class\nThe enshrinement ceremony is the main event of the annual Enshrinement Week Powered by Johnson Controls that kicks off every NFL season. The celebration is held in Canton, throughout the week surrounding the enshrinement ceremony.[22] All members of the Hall of Fame are invited to attend the annual ceremony.[18]\nEnshrinees do not go into the Pro Football Hall of Fame as a member of a certain team. Rather, all of an enshrinee's affiliations are listed equally.[17] While the Baseball Hall of Fame plaques generally depict each of their inductees wearing a particular club's cap (with a few exceptions, such as Catfish Hunter and Greg Maddux), the bust sculptures of each Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee make no reference to any specific team. In addition to the bust that goes on permanent display at the Hall of Fame, inductees receive a distinctive Gold Jacket, and previous inductees nearly always wear theirs when participating at the new inductee ceremonies.\nPrevious induction ceremonies were held during the next day (Sunday from 1999-2005, Saturday in 2006), situated on the steps of the Hall of Fame building.\nStarting in 2002, the ceremony was moved to Fawcett Stadium (now Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium), where it was held from 1963 to 1965. Since 2007, the enshrinement ceremony has been held on the Saturday night, since 2017 two days after the Hall of Fame Game.[23]\nHall of Fame Game\nThe Hall of Fame Game, the annual NFL preseason opener, is played in Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium at Hall of Fame Village in Canton, Ohio. In 2017, the Hall of Fame Game was held for the first time on Thursday night. The preseason classic kicks off Enshrinement Week Powered by Johnson Controls and officially kicks off the NFL preseason.\nBlack College Football Hall of Fame\nThe Pro Football Hall of Fame museum includes a permanent exhibit recognizing the inductees of the Black College Football Hall of Fame. The two organizations partnered in 2016, also creating the Black College Football Hall of Fame Classic played at Tom Benson Hall of Fame Stadium.[24][25]\nSign at the old entrance to the PFHOF\nThe small number of candidates elected each year has helped foster what some perceive as an inequality of representation at certain positions or in certain categories of player, to the exclusion of defensive players in general (defensive backs and outside linebackers in particular), special teams players, wide receivers, and those from the \"seniors\" category. There has also been criticism that deserving players have been overlooked because they played most or all of their careers on poor teams.[26]\nIn 2009, a New York Times article criticized the Hall for not including punter Ray Guy on its ballot, erroneously stating that the Hall did not have an inductee at the time representing the position[27] (punter Yale Lary had been inducted in 1979, while Sammy Baugh had also punted in addition to his quarterback play; the punter position was not specialized until free substitution became widespread in the 1960s, and most punters until then also played another position). Guy was eventually inducted as part of the 2014 class for the Hall of Fame.\nThe Pro Football Hall of Fame is unique among North American major league sports halls of fame in that officials have been generally excluded. No on-field officials have ever been inducted, and only one person--1966 inductee Hugh L. Ray, the league's longtime supervisor of officiating and rules advisor--has been inducted for any contributions related to that aspect of the sport.[28] The National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and Hockey Hall of Fame have each inducted game officials as members. In part to rectify the lack of officials and other off-field contributors, the Hall of Fame added a \"Contributors\" committee beginning with the class of 2015, which will nominate officials, general managers, owners and other positions that have historically been overlooked by the committee at large.[29]\nOn August 31, 2021, former referee and director of officiating Art McNally was selected as the contributor nominee for the Hall's Class of 2022, marking the first time any professional football official will be considered as a finalist for enshrinement by the entire selection committee.[30]\nAnother prominent absence from the Hall is sports-journalist Howard Cosell, who has yet to be awarded the Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award despite his well-known association with Monday Night Football; an August 2010 Sports Illustrated article hints that Cosell may have even been \"blacklisted\" by the NFL.[31][32]\nAs the late 2010s approached, a number of controversial and polarizing figures began to reach eligibility for the Hall. For example, Darren Sharper's career achievements make him a candidate for the Hall, but there is debate over whether he should be inducted due to his conviction on multiple rape charges after he retired.[33]\nTerrell Owens' exclusion from the Hall in his first two years of eligibility despite his strong individual statistics was a subject of public debate:[34] while Owens was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2018, he refused to attend the enshrinement ceremony.[35]\nTouchdown Club Charities Hall of Fame\nCanadian Football Hall of Fame\nArena Football Hall of Fame\nIndoor Football League Hall of Fame\nDick McCann Memorial Award--sometimes referred to as the \"writer's wing\" of the Pro Football Hall of Fame\nPete Rozelle Radio-Television Award\n^ \"History of the Pro Football Hall of Fame\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on July 15, 2009. Retrieved 2012.\n^ a b c d Maroon, Thomas; Maroon, Margaret; Holbert, Craig (2006). Akron-Canton Football Heritage. Arcadia Publishing. Retrieved 2022.\n^ \"Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinees\". Retrieved 2021.\n^ a b \"15-person centennial slate for HOF revealed Jan. 15 on NFLN\". NFL. January 8, 2020.\n^ Fiorillo, Steve. \"History of the NFL: From the 1890s to the Present\". TheStreet. Retrieved 2019.\n^ \"History of the Pro Football Hall of Fame - Visit | Pro Football Hall of Fame Official Site\". Pro Football Hall of Fame.\n^ \"Hall of Fame ceremonies held at Canton\". Youngstown Vindicator. (Ohio). Associated Press. August 11, 1962. p. 8.\n^ \"Cards tie Giants, 21-21, in Hall of Fame Game\". Toledo Blade. (Ohio). Associated Press. August 12, 1962. p. 6.\n^ a b c d \"The Pro Football Hall of Fame: Then and Now\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. January 1, 2005. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012. Retrieved 2011.\n^ \"Pro Football Hall of Fame Village announces 'agreement in principal' on merger that could bring more cash to project\". WKYC. Retrieved 2019.\n^ \"Pro Football Hall of Fame Village delays frustrate neighbors in Canton\". WKYC. Retrieved 2019.\n^ \"History of the Pro Football Hall of Fame\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved 2018.\n^ https://theathletic.com/news/david-baker-pro-football-hall-of-fame-president-announces-retirement/wnwim9HI3udi/. Retrieved 2021. Missing or empty |title= (help)\n^ \"Hall of Fame\". goifl.com. Retrieved 2020.\n^ \"Chicago Bears: Team History\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on June 8, 2012. Retrieved 2011.\n^ a b \"Selection Process\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on January 30, 2012. Retrieved 2012.\n^ a b c \"Selection Process FAQ\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on February 1, 2012. Retrieved 2012.\n^ a b \"Canton welcome mat still out for O.J. Simpson\". ESPN.com. July 21, 2017. Retrieved 2017.\n^ Centennial-slate-for-hof-revealed-jan-15-on-nfln|title=15-person centennial slate for HOF revealed Jan. 15 on NFLN|date=January 8, 2020|publisher=NFL }}\n^ \"Jimmy Johnson joins Bill Cowher as NFL coaches to be part of Hall of Fame's centennial class of 2020\". CBS Sports. January 12, 2020.\n^ \"Pro Football Hall of Fame Centennial Class revealed\". NFL.com.\n^ \"2012 Pro Football Hall of Fame Enshrinement Festival Schedule\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on January 20, 2012. Retrieved 2012.\n^ \"Class of 2007 Presenters\". Pro Football Hall of Fame. July 2, 2007. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved 2012.\n^ \"Black College Football Hall of Fame\". ProFootballHOF.com. Retrieved 2021.\n^ Strickland, Ray (September 1, 2019). \"Pro Football Hall of Fame unveils exhibit honoring historically black college & university legends\". WKYC.com. Retrieved 2021.\n^ Barall, Andy (February 16, 2012). \"How to Fix Football's Hall of Fame Voting System\". The New York Times.\n^ Joyner, K C (January 25, 2009). \"A Case for Ray Guy Belonging in Pro Football Hall of Fame\". The New York Times.\n^ Austro, Ben (February 3, 2018). \"Art McNally is long overdue to be the first official in the Pro Football Hall of Fame\". Football Zebras.\n^ King, Peter (October 21, 2014). Behind the HOF's New Contributor Committee. SI.com. Retrieved October 21, 2014.\n^ Austro, Ben (August 31, 2021). \"Art McNally, father of modern NFL officiating, is the candidate to be the first official in the Pro Football Hall of Fame\". Football Zebras.\n^ Billson, Marky (August 4, 2010). \"As strange as it sounds, Howard Cosell has never won Rozelle award\". Sports Illustrated. Archived from the original on October 6, 2010. Retrieved 2017.\n^ Researcher, NFL (February 4, 2013). \"Cronyism on the part of the NFL and the Pro Football Hall of Fame?\". NFL Sports Blog.\n^ Ryan Gabrielson. \"For Darren Sharper, a Place in Prison. But in Hall of Fame, Too?\". ProPublica.\n^ \"One Hall of Fame voter sheds light on why Terrell Owens didn't make it in\". CBSSports.com.\n^ Bieler, Des (13 July 2018). \"Hall of Fame to answer Terrell Owens' snub by refusing to announce his induction\". The Washington Post. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 2019.\nMedia related to Pro Football Hall of Fame at Wikimedia Commons\nPro-Football Hall of Fame\nPro Football Hall of Fame Choices\nPro Football Hall of Fame finalists\nPro Football Hall of Fame Ceremonies\n2016 Pro Football Hall of Fame class\nPro Football Hall of Famer, Warren Moon\n2015 Pro Football Hall of Fame Week.\nPro Football Hall Of Fame Class of 2016\nFAMILY ROAD TRIP - PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME\n8 Elected to Pro Football Hall of Fame\nThe Latest Pro Football Hall of Fame Inductees\nROOKIE Tailgate Tour: Pro Football Hall of Fame\nArchie Manning Pro Football Hall of Fame Contest\nMichael Strahan's Pro Football Hall of Fame speech\nNFL Pro Football Hall of Fame Tour | The Handoff\n$11M gift funds Pro Football Hall of Fame expansion\nCalvin Johnson Elected to Pro Football Hall of Fame\nPro_Football_Hall_of_Fame","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line832012"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5014935731887817,"wiki_prob":0.49850642681121826,"text":"Doorstop interview, Yankalilla Area School\nTopics: Engineering is Elementary program; New child care package; Mayo by-election.\nGeorgina Downer: Well it’s great to have Minister for Education Simon Birmingham here today at the Yankalilla Area School, and we’ve just had a fantastic demonstration of the new program Engineering is Elementary, and it was so impressive to see the teachers who have done some training at Questacon rolling out this program and really giving the kids that fantastic opportunity to learn the E in STEM, and of course build skills that will be so important for those jobs of the future. So thank you very much, Minister, it’s been really great to see this program which I think gives kids here in Mayo such a fantastic opportunity for the future.\nSimon Birmingham: Thanks Georgina, and I’m thrilled to be here today as part of the rollout of the Engineering is Elementary program across more than 80 schools around Australia, supporting around 1600 students here in South Australia to be able to access engineering skills. It’s a program where the Turnbull Government is backing it through Questacon, with multimillion dollar investment and support that is part of our overall Innovation And Science Agenda. We’re very thrilled to be able to partner with Raytheon in this case and I thank them for their work with Questacon and their support for making this program available, and to help bring it from a US model, and Questacon adapting it as something that is directly relevant for Australian school students. Of course, we recognise that some of the fastest growing skills across the world that are required for future jobs are STEM skills, and much of our work focuses on ensuring science and technology and maths are developed and enhanced as areas of subject interest in school. But this is the E, this is the engineering, and what we’ve had the thrill of seeing in this classroom today is how it is that young children can bring engineering skills to life and in doing so, they’re applying their maths skills, they’re thinking about technology, they’re using scientific principles. This is about real life educational skills being deployed in the classroom and developing and inspiring an interest that hopefully will see future generations of engineers working on agricultural projects, transport projects, defence industry projects right across our state, right across Mayo.\nThanks, Georgina. It’s so important it’s here at the Yankalilla Area School, because it’s also an example of the commitment we have to make sure that all children across all schools have access to the type of educational opportunities they deserve. And here in Yankalilla, as part of our valued regional communities, we’re seeing a school taking leaps and bounds ahead in terms of the opportunities it’s offering its students.\nQuestion: Would you say the future of this program being past this trial?\nSimon Birmingham: Well, this program is obviously something that is quite easily replicated by so many schools. It is something that doesn’t require a significant investment. It’s about teacher capability, and of course, we continue to work hard in initial teacher education and training, and in providing programs – not just like the ones Questacon’s done here in terms of providing teachers with resources and capability and program tools to be able to deliver this. But also as other programs have done in the maths space, such as the University of Adelaide’s MOOC which they’ve provided open access to teachers across the country to be able to develop new maths, new technology skills for delivery in the classroom. In terms of STEM development, it’s about us continually providing new access to teachers to be able to develop the skills they need and develop and deploy the programs that will work in terms of STEM delivery in the classroom.\nQuestion: So you say you imagine it could be easily replicated. How long though can we expect this trial to go for, and then maybe how long before it’s rolled out permanently into schools?\nSimon Birmingham: Well, we’ll be working with Questacon to ensure that the lessons from this are shared and hopefully see school systems themselves pick it up with enthusiasm. But it doesn’t always take a teacher going and training at Questacon. Models like this can be deployed simply and strategically by school systems themselves, and it’s really part of our national STEM partnership agenda that we have with the states and territories, and I hope that over the next couple of years we’ll see more and more schools make engineering a priority alongside science, technology and maths disciplines.\nQuestion: On to issues around the child care subsidy. We’ve seen some modelling which suggests as many as 280,000 families might be worse off under the new subsidy. Is that acceptable to you?\nSimon Birmingham: Well, the Turnbull Government has deliberately put in an extra $2.5 billion of support for child care, but also better targeted support to ensure that the greatest number of hours of subsidised care go to the families working the longest hours and the greatest level of support, the greatest rate of subsidy, goes to the families earning the least amount. On average, families across South Australia who have registered already are going to be about $1400 per child, per annum, better off under these reforms. Around 1 million Australian families are going to be better off.\nThe only circumstances, really, where families won’t be better off are if they’re not meeting a very basic activity test of just four hours per week on average of work and study and volunteering, or if they’re very high income earning families, earning more than $350,000 per annum who see their subsidy cut off.\nQuestion: What about issues around casualisation of the workforce, unpredictable work hours and some families maybe one parent isn’t meeting that activity test every week. What about those issues? Is it acceptable that some families will still miss out?\nSimon Birmingham: Well, these are some of the lies that the Labor Party is spreading. This is a well-calibrated program where the activity test is designed to be averaged over a three-month period. So somebody who’s working casually or variable hours is able to average their estimate. They work an average of four hours a week, then they’re going to be eligible for some 36 hours of childcare a fortnight. That is clear support, the steps are clearly laid out. Families are able equally to qualify if they’re volunteering. Volunteering can include volunteering in schools where you can be reading to children, helping with projects like the one we’ve just seen. That’s a recognised volunteering activity that will qualify for the child care activity test. It would include working as a carer, looking for work as part of your Newstart obligations. There are a range of different activities that are recognised to ensure this is light touch, but it does absolutely deliver what we want which is the greatest support to families working the longest hours and earning the least.\nQuestion: Do you think the Australian Government’s doing enough to make child care truly accessible for all people?\nSimon Birmingham: This is the biggest improvement to the child care system in more than 40 years. It’s going to make life easier for around 1 million Australian families. No longer will families find that their child care rebate cuts out in February or March of the financial year. They’re going to get support right through the year that doesn’t run out. It’s going to allow, we estimate, 230,000 Australians to participate more in the workforce, to increase the hours or days they work, and they can do that because they’re getting the child care support and their child care bills won’t be an impost. This is a great reform. It’s a positive reform for Australian families. It’s putting more money in the pockets of close to 1 million Australian families and it’s going to make a big difference in terms of their capacity to work the hours and days that suit them.\nQuestion: Will the government ever consider something like making child care payments tax deductible?\nSimon Birmingham: Well, there was a thorough Productivity Commission inquiry that looked at how we can improve our child care system, and the problem with something like tax deductibility for child care payments, as the Productivity Commission truly spelt out, is the greatest benefit goes to the highest income earners because we have a progressive tax system in Australia. So, if we made child care tax deductible, my family might benefit, but indeed, those working part-time hours, those on lower wages and incomes, would struggle. What we’ve done is put in place a system where the lowest income families – those earning less than $65,000 per annum – are going to see the rate of support for their child care increase from 72 per cent to 85 per cent without a cap in place. They’re going to be much, much better off and I can’t believe that the Labor Party, the Greens or others, are shedding crocodile tears because high income families might miss out on child care support, when what we’ve done is target the greatest levels of assistance to low and medium income families.\nQuestion: And Minister, how will this change affect you personally?\nSimon Birmingham: Well indeed, my family will no longer be eligible for child care assistance. My wife works full-time. I clearly work full-time. We are a family who are in a fortunate financial situation and I don’t expect that Australians would be saying it’s unfair that we might pay for our afterschool hours care or our school holiday care when we need it. What we think is fair, as a government, and what I think is fair personally, is that child support should be targeted to the families who need it most, and they are the families working the longest hours, but earning the least amount.\nQuestion: What do you make of recent polling ahead of the Mayo by-election? Does it make you nervous?\nGeorgina Downer: Look, I’ve been really enjoying campaigning in Mayo in the Adelaide Hills and the Fleurieu and I’m looking forward to going to Kangaroo Island next week and meeting as many people as possible and talking to them really about the issues that matter most to them. That’s what’s really important to me. But what’s becoming really clear when I go around Mayo talking to people is that people absolutely do not want a Shorten Labor government. There is a real feel in the electorate of what a Shorten Labor government could lead to in this country. And it is quite clear that there is an alliance being created here with my opponent Rebekha Sharkie and the Labor Party and now the Greens. So, it seems clear to me that a vote for Sharkie is going to end up being a vote for Shorten because given the chance and given Rebekha Sharkie’s voting record of 60 per cent of the time in the Australian parliament, she voted with Labor and the Greens. It’s quite clear that given the chance, she would back in a Shorten Labor government.\nQuestion: How can you say that, what specifically has led you to form that opinion?\nGeorgina Downer: Well, if you look at the Parliamentary Library’s record of individual MPs voting records, Rebekha Sharkie’s is there for everyone to see. It indicates that 60 per cent of the time she voted with Labor and the Greens on legislation and opposed the government’s agenda. She’s opposed cuts to local business taxes. She’s come out against changes to border protection that would mean we have stronger borders, that we make sure that we do keep the boats out of our waters and stop the people smuggling trade. On a variety of measures she has voted with Labor and the Greens and has opposed the Turnbull Government’s agenda, which is an agenda that is going to lower taxes, that is going to make sure that we have a strong economy so we can deliver the essential services that we also very much need and deserve.\nQuestion: All of that aside, the recent polling suggests she is popular in the electorate, does that make you nervous?\nGeorgina Downer: No, I am very comfortable with the campaign is going- as I said, I’ve really enjoyed speaking to as many people in Mayo as I can about the issues that matter most to them, and it is clear that they don’t want a Shorten Labor government, and I’m really looking forward to the next six or so weeks getting out there and really making sure that I’m listening. And of course being a member of the Liberal Party, part of the Coalition, a party of government, a party that can deliver for this electorate. I think there are some great opportunities and I’m very much looking forward to the by-election on 28 July.\nQuestion: And please correct me if I’m wrong, but it appears that you’ve deleted your Twitter account and there are suggestions flying around on social media that you’ve been blocking certain people who are contacting you about issues, particularly around climate change. Is that true?\nGeorgina Downer: So I’m no longer active on Twitter because, quite frankly, Twitter is not the place where we, as political candidates, find it’s best to engage with our communities. I use Facebook as my medium for engagement with people in Mayo, and where there are comments that are unacceptable, or trolls that use language that is unacceptable, then sure, we don’t think they are fruitful for political debates and commentary.\nQuestion: So is it right to shutdown political debate on a certain platform just because it doesn’t suit you?\nGeorgina Downer: Look, ultimately people are free to express themselves on social media and they do so, but…\nQuestion: But is it right for a candidate running in a by-election to, I suppose, shut down an avenue of debate?\nGeorgina Downer: There are plenty of avenues of debate available to people and I of course welcome people debating issues that are important to them and would not seek to shut down those debates in the public sphere. But on my Facebook page, we have protocols in place that encourage polite debate, frank debate, but where those limits are exceeded, where there is language that is unacceptable and goes to sort of insults, then that’s I guess- commentary of that nature, there’s no place for it on our particular Facebook page. If others want to have different mediums where they have those types of discussions, feel free, but it is not something that we think contributes to a fruitful and constructive debate on the issues.\nQuestion: Was there anything on Twitter that you were uncomfortable having up there? Maybe comments from the past.\nGeorgina Downer: No, no, no. Not at all.\nSimon Birmingham: Thanks, guys.\nCategory: Interview Transcripts 13 June, 2018\nPreviousPrevious post:Program brings engineering to life for Yankalilla Area School studentsNextNext post:Interview on ABC Radio Adelaide, Breakfast, with Ali Clarke and David Bevan","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line698746"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.707718014717102,"wiki_prob":0.707718014717102,"text":"University of Sains Malaysia\nEstablished as the second university in the country in 1969, Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM) was first known as Universiti Pulau Pinang. In 1971, USM moved from its temporary premises at the Malayan Teachers’ Training College, Bukit Gelugor to the present 416.6 hectare site at Minden, approximately 9.7 km from Georgetown.\nUSM offers courses ranging from Natural Sciences, Applied Sciences, Medical and Health Sciences, Pharmaceutical Sciences to Building Science and Technology, Social Sciences, Humanities, and Education. These are available at undergraduate and postgraduate levels to approximately 30,000 students at its 17 Academic Schools on the main campus in the island of Penang; 6 Schools at the Engineering Campus in Nibong Tebal (approximately 50km from the main campus); and 3 at the Health Campus in Kubang Kerian, Kelantan (approximately 300km from the main campus).\nUSM also has 17 dedicated research centres for a wide range of specialisations which include archaeology, medicine and dentistry, molecular medicine, science and technology, Islamic development and management studies, and policy research and international studies. It also provides consultancy, testing, and advisory services to the industry under the ambit of USAINS Holdings Sdn Bhd, the University’s commercial arm.\nSince the beginning, USM has adopted the School system rather than the traditional Faculty system to ensure that its students are multi-disciplined from their exposure to other areas of study by other Schools. It also encourages students to be active in extra-curricular activities given the myriad of clubs and societies available.\nAs a Research Intensive University recognised by the Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia (MOHE) in 2007, USM offers educational and research opportunities to students and staff. In 2008, USM also became the first university in the country to be selected by the Malaysian government to participate in the Accelerated Programme for Excellence (APEX), a fast-track programme that helps tertiary institutions achieve world-class status.\nUniversiti Sains Malaysia (USM), Minden, USM Pulau Pinang, Penang 11800, Malaysia\nPhD River & Urban Drainage Engineering\nSustainable Asphalt Research Group, University of Sains Malaysia\nAsian Academy of Management Journal\nJournal of Construction in Developing Countries\nUniversity Coordinator\nJanet Snow\nCountry Coordinator\nProfessor Dato' Dr. Faisal Rafiq Mahamd Adikan - Vice Chancellor\nAssociate Professor Dr. Mohd Sayuti Bin Hassan - Centre for Global Sustainability Studies\nUSM Aerospace Engineering students bag top prize in crest design challenge @IMDC2021\nNIBONG TEBAL, 10 August 2021 — An affordable, palm-sized and automatic Micro Air Vehicle(MAV) to help farmers…","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line606897"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6872756481170654,"wiki_prob":0.31272435188293457,"text":"2011 NFL Draft Prospects: Nick Fairley For The Denver Broncos?\nBy Russ Oates Dec 16, 2010, 8:32am MST\nShare All sharing options for: 2011 NFL Draft Prospects: Nick Fairley For The Denver Broncos?\nIf the NFL season ended today, the Denver Broncos would have the No. 3 overall pick in April's draft. The Carolina Panthers (1-12) would have the top pick, followed by the Cincinnati Bengals (2-11) at No. 2. Should Stanford QB Andrew Luck declare for the draft, the Carolina Panthers would likely select Luck with the No. 1 overall pick. Matt Moore is not the answer and Jimmy Clausen is a rookie who has played like one.\nAt No. 2, the Bengals could go in a number of directions. However, defensive line help would be a great need. They are tied for last with 18 sacks this season. Looking at Russ Lande's Top 40 at the Sporting News, Clemson underclassman Da'Quan Bowers is his No. 3 prospect in the draft right now. Bowers has 15.5 sacks this season and 25 tackles for loss. That's production any defensive line would want.\nThe team tied for last with the Bengals for least sacks this season? The Denver Broncos. The Broncos could also use Bowers' help, but if the Bengals draft him who else should the Broncos turn to? Next on Lande's list is Auburn DE/DT Nick Fairley. Fairley was a disruptive presence in the trenches, accumulating 10.5 sacks for a loss of 67 yards and 21.0 tackles for loss. The 6-foot-5, 300-pound lineman would work well in either a 4-3 or 3-4 defense.\nHowever, if the Broncos decide Elvis Dumervil's return will be enough to ignite the pass rush, then the team should look for help at corner in either LSU's Patrick Peterson or Nebraska's Prince Amukamara.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line3556"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5102787017822266,"wiki_prob":0.5102787017822266,"text":"Ron de Burger Student Award\nEH Topics\nEvidence Reviews\nField Inquiries\nMould Investigation Online Course\nReady-to-Eat Meats Online Course\nEnvironmental Health Seminar Series\nHBE Forum\n» documents\n» practice scenario\n» Carbon Dioxide in Indoor Air\nCarbon Dioxide in Indoor Air\nContaminants and Hazards\nChemical Agents\nA Public Health Inspector calls about an issue flagged at an older elementary school. As part of a teacher complaint process, the provincial health and safety agency has been conducting a workplace investigation. Carbon dioxide (CO2) levels were measured and ranged from 412 ppm in an unoccupied classroom to 1,130 ppm in the school library and 1,660 ppm in an occupied classroom that had closed windows. Parents are now concerned and the school board has asked you, as Medical Officer of Health, about the potential health risks to students from CO2 levels that exceed formal workplace standards.\nCO2 and air quality concerns\nWhere does CO2 come from?\nWhat physiological responses occur in response to elevated CO2 levels?\nWhat is the significance of slightly elevated CO2 in school classrooms?\nWhat is the relationship between ventilation (air exchange rate) and respiratory health?\nWhat are commonly cited workplace-applicable standards for CO2? What rationale is given?\nWhat was found by the health and safety agency?\nThe same agency ordered a health survey... Do you expect this to be useful? What might be more useful? How would you respond to the School Board’s query about possible health risks to students?\nCO2 is frequently an issue in the context of indoor air quality concerns.1 It is relatively easy to measure and is commonly included in indoor air quality monitoring. CO2 at levels found in classroom settings do not appear to pose any direct health effects. High CO2 levels, however, are an indication that there is not sufficient ventilation for the number of occupants in the room. Results of CO2 measurements are often incorrectly interpreted and in some cases may be confused with the more serious carbon monoxide (CO).\nCO2 is a natural constituent of the air we breathe; it is a colourless, odourless and non-flammable gas produced by metabolic processes (such as respiration) and by combustion of fossil fuels. The average outdoor air concentration of CO2 is in the order of 300 to 400 ppm. Indoor levels are usually higher, due to the CO2 exhaled by building occupants. Human metabolism alone can lead to CO2 levels in excess of 3,000ppm, especially in poorly ventilated rooms. Indoor combustion appliances, in particular gas stoves, can also increase CO2 levels.\nHuman health effects have been observed at very high levels (> 7,000 ppm) of CO2, but it is unlikely that you would ever find levels this high in homes or classrooms.\nIncreased ambient CO2 levels cause acidification of the blood with compensatory increase in rate and depth of breathing. After prolonged exposure (days), acid-base regulation can occur via renal mechanisms which can affect calcium metabolism in bone.\nThe lowest level at which a human health effect (i.e. acidosis) has been observed in humans is 7,000 ppm, and that only after several weeks of continuous exposure in a submarine environment. In its 1987 Exposure Guidelines for Residential Indoor Air Quality,2 Health Canada set an exposure limit of 3,500 ppm to protect against such undesirable adaptive changes to acidosis, in particular calcium release from bones.\nThe occupational limits for CO2 recommended by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) are 5000 ppm (TLV-TWA) and 30,000 ppm (TLV-STEL),3 based on the direct effects on acidification of the blood.\nOf note, no major pediatric studies have been identified to address the possibility of a significant differential in response between adults and children other than realizing that infants and children breathe more air than adults relative to their body size and thus tend to be more susceptible to respiratory exposures.4\nCO2 at the levels in this school do not pose a direct risk to health. The elevated CO2 levels (e.g. > 1100 ppm), however, may suggest the need for more ventilation.\nIndoor CO2 levels are generally higher than outside, as building occupants produce CO2 when they exhale. Ventilation exchanges indoor for outdoor air and reduces indoor CO2 levels. High indoor CO2 levels therefore may indicate that the air exchange rate is too low for the number of people in the room. School officials should look to increase ventilation by turning up mechanical ventilation systems or by opening windows.\nPoor ventilation can make classrooms uncomfortable and can reduce productivity. Poor ventilation can also lead to increased humidity, as moisture produced indoors is not vented to the outside. High humidity can encourage the growth of mould and dust mites; both of which are allergens and asthma triggers.\nIn addition, ventilation also helps reduce the levels of other indoor air pollutants released from furnishings, building products or chemical cleaners such as formaldehyde or volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Since some of these chemicals have known or suspected health effects, keeping levels as low as possible is always advisable.\nWorkplace standards applicable to the school environment, if they exist, will be set by the provincial government.\nThe American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) Standard 62-2007 Ventilation for Acceptable Indoor Air Quality provides standards for ventilation based on surface area and occupancy. Typically, in an occupied classroom situation, the recommended level of ventilation would correspond to a CO2 level of approximately 1000-1100 ppm.5 A CO2 level of 1,000 to 1100 ppm is therefore offered as “a surrogate for human comfort (odour)” but “not considered a health risk.”\nThe investigation followed complaints of persistent respiratory irritation by teachers. CO2 measurements were taken in classrooms over the course of schooldays between 9am and 3pm on three separate occasions during the past year. The highest level was 1,660 ppm. Records showed that there had been historical issues with water intrusion into the school. CO was not tested. Two indoor air samples for mould spores were found to be comparable to one outdoor air sample.\nWhat are your thoughts? Would you discount mould as a possible source of the problem based on these test results?\nIt will be difficult to link health data with the ventilation issue given the lack of before and after data for comparison. As high CO2 levels can simply be an indicator of poor ventilation, there is a possibility that other contaminants are accumulating. It is better to focus on taking steps to improve ventilation and reduce CO2. Illness rates are more likely to be related to community-wide seasonal trends than to the ventilation rates in a school.\nAs the MOH, you could discuss with parents and teachers about the meaning of the findings, highlighting the low direct risk to health. You could recommend that school officials look at increasing ventilation in the areas with high CO2. Simple measures for improving ventilation may include opening windows and increasing play time outdoors, but the possibility of a source of contaminants may need to be considered and possibly investigated.\nA good resource is the US EPA Indoor Air Quality Tools for Schools Program6 that provides checklists and tools to deal with indoor air quality issues. Also, for mould-related problems, a good resource is the US Environmental Protection Agency’s guide on Mold Remediation in Schools and Commercial Buildings.7\nAlso, possible information sources that can help determine if there is a possible problem at this school are records of student, teacher and staff absenteeism rates, records of nurse visits, and comparisons with other schools.\nWe would like to thank the following individuals for their valuable input and review of this document: Charmaine Enns, Charlene MacKinnon, Josh Moran, and Claudette Erdman for the question and context; Tim Foggin for research and write-up; Catherine Donovan, Brian Giles, and Deborah Schoen for review and comments.\nMiller J, Semple S, Turner S. High carbon dioxide concentrations in the classroom: the need for research on the effects of children's exposure to poor indoor air quality at school. Aberdeen (UK): Occ & Env Med 67(11):799.\nHealth Canada. Exposure guidelines for residential indoor air quality. A report of the Federal-Provincial Advisory Committee on Environmental and Occupational Health. Ottawa (ON): Environmental Health Directorate, Health Protection Branch; 1987 Apr.\nAmerican Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH). 2010 TLVs and BEIs. Based on the documentation of the threshold limit values for chemical substances and physical agents & biological exposure indices. Cincinnati (OH): ACGIH; 2010 Mar. 272 p.\nSnodgrass WR. Physiological and biochemical differences between children and adults as determinants of toxic exposure to environmental pollutants. In: PS Guzelain, CJ Henry, SS Olin, eds. Similarities and differences between children and adults: Implications for risk assessment. Washington (DC): ILSI Press 1992:35-42.\nAmerican Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE) Standard 62-2007 Ventilation for Acceptable Indoor Air Quality. Atlanta (GA): American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers; 2002. 6 p.\nEnvironmental Protection Agency (US). Indoor air quality (IAQ) tools for schools program. Washington (DC): Office of Air and Radiation, Indoor Environments Division, 1995 [updated 2010 Jun 8; cited 2010 Jun 14].\nEnvironmental Protection Agency (US). Mold remediation in schools and commercial buildings. Washington (DC): Office of Air and Radiation, Indoor Environments Division, 2001 Mar. Contract No.: EPA 402-K-01-001 [updated 2008 Sept 18; cited 2010 Jun 14].\nCopyright © 2020 National Collaborating Centre for Environmental Health\nProduction of this website has been made possible through a financial contribution from the Public Health Agency of Canada.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1661829"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6066354513168335,"wiki_prob":0.6066354513168335,"text":"Trusting our government isn’t a matter of choice\nBy Thomas Sowell\nAmid all the heated cross-currents of debate about the National Security Agency’s massive surveillance program, there is a growing distrust of the Obama administration that makes weighing the costs and benefits of the NSA program itself hard to assess.\nThe belated recognition of this administration’s contempt for the truth, for the American people and for the Constitution of the United States, has been long overdue.\nBut what if the NSA program has in fact thwarted terrorists and saved many American lives in ways that cannot be revealed publicly?\nNothing is easier than saying that you still don’t want your telephone records collected by the government. But the first time you have to collect the remains of your loved ones, after they have been killed by terrorists, telephone records can suddenly seem like a small price to pay to prevent such things.\nThe millions of records of phone calls collected every day virtually guarantee that nobody has the time to listen to them all, even if NSA could get a judge to authorize listening to what is said in all these calls, instead of just keeping a record of who called whom.\nMoreover, Congressional oversight by members of both political parties limits what Barack Obama or any other president can get away with.\nAre these safeguards foolproof? No. Nothing is ever foolproof.\nAs Edmund Burke said more than two centuries ago: “Constitute government how you please, infinitely the greater part of it must depend upon the exercise of the powers which are left at large to the prudence and uprightness of ministers of state.”\nIn other words, we do not have a choice whether to trust or not to trust government officials. Unless we are willing to risk anarchy or terrorism, the most we can do is set up checks and balances within government — and be a lot more careful in the future than we have been in the past when deciding whom to elect.\nAnyone old enough to remember the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, when President John F. Kennedy took this country to the brink of nuclear war with the Soviet Union, may remember that there was nothing like the distrust and backlash against later presidents, whose controversial decisions risked nothing approaching the cataclysm that Kennedy’s decision could have led to.\nEven those of us who were not Kennedy supporters, and who were not dazzled by the glitter and glamour of the Kennedy aura, nevertheless felt that the president of the United States was someone who knew much more than we did about the realities on which all our lives depended.\nWhatever happened to that feeling? Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon happened. Both were shameless liars. They destroyed not only their own credibility, but the credibility of the office.\nEven when Lyndon Johnson told us the truth at a crucial juncture during the Vietnam war — that the Communist offensive of 1968 was a defeat for them, even as the media depicted it as a defeat for us — we didn’t believe him.\nIn later years, Communist leaders themselves admitted that they had been devastated on the battlefield. But by then it was too late. What the Communists lost militarily on the ground in Vietnam, they won politically in the American media and in American public opinion.\nMore than 50,000 Americans lost their lives winning battles on the ground in Vietnam, only to have the war lost politically back home. We seem to be having a similar scenario unfolding today in Iraq, where soldiers won the war, only to have politicians lose the peace, as Iraq now increasingly aligns itself with Iran.\nWhen Barack Obama squanders his own credibility with his glib lies, he is not just injuring himself during his time in office. He is inflicting a lasting wound on the country as a whole.\nBut we the voters are not blameless. Having chosen an untested man to be president, on the basis of rhetoric, style and symbolism, we have ourselves to blame if we now have only a choice between two potentially tragic fates: the loss of American lives to terrorism, or a further dismantling of our freedoms that has already led many people to ask: “Is this still America?”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1417822"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9113980531692505,"wiki_prob":0.9113980531692505,"text":"Dr David Jones BA Ph.D. (Cymru) FRHistS\nReaderDepartment of History and Welsh History - Teaching And Research\nHugh Owen Building\ndmj@aber.ac.uk\nSelect type... Contribution to journal → Article Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding → Chapter Book/Report → Book → Edited book\nGeorge Whitefield and Dissent\nJones, D., 15 Sep 2020, Evangelicalism and Dissent in Modern England and Wales. Bebbington, D. & Jones, D. C. (eds.). Taylor & Francis, p. 46–64 19 p. (Routledge Studies in Evangelicalism).\nDOI: 10.4324/9781003011071-3\nEvangelicalism and Dissent in Modern England and Wales\nBebbington, D. W. & Jones, D., 08 Sep 2020, 1 ed. London: Taylor & Francis. 230 p. (Routledge Studies in Evangelicalism)\nMaking Evangelical History: Faith, Scholarship and the Evangelical Past\nAtherstone, A. (ed.) & Jones, D. (ed.), 30 Apr 2019, 1 ed. London: Taylor & Francis. 304 p. (Routledge Studies in Evangelicalism)\nIain H. Murray and the rise and fall of British evangelicalism\nJones, D., 14 Mar 2019, Making Evangelical History: Faith, Scholarship and the Evangelical Past. Atherstone, A. & Jones, D. C. (eds.). p. 194-212 19 p. (Routledge Studies in Evangelicalism).\nDOI: 10.4324/9781315581231-10\nJohn Gillies and the evangelical revivals\nJones, D., 14 Mar 2019, Making Evangelical History: Faith, Scholarship and the Evangelical Past. Atherstone, A. & Jones, D. C. (eds.). p. 22-41 20 p. (Routledge Studies in Evangelicalism).\nEvangelicals and the cross\nJones, D., 17 Jul 2018, The Routledge Research Companion to the History of Evangelicalism. Atherstone, A. & Jones, D. C. (eds.). Taylor & Francis, p. 39-56 (Routledge Studies in Evangelicalism).\nThe Routledge Research Companion to the History of Evangelicalism\nAtherstone, A. (ed.) & Jones, D. (ed.), 11 Jul 2018, 1 ed. Taylor & Francis. 312 p. (Routledge Studies in Evangelicalism)\nGeorge Whitefield and Heart Religion\nJones, D., 30 Jun 2016, Heart Religion: Evangelical Piety in England & Ireland, 1690-1850. Coffey, J. (ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 93-112 19 p.\nGeorge Whitefield: Life, Context, and Legacy\nHammond, G. (ed.) & Jones, D. (ed.), 19 May 2016, Oxford: Oxford University Press. 344 p.\nDOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198747079.001.0001\nWhitefield and the “Celtic” Revivals\nBeebe, K. E. & Jones, D., 19 May 2016, George Whitefield: Life, Context, and Legacy. Hammond, G. & Jones, D. C. (eds.). Oxford University Press, p. 132–148\nEvangelicalism Arts & Humanities\nEvangelical Theolog... Arts & Humanities\nMethodism Arts & Humanities\nWales Arts & Humanities\nRevival Arts & Humanities\n18th Century Arts & Humanities\nHistory Arts & Humanities\nCalvinist Arts & Humanities\nFaith Arts & Humanities\nTransatlantic Arts & Humanities","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1189552"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8408335447311401,"wiki_prob":0.8408335447311401,"text":"Home Canada What does a re-elected Liberal government mean for northern housing?\nWhat does a re-elected Liberal government mean for northern housing?\nsharlene paine\nBy Sarah Sibley, Local Journalism Initiative ReporterCabin Radio\nWed., Sept. 29, 2021timer6 min. read\nWith Justin Trudeau’s Liberals once again securing a minority government, many are ready for the party to get back to work and start fulfilling campaign promises.\nOf those promises, one of the most crucial for northerners is how the federal government plans to help advance the N.W.T.’s housing priorities and end the territory’s ongoing housing crisis.\nIn his election campaign, re-elected Liberal MP Michael McLeod touted the work the federal government had completed in the past, stating his party’s government had invested “unprecedented levels into local housing priorities.”\nMcLeod cited examples like the N.W.T.’s $60-million share of a national fund, a $25-million housing allocation in 2021’s federal budget, the forthcoming Avens Pavilion seniors’ facility in Yellowknife, and what he termed “over $100 million toward housing and infrastructure for Indigenous governments across the Northwest Territories.”\nBut that has been a drop in a bucket for a territory that, two years ago, reported two in every five homes were either unaffordable, in disrepair, overcrowded, or all three.\nIn their 2021 election platform, the Liberals committed to producing an “Urban, Rural and Northern Indigenous Housing Strategy with an initial allocation of $300 million.”\nIf it comes to fruition as billed, that strategy is expected to place a lot of power to buy and refurbish northern housing directly in the hands of Indigenous governments – speeding up a key shift that had slowly begun in recent years.\nHowever, the $300-million figure could find itself immediately stretched. In the N.W.T. alone, new homes paid for with federal dollars have recently cost between $500,000 and $1 million per house.\nAsked after his re-election when the N.W.T. could expect the new strategy to become a reality, McLeod told Cabin Radio a lot of preparatory work had already been done to establish ways of investing more money in Indigenous housing.\n“I’m just wanting to see a long-term stream of funding come directly to Indigenous governments,“ said McLeod, echoing a demand made by various Indigenous governments in the N.W.T. over the past six years of Liberal government.\n“At this point I don’t know formally what my role is going to be [with the strategy] but I know that I’ll be an advocate to get it done,“ McLeod continued.\n“I think it’s an important piece of our strategy to address housing, especially here in the North.”\nIn May, a federal standing committee said Indigenous peoples living off-reserve were “best-placed to address the housing needs of their people and communities” but never received long-term, sustainable funding to do it.\nThe committee made nine recommendations, of which creating the strategy was one. Establishing an Urban, Rural and Northern Housing Centre, with a mandate and responsibilities to be decided by Indigenous people, was another.\nNone of that has happened yet, but Dene National Chief Norman Yakeleya told Cabin Radio “the status quo is no longer acceptable and no longer works” in the N.W.T. He wants exactly what the Liberals just promised: direct funding to get more done.\nThis summer, the Dene Nation unveiled its own housing strategy that pledged new homes built to meet northern demands by an Alberta-based company.\nYakeleya wants the federal government to support that plan, which he believes will create “viable and affordable” housing options for the Dene.\n“We know the impacts of inadequate housing are not a one-time fixed cost, but [have] long-term challenges to social and physical effects for our children, our families and our Dene communities,” he said.\n“I believe the missing piece of this process is giving the Indigenous leaders the respect and the opportunity to do things for themselves and the people they serve.”\nYakeleya envisages using federal funding to train locals in home repair and construction in their own communities.\nHe said the Dene Nation had created its own task force to work with the federal and territorial governments to make that funding happen, envisaging a three-way agreement that “recognizes the need to do better in dealing with issues of common concern, like the existing housing crisis.”\n“We need to do this work together – no more of the days of the government telling us what kind of houses to build, where to build them,” he said. “It’s time now they begin the road to reconciliation and that requires many government leaders.”\nThe Dene Nation isn’t alone in producing its own housing strategy. Ultimately, one test of the Liberals’ new strategy will be whether it can withstand the sheer number of Indigenous governments lining up for significant sums of direct funding to address deficiencies.\nThe Yellowknives Dene First Nation also has a strategy that focuses on helping its members to own their homes, a challenge in many northern communities.\nJason Snaggs, the First Nation’s chief executive, previously told Cabin Radio direct federal funding would bring that strategy to life.\nAt the Northwest Territory Métis Nation, Garry Bailey requested that Trudeau travel to the Northwest Territories to see the housing crisis first-hand. Bailey believes that might motivate the federal government to hasten the settlement of land claims.\n“The government did commit to housing for all people – not just certain people,“ Bailey said. ”I think there’s definitely a lot of work that needs to be done to get people into their own homes.“\nInuit Tapiriit Kanatami, the national Inuit group, listed the housing deficit among 15 priorities for a new Canadian government to tackle.\n“ITK has welcomed recent federal investments in infrastructure and housing in Inuit Nunangat and calls on the next federal government to pledge major new and sustained investment in the region in order to bring it into Canada, uphold Canada’s human rights obligations, and help support economic development,“ a statement from the group read ahead of September 20’s polling day.\nMeanwhile, promises made in previous elections have still to fully play out.\nA Liberal National Housing Strategy unveiled in 2017 pledged more than $72 billion over 10 years to “build supply, making housing affordable, and address chronic homelessness.” That strategy has more than half a decade left to run.\nThis time around, the 2021 Liberal platform featured a housing plan that would make owning a home easier – for example by reducing mortgage costs and increasing incentives for young people – and build more of them.\nWhile the Liberal plan states it “refuses to pit urban against rural,” some of the 2021 platform – such as a homebuyers’ bill of rights that, in part, bans foreign ownership of homes for two years – may not directly tackle the specific challenges the N.W.T. currently faces.\nHowever, building more homes is something every government in the territory wants. A national co-investment fund already heavily used by the NWT (after some teething problems) is set to be doubled if the Liberals follow through on their campaign pledges, potentially giving the territory tens of millions of fresh dollars for homes.\nA “federal housing advocate” should also be appointed within the first 100 days of the Liberals’ new term, a position designed to work toward ending chronic homelessness and keep tabs on the federal government’s housing commitments.\nMcLeod said he is “confident that we’re going to start to see more investment for the long term” and argues residents will begin to see the issue being addressed on their streets.\nHe said: “I can foresee a real busy housing construction season coming up next year.”\nPrevious article‘Blindly going forward’: Urgent call for more COVID-19 testing as B.C. sees waits of hours or days\nNext articleKawartha Lakes implementing vaccine requirement for city meetings\nI am a New York-based reporter covering billionaires and their wealth for Earlynewspaper. Previously, I worked on the breaking news team at ENP covering money and markets. Before that, I wrote about investing for Money Magazine. I graduated from the University of St Andrews in 2018, majoring in International Relations and Modern History.\nThe CRB has ended. Here’s how it may impact Canadians’ taxes\nCOVID-19 outbreak declared at R. G. Sinclair Public College in Kingston\nNo timeline yet on vax policies for local schools\nJason Momoa roaming the U.S. for new docuseries\nsharlene paine - May 20, 2021\nThe Sizable Economic Stakes In the benefit of Joe Biden’s Vaccine Mandate\nWaseem - September 15, 2021\nZTE Axon 30 global launch set for September\nCyber security training platform Immersive Labs closes $75M Assortment C led by Perception...\nWaseem - June 14, 2021\nThune says Trump’s election claims aren’t productive if GOP wants to...\nLitman: Hannity had an unholy alliance with Trump. The 1st Amendment...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line462084"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9893938899040222,"wiki_prob":0.9893938899040222,"text":"The Providence Journal\nThe July 27, 2005 front page of\n\"Honest\" John Miller\nPeter Meyer\nMichael McDermott\nBill Corey\nDavid Ng[1]\nJuly 1, 1829; 192 years ago (1829-07-01)[2]\n75 Fountain Street\n29,957 daily\n38,500 Sunday\n(as of 2021)[3]\nwww.providencejournal.com\nMedia of the United States\nList of newspapers\nLogo of projo.com\nThe Providence Journal, colloquially known as the ProJo, is a daily newspaper serving the metropolitan area of Providence, Rhode Island, and is the largest newspaper in Rhode Island. The newspaper was first published in 1829 and is the oldest continuously-published daily newspaper in the United States. The newspaper has won four Pulitzer Prizes.\nThe Journal bills itself as \"America's oldest daily newspaper in continuous publication\",[2] a distinction that comes from the fact that The Hartford Courant, started in 1764, did not become a daily until 1837 and the New York Post, which began daily publication in 1801, had to suspend publication during strikes in 1958 and 1978.[4]\nThe beginnings of the Providence Journal Company started on January 3, 1820, when publisher \"Honest\" John Miller started the Manufacturers' & Farmers' Journal, Providence & Pawtucket Advertiser in Providence, published twice per week.[5] The paper's office was in the old Coffee House, at the corner of Market Square and Canal street.[6] The paper moved many times over the next few decades as it grew.\nBy 1829, demand for more timely news caused Miller to combine his existing publications into the Providence Daily Journal, published six days per week.[5] The first edition of the Providence Daily Journal appeared July 1, 1829.[7]\nKnowles, Anthony & Danielson\nDuring the years 1863 to 1884 the Journal was published by Knowles, Anthony & Danielson.[6] These were Joseph Knowles, George W. Danielson and Henry B. Anthony. During this period the paper would reach new heights of political influence, aligning itself with the Republican party and against Irish and Catholic immigrants.[8] Anthony would become one of Rhode Island's most powerful politicians, and go on to serve as Governor of Rhode Island and United States Senator.\nDuring the Knowles, Anthony & Danielson years, the paper became known for its strong support of the Republican Party, and became known by the nickname \"The Republican Bible\". The Republican party ruled the state for much of the mid-1800s, and the Journal was their mouthpiece.[8] During the Danielson/Anthony years, the paper was solidly allied with textile mill owners and big business, and frequently gave support to nativist anti-Irish Catholic sentiment.[8]\nIn 1877, Danielson hired Charles Henry Dow, a young journalist with an interest in history. At the Journal, Dow developed a \"news index\" which summarized stories of historic interest.[9] It is possible this was an early inspiration for Dow's later development of his \"stock index\" at the Wall Street Journal.[9] While at the Journal Dow wrote a series on \"The History of Steam Navigation between New York and Providence.\"[9] Dow also traveled to Colorado to report on the Colorado Silver Boom and the Leadville miners' strike; these stories were published in May and June 1879.[9] On the Colorado trip, Dow traveled with a team of Wall Street financiers and geologists, leading Dow to leave Providence for New York City in 1879 to advance his career as a reporter on mining stocks.[9]\nIn 1863, Danielson launched an evening edition, called the Evening Bulletin.[7] In 1885, a Sunday edition was added, making the publication schedule seven days per week. After Danielson's death, the paper became less partisan, and by 1888 declared its political independence.[5]\nAlfred M. Williams, editor from 1884 to 1891, broke from the Republican party and advocated for government reform, women's suffrage, and Indian rights.[10] In contrast to Danielson and Anthony, Williams had a sympathetic appreciation for the Irish culture.[10]\nWar years\nBefore American entry into World War I, Journal publisher and Australian immigrant John R. Rathom attempted to stir up public sentiment in favor of the war against the Central Powers. He frequently published exposés of German subversive activities in the United States, claiming that the Journal had intercepted secret German communications. By 1920, it was revealed that Rathom's information was supplied by British intelligence agents.[11] Nonetheless, Rathom remained editor until his death in 1923.[5]\nWilliam H. Garrison joined the staff in 1914, and became the publisher and vice president four years later, in 1918. He and his partners sold the paper to Senator Peter G. Gerry in 1923.[12]\nThe Journal dropped \"Daily\" from its name and became The Providence Journal in 1920. In 1992, the Bulletin was discontinued, and its name was appended onto that of the morning paper: The Providence Journal-Bulletin.\nStarting in 1925, the Journal became the first in the country to expand coverage statewide.[5] It had news bureaus throughout Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts, a trend that had been inaugurated in 1925 by then-managing editor Sevellon Brown. Bureaus in Westerly, South Kingstown, Warwick, West Warwick, Greenville, Pawtucket, Woonsocket, Newport, Bristol/Warren in Rhode Island, and Attleboro and Fall River, in Massachusetts, were designed to make sure that reporters were only 20 minutes away from breaking news.[13]\nIn 1937, the only competing Providence-based daily, the Star-Tribune, went bankrupt and was sold. The Providence Journal company bought it and kept it running for four months, then shut it down.[5]\nThe paper also had a variety of regional editions, which it called \"zones\", that focused on city and town news. The system produced an intense focus on local news typically seen only in small-town newspapers. For example, everyone who died in the Journal's coverage area, rich or poor, received a free staff-written obituary.[citation needed]\nPostwar Pulitzers\nChief editorial writer George W. Potter won the Journal's first Pulitzer in 1945 for a series of essays, and the entire editorial staff won in 1953 for local deadline reporting.[5]\nUncovering Nixon tax scandal\nDuring the 1970s, reporter Jack White, then manager of the Providence Journal-Bulletin bureau in Newport, Rhode Island, cultivated sources among Newport's elite.[14] One source passed on to White evidence that President Richard Nixon had paid taxes amounting to $792.81 in 1970 and $878.03 in 1971, despite earning more than $400,000.[14] White discovered that Nixon had illegally back-dated the donation of his papers to the National Archives, in order to avoid a new law which made such donations ineligible for tax deductions.[14]\nThe night he was prepared to write the story, in September 1973, the union representing reporters at the newspaper voted to go on strike.[15] White would later recall rolling the story out of his typewriter, folding it up and putting it in his wallet.[15] He said he never thought about giving the story to management, even though he risked missing the story.[15] Twelve days later, the strike ended, and the story ran on October 3, 1973.[15]\nAt an Associated Press Managing Editors convention the following month, Journal reporter Joseph Ungaro asked Nixon about the story.[14] Nixon replied with a quote that was to become associated with him for the rest of his life: \"People have got to know whether or not their president is a crook. Well, I am not a crook.\"[14] Shortly after this, the I.R.S. audited Nixon's tax returns. By December 1973, Nixon, under pressure, released five years of tax documents.[14] This set a precedent for Presidents and presidential candidates to release tax returns, a custom that continued to 2016.[14] White's story forced Nixon to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in owed taxes. The story won White the 1974 Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting.[14]\nIn 1988 the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSICOP) presented reporter C. Eugene Emery Jr. with the Responsibility in Journalism Award for his researched claims of faith-healer Ralph A. DiOrio and wrote about the results in his journal.[16][17]\nIn the 1990s, rising production costs and declines in circulation prompted the Journal to consolidate both the bureaus and the editions. The editors tried to reinvigorate the coverage of city and town news in 1996, but competition from the Internet added fuel to the decline.\nIn 1997, the Livingston Award, sometimes called the \"Pulitzer Prize for the Young,\"[18][19] was awarded to Journal reporter C. J. Chivers for International Reporting for his series on the collapse of commercial fishing in the North Atlantic.[20] Chivers, aged 32[18] when he won the award, left the Journal in 1999[21] to go to The New York Times.[18]\nLabor troubles\nIn 2001, reports in industry journals suggested that the Providence Journal was suffering from labor troubles, in which a \"poisoned\" workplace atmosphere led to a \"talent hemorrhage.\"[22] At least 35 news staffers left the paper between January 2000 and summer 2001, including 16 reporters, seven desk editors, two managerial staffers, and 10 administrative staff members.[22] Publisher Howard Sutton denied there was a high turnover and called it normal attrition.[22]\nIn 2001 the Providence Newspaper Guild filed 44 charges of alleged unfair labor practices with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) between December 1999 and June 2001. Judge William G. Kocol held a hearing on the complaints and found in the union's favor on 28 complaints in his ruling.\nIn June 2001, Livingston Award-winning former Journal reporter C.J. Chivers added to the allegations when he wrote an open letter to Belo chairman Robert Decherd, critical of Belo's management.[21] In the letter he expressed concern that poor management was responsible for the departure of 57 employees.[21] He accused management of \"assuming a counterproductive attitude toward its staff,\" which included fights over expenses, and over-reliance on freelancers and interns.[21] Executive Editor Alan Rosenberg retired in December 2020 after four decades, replaced by David Ng.[1]\nFinancial problems and sale\nIn the face of declining revenue, the paper began charging for obituaries on January 4, 2005.\nThe paper's last Massachusetts edition was published on March 10, 2006. On Oct. 10, 2008, the paper stopped publishing all of its zoned editions in Rhode Island and laid off 33 news staffers, including three managers. Even during the Great Depression, the Journal had not terminated news staff to cut costs.\nThe next few years included an extensive campaign to make the Internet version of the paper profitable. The Journal aggressively marketed its news on the web, pushing to get detailed stories onto its website, projo.com, before competing radio, television and other print outlets. But circulation continued to decline and online advertising failed to compensate.\nIn June 2011, the Journal laid off more than a dozen employees and eliminated its Promotion Department which had internally handled the newspaper's marketing and community affairs events for decades.\nOn Oct. 18, 2011, with circulation down to about 94,000 on weekdays and 129,000 on Sundays (down from 164,000 and over 231,000 in 2005),[23] the Journal renamed its website providencejournal.com, a move which meant that most of the previous Internet links to its content no longer worked. It also began implementing a system to require online readers to pay for content. Interactive images of its newspaper pages were initially available on personal computers and on the iPad for free. The paywall was put in place on February 28, 2012. The new website was part of a larger rebranding project by Nail Communications which also included a campaign entitled \"We Work For The Truth\".[24] The rebranding failed to stem the circulation decline.\nThroughout most of its history, the paper was privately owned. After the Journal became publicly traded and had acquired several television stations throughout the country (as well as cable television systems under the banner of Colony Communications; these systems were sold to Continental Cablevision in 1995), it was sold to the Dallas-based Belo Corp. in 1996. Belo also owned several television stations. The company later split into two entities and one, A. H. Belo, took control of the newspapers.\nOn Dec. 4, 2013, A. H. Belo announced that it was seeking a buyer for the Journal, including its headquarters on 75 Fountain St. and its separate printing facility.[25] The company said it wanted to focus on business interests in Dallas. Workers were not surprised because the announcement came after the company sold one of its other papers, the Riverside Press-Enterprise in California.[26]\nA. H. Belo announced on July 22, 2014, that it was selling the paper's assets to New Media Investment Group Inc., parent company of Fairport, N.Y.-based GateHouse Media, for $46 million. By then, the Journal's Monday through Friday circulation had dropped to 74,400, with an average of 99,100 on Sundays. Its website was getting 1.4 million unique users on an average month.[27] The sale was completed on Sept. 3, 2014, as several employees, including widely respected columnist Bob Kerr, were told they would not be transferred to the new company.\nBernie Szachara, senior vice president for publishing and group publisher at Local Media Group, a division of GateHouse Media, assumed the title of interim publisher, succeeding Howard G. Sutton.[28] On Feb. 27, 2015, Janet Hasson was named president and publisher of the Journal. (The GateHouse Media news release announcing the appointment [29] incorrectly reported that Hasson was the paper's first female publisher. That distinction belongs to Mary Caroline Knowles, who was publisher from 1874 until 1879.[30][31])\nIn 2019, Journal parent company GateHouse Media purchased Gannett, the publisher of USA Today.[32] This purchase established GateHouse as the largest newspaper company in the United States \"by far,\"[32] and also provided the Providence Journal with access to publish stories from the USA Today Network of newspapers.[33]\nFalling circulation\nIn October 2015, average daily paid circulation was 89,452 on Sundays[34] and 70,600 on weekdays.[35] By June 2017, circulation was down to about 72,000 on Sundays and 56,000 on weekdays.[36] In 2021 those figures dropped to 38,500 on Sundays and 29,957 weekdays; by contrast, both figures in 1990 were over 200,000.[3]\nThe paper in its early days changed headquarters frequently as the paper grew.[37]\nThe paper's original office was in the old Coffee House, at the corner of Market Square and Canal street.[6] In 1823 it moved to the Union building, on the west side of the bridge, and in the following year to the Granite building, Market Square.[6] In May, 1833, the office moved again to the Whipple building on College street.[6] From 1844 to 1871, the paper was housed at the Washington buildings.[6] In July, 1871 the paper moved to the Barton block on Weybosset street.[6] In May, 1889, the paper purchased the Fletcher building at the corner of Westminster, Eddy and Fulton streets.[6]\nIn 1905 the paper announced its move from Eddy Street to a brand new building next door at the corner of Eddy and Westminster St.[37] The old building was demolished, and the new building extended over the site of the old.[37] The ornate new building was designed in the Beaux-Arts style by Robert Swain Peabody of the noted Boston firm of Peabody & Stearns. It was completed in 1906.[38] The Journal moved in 1934 to its present building on Fountain Street where the original Benny's store was located.[37][39]\nThe Old Providence Journal Building at 203 Westminster St. seen from the corner of Westminster and Eddy Streets\nPlaque on the Old Providence Journal Building\nThe current home of The Providence Journal on Fountain Street\nProduction facility on Kinsey Avenue\nJournalism prizes and awards\nChief editorial writer George W. Potter won the Journal's first Pulitzer in 1945 for a series of editorials on freedom of the press[40]\nIn 1950, editor Sevellon Brown and reporter Ben Bagdikian received Honorable Mention from the Peabody Awards for a series of commentaries and criticisms of broadcasts by Walter Winchell[41]\nIn 1953 the editorial staff won the Pulitzer for local reporting their spontaneous and cooperative coverage of a bank robbery and police chase leading to the capture of the bandit.[42]\nIn 1974, reporter Jack White won a Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting for investigating President Richard Nixon's Federal income tax payments in 1970 and 1971.[43]\nIn 1994, the Journal won a Pulitzer Prize in Investigative Reporting for exposing corruption in the Rhode Island court system[44]\nIn 1997, the Livingston Award, sometimes called the \"Pulitzer Prize for the Young,\"[18][19] was awarded to Journal reporter C. J. Chivers for International Reporting for his series on the collapse of commercial fishing in the North Atlantic.[20]\nIn 2016, the Journal was named New England Newspaper of the Year by the New England Newspaper and Press Association. The Journal also received the top editorial writing and public service awards.[45]\nNotable contributors\nSee also: Category:The Providence Journal people\nHenry B. Anthony\nBen Bagdikian\nC. J. Chivers\nCharles Henry Dow\nPhilip Terzian\nRuth Tripp\nJoseph Ungaro\nRobert Whitcomb\nThe Providence Journal has been sold for $3 daily since the spring of 2019. It is $5 on Sundays and Thanksgiving Day and be higher outside Rhode Island and adjacent states.\nVolume numbering\nThrough the paper's long history, there have been some inconsistencies in its volume numbering. In 1972, when the Saturday editions of the Journal and Bulletin were combined to create the Journal-Bulletin, the Saturday edition was reset to become Volume 1, Number 1.[2] The daily edition of the paper followed suit in 1995 (becoming Volume XXIII) upon the termination of the Evening Bulletin.[2] In July 2017, the Journal announced it was reverting to the original volume numbering. The Friday, July 21, 2017, edition of the newspaper was set to become Vol. CLXXXIX, No. 1, to mark the first paper of the 189th year.[2]\nIn the television series Gilmore Girls, Rory Gilmore has a job interview at the newspaper.\nIn the Farrelly brothers film Hall Pass, Owen Wilson's character Rick can be seen reading a copy of the newspaper in one scene.\nJournalism portal\nRhode Island portal\n^ a b \"David Ng named executive editor of The Providence Journal\". ABC News. Associated Press. 22 January 2021. Retrieved 11 February 2021.\n^ a b c d e Rosenberg, Alan (16 July 2017). \"The Providence Journal's 188th-birthday mystery\". Providence, Rhode Island: The Providence Journal. p. A2. Archived from the original on 16 July 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2017.\n^ a b \"Projo's Circulation Falls to 29,957 - Paper Announces More Restrictions to Online Content\". Go Local Prov. 5 February 2021. Archived from the original on 5 February 2021. Retrieved 11 February 2021.\n^ \"Digital Extra: The Journal's 175th Anniversary - For the record\". The Providence Journal Co. 2004-07-21. Archived from the original on 2011-06-22. Retrieved 2010-08-28.\n^ a b c d e f g \"The Providence Journal Company - Company Profile, Information, Business Description, History, Background Information on The Providence Journal Company\". Reference for Business. Retrieved 22 March 2015.\n^ a b c d e f g h Smith, H.P. (1902). \"\"The Printer and the Press\"\". State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations at the End of the Century Vol, II. Boston & Syracuse: The Mason Publishing Company. pp. 563–611. Retrieved 6 November 2017.\n^ a b Greene, Welcome Arnold (1886). The Providence Plantations for 250 Years. Providence, RI: J.A. & R.A. Reid, Publishers and Printers. pp. 318–319.\n^ a b c McLoughlin, William G (1986). Rhode Island: A History. New York: W.W. Norton & Company. pp. 140–141, 150. ISBN 0393302717.\n^ a b c d e \"Charles Henry Dow\". American National Biography Online. American National Biography. Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ a b Conley, Patrick T. (22 April 2016). \"The Providence Journal and Irish independence\". The Providence Journal. Retrieved 6 November 2017.\n^ Arsenault, Mark (21 July 2004). \"WWI 100 Years: Journal editor Rathom lied about personal, paper's role in exposing German spies\". The Providence Journal. Retrieved 22 March 2015.\n^ \"JAMES CARR GARRISON, EDITOR, DIES AT 58; Publisher of The Pelham News-- One-Time Managing Editor of New York Press\". timesmachine.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2020-07-09.\n^ \"The Providence Journal Company\". FundingUniverse.com, Company Histories & Profiles. n.d. Retrieved 2012-03-24.\n^ a b c d e f g h Zuckoff, Mitchell (5 August 2016). \"Why We Ask to See Candidates' Tax Returns\". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ a b c d \"Obituary: Jack White, 63\". Cape Cod Times. 13 October 2005. Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ \"Articles of Note\". The Skeptical Inquirer. 13 (4): 425. 1988.\n^ Shore, Lys Ann (1988). \"New Light on the New Age CSICOP's Chicago conference was the first to critically evaluate the New Age movement\". The Skeptical Inquirer. 13 (3): 226–235.\n^ a b c d Eisendrath, Charles R. (11 June 2014). \"New Livingston Awards Winners to the Fast Track\". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ a b \"Livingston Awards, \"Pulitzer of the Young,\" adds digital nominators, expands outreach and seeks endowment with new funding\". Knight Foundation. John S. and James L. Knight Foundation. 26 January 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ a b \"Library: Empty Nets: Atlantic Banks in Peril (series)\". University of Michigan. Wallace House. Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ a b c d \"New York Times reporter cites poor morale at Providence Journal\". Guild Leader. XII (35). 3 July 2001. Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ a b c Wenner, Kathryn (July–August 2001). \"You Say Hemorrhage, I Say Attrition\". American Journalism Review (July–August 2001). Retrieved 2 October 2016.\n^ \"Projo hit by 61% drop in advertising since '05; digital declining\". WPRI.com. 2012-03-14. Retrieved 2012-03-24.\n^ Providence Journal Commercial - \"Truth\"\n^ \"A.H. Belo Hires Arkansas Firm to Explore Sale of the Providence Journal\". Rhode Island Public Radio. 2013-12-04. Retrieved 2013-12-19.\n^ \"Scott MacKay Commentary: Providence Journal, We Knew Ye Well\". Rhode Island Public Radio. 2013-12-06. Retrieved 2013-12-19.\n^ \"Longtime Journal publisher Sutton to retire; interim publisher named\". ProvidenceJournal.com. 2014-08-29. Retrieved 2014-08-29.\n^ \"New Media completes purchase of The Providence Journal\". ProvidenceJournal.com. 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2014-09-03.\n^ \"Accomplished media executive becomes first female publisher of The Providence Journal\". gatehousemedia.com. 2015-02-27. Archived from the original on 2015-03-26. Retrieved 2018-04-12. CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)\n^ \"Journal names new top editor\". ahbelo.com. 2014-04-14. Retrieved 2015-05-19.\n^ \"Janet Hasson, Gannett veteran, named president, publisher of The Providence Journal\". ProvidenceJournal.com. 2015-02-27. Retrieved 2015-05-19.\n^ a b \"Journal parent buying owner of USA Today\". The Providence Journal. The Associated Press. 5 August 2019. Archived from the original on 6 August 2019. Retrieved 22 May 2021.\n^ Rosenberg, Alan (7 November 2020). \"Opinion/Rosenberg: Readers asked what the USA TODAY Network is. Here's the answer\". The Providence Journal. Retrieved 22 May 2021.\n^ The Providence Sunday Journal, \"Statement of Ownership, Management and Circulation, Oct. 11, 2015, page E5\n^ The Providence Journal, \"Statement of Ownership, Management and Circulation, Oct. 6, 2015, page B7\n^ \"Projo reporters' union will march to protest pay cuts, use of freelancers\". wpri.com. 2017-09-20. Retrieved 2017-09-20.\n^ a b c d Delaney, Michael (16 July 2017). \"Time Lapse: Read all about it\". Providence, Rhode Island: The Providence Journal. p. F2. Archived from the original on 16 July 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2017.\n^ Woodward, Wm. McKenzie (2003). PPS/AIAri Guide to Providence Architecture. Photography by William Jagger Photography (1st ed.). Providence, Rhode Island: Providence Preservation Society and American Institute of Architects Rhode Island Chapter. pp. 86–87. ISBN 0-9742847-0-X.\n^ Arditi, Lynn. \"Benny's celebrates 90 years with a cap and a nod\". providencejournal.com. Retrieved 2018-08-29. Benny’s ... opened in 1924 on Fountain Street, where the Providence Journal building now stands\n^ \"1945 Pulitzer Prizes\". The Pulitzer Prizes. Retrieved 7 October 2016.\n^ \"Providence Journal, Its Editor and Publisher, Sevellon Brown, and Ben Bagdikian, Reporter for the Series of Articles Analyzing the Broadcasts of Top Commentators\". Peabody: Stories that Matter. The Peabody Awards. Retrieved 7 October 2016.\n^ \"1953 Pulitzer Prizes\". The Pulitzer Prize. Retrieved 7 October 2016.\n^ Journal Staff (6 October 2016). \"Providence Journal named best in N.E.\" The Providence Journal. 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Ridger\nObserver-Dispatch\nOlney Daily Mail\nOld Colony Memorial\nOshkosh Northwestern\nPalladium-Item\nPekin Daily Times\nPetoskey News-Review\nPocono Record\nThe Portsmouth Herald\nThe Post-Crescent\nPress & Sun-Bulletin\nThe Progress-Index\nThe Pueblo Chieftain\nThe Register-Mail\nReno Gazette-Journal\nThe Record Herald\nThe Repository\nRockford Register Star\nThe Rolla Daily News\nThe St. Augustine Record\nSt. Cloud Times\nThe Salina Journal\nThe Salinas Californian\nSan Angelo Standard-Times\nSarasota Herald-Tribune\nThe Shawnee News-Star\nThe Sheboygan Press\nThe Shelby Star\nSiskiyou Daily News\nSouthwest Times Record\nThe Standard-Times\nStar-Banner\nStar Courier\nStar-Gazette\nThe State Journal-Register\nStuart News\nSturgis Journal\nSun Journal (New Bern, North Carolina)\nTaunton Daily Gazette\nThe Telegram\nTelegram & Gazette\nThe Times (Little Falls)\nThe Times (Shreveport)\nThe Times Herald\nTimes Herald-Record\nTimes-News (Hendersonville)\nThe Times-News (Burlington)\nTimes Record News\nTimes Recorder\nThe Topeka Capital-Journal\nTreasure Coast Newspapers\nThe Tribune-Democrat\nThe Tuscaloosa News\nVentura County Star\nVero Beach Press Journal\nWatertown Public Opinion\nWausau Daily Herald\nThe Wayne Independent\nThe Wellington Daily News\nWellsville Daily Reporter\nWisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune\nBridgeTower Media business publications in the United States\nCasual Living\nCentral Penn Business Journal\nCharleston Regional Business Journal\nColumbia Regional Business Report\nThe Countian – Jefferson County\nThe Countian – St. Louis\nDaily Journal of Commerce (Oregon)\nDaily Journal of Commerce (Louisiana)\nDaily Record (Baltimore)\nThe Daily Record (Rochester)\nThe Daily Record – Kansas City\nDesigners Today\nFurniture Today\nGSA Business\nGifts & Decorative Accessories\nHome Accents Today\nHome Furnishings News\nHome Textiles Today\nIdaho Business Review\nThe Journal Record\nLehigh Valley Business\nMassachusetts Lawyers Weekly\nThe Mecklenburg Times\nMichigan Lawyers Weekly\nMinnesota Lawyer\nMissouri Lawyers Weekly\nNJBIZ\nNew Orleans CityBusiness\nNorth Carolina Lawyers Weekly\nPet Age\nRhode Island Lawyers Weekly\nRochester Business Journal\nSCBIZ\nSouth Carolina Lawyers Weekly\nSt. Charles County Business Record\nSt. Louis Daily Record\nWisconsin Law Journal\nNewsquest daily newspapers in the United Kingdom\nThe Argus, Brighton\nThe Bolton News\nTelegraph & Argus, Bradford\nDaily Gazette, Colchester\nDorset Echo\nEcho, Basildon, Essex\nGreenock Telegraph\nThe Herald, Glasgow\nNews Shopper, South East London & North West Kent\nLancashire Telegraph\nOxford Mail\nThe National, Scotland\n* The National, Wales\nThe Northern Echo\nThe Press, York\nSouthern Daily Echo, Southampton\nSwindon Advertiser\nWorcester News\nGateHouse Media\nAmerican Consolidated Media\nCalkins Media\nCommunity Newspaper Company\nHalifax Media Group\nHathaway Publishing\nLocal Media Group\nSchurz Communications\nStephens Media\nJournal Media Group\nPulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting\nPulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time (1953–1963)\nEdward J. Mowery\nAlvin McCoy\nRoland Kenneth Towery\nArthur Daley\nWallace Turner\nGeorge Beveridge\nJohn Harold Brislin\nMiriam Ottenberg\nEdgar May\nGeorge Bliss\nOscar Griffin Jr.\nPulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting (1964–1984)\nJames V. Magee\nAlbert V. Gaudiosi\nFrederick Meyer\nGene Goltz\nJohn Anthony Frasca\nGene Miller\nJ. Anthony Lukas\nAl Delugach\nDenny Walsh\nHarold E. Martin\nWilliam Jones\nTimothy Leland\nGerard M. O'Neill\nStephen Kurkjian\nAnn Desantis\nThe Sun Newspapers of Omaha\nWilliam Sherman\nAcel Moore\nWendell Rawls Jr.\nAnthony R. Dolan\nGilbert M. Gaul\nElliot G. Jaspin\nAlexander B. Hawes Jr.\nNils Bruzelius\nJoan Vennochi\nRobert M. Porterfield\nClark Hallas\nRobert B. Lowe\nLoretta Tofani\nKenneth Cooper\nJoan Fitz Gerald\nJonathan Kaufman\nNorman Lockman\nGary McMillan\nKirk Scharfenberg\nDavid Wessel\nPulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting (1985–present)\nLucy Morgan\nJack Reed\nWilliam K. Marimow\nJeffrey A. Marx\nMichael M. York\nDaniel R. Biddle\nH.G. Bissinger\nFredric N. Tulsky\nDean Baquet\nWilliam C. Gaines\nAnn Marie Lipinski\nLou Kilzer\nJoseph T. Hallinan\nSusan M. Headden\nLorraine Adams\nDan Malone\nJeff Brazil\nProvidence Journal-Bulletin\nStephanie Saul\nThe Orange County Register\nEric Nalder\nDeborah Nelson\nAlex Tizon\nGary Cohn\nSang-Hun Choe\nCharles J. Hanley\nMartha Mendoza\nDavid Willman\nSari Horwitz\nScott Higham\nSarah Cohen\nClifford J. Levy\nMichael D. Sallah\nJoe Mahr\nMitch Weiss\nNigel Jaquiss\nSusan Schmidt\nJames V. Grimaldi\nR. Jeffrey Smith\nBrett Blackledge\nWalt Bogdanich\nJake Hooker\nDavid Barstow\nBarbara Laker\nWendy Ruderman\nSheri Fink\nPaige St. John\nMatt Apuzzo\nAdam Goldman\nEileen Sullivan\nChris Hawley\nMichael J. Berens\nAlejandra Xanic von Bertrab\nChris Hamby\nEric Lipton\nLeonora LaPeter Anton\nAnthony Cormier\nMichael Braga\nEsther Htusan\nEric Eyre\nMatt Hamilton\nHarriet Ryan\nPaul Pringle\nBrian Rosenthal\nGannett publications\n1829 establishments in Rhode Island\nMass media in Providence, Rhode Island\nNewspapers published in Rhode Island\nPulitzer Prize-winning newspapers\nPublications established in 1829","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line162765"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5052317380905151,"wiki_prob":0.49476826190948486,"text":"August 26, 2016 Carroll Insider - We're Off and Running!\nWelcome Class of 2020!\nStudents are moved in, classes have begun, and campus is bustling! We are excited to begin the 2016-17 school year and welcome the class of 2020 to campus. For more photos of move-in day, visit here.\nGuatemala Grant\nTo help continue the important work being done by Carroll College’s Engineers Without Borders in Guatemala, the Foundation for the Diocese of Helena recently awarded CC-EWB a grant in the amount of $2,000. This grant funding will be used for the continuation of the seismic retrofit wall construction at the Instituto La Asuncion school located in Santo Tomas La Union, Guatemala. Read more.\nSaints in the News\nA budding relationship between a Ugandan priest, Rev. Julius Bwowe, parishioners of the Cathedral of St. Helena and the Carroll College Chapter of Engineers Without Borders is working to help hundreds of Ugandans access clean water.\nCC-EWB made its first trip to Kawango, a community of 350, this past May to assess the needs and begin to develop solutions.\n“There’s been a calling for us to be with Father Julius in Uganda and the students are excited to develop and work on this long-term relationship,” said Dr. John Scharf, professor of engineering and faculty advisor on the Uganda project. Read the story in the Helena IR here:\nHelena's academics, faith and philanthropy meet in east Africa\nAs a product of Carroll's Entrepreneur in Residence program, senior Ty Irving and 2016 grad Joe Stoutt recently held a launch party of their new company Big Skylines, Montana's first and only designer athletic sock company. At the launch, held at fourOsix in downtown Helena, they unveiled their first product: Helena Hightops. The 406 on your feet!\nCarroll’s Nursing Department started off the academic year with the tradition of welcome and celebration at the Annual Blessing of the Hands Ceremony, which recognizes the dedication of nurses to bring comfort, kindness, respect, and spiritual support to patients. See more photos of this special ceremony here.\nAssistant professor of biology Dr. Stephanie Otto-Hitt was recently awarded $5,000 from the Ciliate Genomics Consortium's NSF IUSE grant to help cover the cost of supplies related to an open-investigation style Tetrahymena lab module in her first-year biology course this fall. This is the second grant she has been awarded from the consortium having received a $1,000 this past winter for her molecular biology lab class. Thank you to the CGC for this most generous award for our students!\nRick Reese, former political science professor at Carroll from 1970-74, was one of the rescuers featured in a documentary film which recently aired on PBS regarding the 1967 Grand Teton rescue of an injured climber and his companion. A trailer for The Grand Rescue: A True Story of the 1967 Jenny Lake Rangers can be viewed here.\nThomas Hoffman, M.D., '98, Medical Director, Acadia Montana, Butte, MT. Read announcement here.\nEzekial “Zeke” Koslosky ‘16, recently received a $12,000 scholarship from the Loge Family Medical Scholarship Fund to continue his education. He will attend medical school through the WWAMI program of the University of Washington. Read announcement here.\nRose Mary (Baker) Sheehan, class of 1954 - read more about her life here.\nRichard A. Tomcheck '53 - read more about his life here.\nEmployment at Carroll\nHave you ever thought about working at Carroll? You should – we are pretty nice folks at a pretty great place. Check out our current openings.\nAssistant Professor in Theology\nArt Adjuncts\nNursing Clinical Lab Facilitator\nCanine Training Assistant\nIn addition, WorldMontana, which is located on Carroll College’s campus in conjunction with the Artaza Center for Excellence in Global Education, is looking for a new Executive Director. WorldMontana is non-profit organization dedicated to connecting Montana to the world through global education and exchanges with international visitors. While operationally separate from Carroll College, the college provides WM with office space and is supportive of their work in bringing international visitors to campus and into the Helena community.\nWhat is the Greatest Unsolved Mathematics Problem of Modern Times? A public debate with Dr. Kelly Cline vs. Dr. Eric Sullivan, Sept. 7, 7 p.m.,101/202 Simperman/Wiegand Amphitheatre, Carroll College\nIn the year 2000, the Clay Mathematics Institute announced that they would award a one million dollar prize for solutions to any of seven challenging mysteries in mathematics. One of these mysteries has now been solved, and six are still out there. What is the most important of these unsolved problems? Dr. Sullivan and Dr. Cline will argue which of the remaining six they feel is the most important. At the end of this debate, the audience will vote on which of these two problems is the most important unsolved mathematics problem of modern times. This event is free and open to the public.\nAnnual Constitution Day Lecture - The Anti-Federal Appropriation, Sept. 12, 7 p.m., Trinity Lounge, Carroll College\nSponsored by the Constitutional Studies Center at Carroll College and made possible by a generous gift from the Apgar Foundation, Carroll's Annual Constitution Day lecture will feature Dr.Jeffrey K. Tulis, an associate professor in the Department of Government at the University of Texas at Austin.\nIn his lecture titled, “The Anti-Federal Appropriation,” Professor Tulis will explain how Anti-Federalists — those who originally opposed the U.S. Constitution — and their heirs \"have exploited the iterative character of The Federalist to gain through interpretation what they lost in ratification of the Constitution regarding federalism, separation of powers, and executive power.”\nAll students, faculty, staff, and members of the community are invited to attend. This lecture is the first in a series of events designed to bring heightened attention to the tradition of constitutional government.\n7th Annual Carroll College ASCE Student Chapter Fundraiser Golf Tournament, Sept. 16, Bill Roberts Golf Course, Helena\nYou have the opportunity to help raise money for Carroll American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) Student Chapter activities and win great prizes in the process. All levels of golfers are welcome and encouraged to play. Hole contests and prizes! Registration fees before Sept. 3: $90/person (includes cart) and $320/4-person team (includes 2 carts). For registration and sponsorship forms, contact Gary Fischer, ASCE Faculty Advisor, at gfischer@carroll.edu or 406-447-4571.\nAmanda Lipp – National Alliance on Mental Illness Lecture, Sept. 19, 7 p.m., Lower Campus Center, Carroll College\nCarroll College and NAMI Helena are bringing Amanda Lipp, 24, to campus to speak about mental illness. Since age 19, Amanda has given over 150 speeches around the country regarding mental and behavioral health. Her messages come from a place of passion from experiencing psychiatric hospitalization her freshman year of college, to consulting professionally in mental health care and serving on national boards. Her messages intersect with her passion for film and the fine arts, tapping into creativity as mechanisms to support individuals and communities. This event is free and the Helena community is invited to attend.\nCapital Punishment, Catholicism, and Pope Francis, Sept. 29, 7 p.m., Lower Campus Center, Carroll College\nLiturgy and God’s Justice for All: Capital Punishment, Catholicism, and Pope Francis with Tobias Wright is sponsored by the Carroll College Theology Department, Hunthausen Center for Peace and Justice, Archbishop Hunthausen Professor for Peace and Justice, and Dr. James and Joan Schneller Endowed Professorship in Catholic Mission and Identity.\nPope Francis's support for the abolition of capital punishment and his call for a worldwide moratorium on executions during this Holy Year of Mercy have generated questions about current Catholic teaching on the death penalty. This presentation gives attention to the history of Catholic teaching about capital punishment, including how Scripture has been interpreted in connection with it, and it describes recent developments from Pope Saint John Paul II, through Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI, to Pope Francis.\nTobias Wright is a former correctional officer and reserve police officer who has also served as an ethics instructor for police officers. He is a Catholic moral theologian whose research and teaching addresses violence-related issues, environmental issues, and healthcare issues. He is the Maeder Endowed Associate Professor of Health Care Ethics and an Associate Professor of Christian Ethics at Saint Louis University. This lecture is free and open to the public.\nMark your calendars – Upcoming Alumni Events:\nHomecoming 2016: September 23-25\nMake plans now to return to campus this fall for Homecoming. All alumni, parents and friends are invited to attend. Special reunions will be held for the classes of 2006, 1996, 1986, 1976, 1971, 1966 and the Nursing Class of 1961.\nFor a full schedule and to register visit: www.carroll.edu/alumni/homecoming-family-weekend\nAlumni Award Nominations\nThe Office of Alumni Relations is currently seeking nominations for the following alumni awards:\nAlumni Hall of Fame Award\nAlumni Luminary Award\nFor details about these awards and how to submit nominations visit www.carroll.edu/alumni or email alumni@carroll.edu. Alumni awards are presented at the Founder's Day Dinner which will be held on Friday, November 4, 2016.\nConnect with us online or get the latest news via social media:","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1544459"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7765305042266846,"wiki_prob":0.7765305042266846,"text":"Joe Biden Launches LGBTQ Youth Program: ‘Every American Deserves to Be Treated With Dignity’\nWritten by Alexander Kacala on May 22, 2018\nFormer vice president Joe Biden, along with the YMCA of the USA, are launching an initiative to help LGBTQ youth and their families. In an op-ed written for CNN, Biden and Kevin Washington — CEO of Y-USA — reveal the obstacles and challenges faced by LGBTQ youth, and lay out exactly what their solution will be. The Joe Biden LGBTQ youth programming will first begin at selection of Ys, before rolling out to Ys nationwide.\n“Today, too many members of the LGBTQ community continue to face discrimination, harassment, rejection and physical violence every day at school, at work, in their neighborhoods and even in their homes,” write Biden and Washington.\nThe pair cite staggering statistics that reveal the painful obstacles LGBTQ youth face. This includes the facts that “LGBTQ youth are five times more likely to attempt suicide than their heterosexual peers,” and “they represent up to 40% of the homeless youth population even though they make up only about 7% of the overall youth population in the US.” They also point out that issues such as food insecurity, hate crimes and poverty affect queer people and need addressing.\n“Every American deserves to be treated with dignity and respect, but too many in the LGBTQ community are denied this basic human right today. This is unacceptable in a country founded on the belief that we all are created equal,” write Biden and Washington. “Equality and opportunity for all is the way to a brighter future, and at the Biden Foundation and the Y, this is the future we are working to create.”\nAt first, a selection of of Ys will develop locally focused strategies designed to engage and support local LGBTQ individuals and their families. These strategies may include “staff training; member outreach and engagement; program innovation for LGBTQ youth, adults, seniors and families; and community collaborations.” Over time, the best practices and tools developed by the initial selection of Ys will be taken to organizations nationwide.\nRELATED | These 5 Organizations Are Dedicated to Assisting Homeless LGBTQ Youth\n“This kind of work — work to ensure everyone has a fair shot at the American dream and to build stronger, more welcoming communities — is what drives our organizations, and we call upon others to join,” the pair write.\nBiden has been a longtime advocate and ally to the LGBTQ community. Back in 2012, he beat Barack Obama by publicly declaring his support for same-sex marriage first during an interview with Meet the Press.\n“I am vice president of the United States of America,” Biden answered when asked . “The president sets the policy. I am absolutely comfortable with the fact that men marrying men, women marrying women, and heterosexual men and women marrying another are entitled to the same exact rights, all the civil rights, all the civil liberties. And quite frankly, I don’t see much of a distinction — beyond that.”\nThen President Obama followed suit a few days later. A book published in 2016 revealed that Biden’s support for same-sex marriage forced Obama’s hand on the issue.\nThat same year, Biden called transgender rights the “civil rights issue of our time.” He used that phrase again in October 2015 when announcing he wanted to end the military’s ban on transgender people serving openly. “No longer is there any question transgender people are able to serve in the United States military,” he said, while the administration was still reviewing the policy.\nBiden is the rebel ally the LGBTQ community has always needed. We’re looking forward to seeing him continue to fight the good fight for us, especially when it is in the name of our youth, a population in our community who needs the support most of all.\nWhat do you think of the Joe Biden LGBTQ youth programming? Sound off in the comments below and on Facebook.\nJoe Biden LGBTQ youth\nMotivate Yourself to Get Fit Without All the Body-Shaming\nThe Nazi Regime Set the Trans Rights Movement Back Decades. Here's How.\nMountain-Climbing Mixed With Queer Activism: Pink Summits Takes LGBTQ Visibility to New Heights\nLoic, Who Grew Up Gay in Homophobic Cameroon, Shares 'What Pride Means to Me'","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line836996"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9846383333206177,"wiki_prob":0.9846383333206177,"text":"Dragged back from abroad to face justice - the people who fled the UK after committing serious crimes\nTheir efforts to leave the country frustrated the authorities but they were brought back to face justice in the courts\nAndrew BardsleyCourt reporter\nIrmantas Zvybas, Choudhry Ikhalaq Hussain, Michael Davis (Image: NCA, GMP)\nDon't miss out on the big stories from Manchester's courts with our weekly newsletter\nWhen criminals flee the country in a bid to avoid being prosecuted, the authorities have ways of bringing them back to the country to face justice.\nArrest warrants can be issued, and law enforcement colleagues across the world engaged in the search and capture.\nSome of serious crimes in the last 12 months would have gone unpunished were it not for international cooperation.\nHere, the M.E.N looks at Manchester cases where people have been brought back to the UK to face justice in our courts.\nIrmantas Zvybas\nIrmantas Zvybas (Image: National Crime Agency)\nZvybas faced justice nearly a decade after committing crimes, acting as a 'foot solider' in a criminal gang which helped people illegally enter the UK.\nBack in 2011, Zvybas was living in Cheetham Hill and made trips to Italy and France, where he met two Albanian people he didn't know.\nHe returned to the UK with them, giving them a legitimate passport belonging to someone else 'who bore physical similarities' to them.\nThe first trip was apparently successful, but after returning from France he was questioned at Luton Airport.\nZvybas was not arrested and was released, believing there would be no further prosecution, Manchester Crown Court heard.\nIt was only about a decade later that he faced justice - arrested at Riga airport in Latvia, 'out of the blue,' while on holiday with his family.\nA European arrest warrant had been issued nine years earlier, and Zvybas was extradited to the UK and remanded in Strangeways.\nIn January last year, Zvybas, 30, was jailed for 10 months after pleading guilty to two counts of assisting unlawful immigration.\nThe National Crime Agency said neither of the two people who accompanied Zvybas back to the UK were granted entry.\nGang helped people from Albania try to enter the UK illegally using 'lookalike' passports - this 'foot soldier' thought his crimes had been forgotten\nChoudhry Ikhalaq Hussain\nChoudhry Ikhalaq Hussain (Image: PA)\nHussain was 'living the good life' in Pakistan when he should have been in jail.\nDuring his 2016 trial, at which he was later convicted of the rape and sexual abuse of a child, Hussain told his barrister that a relative had died and he wanted to attend their funeral at a mosque in the west Midlands.\nAs he was on bail, and was free to leave court each evening, the judge gave him permission.\nBut the funeral was a lie and he fled to Pakistan.\nHussain, 42, from Rochdale, had earlier been ordered to hand over his passport, but he said he had lost it and would order a new one.\nIn fact he hadn't lost the passport and used it to leave the country.\nHe was caught in Pakistan in 2019 and brought back to the UK following a 'long and drawn out process'.\nHussain had been convicted at trial and sentenced in his absence to 19 years in jail in January 2016 for two counts of rape; three counts of sexual activity with a child; and one count of conspiracy to rape.\nIn January last year, Hussain was brought before the same judge at Minshull Street Crown Court, who imposed the sentence and described him as a 'devious sexual predator'.\n'Wicked sexual predator' who raped child ran for three years. He was hunted down 4,000 miles away - and has finally been locked up\nHashem Abedi\nHashem Abedi (Image: PA)\nAbedi was brought back to the UK to face justice for his role in the Manchester Arena bombing.\nAbedi had left the UK for Libya in April 2017, a month prior to the atrocity which claimed the lives of 22 people.\nUnlike his brother Salman Abedi, who returned to Manchester to carry out the suicide bombing, Hashem Abedi remained in Libya.\nHashem Abedi was extradited to the UK in July 2019.\nProsecutors said Hashem Abedi helped plan the atrocity.\nFollowing a trial at London's Old Bailey, Hashem Abedi, 23, was convicted of 22 counts of murder; attempted murder; and plotting to cause an explosion likely to endanger life.\nHe was handed 24 life sentences in August last year, and ordered to serve a minimum term of 55 years before he can be considered for parole.\n'His sentence will never compare to the sentence we have' - bereaved families speak out as Hashem Abedi jailed for life\nMichael Davis (Image: GMP)\nDavis fled to Spain after being arrested.\nPolice searched a flat above a takeaway where he was living and found seven firearms, 145 rounds of ammunition and class A drugs worth more than £38,000 on the streets.\nThose firearms were linked to a number of shootings which took place across Greater Manchester.\nAfter being arrested and bailed 54-year-old Davis fled to Spain, where he remained at large until he was brought back to the UK on an international warrant.\nProsecutors at Manchester Crown Court said a locked bedroom in the flat in Blackley was being used as a 'safe house' to store the items.\nDavis was the key holder for the flat and acted as a 'warehouseman', the court heard.\nSentencing in December, Judge Suzanne Goddard QC told him: \"There is no evidence to link you to the shootings, but what this shows is how such weapons can be used in a criminal way in the crime fraternity.\"\nDavis, of Shaw Road, Rochdale, was jailed for six years and six months after admitting conspiracy to possess prohibited firearms and ammunition.\nBrothers Safeer Ali, 36, Khateer Ali, 35, and Qabeer Ali, 32, had been previously jailed for their part in the conspiracy.\nSafeer Ali was jailed for nine years and six months for conspiracy to possess a firearm and ammunition.\nQabeer Ali and Khateer Ali admitted supplying drugs. Qabeer was sentenced to six years and Khateer to four-and-a-half.\n‘Warehouseman’ jailed after haul of firearms and drugs found above takeaway in police raid\nJoseph Morley\nJoseph Morley was jailed for two years and four months (Image: Liverpool Echo)\nMorley spent years on the run after conspiring to smuggle cocaine and heroin into the UK through Manchester Airport.\nHe spent time on cruise when he was supposed to be in jail.\nMore than 20 years after receiving his sentence, he was back before the courts.\nLiverpool Crown Court heard that in 1995 Morley was jailed for 15 years for conspiring to smuggle cocaine and heroin into the UK through Manchester Airport, but he spent 17 of the last 20 years on the run across Europe.\nHe used a number of bogus passports and forged documents.\nBy May 7, 2000, Morley was allowed periods of home leave from prison.\nBut he failed to return to HMP Kirkham in Lancashire, despite having only 20 months of his sentence left to serve.\nHe was given another four month sentence in 2010 after admitting breaching custody requirements, was released on licence in 2012 but left the country after being recalled to prison in 2013.\nMorley, 57, was arrested in November after applying for a passport in his own name.\nMorley, of Alvington Road, Hightown, admitted remaining unlawfully at large after recall to prison and three counts of making a false instrument.\nIn December he was jailed for two years and four months.\nThe 'catch me if you can' drug trafficker back behind bars after years on the run\nKelly Gray\nKelly Gray (Image: GMP)\nGray fled to Ireland and was brought back to the UK after a European arrest warrant was issued.\nShe had killed 23-year-old David Gavin, stabbing him once to the neck after a row.\nA dispute over damage to a van escalated and left the young dad fatally injured.\nA kitchen fitter who had been working at Mr Gavin's home in Rochdale had his van damaged.\nMr Gavin believed members of the Gray family were responsible for the damage, and after he and others confronted them, a fight broke out.\nGray, 32, arrived at the scene shortly after, running towards the brawl armed with a knife and stabbing Mr Gavin once to the neck.\nMr Gavin died following the incident in May last year.\nGray was caught three months later and brought back to the UK.\nShe admitted manslaughter on the grounds of a loss of control and was jailed for 10 years in October last year.\nIt began with an argument over damage to a van... escalated into a fist fight and ended with a mum stabbing a young dad to death\nGet breaking news first on the free Manchester Evening News app - download it here for your Apple or Android device. You can also get a round-up of the biggest stories sent direct to your inbox every day with the MEN email newsletter - subscribe here. And you can follow us on Facebook here.\nPiccadilly GardensDramatic video shows moment 'loud bang' is heard in McDonald's as police respond to massive fight involving 100'It was like something out of a Hollywood film'\nNovak Djokovic 'extremely disappointed' after losing Australian visa appeal\nTennisThe tennis star will now be deported from the country, so will not be defending his title at the Australian Open","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1110078"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.927483081817627,"wiki_prob":0.927483081817627,"text":"Rachel Croson\nExecutive Vice President/Provost, Academic Affairs/Provost\nEmailrcrosonumnedu\nProjects and Grants (1)\nRachel T.A. Croson came to the University of Minnesota from Michigan State University (MSU), where she served as Dean of the College of Social Science and MSU Foundation Professor of Economics. She is professor of economics, the 2018 winner of the Carolyn Shaw Bell Award and a Fellow of the AAAS, Class of 2021. Prior to her tenure at MSU, she served as dean of the School of Business at the University of Texas at Arlington, division director for Social and Economic Sciences at the National Science Foundation, professor and director of the Negotiations Center at the University of Texas at Dallas, and associate professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. She earned her bachelor's degree in economics and the philosophy of science from the University of Pennsylvania and her master's and Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University.\nExpertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals\nIn 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):\nThe Fingerprint is created by mining the titles and abstracts of the person's research outputs and projects/funding awards to create an index of weighted terms from discipline-specific thesauri.\nExperiment Business & Economics 100%\nVoluntary Provision Business & Economics 86%\nField Experiment Business & Economics 62%\nBehavioral Operations Business & Economics 53%\nCharitable Contributions Business & Economics 52%\nFund Raising Business & Economics 50%\nSocial Preferences Business & Economics 50%\nCOVID-19: Enhancing the Preparation of New Teachers to Impact Learning in Minnesota's PK-12 Schools\nErnst (she/hers), S., Croson, R. & Dillon, D. R.\nMN OFFICE OF HIGHER EDUCATION\nteacher 100%\nlearning 81%\nThe hidden costs of control (by Armin Falk and Michael Kosfeld)\nRazzolini, L. & Croson, R., Aug 27 2021, The Art of Experimental Economics: Twenty Top Papers Reviewed. Taylor and Francis Inc., p. 191-197 7 p.\nTransmission of information within transnational social networks: a field experiment\nCandelo, N., Croson, R. T. A. & Eckel, C., Dec 1 2018, In: Experimental Economics. 21, 4, p. 905-923 19 p.\nSocial Networks 100%\nField Experiment 96%\nHome Country 93%\nRisky Decision Making 44%\nRisky Decisions 42%\nEquity stakes and exit: An experimental approach to decomposing exit delay\nElfenbein, D. W., Knott, A. M. & Croson, R., Feb 1 2017, In: Strategic Management Journal. 38, 2, p. 278-299 22 p.\nEquity 100%\nExit 99%\nManagers 27%\nDecision Rights 24%\nIncentives 20%\nIdentity and social exclusion: an experiment with Hispanic immigrants in the U.S\nCandelo, N., Croson, R. T. A. & Li, S. X., Jun 1 2017, In: Experimental Economics. 20, 2, p. 460-480 21 p.\nLocal Public Goods 100%\nSocial Exclusion 97%\nImmigrants 63%\nEthnic Minorities 48%\nThe overconfident newsvendor\nRen, Y., Croson, D. C. & Croson, R. T. A., May 1 2017, In: Journal of the Operational Research Society. 68, 5, p. 496-506 11 p.\nNewsvendor 100%\nOverconfidence 93%\nProfit 46%\nNewsvendor Problem 35%\nMinnesota colleges bring students back to campus for summer classes, a test run for the fall\nRachel T Croson & Jeffrey A Gralnick\nThere’s No Good Reason to Hoard Anything, Especially Food\nRachel T Croson","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1604547"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6982991099357605,"wiki_prob":0.6982991099357605,"text":"Bob Saget Dead at 65\nErica Russell Published: January 9, 2022\nEmma McIntyre, Getty Images\nBob Saget has died, according to a report by TMZ. He was 65.\nAccording to \"multiple sources\" who spoke to the tabloid, the Full House icon passed away Sunday (Jan. 9) while at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Orlando.\nAccording to TMZ's report, the Sheriff's Department as well as the fire department responded to Ritz-Carlton around 4 PM ET Sunday, after hotel security discovered the actor's body in his hotel room. Saget was pronounced dead on the scene.\nThe Orange County Sheriff's Office confirmed Saget's death via their official Twitter account.\nThe exact circumstances surrounding his death are unclear at this time, though the Sheriff's Office confirmed that detectives \"found no signs of foul play or drug use in this case.\"\nRobert \"Bob\" Saget, who is perhaps best known for his role as patriarch Danny Tanner on '80s and '90s sitcom Full House and its Netflix sequel series, Fuller House, as well as for his stand-up comedy career, was in town in Florida for his ongoing I Don't Do Negative comedy tour.\nThe former America's Funniest Home Videos host performed in Orlando at the Hard Rock Live on Friday night (Jan. 7) and then in Ponte Vedra Beach at the Ponte Vedra Concert Hall on Saturday night (Jan. 8).\nOn Saturday, Saget tweeted about his love for stand-up comedy following his show the same evening.\n\"Loved tonight’s show @PV_ConcertHall in Jacksonville,\" he wrote. \"Appreciative audience. Thanks again to @RealTimWilkins for opening. I had no idea I did a 2 hr set tonight. I’m happily addicted again to this sh--.\"\nSaget is survived by his wife, Kelly Rizzo, as well as three children: Aubrey, Lara and Jennifer.\nStars We Lost in 2021\nSource: Bob Saget Dead at 65\nFiled Under: Bob Saget\nCategories: National News","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1300228"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8196594715118408,"wiki_prob":0.8196594715118408,"text":"Tweak says, \"I thought I told you...!\"\nxavier delamere {the count of monte cristo} ( whatbefell) wrote in bellumlogs,\nEntry tags: count of monte cristo, mercedes mondego\nWho: Xavier and Gina\nWhat: It's a surprise! AKA, Gina's coming downstairs and we have no idea what's going to happen ...Or it's the great reveal.\nWhere: 1003\nWhen: August 1, Afternoon\nWarnings: No clue. Xavier's thoughts tend to be dark.\nAfter not hearing from the Renauds from several days left him antsy, hearing from Gina didn't help matters. Before he knew it his newest vase was in smithereens on the floor and Gina was set to come down. He didn't know where that idea came from - especially per the Count's suggestion he should be avoiding her. It didn't sit well with him that the man he was supposed to be disapproved of him. But what could he do? How was Edmond able to push Mercedes in the end? Was it a matter of time?\nXavier got out the broom, cleaning up in short time. The apartment was given a once over and decided as clean enough before he paced. Returning to the computer would only agitate him more. There was too much to think about now and to figure out what he was going to do if Gina pieced things together. But if she did, like Mercedes had then she needed to hear the truth from him - even if the last thing he wanted was for her to know.\nThe knock at the door came at last and he took a deep breath, before putting his Xavier illusion in place. He opened it with a small smile that stayed firm despite how she looked. \"Come on in.\"\njustonefish\nAt his comparison, she stiffened. \"I'm not Mercedes!\" she snapped, a show of backbone that she seemed to have lost over the last hour or so. Pressing her palms to her knees, she sighed. \"I...don't know either...he helped my family a lot...\" He didn't need to hear this. Anybody that was even remotely close to Gina knew that her family was one giant Dysfunction Junction. Between her father's love of booze and her mother's golddigging values, it was a wonder that her sisters weren't worse. Though really, they weren't exactly good. Gina was the one that made something of herself - the other two had stagnated. Once Lucas came into the picture, it was game over. With a lake of money to draw from, the Berry family was fat and happy.\nwhatbefell\nXavier filed the information away, frowning slightly. His family, at least in comparison to hers, had never depended on him. They were all too eager to cut ties. \"I'll do some research,\" he promised once more. His hands went to his pockets, before he asked, \"Can I do anything else for you?\"\nSomewhere in the back of her mind, she knew that his formal mannerisms should have hurt. But she honestly didn't care anymore. She felt like she had been split open, her insides scooped out and replaced with cotton stuffing. At his question, she shook her head numbly. \"No, thank you,\" she said dismally. \"I'll get a bag with some clothes in a little while...I usually take a duffel to the hospital, Lucas won't be suspicious at all.\"\nHe nodded, unsure of what else he could do for her. \"Alright,\" he said softly. His hands shoved further into his pockets, trying to ignore the feeling of awkwardness now. There was a long pause before he managed, \"I'll just...will you let me know if there's anything else?\" He needed to hide in his office. Grab a vase and smash it.\nJust like the hurt, Gina knew she should have felt awkward. But she didn't. Instead she just sat in the silence, appreciating it, until he spoke. Glancing up at him, she nodded. \"I will,\" she lied. \"Go to sleep, Ed-\" She cut herself off, unsure of what to call him. She settled on just sighing. \"It's been a long day.\"\nHe raised an eyebrow at her. Even though this visit had dragged on, it was still the afternoon. \"I have work to attend to,\" he said simply. He gestured to the guest bedroom. \"That's yours...whenever you want to head off. I showered this morning so there's no need to worry on that.\"\nWith a final glance, he headed to his office. A moment later a crash could be heard, but fortunately his door was locked behind him.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1318154"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7142787575721741,"wiki_prob":0.7142787575721741,"text":"Home|Health|Sarah Volunteers Skills For Overseas Mission\nSarah Volunteers Skills For Overseas Mission\nTownsville Hospital My Health Record HHS integration officer Sarah Glendon is combining her passions for travel and health care by embarking on a volunteer placement in Kenya, providing medical assistance to communities living in extreme poverty.\nThe placement is part of the Nurses in Action program by World Youth International who run regular four-week volunteer placements for nurses and allied health professionals.\nMs Glendon said she was looking forward to combining travel and health care while helping those less fortunate. “I love travelling overseas and have travelled extensively. I have also always wanted to spend time abroad providing health care to communities that are not as fortunate as ours,” she said. “I made a decision that my overseas travel from now on would be based on giving something back to the communities that I visit. “The program is a great opportunity to combine the two areas and I think it makes your travel a little bit more meaningful.”\nMs Glendon said the role would complement her previous nursing experience. “I am an endorsed enrolled nurse and I also have a Bachelor of Health Promotion with a background in both clinical and health promotion roles,” Ms Glendon said.\n“The placement involves a range of health-care activities including assisting with HIV testing, visiting sick people in their homes, wound management and incredibly busy medical clinics. “We will also do some health education for both the townspeople and health professionals covering issues like hand hygiene and sexual health. “I look forward to using both my clinical skills and my health education skills to try and make a difference in their community.”\nMs Glendon is aiming to raise $2,200 for the trip to further assist the communities. “The fundraising money goes towards continuing to fund the programs as well as clinical resources in Kenya and Nepal such as the medical centre and dental clinic,” she said. Ms Glendon’s placement begins next June.\nTo donate to her cause you can visit http://worldyouth.org.au/WorldYouth_DonationsPayments","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line408130"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5866990685462952,"wiki_prob":0.41330093145370483,"text":"Prezi for teaching linguistics?\nThis semester I've been using Prezi as a visual aid in my lectures. I decided it would be a useful exercise to summarize my thoughts on it for the benefit of others, since there's no need to reinvent the wheel by discovering all of Prezi's features and flaws.\nThe conclusion, for those of you with short attention spans, is that I probably won't be using it again, at least not for regular lecturing. But let's start at the beginning.\nI used Prezi for eleven one-hour lectures, which constitute the lecture part of the first-year course Introducing English Grammar at the University of Manchester. It's a basic course, designed to get everyone up to speed on a basic framework for understanding English grammar, from those who have no prior knowledge to those who might have substantial experience with grammatical terminology in a different framework. The course is highly terminology-laden: lots of names for things, and lots of tests one can apply in order to identify those things. There were about 220 students on the course this year.\nPrezi, for those of you who haven't come across it, is a piece of presentation software marketed as an alternative to Powerpoint (and to Keynote and Beamer, which are basically the same thing: slides), even as a \"Powerpoint killer\" in some markets. I won't give a full introduction; take a look for yourself at some of the sample presentations on their website if you're interested. The key thing is that instead of just moving from slide to slide you zoom in and out and move around on one giant canvas.\nOn to the advantages and disadvantages.\nWow factor. This is not to be underestimated. Students are a jaded bunch, and it's difficult to impress them with technology; but by and large have responded well to the general look and feel of it. In my mid-term survey, which had 58 respondents, 74% found the presentations to be attractive, and 0% thought they were ugly. (Though this must in part be due to my general awesomeness as a designer, and not entirely to the software...) Obviously this wow factor will diminish the more people use Prezi for teaching.\nClearer conveyal of complex arguments. I genuinely believe Prezi is better for this than its slide-based competitors. Let's say you're presenting a list of things, for instance constituency tests. Rather than having a sequence of slides and presenting them one by one, you can have a kind of spider diagram and zoom in to each test in turn. And having some screens embedded in small form within other screens is great for capturing part-whole relations, and relative importance. In short, here I think Prezi lives up to its claims. In the mid-term survey, 41% stated that they found Prezis easier to follow than Powerpoint presentations, and 19% said the opposite.\nSome of the positive comments I received in the survey:\n\"I definitely much prefer the prezi presentations compared to powerpoint presentations, and the Grammar lecture is one of my favourites because of this.\"\n\"The lecture slides are very attractive and engaging which helps make the concepts more memorable.\"\n\"The way the information is portrayed is much more interesting than a powerpoint presentation, and the examples are always useful to refer back to.\"\nPoor facilities for typography. Prezi has no bold, underline, italic, superscript, subscript, anything like that. This means that using it for linguistics can be very frustrating. (Sure, you can create a \"subscript\" by creating a new text box and making it smaller, then manually positioning it in the right place. But that's not a sustainable solution.) Writing out formulas, for instance, or labelled bracketings, is virtually impossible. Prezi also gives you an extremely limited colour palette.\nNo tables. You have to draw all the lines by hand, and space it out by hand; it's not impossible, but very tedious.\nIncredibly time-consuming. You probably figured this one out from the above two, but it's the main barrier to using this software in a sustainable way. Even a very basic lecture, with nothing fancy added, takes hours to create; much longer than it would in Powerpoint, at any rate.\nExtremely buggy. The browser-based editor, which I used to create all my Prezis, is bugged beyond belief. Sometimes you'll copy-and-paste something, only to have it appear in a random position somewhere else in the presentation. Sometimes, after moving something, it will suddenly decide to spring back to where it came from. Sometimes line breaks will arbitrarily delete themselves. A colleague who used the desktop version of the editor tells me it's no better. This is unbelievably frustrating even for experienced users (I'd now count myself as one). There is a facility to import Powerpoint slides, but it's just as buggy as you'd expect.\nMassive files, no handouts. You can download a \"portable Prezi\" to present offline, but the file size is usually between 40 and 50 megabytes. Not useful. Furthermore, it's difficult to create handouts. You can create PDFs of the screens (which are themselves large-ish files; mine were all between 4 and 13 megabytes), but there's no easy way to do, say, 6 per page. (I found a workaround for this, but like many workarounds it's time-consuming; just what you don't need with Prezi.)\nNot supported on all computers. Though the portable Prezis are supposed to be standalone files, they need a certain version of Flash to work, and apparently need some sort of internet connection (or sometimes do). Anyway, some Manchester computers, such as the ones in the library, simply won't play them.\nMotion sickness. Though only 2% of students (one) found the lecture presentations to be nausea-inducing, apparently this can be a general problem with Prezi if you do too much panning.\nSome of the negative comments I received in the survey:\n\"The prezi presentations are very effective in lectures but when reviewing I haven't found a way of quickly getting to the slide I want except through flicking through all of them. Similarly, they can't be printed off except one to a page, so for both these reasons I prefer powerpoint for slides that I am going to refer to later.\"\n\"lectures slides are too long it would be very helpful if you use powerpoint instead\"\nOverall, then, I'm sad to say that I think the negatives outweigh the positives. The \"wow factor\", as I noted, is only relevant to the extent that Prezi is a minority technology: if everyone uses it, it will become much less impressive. That leaves its only lasting advantage as the clarity of representation of complex chains of thought. While it's nice to have, it doesn't justify the time and effort spent on creating them, or the additional problems created for students who want handouts.\nI therefore can't recommend Prezi for regular lecturing, and won't be using it in that function myself in future. Still, it was a fun experiment, and I've certainly learned from it - and I hope you find this useful too!\nPosted by George at 12:44 pm 3 comments:\nMore chocolate\nGreetings (and ratings) from Stuttgart, where everything is closed on Sundays. (Ah, Catholic Europe, how I love thee.)\nWaldbeer Joghurt: 7/10\nA tasty treat, though very sweet and rather gooey. This variety certainly succeeds in bringing out the distinctive sharp taste of the berries - it's a bit like a Fruits-of-the-Forest cheesecake encased in milk chocolate. Only a slight yoghurty clogginess detracts from it.\nNapolitaner Waffel: 4/10\nThough wafers and Ritter Sport milk chocolate are good on their own, I don't think the combination quite succeeds. Wafers are at their best when dry and crispy, which the very creamy chocolate coating prevents. The result is a bit soggy and nondescript, though by no means unpleasant.\nWhat's wrong with academia? Part 1A\nI wasn't planning to write anything more on the issue of job security, but I've been really pleasantly surprised by the number of people who've taken the time to engage seriously with my previous post, both in blog and Facebook comments and in private responses. Thanks for your thoughts - I really appreciate it. And I hope that the debate has helped a few people to clarify their own position on this issue, whatever that might be. It's certainly had that effect on me.\nI should start by saying that I am extremely unlikely to be in a position where I can implement any of the sweeping changes I proposed. That's for the best, for a number of reasons. For one thing, like Neil (Facebook comment), I'm actually more conflicted than the previous post made out; in that post I was trying to take a line of argumentation to its (approximate) logical extreme, and though it's an extreme that I am sympathetic to, I'm not too fond of extremes in general. For another thing, I'm not sure I'd have the balls to make big changes like this.\nI think two major issues have been raised with regard to the alternative system I sketched (as well as a host of more minor ones, such as the increased danger of funding cuts under such a system, as Christine pointed out in a blog comment, and the difficulty of keeping long-term projects afloat, as Katie pointed out in a Facebook comment). These are: \"juking the stats\", and the issue of job security as an incentive per se (the \"family argument\"). I'll address these in turn.\nJuking the stats\n\"Impact is up 42%, and the Mayor's gonna love our project on the Big Society.\"\nI think this issue was stated most clearly by Tim (Facebook), Lameen (blog) and Unknown (blog), though in different ways. It's closely related to the \"flavour of the month\" approach to research funding mentioned by Orestis (blog). Essentially the key problem as I understand it is this: the intention of abolishing permanent positions is to force academics to continue to come up with innovative new work. But one alternative for academics is to become cynical, and to try to game the system by either a) producing a load of hackwork (or at best work that's a \"safe bet\") and passing it off as research activity, or b) deliberately focusing your research priorities on what others think is awesome (grant-awarding bodies, employers, research assessment bodies, the media) and generating hype and hot air rather than ideas. (On reflection, I guess that a and b are variants of one another.)\nThis is a genuine concern, and a clear potential practical problem for any approach like the one I sketched. It's worth mentioning that it's a problem right now as well. For instance, in Lisbon recently I was discussing with colleagues a project that had been awarded vast amounts of money by a major grant-awarding body but that seemed to us to be mostly spin. Similarly, as I mentioned in my previous post, research assessment as carried out at present is not enormously difficult to juke, at least insofar as the intent of research assessment is to assess research quality and the metrics used by for instance the REF in arts and humanities are a fairly poor reflection of that. (Publication counts, essentially: you have to submit four; monographs count for two [why two? why not four, or ten, or zero?].) Other metrics used as a proxy for research assessment at present are also not great: citation counts, for instance. It's not as if you cite something solely because you believe it's wonderful research.\nGiven that the problem exists now, it would only be quantitatively greater under the approach I sketched, not qualitatively different. This leads me to suspect that the issue is an independent one: can a robust metric for research quality or for innovation be devised? I've seen no demonstrative argument to the effect that this is impossible either in principle or in practice (though I'm damned if I can think of anything that would work). More generally, though, when it's put this way it's pretty clear that the increased influence of juking the stats under the approach I outlined is not an argument against the approach. Consider an analogy from the school system. In order to assess pupils' achievements (as well as teaching efficacy etc.), exams are needed. This much is uncontroversial, though the exact extent of examination at primary and secondary level gives rise to heated debates. Now consider a system in which pupils only take one examination - in order to assess their suitability to enter the school in the first place (sorta like the old 11+ in the UK) - and then are left to their own devices, without any assessment. They might advance from year 7 to year 8, say, but this (as, ultimately, in the school system) would be based solely on age. This seems to me to be fully analogous to the current system of permanent academic positions. (In particular, though it's not unheard of for pupils to repeat a year, being demoted to the year below on account of poor performance is not something that often happens, to my knowledge.)\nThe point is that one has to doubt any argument that goes as follows: \"Assessment (of pupils, academics, the Baltimore police force, etc.) is really difficult, and all metrics so far devised are imperfect reflections of what we're actually trying to measure. Therefore, let's not do any assessment at all past a certain point.\" At best it's a slippery slope argument, and we all know that slippery slope arguments lead to much, much worse things. ;)\nThe family argument\n\"Won't somebody please think of the children?\"\nThis is the argument most clearly and repeatedly made against my position, e.g. by Chris, Liv, Katie and Neil (Facebook) and Darkness & Light (blog) and by more than one person in private responses as well.\nThere are many strands to this argument, but before I mention them I should perhaps explain why in my first post it seemed like I was dismissing the family argument so cavalierly. Underlying that post was the desire to optimize the individual academic's research output. I was tacitly assuming that this is the only goal of academia - which of course it isn't. There are many other sides to academia: teaching, admin (yay!), training others to become good researchers, etc. While the approach I sketched might be good for the research output of individuals, it doesn't look as promising for any of these other sides.\nOne strand of the family argument is simply a human argument: it's not as good for us as people if we don't have permanent jobs. We can't plan in advance to nearly as great an extent, and of course it's much harder to do things like buying a house and raising a family. Well, this is all obviously true, though of course it will bother some people more than others. I personally don't particularly want to raise a family; I have no particular ties; I am young and mobile. (To those of you in different situations, this particular bias must have seemed painfully obvious from my post.) To the extent that optimizing individual research output is the goal, however, it's irrelevant.\nHowever, note the word \"individual\" with which I've carefully been hedging. As Chris pointed out in his Facebook comment and subsequent clarification, if we consider the research community as a whole, that could suffer. People who do want to raise a family might decide that academia is not for them, and we might have a mass exodus on our hands. This reduces the \"genepool\", and is hence bad.\nThere are a couple of ways of responding to this criticism, though both are super tendentious. First of all, maybe I think that actually the absence of permanent positions should be something that's not restricted to academia but is more prevalent at large. (As, in fact, it already is among people of my generation. One good friend has had several jobs now, in the real world, and found career advancement to be nearly impossible - putting this down to the fact that \"old people can't be fired\".) If the whole world works in the way that I've been suggesting, then academia would just be one field among many.\nSecondly - and I should emphasize that I don't believe this, though the argument could in principle be made - do we really need all those people who would leave the field? Academia is already massively oversubscribed to the extent of the job market being a joke, at least in the arts and humanities. But the smaller genepool must be a bad thing in itself - unless it could be argued that the people who desire permanence, who want to raise families etc. are inherently less good at research than flexible, asocial freaks like me. But I really don't want to go down that road; I'll just note that it's an open question, which could presumably be investigated empirically. (Actually the argument could be put the other way round, as one private response to my post did. If academia is robbed of all the people who are embedded in stable social contexts such as families, it becomes distanced from the social \"mainstream\", which encourages precisely the kind of philistinism I was scared of in my previous post.)\nThe final key strand of the family argument is not about families: it's about the other roles of academics. Certainly for teaching purposes, constant change is bad. Departmental leadership and continuity of that kind will also suffer. Perhaps most importantly, as again emphasized in a private response, the role of senior academics in mentoring more junior academics would be compromised. Again, on a narrow reading of optimization of the individual research output, none of this is a problem. But again, if we consider the output of the research community, it's bad.\nIn this section I haven't been concerned with defending my original argument, at least not beyond pointing out the tacit (and, ultimately, flawed) assumption that underlay it. There's more to academia than the individual's research, that much is clear.\nWell, I think I'll stop here. Other interesting points were raised; in particular, my impression is that a lot of the sort of changes I'm suggesting are already in place in the sciences (and that people heartily dislike them). But I don't have the background or knowledge necessary to consider that further, and I wouldn't want to generalize beyond the arts and humanities (which is itself a stretch from linguistics). So, yeah.\nWhat's wrong with academia? Part 1: Job security\nUpdate, 17th March 2021: I wrote this post nearly a decade ago, and have since become convinced that it's the single worst thing I've ever written. This is especially true given that, at the time, I'd recently taken up a permanent position myself, so it's sick-makingly tone-deaf. Unsupported assertions about 'human nature', unironically appealing to 'meritocracy'... honestly, it'd be better for my reputation if I just deleted it, or retconned it à la Dom Cummings. I'm leaving it here only for the sake of intellectual honesty and accountability. Perhaps unsurprisingly given the fierce reactions this post engendered (see the comments), I never ended up writing parts 2 and 3.\nWhat follows is a collection of musings on various topics that have come to bother me during my first six months in a lectureship. In the interests of structure, I'll focus on three main areas: job security, the relationship between teaching and research, and publishing.\nIf you're familiar with my general left-wing leanings, you might think you can already anticipate the bones of contention that form the skeleton of this blog post. With regard to job security, for instance, one might expect me to bewail the decreasing availability of permanent positions; and one might expect me to extol the virtues of the oft-unnoticed synergies between teaching and research. In both these cases I will do neither of these things; if anything, the complete opposite viewpoint will emerge. (With regard to publishing, given my own editorial activities, the thread of argument will be a bit more predictable.)\nWhether any of this is consistent with the aforementioned left-wing leanings or with my life philosophy in general, or whether I should instead be counted among the Hippocrates, is an interesting question. I'm convinced that my stance is consistent, but that's a discussion for another time; in any case, I do welcome thoughts on this or any other part of the post.\n1. Job security\nAs I've mentioned, it's fashionable and commonplace to find the decreased availability of permanent academic positions deeply worrying - so much so that it's entered into mainstream media discourse. Now this seems to go hand in hand (at the moment, at least) with a general decline in the availability of academic jobs tout court. I'd be the first to say that the latter is an extremely worrying trend, especially when coupled with the general philistinism as regards academia in the UK. Consider the following comment, a response to a Guardian article about the AHRC supposedly being told to study the Big Society:\nThe country spends £100m on 'arts and humanities research'???\nPlease cut it all and let's see if we miss it....\nWorryingly, this comment is 'recommended' by 62 people... and this is the Guardian we're talking about, not the Daily Fail. And in the meantime, we pay £2 billion a year for a collection of Cold War relics to gather dust, and some people defend this with their lives. Ho hum.\nSo I'm against a reduction in jobs across academia as a whole. However, this issue is logically separate from the question of whether those jobs should be permanent or temporary/fixed-term. What's more, I've never heard a good argument for permanent academic positions.\nPermanent positions make a necessity out of virtue. They are disproportionate post hoc rewards for research achievements, and give no incentive to advance the state of knowledge (which I take to be the primary function of academia as a whole). Let's say you write a decent PhD thesis and a few publications, meet some nice people at conferences, get lucky, and then end up with a job for life. Why is this considered to be a good thing? From that point onwards, it's human nature to kick back and do nothing. From my observations of other supposedly research-active staff (admittedly a small and varied group), if this happens, the worst that the university can do to you is shout at you a little bit. But because you're contractually protected, you can more or less continue to do nothing with impunity.\nBut let's say that's not the case. Let's say that instead you sit down and churn out the four publications needed to become REFable every few years - or even more. Where is the incentive to innovate, to produce research that will change the state of ideas?\nWorse is that academic advancement (at least in the fields with which I'm familiar in the arts and humanities) is still so closely tied to age. 'Being on the ladder', many reflexively call it, and with good reason. Once you're in at the ground floor, every decade or so, a promotion comes along and you go upstairs. You never go downstairs again. Who ever heard of a reader being demoted to lecturer? Or a professor to reader? Why not? Furthermore, ask yourself how many professors you've met who are under the age of 40. Then think about who's doing the top quality research in your field right now - the work you're really excited about, the work that is changing the way people think. How old are they? What is their job title? Whatever the outcome, chances are this group of researchers won't be anything like coextensive with the 50-something professors who have climbed highest on the ladder. This fact seems to be so obvious that I'm amazed at the level of acceptance that exists for it. At best one can conclude that pay in academia isn't in any way performance-related.\nMy solution? Well, it's not a novel one. One's position at a given time should be related to two things: a) the quality of the work one is doing at that time (in practice, since this is difficult to assess, a fixed time span immediately preceding can serve as a proxy) and b) the quality of one's research proposal. There was a massive outcry a while back when King's College London threatened to make everyone reapply for their own jobs. In principle, as long as the total number of jobs and amount of funding stays proportionate, I think this is an excellent idea. It forces researchers to think about exactly what they're doing and why - and to up their game in order to stay in it. I can see no harm in stipulating that academic positions last for a maximum fixed term of five years. In fact, a lot of good would surely come out of it.\nNow one could object that the proposal I'm making here is precisely what grant funding is supposed to achieve in the UK. My response is twofold. Firstly, grant funding (again, at least in the arts and humanities) constitutes only a small amount of the money academics receive: I don't have numbers, but I'd wager that far more is paid on an annual basis to salaried, tenured professors. Therefore, the grant funding solution doesn't go nearly far enough. Secondly, the grant application system is so massively broken in the UK as to be almost completely worthless from the point of view of advancing the state of knowledge. The reason is a classic Catch-22. Grant applications to bodies like the AHRC are like double-blind peer review - except that, crucially, the reviewers know exactly who you are. They need to know this (so I'm told) because they need to assess your suitability for leading a project team, and for managing grant money. How is this assessed? Well, of course in terms of your experience of leading a project team, and of managing grant money. If speculative business financing in general worked on this basis... well, it wouldn't. Work, that is. No interesting project would ever get off the ground. The emphasis on grant-handling experience is particularly bemusing in light of the fact that actually AHRC-funded projects often have no obvious output or endpoint at all. (I use the term 'output' non-traditionally here, to refer to 'any resource that advances the state of knowledge' rather than the more typical 'publications'.) It seems that the AHRC and bodies like it have little concept of what it means for a project to be successful; which makes it all the more odd that they set such high stock in the ability of the project leader to achieve success. (Once again, let me emphasize that publications in and of themselves are NOT 'success'. This will become a lot clearer in part 3.)\nThe preceding two paragraphs are perhaps a bit deliberately polemical, but you should at least be disabused of the notion that funding bodies are the great levellers. Even if funding bodies played a significant enough role in actual funding to be the deal-breaker, they couldn't vouchsafe the advancement of knowledge because their priorities are wrong and their funding criteria flawed.\nThe moral of all of this? Academics make such a big deal out of meritocracy in principle that it's hard to see how things could have gone so drastically wrong. Throughout your school, undergraduate and graduate career you're fighting to jump through the next hoop, to advance yourself, to educate yourself. Then when you enter the job market the logic is reversed: you find a hole to crawl into, where you'll be paid a reasonable sum of money. And if you churn out enough publications, take care not to ruffle any feathers in teaching or administration, and maybe get a grant or two, you'll probably get promoted every ten years or so. Whatever happened to onward and upward?\nChocoholics anonymous\nWent to Norway this month. Went on the train via Germany, just so I could get some Ritter Sport on the way. What?\nKakaosplitter: 9/10\nThis one tastes like crushed-up cocoa beans in chocolate cream encased in chocolate, and indeed it's hard to imagine how that combination could fail. This is an energy-granting variety, which wasn't particularly advantageous for me given that all I had to do that day was sit on trains for 9 hours - but in addition it really lifted my spirits. A lovely balance of smooth and slightly crunchy, one of this year's spring varieties.\nAmarena Kirsch: 8/10\nNot bad at all. Very fruity, but not overpowering, either in terms of the fruit or the modest liqueur content. Perhaps a little overly sweet, and - as with many varieties - this might have been overcome with the use of dark chocolate. But all in all this was a very enjoyable eat. A summer variety.\nBourbon Vanille: 5/10\nHere you could barely taste anything except the vanilla-flavoured yoghurty goo. Not offensively bad, just boring and ill-judged. A spring variety that won't compensate for the April showers.\nBack to Babel?\nI've just finished reading David Bellos's recent book on translation, 'Is That a Fish in your Ear?' (Penguin, 2011). It verged between an entertaining read and a frustrating one. Perhaps unsurprisingly, I found the book to be at its least entertaining and convincing when it touched on subjects in my own area of expertise, linguistics. On the other hand, aspects of the book – such as the story of the dragomans of the Ottoman Empire (chapter 11), and the paradoxical language policies of the European Union (chapter 21) – were fascinating, and well narrated.\nThis isn't meant to be a full review, but since I feel that ITaFiyE misinterprets linguistics and/or sells it short at more than a few points throughout the book, I decided to set the record straight on the open web, especially with regard to three particular chapters.\nChapter 6: Native Command: Is Your Language Really Yours?\nThis chapter, on what it means to be a L1 or L2 speaker of a language, starts off promisingly enough. Bellos correctly observes that the traditional term 'mother tongue' is misleading, since we learn our L1 just as much from our peers as from our parents. He then goes on to claim that 'communicative competence' is acquired 'between the ages of one and three' – but that the language learned during this period is not always the one that adult speakers feel most comfortable using. The example he cites for this is Latin 700–1700, which uncontroversially had no native speakers during this period, but which was used as a vehicular language for various purposes. Then comes an astonishing leap (p59):\nBut if a clear distinction can be made between the language learned from your mother and the language in which you operate most effectively for high-born males in Western Europe between 700 and 1700 CE, the very concepts of 'mother tongue' and 'native speaker' need to be looked at again.\nUm, really? The distinction seems pretty clear to me. The muddying of the waters in Bellos's book starts with use of the nebulous term 'communicative competence', which does not enter into mainstream definitions of native speaker status, for which grammatical competence is far more crucial. This is a minor quibble. But the claim that high-born males operated most effectively in Latin for a millennium is an incredible one. It may well be the case that for 'formal speech and writing', as well as for 'diplomacy, philosophy, mathematics, science and religion', Latin was the language of choice. However, these high-faluting academic purposes constitute a tiny minority of our total language use. Is the claim really that these people spoke (as adults) to their parents and peers in Latin in everyday situations? The suggestion that they 'thought' in Latin is even more absurd. There's a long literature on the 'language of thought' and how closely it approximates the languages we hear spoken, but the idea that a 15th-century Dutch nobleman, say, would wake up and think Sum esurientem ('I'm hungry') does not enter into it. The evidence from vernacular written traditions in Western Europe also speaks against this assertion. From the very beginning of the period 700–1700, writing – even for academic and ecclesiastical purposes – began to be carried out not in Latin but in the local languages of the area. Alfred's great program of translation into West Saxon English (not mentioned in this book), or the monastery translations of Boethius and other such texts in the Old High German-speaking area, are prime examples. These do not indicate that Latin was a language of thought, or even an effective operating language. Instead they indicate that the Latin of the period was a language on life-support, for which cribs had to be devised so that keen young men could get their heads round it. The worst part of this little paragraph is that even if it were true that a distinction could be drawn between 'the language learned from your mother' (read: first language) and 'the language in which you operate most effectively' in this instance, it wouldn't follow that this somehow invalidates the concept of a 'native speaker'.\nThis distinction continues to be made throughout the chapter, with the implication that languages learned during the early years of life are of little importance. There is, no doubt, a difference between 'first learned language', in Bellos's terms, and 'operative language'. Bellos then adduces two examples – his father, whose mother spoke to him in Yiddish but who learned English at school age, and his wife, who initially acquired Hungarian but who began to learn French at the age of five. The aim seems to be to deny the significance of the 'first learned language' or 'mother tongue'; and in these terms, it's a reasonable aim. But it misses the point that linguists and specialists in acquisition are trying to make when they talk about something called the 'critical period' or 'critical threshold', a term dating back to Lenneberg (1967). Very simply, in Trudgill's (2011) terms:\nLenneberg’s term refers to the well-known fact, obvious to anyone who has been alive and present in normal human societies for a couple of decades or so, that while small children learn languages perfectly, the vast majority of adults do not, especially in untutored situations.\nTo be sure, there is disagreement about what the relevant age is, or whether the term 'critical threshold' is really appropriate as opposed to a gradual tailing-off of language learning abilities. Meisel (2011) provides a recent summary. But what is uncontroversial is that adults do not learn languages as well as children. If, indeed, it is possible to isolate a specific age at which language learning ceases to be a cake-walk, that age is more like 7 (Meisel 2011: 134) rather than 3 as proposed by Bellos. Both of the examples that Bellos gives, then, may be evidence that 'first learned language' or 'mother tongue' is not what is important. But neither is problematic for the idea that languages learned during the critical period are learned better than languages learned after.\nThis misrepresentation colours the rest of the chapter, including Bellos's conclusion (pp65–66), to the effect that it is not important for translations to be into the translator's L1:\n[I]t would be futile to insist that the iron rule of L1 translation be imposed on all intercultural relations in the world without also insisting on its inescapable corollary: that every educational system in the world's eighty vehicular languages devote significant resources to producing seventy-nine groups of competent L1 translators in each cohort of graduating students. The only alternative to that still utopian solution would be for speakers of the target languages to become more tolerant and more welcoming of the variants introduced into English, French, German and so forth by L2 translators working very hard indeed to make themselves understood.\nThere are a few things wrong with this. First, there's a straw man hiding amidst the prose. If we don't accept L1 translators, do we really have to devote huge amounts of money to training enormous numbers of language professionals? (Not that that would be a bad thing, in my opinion.) Not at all, because of something that Bellos himself mentions later in the book: translations can perfectly well be carried out via other languages. To find a translator from Welsh into Cantonese may be tricky, but when the translation passes via English it's a piece of cake. Of course there's a loss of fidelity involved in this two-step process – but one of the most convincing parts of Bellos's overall thesis (see chapter 10) is that the very notion of 'fidelity' is suspect when applied to translation anyhow.\nMore problematically, it seems no less 'utopian' to believe that L2 translators 'trying very hard' is the right solution. I'm not a translator, but I've worked in the industry, and my father's been in it for thirty years, so I feel I know enough to comment. 'Trying very hard' may be good enough when it comes to translation on a hypothetical academic-philosophical level, or literary translation (addressed in chapter 27 of Bellos's book but assumed tacitly throughout in the examples used, but in the real world of translation mistakes can be deadly. When I was working in Aachen, translating patient information leaflets from German into English, I was acutely aware that if I made a mistake people could be killed. With that in mind, it seems daft to insist that well-meaning L2 translators are as good as the real deal.\n(There's also at least one factual error in this chapter. It is stated that 'all babies are languageless at the start of life'. That's not quite true: in fact, the process of language acquisition begins well before birth, as shown in experimental work by Kisilevsky et al. 2003 among others.)\nChapter 14: How Many Words Do We Have For Coffee?\nUnlike chapter 6, this chapter sets out to argue for something reasonable. Its aim is to assess the evidence for linguistic relativity – the idea that language shapes thought – and its conclusion (in stark contrast to the gushing quasi-religious masturbatory rhetoric we so often see in the popular press surrounding the issue, for instance Boroditsky 2010) is sensible (p170).\nIf you go into a Starbuck's and ask for 'coffee' the barista most likely will give you a blank stare. To him the word means absolutely nothing. There are at least thirty-seven words for coffee in my local dialect of Coffeeshop Talk ... You should point this out next time anyone tells you that Eskimo has a hundred words for snow.\nThis is in general a strong and interesting chapter, even though the more recent work of 'neo-Whorfians' like Boroditsky and Levinson in the last decade is rather unaccountably left out of consideration.\nMy problem with it is only in how it begins: Bellos trots out a well-worn passage from Sir William Jones's 1786 Discourse, commenting (p161) that this 'is generally reckoned to be the starter's gun' in the development of comparative linguistics. The idea that Jones had this pivotal role is part of the origin mythology of historical linguistics, to be sure – but his significance has almost certainly been massively overestimated, as shown in detail by Campbell & Poser (2008: chapter 3). You can read their chapter if you want the real story, but the gist of it is this:\nFirstly, Jones was not particularly original in his contributions. Commonalities between Indo-European languages had frequently been observed before his time, and even the relationship of Sanskrit to these languages was not a new idea.\nSecondly, Jones made a lot of mistakes. He considered Peruvian, Chinese and Japanese languages to be part of the same family as the more familiar Indo-European languages, for instance, while leaving out others he should have included, such as Pahlavi, which he classed as Semitic (Campbell & Poser 2008: 37–38).\nThirdly, Jones was working within a biblical framework and viewed his own work as having 'confirmed the Mosaic accounts of the primitive world'; specifically, all the languages of the world could be traced back, according to him, to one of Noah's three sons Ham, Shem and Japhet (Campbell & Poser 2008: 40) – in stark contrast to the backbone of comparative linguistics of the day.\nThere's more to say, but the point should be clear enough. The idea that Jones was the founder of comparative linguistics is just as much of a myth as the idea that Eskimo has one hundred words for snow. The repetition of the myth is frustrating within the narrow confines of linguistics, and the situation can only get worse if books like this one, intended for a popular audience, perpetuate it further.\nAfterbabble: In Lieu of an Epilogue\nEpilogues are typically unambitious: summaries of the content and main argument of the book, perhaps, or suggestions for future research. Not so for the ITaFiyE epilogue, which tries – in 34 short pages – to solve the problem of language, the universe, and everything.\nWell, perhaps that's overstating the case. But it does attempt to address the problem of the evolution of language, which is almost as thorny an issue. As modern theorists are fond of observing, in 1866 the Linguistic Society of Paris banned debates on the subject. Those same modern theorists often then argue that we have come far enough, nowadays, to lift the ban and talk about the origins of language with impunity. I disagree – though even among linguists I feel like I'm still in the minority here. We're barely any closer to understanding the genetic basis of our language capacity than we were a century ago, and there is still substantial debate as to what language even IS. The concrete proposals made by Noam Chomsky to that effect, as for example in Chomsky (1986), are very often rejected on the basis that they don't tally with our hazy pretheoretical intuitions about language – such as the idea that it is a social phenomenon, whatever that means; see e.g. Enfield (2010). We don't know nearly enough about human prehistory to say when language emerged, and that situation is unlikely to change. Most painfully, very often theorists still fail to distinguish between 'glossogeny', i.e. change in 'languages' (as we pretheoretically know them), and 'phylogeny', the emergence of the human biological capacity for language (whatever form that takes). (On this distinction, see Hurford 1990.)\nIn historical linguistics, meanwhile, it is quite normal to suggest that standard comparative methods typically can't take us more than 8–12,000 years into the past (Campbell & Poser 2008 have a discussion of this); this is not due to any flaw in the methods themselves, but rather to the build-up of confounding factors and the paucity of relevant data the further back one goes. Any claim about what was going on 40,000 years ago or more is likely to meet with extreme scepticism from any sensible historical linguist. Nevertheless, this is what specialists in the evolution of language get up to constantly. Perhaps not surprising that I can't shake the feeling that the whole field is a waste of time, then. Until someone has something more evidence-based to say, I'm inclined to take the simple route proposed by Berwick & Chomsky (2011): a tiny mutation emerged at some point, in one fell swoop, giving us the ability to put words together like we know we can; that mutation was (unsurprisingly) selectionally advantageous in the long run; and that's all there is to be said. (Curiously, critics of this 'saltationist' viewpoint are often the same people who rake Chomskyan linguistic theory over the coals for its apparent baroque complexity...)\nBut back to Bellos. He attacks the assumption that 'all languages are, at bottom, the same kind of thing, because, at the start, they were the same thing' (p341). Whether or not we believe the 'because' clause (and there's certainly no linguistic evidence that would lead us to; see again Campbell & Poser 2008), Bellos gives us no reason to doubt the underlying sameness of languages. The fact of linguistic diversity has very little bearing on this; the very fact that we have a concept of language at all, on the other hand, even a pretheoretical one, is evidence for sameness. At some level, we can judge whether something is linguistic or non-linguistic. That alone suggests unity in diversity.\nBeyond that, though, there are linguistic arguments for sameness, many of which have been controversial over the years. Bellos groups these together as the argument that languages have 'a grammar', and disposes of it quickly and unconvincingly: rather than being an empirical matter, 'the \"grammaticality hypothesis\" is an axiom, a circular foundation stone' (p342). Why? Because...\nSince traffic lights and the barking of dogs seem to have no discernible rules of combination or no ability to create new combinations, they have no grammar, and because all languages have a grammar in order to count as languages, dog barking and traffic lights are not languages. QED.\nOne might legitimately argue that this is hardly circular reasoning. Rather, we're attempting to understand the defining characteristics of language in terms of concrete properties, in order to establish what exactly it is that we're doing when we describe something as linguistic or non-linguistic. If these properties turn out to be a poor mapping to what our intuitive conception of language is, or not sharp enough to distinguish language from other things, we can reject them, refine them, retain them on the understanding that no better model has yet been proposed, OR decide that our concrete properties in fact tell us that our intuitive conception is wrong or not clear enough. This is what has happened over the last fifty years with Hockett's (1960) 'design features' of language (which seems to be what Bellos is bashing here, though he doesn't cite it), and with purported universals both in the Chomskyan tradition and the Greenbergian (e.g. Greenberg 1963). It seems to me to be normal scientific practice. For example, we now know that spiders are not insects, despite all our intuitions telling us otherwise, and this is a natural consequence of adopting a particular model of taxonomic classification that is superior to our vague intuitions. We now know that whiteness isn't necessarily a property of swans. Likewise, by the botanical definition of tomatoes that we adopt, they are classed as fruit rather than vegetables. This isn't just axiomatics: we're learning something that we didn't already know. This is scientific progress.\nBut Bellos, like many authors in and around linguistics, refuses to give up on the intuitive definition. He proceeds as follows (p342):\nIn a similarly circular way, the axiom of grammaticality pushes to the edge of language study all those uses of human vocal noises – ums, hums, screams, giggles ... and so forth – that don't decompose neatly into nouns, verbs and full stops.\nQuite apart from the disingenuousness of this comment (no one ever seriously proposed that full stops were a property of human language, axiomatically or otherwise, as Bellos must well know), I fail to see the problem. Describing these types of noise as 'non-linguistic' seems to me to be entirely fair and reasonable. (Note that this is very different from saying that they don't constitute a worthy object of study in their own right, a claim that no linguist I know would want to be associated with.) What we discover by doing this kind of scientific work is that our intuitive conception of language is so fuzzy and all-encompassing as to be effectively unusable, a point that Chomsky has been making for years (see again Chomsky 1986). If, like Bellos, you find definitions in the Chomskyan mould unpalatable, then the onus is on you to come up with a better operational definition if you want to be thought of as doing serious work on language.\nAfter listing various ways in which languages can be odd (evidentials always seem to come up whenever anyone puts together a list like this!), Bellos somewhat uncharitably (but perhaps not unfairly) states that the attempt to discern what all grammars share 'has got about as far as the search for the Holy Grail'. He then builds another straw man which he proceeds to rip apart: 'all grammars regulate the ways in which free items may be combined to make an acceptable sentence' (p344). The obvious problem is the word 'sentence' here – what does it mean? Nothing (either inside or outside a theory of grammar, as far as I'm aware), and of course we don't speak in sentences, as Bellos points out.\nNor is it really a problem that 'no living language has yet been given a grammar that accounts for absolutely all of the expressions' (p344). Even if this goal were a reasonable one for linguistic theory (Chomsky 1986 argues that it isn't), and even if a living language like 'English' were a coherent object of study (see virtually any work by Chomsky for a brief but irrefutable demonstration that it isn't), does this stymie any attempt? In physics, our best theories of reality can't account for phenomena like dark matter; all this shows is that science (any science) is a work in progress. So it's an absolute nonsense to claim, as Bellos does (p344), that:\nFlaws of this magnitude in aerodynamics or the theory of probability would not have allowed the Wright Brothers to get off the ground or the National Lottery to finance the arts.\nFirst off, there's no reason that our scientific theory has to be practically applicable in order to be worth something (look at string theory, for instance). But, in any case, Bellos should look at state-of-the-art work in computational linguistics, where parsers based on handwritten grammars in combination with a simple statistical learning algorithm can robustly parse up to 92.4% of an average corpus of English (see Fossum & Knight 2009). That doesn't seem like crash-and-burn to me.\nThe afterbabble goes on to compare dialectal variation to primate grooming, and to propose this as a potential evolutionary origin for language, following work by Robin Dunbar. I won't discuss this in any detail, but suffice it to say that the conclusion – that 'The most likely original use of human speech was to be different, not the same' (p351) – presupposes precisely what has been argued so vigorously against earlier in the same chapter, namely a definable object that is 'human speech' (which, since animals fairly intuitively don't have it, must have evolved somehow).\nIn short, this chapter (and the book as a whole) overreaches itself. Though issues of translation are inevitably bound up with deep questions about the nature of language, ITaFiyE would have been a better book if it had chosen to stick closely to the former and leave the latter to specialists.\nBerwick, Robert C., & Noam Chomsky. 2011. The biolinguistic program: the current state of its evolution and development. In Ana Maria di Sciullo & Cedric Boeckx (eds.), The biolinguistic enterprise: new perspectives on the evolution and nature of the human language faculty, 19–41. Oxford: Oxford University Press.\nBoroditsky, Lera. 2010. Lost in translation. Wall Street Journal, 23 July.\nCampbell, Lyle, & William J. Poser. 2008. Language classification: history and method. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.\nChomsky, Noam. 1986. Knowledge of language. New York: Praeger.\nEnfield, Nicholas J. 2010. Without social context? Science 329, 1600–1601.\nFossum, Victoria, & Kevin Knight. 2009. Combining constituent parsers. Proceedings of NAACL HLT 2009: Short Papers, 253–256.\nGreenberg, Joseph H. 1963. Some universals of grammar with particular reference to the order of meaningful elements. In Joseph H. Greenberg (ed.), Universals of grammar, 73–113. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.\nHockett, Charles F. 1960. The origin of speech. Scientific American 203, 89–97.\nHurford, James R. 1990. Nativist and functional explanations in language acquisition. In I. M. Roca (ed.), Logical issues in language acquisition, 85–136.\nKisilevsky, Barbara, Sylvia Hains, Kang Lee, Xing Xie, Hefeng Huang, Hai Hui Ye, Ke Zhang, & Zengping Wang. 2003. Effects of experience on fetal voice recognition. Psychological Science 14, 220–224. Lenneberg, Eric. 1967. Biological foundations of language. New York: John Wiley & Sons.\nMeisel, Jürgen M. 2011. Bilingual acquisition and theories of diachronic change: bilingualism as cause and effect of grammatical change. Bilingualism: Language and Cognition 14, 121–145. Trudgill, Peter. 2011. Sociolinguistic typology: social determinants of linguistic complexity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.\nPosted by George at 2:15 pm 1 comment:\nWhy I don't give a f**k about an Oxford Comma","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line428989"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5911438465118408,"wiki_prob":0.5911438465118408,"text":"IOU Financial Introduces 24-Month Term Loan\nIOU continues to fulfill product innovation promise to meet the funding needs of small business owners\nATLANTA, Dec. 3, 2021 /CNW/ - IOU FINANCIAL INC. 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These forward-looking statements are subject to and involve substantial known and unknown risks and uncertainties, certain of which are beyond the control of IOU, including, but not limited to, the impact of general economic conditions, industry conditions, dependence upon regulatory and shareholder approvals, the execution of definitive documentation, the uncertainty of obtaining additional financing, risks related to the Company's incapacity to execute on its business plan, dependence on third-party service providers, competition, dependence on key personnel, security and confidentiality risk, technological development risk, IT disruptions, maintenance of client relationships, and litigation risk. No assurance can be given that any of the events anticipated by such statements will occur or, if they do occur, what benefit IOU will derive from them. Readers are cautioned that the assumptions used in the preparation of such information, although considered reasonable at the time of preparation, may prove to be imprecise and, as such, undue reliance should not be placed on forward-looking statements. IOU does not assume any obligation to update or revise its forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, or otherwise. Additional information concerning these and other factors can be found beginning on page 18 under the heading \"Risks and Uncertainties\" in IOU's management's discussion and analysis dated November 18, 2021, which is available under IOU's profile on SEDAR at www.sedar.com.\nNeither TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in policies of the TSX Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this release.\nView original content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/iou-financial-introduces-24-month-term-loan-301437242.html\nSOURCE IOU Financial Inc.\nView original content: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/December2021/03/c0290.html\nThe Sault News\nUnited Way hosting virtual reading in honor of MLK Day\nEastern Upper Peninsula residents are invited to join a virtual reading of “Change Sings: A Children’s Anthem” by Amanda Gorman.\nNadine Dorries: BBC licence fee announcement will be the last\nThe culture secretary says it is time to discuss new ways to fund and sell \"great British content\".\nThe deal, which could be signed as early as this week, could usher Netanyahu off the Israeli political stage for years.\nFour people are freed and an assailant dies as police bring the incident in Colleyville to an end.\nThe 1 Retirement Benefit You Can Only Get With a Roth IRA\nThough there are plenty of good reasons to save in a Roth IRA, here's one perk you can't ignore.\nEngland produce one last Ashes batting collapse as Australia clinch 4-0 win\nEngland slipped from 68 without loss to 124 all out.\nWhile the sight of snow-covered trees makes a pretty picture, it’s a picture that could spell trouble for property owners\nLSU Tigers Wire\nVirginia linebacker West Weeks announces transfer to LSU\nLSU adds another transfer, does it help in pursuit of a certain 2023 prospect?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line195892"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.985856831073761,"wiki_prob":0.985856831073761,"text":"'Dirty John' Creator Alexandra Cunningham Is Just as Excited as Fans Are for Season 3\nThe true crime drama could go in a totally different direction.\nBy Selena Barrientos\nMore than three decades ago, the world learned the name of Betty Broderick, after she shot her ex-husband, Dan Broderick, and his second wife, Linda, in bed at their California home. But the true crime saga of Dan’s murder at the hands of his ex-wife has been in the spotlight again in recent years, after the popular Los Angeles Times' podcast and related TV show, Dirty John, picked up the story for its second season, Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story.\nNow that viewers have seen season 1, Dirty John: The John Meehan Story, and some folks are just now catching up on season 2, Dirty John: The Betty Broderick Story via Netflix, fans of the anthology series are looking ahead at what’s to come.\nIf you’re wondering if there will be a season 3 of Dirty John, here’s what we know so far:\nWhen will season 3 of Dirty John premiere?\nUnfortunately, Dirty John has not been officially renewed for season 3, and there is no confirmation from anyone involved that another season is on the way. But — according to showrunner Alexandra Cunningham — there have been plans to discuss the idea.\n“We’re going to be having a conversation very soon,” she told The Hollywood Reporter in July 2020. “If it’s something that everyone is excited about as I and my executive producer Jessica Rhoades are, it will be super awesome.”\nStill, since the last episode of season 2 aired last summer, there have been no more leaked details.\nWhat would season 3 of Dirty John be about?\nCunningham also opened up to THR about where she was creatively, revealing that she was interested in the idea of branching out from the traditional definition of love. After ending the second season with Betty’s trial, the creator said she was ready to tell a fresh, new story.\n“The thing I would love to do, all things being equal, to me the ultimate example of love gone wrong is familial,” Alexandra told THR. “Not romantic love, not a couple, not a boyfriend-girlfriend like the first season or a married couple divorcing, but mother-child, siblings, especially parentally.”\nShe continued:\n“I think that’s where love gone wrong truly begins, that the love coming from a parent is not appropriate or twisted or not real, that is obviously one of the things that contributes to people’s future behavior. That’s something I’d love to explore if given the chance.”\nHow can I watch and stream Dirty John?\nWhile we wait to hear more details about the potential for Dirty John season 3, you can watch (or rewatch!) seasons 1 and 2 on Netflix. You can start streaming on the Netflix site or grab your phone to tune in via the Netflix app. Don’t have a subscription yet? Netflix plans start at $8.99 per month.\nAlternatively, you can watch first and second seasons of Dirty John on Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV, Google Play and Vudu.\nWhile we don't yet know if there will be a season 3, it's important to note that the first season premiered in November 2018 on Bravo. A year and a half later, the second season debuted in June 2020 on the USA Network.\nWe’re predicting that if and when there is a new season, it will likely air on USA again. If you don’t have a cable provider, you can sign up for a live streaming service like YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV and fuboTV. Before signing up, you can try them out with free seven-day trials.\nWhere Is Betty Broderick Now?\nSelena Barrientos Associate Entertainment and News Editor Selena Barrientos is the associate entertainment and news editor for Good Housekeeping — she writes and reports on the latest shows and movies, in addition to spotlighting Latinx celebrities.\n'Shark Tank' Fans React to Viral TikTok Gadget\n'WOF' Fans React to Winner's Surprising Request\n'Jeopardy!' Star Buzzy Cohen Reacts to Amy's Loss\nWhat We Know About 'Mrs. Maisel' Season 4\nHow Watch All the Hobbit Movies in Order\nThe Most Memorable Olympics Outfits Ever\nAt 48, Kate Beckinsale’s Abs Are Pure Muscle On IG\nThe True Meaning of the Goat Cookie Jar in 'Ozark'\nYikes, Kelly Clarkson Divorce Is Getting \"Nasty\"\nIs Michael Weathering Coming Back to 'NCIS'?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1325186"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8859792351722717,"wiki_prob":0.8859792351722717,"text":"'Die Hard' Prequel in the Works\nYippee ki-yay, Die Hard fans. There have already been five films in the action movie series, and now a sixth one is reportedly in the planning stages. This one is set to be a prequel.\nAccording to Deadline's sources, Len Wiseman, the director of 2007's Live Free or Die Hard, is returning for this film. He's developing it with experienced action producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura.\nThey're apparently seeking a scriptwriter for what is tentatively being called Die Hard Year One. It's set to be an origin story about John McClane's early days as a New York cop in 1979. The plan is for Willis to play a modern-day version of McClane, with a younger actor to appear in the flashback storyline. This is a bit like what Willis did with Joseph Gordon Levitt in 2012's Looper (minus the time-travelling sci-fi twist).\nIt's still very early days for this project, since Willis hasn't even signed on yet. That being said, di Bonaventura has a good relationship with the actor (having worked with him films like Red, Red 2, G.I. Joe: Retaliation and the upcoming American Assassin). The filmmakers are apparently keeping in touch with Willis regarding developments on the project.\nIt's still early days, so it remains to be seen how or if this project pans out. It's a promising idea, however, since Wiseman's return could help the franchise to recapture the excitement of Live Free or Die Hard (and help us to forget 2013's lacklustre A Good Day to Die Hard).\nMore Len Wiseman","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line297114"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6408538818359375,"wiki_prob":0.6408538818359375,"text":"Home SCIENCE NEWS Biology\nCommon arctic finches are all the same species\nFor birders struggling to figure out what kind of Redpoll they’re watching, new research from the University of Colorado Boulder says don’t worry—the different species are actually all one and the same.\nCredit: Pexels / Erik Karits\nThis new research, out recently in Nature Communications, finds that Redpolls, a bird found in the Arctic that will sometimes come to the Southern latitudes during the winter and can be hard to differentiate, aren’t actually multiple species, genetically speaking. Instead, the three recognized species are all just one with a “supergene” that controls differences in plumage color and morphology, making them look different.\nThis research builds on findings from 2015 suggesting this might be the case but without having a clear idea as to why. This time, with greater genetic technological capability, the researchers looked at the full genome of the different species and found that what commonly signifies different subspecies in birds doesn’t apply to Redpolls.\n“I think, solidly now, the new paper shows that there is widespread gene flow across the (Redpoll’s) genome, except for this one region, and it just so happens this one region influences the way they look,” said Scott Taylor, assistant professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, director of CU Boulder’s Mountain Research Station and author on the paper.\nRedpolls are a type of “winter finch,” or a finch that lives in the northernmost reaches of the globe and fly south only sporadically. While known for their characteristic red marking on their heads, appearance within the species can vary widely, with some Redpolls being white with small bills and others with larger and darker bills. Initially, it was thought that these differences signified three different species of the bird—like is the case with many other bird species—but those “species” can be difficult to differentiate.\n“Redpolls have been taxonomically confusing for a long time, and we only get to see them every once in a while in the winter,” Taylor explained. “They aren’t a bird you’re guaranteed to see at your feeder, so when it happens, people get excited, and they want to know what they’re looking at.”\nIn 2015, however, then-postdoc Taylor and graduate student Nicholas A. Mason, now an assistant professor at Louisiana State University, found preliminary genetic data suggesting they aren’t different species. Instead, they are all the same species, just with different appearances—but the researchers weren’t quite sure why.\nThese new findings picked up where that previous research left off, with Erik Funk, graduate student at CU Boulder and the lead author of the paper, going back and re-examining the original samples and adding a few more from other areas, including Greenland, Iceland and parts of Europe, to get a more complete picture.\nAltogether, Funk examined the full genome of 73 individuals from all the different subtypes, including the Common Redpoll, the Hoary Redpoll and the Lesser Redpoll.\nWhat he found is that, despite the differences in appearance, the birds are almost identical genetically but with a “supergene” that controls the different traits that make the birds appear different. In particular, the researchers found a chromosomal inversion, or when part of the chromosome is flipped, for one of the chromosomes, that allowed this supergene to get created.\n“Often times we assume that a lot of traits can act independently, meaning that different traits can be inherited separately from one another, but this particular result shows that sometimes these traits are actually tightly linked together. … At least for these birds, they’re inheriting a whole group of traits together as one,” said Funk.\nAnd redpolls aren’t alone with these supergenes. Many species, from other birds to certain types of mice, are now known to have these supergenes.\n“It seems to be less common, but I think one of the things that we are learning as we have access to more sequence data now is that maybe they’re not as uncommon as we once thought,” Funk said.\nWhile the researchers now have an answer about why this species’ appearance varies, questions still remain as to how. So, how are these traits maintained? And how will that change with the arctic warming for these arctic specialists? Both questions the researchers hope to dig into next.\n“Sometimes birders get mad if you take birds off their list, but I think it makes the Redpolls even more interesting,” Taylor said. “Understanding the genetic basis of the trait makes it make much more sense now, which I think is pretty cool.”\nOther authors include Snæbjörn Pálsson from the University of Iceland; Tomáš Albrecht from Charles University in Prague and Czech Academy of Sciences; and Jeff Johnson from the Wolf Creek Operating Foundation.\n10.1038/s41467-021-27173-z\nA supergene underlies linked variation in color and morphology in a Holarctic songbird\nTags: Arcticcommonfinchesspecies","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line55911"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8938815593719482,"wiki_prob":0.8938815593719482,"text":"TRAGIC END: Report reveals pilots’ “unfamiliarity” with stolen jet led to fatal crash\nLocalAugust 3, 2021August 3, 2021 at 3:55 am Royston Jones Jr.\nThe aftermath of a plane crash in Treasure Cay, Abaco, on Monday, July 5, 2021.\nNASSAU, BAHAMAS — A final report into a fatal plane crash in Treasure Cay, Abaco, last month determined the pilots’ “unfamiliarity with the aircraft systems and their failure to configure the aircraft for the proper takeoff” contributed to the aircraft’s failure to perform.\nThe Westwind aircraft crashed and burst into flames on July 5, killing the two Bahamian pilots onboard.\nIsraeli Aircraft Industries (IAI) Westwind 1124A aircraft N790JR.\nIn its final report, dated August 2, the Air Accident Investigation Authority (AAIA) said the twin-engine business jet departed Las Americas Airport in the Dominican Republic on July 2 at 2.03pm with two crew members and three passengers on board, arriving at Treasure Cay International Airport around 3.45pm.\nAfter offloading the passengers and securing and locking the aircraft, the crew checked into their hotel.\nImmigration officers apprehended the crew on July 4, the reason for which remains unclear as the pair was released on July 6.\nDuring the post-crash interview with the pilots that flew the aircraft to Treasure Cay, it was revealed that the aircraft was stolen, the AAIA said.\nAccording to the report, the crew said an hour before their release, they were informed of the crash but advised investigators that they never met the pilots involved and never gave anyone authority to move the aircraft.\nThe crew also advised that they had the only set of keys for the plane, which they produced for investigators during their period of detention.\nLavan Paul and Jason Allen, who died in a plane crash in Treasure Cay, Abaco, on Monday, July 5, 2021.\nMeanwhile, the Bahamian pilots, identified as Lavan Paul and Jason Allen, set a departure time of 2.10pm from Treasure Cay to New Providence, with an arrival time of 2.33pm, according to investigators.\nWitnesses recalled the two pilots entering the ramp after 3pm, and said one of the pilots onboard advised customs officials that they were departing for Marsh Harbour for fuel for the aircraft.\nThe AAIA said it was uncertain which destination the aircraft was traveling to as the flight plan differed from the information the pilots advised customs.\nAccording to the report, a witness recalled that both pilots sat in the aircraft for around 40 minutes before starting both engines and proceeding to the runway for departure.\nBut the aircraft plowed through airport lighting equipment at the end of the runway, hitting and breaking several trees along its path.\nIt then struck a small mound and spun into additional trees before “breaking apart and bursting into flame” around 2,000 feet from the end of the runway.\nThe report said two fire trucks from the township responded “as this airport did not have a fire truck or crash and rescue personnel stationed on-site” but that the trucks were unable to reach the crash site and assist due its location and no access road available.\n“The fire continued unimpeded, dampened only by the intermittent downpour of rain, which did not aid in extinguishing the blaze, but rather, only limited the spread of the fire to surrounding bushes,” the report read.\n“The raging fire totally destroyed the aircraft and much of the control surfaces and components in the direct area of the blaze.”\nInvestigators said this hindered efforts to “closely examine all components of the aircraft”.\nThe cockpit voice recorder and/or flight data recorder, which the AAIA noted would have revealed a more accurate account of what transpired, could not be located.\nBut the report noted: “[The] investigation has uncovered that with this type aircraft, there are several configuration settings that the pilot must physically select and set, in order that the aircraft would climb after takeoff.\n“Based on the fact that the aircraft was not able to climb, those configurations and settings were probably not met.”\nThe Bahamian pilot was issued an Airline Transport Pilot certificate by the FAA on August 28, 2019, and held a type rating for a Boeing B737 and Saab SF340 aircraft, but did not have the requirements to operate the Westwind aircraft.\nThe second pilot also did not meet the requirements to operate the aircraft or act as second in command as he was not in possession of “at least a private pilot certificate or type rating required for the aircraft type”.\nAlways a headline ahead, around the world, Bahamas, Bahamas news, ewnews, ewnews.com, Eyewitness News, Eyewitness News Online, www.ewnews.com\nAbout Royston Jones Jr.\nRoyston Jones Jr. is a senior digital reporter and occasional TV news anchor at Eyewitness News. Since joining Eyewitness News as a digital reporter in 2018, he has done both digital and broadcast reporting, notably providing the electoral analysis for Eyewitness News’ inaugural election night coverage, “Decision Now 2021”.\tView all posts by Royston Jones Jr. →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1352288"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9035689830780029,"wiki_prob":0.9035689830780029,"text":"Who Is Kim Ward? Bobby Brown Jr’s Mother Claimed Whitney Houston Had An Issue Together With Her Little Son\nHe was found lifeless at his Encino house on Wednesday at round 1.50pm. Colorado officials have named the suspect and 10 folks killed in an assault on a grocery store. Brown Jr was certainly one of two youngsters from his father’s 11-year relationship with Kim Ward, which led to 1991. The household mentioned Brown Jr was experiencing flu-like signs on the time, but had not tested optimistic for Covid-19. The night before his death, he had consumed tequila and cocaine, and “snorted” the painkiller Percocet, a witness advised police.\nLegal officials are at present trying to determine whether or not the home violence allegations violate his probation on a drink-driving arrest. Brown was the son of the singer and Kim Ward, with whom the elder Brown had an eleven-year relationship previous to assembly and marrying Whitney Houston. Brown Jr. was the second of two youngsters with the couple. Singer Bobby Brown’s son, Bobby Brown Jr., has died at 28.\nPrivate Tools\nIn 1982, they turned a quintet when their manager Brooke Payne insisted on bringing in his nephew Ronnie DeVoe, to finish the group. After performing in a number of expertise reveals in the Boston area in 1979, they signed a take care of fellow Bostonian Arthur Baker’s Streetwise Records, who launched their debut album Candy Girl. The title monitor, on which Brown sang co-lead alongside Bell and Tresvant, was a top-20 hit on Billboard’s R&B Singles Chart in 1983. Brown’s first full lead vocal performance was on the New Edition ballad “Jealous Girl”, which was a minor hit when it additionally charted in 1983. The group became pop sensations with their self-titled second release.\nBobby Jr was the half-brother of Bobbi Kristina, who passed away in 2015 at the age of twenty-two. News Corp is a network of main corporations within the worlds of diversified media, news, schooling, and knowledge services.\nBobby Brown Jr Was Born Amid His Dads Romance With Longtime Girlfriend Kim Ward\nBobby Brown is in even more legal scorching water – his former lover is suing him for being a “deadbeat dad”. Kim Ward claims the singer owes her $40,000 in missed paternity payments for their two youngsters, aged 14 and 12. Brown has already been taken to courtroom over the payments, and was ordered to pay out $5,500-a-month however Ward claims he hasn’t been doing that.\nThe Way To Repair Instagram Crashing\nEvan Mobley School Stats","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line524220"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7815103530883789,"wiki_prob":0.7815103530883789,"text":"ISTAT News | 01 April 2020\nISTAT Announces New Executive Director\nOn behalf of the ISTAT Board of Directors, I would like to inform you of a change in ISTAT’s organizational leadership.\nLate last year, ISTAT’s executive director, Julie Wichlin, shared her decision to pursue other ventures with the board. As many of you who have worked with Julie know, she has been instrumental in helping ISTAT evolve into the organization that we are today. Over the past five years, Julie has been an invaluable partner to the ISTAT board and members. During her tenure we added many new events and offerings and saw growth not only in ISTAT's membership as a whole, but also across those offerings. We are forever grateful for her hard work, dedication and passion for our organization.\nIn order to properly evaluate candidates for Julie’s replacement, the ISTAT Board of Directors appointed a task force that began working in November. The task force was committed to identifying a strong partner to our increasingly diverse membership, as well as someone who will continue to support the vision of our growing global organization.\nThe task force conducted a thorough and thoughtful search process, which included the evaluation of many qualified candidates. At the conclusion of that process, earlier this month, the board selected and is now pleased to announce the appointment of Guilherme Lopes as ISTAT’s new executive director.\nGuilherme is an accomplished executive who is joining ISTAT after serving as the Managing Director of Global Relations & Development for the Institute of Internal Auditors (IIA). IIA is a not-for-profit association with 200,000 members in more than 170 countries. In this role, Guilherme was deeply involved in the expansion of the IIA’s global footprint, as well as in membership strategies and delivery of products and services worldwide. Guilherme graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Aviation Business Administration from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Arizona.\nGuilherme assumed the role of ISTAT Executive Director as of 30 March.\nPlease join me in thanking Julie for her unwavering commitment to our organization, and welcome Guilherme to the ISTAT community. I look forward to introducing him to you in the near future.\nGerry Butler\nISTAT President","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1682150"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8098108768463135,"wiki_prob":0.8098108768463135,"text":"It was harrowing getting our NGO and its staff out of Afghanistan | View\nThey are mothers, fathers, and children. Human rights activists, journalists, civil servants, and artists. They dedicated their lives to building a more democratic and vibrant Afghanistan, only to be forced to flee in desperation as the government quickly fell. They are among the fortunate who were brought out on planes to safety in Albania, even as Kabul airport descended into chaos and violence. They are relieved to have escaped, but anxious for loved ones, colleagues and neighbours who remain — and for the future of the country they love.\nI had the privilege to visit 200 or so Afghan evacuees less than 24 hours after they landed near Durrës, a seaside town in Albania. Many were colleagues from Open Society Afghanistan, whose offices were forced to close due to the Taliban takeover. Some shared how astonished they were at the speed of the government’s collapse – “like a house of cards,” as one said – and were still processing what had happened. The children adapted more quickly, playing ball, singing songs and marvelling at the sight and smell of the sea many of them had never seen before.\nIt was a harrowing journey out, one that involved inspiring cooperation between government agencies, civil society, and countless brave Afghans operating under the most stressful possible circumstances. As the pace of the Afghan government’s collapse became clear, colleagues at the Open Society Foundations swung into action, doing everything in their power to rescue our staff and partners, as so many others with friends, family, and coworkers desperate to escape Afghanistan have done.\nA core group of the foundation’s staff — in the US, throughout Europe, and as far away as Australia —worked around the clock, joining with local and international partners to pool knowledge and resources to bring as many people as possible to safety. From negotiating with host countries to arranging convoys and aircraft, to compiling passenger lists and finding accommodations, colleagues worked with partners in pursuing every lead to ensure safe passage.\nTheir journey began with clandestine meetings, navigating checkpoints and gates patrolled by the Taliban. There were anxious starts and stops and gruelling hours stuck on overheated buses outside the airport amid deteriorating security conditions. Evacuees ran the gamut of human experience—from a two-month-old baby to a septuagenarian using a wheelchair. One group made it to the gate shortly before the first terrorist attacks threw the airport into total chaos. Two hours later, they were airborne. In all, we were able to evacuate by air 158 of our staff and 112 partners, while offering support to efforts that helped rescue hundreds more.\nNone of this would have been possible without the generous support of countries and leaders willing to temporarily host evacuees, who worked with us to help procure accommodations, provide COVID tests and vaccines, and offer psychosocial support.\nEnormous credit goes to Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, the first head of government on the world stage to offer refuge when the US announced its withdrawal back in April. He personally welcomed members of our staff as they landed in Albania and sought to persuade them and many others to settle in the country, stressing the contributions he felt they could make to society there.\nPrime Minister Zoran Zaev of North Macedonia has stepped up as well, opening his nation’s arms to offer Afghans and civil society partners refuge in their hour of need. NATO’s newest member, North Macedonia has already accepted more people fleeing Afghanistan than many of its much larger European neighbours.\nThe welcoming approach shown by these Western Balkan countries should serve as an inspiration to other nations we need to see step up in taking in Afghan evacuees. In Europe, welcoming those fleeing violence and oppression has become a toxic political issue. Rama and Zaev, by contrast, see welcoming these refugees as the right thing to do—which is remarkable, given that Albania was one of the most isolated and repressive regimes in the world just 30 years ago. In terms of development, it is perhaps the country on the European continent that has come the farthest since the end of the Cold War.\nAs relieved as the evacuees I met with are to be safely out of Afghanistan, I know that there is hard work ahead. They need to reckon with all they’ve left behind and to begin to build new lives, without yet knowing their final destination, and with so many of their family and friends still in harm’s way.\nThe Open Society Foundations will continue to do what we can to help. We have launched a $10 million Afghanistan Emergency Humanitarian Fund to help expand access to safe pathways for Afghans in peril and support host countries receiving Afghans fleeing the Taliban. The fund is growing thanks to the support of other donors who have joined this effort. We are aiding Afghan refugees in the U.S. and other countries and will continue to advocate for other governments to welcome as many Afghans as possible.\nWe owe these evacuees no less. As I met with the group gathered in Durrës, I listened to their stories of the violence and chaos that has befallen their homeland, and the hardships they endured on the long and difficult journey to safety. But I was also struck by the hope in their eyes, as their thoughts turned to their new lives ahead. As the son of an immigrant myself, I recognised the power of dreams to forge new possibilities from dire circumstances.\nMay their futures be bright.\nAlexander Soros is deputy chair of the Open Society Foundations\nPrevPreviousBig 12 presidents to ‘rubber stamp’ invites to BYU, Cinci, UH, UCF on Friday\nNextJennifer Lawrence Confirms She Is Pregnant With Her First ChildNext","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line133151"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9555671811103821,"wiki_prob":0.9555671811103821,"text":"(Redirected from Cascading)\nFor information on cascade protection, see WP:CASCADE.\nLook up Cascade or cascade in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.\nCascade, Cascades or Cascading may refer to:\n1 Science and technology\n1.1 Science\n1.2 Computing\n1.3 Engineering\n2.4 Elsewhere\n3 Organizations\n4 Arts and entertainment\n4.1.1 Artists\n4.1.2 Albums\n4.1.3 Songs\n6 Other uses\nScience and technology[edit]\nScience[edit]\nCascade waterfalls, or series of waterfalls\nCascade, the CRISPR-associated complex for antiviral defense (a protein complex)\nCascade (grape), a type of fruit\nBiochemical cascade, a series of biochemical reactions, in which a product of the previous step is the substrate of the next\nEnergy cascade, a process important in turbulent flow and drag by which kinetic energy is converted into heat\nCollision cascade, a set of nearby adjacent energetic collisions of atoms induced by an energetic particle in a solid or liquid\nEcological cascade, a series of secondary extinctions triggered by the primary extinction of a key species in an ecosystem\nTrophic cascade, an interaction that can occur throughout an ecosystem when a trophic level is suppressed\nComputing[edit]\nCascading classifiers, a multistage classification scheme\nCascading deletion, a way to handle deletions in database systems\nCascading (software), an abstraction layer for Hadoop\nCascading Style Sheets (CSS), style sheet language used in markup languages like HTML\nCascade (computer virus), a type of computer virus in the 1980s\nMethod cascading, in object-oriented languages\nEngineering[edit]\nCascade amplifier, any two-port network constructed from a series of amplifiers\nCascade (chemical engineering), a series of chemical processes\nCascade filling system, for gasses\nCascade connection, a type of electrical network connection\nCascade motor connection, a speed control system for induction motor\nCascade Range, a mountain range on the west coast of North America\nCascade Creek (disambiguation)\nCascade Falls (disambiguation)\nCascade River (disambiguation)\nYerevan Cascade\nAustralia[edit]\nCascade, Norfolk Island, a settlement in the Australian external territory of Norfolk Island\nCascades, Tasmania, a suburb of Hobart\nCascade, Western Australia\nCanada[edit]\nCascade City, British Columbia, aka Cascade Falls, a ghost town\nCascade Falls (Kettle River), the eponymous waterfall near Cascade City\nCascade Inlet, a side-inlet of Dean Channel in the Central Coast region of British Columbia\nCascade Falls (Iskut River), waterfall in the Stikine-Iskut region of British Columbia\nCascade Falls Regional Park, located on Cascade Creek northeast of the District of Mission in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia\nUnited States[edit]\nCascades (ecoregion), an area of Washington, Oregon, and California\nCascade, California, an unincorporated community in Plumas County\nCascade, Colorado\nCascade, Idaho\nLake Cascade, a reservoir in Idaho\nCascade, Indiana, an unincorporated community\nCascade, Iowa, a city in Dubuque County and Jones County\nCascade Township, Michigan\nCascade Township, Olmsted County, Minnesota\nCascade, Missouri\nCascade, Montana\nCascade County, Montana\nCascade, Nebraska\nCascade, New Hampshire\nCascade, Ohio, a former town in Putnam County\nCascade Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania\nCascade, Virginia, an unincorporated community\nCascades, Virginia, a census-designated place in Loudoun County\nCascade, Seattle, Washington\nCascade-Fairwood, Washington, a census-designated place in King County\nCascade, West Virginia, an unincorporated community\nCascade, Wisconsin, a village in Sheboygan County\nElsewhere[edit]\nCascade, Jamaica, a settlement in Jamaica\nCascade, Seychelles, an administrative district of Seychelles\nPenpedairheol, Caerphilly, also known as \"Cascade\", South Wales, United Kingdom\nCascade, a public housing estates in Ho Man Tin, Hong Kong\nOrganizations[edit]\nCascade Brewery, a brewery founded in 1832 in Australia\nCascade Communications, a communications equipment manufacturer\nCascade Investment, a financial company\nCascades (company), a paper pulp company, founded in 1957 in Canada\nOpen Cascade, a software development company with head office in France\nArts and entertainment[edit]\nThe Cascade, a Canadian newspaper, first published in 1993 in British Columbia\n[s] Cascade, a flash animation from the webcomic Homestuck\nArtists[edit]\nCascade (band), a Japanese rock group, who formed in 1993\nCascade, a former name of the German dance group Cascada\nCascade, a British DJ duo also recording under the alias Transa\nAlbums[edit]\nCascade, a 1984 album by Capercaillie\nCascade, a 1986 album recorded by Terry Oldfield\nCascade (Peter Murphy album), a 1995 album by Peter Murphy\nCascade (Guy Manning album), a 2001 album by Guy Manning\nCascade, a 2009 album by Abaddon Incarnate\nCascade (William Basinski album), a 2015 album by William Basinski\n\"Cascade\", a song written by Gene Slone and played by Chet Atkins on his 1977 album Me and My Guitar\n\"Cascade\", a song by Spyro Gyra from the 1978 album Spyro Gyra\n\"Cascade\", a song by Siouxsie and the Banshees from the 1982 album A Kiss in the Dreamhouse\n\"Cascade\" (song), a 1993 single by The Future Sound of London\n\"Cascade\", a song by Dave Weckl from the 2005 album Multiplicity\n\"The Cascade\", a song by Moving Mountains from the 2011 album Waves\n\"Cascade\", a song by Kreidler from the 2012 album Den\nCascade (train), a railroad train\nUSS Cascade (AD-16), a 1942 ship\nCascade College, a former college in Oregon, US\nCascade (juggling), a juggling pattern\nCascade hop, an agricultural crop\nJabot (window), also called a cascade, a type of interior decor\nInformation cascade, when people use the actions of others as an input to their own actions\nCascade, a household dishwashing detergent manufactured by Procter & Gamble\nCascades (disambiguation)\nCascade Lake (disambiguation)\nKASCADE, a European physics experiment\nKaskade (Ryan Gary Raddon, born 1971), American DJ\nCascada (disambiguation)\nCascadia (disambiguation)\nCollisional cascading (disambiguation)\nAll pages with titles beginning with Cascade\nAll pages with titles containing Cascade\nAll pages with titles beginning with Cascading\nAll pages with titles containing Cascading\nThis disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Cascade.\nRetrieved from \"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cascade&oldid=1054446682\"\nPlace name disambiguation pages","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line223016"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6573106646537781,"wiki_prob":0.6573106646537781,"text":"The Canadian Word Sleuth: babiche, bismarcks, ginch...\nby Katherine Barber\nDid Samuel Johnson ever have to ask his compatriots and colleagues what they call their underwear? Did James Murray ever have to head to the ladies' lingerie section of his local department store to determine how \"brassiere\" should be spelled in the Oxford English Dictionary? Did Henry Fowler ever pop into his local \"perogy palace\" (an unlikely find in the Channel Islands!) to do field research for Modern English Usage?\nHaving seen The Canadian Oxford Dictionary (Oxford University Press, 1,728 pages, $39.95 cloth) through to completion, I wouldn't be surprised if these illustrious lexicographers did precisely that-even if the fact has not been recorded in the annals of lexicography, any more than \"the Canadian Tire guy\" and \"the grain elevator agent out at Rosser, Manitoba\" get credit among the list of consultants appearing at the front of a dictionary.\nLexicographers resort to all sorts of research methods, from the most sophisticated to the simplest, in their attempt to describe the language and all its facets. Since Samuel Johnson's time, the tried and true method of serious lexicography is to establish a reading program that is as all-embracing as possible. In The Canadian Oxford Dictionary's case, this meant reading an eclectic selection of Canadian texts, a total of about 8,000 sources: everything from the novels of Robertson Davies to magazines about logging and Inuit art and fish farming, to books on figure skating and hockey. You can imagine the odd looks that must come your way from other ballet patrons when you're seen at the intermission of Swan Lake reading Eric Lindros's autobiography-not only reading it, but actually highlighting the juicy hockey vocabulary!\nOf course most people assume that when lexicographers say we have to read a lot, what we read are other dictionaries. We do in fact consult them, but often the information they contain is unreliable or out of date. A case in point is the Dictionary of Canadianisms on Historical Principles, which was published in 1967. We systematically examined every entry in this dictionary, but it was often hard to determine whether a word was still current in the 1990s though we hadn't heard of it, or whether it had never survived the sixties. An example was \"babiche\", a kind of rawhide used in snowshoes, among other things. Books and magazines yielded no evidence for the word, and neither did the CD-ROMs of Canadian newspapers. We decided to bite the bullet and pay for an online database search of Southam newspapers dating back to the seventies and, sure enough, we found evidence of \"babiche\" and put it in the dictionary. Imagine my dismay when shortly after that, I was in the sporting goods section of my local Canadian Tire store and saw a snowshoe with the label, \"Pure babiche\"! We made sure to add the Canadian Tire catalogue to our reading program.\nBut even a vast reading program leaves some questions unanswered, sending the lexicographers scurrying for more information wherever they are most likely to find it. Hence the trip to the ladies' lingerie section (I offered to do this for the lexicographer responsible for that stretch of the alphabet when he started to show signs of acute embarrassment at my suggestion that he head to Eaton's and start reading brassiere packages to see whether the word was still spelled with an accent or not). As it happens, we found out that all of these packages now use only the word \"bra\".\nBy some cruel quirk of fate, this same lexicographer ended up with all our underwear words, so it fell to him to inquire of our e-mail survey group (a very convenient research tool not, alas, available to Samuel Johnson) which word or words they used to designate their undies: \"gitch\", \"ginch\", \"gotch\", \"gotchies\" or \"gaunch\". The results confirmed what the quotations gleaned from our reading of novels from every region of Canada had suggested: there is a mysterious line falling across the country somewhere about Lloydminster, west of which people say \"gaunch\" and \"ginch\", and east of which people say \"gotch\", \"gotchies\" or \"gitch\". Our survey group also proved invaluable when we were researching the exclamation, \"Holy jumpin'!\", for which we had no written evidence. Everyone agreed that they not only knew the expression, but also used it. Subsequently, we did find a reference for it in a Canadian short story.\nIndeed, we often wondered how anyone ever wrote a dictionary before e-mail. In addition to our Canadian survey group, respondents in the U.S., the U.K., South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand answered a constant barrage of questions. If \"beer parlour\" is a Canadian word, we asked our American friends, why was Stephen King using it in novels? \"Ah,\" they said, \"well you know he lives in Maine, he's probably popping across the border for a quick brewski and has been corrupted by you Canadians.\" For a while, we thought we had found a uniquely Canadian usage of the F-word but our helpful informants disabused us of that notion (not, of course, that they would ever use it, you understand, but they know people who know people who have heard it used in movies). They were also entertained by our question as to whether the word \"squared\" is used there to mean \"hit in the groin\". It turns out it isn't, and that in fact-curiously-it seems to be limited to Toronto. \"Road apples\" were the topic of hot debate one October morning, as we determined that while Americans do use the term to mean horse droppings, only Canadians use it to mean frozen horse droppings used as hockey pucks!\nWe could almost hear the collective gagging from our British colleagues when we asked if they were familiar with the \"Bloody Caesar\": \"A mixture of clam-and-tomato juice and vodka,\" we breezily informed them. But then any nation that includes amongst its culinary accomplishments lamb's fry (Brit. lamb's testicles or other offal as food) should not try to judge another country's food and drink. Our field research, what with \"Nanaimo bars\" and \"butter tarts\" and such, was much tastier. Mind you, one of the Canadian cookbooks in our library does have a recipe for \"Scrambled Caribou Brains on Toast\". We decided to forgo the field research on that one, but one item of food we could not ignore was garlic sausage. Because of the huge influx of Eastern European immigrants to Canada in the nineteenth century, we are left with not one but three possible names: the Polish kielbasa, the Russian kolbasa, and the Ukrainian-well, what did the Ukrainians call it? We had evidence of the Polish and Russian forms, but none for the Ukrainian. Having grown up in Winnipeg, I knew that Ukrainians did not use either the Polish or (God forbid) the Russian word, so I sent my father off on a trek in search of the elusive sausage word. Alycia's Perogy Palace in North End Winnipeg was a bit of a disappointment since she used the Polish \"kielbasa\", and we were on the point of despairing when, driving in to Edmonton from visiting my brother in Cold Lake, my parents stopped for lunch at Baba's Bistro and found \"kubasa\" on the menu!\nMany people ask if we had suggestions from the general public for our dictionary. When we first started, we inserted cards in every book shipped from Oxford University Press Canada's warehouse-100,000 in all inviting readers to send in suggestions with supporting quotations. Not a great success. We had an experience common to most dictionary projects: a phone call from a gentleman who described himself as an \"inventor\" and who invented words and had some to submit to us (for a fee, I suspect). When we explained that we had to have evidence of words being used before they went in our dictionary, he got most annoyed, told us we didn't know anything about writing dictionaries and what words should go in, and that he wouldn't send us his words after all because we would obviously just \"steal\" them without giving him credit.\nWe used another method for soliciting public input when we had to confront the thorny problem of what Canadians across the country called that staple of their diets-the round, sugar-coated, jam-filled doughnut. We wrote a letter to the editors of ninety-two newspapers encouraging readers to write and tell us what they called this delicacy. After the flood of replies died down, we could state with some assurance that a jelly doughnut became a \"bismarck\" in Alberta and Saskatchewan, then morphed into a \"jambuster\" in Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario, before it settled down to life as a \"jelly doughnut\" again in the east. This was actually a very helpful exercise in determining approximately where the change between one word and the other happened, but it was the sort of technique that could only be applied to unambiguous questions about common objects.\nFor certain categories of words, specialist consultants did the research for us. Canada's Aboriginal peoples provided us with a wealth of vocabulary never before recorded in dictionaries. The names for Aboriginal peoples with which most English-speaking Canadians are familiar, such as Ojibwa, are fading away as the names used or preferred by the peoples themselves take over. But since these had not yet appeared in dictionaries, spelling was totally unstandardized. For instance, we found thirty-two different versions of \"Anishnabe\". An improved awareness amongst English-speaking Canadians of Aboriginal issues and cultural realities also required that we research words such as \"dream catcher\", \"sentencing circle\", \"button blanket\", and \"vision quest\".\nAnd finally we must not forget the innumerable people at universities, associations, and businesses who patiently and competently answered our telephone inquiries. While trying to determine exactly what \"maple butter\" was, we contacted the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers Association, which we envisaged as being in some office building somewhere. The receptionist (we presumed) took note of our query then politely informed us that the president was unavailable just then since he was out in the barn with the cows, but we should call back when he came in for lunch. And indeed, he gave us enough information on the exact temperature to which the syrup needed to be heated and cooled that we felt we could take up maple syrup production as a sideline from lexicography.\nDictionary users probably conceive of lexicographers (if they think of them at all) as white-bearded, stuffy, somewhat eccentric types shut away in an ivory tower contemplating the finest works of English literature. The truth is much different: because the language describes all aspects of life, lexicographers are involved in the mundane, amusing, solemn, and quirky realities of our day-to-day existence. It is one of the things that makes dictionary-making so rewarding a task. \u0007\nKatherine Barber is the Editor-in-Chief of The Canadian Oxford Dictionary, which was published in June of 1998. She also has a regular spot on CBC Radio 1 in Toronto as Metro Morning's \"Word Lady\", where she explains fascinating word histories.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1239673"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6754232048988342,"wiki_prob":0.6754232048988342,"text":"Minneriya reservoir and its surrounding wetland habitat is inhabited by a large number of a aquatic bird species in addition to elephants. Early morning and late evening are the optimum observation times of the day for resident and migratory birds. Flock of about 2000 little cormorant (Phalacrocorax niger) diving in the waters of Minneriya reservoir is not a rare scene. In addition painted strokes (Mycteria leucocephala), Great white pelicans (Pelicanus anocrotalus), Ruddy turnstones (Arenaria interpres) and Grey herons (Ardea cinerea) too can be seen.\nThe best season to view the large Elephant herds gathering at the banks of the water reservoir is the dry season from June to Sept. Sambar and Spotted deer are other wild animals roam the park.\nThe park covers an area of approximately 8900 Ha.\nThe Minneriya National Park is located in the north–central plains (North-East Province) Sri Lanka, 20 km from Polonnaruwa. From Colombo is about 182 km journey.\nAfter the Minneriya National Park in 1938 was advertised as a nature reserve, he offered in 1997 to the National Park.\nEven though it is one of the smallest national parks in the country for only 8,889 acres, it is a paradise with many natural wonders.\nMinneriya National Park are for current counts for about wild elephants have found a home.\nThe Minneriya National Park consists of mixed evergreen forest and scrub, and is home to sambar deer, leopards and elephants.\nBut the central feature of the park is the ancient Minneriya tank (built in the 3rd century. BC. King Mahasena).\nDuring the dry season (June to September), this tank is the place that serves the animals as a water source to which the elephants come to bathe and browse.\nHuge flocks of birds (cormorants and storks, to name a few), there are also a.\nBesides the many elephants are especially monkeys, leopards, deer and bears in this area.\nGetting to the Minneriya National Park\nThe main entrance to the Minneriya National Park is located opposite Habarana – Polonnaruwa road (A11).\nFrom Colombo: Habarana junction via Kurunegala, Dambulla (A1, A6), turn right towards Habarana Polonnaruwa.\n10 km towards Polonnaruwa to Minneriya National Park.\nThe distance from Colombo is about 182km and about 4-5 hours drive.\nWeather and Season\nThe best months to visit Minneriya National Park are the dry months ago by June to September.\nHundreds of elephants are in the vicinity of the Minneriya Lake, which is transformed into a green grass landscape, tightened.\nTo visit the Minneriya National Park should be scheduled at least 2-3 hours.\nKaudulla National Park","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1327596"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7375869750976562,"wiki_prob":0.7375869750976562,"text":"Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe — [Sir Charles Walker in the Chair]\n– in Westminster Hall at 11:29 am on 16th November 2021.\n« Previous debate\nAll Westminster Hall debates on 16 Nov 2021\nNext debate »\n[Sir Charles Walker in the Chair]\nLink to this item In context Individually\n(Citation: HC Deb, 16 November 2021, c191WH)\nCharles Walker Chair, Administration Committee, Chair, Administration Committee 2:30 pm, 16th November 2021\nBefore I call Tulip Siddiq, I wish to make a short statement about the sub judice resolution. I have been advised that there are active legal proceedings in the High Court between International Military Services Ltd and Iran’s Ministry of Defence. I am exercising the discretion given to the Chair in respect of the resolution on matters sub judice to allow full reference to those proceedings as they concern issues of national importance.\nColleagues, it will not have escaped your attention that the debate is massively over-subscribed. Many of you will be disappointed, but you are here showing your support, so thank you. If you intervene on colleagues and you are down to speak, you may be moved off the speakers list, because we will only get to 15 or 16 of you. There will be a three-minute limit on speeches after Tulip Siddiq has spoken.\nLink to this speech In context Individually\nTulip Siddiq Shadow Minister (Education) 2:31 pm, 16th November 2021\nI beg to move,\nThat this House\nhas considered the case of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles. A lot of Members will be well versed with the details of my constituent’s case. Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has been unlawfully detained in Iran for nearly six years now, separated from her young daughter and her family. She served the first five years of her first sentence and was then put under house arrest at her parents’ house, wearing an ankle tag. She then faced another charge and was sentenced to another year, and then a year’s travel ban—effectively, two more years of being separated from her family in London.\nNazanin appealed the sentence of her second case, which was rejected. At that time, her husband, Richard Ratcliffe, decided to go on hunger strike. I say to Members across the House that no one goes on hunger strike on a whim. Richard Ratcliffe went on hunger strike because he felt that he had no other option, and that this was his last resort. He went on hunger strike for three weeks outside the Foreign Office in order to capture the attention of those in the upper echelons of Government, because he does not think that they are helping with his wife’s plight. I am disappointed that in the three weeks during which Richard was starving himself outside the Foreign Office, the Prime Minister of our country did not come to visit him.\nKim Leadbeater Labour, Batley and Spen\nHas the Prime Minister met my hon. Friend and Richard in recent years? What has his personal intervention been in this case? Does he keep in touch with my hon. Friend? Has he shown the leadership and compassion needed in this case?\nTulip Siddiq Shadow Minister (Education)\nThe Prime Minister did meet us shortly after becoming Prime Minister, but he has not done so in recent years. After dealing with this case for nearly six years, having tabled eight urgent questions in the House, and having dealt with five Foreign Secretaries and countless Ministers, I think it is high time that the Prime Minister, knowing the details, got involved properly.\nStephen Doughty Shadow Minister (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs and International Development)\nThese sentiments are shared entirely by my constituents. Like many Members here today, I have been overwhelmed by messages of support for Nazanin, Richard and the whole family. All urge the Government to act and to show solidarity with the whole family in wanting Nazanin to be freed. Could my hon. Friend please convey that to the family?\nRichard Ratcliffe is in the Gallery and will have heard that message directly from my hon. Friend. This campaign has touched everyone, regardless of where they are in the country. A lot of Members will know that my constituency of Hampstead and Kilburn is one of affluence and deprivation. When I am in Hampstead, Emma Thompson will stop me and ask, “Have you got Nazanin home?” When I am campaigning in the south Kilburn estates, people will open the door and say, “What good are you if you haven’t got that poor woman home yet?” The campaign has touched everyone; my hon. Friend is right to make that point.\nJim Shannon Shadow DUP Spokesperson (Human Rights), Shadow DUP Spokesperson (Health)\nI commend the hon. Lady for her excellent campaign. She deserves every credit. The USA has agreed to pay around $1.4 billion in moneys owed to Iran, even though it supports the sanctions against Iran. Does she agree that the UK should follow the USA’s decision by paying the £400 million, thereby ensuring Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s immediate release?\nThe hon. Gentleman has appeared at every single debate we have had on Nazanin. I thank him for all his efforts in the campaign. I will come to the debt and getting our constituents back home.\nIt goes without saying that the reason why my constituent is imprisoned in Iran is because of the Iranian regime. It is because of them that my constituent is away from her young family. But in six years of dealing with our Government, I have become increasingly frustrated that Ministers are ignoring the elephant in the room, which is the fact that this case is now linked to the £400 million that this country owes Iran. That is not something I want to deal with, but it is the reality of the situation. It is becoming obvious that the Iranians see the £400 million that we owe as a pre-condition to releasing Nazanin.\nRoger Gale Conservative, North Thanet\nI congratulate the hon. Lady on securing the debate. She said “constituents” and she is absolutely right. Nobody in this room has anything but compassion for Richard Ratcliffe and his family, but there are other constituents who are dual nationals who also need the help of the British Government. Does she agree that they are living under the most awful regime and that has to be a priority?\nI thank the right hon. Gentleman for his intervention. I will mention the other dual nationals who are imprisoned in Iran. As he says, Nazanin is not the only one.\nI want to go back to the question of the debt before I take another intervention. When Nazanin was captured and put in solitary confinement in Evin prison, she was told by prison guards that the reason she was being held was because of our failure to pay this historic debt. Former President Rouhani told our Prime Minister in March this year that accelerating the payment on the debt would solve a lot of the problems in the bilateral relationship between Iran and our country. Iran’s former Foreign Minister Zarif also cited the debt in an article. There is no question but that the debt is linked to Nazanin’s case.\nWe have seen that it is not a coincidence: every time there is any movement on the IMS court hearing, there is some movement on Nazanin’s case. When the IMS court hearing was delayed earlier this year, Nazanin received a call a week later saying, “Come to court, because we need to speak to you.” There is no coincidence, because the two are linked. What frustrates me so much is that every time I speak to the Government, they seem to bury their head in the sand and deny that there is a link.\nMartin Docherty Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Industries of the Future and Blockchain Technologies), Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Foreign Affairs Team Member), Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Defence Team Member), Shadow SNP Spokesperson (PPS to the Westminster Leader)\nI thank the hon. Member for securing the debate. I wonder whether they, like me, believe that for cases such as Nazanin’s and that of my constituent Jagtar Singh Johal, having a fully resourced consular support service that enables diplomats rather than hindering them, so that families can have confidence in that consular support, is the least that the Government can provide for them and for the rest of us?\nI fully agree. One of the biggest disappointments has been that British officials will not go to the court hearings for Nazanin when she is called back to court. That is something we have been asking for again and again.\nMatt Rodda Shadow Minister (Work and Pensions) (Pensions)\nMartin Docherty-Hughes makes an important point. I also wish to offer my support to the family—to Richard and Nazanin—at this very difficult time. My hon. Friend makes an excellent point about the level of involvement of the Prime Minister and those at senior levels in the current Administration. Will she comment on how that compares and contrasts with the level of support from previous Prime Ministers?\nI will come to the topic of the three former Foreign Secretaries and what they have said. In terms of Prime Ministers, one of the problems that I have always had with this case is that it needs intervention from the Prime Minister, but it has not felt as though the three Prime Ministers that we have dealt with have given us that option. Bear in mind that I have asked Prime Minister’s questions to all of them and turned up at No. 10 to knock on their door every single time there has been a new Prime Minister.\nSeveral hon. Members:\nI will take an intervention in a minute, but I want to make a little more progress.\nThe Leader of the House told me in March that Iran was holding us to ransom. He said that\n“the UK Government do not pay for the release of hostages”—[Official Report, 11 March 2021; Vol. 690, c. 1014.]\nI see the logic of this principle but, in the truest form of the word, this is not a ransom; it is a debt. It is a debt that we as a country owe Iran. It was ruled in international tribunals that we owe Iran this money. Anyone hiding behind the fact that it is a ransom is wrong. They need to see the ruling in international courts to understand that we owe this money.\nIain Duncan Smith Conservative, Chingford and Woodford Green\nI thank the hon. Lady for giving way and congratulate her on securing the debate. I will also take this opportunity to say exactly how brave Richard has been throughout this ordeal, on behalf of his whole family. He is here today. As I am a co-chair of the all-party parliamentary group on Magnitsky sanctions, I wonder whether the hon. Lady might ask the Government this question in due course: how is it that the United States, Australia, France and Germany have all now successfully negotiated the release of their citizens who were arbitrarily detained in Iran, yet we have made no progress? Perhaps she could challenge the Government on that.\nI thank the right hon. Member for his intervention. He is absolutely right, because those countries have brought their people home. Indeed, Australia actually managed to bring Nazanin’s prison cellmate back home, while Nazanin herself is still in Iran. So I hope that the Minister will pay attention to what the right hon. Member has just said, because he makes a very important point.\nRegarding the debt, I will come back to something that the Secretary of State for Defence has said:\n“With regard to IMS Ltd and the outstanding legal dispute the government acknowledges there is a debt to be paid and continues to explore every legal avenue for the lawful discharge of that debt.”\nSo if anyone questions whether we owe the money, we definitely owe the money, as has been stated several times. It is not a ransom; it is a debt that we as a country should lawfully pay back to Iran.\nMargaret Ferrier Independent, Rutherglen and Hamilton West\nNuclear negotiations restart on 29 November and there is a risk that both Nazanin’s case and Anoosheh Ashoori’s case will be used as leverage. The negotiations are complex and we cannot risk these cases becoming entangled in them. Does the hon. Lady agree that the Government need to have a plan in place to ensure that these cases do not get caught up in the nuclear negotiations?\nI thank the hon. Member for her intervention. I think that Members from across the House can probably hear the frustration in my voice, because I am very worried that my constituent is getting caught up in this overall universal problem and becoming a pawn between the two countries. Her husband has maintained from day one that she is a pawn caught between the two countries, which is unacceptable.\nIan Paisley Jnr Shadow DUP Spokesperson (Communities and Local Government), Shadow DUP Spokesperson (Culture, Media and Sport)\nWill the hon. Member give way?\nI will make just a bit more progress before giving way again.\nOne of the things that I have been told by different Foreign Office Ministers, off and on the record, is that there are practical issues with actually paying the debt. However, if anyone has read the news this week, they will have seen that three former Foreign Secretaries have come out and said that there are ways of paying the debt without busting sanctions and without angering our western allies. For me the question is this: if we all know that the debt exists, and we have ways of paying it, what is the explanation for why we have not paid it?\nKevin Brennan Labour, Cardiff West\nI am extremely grateful to my hon. Friend for giving way. Earlier Sir Iain Duncan Smith made the point about the UK’s seeming inability to get our people who are held captive overseas released. I know that she is aware of the case of Luke Symons, my constituent who is held by the Houthis. Similarly, other countries seem to have been able to get their people held by them released. Does she think that there is something wrong in the way the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office is approaching these cases?\nThat is the frustration that Nazanin expresses every time I speak to her: that her Government are not doing enough for her as a British citizen. The people she was in jail with are going home, while she is still stuck there, missing out on her daughter’s childhood.\nThe other point I will make—then I will take another intervention—is that I do not think that as a country we can take the moral high ground in relation to Iran and to Nazanin if we are not following a legal ruling that says we owe Iran money.\nClaire Hanna Social Democratic and Labour Party, Belfast South\nI thank the hon. Member for her generosity in giving way. People across south Belfast, and indeed across Northern Ireland, have expressed their distress at the forced separation of a mother and her young daughter. Does the hon. Member share my concern that the failure that this family are experiencing is part of a pattern of moral unseriousness and a lack of moral courage, which is in very stark contrast to the steadfastness and bravery that this family are somehow finding?\nI agree with the hon. Member and thank her for her help in this campaign. I repeat the point that several other Members have already made, which is that this issue is not just about Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe; it is also about Anoosheh Ashoori and Morad Tahbaz.\nJanet Daby Labour, Lewisham East\nI thank my hon. Friend for securing this essential debate. I also thank her for mentioning my constituent Anoosheh Ashoori, a 67-year-old man who is a father and a husband, and a British citizen who is also locked up in the same prison as Nazanin. Does my hon. Friend agree that it is a grotesque crime for Iran to hold hostages but that it is also a crime for our country not to settle any debts that are possibly keeping the hostages there?\nI thank my hon. Friend for her intervention and applaud all the work she is doing to try to free her constituent. It is sad that we have had to bond over this topic, with both of us having constituents who are imprisoned in Iran and separated from their families.\nWe need to pay our debt and challenge Iran, calling it out for what it is—challenging the perpetrators. But until we pay our debt, they will not even come to the negotiating table and we cannot deal with them.\nLiz Saville-Roberts Shadow PC Spokesperson (Home Affairs), Shadow PC Spokesperson (Women and Equalities) , Plaid Cymru Westminster Leader, Shadow PC Spokesperson (Justice), Shadow PC Spokesperson (Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy), Shadow PC Spokesperson (Transport), Shadow PC Spokesperson (Attorney General)\nIn February, the Minister assured us that the UK Government were using every tool in their diplomatic arsenal and doing everything they could to get Nazanin home. Does the hon. Lady want to ask the Minister, as I do, what is missing from those diplomatic tools, because so far they have failed to bring anything about?\nWhat I would say is that in the nearly six years that Richard Ratcliffe and I have been campaigned to get Nazanin home, we have heard every platitude. We have heard about no stones being unturned. We have heard about how this issue is top of the Government’s agenda. We know it is their highest priority, but warm words are not enough any more. After six years, I want to see my constituent come home. I do not want to hear from the Government the same rhetoric over and over again, which is what we are hearing.\nCatherine West Shadow Minister (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs)\nI thank my hon. Friend and constituency neighbour for giving way. I want to put on the record my heartfelt feelings on behalf of all the people in Hornsey and Wood Green. I also want to point out how long it has taken to resolve the case of my constituent Aras Amiri, who was a member of the British Council—she was almost a Foreign Office employee. There is a feeling that we all think this is inevitable, but we have to get some energy and some push in order to get Nazanin home.\nThat was a tragic case, and I know my hon. Friend fought very hard for her constituent.\nBefore I get to a series of questions that I want to ask the Minister, I would like to give the opportunity for anyone else to intervene.\nI congratulate the hon. Lady on securing a debate on this serious matter. Is not the elephant in the room the very obvious fact that the current incumbent in Downing Street said something that was a monumental cock-up, which has had a human cost? It is now up to the Government to fix that immediately, without further delay.\nThe truth is that the Prime Minister made an enormous blunder when giving evidence to Parliament, and I hope he feels responsible for that. As a result, I hope he takes some action to bring my constituent home.\nDavid Linden Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Work and Pensions)\nOn behalf of the people in Glasgow East, I extend my best wishes to Richard, Nazanin and Gabriella. Catherine West mentioned the need to get energy into the effort to get Nazanin home. It is widely accepted in the House that the current Foreign Secretary is always full of energy, so can Tulip Siddiq tell us what the new Foreign Secretary has done to try to progress the case of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe?\nI am appreciative of the fact that the new Foreign Secretary called me as soon as she was in post and said that she was dealing with Nazanin. She also called us in for a meeting, along with Richard Ratcliffe and members of his family. I am grateful that she seems to be acting on the issue, but I will judge her on what she does at the end. As I say, we have dealt with five Foreign Secretaries and none of them has brought Nazanin home yet. It is time the Foreign Secretary took some action properly.\nI have to go on to my questions, but I will take some very short interventions.\nMunira Wilson Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Health and Social Care)\nI congratulate the hon. Lady on her campaign. Given that Nazanin has been granted diplomatic protection, how does the hon. Lady feel that the Government are treating her case differently from other consular cases? Does she think that Anoosheh Ashoori should also be granted diplomatic protection?\nI give way to the hon. Gentleman.\nToby Perkins Shadow Minister (Education)\nI pay tribute to my hon. Friend on behalf of the people of Chesterfield. She is absolutely inspirational in the campaign that she is fighting, but I know it will mean something to her only when she gets Nazanin home. Will she tell us a bit more about the barbaric Iranian regime and the way it has operated? What is her message to the regime?\nI give way again.\nMike Amesbury Shadow Minister (Housing, Communities and Local Government)\nThe people of Weaver Vale send their love and compassion to Nazanin, Richard and Gabriella, and to my hon. Friend, who is a real champion of this issue. It is now important that the Foreign Secretary and the Prime Minister do the right thing.\nI have rarely seen such a crowded Westminster Hall debate. It demonstrates the amount of affection and concern that we have for Nazanin. I think Richard will report that back to his wife, so I thank hon. Members.\nI will pick up on diplomatic protection. It is right to say that diplomatic protection was given to Nazanin by the former Foreign Secretary. We in the campaign do not feel that the Government have used that enough, because it became a state-to-state dispute the moment that diplomatic protection was given. One of the questions I have for the Minister is whether he will do something to use the diplomatic protection and try to get Nazanin home.\nI will get to my questions, if that is okay. I am conscious of the time.\nCharles Walker Chair, Administration Committee, Chair, Administration Committee\nIf Members have intervened on the hon. Lady already, please do not do so again. I think the hon. Lady was going to give way to Mr MacNeil and then Ms Vaz.\nAngus MacNeil Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Trade Team Member), Chair, International Trade Committee, Chair, International Trade Committee\nIf we were able to engineer a vote today on the payment of the debt, it would be unanimous. Is there a way that we can engineer a vote in the main Chamber on the debt, so that we add pressure on the Government to pay the debt and get Nazanin home?\nMs Vaz, you are not going to get in to speak. Do you have an intervention to make?\nValerie Vaz Labour, Walsall South\nVery briefly, I thank my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq and wish her and my hon. Friend Janet Daby well. The Ratcliffe family, and Anoosheh Ashoori, Morad Tahbaz, who was born in Hammersmith Hospital, and Mehran Raoof are all British citizens. The Hague convention applies to them; they can get diplomatic protection. If the Minister would only look at the Hague convention, he would find that it takes other factors into account. More importantly, why do we not harness the spirit of Lewis Hamilton at the Brazilian grand prix, and realise that there is not a single obstacle that is going to stop us bringing home our Nazanin, Anoosheh, Morad and Mehran?\nI give way to Drew Hendry\nDrew Hendry Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Trade)\nMay I put it on the record that the people of Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey are fully behind Nazanin being freed? Would the hon. Lady agree that the UK Government must now act without any fear of upsetting allies such as the United States, and do what must be done to free Nazanin now?\nI absolutely agree. I will ask the Minister a series of questions, and then I know that there are lots of hon. Members who want to speak.\nWhy will the Government not acknowledge that Nazanin is a hostage, and challenge Iran’s hostage-taking with sanctions or legal action? Will the Minister set out exactly what practical and legal issues he believes stand in the way of resolving the International Military Services debt, so that these can be properly scrutinised? The Government have long accepted that they owe the debt as a matter of international law. Do the Government think that they are entitled to ignore their legal obligations and the rule of law? Have the Government made a specific offer to Iran to discharge the debt through humanitarian assistance, such as the provision of medicine? Have the Government sought or received assurance from the US, in the form of a comfort letter, that no bank will be sanctioned or fined for facilitating the payment of the debt? Finally, a Foreign Office Minister, Lord Goldsmith of Richmond Park, said in the Lords yesterday that,\n“were the Government to pay hundreds of millions of pounds to the Iranian Government, that would undoubtedly be seen as payment for a hostage situation.”—[Official Report, House of Lords, 15 November 2021; Vol. 816, c. 18.]\nIs that the view of the Government?\nColleagues, many of you are not going to get called. I will give those I do call three minutes, but if you speak for less, more people will get in. Please stop taking photographs; you know that you are not meant to take photographs.\nBob Stewart Conservative, Beckenham 2:53 pm, 16th November 2021\nI will focus on the money that we owe Iran for the tanks that we never delivered even though the Shah’s regime had paid for them before the Iranian revolution of 1979. The United States was in a similar position to us, and apparently owed $1.7 billion to the Iranian regime. However, it was reported that the Obama Administration returned that money, via Switzerland and in other than US currency, on 17 January 2016, 22 January 2016 and 5 February 2016. On 17 January, by chance, four US prisoners were released from Iranian jails. The Obama Administration, of course, denied that there was any connection.\nOn 30 June 2016, I asked the Secretary of State for Defence how much the MOD owed Iran for Chieftain tanks that were never delivered. The answer that I received was that the MOD did not dispute that the money was owed, but that EU sanctions stopped repayment. There is no doubt that we owe Iran £400 million, and it should be given back. With luck, if we repay the money, the supreme leader, who is the only person who will make the decision, may be magnanimous enough to order the release of not just Nazanin but all the other British prisoners held in jail in Iran. As we have always owed that money, I can live with the idea that we have not been blackmailed into returning £400 million for military equipment that we never delivered.\nJoanna Cherry Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Justice and Home Affairs) 2:55 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles. I congratulate Tulip Siddiq on securing the debate and on her hard work on this serious issue. I pay tribute to her constituent, who is sitting behind me. Along with many other MPs, I was privileged to visit him during his hunger strike.\nThe facts are stark. A British citizen has been detained for five and a half years on unsubstantiated allegations of spying. Successive Conservative Foreign Secretaries have failed to secure her freedom. No less than three distinguished former Foreign Secretaries have said that the debt to Iran should be paid so that Nazanin can come home.\nI will keep my comments brief. There have been some good articles about the case in the newspapers over the weekend, particularly The Times and The Observer. I am grateful to them for informing the questions that I will ask of the Minister.\nFirst, why is the Prime Minister still refusing to settle the acknowledged £400 million debt to Iran incurred before the ’79 revolution? Why has he let that unjustified failure to pay up bedevil the talks? Why are the Government saying that bank transfer restrictions arising from international sanctions prevent payment? Is that not untrue? Surely the Government can find legal ways around rules that they helped to create. As we have already heard, the United States settled a similar debt in return for the release of four American hostages.\nJonathan Edwards Independent, Carmarthen East and Dinefwr\nThe hon. and learned Lady is presenting a forensic case in her usual style. Does she agree with the International Observatory of Human Rights that one way around that issue might be to use humanitarian aid?\nJoanna Cherry Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Justice and Home Affairs)\nYes, indeed. I will come to that.\nSecondly, why has the Prime Minister failed to honour the personal promise to pay the debt that he made as Foreign Secretary to Mr Ratcliffe and, indirectly, to the Iranians? That promise was a blatant attempt to compensate for the disastrous blunder that we have heard about when he misrepresented Nazanin’s activities in Tehran. Why will the Prime Minister not keep his word and his promises, particularly when the life of a young mother is at stake?\nThirdly, why are the Prime Minister and the Foreign Secretary persisting with the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office’s non-confrontational softly-softly approach? Let us be honest: the Government are not exactly known for their non-confrontational softly-softly approach when it comes to the European Union or the vexed question of the north of Ireland. In this respect, their approach has failed completely. It is not about paying a ransom; it is about the credibility of the British Government abroad and the confidence of British citizens in their Government. When will the Prime Minister take a tougher line with Iran than with the European Union?\nEsther McVey Conservative, Tatton 2:58 pm, 16th November 2021\nI pay tribute to Tulip Siddiq for securing this important debate and for her unyielding determination to keep the issue in the public’s consciousness and alive in Parliament. Nazanin and her family have been subjected to the utmost cruelty—a never-ending emotional torture. Just when they think that freedom is within their grasp, it is ripped away again. Where does somebody go from here and what do they do?\nRichard asked himself that question. He has raised the issue with a series of Secretaries of State and Prime Ministers. He has involved the media in the UK and what independent voices there are in Tehran. When I spoke to him when I visited him a few times in the last couple of weeks, he said that the only thing he felt he could now do was starve himself. I ask how hopeless, powerless and desperate someone must be to feel that the only thing they can do is go on hunger strike—endure 21 days of not eating, while at the same time being prepared to see people, greet people and do interviews, explaining again and again what their situation is, in the hope that something will budge.\nThroughout, Richard has remained utterly gracious. He has asked himself, “How do I break this stalemate? What do I do to make sure that my wife, and other British citizens in the same situation, are not forgotten? How do I make sure that their lives do not disappear in a pile of paperwork pushed to the back of a desk?” Nazanin has endured the most profound mental and physical trauma throughout her imprisonment, tortuous heartbreak caused by prolonged separation from her loved ones. She has been subjected to prolonged periods of solitary confinement, vastly inadequate living conditions, and traumatising interrogation. Her treatment has been utterly appalling.\nHow do we end this nightmare? So far, diplomatic routes have not worked. The sticking point is a £400 million historical debt relating to a sale of Chieftain tanks, paid for but never received, dating back to the 1970s. To date, there have been conversations, discussions, deliberations, articles and newspaper coverage, but words alone are no longer enough: it is time for action. Can the Minister today let us know what that action will be, so that Nazanin can come home where she rightly belongs, with her family?\nJustin Madders Shadow Minister (Health and Social Care) 3:01 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Sir Charles. I congratulate my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq on securing today’s debate, and on the relentless tenacity she has shown in highlighting the injustice of Nazanin’s incarceration at every opportunity. I of course wish to pay tribute to Richard Ratcliffe as well: I have had the privilege of meeting him on a number of occasions, and each time he has been a picture of calm, dignity and resolve. Goodness knows what he must be feeling inside, yet despite that unimaginable torment, he has always conducted himself in a way that is a credit to himself and to Nazanin. To have gone on hunger strike for three weeks, having done so previously and suffered the agonies of it already, and knowing the damage it can do to a person, shows the level of desperation he must feel at a seemingly intractable situation in which hope can be cruelly snatched away. That must be the hardest thing of all to take.\nMany of my constituents have been in touch to register their support for the release of Nazanin. Understandably, they have been moved by the plight of a mother separated from her husband and child, but they have also been motivated to contact me because of what they see as a failure of the UK Government to take decisive action. We all know that diplomacy is a fine art and that nuance is required, but there is no room for doubt here: this is an injustice and an intolerable situation, and every opportunity should be taken to right this wrong. Many of my constituents believe, as I do and as we have heard today, that more can be done. We have heard some examples of what that might look like.\nThe entire history of this situation does not need repeating, but it is worth repeating that Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has been imprisoned for crimes that she did not commit. I use the word “crimes” with a heavy caveat: we should resist talking about this situation in terms of crimes committed, because this is not a criminal justice matter but a political one. She is a victim of the long-standing dispute between Iran and this country over the £400 million it says is owed by the UK Government. It seems to me that until we have a public acknowledgment that that dispute lies at the root of this situation, we shall struggle to move forward, so will we get such an acknowledgment today from the Minister? Will that then lead to an approach based on Nazanin effectively being a hostage, for whom a ransom is sought?\nWe can be in no doubt that the Government’s approach thus far has been ineffective, and in some instances counterproductive. I noted with interest that the Government will not disclose how many dual nationals currently find themselves in the same position. One can probably conclude from that fact that there are others, which prompts the question: where does this end? How many more innocent people could find themselves pawns in a game that they have no control over, and which their own Government seem unwilling to take steps to resolve? I also ask the Minister what efforts are being made to gather international support, and what other diplomatic and financial levers can be pulled to bring about a satisfactory resolution, because we cannot accept that no more can be done. We cannot accept that this is just the way it is, or that such a gross injustice can be tolerated, and the support that we are seeing from Members today shows that this Parliament does not accept that nothing more can be done.\nJeremy Hunt Chair, Health and Social Care Committee, Chair, Health and Social Care Committee 3:04 pm, 16th November 2021\nI salute the quiet dignity of Richard Ratcliffe, who is one of the bravest people I have ever met. I thank Tulip Siddiq for her campaigning. We are from different parties, but she makes me proud to be a Member of this House.\nHow do we get Nazanin, Anoosheh, Morad and Mehran home? If it were ransom money, heartbreaking though it is, we should not pay it, because it would only lead to more hostages being taken. But it is not ransom money; it is a historical debt that we owe Iran. The debt should not be linked to this case, but it is, and that is why we should pay it. It is not easy to do because of sanctions, but with political will it can be done. No country can have a veto over a sovereign Britain deciding to pay its debt, not least the United States, because it did exactly the same thing under President Obama.\nWhen the right hon. Gentleman was Foreign Secretary, were they advised by senior civil servants that this money would not be paid, and what was the answer in Cabinet?\nJeremy Hunt Chair, Health and Social Care Committee, Chair, Health and Social Care Committee\nI believe that during the period when I was Foreign Secretary, the decision whether we owed that money was settled. There was an understanding, confirmed publicly by the Defence Secretary, that the money is owed and should be paid. It was going to take, and will take, a real effort to deal with the practicalities. But the Americans managed it and we can most certainly manage it, if necessary by getting an RAF plane to fly gold over to Tehran. There are lots of ways of doing it.\nWill the right hon. Gentleman give way?\nI will make some progress. One other thing needs to happen to ensure that Nazanin and the other dual nationals can come home: we must completely de-link their fates from the outcome of the Vienna talks on the joint comprehensive plan of action. Just as we tell Iran it should not make anyone a pawn in a diplomatic game, we too must live by those words and ensure they are not being used in any way by any country to put pressure on Iran to sign up to that deal. Their fates should be completely separate.\nThis is a terrible tragedy. It is a shame not just on Iran but on Britain that it has taken us five and a half years to solve it. There must be two outcomes: first, the reuniting of all the families who have been separated by this vile detention in Iran, including Nazanin’s family; and secondly, the legacy of this tragedy must be the end of the vile practice of hostage diplomacy, which must be consigned back to the 19th century where it belongs. Britain needs to learn from this to lead a diplomatic initiative with other countries, so that if someone is taken hostage from one country, we treat it as if they had been taken hostage from any of us. We act accordingly; we deter it and it never happens again.\nAnna McMorrin Shadow Minister (Justice) 3:07 pm, 16th November 2021\nI congratulate my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq on securing this important debate and on her hard work so far.\nUnjustly convicted, denied basic human rights and tortured—Richard Ratcliffe is rightly desperate as his wife has to undergo this cruel ordeal. It is heartbreaking that, once again, Richard has had to resort to the life-threatening action of a hunger strike. I visited Richard on day 16 of his strike. The pain in his eyes was harrowing. He just wants the Government to act. To go 21 days without food is testament to Richard’s love for his wife and his resolution to get the attention this issue rightly needs. The risks and symptoms of going on the strike are huge. After two weeks, people on hunger strike will have difficulty standing. They suffer severe dizziness, sluggishness and loss of co-ordination. After two or three weeks, it can result in severe neurological problems—vision loss and lack of motor skills. That is the love that Richard has shown for his wife.\nNazanin’s reaction to her husband’s strike brought me to tears at the weekend. She was worried sick about her husband. My heart breaks that this family is caught up in this dispute between two states. I want to address Nazanin directly, if she is able to see this debate. Nazanin, you can see the love and support right across this Parliament. I want to assure you that we, as representatives up and down this country, will not stop until you are free, home and reunited with your family and daughter. I pay tribute to the whole family, who are always there to support Richard, Gabriella and Nazanin. Richard’s sister Rachel lives in Cardiff and is always there for them, always looking for the positive and determined to bring a positive outcome.\nLet us be clear: the blame lies firmly at the Prime Minister’s door. He could resolve this issue by paying the debt to Iran, yet he refuses to do so. On Monday, Zac Goldsmith told peers that paying the debt owed by the UK would be seen as payment for a hostage, and would not be in the Government’s interest. Well, Zac, tell that to this family.\nPaying a debt is not paying a ransom. It has been ordered by an international court. It is clear this case could have been resolved many months ago. As well as Nazanin, we must not forget Anoosheh, Morad and Mehran—we must bring them home too. I hope this debate is a turning point, and that the Government will do everything in their power to bring them home.\nJeremy Wright Conservative, Kenilworth and Southam 3:11 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles. I join the tributes to Richard Ratcliffe—it is great to see that he is able to join us—and to his entire family, some of whom live in my constituency, whose resilience and bravery have been truly remarkable during this long period. I also join the tributes to Tulip Siddiq, whose campaigning has been exemplary; many of us have been delighted to assist her in that.\nI will make two points in the time available to me about the linkage of debt repayment to the detention of UK nationals and about the sanctions regime. First, I understand entirely and agree with the Government’s rejection of any suggestion by Iran that there is a connection between the repayment of a decades-old commercial debt and the release of UK citizens. However, I urge the Minister and his colleagues not to be hamstrung by what I might call the mirror image problem. Failing to repay a debt that would otherwise be repayable for fear of it being linked to the release of UK detainees is, in itself, to make a linkage that the Government have been at pains to say does not exist. If the debt should be repaid—and it seems clear that it should, subject to the remaining legal proceedings—then it should be repaid.\nThe UK’s adherence to standards of behaviour that states should maintain—standards which we argue Iran is not maintaining—demands that the debt be repaid promptly. How such a repayment is perceived should not, as a matter of principle, prevent us from making it.\nPhilippa Whitford Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Health and Social Care), Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Europe)\nDoes the right hon. and learned Gentleman agree that the failure to pay an acknowledged debt creates a fig leaf for the Iranian Government to hide behind? It is not a matter of it being connected; it is an obstruction to things moving forward.\nJeremy Wright Conservative, Kenilworth and Southam\nI understand entirely the point made by the hon. Lady. However, as I say, I do not think it is necessary to accept any linkage—positive or negative, by the Iranians or by the UK—to justify the decision to repay a debt that is legally repayable. We should do that for its own reasons and for its own sake, regardless of what else may be happening.\nThat brings me to the issue of the sanctions regime as an obstacle to repayment. It seems that we require more ingenuity and more innovation. Certainly, in so far as my right hon. Friend the Minister and his colleagues are concerned, I accept that a huge amount of personal effort has been put into this case. However, as others have said, something is still missing, and that may be the innovation that we need to find.\nThe debt predates the sanctions regime that we see as an obstacle to making the repayment. The purpose of that sanctions regime is to prevent the enrichment of Iran during the course of the sanctions period, but it does not seem to me that this repayment would do that. The repayment of the debt would, in effect, put Iran in the position it would have been in if the obligation had been fulfilled when it should have been—well prior to the beginning of the sanctions regime.\nI know better than many that the Minister has access to some exceptionally good lawyers in government. I hope that he is instructing those lawyers to use their best imagination and innovation to find ways of resolving this legal problem, because that is what we will require to break this deadlock. I know he will do his best, but I hope that he will give instructions to apply innovation and ingenuity to the case, as well as simply effort.\nLayla Moran Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (International Development), Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs) 3:14 pm, 16th November 2021\nMay I start by congratulating Tulip Siddiq on the way she has taken up this cause? I also pay tribute to Richard Ratcliffe and his whole family. The case has touched the hearts of the entire nation; 200 of my constituents have written in. I first heard of it when Richard’s aunt Rosemary and Colin came to see me in my advice surgery. As their MP at that moment, I said I would do everything I could to help. Now, as Liberal Democrat spokesperson, I intend to do the same.\nIt has been 2,000 days since the first detention. Since then, there have been eight urgent questions and 125 written questions from Members across the House. This is the third debate we have had on this, and yet Nazanin is still not home. To add another number, this is the fifth Foreign Secretary during that time, one of whom became Prime Minister. While he was Foreign Secretary he caused his own problems in this case. No offence to the Minister, but I find it regrettable that we have yet to see the current Foreign Secretary making statements to the House, because people watch what happens in Parliament. If they indicate that it is a priority, then I believe that that is what needs to happen.\nSarah Olney Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy), Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Transport)\nI pay tribute to Tulip Siddiq for bringing the debate. Amid this talk of international diplomacy, sanctions and payments, when my constituents write to me about this case, they want to express their huge sympathy for Richard and particularly his daughter. Gabriella was just 22 months old when her mother was imprisoned. When I had the pleasure of speaking to Richard recently, he told me that now she is in the UK she is doing really well at her school, but my heart goes out to them. I want to express, on behalf of my constituents, how for them this is really about reuniting a mother with her daughter.\nI will not give another speaker another minute. You get one injury-time minute; I will not give any more time if you give way again. That goes for all colleagues.\nLayla Moran Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (International Development), Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs)\nAs my hon. Friend Sarah Olney says, the reason this has touched the hearts of so many people is that they can imagine being in this position.\nThe Government need to acknowledge that they are state hostages—they have been taken hostage by the Iranian state—and the problem is that there is no way to tackle this internationally. Will the Minister update us on any progress on the Foreign Affairs Committee recommendation to work with the United Nations to create an internationally recognised definition for state hostage-taking, so that this does not happen to other families in future?\nIt is clear that the Government have got themselves into a bit of a twist over what they think of the debt. Either it is linked or it is not. In my view, it is not linked. We owe the debt; we should pay the debt. It is now increasingly clear that there are ways in which that could happen. I would say, call their bluff. If the Iranian Government say that there is a debt, remove the barrier. If they still do not release the hostages, we show the Iranian Government for the wicked regime that it is. I do not see a downside to doing that.\nIn closing, I simply want to express my wholehearted support for anything the Government can do, so that this is the last debate on this matter. A standing-room-only debate in Westminster Hall shows that this Parliament cares. I know the Minister cares. I would like to think that the Foreign Secretary and the Prime Minister care, but I do know that the whole country cares. We just want Nazanin home.\nAlex Sobel Shadow Minister (Digital, Culture, Media and Sport) 3:18 pm, 16th November 2021\nI have received more than 100 emails from constituents on this matter, which shows that the case of Nazanin has touched the hearts of the nation. It is all too common for people to claim that the situation is Kafkaesque. To me, as an avid reader of Kafka, the similarity between current cases and that of Josef K in “The Trial” are all too apparent. Kafka himself described the seeming basis of the Iranian judicial system when he wrote in “The Trial” that\n“it’s characteristic of this judicial system that a man is condemned not only when he’s innocent but also in ignorance.”\nNazanin was charged and convicted without adequate representation or due process—indeed, condemned in ignorance. Like other hon. Members—particularly my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq—I call on the Foreign Secretary, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Minister to press the Iranian Government on a number of issues that my constituents, Amnesty International and I have raised. They should press them to allow Nazanin any specialist medical care she may require; apply without discrimination article 58 of the Islamic penal code, which allows for someone to be conditionally released after serving a third of their prison sentence and would ensure the immediate release of Nazanin; ensure that Nazanin has regular access to a lawyer of her choice; allow Nazanin to be in contact with her family, including relatives abroad; and allow her to communicate with British consular officials—although that seems to be a contentious issue. I ask the Minister to respond to those points.\nThe United Kingdom has a well-deserved international reputation for its justice system. I hope that the Government will press for the most basic justice in Iran for our citizens, whether they are British citizens or dual citizens, and particularly for Nazanin. It is clear from the contributions to this debate that that is completely and utterly lacking.\nSir Charles, that was the speech I made in this place on 18 July 2017—word for word. In fact, it was my first speech in this place. I ask the Minister: what has changed? The answer is very little. What has the FCDO managed to do in the last four and a half years? It has failed to secure Nazanin’s release. Four and a half years of failure—a litany of failure at the Department’s door. I call on the Minister to answer the points raised in this debate and ensure that our debt to the Iranian Government is repaid—a debt that was incurred not by the last Government or the Government before them, but by the Government who were in power when I was in nursery school. It is all the more important that we ensure that the UK honours its international obligations. We have failed to do so, and Nazanin is paying the price.\nBarbara Keeley Labour, Worsley and Eccles South 3:21 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles, and I congratulate my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq on securing this debate. I know that she has been a great source of support for the Ratcliffe family with her campaigning.\nNazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe is being held as a political hostage in Iran. Her life is being used as a bargaining chip in a diplomatic game between Britain and Iran. In September, in order to mark Nazanin’s 2,000th day in detention, Richard Ratcliffe and their daughter Gabriella stood on a large snakes and ladders board in Parliament Square that represented the ups and down, twists and turns and false dawns that this family have endured. Gabriella has been separated from her mother for most of her young life; Richard has been separated from his wife. Nazanin has endured terrible mistreatment, and Amnesty International rightly describes her as a victim of torture.\nAs so many colleagues have done, I want to pay tribute to Richard Ratcliffe and his unwavering determination to keep Nazanin’s case at the top of the agenda. I have met him during both his first and second hunger strikes to show him solidarity and support. The strength, determination and dignity that he continues to show is heroic. The Government’s response to the escalation of Nazanin’s ordeal in Iran has rightly been described as pitiful. In May this year, the former Foreign Secretary, Dominic Raab, said that Iran’s treatment of Nazanin “amounts to torture” and that she is being\n“held unlawfully…as a matter of international law.”\nThe strengthening of the language being used by Ministers is welcome, but it is just words—the Government have to act. We need to know why the Government are not acting to bring British hostages home.\nIn her eighth urgent question on Nazanin’s case recently, my hon. Friend the Member for Hampstead and Kilburn asked the Minister to acknowledge that Nazanin is a hostage, to resolve the £400 million debt issue—I am pleased that so many Members have raised that today—and to work to secure an end to hostage taking. The shadow Minister, my hon. Friend Wayne David, rightly called for a fundamental rethink of the Government’s approach to Nazanin. It is long past time for an urgent intervention from the Prime Minister, and for a new strategy to bring Nazanin home. The strength of support in this standing-room only Westminster Hall debate shows how much support there is in this House for that urgent action.\nI am going to annoy colleagues by dropping the speaking time to two minutes, and none of you is going to get injury time for interventions—I want to get you all in.\nBrendan O'Hara Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Inclusive Society), Shadow SNP Spokesperson (International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution), Shadow SNP Deputy Spokesperson (Cabinet Office) 3:23 pm, 16th November 2021\nI thank Tulip Siddiq for securing this debate. Almost exactly a year ago, on 3 November 2020, the Minister stood at the Dispatch Box and said that the Government,\n“from the Prime Minister down, remain committed to doing everything we can for her.”—[Official Report, 3 November 2020; Vol. 683, c. 185.]\nIn the intervening 12 months, nothing has changed. Nazanin is no closer to being released, her daughter is no nearer to being reunited with her mother, and her husband, Richard, has been forced into enduring yet another hunger strike to highlight her case. Since her detention in April 2016, five Foreign Secretaries have promised to explore every avenue, leave no stone unturned and work tirelessly to secure her release. However, there has been no progress.\nLast year, when the Defence Secretary finally acknowledged that there is a debt and a debt has to be repaid, it suddenly felt like progress; it felt like perhaps there was a breakthrough. The Minister himself admitted that they were exploring ways to repay this debt.\nA year ago it felt like negotiations were at a delicate stage, when one misspoken word could set the whole process back. Yet here we are, stuck in the same situation as we were then. The inescapable conclusion must therefore be that this Government are actually not serious about securing the release of Nazanin. They have had so many chances, so many opportunities, and every single one of them has been missed.\nI visited Richard twice during his hunger strikes, and on both occasions I was struck by his resolve to not sit meekly back and wait for debates to take their course. The Government are letting the people down; they are letting Nazanin down, and there is a seven-year-old girl stuck in the middle. Minister, it is not good enough. The public are not with you. Richard Ratcliffe is not going to go away, and neither are his supporters in this House.\nDan Jarvis Labour, Barnsley Central 3:25 pm, 16th November 2021\nLike others, I would like to pay tribute to my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq, not just for securing this debate but for her tireless and unwavering commitment to her constituents.\nI have had the pleasure of meeting Richard on a number of occasions: first, outside the Iranian embassy while on hunger strike, and most recently outside the Foreign Office, also while on hunger strike. I cannot begin to imagine the living hell he has endured over the past five years, yet he has only ever acted with the utmost dignity and decency. His dedication to his wife and devotion to his family are a true inspiration. The pain, the cruelty, and the unfairness to which Nazanin and many others have been subjected is, sadly, all too routine for the Iranian regime. Their fates should not be tied to geopolitics and arms deals, but they are.\nWe are all well versed in the complexities of these cases, the issues around breach of sanctions, arguments about interest, the relationship with the US. However, one thing is clear: we do owe that debt. Former Foreign Secretaries have said that we should pay that debt. The Defence Secretary has said that we should pay that debt. An international court has said that we should pay that debt. The Prime Minister said that we would pay that debt. There is a plan to free Nazanin, but the Government, for whatever reason, have so far chosen not to pursue it. That has come at an immeasurable cost to Nazanin, Richard, Gabriella and the many other families affected.\nI want to take this opportunity to urge the Minister—and I know that he cares about these matters—to do whatever it takes to prevent those who have been ripped apart from being kept apart for much longer. No one should be forced to starve themselves just to get their family back, and the last thing any of us want is to see Richard on hunger strike again. The torment must not continue, and we look to the Government to ensure that it does not.\nFlorence Eshalomi Labour/Co-operative, Vauxhall 3:28 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles. I would also like to pay tribute to my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq for securing this really important debate.\nLike many in this House, I visited Richard a couple of weeks ago outside the Foreign Office, to see him and the measures he has taken. It is something he should never have had to do. For five and a half years, Nazanin and her young family have felt the horrific pain of separation as a result of an unjust and arbitrary detention. In May last year, the previous Foreign Secretary outlined that the treatment of Nazanin “amounts to torture”. I agree with this assessment.\nNot only is Nazanin’s treatment unimaginably cruel, but our position internationally is weakened if we do not appear to have a diplomatic solution to look after our own citizens. Unfortunately, the Government have not explored the full suite of diplomatic levers to get her home, so I urge them to act today and bring this case to the fore.\nLast Christmas many of us spent a number of days away from our families and loved ones. We felt the pain of not being able to see them. This evening, after today’s debates, after we have all voted and had dinner, we will all go home to our families. We will tuck our children in. We will see our grandchildren. Nazanin will not have that; Richard will not have that; Gabriella will not have that. They have been going through this hell for years, and it is time for it to end. I hope that today the Minster will outline what key actions he will be leading to change the situation.\nStuart McDonald Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Home Affairs) 3:29 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles. I also pay tribute to Tulip Siddiq for her tremendously eloquent, passionate, and absolutely relentless pursuit of this cause. She has been an absolute credit to her constituents. I too am grateful for the opportunity to express my solidarity and support for Nazanin and her family, and I do so on behalf of my constituents in Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East. Many of them have been in touch to express their shock at the continuing torture that Nazanin endures as a hostage in Iran.\nLike pretty much everyone else in the Chamber, I have had the privilege—and it was a privilege—of meeting Richard a couple of times at the Iranian embassy and then at the Foreign Office. It is appalling that he has felt compelled to go on hunger strike twice just to seek justice for his family. I hope it gives him some heart to see the huge cross-party support on display today.\nFirst and foremost, our starting point is condemnation of the Iranian regime. How it has acted and continues to act is absolutely appalling, but today we have the opportunity to ask, and we must ask, questions of the UK Government. My constituents want to know what the strategy is. We almost need to ask whether there is a strategy. I appreciate that there are no easy answers to such situations, but we are entitled to see evidence of a concerted strategy and one that is being pursued energetically. Sadly, we are not convinced that that is the case.\nIt has been rightly asked why other countries have managed to secure releases, but the UK has not. It is beyond doubt that it is linked to the IMS debt that is legally due. Why is that not being paid? Why are the Government unable even to speak about it when previously they appeared very willing to make promises and raise expectations?\nWhile it is welcome that diplomat protection was granted to Nazanin, how has it been used by the Government? What practical difference has it made? If it is useful, will others be granted the same status? These are just some of the questions that my constituents and I would love to see answered, and we will continue to push for answers along with colleagues across the House.\nRuth Jones Shadow Minister (Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) 3:31 pm, 16th November 2021\nI am grateful to be called to speak in the debate, and I hope Richard can feel the support, warmth and love for him in the room today. I want to thank my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq for her tenacity and commitment to the Zaghari-Ratcliffe family, as well as her compassion. She has done so much to help and champion Nazanin’s case. In my constituency of Newport West, this case is personal. Richard Ratcliffe’s sister Rebecca is a constituent of mine, so I was determined to speak today. I thank Rebecca for being in touch ahead of the debate, and I thank all the people from across Newport West who have written to me about Nazanin in recent days.\nThere is no doubt that the failure to get Nazanin home with her family and friends lies at the door of No. 10 Downing Street and on the desk of this Prime Minister. I would be grateful if the Minister could tell the House exactly what the Prime Minister has done since July 2019 to get Nazanin home. Can he tell us precisely how many meetings the Prime Minister has had on the issue? Can he outline what efforts are being made to ensure Nazanin is home in time for Christmas? Nazanin’s lovely husband Richard has previously said that this Government’s inability to secure his wife’s return home is “a failure of diplomacy”. What does the Minister say to that?\nI am here in the debate as a mother and a wife, but most importantly as a parliamentarian. I feel a massive obligation to Richard, Gabriella, Rebecca and all the family to press the Minister in the strongest terms. So far this Government have failed to get Nazanin home, so I urge the Minister to get back to the Foreign Office and make it very clear to the Foreign Secretary that this simply cannot go on. We need Nazanin home in the UK, and we need her home now.\nAlyn Smith Shadow SNP Spokesperson (Foreign and Commonwealth Office) 3:33 pm, 16th November 2021\nI can be brief because there is so much agreement across the House on this point, but I put on the record the SNP’s deep appreciation for Tulip Siddiq for bringing the debate forward and her dogged pursuit of the issue. The SNP has a deep respect for the profound dignity of Richard Ratcliffe, who is obviously undergoing a living hell in this situation and deserves the cross-party support that is evident today.\nI also put on record that I do not think the Minister is part of the problem. I think he has been diligent and is carrying the can for a story of other people’s failures, because this is a story of failure. The fact that Nazanin and others have not been released when they are clearly political hostages is something that should give us all deep cause for concern. It is up to all of us to find solutions to the problem.\nI have two concrete points that I will make and be grateful for a response on. There is clearly agreement across the House that the historical £400 million debt does need to be repaid. What consideration have the Government given to translating that debt into humanitarian aid or some sort of other payment that would be a face-saving mechanism and also a more legally sound way of making that payment? Surely that would move things on.\nParallel to that—because I do not think it should just be carrot; I think we need some stick as well—what consideration have the Government given to Magnitsky sanctions on individuals within the Iranian regime to focus minds that this is an intolerable situation that cannot stand? The Minister will get great support across the House if he takes these measures forward—certainly from the SNP. We want to see Nazanin and the other people home as soon as possible.\nJeremy Corbyn Independent, Islington North 3:34 pm, 16th November 2021\nI will be brief because I very much want to hear what the Minister has to say in response. The whole House owes a debt to Tulip Siddiq for the way she has pursued this case for so long—I remember having a conversation with her when Nazanin was first taken prisoner. We should all also admire Richard for the way he has campaigned so effectively despite his suffering. As a result of that, this is the largest Westminster Hall turnout I can remember.\nObviously, the debt is owed and must be paid. If this country wants respect for behaving in the proper manner, the debt should be paid. It is not a negotiation; it is saying “This money is owed. Let’s pay it.” I believe that would help to unlock a lot of things, and help to open up a serious human rights dialogue with Iran in the future, which is necessary. While we are here today, concentrating on Nazanin’s release—which I completely support—I would put on record that we should also be calling for the release of Anoosheh Ashoori, Mehran Raoof and Morad Tahbaz, who are in a similar situation. I hope that, in the context of a changed and renewed relationship with Iran, they would be released.\nI want to see decent human rights everywhere around the world, and that obviously includes Iran. The people of Iran deserve that. We should do everything we can to ensure that happens. I hope the Minister can unlock this—maybe not completely today but I hope it can be unlocked—and that he will have got the message of the strength of feeling, from everybody across our House, for her release.\nThank you, colleagues; we finish with 45 seconds to spare before going to Front Bench wind-ups.\nPatrick Grady Scottish National Party, Glasgow North 3:36 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles; congratulations on chairing the debate so effectively. I also congratulate Tulip Siddiq on giving so many people the opportunity to share her passion and frustration over the situation that Nazanin, Richard and Gabriella are all in. We all express our personal solidarity with them today, along with that of the thousands—probably tens or hundreds of thousands—of constituents represented by the voices here.\nI hope you will indulge me, Sir Charles, if I recognise the SNP and Plaid Members who are either here or have been to visit Richard, but have not been able to speak. Those are my hon. Friends the Members for East Renfrewshire (Kirsten Oswald), for Glasgow South West (Chris Stephens), for Linlithgow and East Falkirk (Martyn Day), for Paisley and Renfrewshire North (Gavin Newlands), for North Ayrshire and Arran (Patricia Gibson), for Inverclyde (Ronnie Cowan), for Aberdeen South (Stephen Flynn), for Glasgow Central (Alison Thewliss), for Glasgow South (Stewart Malcolm McDonald), for Gordon (Richard Thomson), for Glasgow North West (Carol Monaghan), for Ochil and South Perthshire (John Nicolson), for Edinburgh East (Tommy Sheppard), and for Edinburgh North and Leith (Deidre Brock). I also pay tribute to the hon. Members for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath (Neale Hanvey), for North East Fife (Wendy Chamberlain), for Ceredigion (Ben Lake), and for North Down (Stephen Farry). We all believe that enough is enough; it is time for action.\nI first met Richard outside the Iranian embassy in 2019, and had the privilege of meeting him again outside the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office. He said it was one thing to keep vigil outside the embassy of the country that is holding his wife hostage—let us make no mistake; that is what Nazanin is, and that is the first thing the Minister ought to put on record today—but it is another to have to protest, and to go on hunger strike, outside his own Government’s buildings because of their inaction and unwillingness or inability to carry out their basic duty of care for one of their own citizens.\nThe Government repeatedly say they are doing everything they can but, as we have heard in this debate, that is patently not the case, as Liz Saville Roberts and many others have said. It is clear that the repayment of debt is a major issue, and one that, if resolved, would bring about a major shift in Iranian policy. Jeremy Hunt has said as much, and others have said how that could be done.\nSadly, the feedback that we have had—the result of the hunger strike—was a series of increasingly frustrating meetings that made the family and all campaigners feel that no progress is being made. That is despite, as Sir Iain Duncan Smith says, other countries in recent years, including the United States, Australia, France and Germany, all successfully negotiating the release of their citizens who have been arbitrarily detained in Iran—but Britain has not secured any releases.\nWe have also heard the cases of Anoosheh Ashoori, Mehran Raoof and Morad Tahbaz, all of whom, interestingly—my hon. Friend Dr Whitford said this to me in conversation—are dual nationals. I wonder if that makes the UK Government feel they have some sort of diminished responsibility for them, but a constituent of my hon. Friend the Member for West Dunbartonshire (Martin Docherty-Hughes), Jagtar Singh Johal, remains incarcerated in India, so there has to be more; more can be done and must be done.\nSaying that diplomatic protection exists is one thing, but acting on it is another. I pay tribute to the point made by Valerie Vaz, and to the fact that, week after week, she raised this at business questions. She did that on behalf of all of us in the House who take an interest in that case, and I do not think the Government would be as responsive if not for her continuing to do that. That should be recognised.\nHaving the right to diplomatic protection means there should be a right to private consular meetings and immediate access to medical examination by an independent doctor. The Government could issue a formal protest to the Iranian authorities; they could summon the Iranian Ambassador—they summoned the French Ambassador after all. They could propose to the Iranian authorities the immediate commencement of formal negotiations to resolve the dispute; they could send a detailed legal memorandum to the Iranian authorities outlining the breaches of international law arising from their detention of these British nationals; and they should assert under international law their right to provide assistance. Consular assistance is important to all of us, including my hon. Friend Hannah Bardell. I hope there will be a further debate on that in the Chamber very soon.\nThroughout the Brexit campaign and, indeed, the independence referendum campaign, we were always told how proud we should be of our British passports. Well, the British passport says:\n“Her Britannic Majesty’s Secretary of State Requests and requires in the Name of Her Majesty all those whom it may concern to allow the bearer to pass freely without let or hindrance, and to afford the bearer such assistance and protection as may be necessary”.\nThat is what it says on Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe’s passport. The question for the Government today is: what are they doing to make it a reality?\nWayne David Shadow Minister (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs) 3:41 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles. Like other Members, I congratulate my hon. Friend Tulip Siddiq on securing this debate and on all her incredible work on behalf of her constituents. Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe has been held in Iran for five and a half years. Like many here, I visited Richard, her husband, on two occasions outside the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and I want to pay tribute to him for his determination and incredible resolve.\nMany MPs and members of the public visited Richard during his hunger strike. In his final speech outside the FCDO, looking back at his time on hunger strike, he said that it had always been important to him that everyone who visited him had been united against injustice. We all pay tribute to Richard and, as others have said, the fight will go on.\nLast week, there were talks between the Government and the Iranian deputy Foreign Minister. Unfortunately, yet again, there was no progress. Nor has there been progress on the cases of other dual nationals, including Anoosheh Ashoori and Morad Tahbaz. Both men are not in good health and, like Nazanin, are being arbitrarily detained on spurious fabricated charges. Anoosheh Ashoori has not been granted diplomatic protection by the UK Government and has not been allowed out of prison. Morad Tahbaz was one of eight conservationists held by the Iranian authorities. Amnesty International has said that there was evidence that those eight had been tortured to obtain false confessions.\nEveryone here is united in believing that those detentions are wrong and totally unjust. Surely, all this has gone on long enough. For more than five years, British Governments have tried and failed to secure the release of Nazanin and the other dual nationals. If there has been a Government strategy during this time, it has clearly failed.\nA number of Members have mentioned the debt of £400 million which Britain owes Iran. The money was paid to the United Kingdom by Iran over 40 years ago for 1,500 Chieftain tanks which were never delivered. The Government have said that bank transfer transactions are not possible because of restrictions but, as we all know, if the Government had the will to settle the debt, one way or another the payment would be made.\nI am not suggesting that any sort of ransom is paid by our Government, but if the money is owed and there is no question but that that is the case, the debt should be settled. In fact, when the Prime Minister was Foreign Secretary, he made a promise to Richard Ratcliffe that the debt would be paid. Significantly, in 2014, the current Defence Secretary described the unpaid debt as “a sorry story”. He said the whole issue had been,\n“marred by double dealing and obfuscation”.—[Official Report, Westminster Hall, 11 March 2014; Vol. 577, c. 103WH.]\nMore recently, a number of distinguished former Foreign Secretaries, Conservative and Labour, have said that the debt should be paid. That is also the view of many international and legal commentators, and it is our view as well. As Jeremy Hunt, who is a former Foreign Secretary, has said, this is not about paying a ransom. It is about the UK’s credibility and doing what is right.\nOn numerous occasions, we have been told by the Government that they are doing their best and that it would be unwise to rock the boat, but it has to be said that the Government’s approach has failed abysmally. Now is surely the time to take off the kid gloves and to be vigorous and determined. Nazanin, Anoosheh Ashoori, Morad Tahbaz and all the dual nationals need to be brought back home. The time for discreet pressure and cautious words is long past. I look forward to hearing from the Minister what plan of action the Government now have for bringing our people home.\nMinister, please leave about 90 seconds at the end, to allow Ms Siddiq to wind up.\nJames Cleverly Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office) 3:45 pm, 16th November 2021\nIt is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Charles. I am grateful to Tulip Siddiq for securing the debate and for her tireless work in supporting Nazanin and Richard and in championing this issue. Although there have been times when we have disagreed, it is absolutely right that I put on the record our respect for the hon. Lady’s passion.\nJanet Daby mentioned her support for the family of her constituent, and right hon. and hon. Members have spoken about the work that they have done to support family members of those in Iran. Other Members were unable to attend the debate because of ministerial duties—I think particularly of my hon. Friend Mr Jayawardena, who speaks to me regularly about the situation and who is the constituency MP for some of the members of Richard and Nazanin’s family.\nLike all Members of the House and everyone in the country, I have huge sympathy for the families of those who are incarcerated in Iran. The Government will continue to do everything we can to resolve the situation in which they find themselves through no fault of their own. The ongoing suffering that Iran is inflicting on British dual nationals such as Anoosheh Ashoori and Morad Tahbaz is deeply distressing and rightly elicits very strong feelings from hon. Members of different parties. I cannot overstate the fact that the Government share that frustration and are unwavering in our commitment to resolve this issue. We have made it clear to the Iranian Government at every stage that we expect Iran to release all British dual nationals and allow them to return home to their families.\nIn today’s debate, we are focusing primarily on Nazanin, Richard and Gabriella. The UK Government continue to work tirelessly to secure Nazanin’s full, permanent release and ability to return home to her family. As right hon. and hon. Members are aware, Nazanin was released on furlough into the care of her parents in Tehran in 2020, but the Iranian system has refused to let her return home and has not left her alone during the period of furlough. The Government have kept up our campaign of pressure on the Iranian authorities throughout this time, and we will not relent until she is fully and permanently released.\nThe completion of Nazanin’s first sentence and the removal of her ankle tag in March 2021 should have been a time for happiness and enabled Nazanin to be reunited with Richard and Gabriella. Instead, Iran doubled down on its baseless charges against her. We have raised our objections at every stage, and when those charges were formalised at a court hearing in April, we summoned the Iranians and demanded that she be released. When her appeal was rejected in October and her sentence confirmed, we again objected in the strongest terms and demanded her release. The Foreign Secretary and this Government continue to be clear in our discussions with Iran that under no circumstances should Nazanin be returned to prison, that we would react strongly if she were and that she should instead be allowed to return home to her family immediately. The Foreign Secretary raised this point again with Foreign Minister Amir-Abdollahian, most recently on 8 November. I raised this issue again with the Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Bagheri Kani on 11 November.\nAt every stage since Nazanin was detained, the UK Government have carefully considered and assiduously pursued the courses of action that we have assessed offer the best opportunity for resolving this case. We have not pursued any course of action that we believe would be counterproductive to the release and return home of those in incarceration.\nIn March 2019, my right hon. Friend Jeremy Hunt afforded diplomatic protection to Mrs Zaghari-Ratcliffe. This formally raised it to a state-to-state issue. At that time, he also recognised that that was unlikely to yield immediate results, in part because Iran does not recognise dual national status. Unfortunately, his prediction at the time seems to have been proven right.\nSince then, this Government have continued to take further action where we judge it will help to secure full and permanent release. We constantly review what other steps are possible, and we weigh up all the diplomatic and legal tools available to secure her release.\nWill the Minister give way?\nJames Cleverly Minister of State (Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office)\nI will not. A number of hon. Members have raised the issue of the IMS debt. As I have said to the House on a number of occasions, the UK Government recognise that we have a duty to legally repay this debt and we continue to explore all legal options to resolve this 40-year-old case. [Interruption.] We have always been clear.\nI want to address the point that my right hon. Friend Lord Goldsmith made and the way his words have been interpreted, and I want to make the point absolutely clear. We have always been clear that we do not accept British dual nationals being used as diplomatic leverage. My right hon. Friend the Member for South West Surrey made the point with regard to the payment of the IMS debt that it is not easy, and he is right.\nThis Government remain committed to doing everything we can to explore all avenues to secure Nazanin’s release. We always act in what we believe to be her best interests, with the ultimate aim of securing her return home to be reunited with Richard and Gabriella.\nSince the family requested assistance from my Department, officials have provided support to Nazanin’s family and are available to be contacted 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Since Nazanin’s release on furlough, we have also been able to talk directly to her through our ambassador in Tehran. We will continue to offer that support until Nazanin is returned home.\nThis Government and I have the utmost respect and admiration—I have said this directly to him and I am more than happy to say this publicly again— for Mr Ratcliffe’s stoicism, resolve and commitment to securing Nazanin’s release and for the support of his family. Mr Ratcliffe has met with the Foreign Secretary, with me and with senior officials. We will continue to update him, and the other families who have British dual nationals in incarceration, whenever we have information on progress or whenever we feel there is an update to do with the families in detention.\nOur concern for Nazanin and her family is mirrored by our concern for all detained British nationals in Iran and their families, wherever they may be. Their welfare remains a top priority for this Government. Our ambassador in Tehran regularly lobbies on mistreatment allegations and on their health, whenever we have specific concerns or whenever a family member brings this issue to our attention. This Government will continue to lobby for the full and permanent release of those held in Iran.\nOn our international efforts, we will also collaborate with all relevant international partners to seek to put an end to Iran’s unacceptable practice of detaining foreign and dual nationals in an attempt to find some kind of diplomatic leverage. As part of a Canadian initiative on arbitrary detention, we are committed to enhancing international co-operation to prevent any state from arbitrarily detaining foreign nationals for coercive purposes.\nWayne David Shadow Minister (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs)\nOn the debt, which is obviously crucial—many Members raised it—as the Minister accepts that it will be repaid, can he give any indication of the Government’s timetable for the repayment of that debt by whatever means?\nIt is not possible to give the hon. Gentleman details on that. As I said, we recognise the legal duty to repay the debt, and we will explore all legal options for doing so.\nI once again express my deepest sympathies for Richard and his family, and indeed to all the families of those incarcerated in Iran. He has campaigned with such tireless commitment. The Government will continue to push in all the ways we can.\nThe Minister mentioned Anoosheh Ashoori, my constituent. I am grateful for that. However, the family are still waiting to hear whether they have received diplomatic protection from the Government. Is the Minister able to respond to that?\nWe of course consider this issue carefully. However, I have made the point already that—I suspect in large part because Iran does not recognise dual nationality and therefore does not recognise our authority to speak on this issue—that has proven to be of limited success in the instance of Nazanin. We will continue to hold the Iranian Government to account for their treatment of the British dual nationals in incarceration, including Anoosheh Ashoori and Morad Tahbaz. I assure the House that the Government remain committed to doing whatever we can to secure their release and will continue to work and make representations at every opportunity on their behalf.\nI remind all Members that it was the Iranian Government who arrested these British dual nationals. It was the Iranian Government who applied these bogus charges against them. It was the Iranian Government who hold these people in incarceration and prevent them from coming home. It is the Iranian Government who are wholly and solely responsible for the appalling circumstances that these people find themselves in. The British Government will continue to work tirelessly to secure their release and return home. I assure everyone in the House that that will remain our priority until they are released and are able to return home.\nI was planning to thank everyone who spoke in the debate, but the list is too long, I am afraid. MPs are very lucky that we can sit here and talk and it is recorded in Hansard, but our constituents are not always so lucky, so I will read some words from Richard Ratcliffe:\n“Today marks day 2,054 of Nazanin’s detention. We are approaching our 6th Christmas apart. A little girl has been without her mother for 5 and a half years. It did not have to be like this. Back in 2017—when the now Prime Minister scrambled following his false statements in Parliament that are still used to justify Nazanin’s second case—he promised to resolve the debt we owe to Iran which is the reason for Nazanin’s detention, effectively setting a price for her release. He has now been Prime Minister for two years, yet that promise is unkept—but remembered in Tehran. The Prime Minister did not visit me on hunger strike, though he did pass one morning without coming over. His government continues to put British citizens in harm’s way. Nazanin's story shames this country.”\nI do not think I could have put it any better. I read Richard Ratcliffe’s words so they can be recorded in Hansard.\nMotion lapsed (Standing Order No. 10(6)).","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1602478"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6849409341812134,"wiki_prob":0.3150590658187866,"text":"Rick Morton’s article “The collapse of aged care (part one)” (September 12-18) identifies the late 1990s as when the system started to go pear-shaped. One major failing is when the ratio of registered nurses (RNs) to residents was abandoned in 1998. I was the CEO of a community-based non-profit nursing home in inner Melbourne from 1982 to 1989. We had three RNs for 60 residents for a 12-hour shift (8am to 8pm) and one RN from 8pm to 8am. Although funding was tight, we always were financially stable through community support plus a board of management that included representatives from the three local councils in our referral area. Yes, we also had enrolled nurses and nursing assistants, but the primary care was always provided by skilled registered nurses. As Morton points out, the percentage of RNs has declined 8 points from 2003 to 2016 in Australian nursing homes, and 5 points for ENs over the same period. Is it any wonder the abandonment of minimum standards has been a major contributor to the recent failures of many Australian aged-care facilities.\n– Alan Johns, Queenscliff, Vic\nNews Corp destroying a free press\nI have just finished reading Mike Seccombe’s article “Murdoch grab: The other story behind AAP’s sale” (September 12-18). I have followed with interest the demise of independent journalism in this country and around the world. I would like and have tried to understand the need of Mr Murdoch and his press empire to destroy press freedom; it seems they need to hoover up anything that is not under their control. Papers such as The Saturday Paper are an important part of keeping a free press. Keep up the good work.\n– Kerry Stokes, Montrose, Vic\nCoalition must spend more\nI agree with Danielle Wood’s “Recession realities” (September 12-18) assertion that billions more dollars should be used to create jobs and stimulate the economy to turn the Covid-19 recession around, but I disagree that the money needs to be sourced from low-interest loans. According to modern monetary theory, a government of a country such as Australia, which has a sovereign currency, can never become insolvent. It does not have to borrow money nor increase taxes to fund its programs. There is a role for taxation in shaping public behaviour and redistributing wealth and power. There is a definite limit on how many programs can be physically resourced, and that is the source of anxiety about inflationary impacts. But our rate of unemployment is a choice, set by our government. (In the 1970s, an unemployment rate above 2 per cent was considered politically suicidal.) On April 30, 2020, economics professor Bill Mitchell calculated that $26.5 billion would pay for a direct jobs guarantee that would reduce the unemployment rate by 6 percentage points. That’s good for society, individuals’ mental and physical health, the environment and the economy.\n– Kip Fuller, West Croydon, SA\nChipping away at forests\nWhile Tasmania didn’t suffer the Black Summer bushfires experienced on the mainland, Drew Rooke’s article (“Trees of strife”, September 12-18) suggests we all suffer the same feral logging industry. On both sides of Bass Strait it claims to be crucial to its state’s economic existence despite wildly inflated claims of jobs provided and economic returns. In Tasmania, at the height of its forestry frenzy, close to 94 per cent of its huge native forest harvest went to woodchips, yielding virtually no return to the public owners. Threatened species and giant trees received much the same solicitude as any other economic inconvenience, and regulatory breaches usually occasioned no more than a “sorry”. Victoria’s recently announced cessation of old-growth forest logging may have less to do with moral conscience, or economic rationality, than with the fact less than 10 per cent survives.\nStates too slow on logging\nIt’s shock enough to read about the logging of recently burnt forests. After the stories of giant trees being felled with the logging business owner crying “it’s so hard to log within boundaries”, the greater shock is to realise Victoria has a plan to end native tree logging – by 2030! We know most timber is cut from plantation-grown trees. Logging of native forests in all states must end right now, while there are still trees left standing.\nDon’t write off the writing\nIn your article “Collecting thoughts” (September 5-11) about a Covid-19 museum collection, the sign in a house window in the accompanying photo is described as “in a child’s scrawl”. Since each large letter has been neatly and carefully printed and spaced, an apology to the child would be a gallant gesture.\n– Christopher Francis Clarke, Kambah, ACT\nCryptic clues headed south\nIt took several attempts before I solved the interrelated clues 13 across and 17 across and 20 down in Mungo’s intriguing crossword (September 5-11). June 21 is not the winter solstice but, in fact, the summer solstice. The equinoxes and solstices are named for the northern hemisphere and are (astronomical) technical nomenclature; they should not be casually redefined by editors, journalists and crossword setters no matter how erudite, entertaining or antipodean. It would greatly please me to see the terms June solstice, September equinox et cetera used, as they have the advantage of being unambiguous.\n– Gary Hovey, Braidwood, NSW","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line44586"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7309799194335938,"wiki_prob":0.7309799194335938,"text":"Selling Black Books Since 1997 ★\nBlack Books are for Everyone\nReceive Our Text Alerts\nWilliam Jelani Cobb\n(share)\nWilliam Jelani Cobb is a 1-Time AALBC.com Bestselling Author\nWilliam Jelani Cobb, Ph.D. is an author and educator.\nHe specializes in post-Civil War African American history, 20th-century American politics and the history of the Cold War. He is also a contributing writer for Essence magazine, an essayist and fiction writer and the author of To The Break of Dawn: A Freestyle on the Hip Hop Aesthetic as well as The Devil & Dave Chappelle and Other Essays. He is editor of The Essential Harold Cruse: A Reader, which was listed as a 2002 Notable Book of The Year by Black Issues Book Review.\nBorn and raised in Queens, NY, he was educated at Jamaica High School, Howard University and Rutgers University where he received his doctorate in American History.\nDr. Cobb's forthcoming monograph Antidote to Revolution: African American Anticommunism and the Struggle for Civil Rights, 1931-1957 examines the nexus of the two dominant themes of American politics in the 20th century: the quest for racial democracy and the state's opposition to Communism.\nHis reviews and essays have appeared in The Washington Post, Emerge, The Progressive, The Washington City Paper, ONE Magazine, and Alternet.org. He has contributed to a number of anthologies including In Defense of Mumia, Testimony, Mending the World and Beats, Rhymes and Life. He has also been a featured commentator on National Public Radio and a number of other national broadcast outlets.\nDr. Cobb has been the recipient of fellowships from the Fulbright and Ford Foundation.\nDr. Cobb is The Ira A. Lipman Professor of Journalism at Columbia University, Dr. Cobb was previously an associate professor of history and director of the Institute for African American Studies at the University of Connecticut. Since 2015, he has been a staff writer at The New Yorker.\nAre you the author profiled here? Email us your official website or Let us host your primary web presence.\nWilliam Jelani Cobb Has Written 1 Article(s) for AALBC.com\nObama Rises, Old Guard Civil Rights Leaders Scowl\n6 Books by William Jelani Cobb\nThe Matter of Black Lives\nThe Substance Of Hope\nThe Devil and Dave Chappelle\nTo the Break of Dawn\nAntidote to Revolution: African American Anticommunism and the Struggle for Civil Rights, 1931-1954\nAntidote to Revolution\n(Unavailable for Sale)\nThe Essential Harold Cruse\n★ About Us ⋅ FAQ ⋅ Privacy Policy ⋅ Advertise ⋅ Advertiser Login ⋅ Store Policies ⋅ Copyright © 1997–2022, All Rights Reserved, AALBC.com, LLC ✉ ☎","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1602704"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5120338797569275,"wiki_prob":0.4879661202430725,"text":"Via Pegasus Books\nHow Do Some Authors “Lose Control” of Their Characters?\nIs it the Mysterious Work of the Unconscious, or the Mechanized Brain?\nBy Jim Davies\nMany fiction writers say that their characters seem to have minds of their own. Writers sometimes report that they feel that the events in their novel, or even the words themselves, are being dictated to them outside of their conscious control. Some writers report that they need their characters to do something, presumably for some plot reason, but the character “refuses” to do it.\nThis feeling, the “illusion of independent agency,” is quite common. I was at a writers’ panel and one author said that her characters wouldn’t do what she said, and another writer said that he was in complete control of his characters. Marjorie Taylor surveyed 50 fiction authors and found that a full 92 percent of them experienced this phenomenon of their characters having their own agency. Some writers even report that writing feels more like dictating what their characters do and say than creating the story deliberately. Some characters feel so real authors have imaginary conversations with them, much like children have conversations with imaginary friends.\nJohn Foxwell’s research found that 69 percent of authors hear voices of their characters, and 42 percent can enter into dialogue with them. Sixty-five percent say they can act on their own accord.\nMary Watkins has documented evidence of many famous authors who insist that their characters are autonomous and out of their control. For example, Philip Pullman, author of the His Dark Materials trilogy, reports negotiating a deal with his character Mrs. Coulter to get her to spend time in a cave in one of his books. Some authors have reported that their characters give them unsolicited advice about the writer’s own life!\nSeventy-one percent of authors say their characters become more autonomous over time. After about 30 thousand words, some of the main characters seem to take on lives of their own. One author said, “I nowadays just plan my books halfway as I know that in the middle of the writing process the characters will take over the story so my planning will be useless anyway.”\nThe perceived autonomy of these characters is very strong. Some authors even insist that one can’t be any good as a writer unless this is the case. One author said that without their main characters becoming autonomous, the characters become shallow archetypes.\nBut sometimes it can get in the way of the story the author is trying to write, when their characters refuse to behave and do what is needed for the book. One author said: “They develop their own narratives, rapidly accumulating their own histories and anecdotes—if unchecked, I have had to kill off characters to stop a story digressing out of sight.”\nJust as authors sometimes complain that their characters will sometimes act in ways they do not like, imaginary companions can be very annoying to the children that create them.\nWhen Alice Walker was writing The Color Purple, not only did her characters seem to choose their own actions in the plot, but they regularly visited her and commented, sometimes unwelcomely, on Walker’s own life.\nWhen children feel that their imaginary friends have minds of their own, it could be like fiction authors who experience the illusion of independent agency—their imaginary friends are so familiar to them that they no longer feel like their own creations. Intriguingly, the writers who experienced the illusion were about twice as likely to have had imaginary friends as children.\nWe don’t even need to turn to imaginary companions or to fiction authors to find imagined characters acting with their own agency—most of us experience such characters every time we dream: we have imagined experiences of vivid characters we can’\nt consciously control. This is even true for lucid dreamers. Composer Robert Schumann believed that his compositions were communicated to him by other (dead) composers, such as Beethoven.\nJust as authors sometimes complain that their characters will sometimes act in ways they do not like, imaginary companions can be very annoying to the children that create them. At the core is the issue of control. Even though imaginary companions are make-believe and the people who have them know it, sometimes the friends feel out of control, or can even be downright frightening. One 14-year-old boy slept with his hands covered for three years out of fear that a giant would step out of a picture on the wall to cut off his hands.\nIt’s unclear whether this giant counts as an imaginary companion, because he does little more than scare the boy, but the normally friendly imaginary companions of children can not bother to accompany a child on a trip, sometimes fail to show for playtime, talk too loudly, not share, and so on. One child’\ns day was ruined when his imaginary companion, a pony, had made other plans and could not accompany the child to a horse show.\nJennifer Mauro found that 34 percent of children with imaginary companions say they get angry with the children sometimes, and parents witness arguments between the child and the imaginary friend.\nBut most of the time children are in conscious control. Marjorie Taylor tried to get children in the lab to be envious of their imaginary companions. They gave the companions a present and informed the children that the companion refused to share. The experiment had to be discontinued, because the children got annoyed with the researcher rather than with the companion! They don’\nt abide other people trying to control their companions.\nSo why do children sometimes seem to be in control of their companions and sometimes not? Why do some characters feel in control by their authors and other times not? We distinguish hallucination from other imagination, in part, because we are in control of what we imagine—in hallucination and dreaming, for example, we have little or no control. So if these children are simply imagining their friend, why not simply make the friend behave? Somehow, the friend seems, to the child, to have its own autonomy.\nIt could be that, in the cases of imaginary companions and well-fleshed out characters that authors imagine, the person’s idea of what the character is like is so detailed and well-understood that the mental processing done to explain and predict what these characters say and do becomes completely unconscious. It’\ns not that the character is out of control of the person who imagined them, but they are out of control of the conscious part of the mind that created them. The character’s actions are determined by the deep tides of the unconscious ocean of their creator’s mind.\nTo understand my interpretation of this phenomenon, it’s important to understand a pervasive ability of the human mind known as “automatization,”or making things automatic. When you do something complex for the first time, it’s difficult or downright impossible—recall learning to drive, playing pinball, or dancing salsa. What happens is that over time the task becomes automatic. You can then do the task pretty well, often without even thinking about it.\nYou might have experienced meaning to stop at a store on the way home from work, but then finding yourself home, without having thought about the ride at all during your trip. While you were driving, you were thinking about other things. You might have started out with the intention to stop at the store on the way home but ended up not doing it. Your automatized memories got you home.\nJust like all automatized things, it feels like it’s coming from nowhere. The characters are being thought about by the old brain, unconsciously.\nWhen I was first learning to swing dance, it seemed impossible. If I paid attention to my feet, my hands did the wrong thing. If I turned my partner correctly, I’d lose the beat and not know where to put my feet. But after doing it for many years, I got to the point where I could do the basics without any conscious control at all. I could think about what was coming up in the song, so that I could time a dip perfectly. I could hold a philosophical conversation while swing dancing at a fast clip. And I met my wife this way. Such is the power of automatization. It can help you get married.\nActivities get so well learned that they become fast and unconscious. It is most obvious in physical tasks, such as sports and driving. It could be that automatization can also happen to reasoning—that is, doing things that don’\nt just involve moving your body. Sometimes, for example, I hear an argument from someone, and I instantly know that there’s something wrong with it. When asked to elaborate, I figure out why the argument was wrong as I talk it out, and usually my feeling that there was something wrong with the argument was right on.\nBut what’s interesting is that I was convinced that it was wrong before I was conscious of the reasons why! What is probably happening here is that there is an automatized, unconscious reasoning going on, and only when I have to talk about it am I required to use my conscious mind to reconstruct, or invent, a justification for the feeling.\nFiction authors need to create whole people in their minds, including appearance, mannerisms, culture, ways of speaking, attitudes, preferences, personalities, goals, and so on. At first, this can be cognitively demanding, but over time, thinking about this (fictional) person becomes automatized. Because the author is no longer conscious of the thinking process that determines what the character would want, do, or say, it feels like the character is a person telling her (in her mind) what’s what. It is similar to a mental models you create of people you know very well.\nYou instantly know that your spouse would like this book or not like this restaurant. It could be that the same trend is happening with imaginary companions and novelists’ autonomous characters: they start out as a conscious creation, but then when they become automatized, they can start “misbehaving.” So what might be happening with these authors is that they start out consciously thinking about a character, and after they get a good mental model of what the character is like, it becomes automatized, so that they no longer need to consciously reason out what the character would do in a particular situation, how they would react to things. Just like all automatized things, it feels like it’\ns coming from nowhere. The characters are being thought about by the old brain, unconsciously.\nThe new and old brain distinction is important for understanding imagination and creativity, because often we have no idea where our creative ideas come from. The old brain is largely unconscious, so ideas that bubble up from its depths seem to come from nowhere. Long before a complex understanding of the unconscious mind, the ancient Greeks attributed these ideas, which seemingly came from nowhere, as being delivered by gods, the muses.\nBut not all of these unbidden ideas come from ancient evolved systems. Because we can automatize practiced actions, we can render them unconscious, too. My ability to swing dance without thinking about it certainly isn’t an evolved behavior!\nExcerpted from Imagination: The Science of Your Mind’s Greatest Power. Used with the permission of the publisher, Pegasus Books. Copyright © 2019 by Jim Davies.\ncreativityfictional charactersimaginationImagination: The Science of Your Mind's Greatest PowerJim DaviesPegasus Booksthe writing lifeWriting process\nJim Davies\nJim Davies is a professor at the Institute of Cognitive Science at Carleton University. He is the director of the Science of Imagination Laboratory and the co-author on two editions of The GNU Scientific Library Reference Manual. He is the author of Riveted: The Science of Why Jokes Make Us Laugh, Movies Make Us Cry, and Religion Makes Us Feel One with the Universe. He lives in Minnesota.\nUnearthing the Stories of Australia's Working Class\nThe Pain, Hidden in Plain Sight, of John Cheever's Darkest Work\nI grew up in a working-class suburb of Melbourne, Australia. My parents were Sicilian. They left school at the end of Grade...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1353962"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9643228054046631,"wiki_prob":0.9643228054046631,"text":"Bueckers scores 22 but injured in UConn win over Irish\nby: PAT EATON-ROBB, Associated Press\nSTORRS, Conn. (AP) — UConn won its rivalry game against Notre Dame but may have lost last year’s national player of the year to a knee injury in the process.\nPaige Bueckers scored 22 points before going down with just seconds left in No. 2 UConn’s 73-54 victory over No. 24 Notre Dame on Sunday.\nBueckers, who is averaging a little more than 20 points per game, was dribbling up the court in the final minute of this one when she stumbled, twisting her ankle and coming down awkwardly on her left leg. She went to the floor a few seconds later and had to be carried off the court.\nCoach Geno Auriemma said she injured her left knee but did not appear to twist it. He said the extent of the injury won’t be known until scans are completed on Monday.\n“The initial report is, she might have hyperextended it,” Auriemma said. “But I think the first thing that goes through your mind is the worst thing.”\nOlivia Nelson-Ododa added 14 points and 13 rebounds for the Huskies (5-1), who dominated underneath, outrebounding Notre Dame 45-32 and outscored the Fighting Irish 28-16 in the paint.\nUConn freshman Caroline Ducharme scored a season-best 14 points and Aaliyah Edwards chipped in with 10.\nFreshman Sonia Citron, coming off a 29-point game against Michigan State, scored 19 points for Notre Dame (7-2), which had its final lead at 10-9 in the first quarter.\nThe Huskies led by 10 points at halftime and by 12 early in the second half. But Notre Dame used a 6-2 run to cut the lead to 51-44 headed into the fourth quarter.\nThe Huskies took over from there. A 3-pointer from Bueckers made it 56-44 and UConn scored the first 13 points of the final quarter to put the game away.\n“We played competitively for three quarters,” Notre Dame coach Niele Ivey said. “And in the fourth quarter they ran away with it. I think it’s a credit to UConn. They are a really great team. Unfortunately, we got outrebounded and I thought that was the difference.”\nUConn fell behind early, before going on a 7-0 run to take the lead for good. The Huskies ended the first quarter leading 16-12.\nA 3-point play by Nelson-Ododa after an offensive rebound gave UConn a 28-23 lead and sparked a run that saw the Huskies score 10 of the final 12 points in the half.\nA long pass from Bueckers to Christyn Williams, who laid the ball in just before the buzzer, sent the Huskies into halftime leading 35-25.\nUConn had 14 of its 18 second-chance points in the first half, while holding the Irish to just four during the game.\n“We definitely celebrated the win, but we were definitely more concerned about Paige and just how she was feeling and her status right now,” Nelson-Ododa said. “You know, we’re praying for the best and praying for good news and just kind of waiting for the outcome.”\nNotre Dame: This was Ivey’s first game against UConn as a head coach. The Irish are now 13-39 all-time against the Huskies, 0-9 in the month of December and 9-11 over the last 20 meetings.\nUConn: Before the game, UConn dedicated a monument outside of Gampel Pavilion honoring the school’s Olympians, including 16 former Husky women’s basketball players. Eleven of those won gold medals, led by Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi, who each have five.\nAuriemma was asked why Bueckers was on the floor in the final minute of what turned out to be a 19-point win. He said there is no good explanation for that.\n“She never wants to come out,” he said. “She’s a pain in the (behind) to have on the bench, ‘cause all she does is complain about why she’s not playing and we’ve made a concerted effort in the last three or four games to get her some rest during the game.”\nUConn likely will remain near the top of the poll, but how long it stays there may depend on the extent of Bueckers’ injury. Notre Dame’s losses have come to No. 20 Georgia in overtime and to UConn, which may be enough to push them outside the Top 25.\nNotre Dame: Continues its road trip with a visit to Valparaiso on Wednesday.\nUConn: Travels to Atlanta to face Georgia Tech on Thursday.\nMore AP women’s college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-college-basketball and https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-womens-college-basketball-poll and https://twitter.com/AP_Top25\nConnecticut’s Paige Bueckers (5) is helped off the court by Amari DeBerrym, left, after injuring herself in the second half of an NCAA college basketball…\nConnecticut’s Paige Bueckers (5) is helped off the court by Amari DeBerrym, left, after injuring herself in the second half of an NCAA college basketball game against Notre Dame, Sunday, Dec. 5, 2021, in Storrs, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1868068"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7265576124191284,"wiki_prob":0.2734423875808716,"text":"Jerry McBrien\nWriter and Lecturer in Military History\nNotes from Recent Lectures\nAustralia’s War: 80 years ago this week\nJerry’s new book “War in the Pacific: The First Six Months” is now available at all good ebook stores.\nJerry McBrien grew up in England at a time when World War 2 was recent and familiar history, and many people and the landscape still bore its scars.\nIn his twenties he settled in Australia, where he worked in strategy and planning roles in the chemical and power industries.\nNow retired on the Sunshine Coast, he spends most of his time writing and lecturing on the history of the Second World War, particularly the War in the Pacific, which has been an interest since he arrived in Australia.\nHis book War in the Pacific: The First Six Months―Defending Australia tells this dramatic story to a new audience and celebrates the efforts of those who fought and won the war, from the infantrymen to the joint chiefs of staff.\nIn his spare time he drives an old sports car around the Sunshine Coast Hinterland and boats in Pumicestone Passage.\nCopyright Jerry McBrien – All rights reserved\nJerry McBrien A WordPress.com Website.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1009937"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6718692779541016,"wiki_prob":0.6718692779541016,"text":"France and Germany Order EU States to Open Up Borders for Mass Migration\nEU states must pay fee if they don't accept refugees\nBy: Jacob Pramuk |@NeonNettle\non 7th December 2018 @ 4.00pm\nSince the European migrant crisis started back in 2015, there has been growing tension among EU members regarding asylum seekers and who will take them.\nThe massive influx of refugees to places like Italy, who reportedly turned boats of migrants away and sent them to the European Union allies, has instilled public discontent over Brussels' immigration policy.\nNow European Union member states who, like Italy, refused to take refugees, will have to pay a fee to EU budget or toward development projects in Africa, according to a report presented by France and Germany.\n[RELATED] Angela Merkel to The UK: 'Surrender Your Sovereignty To The EU'\nIn a separate scramble to stop intra-EU clashes over migration, Berlin and Paris submitted an amended version of a migration management mechanism, dealing with various migrant-related issues.\nThe document, obtained by Reuters, recommends a new formula for EU states obligation to take refugees, according to which first countries would carry the liability for migrants.\nThe Franco-German initiative also proposes extending strict rules on how to deal with migrants who entered in the EU after being rescued at sea.\nAccording to Sputnik: The \"alternative measures of solidarity\" that could be forced upon member states in the event they decline to provide asylum seek to end the disputes between the West and East in the bloc as the former has been willing to take in refugees while the latter has denied giving shelter to migrants.\nThe document also recommends that the EU would need to create a mechanism to avoid a circumstance when all European Union states prefer to pay instead of accepting migrants.\nNo specific details regarding such a mechanism have been provided.\nIn 2015-2016 the EU experienced a huge influx of migrants and refugees. In 2015 more than one million migrants arrived in Europe, of which 250, 000 people came by sea.\nThe main migrant entry-points into the EU were in southern and eastern EU member states, such as Italy, Greece, Spain, etc.\nEU authorities, to deal with the burden the migration created, established a quota system, according to which all EU states have to share liability for receiving migrants.\nWhile the bloc's western states, such as Germany, were prepared to give shelter to refugees, eastern countries, such as Hungary and Poland strongly opposed the decision.\nThe UN is set to hold a conference on migrants on 10-11 December 2018, where the participant states are expected to sign The UN Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration.\nThe Compact has generated disagreement among EU states, leading some of them to reject it.\nSo far the US, Austria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia, Bulgaria, and Lithuania have rejected the UN Compact.\nIn November Italian Deputy Premier Matteo Salvini stated that Italy would not take part in the forthcoming conference, however, noting that \"the floor of parliament must debate it. The Italian government will allow parliament to decide\".\n[RELATED] Journalist Who Exposed Misuse of EU Funds Found Brutally Murdered","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1696483"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8983177542686462,"wiki_prob":0.8983177542686462,"text":"Czech Philharmonic • Jakub Hrůša\nCzech Philharmonic\nIntroducing himself in Prague in Elgar’s Cello Concerto is 22-year-old British cellist Sheku Kanneh-Mason, who won the BBC Young Musician award in 2016. Recently, Jakub Hrůša has been discovering one important composition after another by Josef Suk. This time he chose Epilogue, a late, mature, and highly sophisticated work in praise of love.\nSubscription series C\nDuration of the programme 1 hod 30 min\nCello Concerto in E minor, Op. 85\nAdagio, moderato (attacca)\nLento. Allegro molto\nAllegro. Moderato\n— Intermission —\nEpilogue, a symphonic composition for orchestra, large and small mixed choirs, soprano, baritone, and bass, Op. 37 (40')\nFootsteps (Adagio)\nMothers’ Song (Andante semplice)\nFrom Eternity to Eternity (Allegro appassionato)\nMysterious Wonder and Restlessness (Adagio maestoso e mesto)\nPilgrim – Bringer of Consolation (Adagio molto tranquillo)\nSheku Kanneh-Mason cello\nAlžběta Poláčková soprano\nJiří Brückler baritone\nJan Šťáva bass\nCzech Philharmonic Choir of Brno\nPetr Fiala choirmaster\nJakub Hrůša conductor\n20 Jan 2022 Thursday 7.30pm\nAvailable seats\n21 Jan 2022 Friday 7.30pm\n22 Jan 2022 Saturday 3.00pm\nPrice from 220 to 1100 Kč\nTickets and contact information\nCustomer Service of Czech Philharmonic\nE-mail: info@czechphilharmonic.cz\nCustomer Service office hours are on weekdays from 09:00 a.m. to 06:00 p.m.\nWhen Josef Suk wrote his last composition Sousedská in 1935 for an outdoor ensemble from the village where he was born, he inscribed in the score the comment: “Exemplifying a composition that demands skill from neither the composer nor the players.” This is just one example of Suk’s peculiar sense of humour. At the same time, Suk was very much aware that the path to the highest artistic standards was difficult for both composers and performers. For example, in his Cello Concerto Edward Elgar created what is today one of one of the most famous works for that instrument, but the failed premiere obscured the concerto’s exceptional quality, and as a result the concerto did not become widely known until many years after the composer’s death.\nSheku Kanneh-Mason violoncello\nSheku Kanneh-Mason is already in great demand worldwide. He became a household name in 2018 after performing at the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex at Windsor Castle, a performance watched by nearly two billion people globally. Sheku initially garnered renown as the winner of the 2016 BBC Young Musician competition, the first Black musician to take the title. He has released two chart-topping albums on the Decca Classics label, Inspiration in 2018 and Elgar in 2020.\nSheku has made debuts with orchestras including the Seattle Symphony, the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, NDR Elbphilharmonie Orchestra, the Atlanta Symphony, Japan Philharmonic, BBC Symphony, London Philharmonic, and Baltimore Symphony orchestras. Highlights this season include performances with the Cleveland Orchestra, Orchestre de Paris, New York Philharmonic, and London Philharmonic orchestras.\nIn recital, Sheku has performed at venues and festivals around the world from Wigmore Hall London to Carnegie Hall New York. Current and future seasons include appearances at the Barbican Hall London, Berliner Philharmonie, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, Suntory Hall Tokyo, and tours of North America, Italy, South Korea and China.\nDuring the Covid-19 lockdown in spring 2020, Sheku and his siblings performed in twice-weekly livestreams from their family home in Nottingham to audiences of hundreds of thousands around the globe.\nSheku began learning the cello at the age of six and now continues his studies with Hannah Roberts at the Royal Academy of Music in London as a Bicentenary Fellow. Sheku was appointed a Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2020 New Year’s Honours List. He plays a Matteo Goffriller cello from 1700 which is on indefinite loan to him.\nAlžběta Poláčková is one of today’s most sought-after Czech sopranos. The steady, radiant tone of her instantly recognisable soprano voice lies comfortably on the border between the lyric and the dramatic.\nAs a opera soloist at the National Theatre in Prague as well as at theatres outside of Prague and on foreign stages, she has performed many title roles in operas in a broad range of styles. She has also presented herself to the public at several festivals in this country and abroad (including the Glyndebourne Opera Festival and Smetana’s Litomyšl) under the leadership of important conductors. In the role of Jitka she took part in a recording of Smetana’s opera Dalibor with the BBC Symphony Orchestra led by Jiří Bělohlávek. Alžběta has collaborated with many important stage directors including Robert Carsen, Alice Nellis, and Calixto Bieito. Alongside Rolando Villazón she took part in the filming of the documentary “Rolando meets Don Giovanni”.\nShe was born in Prague, where she completed secondary school and then studied at the Academy of Performing Arts in the studio of René Tuček. She is a laureate of several international singing competitions.\nThe baritone Jiří Brückler completed his vocal studies at the Prague Conservatoire under Jiří Kotouč and at the Academy of Performing Arts under Roman Janál. Already as a student he was making guest appearances at the State Opera in Prague. Victory at the Antonín Dvořák International Singing Competition in Karlovy Vary earned him the opportunity of long-term engagements with opera houses in his native Liberec, and in Pilsen and Brno, where he appeared at first in minor roles. Later he obtained a key engagement at Prague’s State Opera and National Theatre. He is gradually building up a repertoire of leading baritone roles in the worldwide repertoire – The Marriage of Figaro, The Magic Flute, The Barber of Seville, Cinderella, Faust, Romeo and Juliet, Eugene Onegin, The Jacobin, and Werther. He has been repeatedly honoured with nominations for Thalia Awards (for portrayals of Silvia in Pagliacci and of Rodrigo in Don Carlos). He also sings in operas by Janáček, Martinů, and Britten as well as new works by contemporary composers. Jiří Brückler has been honoured by invitations to collaborate with the world famous artists José Cura and Plácido Domingo.\nJan Štáva (*1988, Brno) has been an ensemble member of the Janáček Opera of the National Theatre in Brno since 2010. His repertoire there includes the roles of Baron Ochs (Der Rosenkavalier), Leporello (Don Giovanni), and Kecal (The Bartered Bride). In 2011 he made his debut at the National Theatre in Prague as Osmin (Die Entführung aus dem Serail). Since then, he has appeared there in a number of other roles such as Leporello (Don Giovanni) and Figaro (The Marriage of Figaro). The stages where he has appeared abroad include the Opéra de Paris, the opera house in Montpellier, the Angers-Nantes Opéra, and the Opéra National de Lorraine in Nancy. He has appeared in concert in collaborations with such orchestras as the BBC Symphony Orchestra, the Orchestre National de Lyon, and the Philharmonie Leipzig. His concert repertoire includes bass parts in works by J. S. Bach (St John Passion), J. Haydn (The Creation), W. A. Mozart, A. Dvořák, and G. Verdi (Requiem). This season, his appearances will include Papageno (The Magic Flute) at Brno’s National Theatre.\nThe Czech Philharmonic Choir of Brno choir\nThe Czech Philharmonic Choir of Brno stands at the pinnacle of the field of choral music at home and in a worldwide context. Conductors, orchestras, and soloists who have worked with the choir speak of it in superlatives. Above all, music critics acclaim its compact sound and broad range of expression. The choir appears at most of Europe’s prestigious festivals and at important concerts. Because of its excellence, each year it gives more than 90 concerts at home and abroad. It collaborates with the world’s top orchestras and conductors. It has an extensive discography and has earned a number of important awards: a 2007 Echo Klassik Award from Germany as ensemble of the year, a 2011 Tokusen Award from Japan for a recording of Dvořák’s Requiem, and a 2019 Classic Prague Award in the Vocal Performance category for its interpretation of Janáček’s Glagolitic Mass. The man behind the choir’s successes is its founder, choirmaster, and director Petr Fiala. The assistant choirmaster is Michael Dvořák.\nChoirmaster Petr Fiala graduated from the Brno Conservatoire (piano, composition, conducting) and the Janáček Academy of Performing Arts in the studio of Jan Kapr. Besides teaching (he has been a professor at the Brno Conservatoire) and composing (he has written about 180 compositions), he has been devoting himself intensively to the work of a choirmaster and conductor for over 50 years. Petr Fiala is a laureate of many national and international competitions. He receives invitations to guest conduct Czech and foreign orchestras and choirs. In 1990 he founded the Czech Philharmonic Choir of Brno, and under his leadership it has earned itself a place among Europe’s best choral ensembles. In 2009 the Czech Episcopal Conference honoured Fiala with the Order of Sts. Cyril and Methodius for outstanding achievements as a conductor and composer. In 2013 he received the Brno City Prize in the field of music for his many years of artistic activity and for representing the city of Brno, and in 2016 he won the South Bohemia Region Prize for significant representation of the South Bohemia Region in the area of culture.\nJakub Hrůša principal guest conductor\nJakub Hrůša is Chief Conductor of the Bamberg Symphony, and Principal Guest Conductor of the Czech Philharmonic and the Orchestra dell’Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia.\nHe is a frequent guest with the world’s greatest orchestras, including the Vienna, Berlin, Munich and New York Philharmonics; Bavarian Radio, NHK, Chicago and Boston Symphonies; Leipzig Gewandhaus, Lucerne Festival, Royal Concertgebouw, Mahler Chamber and The Cleveland Orchestras; Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, and Tonhalle Orchester Zürich. He has led opera productions for the Vienna State Opera, Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, Opéra National de Paris, and Zurich Opera. He has also been a regular guest with Glyndebourne Festival and served as Music Director of Glyndebourne On Tour for three years.\nHis recording of Martinů and Bartók violin concertos with Bamberg Symphony was nominated for a Gramophone Award, and his Dvořák Violin Concerto CD with the Bavarian Radio Symphony was nominated for a Grammy Award. In 2020, his recordings of Dvořák and Martinů Piano Concertos with Bamberg Symphony, and Vanessa from Glyndebourne, won BBC Music Magazine Awards. Other releases include Dvořák and Brahms Symphonies with Bamberg Symphony, Suk’s Asrael with the Bavarian Radio Symphony, and Dvořák’s Requiem and Te Deum with the Czech Philharmonic.\nHrůša studied at Prague’s Academy of Performing Arts, where his teachers included Jiří Bělohlávek. He is President of the International Martinů Circle and The Dvořák Society. He was the inaugural recipient of the Sir Charles Mackerras Prize, and in 2020 was awarded the Antonín Dvořák Prize by the Czech Republic’s Academy of Classical Music, and – with Bamberg Symphony – the Bavarian State Prize for Music.\nThe English composer Edward Elgar grew up in the family of a church organist who owned a shop that sold sheet music and instruments. Little Edward began playing the piano at school, and he learned to play the organ by watching his father. He also borrowed a variety of instruments from the family shop and taught himself to play them without receiving any kind of instruction, so he soon mastered not only piano and organ, but also violin, viola, cello, and bassoon. He also began composing in a similar manner. At age 16 he became a free-lance musician, so he got experience mainly as an instrumentalist, church organist, and conductor. He mostly composed choral music, but he did not achieve true renown as a composer until he reached the age of 42, when he wrote his Enigma Variations, Op. 36. The great conductor Hans Richter held the work in high esteem and prepared and led its premiere. The idea of creating a set of variations with a secret, “encoded” theme is indicative of Elgar’s unusual imaginativeness, and as a self-taught composer, he was not under any restraints. The work is a covert tribute to the composer’s wife Alice and to the friends who supported Elgar during the years of uncertainty as he got his start as a composer.\nAnother of Elgar’s most important works is the Cello Concerto in E minor, Op. 85. Just choosing the cello as a solo instrument represents a great challenge for composers. Antonín Dvořák may have put it most succinctly, once warning his composition pupils that unlike the piano or violin, which are capable of carrying themselves in front of an orchestra as ideal solo instruments, the cello does not possess comparable tonal qualities: “it whines up high and mumbles down low”. It is possible that after Elgar’s Violin Concerto (1907–1910), he was taking on a challenge as Dvořák had done—dealing with a difficult compositional task. The solutions the composer selected definitely hint at this. Elgar chose an unusual four-movement layout that differs from most other concertos and is more typical of chamber music, and Elgar’s concerto has a great deal in common with the chamber music genre. The composer deals with the cello’s sonic limitations by using a very delicate instrumental touch, and the music itself is in fact very personal, even intimate in character. Elgar’s musical language achieves perfection in its musical expression of pain and sorrow. The melancholy phrases that descend ever more deeply into despair and gloom are the key to the interpreter’s grasp of the entire work. The concerto dates from a time of great resignation immediately after the First World War. The composer himself was battling illness, but above all he was affected by the decline of his beloved wife’s health. She managed to attend the concerto’s premiere, but she died the following year. Although the premiere on 27 October 1919 featured the superb cellist Felix Salmond, the London Symphony Orchestra, and Elgar conducting, the performance did not turn out well because of a lack of sufficient rehearsal time. The failed premiere proved to be too much for the concerto. Despite the efforts of many outstanding cellists, it was not until 1965 that the work gained wide recognition thanks to the legendary recording made by Jacqueline du Pré, who was 20 years old at the time.\nEpilogue, a symphonic work for orchestra, large choir, small choir, soprano, baritone, and bass, Op. 37\nThe Czech composer, violinist, and teacher Josef Suk received his basic musical training from his father, a village teacher. The talented boy then got the best possible education at the Prague Conservatoire, where he first studied violin under Antonín Bennewitz, then composition under Karel Stecker and Antonín Dvořák. This is one reason for the unusual maturity of even Suk’s early works. The popular Serenade for Strings in E flat major, Op. 6 even captivated Johannes Brahms, who recommended the work to his publisher Fritz Simrock, although the composer was just 18 years old. As a recent conservatoire graduate, Suk also had other ambitious; immediately after finishing their studies, Suk and some classmates founded a string quartet, which soon earned recognition at home and around Europe. For a full four decades, Josef Suk played second violin in the Bohemian Quartet, performing on prestigious stages and spending a great deal of time on tour in trains and hotels. It is incredible that with such a busy schedule, he was able to focus on composing. His works were attracting the interest of performers and audiences. And Antonín Dvořák—Suk’s former teacher and now his father-in-law—was now satisfied. For example, Dvořák declared Suk’s incidental music to Zeyer’s play Radúz and Mahulena to be “music from heaven”.\nDvořák died in 1904, and a year later Suk’s wife, Dvořák’s daughter Otilie, died of a heart condition at the age of 27. The heartbroken composer later said: “This sad turn of events also brought a definitive turning point in my creative work, giving rise to a symphony bearing the name of the angel of death Asrael”. He dedicated the Asrael Symphony (1905–1906) “to the sublime memory of Dvořák and Otilie”. He gradually created an entire cycle of compositions dealing with serious questions of human existence. After Asrael he wrote Pohádka léta (A Summer’s Tale, 1907–1909) and Zrání (Ripening, 1912–1917), then in 1920 he began sketching the last part of the cycle: “The Harvest of Love”. Only after he had begun work on the composition did he give it the title Epilogue. Suk wrote the first two parts of the tetralogy for large orchestra only, then at the very end of Zrání he added a small women’s choir. In Epilogue he greatly strengthened the vocal component, adding a mixed choir and three solo voices – soprano, baritone, and bass. He selected the text from the Bible and from Julius Zeyer’s legend Under the Apple Tree. His work on the vast score was often interrupted because he assumed new duties in addition to playing in the quartet: teaching composition at the Prague Conservatoire and taking over as the director of the school. This is another reason why Epilogue was written during the long interval between 1920 and 1929 (with final revisions in 1933). The unique compositions flows without interruption, and it is divided internally into five parts (1. Footsteps, 2. Mothers’ Song, 3. From Eternity to Eternity, 4. Mysterious Wonder and Restlessness, 5. Pilgrim – The Bringer of Consolation). The movement titles do not appear in the score, but the composer revealed the titles and the thoughts behind them to his biographer J. M. Květ: “A man walking about the countryside is contemplating the mysteries of life and death until he is gripped by fear of death nearly to the point of despair. At the moment of greatest desperation, a recollection comes to him of a song sung by his mother, and in the beauty of maternal love he becomes aware of earthly love in its purest form. Deep in thought, he sees a vision of a flame rising from the earth, and in its radiance he envisions mankind’s eternal feelings and desires and the questions of life and death. Under the impression of this revelation, his heart is filled with mysterious wonder and restlessness. Redemption comes in the form of a Pilgrim, an embodiment of universal human desire, who rids men of the fear of death and fills them to their depths with the humble certainty that ‘the spirit of eternal love hovers over us’, and that in death are the seeds of new life.”\nIn reference to Suk’s humorous comment quoted above, it should be added that unlike Sousedská, his Epilogue definitely requires skill from its performers. At the work’s premiere on 20 December 1933 in Smetana Hall at the Municipal House in Prague, joining with three soloists and three Prague choirs were the Czech Philharmonic augmented by additional players and the conductor Václav Talich, to whom the composer dedicated the work. The President of Czechoslovakia T. G. Masaryk was among those present at the successful premiere.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line429136"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6632401943206787,"wiki_prob":0.3367598056793213,"text":"Worcestershire FA Discipline and Safeguarding Update\nWorcestershire FA is providing this update as a result of a series of unacceptable incidents taking place in local grassroots football. Incidents have taken place across youth, adult, male and female matches and are not limited to a certain category.\nPLEASE NOTE: Some of the content below contains expletives, inappropriate language and discriminatory comments.\nAbusive behaviour within football towards anyone is totally unacceptable. Whilst Worcestershire FA can only affect change locally, rest assured that we are operating with a zero tolerance policy.\nAs recently as last weekend, we had referees verbally abused by players, coaches and spectators due to perceived poor decision making. To be clear: no matter how good, bad or indifferent you think a referees’ performance is, this does not give you any right whatsoever to approach a referee or make abusive comments. A referee will make mistakes, just like the player who misplaces a pass or misses an open goal.\nWith this in mind, there are teams currently under investigation that have their upcoming fixtures postponed due to the severity of their alleged actions.\nWorcestershire FA would like to place on record our sincere thanks to our Leagues who have supported the above action. As well as our Leagues, our Safeguarding and Football Development Teams will also be made aware of these incidents to work with the Clubs to improve behaviour.\nThe following are real examples of incidents that we have recently dealt with. The sanctions issued are determined by The Football Association (FA) in line with Disciplinary Regulations. Any match-based suspensions are from All Football until the team that the offenders were participating for have completed the relevant number of matches.\n1 – A substitute called a qualified assistant referee a “f***ing m***ole” and a “bald sp****c”. The player was charged with Improper Conduct aggravated on grounds of Discrimination. The player received a 7 match suspension, £90 fine and is required to complete an education course if they ever wish to return to football.\n2 – A player used abusive langauge to another player, calling them a “p**i”. The player was charged with Improper Conduct aggravated on grounds of Discrimination. The player received a 7 match suspension, £75 fine and is required to complete an education course if they ever wish to return to football.\n3 – An adult spectator shouted at a youth referee – a child – calling them a “sp****c”, telling the referee to “find his balls” and aggressively screamed several times regarding decisions. A witness stated “the Match Official was put under immense pressure and said to me he felt scared to give cards”. The spectator received a 302 day suspension (including ground ban), meaning they cannot attend any match to watch their child play during this period, £145 fine and is required to complete an education course if they ever wish to return to football. This individual has also been referred to FA Safeguarding.\n4 – A player shouted at a referee that they would “drag me to the car park”. The player was charged with Improper Conduct including Threatening/Abusive behaviour. The player received a 119 day suspension, £75 fine and is required to complete an education course if they ever wish to return to football.\n5 – Two youth team coaches were abusive towards a Match Official, making comments such as “f***ing disgraceful”, “you’re a joke”, “you’ve ruined the game” and approached the match official at half time to make derogatory comments related to their performance. The coaches both received a 3 match suspension (including a ground ban), £50 fine and were severely warned as to their future conduct. The two coaches involved in this incident have also been referred to The FA Safeguarding Team.\n6 – An adult player went head to head with a referee, which was determined as an Assault – the player was charged with Assault on a Match Official. The player received a 7.5 year suspension from All Football, £100 fine and is required to complete an education course if they ever wish to return to football.\n7 – A youth match was abandoned following a mass brawl between players and spectators of both clubs, who then continued the confrontation in the car park after the match. As well as red cards being issued to players, the clubs were charged with failing to ensure that participants conducted themselves in an orderly fashion. The Clubs were fined £100 each and severely warned as to their future conduct, as well as a referral to the Designated Safeguarding Officer for further education.\nThese are just 7 examples – sadly there are many more that we could have used.\nWe also remind everyone that our referees aged under 18 – who are children – wear bright yellow #SeeTheSocks and this means that they are safeguarded in the same way as youth players.\nFor far too long, inappropriate behaviour has taken place within grassroots football with very little accountability. Worcestershire FA promises you that where sufficient evidence exists we will take action. Together with everyone who behaves positively to improve the game, we will enhance the experience for all participants.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line752063"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.753078818321228,"wiki_prob":0.753078818321228,"text":"Wassim Abdul Khalek • December 6, 2021\nCandlelight is gifting New Orleans with an intimate tribute to Taylor Swift in January — And you can now get your tickets!\nSwifties, get ready to experience Tay’s hit songs in a whole different way! Candlelight is featuring a talented string quartet on January 27 in New Orleans and they will be playing your favorite anthems by the iconic pop and country music singer-songwriter, Taylor Swift.\nFrom the moment you step into Livaudais Hall, you will be taken away to a warm and beautiful environment. What makes this experience magical is the perfect blend of breathtaking architecture, the glow of hundreds of candles and the soothing sound of a string quartet.\nAnd tickets for this concert have just been released to the public!\nFollowing its enormous success around the world—in cities like London, Manchester, Madrid, Barcelona, and Paris—Candlelight brings its unique experience to New Orleans to pay tribute to one of the most popular pop stars in the world.\nTaylor recently redid her classic 2012 album ‘Red’, only this time it is Taylor’s version which means even bigger and glossier. And Fever’s Candlelight series will be playing homage to the most popular and loved songs from ‘Red’ and other albums — like “I Knew You Were Trouble”, “All Too Well” and “Shake it Off”.\nThe Candlelight series takes place twice each night, with two back to back 60-65 minute performances.\nExperience a delightful evening orchestrated by the anthems of the legendary Taylor Swift. Get your tickets here!\nCandlelight: A Tribute to Taylor Swift\nSponsored Things To Do","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line488410"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7510852813720703,"wiki_prob":0.7510852813720703,"text":"Crows Woes\nBy Daniel Emilio Amato\nWith one small step forward comes nine back. The Adelaide Crows are now in uncharted territory as a football club and sporting entity under new coach Matthew Nicks. It has now been one year since their last victory in amy capacity. That’s right… the last time Adelaide won any game of football was Round 20 last season, when they defeated an average St. Kilda outfit by 22 points to keep their below standard 2019 campaign alive.\nNow this 365 days of losing may be considered misleading, and the halting of the 2020 AFL Season due to the COVID-19 pandemic is certainly worth taking note of … but you get the picture.\nThe Crows have lost their last twelve games, rounds 21-23 last year and the first nine games this season, by a combined average of 35 points. This eclipses their previous worst start to a campaign by three (0-6 in 2010) and also the most consecutive losses in club history by two (10 games from 1999-2000). These are officially the darkest days in the proud Adelaide Football Club’s history, which has always maintained a high on-field standard, with the lowest finish in club history being 14th with seven wins, 15 losses in 2011.\nAugust 5th, 2020|","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line913856"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7230755686759949,"wiki_prob":0.2769244313240051,"text":"Black Lives Matter Activist Starts \"Church For Black Men\" In Detroit\n(WJBK) - Black Lives Matter Activist & Christian Pastor Jomo Kenyatta Johnson announced he is founding a new Christian denomination of house churches called, \"Church for Black Men.\"\nJohnson, a 2014 Westminster Seminary Graduate and former pastor that became known for his radio debate with Rapper Meek Mill, states in his latest book, that Black men are the least churched demographic in America and therefore are in need of a safe place to be unapologetically black while learning and seeking spiritual truth.\nAccording to Johnson, Church for Black Men will be distinct in three ways: 1. the congregations do not meet in a building, but a home; 2. that the Church will not receive financial offerings from its members. 3. The church will forfeit non-profit status in order to speak on political issues.\nThe belief is that by removing the church's emphasis on money while also addressing political issues that lead to black oppression will enable a greater number of black males to partake.\nJohnson, who graduated Seminary in 2014 before working for a number of predominantly White Presbyterian churches stated,\n\"The reason that Black man do not connect with the American Evangelical church,\" said Johnson. \"Is because we they refuse to suffer with and therefore are unable to communicate in a message by which Black men can understand.\"\nChurch for Black Men launched its first Sunday home meeting on February 4th in Detroit, Michigan.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line965201"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.750127911567688,"wiki_prob":0.750127911567688,"text":"Tag: Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company\nThe Hardware: Fender Stratocaster\nPerhaps no other model embodies the electric guitar more than the Fender Stratocaster\nTo me the Fender Stratocaster is the Porsche 911 of electric guitars. Similar to the iconic German sports car, the Strat was designed decades ago but its basic shape has remained unchanged.\nThe Stratocaster was developed by the founder of the Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company (“Fender”) Leo Fender, guitarist and adviser Bill Carson and company associates George Fullerton and Freddie Tavares. It was Tavares who came up with the two-horned body shape, similar to the Precision Bass that Fender had launched in 1951.\nIntroduced in 1954, the Strat became Fender’s third defining model after the Telecaster and the Precision Bass. While Les Paul built the first solid-body guitar, it was Leo Fender who started mass-producing the first such guitar in 1948, the Fender Broadcaster. A few years later, it was renamed the Telecaster and introduced in 1951. The Telecaster gained quick popularity among country and early rock & roll guitarists.\nIt is quite amazing that to this day, more than 60 years later, the Telecaster, Precision Bass and Stratocaster continue to be manufactured. By the way, it was Fender’s head of sales Don Randall who came up with the name Stratocaster.\nThe Strat featured several innovations. It was the first electric guitar with three pickups; the Telecaster had two. The Strat’s rounded edges and deep body and forearm contours were another first. The so-called “Comfort Contour Body” was another contrast to the Telecaster with its squared-off body that dug into the player’s body and picking-hand forearm.\nThe new shape, which has been attributed to guitarist Rex Gallion, made the instrument more comfortable to play. Gallion reportedly once asked Leo Fender, “Why not get away from a body that is always digging into your ribs?” The new shape also looked pretty cool – there was simply no other guitar like it!\nAnother key innovative feature of the Strat was its spring tension tremolo system. Leo Fender came up with the design after scraping the initial vibrato system due to poor performance. In the new design the whole bridge moved with the strings rather than having the strings move over rollers with the bridge remaining stationary. The spring tension tremolo system allowed the pitch to vary by at least three half steps.\nThe tremolo system turned out to be hugely impactful. For example, without this feature, Hank Marvin, lead guitarist of The Shadows, could not have created his signature sound on Apache and many of the band’s other songs. And more than a decade later, Jimi Hendrix’s epic performance of Star-Spangled Banner at Woodstock would not have been possible without his guitar’s vibrato bar.\nDespite all of its novel features, the Strat was not an overnight sensation. Many guitarists considered it gimmicky. The early rock & rollers largely relied on flat-top acoustic or big, hollow-body electric guitars by Gibson and Gretsch. Leo Fender and his staff continued tweaking the Stratocaster until 1957 when they finally had improved it to the form that largely has remained unchanged to this day.\nThe Strat is a versatile guitar that has been used in many music genres, including blues, country, soul, rock, punk, heavy metal and jazz. Following are some of the influential musicians who have played the Strat.\nBuddy Holly was the first “Strat hero.” According to Fender’s official website, Holly purchased his first Strat in his hometown of Lubbock, Texas in 1955, with money he had borrowed from his brother Larry. He helped popularize the guitar with his 1957 appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show. Peggy Sue also happens to be one of my favorite tunes from that era.\nHank Marvin reportedly was the first U.K. owner of a Strat. His initial preference for the guitar was based the wrong assumption that his favorite guitarist James Burton, who played with Ricky Nelson at the time, was using that model. “We loved the sound he and Buddy Holly had,” Marvin told Vintage Guitar Magazine in 2006. “We just assumed that James would be using the same, because it seemed to be the top model…That’s how I got my Strat. And it was a beautiful guitar, [Fiesta Red] with a birdseye maple neck and gold-plated hardware.”\nLike Buddy Holly, Jimi Hendrix helped popularize the Strat, especially his favorite white-finish version, the guitar he used at Woodstock. Two years earlier, at Monterey Pop Festival, Hendrix also proved you can set a Stratocaster on fire – don’t try this at home!\nEric Clapton became a Strat enthusiast in 1967, after originally having played Gibson guitars. The guitar he used to record Layla was a second-hand 1956 sunburst-finish Strat he had purchased in London in May 1967, which he nicknamed “Brownie.” Clapton’s other main Fender guitar, “Blackie,” was assembled from three different Strats. He used it until the mid-80s. In 1988, Fender introduced the Eric Clapton Stratocaster, the first model in the company’s signature series. Here is Clapton with It’s Too Late, together with Derek & The Dominos.\nRory Gallagher was well known for his battered 1961 sunburst Stratocaster, which he described as “a part of my physical make-up.” Since 1997, Fender’s Custom Shop has built the Rory Gallagher Signature Stratocaster, an exact replica of the Irish blues rocker’s instrument. Here is a clip of a 1977 live performance of Tattoo’d Lady on German TV music broadcast Rockpalast.\nMark Knopfler, another big Strat enthusiast, has been using this Fender model throughout his career. Together with his fingerstyle playing, he created his own signature sound. Sultans of Swing is one of the finest examples. In an interview with Guitar World last year, Knopfler commented on the role his Strat played for the song. “I thought it [the National Steel guitar he used to write the tune] was dull, but as soon as I bought my first Strat in 1977, the whole thing changed, though the lyrics remained the same. It just came alive as soon as I played it on that ’61 Strat.”\nStevie Ray Vaughan is another great guitarist who is closely associated with the Strat. In January 1992, Fender introduced the Stevie Ray Vaughan Stratocaster, a signature model based on his favorite guitar, “Number One.” Here is a clip of Pride And Joy, together with Double Trouble.\nDavid Gilmour is considered to be one of the more influential Stratocaster players since the instrument’s invention, according to Wikipedia. He has played the Strat during his time with Pink Floyd and as a solo artist. Here is a clip of Comfortably Numb, which includes an epic Strat solo.\nBuddy Guy has played a Strat throughout his career. There has been a Buddy Guy Signature Stratocaster since the early 1990s. Here’s a clip of one of my favorite Guy tunes, Whiskey, Beer & Wine. It rocks like a Hendrix reincarnation!\nBonnie Raitt has owned a Stratocaster since 1969 and told Guitar Player she hasn’t missed one concert with that guitar since then. She also owns various Bonnie Raitt signature Strats. Here is a clip of Gypsy In Me from her last album.\nIn 1965, poor health made Leo Fender sell the company to CBS. While Fender significantly grew over the next 20 years, there was a lack of commitment and true understanding of musicianship at CBS. In 1981, it brought in new management to “re-invent” Fender. Eventually, CBS sold the company in 1985 to a group of Fender employees and investors. That transaction started a turnaround of the company and may well be reason why it’s still alive today and hopefully will be around for many years to come.\nSources: Wikipedia; Jeff Owens: The History of the Fender Stratocaster: The 1950s, Fender website; Mental Floss; Guitar Player; Vintage Guitar Magazine; Guitar World; YouTube\nAuthor christiansmusicmusingsPosted on July 4, 2017 November 28, 2020 Categories The HardwareTags Apache, Bill Carson, Bonnie Raitt, Buddy Guy, Buddy Guy Signature Stratocaster, Buddy Holly, Comfortably Numb, David Gilmour, Derek & The Dominos, Don Randall, Double Trouble, Ed Sullivan Show, Eric Clapton, Eric Clapton Stratocaster, Fender Broadcaster, Fender Electric Instrument Manufacturing Company, Fender Precision Bass, Fender Stratocaster, Fender Telecaster, Freddie Tavares, George Fullerton, Gretsch, Gypsy In Me, Hank Marvin, It's Too Late, James Burton, Jimi Hendrix, Layla, Leo Fender, Les Paul, Mark Knopfler, Peggy Sue, Pink Floyd, Pride and Joy, Rex Gallion, Ricky Nelson, Rockpalast, Rory Gallagher, Rory Gallagher Signature Stratocaster, Star-Spangled Banner, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Stevie Ray Vaughan Stratocaster, Sultans of Swing, Tattoo'd Lady, The Shadows, Whiskey Beer & Wine8 Comments on The Hardware: Fender Stratocaster","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line127840"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6440908312797546,"wiki_prob":0.35590916872024536,"text":"November government funding for Clapham Junction’s upgrade scheme scrapped\nPosted on May 30, 2010 by Cyril Richert\n>> Your chance to contribute: tell us what your think on Clapham Junction station redevelopment\nFollowing yesterday’s article on Transport funding cut, I forgot to report on the more specific news regarding the scrapping of the millions promised to upgrade the worst stations in Britain.\nThe report in Railnews.co.uk on the 26th May says:\n“A £50 million DfT grant intended to upgrade the ten worst stations in Britain following the Station Champions’ report last November has been scrapped as part of the Government’s budget cuts.\nThe Department for Transport has lost £683 million from its budget for this year, as its share of a £6.2 billion reduction in spending ordered by the Chancellor of the Exchequer.\nAt first, the DfT had only outlined the reductions following the Chancellor’s announcement. They include £309 million withdrawn from councils and a proposed cut of £108 million for Transport for London.\nAnother item on the brief DfT list had been £100 million cut from the grant to Network Rail, and it’s now been revealed that half that sum is the £50 million which had been allocated to station upgrades in November 2009.“\nHowever all is not lost for Clapham Junction as, according to the article, Network Rail pointed out that funding is also coming from other sources (Manchester Victoria will still go ahead, for example, because only £5 million of the £30 million to be spent there was coming from the Better Stations fund in any case). Clapham Junction is said to be benefiting from other funding. We have not heard of any of them and I would be curious to know what are the other parts of the £10m funding that was promised.\nObviously it gives me mixed feelings:\nAlthough not welcomed, it is understandable that the new government is cutting first the last minute spending from its predecessor.\nWhen we met with Office of Rail Regulation last November, our discussions were not considering the last minute funding provided by the government, and we were focusing on the next budget period, especially CP5 (2014-19). Although it has to be discussed in line of the proposed funding for these period, the topic still remains.\nWe were outraged by Network Rail saying, when we met with them in January, there won’t be much allocation for Clapham Junction station in CP5 as it already received a lot currently (pointing out the £50m grant for the 10 worst stations). Hopefully they won’t dare use this argument any more to explain their future allowance to CJ station.\nObviously it does not prevent us to carry on with our consultation, giving an opportunity for local residents to have their say o nthe future of Clapham Junction station. I want to believe that we will receive the same support and encouragement from our new MP, Jane Ellison, as we did from Martin Linton.\nThis entry was posted in The station by Cyril Richert. Bookmark the permalink.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line907119"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9769092202186584,"wiki_prob":0.9769092202186584,"text":"LB Jaylon Smith joins Packers one day after Cowboys drop him\nby Shereen Siewert October 8, 2021 October 8, 2021\nFILE - In this Monday, Sept. 27, 2021, file photo, Dallas Cowboys linebacker Jaylon Smith leaves the field after an NFL football game against the Philadelphia Eagles in Arlington, Texas. The Cowboys are moving on from Smith without getting into the specifics of the decision to release their leading returning tackler four games into 2021. (AP Photo/Roger Steinman, File)\nGREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Jaylon Smith has joined the Green Bay Packers, one day after the Dallas Cowboys released the veteran linebacker.\nThe Packers officially announced Thursday afternoon that they had signed Smith. Packers coach Matt LaFleur had talked earlier in the day about how the former Cowboy would fit in with the Packers.\n“I just think (he’s) a veteran guy who’s played at a really high level and just can bring kind of a mentality and leadership to our defense,” LaFleur said.\n“Certainly he’s going to be behind quite a bit, being the fact we’re heading to Week 5 and it’s a totally different system, so there’s going to be a lot of work that needs to be put in, not only from him but from our coaching staff to get him up to speed, but we’ll let him kind of come in here and compete to play.”\nSmith wasn’t available to practice on Thursday, and LaFleur said it’s “highly unlikely” that Smith would play for the Packers (3-1) as soon as Sunday’s game in Cincinnati (3-1).\nWhen defensive coordinator Joe Barry spoke to reporters late Thursday afternoon, he still hadn’t met Smith. Barry said teaching the verbiage will be the starting point.\n“He’s a good football player,” Packers linebackers coach Kirk Olivadotti said after meeting Smith for the first time. “He’s played a ton of football. He can do a lot of different things. To be quite honest, we’ll find out more once we get our hands on him a little bit.”\nSmith made the Pro Bowl as an injury replacement in 2019 and led the Cowboys in tackles each of the past two seasons. He had nine tackles against Green Bay during the Packers’ 34-24 victory at Dallas in 2019.\n“I remember he was a bad dude in there,” Packers offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett said. “He was definitely somebody we had to account for sideline to sideline, being a force in the middle, so excited to have him on the team.”\nSmith’s performance had dipped over the past year. Smith played just 16 snaps in a season-opening loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers as the Cowboys cleared the way for rookie linebacker Micah Parsons, the 12th overall pick in this year’s draft.\nThe Cowboys released Smith at the same time they anticipated getting linebacker Keanu Neal back after the converted safety missed two games because of a positive COVID-19 test.\n“I like him as a person, and he’s a super like friendly, happy guy, even on the field,” Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers said Wednesday when he was asked about Smith.\n“He’s a fierce competitor, but he always has a smile on his face. So I appreciate that about him, and it was just more of a respectful competitor-to-competitor conversation after the game.\n“I haven’t heard if anything’s been done yet, but in general, I think anytime you add a veteran player to a team, there’s the possibility of a guy getting an opportunity who’s played football before at a high level, and sometimes it just takes an environment switch for some of those guys to play their best football.”\nSmith’s pending move to Green Bay would reunite him with LaFleur, who spent the 2014 season as Notre Dame’s quarterbacks coach when Smith was starring for the Fighting Irish.\nSmith won the Butkus Award as college football’s most outstanding linebacker the following year, but suffered a severe knee injury in the Fiesta Bowl that dropped him into the second round of the 2016 draft and caused him to miss his entire rookie season.\nLaFleur said that Smith was one of his favorite players during his year at Notre Dame.\n“He’s got a great presence, No. 1,” LaFleur said. “He’s got an infectious personality. He’s a guy that everybody on the team really gravitated to, was a great leader not only by example but vocal as well. And then he was a pretty damn good player, too. He was the complete package.”\nWhile the Packers seemed on the verge of welcoming a veteran inside linebacker, they also likely lost a reserve outside linebacker for the rest of the season. LaFleur said Chauncey Rivers suffered a significant knee injury during Wednesday’s practice and was placed on injured reserve Thursday.\n“My heart goes out to him because I think he was really doing a great job,” LaFleur said. “He was battling. He was getting us snaps on defense, playing on special teams. He came to work every day with a great attitude, a great mentality, was a great teammate in the locker room.”\nTagged: Chauncey Rivers, Dallas Cowboys, Green Bay Packers, Jaylon Smith, Matt LaFleur","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1838981"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8976691961288452,"wiki_prob":0.8976691961288452,"text":"Efficiency at core of EPA transport program\nHILTON HEAD, S.C.—The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is inviting commercial tire manufacturers as well as truck fleets to join a unique industry-government partnership to improve the efficiency of freight transport, according to a speaker at the Clemson University Tire Industry Conference.\nLaunched in 2004, the SmartWay Transportation Partnership is designed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from truck fleets, promote U.S. energy security and save trucking companies money, said Cheryl L. Bynum, senior policy analyst for SmartWay at the EPA.\n“Shippers assess the carbon footprint of their freight operations, using information from carriers that employ SmartWay-verified technologies,” Bynum said. SmartWay partners that have the greatest reductions in their carbon baseline are entitled to use the SmartWay logo in their publicity in recognition of their achievements, she said.\nThe SmartWay program has doubled in size annually since its inception, according to Bynum. Today it has more than 1,500 partners driving more than 584,000 trucks and representing 7 percent of the trucking industry, she said.\nFor 2009 alone, SmartWay partners will save 7 million tons of carbon dioxide, 1,000 tons of particulate matter, 41,000 tons of nitrogen oxide, 625 million gallons of diesel fuel, and $1.5 billion in fuel and maintenance costs over the figures recorded before SmartWay was introduced, according to EPA estimates.\nPersuading truckers to join SmartWay wasn't easy in the beginning, said Bynum, who worked in the transportation industry before joining the agency.\n“Many fleets weren't willing to work with us because they knew us only from the regulatory side,” she said. “They were skeptical, and trucking is a conservative business to begin with.”\nThe small, mom-and-pop trucking companies that form the base of the industry were particularly hard to reach because they don't necessarily belong to the American Trucking Association and other professional groups, Bynum said. But through public service announcements, booths at truck shows and talks at state trucking association meetings, the EPA got the word out.\n“We told them, 'Let us be your environmental consultant,' ” she said. “ 'You might as well get your money's worth because we're doing it for you.' ”\nBynum and other EPA officials met with all truck manufacturers to identify the most fuel-efficient truck models and also the most fuel-efficient truck configurations, including parts and trailers.\nThe SmartWay program has specifications for parts and configurations across the entire length of a tractor-trailer, including low-rolling-resistance tires with aluminum wheels.\nTractor-trailers bearing SmartWay-approved design features are 10- to 20-percent more fuel-efficient than those without them, Bynum said.\nSmartWay-approved truck tires must provide 15-percent lower rolling resistance per axle position than the most commonly used tires in that size, providing 3-percent or greater fuel savings, according to Bynum.\nThe EPA reviews and publishes a list of SmartWay-approved tires on its Web site and plans to add technical verification/verified products pages to the site, she said. SmartWay also is working with the retread industry to develop a comparable SmartWay specification for retread tires, she said.\nTire manufacturers use different test methods to certify fuel efficiency for SmartWay, Bynum said. These include the J1269 tire rolling resistance test and the J1321 vehicle fuel economy test, both from the Japan Automobile Tyre Manufacturers Association. Tire makers can use vehicle averaging in the J1269 test, as long as at least one tire meets the target figure, she said.\nThe International Standards Organization should unveil its 28580 rolling resistance test sometime around October of this year, Bynum said. “We want all manufacturers to use this method because it will end variability,” she said.\nPurchasing fuel-efficient tires and equipment is expensive, particularly for smaller companies, Bynum said. In recognition of this, SmartWay developed the SmartWay Finance Center at www.smartwayfinancecenter.com.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1039025"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7027389407157898,"wiki_prob":0.7027389407157898,"text":"Videos • Latest\n• Breaking News\n• Opinions\nChina Talk\n• Feature\n• Entertainment\n• Sports • Your Videos\nYou are here: Home > Video > Features\nBai Fangli: Selfless donation to poor students\n0 Comment(s) Print E-mail CNTV, February 15, 2012\nThe last instalment of Unsung Heroes series is one hero provided financial help to poor students. But this is no millionaire -- he made a living by pedalling a pedicab. Bai Fangli donated a total of 350,000 yuan to help more than 300 poor students continue with their studies. In 2005, he passed away at the age of 93.\nFor almost twenty years, to save up for his donations, Bai Fangli peddled his pedicab everyday.\nHis devotion started in 1987 when he was 74 years old. Bai had prepared to retire and say goodbye to his job.\nBut after coming back to his hometown, a group of children working in the field aroused his attention.\nBai's daughter, Bai Jinfeng said:\" He asked why the children didn't go to school. And our relatives told him that it was because they were too poor to afford tuition. My father was worried so he decided to donate 5,000 yuan to the schools in our hometown. But for him, it was all he owned.\"\nAs soon as he returned to Tianjin, Bai went back to work. All of his earnings went to support the needy students.\nHis sons and daughters tried to persuade him to change his mind, as they wanted him to enjoy a relaxing life. But the father turned a deaf ear to them.\nBai Jinfeng also said:\" At that time, he went out at dawn and wouldn't return until darkness fell. He earned 20 to 30 yuan each day. After returning home, he put his earnings in a place carefully.\"\nBai had always felt regretful that he was illiterate. So he hoped the next generation could change their destiny with education.\nLater on, to increase his effort to assist students in need, Bai moved to a simple room near the Tianjin Railway Station. He waited for clients 24 hours a day, ate simple food and wore discarded second-hand clothes he found.\nAt the age of 82 years old, to his children's surprise, Bai made another decision.\nHe founded an education support fund with the help of loans.\nBut his life driving a pedicab continued.\nXu Xiuxiang, one of the workers of Education Support Fund, said:\" He never forgot when to give money to the schools and often urged us to give his earnings to the school. Each time he gave the money he felt very happy and said he had completed his mission again.\"\nIn 2001, he drove his pedicab to Tianjin YaoHua Middle School, to delivering his last installment of money. Nearly 90 years old, he told the students that he couldn't work any more. All of the students and teachers were moved to tears.\nBai Fangli said:\" I hope the students could study hard and get a good job, and then make contributions to our country.\"\nA long journey of supporting and aiding students lasted two decades.\nIn 2005, he was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer.\nAlthough he had kept none of his earnings for himself, he was left with his selfless spirit and love.\nBai Fangli donated a total of 350,000 yuan to help more than 300 poor students continue with their studies.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1417029"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5752658843994141,"wiki_prob":0.42473411560058594,"text":"Warrant Out For San Jose Real Estate Agent Accused In $500K Scam\nFiled Under:Amalek Elyassnia, Arrest warrant, Crime, Fraud, Grand theft, Real Estate, Real Estate Fraud, San Jose\nAmalek Elyassnia, a San Jose real estate agent, is accused of scamming investors out of $500,000. (San Jose Police Department)Amalek Elyassnia, a San Jose real estate agent, is accused of scamming investors out of $500,000. (San Jose Police Department)\nSAN JOSE (CBS SF) — An arrest warrant has been issued for a San Jose real estate agent charged with scamming victims in a deal involving a building in Modesto, prosecutors said Friday.\nAmalek Elyassnia is wanted on 10 charges of grand theft filed by the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office on April 22, Deputy District Attorney Katharina Wells said.\nProsecutors allege that Elyassnia scammed a number of people out of about $500,000 after persuading them to invest in a medical office building in Modesto that did not exist, Wells said.\nThe district attorney’s office is urging anyone with information about where Elyassnia is to call District Attorney Investigator John Carrillo at (408) 792-2977.\n(Copyright 2013 by CBS San Francisco and Bay City News Service. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line187209"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5845017433166504,"wiki_prob":0.4154982566833496,"text":"What is a building permit?\nA building permit is a license which grants legal permission to start construction of a building. Permits allow the enforcement of codes, standards, and bylaws which have been adopted by the local or provincial governing body. The enforcement of the building code standards and bylaws is carried out to protect the health, safety, and welfare of the public. The governing body which enforces the code is acting to assure safe construction.\nWhy a building permit?\nA building permit provides the means for building officials to protect the public by reducing the potential hazards of unsafe construction and is therefore ensuring public health, safety, and welfare. A building permit helps the public understand what the local or provincial laws are in relation to the construction of a building. Before any construction or any re-modelling work begins applications for a permit should be made. The building permit provides the means for the building official to inspect construction, ensure minimum standards are met, and appropriate materials are used.\nA building permit is required prior to most construction. A fee is charged for all building permits.\nContact the Preeceville Town Office at 1-306-547-2810 to find out if your building project will require a Permit.\nPermits expire after 6 months from date of issue but may be renewed for a further 6 months without fee.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1445570"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7352045774459839,"wiki_prob":0.7352045774459839,"text":"Natures AidHealthNatures Aid & AFC Fylde Commercial Partnership Announcement\nNatures Aid & AFC Fylde Commercial Partnership Announcement\nNatures Aid are delighted to announce a partnership with AFC Fylde – the football team of the Fylde Coast. The partnership will see Natures Aid take a presence at Mill Farm, and within the team’s match day programme. We will also be the main match sponsor for this Saturday’s top of the table clash against Kidderminster Harriers!\nNatures Aid have supplied the AFC Fylde first team squad with supplements and vitamins crucial to aiding recovery between games for the remainder of this season. The partnership has been welcomed by AFC Fylde manager Dave Challinor who commented, “We’d like to thank Natures Aid for their support, it’s brilliant to be working with a locally based company with a great experience who can offer their products and expert advice to the lads on the run in to the end of the season.”\nTim Gaunt, Technical Director at Natures Aid said; “I am delighted to be working with the players from AFC Fylde with regards to creating a nutritional programme to help achieve optimal performance. The team have a clear goal and I hope that providing the right supplements and advice will help them to achieve this. The supplements that we are using with the players are designed to help them recover more quickly from their training sessions and the games that they play and also provide them with the energy to continue to perform at the same high levels that they have achieved so far this season.”\nThe partnership has also been welcomed by AFC Fylde Commercial Manager, David Broadbent, “We are delighted to be partnering up with Natures Aid. They are a prominent, locally based, business and employer with very similar values to those of the Club in that they are embedded within the community and are continuously looking to grow. The supplements provided by Natures Aid will prove to be a huge benefit to the AFC Fylde first team as we continue our push for the title and I’d like to thank Chris and Tim for their help and enthusiasm for working with AFC Fylde to develop this partnership over the last couple of weeks and it’s a partnership we’re all excited about.”\nFrom left to right: Caspar Hughes, Brendon Daniels, Dan Bradley, Chris Morrey (Natures Aid), David Broadbent, Dom Collins, Tony Thompson and David Morgan.\nAFC Fylde are currently sitting top of the National League North, seeking promotion to the National League for the first time in their history, with the aim of reaching the football league by 2022.\nTo find out more about our new partners, visit their website: www.afcfylde.co.uk","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1791669"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7352906465530396,"wiki_prob":0.26470935344696045,"text":"Ecological transition: the ECB and budgetary authorities referred to their responsibilities\nOllivier Bodin\nby Michael Vincent\nFinancial stability expert, President of Greentervention (for the green and social transition)\nby Ollivier Bodin\nThe 2018/19 European Semester, which coordinates the member states’ economic policies every year, has just been launched. This provides an opportunity to question the contribution of the mix of monetary and budgetary policies to the ecological transition. Paradoxically, it appears it is the ECB that is most advanced in this reflection.\nA recent speech by Benoît Cœuré, a member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, indeed reports on a quiet revolution in the conduct of monetary policy. According to Cœuré, monetary policy is apparently affected by global warming in three ways. Firstly, new kinds of shock on the economy are emerging whose identification and understanding pose serious problems. In addition, there is uncertainty as to the economic effects of regulations adopted to mitigate and adapt to climate change. Secondly, climate change increases the frequency of natural disasters whose impact may require monetary policies outside the norm. Thirdly, climate change leads to major and lasting changes in physical and human conditions, notably migration flows, whose effects on economic activity and prices will be difficult to determine.\nThe Central Bank’s primary mandate is monetary stability. It is not on the front line to fight against global warming. However, Cœuré suggests that while pursuing its main objective, the Central Bank can make an important contribution through its policy of directing certain green financing towards “green” investments. By identifying climate change as a major risk for the eurozone, Benoît Cœuré is drawing a new responsibility for the ECB that is clearly of a political nature. The ECB’s consideration of this issue is welcome. But, as highlighted in his speech, this new responsibility without new accountability can arouse criticism. To whom, for example, is the Bank accountable when it decides to favour the fight against climate change over safeguarding jobs in the automotive industry? At a time when the ECB’s political role in crisis resolution is welcomed by some, but regularly contested by others, whether in Germany or Italy, the central banker’s approach to the ecological issue will undoubtedly be questioned.\nWith his speech, Benoît Cœuré particularly lays the responsibility on politicians who have budgetary and regulatory tools at their disposal. In the absence of a substantial European budget, the combination of national budgetary policies is crucial. The Commission has just adopted the “Annual Growth Survey” which sets out general priorities for the whole EU, and a “recommendation for the euro area”. This year, the climate emergency is taken much better into account in the Annual Growth Survey than in previous years. It is to be hoped that this will ultimately be reflected in the country-specific recommendations. The climate emergency does not feature, however, in the recommendation for the euro area, which continues to be dominated by the so-called excessive budget deficit and excessive macroeconomic imbalances procedures. These procedures, codified after the 2008 crises and from the start of the decade, focus on financial and debt indicators, and completely ignore the impact of the risks posed by global warming on economic and financial stability.\nThe climate emergency does not feature, however, in the recommendation for the euro area, which continues to be dominated by the so-called excessive budget deficit and excessive macroeconomic imbalances procedures.\nThe “excessive macroeconomic imbalances procedure” is triggered in the event of financial imbalances or external (current accounts, competitiveness) or internal relative prices (private and public debt, price of certain assets). The analysis “takes account” of the employment situation but disregards the progress to be made towards the energy transition. This is all the more harmful given that all public policies, including those that can have a direct or indirect impact on the energy transition, are likely to be called to the rescue in the event of excessive imbalances. Yet the assessment of a country, for example, with a current account surplus above 6% of GDP (one of the only alert thresholds) and a balanced budget – and the economic policy recomendations thus made to it – should not be the same all the ways. It should depend, for example, on whether it is experiencing growing wage inequality and/or whether it is on a path that will enable it to achieve the 2030 carbon goals, or not. Or the assessment of private sector credit growth exceeding the alert threshold and the recommendations should be different depending on whether it involves the assessment of consumer credit, or financing for investments in the energy efficiency of housing linked to public aid in a country lagging behind on the energy transition goals. The five-yearly report on the implementation of this procedure, which is due out in 2019, will be an opportunity to start thinking about the integration of the climate emergency into this procedure.\nIt should depend, for example, on whether it is experiencing growing wage inequality and/or whether it is on a path that will enable it to achieve the 2030 carbon goals, or not.\nThe “excessive budget deficits procedure” does not take account of the challenges of energy transition either. Only the main budgetary aggregates are at issue here. Yet in the long term, better resilience to climate shocks reduces the risks that would be linked to the debt level. By focusing exclusively on debt reduction, the procedure does not encourage arbitrating in the short term in favour of support for public or private investment that would strengthen this resilience and have a beneficial effect on public finance in the long term. For sure, margins of flexibility exist within the procedure that enable certain investments to be deducted before comparing the deficit to the benchmark. But the definition of these margins should be revised to favour investments and spending that have a verifiable impact on the greening of the economy.\nThe procedures set up after the financial crisis to coordinate the economic policies of the European Union’s member states are no longer adapted to the urgency of the climate change challenge. It is urgent to review the way this works. Before becoming technical, the debate will have to be political and brought during the electoral campaign in order to be picked up by the next Parliament and next Commission.\nOllivier Bodin est économiste.\nMichael Vincent est expert en régulation financière et membre de l’observatoire de l’économie de la Fondation Jean-Jaurès.\nDebates Next Economy Next EnvironmentClimate change EU budget Eurozone Future of Europe\nCan the integration plan lead to greater coherence in EU migration policy?\nAndrea Stocchiero\nIn recent years, particularly since the 2015 crisis, European political, media and public discussion has focused on the migration issue at the borders of the Union. Not least on the borders with Belarus. The divisions between member countries and the instrumentalisation of the debate for the purpose of consensus for power has increased social polarisation […]\nNext Social spotlightsBelarus crisis European Social Fund European Union European values inclusion Integration Migration Migration and Integration Fund New Pact on Migration and Asylum Racism Regular Immigration Social cohesion\nBrexit after 2021\nFederico Fabbrini\n2021 has been a year of passage for Brexit – the process of the United Kingdom (UK) withdrawal from the European Union (EU) – but the Promised Land, much hailed by the Brexiteers, seems increasingly a faraway mirage. On the one hand, 2021 marked yet another step in the process of UK detachment from the […]\nBrexit Debates Progressive Page spotlightsback control Brexit Budget EU borders European Union Ireland level playing field Northern Irland Pandemic Trade and Cooperation Agreement United Kingdom Withdrawal Agreement\nExploited and marginalised: obstacles to integration and inclusion for migrant workers in care and agriculture\nGerry Mitchell\nLiran Morav\nThe pandemic has reminded the public that the EU relies on migrants to fill so-called ‘low-skilled’ but essential jobs and services in healthcare, food production, childcare, elderly care, and critical utilities. Migrants make up, on average, 13 per cent of the EU’s key workers. This share is almost zero in Romania, Bulgaria and Poland, but […]\nDebates Next Socialagriculture Austerity COVID-19 Economy Eurobarometer European Commission European Union Labour Migration Policymakers population Social cohesion Social rights Spain","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line427259"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5140461921691895,"wiki_prob":0.48595380783081055,"text":"HomeIran News NowIran Human RightsIran: New Arrests of Political Prisoners Reveal the Regime’s Insecurity\nIran News NowIran Human Rights\nIran: New Arrests of Political Prisoners Reveal the Regime’s Insecurity\nWritten by Mansoureh Galestan\nThere have been reports in recent days of former Iranian political prisoners being re-incarcerated. Furthermore, some reports point to a much broader strategy of harassment, with the families of known activists being caught up in the latest crackdown by the Iranian regime’s authorities. Much of that harassment has been squarely focused on the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI-MEK)\nIn the final days of 2017, protests against worsening economic conditions gave rise to a nationwide uprising, which featured provocative anti-government slogans and explicit calls for regime change. In the midst of that uprising, the regime’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, delivered a speech that attributed this messaging to the social influence and growing organizational strength of the MEK.\nSeveral dozen peaceful protesters were killed over the course of January 2018, and several political prisoners have since been executed for taking part in this and subsequent anti-government protests that same year. Tehran’s fear of the uprising also led to the regime targeting foreign affiliates of the MEK and utilizing a terrorist network within Iranian embassies toward that end. In July 2018, a high-ranking Iranian diplomat was arrested by German authorities after being identified as the mastermind of a foiled plot to bomb the annual gathering of Iranian expatriates organized near Paris by the National Council of Resistance of Iran.\nThe latest crackdown on dissent inside Iran is an extension of all these activities, but it is also a response to their repeated failure. This defiance took on new dimensions in November 2019 when the regime’s announcement of a spike in gas prices turned out to be the spark for an even larger nationwide uprising.\nFor just over a week in the middle of that month, furious protests took place in nearly 200 cities and towns, featuring many of the same slogans as had defined the previous uprising. The second protest movement would have surely lasted longer than the first, if not for the fact that it immediately met with what may have been the worst political repression Iran has seen in more than 30 years.\nUnsurprisingly, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps took the lead in that repression, firing live ammunition into crowds and recognizably shooting to kill. The NCRI released reports indicating that 1,500 people had been killed across a number of cities, while 4,000 more had been wounded and 12,000 arrested. Since then, it has been revealed that a number of those arrestees are facing the death penalty, while all those who are still behind bars are at serious risk of torture, Covid-19 infection, and medical neglect.\nThe death toll from last November’s IRGC shooting incidents pales in comparison to the 1988 massacre of political prisoners, but 1,500 is a shocking number of civilian casualties by any objective standard. In fact, supporters of the Iranian Resistance have expressed concern that Tehran may have gauged the international response to last year’s killings in order to determine whether it can expect to get away with further killings, which might push the death toll closer to the record set in 1988. And if this is the case, it must be acknowledged that the international community has so far given the regime little incentive to change course and spare the lives of political dissidents.\nOn November 11 alone, agents of Iran’s Intelligence Ministry conducted raids on the homes of several activists and former political prisoners, including Saeed Asghari, Saeed Samimi, and Kasra Bani-Ameriyan. Those three individuals had all previously been detained in March 2018, when the regime was still reeling from the effects of the initial uprising. They had all been subjected to two months of interrogation before being released on bond, and their re-arrest does not appear to be based on anything other than a desire to exert more pressure on those whom the regime fears may still make trouble or contribute to unrest.\nIt is probably no coincidence that the raids in question coincided very closely with the anniversary of the November 2019 uprising. The Iranian Resistance has made strong efforts to commemorate that anniversary over the past two weeks and to memorialize the 1,500 victims of the IRGC’s reprisals. But when they have tried to do so in public spaces inside Iran, their efforts were obstructed by regime authorities, who even went so far as to close cemeteries where some of the victims were interred. Such actions betray the regime’s awareness of the symbolic significance of the anniversary, as well as the underlying danger that unrest could resume at any time.\nRegime officials have acknowledged that danger themselves, sometimes identifying the MEK by name in its warnings about the explosive state of Iranian society. It is therefore little surprise that figures like Alireza Salar and Seyyed Reza Zargar have recently been arrested. Both of these individuals had loved ones who were members of the MEK in the 1980s before they were executed on political grounds. In reopening these wounds, the regime seems to be signaling that it fears the November anniversary will shine a light on simmering outrage not just over last year’s killings but also over the entire history of repression by the regime.\nNaturally, Tehran’s reaction to the anniversary puts countless activists at risk. But if that risk can be mitigated, the potential for another uprising could present the regime with its greatest challenge yet. Western powers could help to realize that challenge, and all they would need to do is uphold their own commitments to universal human rights.\nToward that end, the NCRI issued a statement in response to recent arrests, in which it urged “the United Nations Secretary-General, the Human Rights Council, the High Commissioner for Human Rights, the UN Special Rapporteurs, and all human rights organizations to take urgent action to secure the release of political prisoners” and to establish “an international fact-finding commission to visit Iran’s prisons and meet with prisoners, especially political prisoners.”\nMEK-Iran\nIran Human Rights\nPrevious articleThe Iranian Resistance, the Prime Target of the Mullahs’ Terror Machine\nNext articleIran: Coronavirus Update, Over 165,200 Deaths, November 23, 2020, 6:00 PM CET\nPersecution of Iranian Christians Accelerated in 2021 as Part of Broader Repressive Trend\nIran’s COVID-19 Death Toll Surpasses 500,000. Was It Preventable?\nIran Opposition & Resistance\nIran: The Killing Field for Athletes and National Heroes","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1288824"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7239438891410828,"wiki_prob":0.27605611085891724,"text":"Visiting National Trust Properties (Dorset) in Summer 2020 with Phased Re-openings\nOver the last few weeks, the UK has started to lift restrictions and more of our favourite places are becoming accessible again. National Trust has opened more than 100 of their parklands and gardens but visits need to be pre-booked so they can limit the number of visitors.\nTickets can be pre-booked each Friday via their website and you can pick a slot which suits you. The more popular locations such as Stourhead are getting fully booked almost immediately but we have managed to book tickets for Corfe Castle and Kingston Lacy here in Dorset without any problems. Members and non-members can pre-book but non-members will have to pay in advance. For us as members, we just had to enter our membership number and our spaces were booked. When booking you have to pick a 30 minute arrival time but there are no restrictions on how long you stay, although they cannot guarantee entry if you're late for your slot.\nOur first place we visited was Kingston Lacy (we've been twice recently) and we love it here, the grounds are so pretty and the kids love the space to run around! When we arrived in the car park there was a member of staff who ticked our name off the list and that was it, we didn't need to show our membership card.\nOur timeslot was 2pm and it was very quiet, although there were cars in the overflow too. We followed the path in and there were clear signs regarding the walks around the garden and woodland trail. There was a one-way system in place which worked well. There were lots of families enjoying the sunshine but it was very easy to maintain a distance, even on the paths.\nThe Kitchen Garden is currently closed but we still had a pleasant walk around, passing the Japanese Garden and the beautiful meadow area. I've never actually seen the meadow in bloom like this, the daisys were so pretty.\nThe children enjoyed climbing trees, rolling down the hill on the front lawn, and best of all, playing hide and seek in the long grass!\nThe cafe was open on both our visits but just as a takeaway, there is no seating in the stables and the picnic tables have been moved onto the grassy area near the entrance. The toilets were also open and there was extra sanitiser available.\nCorfe Castle is another favourite of ours and we were so excited to visit again. We arranged to meet some friends there and we both booked our tickets on the Friday before with no issues.\nWhen we arrived in Corfe, I did notice that the carpark was very quiet and I assume this was because of restricted numbers in the castle. The visitors centre and toilets were also closed.\nIt's a really pleasant walk from the carpark, the path takes you around the foot of the castle and it's away from the road so alot safer for the children. There's a great little trim trail to climb along too which my kids love!\nOnce at the castle, we gave our names to the member of staff at the ticket tent and we were ticked off the list. Like Kingston Lacy, we didn't need to show our tickets or membership number.\nOur visit to the castle was much like previous visits however there is a one way route to follow around certain parts. This worked well and due to the low number of visitors, we didn't feel rushed. The children were able to explore and have as much fun as normal!\nIf you fancy a treat after your visit, the National Trust tearooms are open (public toilets too!), We decided to order fish & chips from The Greyhound pub which is right outside the entrance to Corfe Castle. We weren't able to sit in the beer garden as there were still restrictions in place when we visited, but we were allowed to take our food back into the Castle grounds where there were tables and chairs available.\nLunch with a view!\nIt's fantastic that the National Trust have put all these measures in place so visitors can still enjoy a day out at their many properties. If you are thinking about booking a visit then I would definitely recommend going online as early as possible on a Friday morning to give you more chance of getting tickets.\nFor more information, please visit https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/\nLabels: corfe castle, days out, dorset, family days out, kingston lacy, National Trust\nVisiting National Trust Properties (Dorset) in Su...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line517278"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7680559754371643,"wiki_prob":0.7680559754371643,"text":"Fix-It and Enjoy-It Healthy Cookbook\n400 Great Stove-Top And Oven Recipes\nPhyllis Good\nSpiral bound (10/1/2011)\nHardcover (1/1/2009)\nSpiral bound (5/7/2013)\nNew York Times Bestselling author. Over 400 recipes for stove-top and oven—vegetables; whole grains and pastas; beef, pork, poultry, seafood, vegetables, soups, breakfasts, breads, and more.\nHere are delicious recipes that are easy to prepare. And they're healthy! New York Times bestselling author Phyllis Pellman Good with the support of the world-famous Mayo Clinic come together to offer irresistibly tasty recipes that are easy to prepare and nutritious in the bargain! Just \"fix it and enjoy it!\"\nFix-It and Enjoy-It Healthy Cookbook is packed with more than 400 recipes for stove-top and oven cooking. \"I am dedicated to offering recipes that make it possible to eat at home, even if you don't have much time, or radiant cooking skills!\" says Good. \"Here are hundreds of ‘make-it-again' recipes from great home cooks—with nutritional punch! \"I am delighted to have teamed up with Mayo Clinic, whose dietitians have analyzed all the recipes for their nutritional value. Together, we've adapted the recipes to fit within Mayo Clinic's Healthy Weight Pyramid.\"\nEach delicious recipe includes Prep Time, Cooking/Baking Time, its own nutrient analysis, and its number of Pyramid servings. A treasury of more than 400 tasty, HEALTHY recipes! Enjoy it!\nSkyhorse Publishing, along with our Good Books and Arcade imprints, is proud to publish a broad range of cookbooks, including books on juicing, grilling, baking, frying, home brewing and winemaking, slow cookers, and cast iron cooking. We’ve been successful with books on gluten-free cooking, vegetarian and vegan cooking, paleo, raw foods, and more. Our list includes French cooking, Swedish cooking, Austrian and German cooking, Cajun cooking, as well as books on jerky, canning and preserving, peanut butter, meatballs, oil and vinegar, bone broth, and more. While not every title we publish becomes a New York Times bestseller or a national bestseller, we are committed to books on subjects that are sometimes overlooked and to authors whose work might not otherwise find a home.\nGood Books, 9781561486427, 284pp.\nPhyllis Good is a New York Times bestselling author whose books have sold more than 12 million copies. She is the original author of the Fix-It and Forget-It cookbook series, Lancaster Central Market Cookbook, Favorite Recipes with Herbs, and The Best of Amish Cooking. Her commitment is to make it possible for everyone to cook who would like to, whatever their age. Good spends her time writing, editing books, and cooking new recipes. She lives in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line952987"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8858010768890381,"wiki_prob":0.8858010768890381,"text":"May 18, 2017, by Crafty Pint\nAustralia's small and independent brewers today voted \"overwhelmingly\" to remove large brewers from their national trade body in a move that has been widely expected for the past few months. It means that what was the Craft Beer Industry Association (CBIA) becomes the Independent Brewers Association.\nThe decision was confirmed at a meeting this morning in Melbourne, at which it was announced that more than the required 75 percent of members voted in favour of the move. It means that no brewing company more than 20 percent owned by a large brewery or other businesses that hold significant brewery holdings in Australia or overseas is eligible for membership. The upper limit on size is set at 40 million litres per annum.\nIn practical terms, this means brewing companies including Mountain Goat (Asahi), Matilda Bay (CUB/AB InBev), Little Creatures, Malt Shovel and White Rabbit (all Lion/Kirin) can no longer become members. Anticipating the move in March, Lion issued a statement from Chuck Hahn announcing its craft brands were quitting the association.\nCBIA chair Peta Fielding, who is also a co-owner of Burleigh Brewing, told The Crafty Pint: \"It's about an industry association representing businesses that need it. It's pretty clear that the big guys don't need us lobbying on their behalf. It's laughable.\"\nShe added: \"We had to draw the line somewhere. No matter where we put that line, we all [as members] had to come to a point where we agreed. We started to take the approach that we can't define a place that will work for every single scenario for eternity. If in ten or 20 years time that line isn't appropriate then the board at the time can look at it again.\"\nDriving the current move was a consensus within the association that larger breweries have the \"size, scale and capital\" to be able to influence the market whereas smaller, independent breweries would need to work together in order to do so.\nNow that they have struck out on their own, the IBA's initial focus will be fourfold:\nPresenting a unified voice for small, independent Australian breweries\nDelivering results through advocacy on issues such as market access, excise and licensing issues\nDelivering value for members through relationships with the association's sponsors\n\"[On issues like] market access, there's always been mixed messages,\" said executive officer Chris McNamara. \"Now we can really prosecute the case.\"\nToday's move is also likely to see a number of breweries that either never joined CBIA due to opposition to its original membership structure or who dropped out over the issue become members of the new look body.\n\"In the five years [since the CBIA was initially formed], there has been a lot of change in the marketplace and it probably was right to step back and look at this,\" added Peta. \"As a board we went back to the membership base to understand is this the broadly held view or a few noisy voices and overwhelmingly the sense we got back was it's time to have a discussion.\"\nThat discussion led to a proposal being put to members and, ultimately, to today's vote. UPDATE: The result of the vote was 134 in favour, two against.\n\"It was a really difficult path to tread,\" she added. \"We're very lucky there's a camaraderie and respect and sharing of knowledge [in the industry] which is pretty special. We wanted to make sure this process didn't put any of that into jeopardy. There's still that absolute respect and love for the people in the industry.\"\nDescribing the craft beer industry as \"a shining light in Australian manufacturing\", a statement announcing today's move highlighted that there are now more than 400 small, independent brewing businesses in Australia, up from just 200 when the association began five years ago, and that the industry directly employs more than 2,100 people and generates an estimated $655 million in economic output.\nAcknowledging \"the significant contributions the larger brewers made as founding members of the Craft Beer Industry Association”, Peta told The Crafty Pint that, following today's vote: \"It feels much clearer as to who we are representing and what we can do.\"\nAs the beer industry becomes ever more competitive, complex and challenging, members will no doubt be looking forward to seeing what this clarity of purpose delivers for Australia's small, independent producers and those who support them.\ncbia independent brewers association iba independence\nCrafty's Advent Calendar: Kate & Shev\nThey're the dictionary definition of work hard, play hard and continue to make an indelible mark on the Melbourne and wider Australian beer community. Behind door 16, it's the irrepressible Kate and Shev. read on\nWhat Next For Indie Beer?\nThe sale of the Fermentum Group to Lion raises a number of question, not least what it means for the indie beer sector. We've been speaking to people in the beer industry to see what they make of the move. read on\nThe Big Issue: Ownership Revisited III\nClose to 100 brewing companies have licensed the IBA's independence seal since its launch in May. We contacted the US Brewers Association, whose campaign inspired it, to find out how they are driving the message in the States. read on","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line345668"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.87237548828125,"wiki_prob":0.87237548828125,"text":"Spotlight: Pre-Whiz Kid Whiz\nPatrick Cox | From the April 1984 issue\nIt is unlikely that your life has not been affected by Andrew F. Kay. Though he has recently come to the attention of the business and computer world as the president of Kaypro, Inc., a leading maker of portable personal computers, Kay's influence on our lives is much broader and significant.\nKay's education, an undergraduate degree from MIT and a nearly completed masters in mathematics from Case Institute of Technology, had been cut short by the onset of World War II. During the war, he worked in military-related scientific research and production of such items as automatic pilots. Then, in 1952, after an argument with his employer, a manufacturer of \"war machines,\" Kay decided to move into other areas, and he formed his own company, Non-Linear Systems.\nAn early project at the new company was to build a \"digital volt meter\"—an instrument that would measure electrical voltage digitally rather than in analog form (the basis of the traditional needle meter)—which Kay started marketing in 1953. The digital readout device on your wristwatch and stereo—and on nearly every important scientific instrument in the world—springs from the mind of Andy Kay, as he is known. Electronic Design magazine has credited Kay for starting the digital revolution, and USA Today recently named Kay's invention as one of the 10 most important inventions that led to the computer age.\nOne of Kay's sons—both of whom are vice-presidents at Kaypro—describes his father as a Renaissance man. On the list of clichés, Renaissance man ranks near the top, but in this case the phrase fits; for Kay is noted for another aspect of his business career besides his technical contributions—his management theories have been discussed in textbooks for almost 30 years. Kay has long been a believer in the theory that freedom engenders efficiency and prosperity. He attributes that belief in part to a 10-year period he served on a school board, during which he saw the way tenure was awarded or denied by bureaucracy. He also had worked in factories where all decisions came down from the top, leading to what Kay describes as \"the stultification of people's desire to excel.\"\nDuring the '60s, Kay's company attracted international attention for its participatory management style. Business Week called the firm \"a laboratory for the behavioral sciences…a proving ground for some of the newest concepts in 'permissive management.'\" Vance Packard described Non-Linear Systems in a Reader's Digest article as \"one of the most revolutionary companies in America.\" The famous MIT management professor Douglas MacGregor was an ardent fan of Kay's non-authoritarian technique, and psychologist Abraham Maslow researched his landmark book Eupsychian Management at Kay's plant. In effect, Kay invented an American form of what is now called \"Japanese management.\" In fact, during the '60s dozens of Japanese managers spent time on-site studying Kay's management techniques.\nIt is odd that American technologies and theories have been better accepted in Japan than in the United States. Even though his company had always been successful, Kay found investors hard to come by when he decided to make a move into personal computers. The money he borrowed was expensive.\nLast July, the company changed its name to Kaypro. Its computers had hit the market and made headlines in the computer trade, but because of Kaypro's unorthodox style, Kay's decision to go public with a stock offering met with skepticism from institutions and analysts.\nInstitutions, which usually buy 50 percent of similar stock offerings, only bought 12 percent of Kaypro's. Michelle Preston, a Wall Street Journal analyst, was, according to Kay, amazed to learn that Kaypro spent less than 10 percent of gross sales on marketing. The industry usually spends at least 20 percent. Similarly, Kaypro baffled the experts because its manufacturing-expense overhead was only about 100 percent while the usual ratio is three times that. \"We have very little of what are called 'white-collar workers,' and our blue-collar work force is very high,\" Kay explains. \"We don't follow the ratios at all, and the fact that I was 64 didn't help.\" The planned sale of 5 million shares was ultimately cut back to 4 million. Still, among companies that make computers costing more than $1,000, Kaypro is the fourth-largest in unit production.\nKay's anti-authoritarian philosophy does not only apply to business. \"We have no drawings of the assembly process or formal plans,\" he says, \"but we do have goals. When people who want to work are free to do what they want, the results are remarkable. But our government seems to work against those tendencies. Once we became visible this year, we were visited by seven or eight government agencies in the space of 90 days. One agency is making me get a permit that I was supposed to have 17 years ago.\"\n\"Computers are tools of autonomy,\" Kay says. \"They enable people to hide from bureaucrats. They will create more individual liberty as people gain power over the details of life that now take so much energy.\" Kay says that he has used his own computer to help make his firm's product cheaper and more accessible to the consumer. One has to wonder what he would be doing if he had started out with those \"tools of autonomy.\" Fortunately, we can take advantage of all that he has already done.\nPatrick Cox is a frequent guest columnist for USA Today and public affairs director of the Pacific Institute for Public Policy Research.\nThis article originally appeared in print under the headline \"Spotlight: Pre-Whiz Kid Whiz\".\nNEXT: Spotlight: Ecologist cum Economist","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1129734"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5501422882080078,"wiki_prob":0.5501422882080078,"text":"The Ethics Around Writing in the Voice of Another: An Interview with Paisley Rekdal\nDecember 1, 2021 / Interviewed by Barbara Platts\nAn award-winning poet and nonfiction writer, Paisley Rekdal is the author of four nonfiction books and five books of poetry, including The Night My Mother Met Bruce Lee, The Broken Country: On Trauma, a Crime, and the Continuing Legacy of Vietnam, Nightingale, and more. Her latest book, Appropriate explores the definition of cultural appropriation, asking if it’s always wrong to write in the voice of another and, if not, what questions we need to consider before doing so.\nRekdal’s work has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, the Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Fellowship, a Fulbright Fellowship, a Civitella Ranieri Residency, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, Pushcart Prizes, Narrative’s Poetry Prize, the AWP Creative Nonfiction Prize, and various state arts council awards. Her poems and essays have appeared in The New York Times Magazine, American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, Poetry, The New Republic, Tin House, the Best American Poetry series, and on National Public Radio, among others.\nShe moved to Utah in 2002 and is a distinguished professor at the University of Utah, where she is also the creator and editor of West: A Translation, as well as the community web projects Mapping Literary Utah and Mapping Salt Lake City. In May 2017, she was named Utah’s Poet Laureate and received a 2019 Academy of American Poets’ Poets Laureate Fellowship.\nI spoke to Rekdal about her new book, what it’s like to be a poet laureate, how her dad encouraged her to read advanced literature from a young age, the line between acceptable appropriation and racism, and much more.\nBarbara Platts: You are both a poet and a nonfiction writer. How are these two genres different for you? How are they the same? Do you prefer one over the other?\nPaisley Rekdal: I don’t prefer one over the other. They are quite different in the fact that they allow for different types of information to be imagined and communicated. They are the same in the sense that both of them have a wide variety of modes attached to them. You don’t write just one poem. You can learn to write an elegy, an ode, a sonnet. In nonfiction writing you have science writing, philosophy, cultural criticism, memoir, personal essays. There’s just so many different types and kinds of ways you can approach this, offering endless formal opportunities and complexity.\nBP: Can you share a bit about your own writing practice?\nPR: I tend to write in almost obsessive bursts now. I started out writing half an hour a day, and then I built it up to forty-five minutes, then to an hour, then two hours a day. Then I changed it up to five days a week and two days off so I could make sure I didn’t overwrite something and I had some time off. And now it’s just really tough to get a daily writing practice in with teaching and research, I’ve got to do lots of other types of work. I think of them as writing adjacent.\nBP: As students, we’re often told to cultivate a daily writing practice. That’s probably very good to do at first, but I imagine one can veer from that once they get used to it?\nPR: And once it becomes a bodily desire. When you’ve written for as many years as I have, and you’re used to writing, you want to write, you miss it, you miss it the same way you miss exercising, and you don’t feel good if you haven’t done it for a while.\nWhen you’ve written for as many years as I have, and you’re used to writing, you want to write, you miss it, you miss it the same way you miss exercising, and you don’t feel good if you haven’t done it for a while.\nBP: How did your latest book Appropriate come to be?\nPR:Well, it was a book I hadn’t planned to write at all. It actually evolved out of a Facebook post, of all things. Anders Carlson-Wee had just published his poem in The Nation, and it caused quite the ruckus. I had just that week happened to be reading Claudia Rankine and Beth Loffreda’s book The Racial Imaginary. In the book, they ask if we can think about this in terms, not of rights or desires, but what are we trying to say via these kinds of appropriated figures? I thought that was a great way of reframing the question. I applied that to the reading of Carlson Wee’s poem and an editor from Norton actually contacted me and asked if I’d be interested in writing a book about cultural appropriation. Initially I thought that sounded like a terrible idea. But the reality is, if you teach, you’re going to have a conversation about appropriation because appropriation contains within it so many different literary practices, such as adaptation and motif appropriation. There’s also subject appropriation, which is when we write from the perspective or about the lives of people not like us. Finally, there’s cultural appropriation where we might do some really damaging work that mines these stereotypes about other people. All of us engage with at least some of these practices, knowing or unknowingly. What does it mean to write about your life as it intersects with other people’s? And if you’re inspired by a story you see out there, whether it’s in the news or your friend’s lives, do you have the right to take it? So, it felt dishonest to say I didn’t want to write this book when I’ve been personally thinking about these topics for years, not just as a writer, but as a teacher presented with these kinds of questions by students who are trying to “do the right thing all the time,” but don’t necessarily know what the right thing is, as it seems to change moment by moment, as our ideas about what is creative freedom itself change moment by moment. It was funny because, as I was writing the book, it made me articulate ideas to myself I had taken as commonplace. I realized that maybe I didn’t even hold those ideas as true anymore. And maybe I disagreed, finally, with some of my strongest gut reactions. That was eye-opening for me.\nBP: And you write the book in a series of letters to X, a student. Is this character based on a variety of conversations in writers workshops?\nPR: Yeah. X is a composite figure. These are questions a variety of students, BIPOC and White, have asked in the workshop. But some of the anxieties are particularly acute among White students who are less familiar with understanding the nuances around race, racial identity, racial formation, and the ways in which race and culture can separate, even as we keep trying to collapse them together. When I was writing to X, I had to think of a particular person I was writing to in order to make the letters, to a certain extent, believable and to solidify my own thinking in response. I wanted to think about a variety of questions I’ve been asked over the years by students and to really use it as an opportunity to show that I myself have changed my mind and may not be completely comfortable with all of the ideas I hold, even currently. I recognize so much of what I believe now is contextually shaped by the historical moments I’m living in and the body I’m living in. I can imagine coming back to this book ten years from now and going, “Oh, wow. I wouldn’t say that.” Maybe in ten years, people will also say, “I disagree with this.” As we become a far more multiracial society, I think these ideas will just become more complex because people will be asking questions rather similar to what I’m asking myself all the time, which is who am I when I live between so many different types of cultures, types of racial identities?\nBP: You say in the book, you’re mixed race, half Chinese, half white, and this often leads you to wonder how you should categorize yourself. In all of your research for this book, did you come up with an answer for yourself personally?\nPR: I’ve always had the answer to it. This is the dishonesty of the book, I know how I see my racial identity, and I feel very comfortable in my skin, but I was wanting, in the letter, to suggest that kind of radical ambivalence I’ve had to live with that is destabilizing in ways. But, on a day to day experience, I don’t generally feel confused about who or what I am. I find it very interesting that people want me to somehow express, “Well, that’s my Chinese side. That’s my white side,” as if these two things can be so easily separated. They can’t be, and they never have been. And I don’t think they can be for many people. So this becomes a way of trying to make other people feel better about my racial identity, whereas I don’t feel like I need to do that for myself. If there’s any painfulness I have experienced or continue to experience, it’s when people want to insist on a kind of authenticity to some aspect of my identity that I also recognize is nothing but a performance in the end, and a performance designed to make people feel like they have seen something they are prepared to see.\nBP: On page 40 in your book, you write, “…to insist that a writer must be from the same group identity as the voice of the author has a dangerous flip side to it: while it warns off writers from blithely taking on subject matters outside of our own experience, it also implicitly warns writers within the same group identity that an authentic experience of that identity does exist—to the group at least—and you may be policed from within.” What would being policed from within in your own group look like?\nPR: I think in terms of literature, there are implicit pressures placed on writers of color to write about a very particular and traumatized experience around race, in ways that are immediately accessible. That pressure comes from the white readership, but also, interestingly, increasingly from the BIPOC literary community that wants to challenge and change institutions and speak openly about what its historically experienced. It seems to me that if the outside holds potentially negative views of what any cultural or racial identity is supposed to mean, those ideas can trickle down into BIPOC communities who then want to create or cordon off certain types of subject matter that will authenticate that identity and become a way of implicitly policing that identity.\nWhen I think of certain really wonderful African-American poets who’ve been overlooked by this current moment, it’s because their work has not easily fitted into some of the ways in which we greet African-American writing now. So a poet like Ed Roberson, who certainly has written about racism, is also not writing about it in the ways and with the explicitness that I think some other poets have. So he doesn’t get all the attention he might deserve. With Asian American writers, there’s a similar question: where do we put Asian-American writers who are not writing explicitly in ways that we recognize about an Asian American experience? How do we classify the aesthetics of someone like Myung Mi Kim? How do we respond to a poet like Tan Lin? Largely, we focus on much more accessible and lyric work, like the poetry of Ocean Vuong or Li-Young Lee, and that’s fine. They’re wonderful poets, but the question is, is it that we can recognize and respond to that experience more readily because we’ve been trained to understand and already imagine that experience, particularly in that aesthetic vein?\nIt’s always a question about if that pressure is coming from without or within. My argument is that, at some point, outside and inside start to share such similar cultural values because the pressure put on success and being seen is so great. It’s very easy to have your aesthetics and subject matters start to shift in order to make sure your work can survive. So that difference between outside and inside becomes far more porous than we’d like it to be.\nBP: You dedicate the book to your father who opened your mind to a world of books, as you put it. Can you tell me about your relationship with your father and how he encouraged you to read and explore books?\nPR: My dad is a voracious reader. He doesn’t read novels and he doesn’t read poetry. He loves history and the law, but he also knew I liked literature, so he would push books on me at an early age that I was not ready for. He knew I liked horror when I was a kid, so he gave me Edgar Allen Poe. I was going to Catholic schools, so he gave me André Gide’s The Immoralist when I was ten. And The Screwtape Letters by C.S. Lewis, because he saw me reading The Chronicles of Narnia. My dad had this idea that I was interested in these things so I might as well read the most adult versions of them. So I would gamely read these things without actually understanding any of it.\nMy dad is a very conservative person. He has a very different way of reading historical facts than I do. That was fascinating to me though. From a very early age, I understood that interpretation is something that is generated. It’s not inherent to a fact itself. I think that also taught me a lot about literature. The ways in which we wield language, the ways we interpret language are the ways we understand or don’t understand our history and the ways we do or don’t understand what other people are experiencing.\nBP: He must love that you became a writer.\nPR: I think he’s okay with it. I mean, he’s happy now. My parents were not happy initially, because, of course, it seems like a really unstable job prospect. And it is. It’s a total risk to become a writer. You don’t know what’s going to happen. I basically got really lucky, and I recognize that. I think anyone who makes it as a writer, at some point, beyond talent, beyond hard work, beyond professionalism and dedication, you succeeded because you were lucky. So I think my dad is very happy now because that risk did pay off, but it was not guaranteed to work that way.\nI think anyone who makes it as a writer, at some point, beyond talent, beyond hard work, beyond professionalism and dedication, you succeeded because you were lucky.\nBP: In your book, you show examples of how something may be appropriative versus something that crossed the line into racism. A good example is when you mention the Katy Perry performance of “Unconditional Love.” Where do we cross that line from it’s uncomfortable yet acceptable to this is offensive and unacceptable?\nPR: Well, it was funny. I was teaching that Katy Perry video in my class, and I had to articulate that difference because one of my students said, “Well, is it racist what she does or is it just appropriative?” It was the first time I’d thought there might be a difference between appropriation and racism. In the book, I talk about how if you go to Southeast Asia and you buy a product made by an indigenous tribe that they have given explicit permission to sell and then you display it in your home, that is an acceptable form of appropriation. It’s part of the capitalist global process. If I were to wear a sari at a friend’s wedding in South Asia, that would be appropriative too, but it should also be understood as respectful for the moment because that was the family’s choice and request. Wearing a sari in and of itself doesn’t require I then behave in a way I imagine to be Indian. It certainly does not require that I parody back certain racist stereotypes about Indians. With the Katy Perry video, however, what’s interesting to me is she links bodily difference and cultural dress with innate interior psychological difference. Her song “Unconditionally” is simply about loving somebody a lot. There’s no reason she has to wear a geisha dress while singing this song except to activate that Orientalist trope in which Asian women are so submissive and self-sacrificing that they will literally kill themselves for love. Katy Perry, by dressing as Japanese, links the song’s meaning with Asianness to reify this Orientalist stereotype.\nIt’s a fine line to draw, but it’s important to remember because oftentimes you’ll see white people with dreadlocks, you’ll see people wearing cheongsams who are not Chinese. There are people who will find this act in itself not just appropriative and but morally problematic. I don’t necessarily find it to be, because I don’t think that being influenced by another culture is inherently and only racist. Dress, music, and hairstyles are unfortunately things that we share constantly. As our cultures change, intermix and evolve, we find increasingly that it’s hard to say that any one object is solely owned by one culture, other than objects and performances that are sacred, which should naturally stay within the boundaries of the culture that holds them sacred. But generally, I believe that appropriation crosses the line into racism when our appreciation of an item of clothing or a hairstyle becomes a way of bowdlerizing another group’s racial or ethnic identity.\nBP: What do you hope readers and fellow writers take away from your book?\nPR: I hope most of all that people take away a set of terms and lenses into textual reading that allow them to make their own determination about the ethics of appropriation. There’ve been a couple of readers who were frustrated with my book. They say, “Well, just tell me. Can I do this or can’t I?” I think that’s really funny because I spent the entire book telling readers they’re going to have to make their own decision. We all appropriate, thus there might be forms of appropriation you will pursue and others you won’t, and you have to make that determination for yourself. That’s what I want the book to do: teach people how to think through what they believe and why they believe it. They don’t have to duplicate my reasoning. I would be surprised if every reader agreed with me, and I don’t think that’s the point of the book either. I would hope every reader is able to say, “Now I know why I believe what I believe. And now I have a way to look at my own creative process and say, should I do this or shouldn’t I?”\nBP: What does your role at the Utah Poet Laureate entail?\nPR: So much. I do a lot of public workshops. I go to K through 12 classrooms, or did before the pandemic, to teach poetry. I’m often asked to write poems for occasions like the commemoration of the 150th completion of the Transcontinental Railroad, or most recently a poem for the vaccination doctors and staff with the Salt Lake County Vaccination Program. It’s been fun because there’s a lot I never would’ve thought to write about. I was just asked by a museum to write a poem for their exhibit on mining about Utah’s mining industry, so I wrote about the uranium mining industry and its effects on Navajo communities here in Utah. So I learn a lot and it also makes me really aware of what it means to be a public writer versus a private writer.\nBP: And is Mapping Literary Utah part of this role?\nPR: Yes. When I was asked to apply for the Poet Laureateship, I said I wanted to create a web archive of Utah writers, past and present, that would then be attached to a digital map of Utah, so people could see for themselves the relationship between writers and place. I managed to do it, and I love the website. I think it looks great. It’s one of my proudest achievements actually, and it was fun because I didn’t know many Utah writers up to that point, but now I’ve got friends all over the state; it’s been a great way of connecting with a literary community. It made me feel much more a part of this place. So, personally, it turned out to be one of the best things I’ve ever done for myself as a community member.\nBarbara Platts is an award-winning columnist, the editor-in-chief of Sweet Jane Magazine, and the managing editor of content production for Lunch Ticket. She’s worked in many forms of journalism, from public radio to newspaper, and is thrilled to be pursuing her MFA for nonfiction writing at Antioch University. She lives in Boulder, Colorado with her fiancé and two adorable pups. Follow her on Twitter and Instagram @BarbaraPlatts.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1601614"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6968715786933899,"wiki_prob":0.6968715786933899,"text":"Rouhani: Russia important country for Iran\nThursday, 10 June 2021 12:07 [ Last Update: Thursday, 10 June 2021 14:47 ]\nTehran (IP) - Iran's President on Thursday appreciates his Russian counterpart's efforts for bilateral cooperation in the different areas, calling Russia as an important and friendly country for Iran.\nIran Press/ Iran News: Before issuing the order to start the construction of Sirik power plant in Minab city of Hormozgan province via videoconferencing, Rouhani appreciated the efforts of the Ministry of Energy and all those involved in the field of water and electricity, both public and private, to achieve national projects in this sector.\nImportant in the development of the country, he said: \"The important project of Sirik power plant is of great importance due to the friendly and close relations between Iran and the northern neighbor, the Russian Federation.\"\nReferring to the good relations between Iran and Russia over the past years, the President added: \"In the last 8 years, the relations between the two countries have developed in various fields.\nRouhani went on to appreciate Vladimir Putin, the President of Russia, due to all the efforts which have been done in the political, economic and regional aspects.\nRouhani added: \"Iran and Russia have very important cooperation in the field of Syria and important tripartite cooperation in the field of Azerbaijan and the Caucasus. We also have very good cooperation in the field of Eurasia with Russia and member states\"\n\" In the field of legal regime of the Caspian Sea, we have taken very important steps with friendly countries, including Russia.\" added the President.\nThe President also referred to the cooperation between Iran and Russia in the field of military and defense issues, as well as the construction of two nuclear power plants, and added: \"Our relations with Russia have become much broader than before, and efforts are underway with Russia to revive JCPOA.\"\nAnd the development of relations with the important neighboring country of Russia will be in the interest of the two nations and certainly in the interest of the region and global issues.\nReferring to the agreement between Iran and Russia on the implementation of joint projects, including power plants and railways in Iran, Rouhani said: \"Fortunately, moves in this direction have begun. Of course, we expected this project to start a little earlier, but some problems caused these plans to start with a delay.\nFour water and electricity industry projects in the three provinces of Hormozgan, Ilam and Kermanshah worth of 41 thousand and 988 billion Tomans inaugurated via videoconferencing with Iran's President and Minister of Energy, Reza Ardakanian in attendance on Thursday.\nRouhani urges respect for women\nIran's President said on Thursday that women deserve respect and highlighted that they should be respected.\nReferring to the Auspicious birthday anniversary of Hazrat Fatimah Masuma (SA) which is called as the day of the girls in Iran, Rouhani stated that all that has ordered by Allah the All Mighty has been realized for women and girls in Islamic Republic of Iran, though Rouhani stressed that the other key issues like gender equality has long run to succeed in Iran.\nLast steps to be taken to remove sanctions\nIran's President said on Thursday that the sanctions will be broken soon and the few remaining issues are going to be resolved and Breaking Sanctions in 2021 is the last step.\nIran's President referred to the hard ship faced by Islamic Republic of Iran in the last four years due to Trump's anti-Iran policies and sanction saying that not economic warfare nor COVID-19 could stop Iran from making further efforts and development.\nElsewhere, The President said: \"We have always emphasized constructive interaction and said that the solution is to produce and work inside, but we should not live in isolation.\"\nHe went on to reiterate:\" We are in touch with our friendly countries and especially our neighbors.\"\nReferring to the coordination between Iran, Russia and China in Vienna, Rouhani said: \"This government had once broken the sanctions once in 2015 and again in 2021. It is our duty and we will do it.\"\nBreaking Sanctions in 2021 is the last step. Our people know that sanctions will be lifted, the United States will have to lift them, and it has come to the negotiating table. Most of the issues have been resolved and the few remaining issues will be resolved, and God willing, the sanctions will be broken and people can see better conditions in their lives.\nRouhani inaugurates nationwide water and electricity projects\nCategory: IranIran PoliticsVideo\nTags: RouhaniHassan RouhaniPresident Hassan RouhaniTehran MoscowRouhani PutinJCPOA","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line240701"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7514390349388123,"wiki_prob":0.7514390349388123,"text":"https://sputniknews.com/20211219/nato-chief-speaks-against-conference-with-russia-on-spheres-of-influence-1091643961.html\nNATO Chief Speaks Against Conference With Russia on Spheres of Influence\nNATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said he does not back the idea of holding a conference with Russia on the spheres of influence\nhttps://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/0b/1e/1091137421_0:0:3073:1728_1920x0_80_0_0_316b39db3f5c1060c00d4c3e862f66f9.jpg\nIn lieu of the conference, Stoltenberg spoke in favor of discussing with Moscow measures to strengthen trust, control armament, ensure transparency of drills, and ease the tensions, according to the newspaper.In an interview with the French Le Journal du Dimanche newspaper, Stoltenberg said that the idea of holding a conference focusing on spheres of influence which would let powerful nations control what their neighbours can and cannot do, is a step back for the alliance. The official added that this direction would be completely wrong.Russia has repeatedly said that the West is using allegations of \"aggressive actions\" as a pretext to deploy NATO's military equipment near Russian borders.\nhttps://cdnn1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/0b/1e/1091137421_91:0:2822:2048_1920x0_80_0_0_8e540fbde5066bf850ce96f2a15a21b4.jpg\nworld, russia, nato\n© REUTERS / INTS KALNINSNATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during a news conference in Riga, Latvia November 29, 2021.\n© REUTERS / INTS KALNINS\nMOSCOW (Sputnik) - NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said he does not back the idea of holding a conference with Russia on the spheres of influence.\nIn lieu of the conference, Stoltenberg spoke in favor of discussing with Moscow measures to strengthen trust, control armament, ensure transparency of drills, and ease the tensions, according to the newspaper.\nIn an interview with the French Le Journal du Dimanche newspaper, Stoltenberg said that the idea of holding a conference focusing on spheres of influence which would let powerful nations control what their neighbours can and cannot do, is a step back for the alliance. The official added that this direction would be completely wrong.\nRussia has repeatedly said that the West is using allegations of \"aggressive actions\" as a pretext to deploy NATO's military equipment near Russian borders.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1338743"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5166739225387573,"wiki_prob":0.4833260774612427,"text":"Vice President Mexico\nMr. Rodriguez was appointed Vice President Mexico in June 2020, having previously held the role of General Manager of the El Limón Guajes (ELG) mining complex since 2018. As General Manager of ELG, Mr. Rodriguez successfully led the team in Mexico to achieve record safety and production results.\nMr. Rodriguez grew up in Sinaloa, Mexico and has gained more than 20 years of mining experience. His career started as a municipal councilor and he has since held senior roles for companies including Glamis Gold, Agnico Eagle, Nyrstar, Geologix Explorations and Primero Mining in areas including Mexico, Honduras and Chile. He has a proven track record of leadership within several different facets of the industry including management, operations, finance, external relations, health and safety and human resources. Mr. Rodriguez holds a degree in Civil Engineering from the Universidad Autonoma de Sinaloa.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1619808"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6924445033073425,"wiki_prob":0.6924445033073425,"text":"Imam Nawawi Shariah College\nWomen and the Nawawi Centre\nNawawi Institute for Islamic Thought\nEmpowering Youth\nWhen Is The Nawawi Centre Estimated To Be Completed?\nThe Nawawi Centre will be entirely completed in 2024. This is the year in which the overall project – including all buildings slated for construction as part of the complex – will be finished and ready for full public use.\nIn the years leading up to this, however, the Nawawi Centre will be operational and growing its activities incrementally.\nIn fact, Salah (prayers) will be commencing at the Centre in Ramadan 2021 with the commencement of taraweeh prayers at the current building that exists on the site.\nWill The Centre Be Open To Females As Well?\nOf course! Women are a crucial part of our community and will have incredible, community-leading facilities, insha Allah.\nTo read more about the involvement of sisters in the Nawawi Centre vision, click here.\nWho Will Be The Resident Scholar In Charge?\nThe Nawawi Centre is the brain-child of Dr Ibrahim Abu Mohammed – Grand Mufti of Australia, who will be the spiritual and intellectual force behind the Centre.\nWhat Youth Facilities Will You Offer?\nThe youth are an important part of our community and will be a core focus of our services. The Nawawi centre aims to cater to the youth by building sporting facilities, youth-specific programs and activities to engage with and nurture the future generations of our community.\nTo read more about youth and the Nawawi Centre, click here. \nWe Have Numerous Community Centres And Mosques Already. How Is This Any Different And Is It Really Needed?\nThe Nawawi Centre is much more than a mosque, although that is a critical part of its vision.\nThe Nawawi Centre is a broader vision at building an ideal community centre that is centered on Muslims in their capacity as everyday humans: requiring spiritual, physical and psychological nourishment in an age where there is much worldly distraction that pulls us away from community and solace.\nThe Nawawi Centre will aim to be a landmark community institution, combining youth and women’s facilities, a Shari’ah College and a groundbreaking Research Institute: The Nawawi Institute for Islamic Thought.\nWhile many mosques and some excellent centres exist in our community, the reality is that our community is significantly under-served and the need is tremendous for such facilities. There is no existing Centre in the immediate vicinity of Chester Hill, and the need for a multi-purpose facility is pressing for the cluster of surrounding suburbs that are not served by an existing one.\nWhere Will The Nawawi Centre Be Located?\nCatering to the ever-growing population of Muslims in Western Sydney while noting that the area still remains critically under-served by Islamic facilities, the Nawawi Centre will be located in the heart of Chester Hill, 30 minutes out from the Sydney CBD.\nIn Which Phase Of Its Journey Is The Nawawi Centre And Where Is It Headed Next?\nAlhamdulilah, through the generosity of our donors, The Nawawi Centre team were able to complete the settlement of land in late 2020.\nWe’re currently fundraising for the major construction phase, which will cover approvals, architecture and planning, insha Allah.\nWho’re The People Behind The Nawawi Centre?\nThe Nawawi Centre team consists of a talented team of Muslim community members under the leadership and guidance of the Grand Mufti of Australia Dr Ibrahim Abu Mohammed.\nThe working committee consists of businesspeople, talented young professionals, students of Islamic knowledge and community activists. We look forward to sharing more about the team in the coming months. \nHow Does The Nawawi Centre Aim To Contribute To The Local Community?\nThe Nawawi Centre aims to serve as the spiritual and communal hub for the Muslim community.\nThe Nawawi Centre will contribute to the community by powering pioneering Islamic thought and research, providing exceptional facilities for youth and women, being a hub for Islamic learning and knowledge, and doing so while facilitating for the old and those with disabilities.\nName: Centre For Cultural relations LTD\nBSB: 032-361\nAcc: 573 003\nRef: Donation\ninfo@alnawawicentre.org.au\nSubscribe to our mailing list! We’ll let you know when targets are met, when milestones are reached and when your center is ready to welcome you!","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1359780"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5504961013793945,"wiki_prob":0.5504961013793945,"text":"'New tradition' for Georgia students: Their first racially integrated prom\n[soundcloud url=\"http://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/87301275" params=\"auto_play=false&show_artwork=false&color=ff7700\" width=\"100%\" height=\"166\" iframe=\"true\" /]\nBy Jamie Gumbrecht, CNN\n(CNN) - As Quanesha Wallace remembers, it was around this time last year when the idea first came up at Wilcox County High School. It was nothing big, just chatter about prom, school, what comes next, what they'd change.\nIf things were different, someone said, we'd all go to the same prom.\nFor as long as anyone could remember, students in their South Georgia community went to separate proms, and homecoming dances, too. White students from Wilcox County attend one. Black students, another. They’re private events organized by parents and students, not the school district. Schools have long been desegregated, but in Wilcox County, the dances never changed.\nThe friends all agreed they'd go to an integrated prom, Quanesha said, and when they asked, others said, \"Yeah, I'd go, too.\"\n\"We are all friends,\" Quanesha's friend, Stephanie Sinnot, told CNN affiliate WGXA-TV in Macon, Georgia. \"That's just kind of not right that we can't go to prom together.\"\nSo now it's April, and prom is coming up, and these black and white friends, longtime pals who go to classes together and play sports together and hang out together, are going to prom together, too. For the first time, students are organizing an integrated dance, one that welcomes any of Wilcox County High's 400 students.\n\"This is going to be the biggest prom ever to come through Wilcox County,\" said Quanesha, one of the event's organizers.\nThe theme will be \"Masquerade Ball in Paris.\" There will be an Eiffel Tower and Mardi Gras-style masks, dancing, flowers, catered food and a clubhouse in nearby Cordele. They're expecting gowns, ties, manicures, up-dos, sparkle. Quanesha has a date, although she hasn't decided on a dress.\n\"If you want to get fancy, get fancy,\" said Quanesha, 18. \"If you don't, that's fine.\"\nAttendees will vote on a king and queen but also cutest couple, best smile, best dressed. They'll do a recognition ceremony for a classmate who died. They'll start a new prom tradition: a unity toast.\nBy Thursday afternoon, about 50 tickets had sold for the integrated prom. They're aiming for 100. They're not sure they'll make it.\nNot everybody is excited about the idea. Posters for the integrated prom were torn off the walls of the high school. Students who usually plan dances didn't get involved with this one. Nothing was different about this year's homecoming dances: Quanesha, the queen, is black. The king, white. She thought she might get an invite to the other prom, but they went to separate dances, and appear in separate yearbook photos, she said.\nIn a statement posted on the school district’s website Thursday, Wilcox County Superintendent Steve Smith stressed the segregated proms aren’t organized by the school.\nWhen students approached him about hosting an integrated prom, Smith wrote, he and the county’s board of education “not only applauded their idea, but we also passed a resolution advocating that all activities involving our students be inclusive and nondiscriminatory.\n“I fully support these ladies, and I consider it an embarrassment to our schools and community that these events have portrayed us as bigoted in any way.”\nThe statement was no longer on the schools' website Thursday night, but a new statement posted by Friday morning said the high school's principal \"will place the 2014 Prom on its agenda for its next meeting.\"\nSmith did not return CNN's phone calls or e-mails.\nWilcox County is not the only place with a racially segregated prom, nor is it the only one that's attracted widespread attention in recent years. In the 2009 documentary “Prom Night in Mississippi,” director Paul Saltzman followed the preparations for the first integrated prom in Charleston, Mississippi. Actor Morgan Freeman, a native of the area, offered in 1997 to cover the cost if the school board would hold an integrated prom, but the offer wasn’t accepted till 2008.\nStudents and parents say it's hard to spark conversation that breaks what's now seen as tradition.\n\"I've lived here all my life. Nobody pushed the issue. This year, these children - we didn’t have any idea it was going to go as it did,\" Quanesha's mother, Linda Wallace, said Thursday. \"Before we knew it, it was like a wildfire.\"\nIndeed, Wilcox County's integrated prom has gotten a lot of attention this week. Schools in the county of about 9,000 residents are on spring break, but while classes were out, the prom story appeared on the local news, and the story spread. They'd been raising money for the prom all year, and some donations helped, but they've picked up a lot in the last few days. The prom's Facebook page drew thousands of fans since it was set up Wednesday.\nMost of the comments are positive. \"Your efforts will open the eyes of many. I applaud your courage and hopefulness. Continue your fight for change this year and every year, not just in your school but throughout your community. It just takes one person to change the world,\" one person wrote.\n\"You are civil rights leaders of 2013!\" another wrote. \"I am so encouraged by what you are doing. I believe that your generation has the power to make things better. Keep going and never give up.\"\nStill, Quanesha is a little nervous about returning to school Monday. A lot of parents and students support them, she said, but she knows some don't. Why else, after all these years, were they still holding dances that segregated white and black students?\n\"I’m all about sticking together, reasoning with each other,\" Quanesha said. \"We have very strong-minded students at Wilcox County. I hope they’re there to back each other up.\"\nThe friends and organizers are trying to enjoy it. Soon, most of them will be graduating. Quanesha plans to go to college to study psychology. She said she's not going too far from home for now. She wants to make sure the prom keeps going, and she can come back to help encourage the underclassmen who will have to take it on next.\n\"I don't want to just leave them hanging. I know we're going to leave them a little money,\" Quanesha said.\n\"New tradition. Leave them a little something so it won't be so hard for them like it was hard for us.\"\nFollow us on Twitter @CNNschools.\nPosted by Jamie Gumbrecht -- CNN\nFiled under: Extracurricular • High school • Parents • Prom • Students\nAshili\nThats so stupied to do seperated proms whats wrong with the parents and students these days to come up with with that irresponsible idea smh yeah IRRESPONSIBLE!!!\njanroc\nI thought I was reading Ripley's Believe or Not. In this day and age to hold two separate proms is preposterous.\nAndrewMcCrew\nWould somebody – please – just applaude these jung people for changing the tradition! The shame is on all the proms and dances held until last year. Everybody who organised and attended the separate events in the past has to be embarassed for the rest of their life that they did not have niether the vision nor the courage.\nGet your priorities right!\nTristin D\nHow backwards some parts of the USA unfortunately are, in New Zealand we have been integrated with our native people the Maoris since the historic signing of the 1840 Treaty.\nJames Laos\n...are you kidding me? In the time I've spent in New Zealand, living in a district with nearly 0% white people in the neighbourhood I haven't seen any efforts made by the government to raise living quality or solving the drug & alcohol issue. Segregation though is another level of stupidity still beiing displayed by some parts of the U.S.\nfodboldministeren\nWhen you think about what Rosa Parks had to go through I am amazed this is going on in 2013. Disgusting!\nHard to believe this still goes on, what....40-50 years after the fact of integration in some of these areas. Well, regardless, I hope that the integrated prom is a success. Best of luck.\nJust a thought?\nI have 4 children and in my home they have been taught that everyone is the same, and they are welcome to have friends over no matter their race. This fight has been ongoing and may never really be over, you cant change someones view points no matter how ignorant you find them to be! We are welcome to voice our opinions though and one I have recently heard still makes me wonder...She pointed out that it's always been \"white v. black\", but is that always just the way it is every single time or does it go both ways? She pointed out that they have BET and they do not have many \"white\" people in their movies and she doesnt allow her children to watch that channel because of this. She says she doesnt discriminate BUT she doesnt see why the finger is always pointed at us she feels that it obviously must go both ways?...She ask me a question that I had no answer to, what happened if 10 years ago we as the \"whites\" had our own channel something like BET, would people being calling discrimination? I had never realy thought of this until she pointed it out. Its really a touchy subject and nobdy will ever have all the answers but Im truly happy that these children will be able to finally experience the same education and events that my children will do and my question to this is why did it take until 2013 to do this? The school says they are not responsible so that means that the parents are raising them to have these viewpoints...is this really fair to the children? Why did the school let this continue for so long? I dont think we will ever have answers to any of these questions, despite the struggles throughout our history. Maybe today although most of us dont want to see it maybe more people than we thought still feel color is important...\nWhat an incoherent, rambling post\nThis is shameful we should be beyond this! so sad\nMost of these people have no idea what they are talking about. I have lived in Georgia my entire life, and the only time I have experienced any sort of racism was when some black guys yelled at me and called me a \"white @ss Mother-effer\" for talking to a black girl, and that girl went on to reprimand the guy. I also found it quite humorous that as I was reading this article and comments, there were white guys and black guys bro-hugging, and white and black girls hugging and talking right in front of me. The south is a very hospitable place, and race is only an issue that comes up when the media finds a story to make a big deal about. There is racism everywhere, and it's no worse in the south than anywhere else in the country.\nIt just seems lot of people in the north that I have talked to (not making a blanket statement) seem to have an elitist mindset that they are somehow superior to, or more intelligent than, anyone from the south, when that's not the case at all. Having that sort of mindset is a form of racism in its own right. Actually, I have some black friends that moved here from New York, and they have only had praise for the state because, in their own words, “people are so much nicer here than in NYC”.\nAnyway, we really do live in a great country. Yeah, it has its faults, but those aren't going to be fixed by name-calling on news articles (from CNN no less) over the internet. If you really want to make a difference, take action. My class at GSU, one of the most diverse universities in the country, in the past few weeks has raised over $10,000 for charities ranging from helping breast cancer patients, schools and orphanages in Kenya, people suffering from cerebral palsy, feeding and helping homeless children, scholarships for low income Latino communities, and animal shelters, just to name a few. If you really want to see change, get out from behind your computer and do something about it.\nWell while some of the things that you say are true but I have to disagree as a black person that was raised in the north and has lived in the south for a while. while there is racism everywhere, I would have to say, especially as black person, that it is way worse in the south compared to most of the north. I went to school in south GA and please believe that old JIM CROW sentiment is still alive in many small cities and towns.\nHowever I do agree that many people of all colors can guilty of discrimination, lets not pretend that it occurs to equal extents. When your in ATL its totally different. your in a diverse city that is way more tolerant than many pockets of the more rural south. And again, I really want to stress that I do believe that all people can feel that affects of racial bigotry. but, if you were a person of color in the south and confronted with the daily and life long obstacles that come just because of your ethnicity you would have a TOTALLY different perspective!!! This town needs to step into the twenty first century its a damn shame!! WE ARE ALL A PART OF THE HUMAN RACE!! after al it is 2013!!! SMFH!!\nJolisa\nI just want to say that I find the claims of people trying to project this idea that racism is long over and gone to be preposterous. Of course, if you come to the Black Mecca of Atlanta, then you'll find that the racism that's present will be less extreme simply because there are so many more black people than you'll find in the average setting. Also, you see the dynamic where the communities are completely separated. As a black girl in Atlanta, all my life I've only gone to school with black kids. My onle extensive encounters in my day to day life in Atlanta with anyone that wasn't black have been with two white kids. Yes, I admit; the two of them , in each case being the only white person on the room, exhibited no racist qualities. In the rurals where progress has been much slower, unfortunately racism is very real (speaking on simply the social level and not focusing on it in the work force and its effects) . These few stories that become sensations are not the outliers; rather they are one of many instances that just haven't gotten enough publicity to become an issue that attracts the attention of the public. I'm proud of what those kids are doing. It's a step. But consider this; that is an entire town. They have to fight the town to get an integrated prom off the ground...because many of those town members are racist, or see nothing wrong with the idea of the town being integrated Do you believe that this town and this town alone has developed in its own little bubble of isolation since the civil rights movement? This single town is the place in the country where all the racists and bigots have decided to live? Well what about Trevon Martin(R.I.P.) ; what about those 3 Black boys shot in Texas by some trashy men with nothing better to do than hate? What about the countless instances of police brutality? Or the targeting of Blacks and Latinos in the New York stop and frisks... Anyone who says that racism is long over and dead is in denial. They desperately need to wake up.\nThats wrong. As a black person living in the south my entire life I will be the first to tell you RACE IS AN ISSUE EVERYWHERE IN THE SOUTH. It does not matter where you go in the south there is still a since of I don't like you because you are black and I dont like you because you are white. Race plays a huge part. As a matter of fact my fiance' and I can not tell her family that we are engaged yet because I am black. ITS STILL AN ISSUE\nWhat a shame its 2013!! I bet there are still more stories like this happening out there in the US and A...\nThis just goes to show you can change laws but you can't change people. That goes for BOTH sides people..","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line441428"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8557310104370117,"wiki_prob":0.8557310104370117,"text":"STAFF & CAST\nProduction I.G> WORK LIST> Guardian of the Spirit\nGuardian of the Spirit\nOnce in a century\nthe Sacred Spirit dwells\nwithin a human being\nKenji Kamiyama, acclaimed director of the Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. series, succeeded in incorporating modern issues such as refugees, nuclear weapons and terrorism into the Sci-Fi world. In his new project, entitled Guardian of the Spirit, he daringly rearranged the intense Asian-flavored fantasy atmosphere of the original novels written by Nahoko Uehashi, tracing a continuity line with the the reality of our world. This new TV series promises to be even more challenging than the Ghost in the Shell: S.A.C. saga.\nBalsa, a female bodyguard bearing a short spear as her weapon, visits the New Yogo Empire after a long time. Here she assists to an incident, and saves a young boy. His name is Chagum, and he is no less than the second prince of the Empire. But his fate seems to be even greater than his rank: inside the boy's body, lays the egg of the Water Spirit, thus making him the Guardian of the Spirit, an event that happens only once in one hundred years.\nThe Second Empress, sensing that Chagum's father, the Emperor, did not welcome the situation and would try to eliminate the boy, desperately asks Balsa to become Chagum's bodyguard and take him to a safe place.\nUndertaking a job that puts her life at risk and turns the whole Imperial Court her enemy, Balsa makes her escape from the palace with Chagum.\nBut entities from a parallel dimension, called Nayug, are also after the two fugitives. Their aim appears simple and frightening at once: they want to devour the egg within Chagum's body.\nTheir flight from tenacious pursuers has just begun.\nOn Nahoko Uehashi\nLeft the Rikkyo University after successful fulfillment of the doctoral course of cultural anthropology. She specialized in the Australian aborigines. After working as an assistant at Kagawa Education Institute of Nutrition, became an assistant professor of Kawamura Gakuen Women's University. She writes unique fantasy novels from the viewpoint of cultural anthropology. Her works include the debut work Seirei no Ki (Tree of the Spirit, 1989), Tsuki no mori ni, Kami yo nemure (Sleep in the Woods of the Moon, Oh God, 1991, winner of the 25th New Artist Award from the Japan Children's Book Artists Society, 1992), Koteki no Kanata (Beyond the Fox's Flute, 2003, winner of the 42nd Noma Children's Books Award, 2004) and the essay Tonari no Aborigine: Chiisana Machi ni Kurasu Senjumin (Aborigines Next Door: Natives Living in a Small Town, 2000).\nThe Moribito (Guardian) series, a grand epic fantasy in Asian style, started in 1996, and is continuously expanding today with the Tabibito (Traveler) series. The whole corpus counts now 10 volumes, that grossed 400,000 copies sold in Japan. The Guardian series has also received many awards, including Noma Children's Books Award, Sankei Children's Book Award, Nippon Broadcasting System Award and Iwaya Sazanami Literary Award.\nThe TV series is based on the first two books, Guardian of the Spirit and Guardian of Darkness, and Kenji Kamiyama personally worked on the screenplay.\nofficial website (Japanese only)\nhttp://www.moribito.com\nAir Date in Japan: April 4, 2007~ September 29, 2007 on NHK BS2\nFormat: 26 x 30'\n© Nahoko UEHASHI/KAISEI-SHA/Guardian of the Spirit Committee","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1698934"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6971657276153564,"wiki_prob":0.30283427238464355,"text":"Consumer Involvement\nKim Bischoff Video\nKim Bischoff Video Text Version\nKim Bischoff Video (Text Version)\n2018 NFRP Vignette\nTitle: A Consumer’s Perspective: “Headed in the Right Direction…”\nConsumer: Kim Bischoff; Neurofibromatosis Network\nMy name is Kim Bischoff. I’m the Executive Director of the Neurofibromatosis Network. But most importantly, I’m the mother of Jennifer, who is 34 years old, and she has neurofibromatosis type one.\nSo when Jennifer was two-and-a-half-years old, we got the diagnosis of NF based on a growing optic glioma. She actually had one eye that was protruding than the other. We ended up chasing around the country trying to find out what to do with--with this growing optic glioma that hadn't hit the chiasm yet, but we needed treatment; otherwise, she was going to lose vision in both eyes. We were really fortunate to find the therapy. The therapy was very successful. The eye actually went back into the socket. She did lose the vision in her left eye. But it didn’t go back into the brain, and she’s doing very well now.\nSo after our daughter’s diagnosis, we were looking for a patient advocacy organization. That’s when we landed with the NF Network, and we’ve been involved with that group for over 30 years now. It’s been a great source of support for our family—the support for our daughter. Since my husband and I don’t have NF. This gives her a community that she can network in where there’s people that really kind of understand the same issues that she’s going through. One of the ones that she had struggled with was whether to have children or not. And so this community really provided her with the information she needed to make her own personal decision.\nAs an advocate, I have been involved in the DoD program since its inception for NF back in 1996. I have done peer review, and I have done the programmatic review for the last 8 years or so. NF is so fortunate to have this community of brilliant and dedicated scientists, researchers, the clinicians, all working together to try to find these treatments for my daughter and the other 100,000 individuals that have NF.\nMy experience as a peer reviewer has been amazing. As a non-scientist, when you first come in, you’re really intimidated, you know. But they appreciate your position as a consumer. They welcome your input. It’s been absolutely phenomenal and really humbling when they listen to my ideas, my thoughts. They take them into consideration. It is truly what gives us hope for the future is this program and the work that’s being done. We feel very blessed and lucky to have NF in this program.\nThe programmatic review is really exciting because we have areas of emphasis. And so, once all of the excellent science comes up, we have the opportunity then to decide which programs fit best in those--those categories. So even if something maybe didn’t score quite as well as some of the others in--in science, but yet we really feel as a community, the scientists included, they feel like this is really something that we can do, we have the opportunity to do that. And I really think that sets us apart from any other kind of scientific review process. It gives us the flexibility to fund what we think is absolutely the most critical to be funded in order to be able to help the community of neurofibromatosis.\nThe CDMRP NF Research Program has been huge. It’s not only helping people with NF, but others as well who have diseases and conditions that are located around that same pathway. I think that we’re really hitting the different areas that we need to in order to be able to attract excellent science into the field of neurofibromatosis.\nBeing able to treat optic gliomas like my daughter had back when we first came into the community is much more streamlined now. Families don’t go through quite the stress that we went through. It seems to be a pretty well-known practice on how to treat the children. Of course, we would like less toxic and better treatments for those particular manifestations of NF, but they’re clearly much improved than--than what they were in the past.\nThere are also other new treatments on the horizon here for the plexiform neurofibroma that’s showing great promise. I think that we’re headed in the right direction. We could use more. Clearly there’s things that need to be learned about when a regular tumor changes into a malignant tumor, but they’re all being worked on. So it’s just a matter of time. If we can keep doing this and getting the scientists the funding that they need in order to do the important work that they do, we’ll get to that endpoint.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1833897"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5255927443504333,"wiki_prob":0.5255927443504333,"text":"The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement is revising its COVID-19 Appeals. It is gearing up for the marathon not the sprint.\nby Alexander Matheou | May 19, 2020 | Leadership Voices\nExecutive Director – International\nBritish Red Cross Society\nWe still don’t have a clear picture of the scale of the COVID-19 pandemic in fragile states and low-income countries. The secondary impacts, however, are already severely felt. Despite the initial surge to action, most humanitarian agencies now recognise that this is a marathon not a sprint and they need to be planning for the long haul. Including how to adapt to a world that may function differently. The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement’s COVID19 appeals launched in March were its call to action – its sprint. Now these appeals are being revised, it is a chance to consider what we can offer to the marathon. Here are seven offers to consider that will strengthen the global response.\nThe first and second wave: The main effort will stay the same. To support health authorities to detect, test, isolate and treat every case and trace every contact through community-based surveillance, to support prevention measures and engage in active risk communication, about COVID19 and other critical health threats. These features of the initial appeal will still be paramount.\nSupporting social safety nets: The United Nations is warning global hunger could double as a result of the pandemic. The main triggers being closure of critical aid pipelines in countries already facing severe food shortages, such as Zimbabwe or Yemen. Or simultaneous crises, such as faced by Kenya and Somalia, who are dealing with COVID-19 and plagues of locusts. The most widespread trigger though is likely to be caused by loss of livelihoods for the poorest people whose food security each day is dependent on daily labour. Of these, amongst the most vulnerable, will be refugees and migrants. Turkey has a programme designed to address this risk through an EU funded national, social protection programme delivering cash to two million refugees, run by the IFRC and the Turkish Red Crescent. More states will need to set up similar initiatives to blend humanitarian assistance into social protection for their most food insecure people. National Societies (NS) can help governments do this by sharing the Movement’s experience of managing large cash-based programmes and of targeting.\nHelping target the most vulnerable: Many states already have lists for their social safety nets, which include the elderly, people living with disabilities, women headed households etc. COVID-19 will have transformed who needs to be on these lists. NS, with their community presence, can help identify who is most in need. Namibia Red Cross is doing just that to support its government foodbank programmes. Amongst the most difficult but important aspects of this targeting will be identifying women and girls at risk of sexual and gender-based violence. This is complicated as the risk tends not to be immediately obvious and is unlikely to be declared. People doing the targeting need to be trained. NS can help with this, but few currently have the right skills. That is why partnership is more important than ever.\nWorking in partnership: Not all INGOs and NGOs will survive the financial impact of the pandemic. Those that do will be smaller. Specialist organisations with small budgets may be particularly vulnerable. It will be important not to lose their expertise and relationships that have been built over the years. Larger humanitarian organisations will need to be open to pooling resources. Even merging. Specialist organisations may need to be insourced into bigger agencies who can take their expertise and insights to scale.\nBuilding on our health infrastructure: The pandemic has highlighted the risks faced by countries with the weakest health systems. But those risks are not new. For decades, Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, with support from ICRC and IFRC, have tried to sustain primary health infrastructures in some of the most vulnerable contexts in the world. The Somalia Red Crescent and Afghan Red Crescent both run a network of clinics. The Yemen Red Crescent too, although much of it is destroyed now. These clinics have struggled to generate investment despite the obvious niche they fill. Now is the time to try again to generate support and to make sure these services support the pandemic response. Kenya Red Cross has launched its ambulance service as a social enterprise. It is now the leading ambulance service in the country and is supporting the pandemic response. Gambia Red Cross has done the same. This could be replicated across much of the continent. These initiatives might be more suitable for private sector investment than humanitarian financing, but at very least, we can seek to bring the investors around the table.\nThe right legal base: Lockdowns have been disastrous to some aid pipelines. Last week, we heard reports from the Typhoon hit Philippines of hampered evacuation efforts due to the pandemic. Disaster laws can help mitigate such risks in the future, by outlining exceptions to lockdowns, by making clear roles and responsibilities and identifying key workers in advance. IFRC has specialised in advising states on disaster laws for over a decade. It can support now in updating these laws to consider pandemic responses if current legislation is not explicit.\nResilient institutions: It’s always been a struggle to get investment for the institutional development of national humanitarian actors. Humanitarian financing is short term and heavily geared towards international organisations. Yet this pandemic is a reminder that these national institutions, especially NS, are a first line of defence. We need an investment strategy from institutional donors that grows volunteer bases and strengthens national management systems and leadership.This list is not exhaustive, but these seven points would already make up a meaningful contribution to the longer term, global response.\nJyoti on May 19, 2020 at 9:32 am\nThough I liked the metaphor of a running sports, I see it in terms of a racquet sports I like to play, badminton. To play the game the right way – you need your head up so you are aware of your environment. Where are the defenders? Where are the opportunities to pass the shuttle or take a shot?\nFor me, this is a great example of a carefully written piece that clearly articulates the vision and the envionment, the present, how to strategically manage now, and importantly as opposed to head down focussed on what is in front of you right now, I see the suggestion of keeping the head up to identify potential opportunities, think of progressive partnerships, and what needs to be changed and achieved. If we were to successfully address the pandemic and support those in the fragile environments and poorer economies, now and in the future.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1320263"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5992739200592041,"wiki_prob":0.4007260799407959,"text":"August 14, 2018 April 19, 2020 Danielle TV Reviews, TV Shows\nKilljoys Season 4 Episode 4: ‘What to Expect When You’re Expecting…an Alien Parasite’ Review\n[Header Image: Kelly McCormack as Zeph, Thom Allison as Pree, Mayko Nguyen as Delle Seyah Kendry | Syfy/Space]\nThis is probably the longest review I’ve written for Killjoys so far and it’s all positive. I really loved this episode. The pacing and structure were well done and it had the perfect balance of funny moments and serious moments.\nAt the start of the episode, we see that D’avin has been going to see Dutch and keeps talking to her. He lies about how well Johnny is doing and begs for her to wake up. During all of this Johnny is still chained up and is constantly banging his head against the wall. He is one of my absolute favourite characters in this show and I hated seeing him hurt himself. It didn’t help that Zeph revealed he was only banging his head so he could relieve the pressure that’s on his brain. Not exactly positive but at least we didn’t have to see him go through being half Hullen for much longer.\nAnother positive is that Dutch finally woke up. At first, she’s not allowed to leave her room under D’avin’s orders and when that fails, she wastes no time in looking for Johnny. The scenes between Dutch and Johnny were so good in this episode. You could really feel Dutch’s emotions whenever she spoke with Johnny. The pain she felt when she realised all of the green plasma was gone and she might not be able to help him. I did appreciate that D’avin stood up for himself and told her that she had no right to judge his actions. The slap allowed for us to see just how much Dutch was affected by seeing Johnny in that state.\nPrior to getting Johnny back to normal, things do change with him. Suddenly he was tired and frustrated. It was so vivid when he tells them that he doesn’t care whether he’s Hullen or human anymore but he can’t be stuck in the middle. He talks so passionately about having that feeling of losing D’avin and Dutch over and over again as his heart switches between human and Hullen. You can really hear our Johnny at that moment and it was honestly a little gut-wrenching.\n[Aaron Ashmore as John Jaqobis, and Hannah John-Kamen as Dutch | Syfy/Space]\nIn the end, we do get him back. That moment between Dutch and Johnny was so perfect and needed. The two of them leaning on each other once again. They’ve been through so much together and this season continues to put emphasis on how important their friendship is.\nI thought the method of getting Johnny back was interesting and a smart way to get around the fact that all the green had solidified (and the fact it needed to be in order to keep the Lady trapped). I never had any fear that Johnny would actually die but for a hot second there I was concerned that they wouldn’t be able to revive him again. Luckily, all ended well AND they were able to use the same method in order to help Delle Seyah Kendry deliver her baby.\nThe fact that there were complications was unsurprising and it was really fun to see them try to find a solution. Kendry was hilarious throughout the start of her labour, feeling no pain, even reading a comic book at one point. I loved the natural progression they had from her feeling calm to being scared and concerned. Even during the transfusion with D’avin, Kendry is still calm. She’s bossy and visibly irritated by everyone around her, which is very much normal. However, by the end of the episode, she’s clearly scared, even going so far as to corner Dutch and demand to know where Aneela us.\nThat little moment between them all was really important. D’avin and Johnny have been stuck in a small space with Kendry for a while and the three of them have had a chance to get used to each other. Talking about Aneela, allowed for Dutch and Kendry to get to know each other a little bit as well. We’ll need a lot more but it was very much needed, especially considering it wasn’t that long ago that Kendry and Aneela were trying to kill the team.\nDelle Seyah Kendry has had one of the biggest character developments, along with Aneela. Pree threatened Kendry’s life earlier in the episode but then was willing to give her a break later. He smiled to the point that he most likely won’t try to kill her (unless she tries something first of course). I love the changes Kendry has gone through and I hope she remains a big part of the team and continues on this really well-done character development. Especially now that she’s human again and can feel everything.\nLike I said, we’ve also seen Aneela change a lot since we first met her, as well as her relationship with Dutch. It was such a touching moment when Dutch said she was going to get Aneela back and she seemed to genuinely care. We can also see that Aneela genuinely cares as she risks being stuck in the green to keep Dutch safe and the Lady trapped. All of these changes almost guarantees that Kendry and Aneela really are going to be a part of the team.\n[Luke Macfarlane as D’avin Jaqobis, Kelly McCormack as Zeph, Mayko Nguyen as Delle Seyah Kendry,\nand Thom Allison as Pree | Syfy/Space]\nThroughout the episode, we get to see what happened to Dutch while she was in the green. I really appreciated that we didn’t see the Lady’s true form. I suspect that we’ll get that reveal when she finally comes out of the green because let’s face it, she probably will. For now, it’s pretty cool that her look keeps changing in the meantime to try and weaken Dutch (and later Aneela).\nIt worked really well that Dutch’s time in the green was put throughout the episode and none of it ever dragged on too long. The scenes where the Lady was trying to force information out of Dutch was really powerful because they weren’t always intense. Sometimes we saw them fighting, other times the Lady was hurting Dutch, and other times they’re simply talking.\nWe also found out that the Lady isn’t Hullen but something much older and she refers to the Hullen as her tools. This episode did a great job of telling us something about the Lady while also keeping her shrouded in mystery. Killjoys knows exactly when to tell us something and just how much information should be given.\n[Robert Stewart as the Lady (appearing as Khlyen, and Hannah John-Kamen as Dutch | Syfy/Space]\nIt made the reveal of what Dutch will face when she leaves the green even more powerful. That scene where everyone is dead at Pree’s bar and Johnny is holding a gun to Dutch’s head was so shocking because we had no idea. We knew something was coming but we didn’t know what it was exactly. The final hit was when Johnny said “who the hells is Johnny?” We’re going to have to wait a little while for that conclusion I bet, but something I did notice was that Pree seemed to look the same way he did in the flashback episode (episode 1 of this season). So I wonder if there’s going to be some sort of time travel involved? I honestly don’t like to guess much with Killjoys because everything they do is always better than I could ever imagine.\nEither way, it was really reassuring to see them all back together again. They’re all willing to fight alongside Dutch to defeat the Lady like the little family they are but there’s plenty of other stuff to deal with at the same time. As we saw, the soldiers on the Armada are starting to wake up (or at least they’re more alert). This could be connected to the fact that Pip has a spider in him and is beginning to hear whispers. The Lady could be using Pip to spy on the team and the soldiers in the Armada to spy on the others.\nIt seems a little obvious but sometimes simplicity is all you need. Sooner or later Pip’s spider and the soldiers are going to make a move. We now know that the Lady wants Aneela, Kendry, and D’avin’s baby and with all the other information we got this episode, it’s more likely than not that everything is connected at this point. So the simple idea of the Lady using the Hullen and Pip as tools to spy and help her escape doesn’t seem so unlikely to me.\nOverall, the episode was really a lot of fun and I’m really excited to see where we go from here. If the vision comes true, it’s not going to be fun for long. I would normally be unconcerned, doubting that they will kill all of these characters, perhaps one or even two, but considering season 5 is confirmed to be the last I feel like no character is safe in this season or the next.\nTagged killjoys, reviews, space, syfy, tv review, tv series, TV Shows, TV: 2010s\nKilljoys Season 4 Episode 3: ‘Bro-D Trip’ Review\nKilljoys Season 4 Episode 5: ‘Greening Pains’ Review","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line859236"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6810562014579773,"wiki_prob":0.3189437985420227,"text":"Author Archives: Allen Porter\nAllen Porter is a 2021-2022 John and Daria Barry Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the James Madison Program at Princeton University. The two main focuses of his current research are bioethics and political philosophy. His dissertation, “Social Justice Leftism as Deconstructive Postmodernism,” offers a unified explanation of a number of novel phenomena associated with what is now commonly called “the woke left”—including the use of various techniques of “silencing” (such as “deplatforming”), calls by students for racially segregated campus spaces, the new rhetoric of “equity,” “microaggression” complaints and demands for “safe spaces,” and more. His thesis is that the existence and features of these phenomena are straightforwardly predictable in light of their underlying political ideology, which results from combining philosophical postmodernism and political leftism—a political ideology which has dominated Western humanities and social science departments for several decades, and which increasingly prevails outside of academia as a kind of secular religion. At Princeton, he is focused on converting his dissertation into a book. Allen holds a B.A. in German from Princeton University, a M.A. in Philosophy from Tulane University, and a M.A. and Ph.D. in Philosophy from Rice University.\nCovid-19 exposes the link between Safetyism and Wokeism\nSafetyism and Wokeism leverage our altruistic instincts to effect submission to irrational policies that were never designed to be rationally justifiable in the first place. Instead, it seems increasingly clear, both ideologies function sociologically like religion.\nby Allen Porter Dec 2, 2021 Dec 2, 2021 / 6 mins /","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line600434"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7154783010482788,"wiki_prob":0.7154783010482788,"text":"ANTOINETTE TAUS\nAntoinette Taus named UN environment ambassador\nPublished: philstar.com | September 27, 2019\nMANILA, Philippines — The United Nations Environment Programme has designated Antoinette Taus as National Goodwill Ambassador for the Philippines. Antoinette is an award-winning actress, singer, TV host, environmental advocate and founder of the non-profit organization CORA.\nShe is the UN Environment Programme’s first National Goodwill Ambassador for the Philippines. The designation was made at a ceremony marking World Environment and Health Day in Manila on September 26. Long a fixture in the entertainment industry in the Philippines, Antoinette has spent much of her life in the media spotlight. At 11, she already was a regular presence on stage and onscreen and has since starred in blockbuster films and top rated television shows, including one of the country’s longest-running soap operas, \"Anna Karenina.\"\nToday, she works with international media networks such as National Geographic and CNN on projects centered around humanitarian and environmental issues. Combining her popularity with her longstanding dedication to the planet, Antoinette founded CORA in 2016, a non-profit organization to help foster action for sustainable development through volunteerism. Antoinette is also the Chief Executive Officer and founder of The Sustainable Planet, a social enterprise centered on improving the lives of indigenous peoples and those living in poverty in the Philippines.\n“Antoinette is as passionate a voice for the environment as they come. We are extremely pleased she will be helping us raise the profile of the range of environmental challenges and opportunities facing the Philippines. Global issues like climate change and plastic and air pollution are impacting all countries, and we are lucky to have advocates like Antoinette standing strong for the planet,” said Dechen Tsering, Regional Director for the UNEP’s Office for Asia and the Pacific.\n“When we protect the planet, we are protecting the people that we love. Each action as an individual has the power to create amazing change, but just imagine what we can achieve if we take action together,” said Taus. \"The key to solving our most urgent global issues is already in every single one of us. But we need to act now, as one people, for our one planet.”\nAs Goodwill Ambassador, Antoinette will continue to work closely with the youth, local communities and media partners to raise awareness on environmental issues and mobilize Filipinos to take climate action for people and the planet.\nIt can be recalled that Taus was also a member of “G Squad,” a group of celebrities assembled by former Department of Environment and Natural Resources secretary Gina Lopez as part of her travel show \"G Diaries.\"\nThe UN Environment Programme is the leading global voice on the environment. It provides leadership and encourages partnership in caring for the environment by inspiring, informing, and enabling nations and peoples to improve their quality of life without compromising that of future generations.\n5 women who inspire and empower other women online and in the real world\nAntoinette Taus urges public to use fabric masks instead of disposable ones\nAntoinette Taus: Protecting the planet means saving lives\n©2020 by Antoinette Taus | AMDG","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line699941"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7241423726081848,"wiki_prob":0.2758576273918152,"text":"On the Level with Tim Sharp\nOver 20,000 members strong, the American Choral Director’s Association (ACDA) is the premier non-profit organization dedicated to the promotion and advancement of choral singing in\nThe Ingredients for a Great Festival Experience\nFrom local events in high school auditoriums to national and international gatherings in venerated concert halls, vocal music festivals come in all manner of shapes\nImporting Files into Assessment Software\nI recently received an e-mail from Dan Franke, the principal of a private school in Audrey, Texas. Mr. Franke was requesting information on how to\nIf You Build It…\nFor many music programs, both vocal and instrumental, the primary indication of their effectiveness and impact is the quantity of participating students. Without a doubt,\nNew Releases: Folk Songs from around the World\nThis is the third of five issues featuring new releases. This month, I highlight arrangements of folk songs from around the world. Many of these\nThe Virtual Choir\nMusic is an inherently social vehicle. Whether sharing a song behind closed doors with the other members of an ensemble or presenting it onstage to\nManilow Hits “The Talk,” Donates $500K to Vegas Music Ed Programs Las Vegas crooner and tireless music education advocate Barry Manilow recently appeared on the\nGood Fight\nAs music educators know, teaching music and conducting a choir involves a great deal more than just showing up with an arm full of sheet","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1189855"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5201238989830017,"wiki_prob":0.5201238989830017,"text":"Home > China's JF-17 Found Success As A Cheaper MiG-21 And F-16 Hybrid\nChina's JF-17 Found Success As A Cheaper MiG-21 And F-16 Hybrid\nAugust 25, 2020 Topic: Security Region: Asia Blog Brand: The Reboot Tags: ChinaAir ForceMilitaryTechnologyJetFighterJF-17Pakistan\nA poor nation can field a relatively modern fighter for a very low price.\nby Charlie Gao\nHere's What You Need To Remember: The largest advantage of the JF-17 is its cost. At only 15 million per plane in its most basic configuration, the JF-17 is far cheaper than any of its competitors, even used. Block II JF-17s cost around the same margin, with Myanmar buying them for only 16 million per unit. This has been the key to the JF-17’s export success.\nChina’s JF-17 “Thunder” multirole fighter is one of China’s most successful aerospace exports. While it was designed from the outset to be an export fighter, its road to service was very rocky, involving decades of development and even American involvement at some points. Design wise, it’s a fusion of the MiG-21 and the F-16 Fighting Falcon. The most recent blocks of the JF-17 have introduced advanced capabilities that nominally put it on par with designs twenty years its senior. But how exactly did the United States help in creating the JF-17? Does the ancient airframe hold it back, or can it be worked around?\nThe JF-17 evolved out of a series of projects to produce an upgrade for the Pakistani Air Force’s fleet of Chengdu Aircraft Corporation (CAC) J-7 fighters. As Pakistan was one of the primary facilitators of U.S. aid to the anti-Soviet Afghan Mujaheddin, the United States was willing to provide aid to Pakistan in other defense sectors. As the Soviets were preparing to field their next generation lightweight fighter; the MiG-29, Pakistan wanted an aircraft that could counter it.\nThis resulted in Project Sabre II, an attempt to modernize the J-7s conducted by CAC and Grumman. The original iteration of Sabre II only stretched the fuselage of the J-7, redesigned the control surfaces, and changed the location and size of the air intakes. However the Sabre II was unable to reach the performance of contemporary American fighters or the projected performance of the MiG-29 with this configuration, so Project Sabre II was canned.\nHowever, the three countries decided to have another go at it later in the 1980s, resulting in the “Super 7” project. This time the wingspan was increased and formed into a similar configuration to the F-16 in addition to the prior aerodynamic changes. Grumman pulled out of the Super 7 project in 1989 due to Tiananmen Square and the resulting fallout. The project remained on ice for around 10 years as negotiations between China and Pakistan continued. A feasibility study to see if future development would be fruitful was commissioned in 1992, it was successful so a memorandum to continue development was signed.\nIn 1998 China and Pakistan recommenced serious development of the Super 7. Costs were split 50/50 between the Pakistani government and CAC and the aircraft was renamed JF-17 As Grumman had dropped out, the fighter needed a new powerplant. A solution was found in the Russian Mikoyan design bureau, which offered the Klimov RD-93 engine which was originally designed for the canceled MiG-33 fighter jet. The RD-93 was an advanced version of the RD-33 used on the MiG-29, however, only one RD-93 is used on the JF-17 in contrast to two RD-33s in a MiG-29.\nAnother key innovation that occurred during the development process was the inclusion of diverterless supersonic intakes (DSI) on the JF-17 design. The design went through several iterations but is seen on current JF-17 production aircraft. In 2003 the first prototype took to the air. By 2006 the JF-17 was finalized and ready to enter serial production. It was formally adopted in 2007. The first fully Pakistani-manufactured JF-17 was created in 2008.\nThe JF-17’s designers have proven adept at keeping up with the times following its entry into service. The initial run of fighters for Pakistan have been referred to as Block I JF-17s. Block II JF-17s introduced a multitude of new capabilities and upgrades, including composites in the airframe for reduced weight, air to air refueling, a full fly-by-wire system, and a better radar. China offered to replace the Russian RD-93s with their own WS-13 in Block II JF-17s, but Pakistan opted to stick with the Russian engine.\nFor the Block III, China hopes to add an AESA radar to the JF-17 and further improve the avionics and weapons compatibility of the JF-17. The standard JF-17 features the MIL-STD-1760 databus in some implementations, allowing for compatibility with Western and Eastern weapons. One potential weakness of the JF-17 is its internal cannon, which is still the double-barrel GSh-23, a legacy of its MiG-21 heritage. This cannon is outperformed by practically any other autocannon mounted on a modern combat aircraft. However, given the relative infrequency of cannon usage in modern air combat, this is not a big issue.\nThe largest advantage of the JF-17 is its cost. At only 15 million per plane in its most basic configuration, the JF-17 is far cheaper than any of its competitors, even used. Block II JF-17s cost around the same margin, with Myanmar buying them for only 16 million per unit. This has been the key to the JF-17’s export success. A poor nation can field a relatively modern fighter for a very low price. It is yet to be seen whether it can actually perform at its price point in combat, but Pakistan seems to be satisfied with what the JF-17 can do in trials. In many ways, China has updated the budget fighter of the last generation, the MiG-21, for the modern era with the help and additional design cues from the F-16.\nCharlie Gao studied political and computer science at Grinnell College and is a frequent commentator on defense and national-security issues. This article first appeared in 2018.\nImage: Wikipedia.\nSource URL: https://nationalinterest.org/blog/reboot/chinas-jf-17-found-success-cheaper-mig-21-and-f-16-hybrid-167723","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line422603"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.746734082698822,"wiki_prob":0.746734082698822,"text":"Subway:\nFranchise Lender Butler Capital Commits $30 Million For Subway® Franchisee Loans\nBy: Subway | 0 Shares 126 Reads\nHUNT VALLEY, MD (Wednesday, February 21, 2007) - Through its Franchise Finance Division, national commercial lender Butler Capital Corporation has committed $30 million in financing this year for SUBWAY® restaurant franchisees throughout the U.S.\nDoctor's Associates Inc. (DAI), franchisor of SUBWAY® restaurants, in 2005 designated Butler as one of only six approved lenders for its entire international operation. Of the six, Butler is one of only three direct lenders.\nIn making the commitment to support SUBWAY® restaurant franchisees, Butler's chief operating officer, Joseph P. Serio, executive vice president, said, \"Butler's principal business line is franchise funding, particularly in the fast-casual restaurant arena. SUBWAY® restaurants are the world's top submarine sandwich franchisor, so it's fitting that we dedicate our attention and our dollars to supporting a winning organization.\"\nEstablished in 1978, Butler Capital is an independent, national lender that provides general business loans and leases. Its lending teams specialize in the fast-casual franchise restaurant, car wash, convenience store, drycleaning, and office furnishings/equipment markets. In addition, Butler maintains an active lessor/broker unit to purchase individual transactions and portfolios from brokers, lessors, and financial institutions nationwide and a sales finance unit that works with manufacturers to fund their customers' purchase of goods and services.\nGuests in 112 countries have easy access to a fresh line-up of vegetables for their made-to-order sandwiches and salads at more than 44,700 franchised locations.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1493394"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9294934868812561,"wiki_prob":0.9294934868812561,"text":"Ventura man arrested after foot pursuit by police\nA Ventura man was arrested Thursday after a patrol officer recognized him, while he was sitting in a car, as someone who had a felony arrest warrant issued for him, the Ventura Police Department said.\nPolice said Danny Speer, 57, who was a passenger in a vehicle, jumped out and ran along the 100 block of West Simpson Street at 3:15 p.m.\nPolice said Speer eventually hid in some bushes. Police also said they ordered Speer to come out but he refused. Speer was arrested after police said they used a Taser on him.\nSpeer was then taken to the Ventura County Medical Center where he was examined and released. He was then booked into Ventura County Jail in connection with a felony warrant, police said.\nPolice said Speer was also booked on suspicion of possession of methamphetamine, possession of narcotics paraphernalia and resisting arrest.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1843971"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7488701939582825,"wiki_prob":0.7488701939582825,"text":"This is how we will be protected against Asteroids threats\nHome/Posts/TECHNOLOGY/Space/This is how we will be protected against Asteroids threats\nNASA is organizing the Planetary Defense Coordination Office, a task force against asteroid threats.\nNASA has formalized its ongoing program for detecting and tracking near-Earth objects (NEOs) as the Planetary Defense Coordination Office (PDCO).\nAbove: The Panoramic Survey Telescope & Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS) 1 telescope on Maui’s Mount Haleakala, Hawaii has produced the most near-Earth object discoveries of the NASA-funded NEO surveys in 2015. Credits: University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy / Rob Ratkowski\nMore than 13,500 near-Earth objects of all sizes have been discovered to date—more than 95 percent of them since NASA-funded surveys began in 1998. About 1,500 NEOs are now detected each year.\nThe office will be responsible for supervision of all NASA-funded projects to find and characterize asteroids and comets that pass near Earth’s orbit around the sun. It will also take a leading role in coordinating interagency and intergovernmental efforts in response to any potential impact threats.\nJohn Grunsfeld, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington, said:\n“Asteroid detection, tracking and defense of our planet is something that NASA, its interagency partners, and the global community take very seriously. While there are no known impact threats at this time, the 2013 Chelyabinsk super-fireball and the recent ‘Halloween Asteroid’ close approach remind us of why we need to remain vigilant and keep our eyes to the sky.”\nNASA has been engaged in worldwide planning for planetary defense for some time, and this office will improve and expand on those efforts, working with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and other federal agencies and departments.\nOn the other hand, AIM is proposed as ESA’s contribution to a larger international endeavour, the Asteroid Impact & Deflection Assessment (AIDA) mission.\nA close-Earth encounter of the binary asteroid 65803 Didymos (1996 GT) in October 2022 provides the optimal target for such a mission, allowing an impact on Didymos’ secondary body to change its orbital period around the primary by a measureable amount – as seen both from ground observatories and from a rendezvous spacecraft.\nAs part of AIDA, two independent spacecraft would be sent to Didymos:\nAn asteroid impactor – the NASA Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) Mission led by the John Hopkins’ Applied Physics Laboratory in the United States\nAn asteroid rendezvous spacecraft – the ESA Asteroid Impact Mission (AIM).\nAIDA is composed of the projectile called DART (Double Asteroid Redirection Test) and an observer satellite called AIM (Asteroid Impact Mission), each under study by NASA and ESA, respectively.The combination of both spacecrafts is referred to as AIDA. As in the separate DART and AIM studies, the target of this mission is the binary asteroid system (65803) Didymos. For a successful joint mission, one spacecraft, DART would impact the secondary of the Didymos binary system in October 2022 while AIM would first characterize the target asteroid (surface and internal properties), observe the impact event and measure any change in the relative orbit.\nsources NASA, ESA\nBy Agis F|2017-07-18T12:34:45+03:00Jan 14, 2016|Categories: Space|Tags: asteroid|\nLamborghini Space Key NFT\nRadian Aerospace reveals plans to build a Spaceplane","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1762838"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.662580668926239,"wiki_prob":0.662580668926239,"text":"Autodesk Inc. Eyes Drones and IoT to Fuel Growth\nThe 3D software king is forging ahead with its transition to new, cutting-edge markets.\nTim Brugger\n(timbrugger)\nTim has been writing professionally for several years after spending 18 years (Whew! Was it that long?)in both the retail and institutional side of the financial services industry. Tim resides in Portland, Oregon with his three children and the family dog.\nFollow @FoolInvesting\nIt was six months ago that 3D-design software leader Autodesk (NASDAQ:ADSK) announced the launch of its Forge developer platform, a move intended to facilitate its transition into a cloud-based company. Forge provides a means for developers to extend Autodesk's suite of cloud-based solutions, which in turn is expected to fuel CEO Carl Bass' efforts to boost recurring revenue via subscription sales and fend off fast-growing competitors, including France-based Dassault Systemes (OTC:DASTY).\nBased on Autodesk's fiscal first-quarter 2017 results, announced May 19, subscription sales, recurring revenue, and deferred sales all performed admirably. However, while peers like Dassault were reporting top- and bottom-line growth, Autodesk's transformation initiatives have taken a near-term toll on sales: dropping 21% to $511 million last quarter.\nThe answer, as per Bass, is Autodesk's Forge platform, along with investments in new, fast-growing markets via its $100 million investment fund. And it's wasting no time in getting its transition and investments in tech upstarts into full swing.\nImage source: Autodesk.\nIf the recently completed Forge developers conference is any indication, Autodesk's emphasis on cloud-based product offerings is off to a strong start. The company said it hosted more than 1,000 cloud developers during the conference, held June 15 and 16 in San Francisco. That's not a bad showing just six months after it introduced Forge to the dev world.\nThere was no shortage of new product and development announcements, including expanding the Forge platform to assist developers in building new 3D-printing features, improving data management capabilities, and transforming 3D images into usable information, all delivered via the cloud. That's great stuff and should give developers everything they need to expand Autodesk's suite of services.\nBut the Forge platform developments took a backseat to news of Autodesk's investments in a few upstarts that are on the leading edge of the drone and Internet of Things markets.\nThe future begins now\nIn the next five years, sales of drones are expected to grow by 50% to $12 billion, largely due to commercial and government enterprises, including military applications, and the construction, telecom, and energy industries. That's a lot of upside, and explains why Autodesk announced at its Forge gathering that it had invested an undisclosed sum in leading drone maker 3D Robotics.\n3D Robotics is already using the Forge system to capture data and images from its drones and transform that information into engineering data. Autodesk and its 3D design software is ideal for data-collecting drones, and its recent commitment to 3D Robotics, though likely small-ish -- remember, Autodesk committed \"just\" $100 million for its entire investment fund -- opens the doors to a world of revenue-generating opportunities.\nAnother of Autodesk's intriguing investments is in Seebo, a software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform designed to transform \"simple,\" everyday objects into IoT \"smart\" technologies. Everything from toys to fashion are made \"smart\" by simply dragging and dropping connected components including sensors, bluetooth, and GPS, into a product design framework.\nAs is the case with 3D Robotics, Seebo is already an avid Forge system developer. The combination of Seebo's SaaS solutions with Autodesk is designed for \"manufacturers to tap into the world of IoT simply, securely and cost effectively.\"\nThis year is expected to see some 6.4 billion IoT connected \"things\" in use, a 30% jump from 2015. And depending on which market estimate you choose to believe, the revenue possibilities are seemingly endless, with some suggesting IoT will grow into a trillion-dollar -plus opportunity. Autodesk's IoT forays are in their early stages to be sure, but with so much upside, even a slice of such a huge revenue pie will move the needle.\nDespite Autodesk's drop in revenue, which was particularly painful given one of its primary competitors, Dassault, reported a 6% jump in sales, its 132,000 sequential jump in subscriptions is nothing short of spectacular. As was Autodesk's 9% increase in annualized recurring revenue to $1.44 billion and 32% jump in deferred sales to $1.52 billion.\nThe transformation is picking up steam, and as Autodesk's recent investments indicate, its future is no longer tied to desktop software, and that bodes well for growth investors with some patience.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1669839"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7983250617980957,"wiki_prob":0.7983250617980957,"text":"HomeIran News NowIran: EU’s Appeasement Policy and Its Consequences\nIran: EU’s Appeasement Policy and Its Consequences\nWritten by Shamsi Saadati\nThe international response to recent crises has made it clear that the myth of Iranian moderation is alive. Much of the European countries remain amenable to the idea of negotiating with some representatives of the Iranian regime, on the assumption that they also represent a faction that is at odds with hardliners like Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). But that assumption is groundless, and Tehran’s continued exploitation of foreign interlocutors should make it clear that the assumption is harmful to global security.\nWhen the current president of the regime, Hassan Rouhani, was elected in 2013, many Western policymakers embraced it as a sign that substantial reform was pending in the country. Some even portrayed the election as a sort of delayed triumph for the 2009 protests that erupted four years earlier after the disputed reelection of Rouhani’s predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Those protests were brutally suppressed, and the people’s demands were rejected out of hand. Rouhani’s election came as a surprise because the intervening four years produced no meaningful changes which suggested that the stage had been set for moderate leadership.\nThis should have been recognized as a clue that Rouhani’s moderate credentials were illusory. But even among those who failed to recognize the preexisting signs of his adherence to hardline principles, there should have been a rapid loss of faith in moderation after his first year in office failed to demonstrate follow-through on any of his promised reforms. Yet some in the West contented themselves with the belief that Tehran was moving toward compromise in the nuclear sphere, and that once this was achieved it would herald broader change.\nA nuclear deal did finally arrive on the scene in 2015, but it was rightly derided by serious critics of the Iranian regime for giving away sanctions relief to the mullahs in exchange for limited, short-term restrictions on nuclear enrichment, and no further transparency on the past military dimensions of the nuclear program. But while the preamble of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action promised that it would contribute to a more peaceful environment in the Middle East, its implementation coincided with the ongoing escalation of Iran’s regional meddling.\nDomestic conditions in Iran didn’t show any signs of progress during Rouhani’s first term, either. Instead, the era seemed to soon be defined by increased repression of political dissent and free expression in general.\nNear the end of Rouhani’s first term, a leaked audio recording from 1988 made it widely known that his first Justice Minister, Mostafa Pourmohammadi, had played a major role in that year’s massacre of 30,000 political prisoners. Pourmohammadi would go on to publicly declare that he felt proud to have helped carry out “God’s command” by executing the main targets of that massacre, members of the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI-MEK). Although he was removed from his position ahead of Rouhani’s second term, he has otherwise faced no consequences, and he was promptly replaced by Alireza Avaiee, another participant in the same massacre.\nMostafa Pour-Mohammadi defends Iran's 1988 massacre\nNow Rouhani is nearing the end of his second term in office, and it is widely anticipated that he will be replaced by an avowed hardliner following a purge of “reformists” from the ballots during last year’s parliamentary elections. After the past seven years, the global consensus should tend toward an understanding that this doesn’t actually make a difference. It should be clear to all that the moderate and hardline factions represent a distinction without a difference, and that the 2015 nuclear deal is not sufficient to set one apart from the other, least of all in the aftermath of Iran’s systematic violations and the ultimatum underlying its recent decision – wholly embraced by both factions – to resume enriching uranium to 20 percent fissile purity.\nThat may be one of the last decisions that defines Rouhani’s legacy, and yet many Western policymakers are looking toward the end of this era while wringing their hands over the pending loss of some vague opportunity that never really made itself known. Some are even pushing for the incoming US presidential administration to promptly reenter the nuclear deal that the previous administration pulled out of in 2018, even if doing so involves the renewed suspension of economic sanctions or an offer of other concessions that effectively reward Tehran for its malign activity.\nThis is not a regime made up of hardliners and reformists jostling for dominance; it is an irredeemable religious dictatorship wherein both factions swear loyalty to a single ruling theocrat while working together to bamboozle foreign adversaries into turning a blind eye to his agenda in hopes of promoting domestic reforms that will never come.\n1988 Massacre\nMEK-Iran\nPrevious articleIran: Executions Continue as International Community Remains Silent\nNext articleIran: Coronavirus Death Toll in 478 Cities Surpasses 203,400\nIran News in Brief – January 28, 2022\nIranian Regime’s State Radio and Television Disrupted. Images of Massoud Rajavi and Mrs. Maryam Rajavi Broadcast","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1193266"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5235542058944702,"wiki_prob":0.4764457941055298,"text":"Saxena Lab\nElectrical Engineering @ University of Florida\nWelcome to the Saxena Lab for Neural Control!\nAbout the PI\nShreya Saxena\nDepartment of Electrical and Computer Engineering @ UF\nWarren B. Nelms Institute for the Connected World\nNorman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases\nShreya Saxena is as an Assistant Professor at the University of Florida in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in the Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering. At UF, she is affiliated with the Department of Biomedical Engineering, the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, the Warren B. Nelms Insititute for the Connected World and the Norman Fixel Institute for Neurological Diseases.\nBefore this, Shreya was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Center for Theoretical Neuroscience at the Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute at Columbia University, working with Liam Paninski and John Cunningham. Here, she was affiliated with the Department of Statistics, and being generously funded by the Postdoc Mobility Fellowship offered by the Swiss National Science Foundation.\nShreya completed her PhD in the Laboratory of Information and Decision Systems at the Massachusetts Institute of Techonology, working with Munther Dahleh in the Department of Electrical Engineering. Prior to this, she received an MSc from the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins University, working with Sridevi V. Sarma. She did her undergraduate degree at Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland.\nHere is a link to Shreya’s CV. She can be reached at shreya.saxena_at_ufl_dot_edu.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1556286"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6915891766548157,"wiki_prob":0.3084108233451843,"text":"Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway\nby Calé\nThrough a superficial observation of the Seekers series, we, as observers, are inclined to reject the portraits we present as failures. They show signs of poor technical capacity as the main character of each photo is quite blurred and overexposed. With the fully automatic cameras of our time, it should be possible to make sharp, well-exposed photos. But Brazilian artist Calé has created a series with such rigor that we necessarily have to surrender to his figurative language and enter the premises of his photographs.\nBecause the conditions for our existence in large cities seem to be the same regardless of where we are in the world, the series is not about specific people or places, but the temporal places in which we find ourselves. It is no coincidence that we are in the urban space, where each person is supposedly surrounded by many other people. However, the photographs are reproduced isolated, alone and anonymous. Nowhere are we more solitary than when surrounded by strangers.\nJens Friis\nCurator and Director\nBrandts Museum, Denmark\nCalé cale.art.br\nCalé has been a editorial and commercial photographer for the last 17 years, and had clients such as National Geographic, Newsweek, Vogue, GQ, NY Times, Petrobras, Cachaça Leblon, Banco Icatu, among others. In the last 3 years he has been dedicating more time to his art work, part of a big life change. His work looks into the universe of his inner experiences and questions love, sexuality, identity and spiritual arise. His photos have been seen in galleries, museums and festivals in Denmark, Russia, Ireland, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil and USA He recently won the XIII Marc Ferrez Prize in Brazil, a USD$ 22.000,00 grant, and in 2011 he won the Iberoamericanos Award and Best Porfolio in Encuentros Abiertos Argentina 2012.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1421598"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6111337542533875,"wiki_prob":0.6111337542533875,"text":"October 31, 2018 by Ernest Johnson\nFormer Public Administrator Employee Indicted for Stealing\nOver $78,000 From Estates of Eight Decedents\nAllegedly Used Stolen Funds on a Cruise, Bills, Shopping and More\nBrooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, together with New York City Department of Investigation Commissioner Mark G. Peters, today announced that a former case manager at the Office of the Kings County Public Administrator has been indicted on grand larceny and other charges for allegedly stealing over $78,000 from the estates of eight deceased individuals whose estates his agency was administering.\nDistrict Attorney Gonzalez said, “This defendant abused his position and betrayed the public trust by allegedly stealing tens of thousands of dollars that he then used for his personal expenses. A thorough investigation uncovered the extent of his alleged theft and we will now seek to hold him accountable. Public corruption and abuse of power will not be tolerated in Brooklyn.”\nCommissioner Peters said, “This public servant misused his position in the Kings County Public Administrator’s Office to allegedly access the debit and credit card accounts of several deceased persons, stealing tens of thousands of dollars from their estates and using the money for lavish purchases, according to the charges. DOI’s report issued today details the alleged criminal conduct and makes recommendations to KCPA to address vulnerabilities in its policies and procedures to prevent future crimes. DOI thanks the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office for their partnership in this investigation.”\nThe District Attorney identified the defendant as Fitzroy Thompson, 36, of Park Slope, Brooklyn. He was arraigned today before Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun on an indictment in which he is charged with second-degree grand larceny, third-degree corrupting the government, first-degree scheme to defraud and first- and third-degree identity theft. The defendant was ordered to return to court on January 9, 2019. He faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted of the top count.\nThe District Attorney said that, according to the investigation, the defendant was employed as a case manager at the Office of the Kings County Public Administrator, which administers estates of those who die without a last will and testament or without family members who are able to administer their estates. Between July 2017 and April 2018, the defendant allegedly stole a total of $78,325 in funds from estates being administered by the Public Administrator.\nIt is alleged that the defendant used credit cards and checking accounts belonging to estates of eight decedents whose cases he handled or could access to make various purchases and payments. In January 2018, he booked a cruise with Carnival Cruise Line, using one of the decedent’s credit cards to pay a $2,741 fee, the investigation found. He also allegedly used estate funds unlawfully to make ATM withdrawals exceeding $35,000, to make lease payments on a 2017 Nissan Pathfinder and a 2016 Nissan Altima, to make rent payments in connection with two properties, to pay phone and cable bills, to buy JetBlue airline tickets to Nassau, Bahamas and to make purchases at Walmart, Fingerhut and other companies.\nThe defendant was arrested in March 2018 after the executor of one estate noticed charges on his deceased relative’s account, including the cruise payment, and filed a police report. A subsequent investigation discovered the additional alleged larcenies. The defendant was suspended upon his arrest and resigned from the Office of the Public Administrator in July.\nDistrict Attorney Gonzalez thanked the Kings County Public Administrator’s Office, its staff and Public Administrator Richard Buckheit for their cooperation and assistance with this investigation.\nThe case was investigated by Senior Investigative Auditor Helen Gromadsky and Deputy Inspector General and Special Counsel Spector of the New York City Department of Investigation, under the supervision of Inspector General Eleonora Rivkin, Associate Commissioner Andrew Brunsden, Deputy Commissioner/Chief of Investigations Susan Lambiase, and First Deputy Commissioner Lesley Brovner. The case was also investigated by New York City Police Department Detective Mitchell Eisenberg of the 60th Precinct Detective Squad.\nThe case is being prosecuted by Senior Assistant District Attorney Adam Libove, of the District Attorney’s Public Integrity Unit with the assistance of Investigative Paralegal Zachary Gitman, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorney Michel Spanakos, Chief of the Public Integrity Unit, and the overall supervision of Assistant District Attorney Patricia McNeill, Deputy Chief of the District Attorney’s Investigations Division and Mark Feldman, Senior Executive Assistant District Attorney for Crime Strategies and Investigations\nAn indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt.\nCategories Press Releases\nBrooklyn Man Indicted for Scheme Where He Allegedly Used Counterfeit Bills When Buying Smartphones and Laptop from Online Sellers\nBrooklyn Man Convicted of Breaking into Apartment and Sexually Assaulting Bushwick Woman Who Previously Hired Him to Clean Her Apartment","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1832274"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6438699960708618,"wiki_prob":0.3561300039291382,"text":"Home / Fulltext / Swot analysis of gwadar and chabahar port\nSWOT Analysis of Gwadar and Chabahar Port\nGwadar and Chabahar port both have significance due to their geostrategic position for the emerging economic powers of Asia, India, and China. Gwadar port managed by China under the CPEC agreement, while on the other side, Chabahar port funded by India under Preferential Trade Agreement (PTA) which was signed on 23 May 2016 between India, Afghanistan, and Iran. Both ports are located in a significant strategic position for an energy trade route to connect Central Asia, Middle East, and Europe. Due to economic cost, both ports came into competition with each other. However, Iran and Pakistan both states deny any competition with each other and both states keenly interested in building cooperation and connections with each other. No doubt China is the emerging economic power of the world while the US try to contain China’s growing influence in the Asian region for its resources. This paper focused on the nature of both ports and built arguments that possible strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threat in the light of comparative analysis through descriptive studies.\nGwadar, Chabahar, Strengths, Weakness, Opportunities, Threats, CPEC\nChina and India are emerging economies of Asia. They both want to make their influence in the resource-rich region of Central Asia. China starts a project in Gwadar, the city of Balochistan in Pakistan, to build a seaport and wants to connect this port to a less develop Western part of China. As a result, India, to contain the growing influence of China in the region, India starts a project to build a seaport in Chabahar located and an important strategic position in Iran to make its influence stronger in Afghanistan and Central Asia. Both countries invest huge amount of money in these projects. Gwadar is the world deepest seaport; it has a large capacity for upcoming ships. On the other hand, Chabahar is only just a few meters deep; it has a low capacity as compared to Gwadar. Chabahar route is unsafe and unclear due to some militant’s groups that have control in a large area of Afghanistan, and there is no trained army or security force in Afghanistan like Pakistan. The Chabahar project is delay due to a lack of funding by India. Iran dropped India from the Chabahar railway project and made a deal with China. China wants to connect CPEC (China– Pakistan Economic Corridor) with Iran and other countries. Gwadar seaport has such a lot of significance due to it has the secure and shortest route for Central Asia and Western China to reach the warm sea. It's important to decrease Chinese dependence on the ‘Strait of Malacca’ and South China sea disputed routes, the port of Gwadar would provide China with another shortest and safe route for oil imports from the Middle East, thereby minimize shipping costs and reduce times. Gwadar is a new transit hub for the Landlocked Central Asian Republics (Malik, 2012).\nChabahar is beneficial for Iran because it is the alternate port of Iran. It is the merely Iranian port with direct access to the Indian Ocean. It also has significance for Afghanistan because it provides a gateway for Afghans. Both ports provide many opportunities to their native. Finically supports their own countries. They help to increase the GDP, decrease poverty, and provide a job for youth. India also wants to increase their influence in Afghanistan by the route of Chabahar.\nGwadar Development under CPEC\nGwadar Port, located in Balochistan, is the only deep seaport which links China to the Middle East and provides a route to warm waters which can help China to develop its western province Xingjian by attaching its western regions to the rest of the world (Salim & Sultana). In the past 1987, China also constructed the Karakoram highway as a symbol of friendship and road connectivity which will be extended through CPEC and linked with Gwadar port. The port of Gwadar provides an alternative shipping route to China instead of ‘Malacca Strait’ and the South China Sea. Gwadar port will be able to improve the logistic structure of the Xinjiang region. Once the CPEC project will be fully functional and connected with Central Asian states through Xinjiang province, they can easily exchange their products in lower prices, and Gwadar port is the nearest port for Central Asian landlocked states (Bashir, Rashid, Ikram, & Tanveer, 2018). Gwadar port also provides access to oil transportation and the shortest route to Middle Eastern and African countries through Gwadar port, as shown in figure 1 (below).\nFigure 1: Importance of Gwadar Port for the World\nSource:https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/gwadar-port-implications-for-gcc-and-china.474961/ (accessed on 04-05-2020)\nIn 1958, Pakistan obtained Gwadar port from the Sultan of Oman with the ambition of developing a deep seaport. Having a deep seaport remained a dream until Karachi port came under attack by Indian forces in the war of 1971 between Pakistan and India. Developing a seaport in Gwadar will help as an alternative trade route for Pakistan. Post-war scenario, the plan of a port was implemented, but due to the lack of funds, ports could not be constructed. During 1988-1992, a small port was built in Gwadar (Ahmad, 2016). The proper development of Gwadar port started in 2002 when China took responsibility for Gwadar port development, and in 2013, they launched the CPEC project, and Gwadar port development became an essential part of this completely under the supervision of Chinese company. Pakistan experienced the same naval threats during the Kargil war 1999 and in 2001-2002 during a direct conflict with India, which forced Pakistan to have some substitute hub and naval base as an alternate trade route and provide a backup to Karachi and Port Qasim to counter future Indian threat (Kanwal, 2018).\nPhases of Gwadar Port\nChinese company completed the first phase of Gwadar port in 2005. In 2007 President Musharaff along, Chinese minister of communication Mr. Li Shenglin, inaugurated it. The total capacity and area of phase I is around 3 berths, used for cargo shipments coming from west China, American continents, Middle East, and Africa. Phase II was during 2005-2010, under the port supervision of the Singapore authority (PSA). The suggested plan for up-gradation of Gwadar port included enhancing the berths from 3 to 9, which would increase the shortage capacity of the port. Due to unfavourable circumstances of Balochistan, the upgradation of the port was not done by PSA (Zaheer, 2006). In 2013, Pakistani leadership handed it over to COPHC for 49 years lease for further development and trading; the first shipment was made from Gwadar in 2008. Currently, China completely controls the development of the Gwadar port, and it also shows the importance of the Gwadar port for China as it has become the prime hub of the CPEC project; without the Gwadar port, we cannot imagine CPEC.\nGwadar port is the third-largest port in the world and can be utilized for commercial activities of the whole region (Naseem, 2014). Strategically it is situated at a prime location and only 72 km away from Chabahar port which tries to challenge and counter Gwadar port importance. Gwadar is located on the mouth of the Persian Gulf and gateway to the Strait of Hormuz. The Chinese government decided to construct a naval base in Jiwani, 40 km away from Gwadar, for the protection of this port and ongoing trade (Khetran, 2014).\nGwadar Free Zone\nGwadar port also has a free zone called (GFZ). In 2013, Gwadar free zone was taken over by China overseas ports holding company (COPHC) for expansion of Gwadar after the agreement inked between the Gwadar port authority (GPA), Singapore port authority and COPHC. GFZ is situated in the northern part of Gwadar, which is 7 km away from the existing port. The Gwadar free zone will be developed till 2030 under four phases. The total area of these free zone is 923 hectares. These free zones will provide cargo capacity and also will develop industry near the port area (Parliamentary Committee on China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC, 2015-2017). The early development of the port is primarily based on cold storage, fishery processing, agriculture processing, infrastructure, marble processing, container yards, warehouse, business centre, trade exhibition hall, halal food processing, packaging, rest and recreation, hotel, and medical facilities etc.\nAccording to the Parliamentary report on CPEC 2015-2017, they prefer local people to work for the development of GFZ, and around 497 locals’ employees are already serving. During the construction work of the free zone, 2000 jobs will be created for the locals, and more jobs will be available with the development of the free zone. In the management of COPHC, the Faqeer school project completed in Gwadar, granting scholarships to local youth, supplying fresh water to locals, further progress of the free zone is in the process (Zaheer, 2006).\nThe planned GFZ expansions are mostly granted by the Chinese government through COPHC. As the president of Rawalpindi Chamber of Commerce and Industry (RCCI ) stated, “There is unfair projection done by the government on Gwadar port, is not much progress has been done there, which they are projecting to the public.” More, he added, “Gwadar port has potential, but we are not capable enough to use that potential. There is dire need to do a lot of work” (Khan, 2018/Interview). In Table 1 the details of Gwadar master plan and progress detail is mentioned.\nTable 1. Gwadar Master Plan\nS. No\nEstimated Cost US$ Million\nFinancing Mechanism\nCOPHC\nConcessional Loan\nGwadar International Airport\nGwadar Smart Port City Master Plan\nChinese Fourth Harbour Design Institute (FDHI) CCCC\nCompleted in August 2018\nGwadar Eastbay Expressway\n(19 km, connecting Gwadar Port\nto Mehran Coastal Highway),\nGwadar Eastbay Expressway II\n(19 km, connecting Eastbay\nExpressway I to New Gwadar\nInternational Airport to New\nA mix of Chinese Government Concessional Loan and Grant\nGwadar Pak-China Friendship\nChinese Government Grant\nGwadar Vocational Training and technical college\nGwadar Port Authority or any Financial Framework Agreement under CPEC\nGwadar Faqeer Primary School\nChinese Communications Construction Company Ltd. (CCCCL)\nNecessary facilities for freshwater treatment, water supply and distribution\nDredging of Breathing Areas & channels\nChinese Government Concessional Loan & Grant\nFeasibility phase\nConstruction of Breakwater\nConcessional Loan & Grant\nBao Steel Park, petrochemicals,\nstainless steel and other industries in Gwadar\nUpgradation and development\nof fishing, boat making, and\nmaintenance services to protect.\nand promote livelihoods of the\nlocal population\nDevelopment of Gwadar University (Social Sector Development)\nSource: The Ministry of Planning and Commission and the China Pakistan Institute (22 Feb 2018)\nGwadar free zone is located 632 km away from Karachi and accessed through Makran coastal highway, and it is 120 km away from the Iran border. Gwadar is linked through road and air with the major cities of Pakistan, and a planned airport will connect the city with major airports of the world. In Table 1 it is clearly indicated that only three projects were completely granted from China, whereas the remaining were on concessional loans taken from the Chinese government. The total expected cost on the development of the Gwadar project is 1.62 billion US dollars (A. Hassan, 2005). Here the question arises that if China is not fully invested in Gwadar, then why Pakistan handed over Gwadar to China for the next 40 years with 91 percent revenue collection to China, and Pakistan will receive only 9 percent of revenue. The concern of revenue production was raised by the Minister of Shipping and port Hasil Beizinjo during a Senate meeting in December 2017. Gwadar port has a significant strategic position for global trading activities, so it is essential for the Pakistan government to close a deal on equal terms and conditions. Another concern is that if Pakistan will collect only 9 percent revenue from Gwadar port, then how it will pay back the loan because Pakistan does not have sufficient foreign reserves or export industry. In 9 percent revenue, how many shares Pakistan will give to Balochistan province. Due to these conditions of Pakistan may be in future, China will take over Gwadar port as they\nalready took control of Hambantota port in Sri Lanka. Sri Lankan government signed a deal with China; they gave the port control to China for the next 99 years along with 70 percent revenue collection and the remaining 30 percent for Sri Lanka (Patrick, 2017). To counter this agenda, Pakistani government officials argue that the deal and agreements of Gwadar port are completely different from Hambantota port, and China will never take control of Gwadar port.\nAll the investments which come under the CPEC project will address China’s interests, not Pakistan’s interests. Pakistan will get better infrastructure, modern techniques of communication etc., but all these advancements will be utilized by China for transportation and trade. If Pakistan’s govt and industrialist will not formulate proper, timely policies and steps and how to counter the growing market of Chinese products, it will further lead Pakistan towards Chinese dependency. Pakistan is already facing foreign debt issue challenges, and CPEC loans will burden Pakistan’s economy.\nChabahar Port\nOn the other hand, Chabahar port which is located southeast of Iran in Sistan and best geostrategic position. It is in a key position to access the Oman Sea, Persian Gulf, and the Indian Ocean. India spending 85 million US dollars primarily on the development of Chabahar port because through Chabahar port India directly access landlocked Afghanistan and rich resources states of Central Asian Republics. After the development of Chabahar port India received rights over this for eighteen months initially. Iran also declared Chabahar port a free trade zone. India is constructing two containers berths with a length of 40 meters and three multi-cargo berths capacity. In figure 2 clearly indicated growing Indian influence in the Persian Gulf region also be able to strengths its maritime presence. The shortest distance of Chabahar Kandla port of India is 550 nautical miles (NM) while the currently define sea route is 650 NM by defining this new route towards Kandla and Mumbai Port it will secure travel cost and time and also avoid the Pakistani coast by a long margin (M. Hassan, 2018).\nFigure 2: Importance of Chabahar Port for India\nSource: google maps.\nWith one of the world's fastest-growing economies, India has felt compelled to explore new ways to extend its economic contacts and get access to new markets. Central Asia is one of the fastest-growing markets. The Gwadar port in Pakistan is one prospective path for India to access Central Asian markets, although India has long sought alternate routes due to its hostile relationship with Pakistan. Afghanistan is one of the possible routes for the country to reach Central Asia. Afghanistan also aims to diversify its trade routes to reach foreign markets and minimize its reliance on Pakistan, which handles most of the Afghan trade due to the country's landlocked status. The Chabahar Agreement was signed in 2003 by India, Afghanistan, and Iran as part of the North-South Transport Corridor concept signature by Chabahar port (Pant & Mehta, 2018).\nThe port of Chabahar is in the province of Sistan and Balochistan in southern Iran, on the Gulf of Oman. Gwadar, Pakistan, located roughly 72 km west along the coast. Chabahar provides a new prospect for India to revive trade links with Afghanistan and Central Asia also monitor China naval presence at Gwadar and counter its ‘Strings of Pearl’ policy in the Indian Ocean. Afghanistan and Central Asian Republics consider Chabahar as another gateway for their import and export. Iran also came out from its isolation in the global community through this regional development (Balooch, 2009). This port also established cooperation and competition for Gwadar port.\nSWOT Analysis of Gwadar with Chabahar Port\nThe port of Gwadar is the backbone of the CPEC project. It will provide China with a short way of transporting its Goods from its western provinces like Xinjiang, Tibet, and Qinghai to the Arabia Sea, in which 60 percent of oil shipping is done. It will play an important role in the less developed western region of China. This project is beneficial for both countries. Pakistan will get infrastructure development, and China can easily transport its goods and fulfil its energy needs by the alternate shortest and secure route. Revenue will also be generated from the toll of moving goods (A. Hassan, 2005).\nBoth ports are located at the mouth of the Strait of Hormuz, which contains two-thirds of the world's oil reserves and through which an estimated 17 billion barrels of crude oil travel every day. Once these ports are fully functioning, it is likely that competition for dominance of regional seaborne trade will emerge (Zeb, 2003).\nThere are some major reasons which indicate the importance of Gwadar port over Chabahar.\nSecurity Threats\nAfter Chabahar in Iran, the next stop for Indian product will be Afghanistan, subsequently to the Central Asian States. Indian goods will not be safe due to the Taliban influence and political instability in Afghanistan, some major insurgent group in Afghanistan they have against Indian ideology. On the other hand, Gwadar also has some security issues like Balochistan has security problems and instability problem from local Baloch groups. Pakistan also established a special security task force with the help of China for the protection of CPEC and Chinese workers.\nIran also has recently launched a nuclear-capable missile, which is a clear violating of a UN Security Council Resolution. Iran supreme leader has made that clear “We will not cooperate with America over the regional crisis. Their aims in the region are 180 degrees opposed to Iran” (Ayatollah Ali Khamenei). Gwadar has no such sanctions on China’s investment anywhere, nor is Pakistan subject to any kind of UN sanctions (Hemmer, 2007).\nBoth China and Pakistan want to work on CPEC because both countries need this project for further economic growth of both countries, China, Russia, five Middle-Asian states and Pakistan, all these countries have an interest in CPEC, these countries also favor CPEC, on the other hand, both China and Pakistan are ready, even if needs they take a military action to stop enemies of CPEC from their aims. So, both countries are trying their best to convert this dream into reality. During the Prime Minister's visit to Pakistan in April 2019, the two nations inked the second phase of the China Pakistan Free Trade Agreement (CPFTA) to increase bilateral trade volume. CPFTA-II started operating on January 1, 2020. It would ensure a level playing field in terms of concessions compared to other rivals, as well as strong safeguard measures to protect domestic industry and improved tariffs as well (Aslam, 2020).\nThis shows the strength of CPEC and, of course, Gwadar, which is part of CPEC. The shortest route for China to reach the Arabian sea goes only through Pakistan. Pakistan and China both have good relations from the beginning, and the ties become stronger with the passage of times.\nGwadar port faced a lot of challenges as compared to Chabahar. Gwadar is situated in the province of Balochistan, which is a resource rich but less developed state. Due to political instability in the Baloch region, Pakistan invested a huge amount for the security of Chinese workers and the development of the CPEC project. The Capital government allocated 17 million US dollars for CPEC safety in the budget of 2017-18. During the budget of 2019-20, the government offer to allocate 1.3 billion US dollars for CPEC related projects, especially for its safety. Furthermore, security forces at the provincial level were also established, like Punjab has its special protection Unit, while Khyber Pakhtunkhwa has passed the formation of a 4200-member security force at the cost of 11.4 million US dollars (Iqbal, 2018). If we see the position of Chabahar, it has no local security concerns like Pakistan.\nWith reference to opportunities, Gwadar, as a relatively small town in the process of development, particularly with a modern port, provides a variety of prospects to potential investors, including those in the following fields: Storage, warehousing, and other port-related infrastructure Hotels, motels, travel, and tourism are all part of the hospitality industry. The port is vital to Pakistan's geopolitical and economic interests. After Karachi and Qasim, it is Pakistan's third-largest deep-water port. It is situated at a major crossroads for international maritime commerce and oil trading. Gwadar has the potential to serve as Pakistan's worldwide trade hub (Takrim & Afeef, 2015).\nThe port of Chabahar will also serve as a check on China's growing position in the Arabian Sea, as China is substantially involved in the construction of Gwadar, a deep seaport in Pakistan's Balochistan region. It is also likely that connections with India and Iran's military cooperation may be expanded, which would be extremely advantageous in countering China's navy in the Indian Ocean.\nThe major threats to Gwadar port are from those who think that this port will damage or end their dreams, like the US, which is in tension due to progressing of China. The US dream is to maintain its status as a Superpower; this dream getting threatens by the growing Chinese economy, which has left behind the US economy in terms of GDP in PPP, which is $25.27 trillion now. It is a common perception that the state which has a bigger economy can accommodate bigger military forces, and the state which has bigger military power can get the status of superpower in the world. So, the US is trying to contain the growing influence of China. Like creating an impression that the CPEC is a threat to Pakistan and forcing other nations of the world to stop trading with China. The US has warned Pakistan that CPEC would push the country deeper into an already stifling debt burden and increase profit to China. News like these will impact CPEC because its main purpose is to provide China with a route to export its goods. Other enemies of CPEC are India, which is looking that these two countries getting improved India is known to support BLA in Balochistan by its intelligence. Kulbhushan Jadhav Indian spy arrested in Balochistan Gwadar proof Indian involvement and objective to create hurdles in the way of CPEC development.\nThe biggest threat to the port of Chabahar is Strict-Policy making the government of Iran itself, as today Iran is under many US sanctions, and if these sanctions remain or increases, the port of Chabahar will be useless India and Central Asian countries. India ignores US threat moves to open Iran's Chabahar port, this shows the US is a threat to Chabahar port, so if the US hold remains in this region, the Chabahar port is in danger, as the US always support Saudi Arabia and Saudi Arabia thinks Iran as a danger for itself, so it somewhat also depends on Saudi Arabia's hold in World politics. To counter US influence, Iran also shakes hand with China and shows its interest to become a part of China’s game-changer project. Recently China and Iran signed an agreement for growing trade, economic and strategic cooperation. China invests $400 to $600 billion in Iran, with some estimates running as high as $800 billion.\nBoth ports are located at the crossroad position of the energy trading route through which 70 percent of the world’s oil shipment passes. Gwadar is just 70 km away from Chabahar, but overall, both have different salient features. As compared to Chabahar, Gwadar is a deep seaport and have more capacity to deal with trans-shipment and dry cargo due to its close Sea Lines of Communication (SLOC) situated on an ideal position. Gwadar is a weather port as well as have more capacity to deal with cargo shipments. Another distinguished feature of Gwadar port is that port development under the lease of China Overseas Port Holding Corporation (COPHC) for 40 years (Khetran, 2018). On other sides, India is invested for the development of Chabahar port, but its operational restraints and control is in the hand of Iran. There is another important perspective that Gwadar is a part of China long term strategy and Belt Road Initiative and target the region of the Middle East and Africa. On the other side, Chabahar is focused on Afghanistan and Central Asian states. In case of cooperation or competition, Iran Ambassador to Pakistan Mehdi Hoonerdost addressing a public gathering on May 27, 2016, at the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad (ISSI) and similarly former Advisor to Prime Minister on Foreign Affairs, Sartaj Aziz, said that Pakistan wants to connect Gwadar with Chabahar trough road and rail links. Iran also shows interest to join the CPEC project. So, both states focus on cooperation rather than the competition but Indian involvement in Chabahar is creating competition and hurdles for Gwadar. The whole scenario focused on a realist perspective and maintained the Balance of Power in the region.\nBoth ports are twin ports, both of which have their own importance. In a case when one port become un-efficient for trading (for example, Chabahar by sanctions of the US), the other port will provide a trade route to Central Asian states. On the other hand, it is just a fantasy created about the Chabahar port, whereas its potentials are so much low than Gwadar’s. Though the Indian economy is growing at a healthy pace of over 7 percent yearly nevertheless, it must manage with high population growth, swelling inflation and financial condition, declining exports, lack of infrastructure, and lots of different considerations. According to research commissioned by the Ministry of Commerce, imports via Chabahar port and international north-south transport corridor INSTC are 30 percent cheaper than those via the Mediterranean-Suez route. The port will allow India to use a sea-land route to deliver products to Afghanistan and Central Asia, bypassing Pakistan. Law and order situation on Iran’s side is not pretty either, and the US disclosed concerns over India-Iran ties too. All such situation increases the questions on the feasibility of Indian capacities for Chabahar and smooth expansion of the project.\nGwadar Port of Pakistan needs extraordinary economic incentives for the country and can be the center stage of the entire recovery process. It is capable of placing Pakistan among the leading economies of the region. Aside from lessening China's reliance on the Strait of Malacca and South China Sea routes, the port of Gwadar will provide China with a new and shorter route for energy imports from the Middle East, lowering shipping costs and transit times. The port of Gwadar is thought to be the closest to other Chinese ports. Pakistan's economy is significantly reliant on Chinese imports. The Gwadar port will be the most convenient port for Chinese imports to enter Pakistan's mainland. This will provide Pakistan's economy with a much-needed boost. Gwadar is providing shorter trade paths to the landlocked country relative to Chabahar. China is getting a cost reductive and time-saving path for exports and imports through Gwadar, and the port will help the new superpower to meet its oil and energy requirements via Gwadar Port. Hence, the port is likely to be “The Golden Bird” for Pakistan.\nView Open\nAhmad, A. (2016). Gwadar: A Historical Kaleidoscope. Policy Perspectives: The Journal of the Institute of Policy Studies, 13(2), 149-166.\nAslam, H. (2020). SDPI E-Newsletter Pak-China Study Centre: January-February 2020.\nBalooch, M. (2009). Iran and India's cooperation in Central Asia. Paper presented at the China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly.\nBashir, R., Rashid, S., Ikram, M., % Tanveer, A. (2018). Geostrategic Importance of Gwadar Port. Journal of Indian Studies, 4(1), 53-64.\nHassan, A. (2005). Pakistan's Gwadar Port-Prospects of Economic Revival. Retrieved from\nHassan, M. (2018). Indian Access to Chabahar And Duqm: Challenges For Pakistan. Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad, Issue Brief.\nHemmer, C. (2007). Responding to a nuclear Iran. Retrieved from\nIqbal, K. (2018). Securing CPEC: Challenges, responses and outcomes. In Securing the belt and road initiative (pp. 197-214): Springer.\nKanwal, G. (2018). Pakistan's Gwadar Port. Center for Strategic and International Studies.\nKhan, M. Z. L. (2018/Interview, May) CPEC project/Interviewer: M. S. Jaleel. Rawalpindi.\nKhetran, M. S. (2014). The potential and prospects of Gwadar Port. Strategic Studies, 34(4/1).\nKhetran, M. S. (2018). Gwadar and Chabahar. Strategic Studies, 38(2), 43-55.\nMalik, H. Y. (2012). Strategic Importance of Gwadar Port. Journal of Political Studies, 19(2).\nNaseem, N. (2014). Geopolitical Value of Gwader for the Region (Mainly for Pakistan, China and the Region). South Asian Studies (1026-678X), 29(2).\nPant, H. V., % Mehta, K. (2018). India in Chabahar: A Regional Imperative. Asian Survey, 58(4), 660- 678.\nParliamentary Committe on China Pakistan Economic Corridor CPEC. (2015-2017).\nPatrick, A. (2017). China-Sri Lanka Strategic Hambantota Port Deal. Ntional Maritime foundation, 2- 8.\nSalim, M., % Sultana, S. Gwadar and its Importance for Pakistan and China. Balochistan.\nTakrim, K., % Afeef, M. (2015). Prospects of Gwadar Port as a Hub Port. Journal of Managerial Sciences, 9(1).\nZaheer, C. K. R. (2006). Development and Operations of the Port of Gwadar. International Federation of Shipmaster's Associations.\nZeb, R. (2003). Gwadar And Chabahar: Competition Or Complimentarity? Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1802796"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5720095038414001,"wiki_prob":0.42799049615859985,"text":"130419-F-VU439-153.JPG Photo By:\nElizabeth Neumann, an NBC TODAY Show producer, tapes Senior Airman Jay O'Neil, 437th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron crew chief, and Sara Haines, NBC Today Show correspondent, as O’Neil explains the wheel assembly on a C-17 Globemaster III during a visit April 19, 2013, at Joint Base Charleston – Air Base, S.C. Haines met with members from the 437th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron, 14th Airlift Squadron, 628th Security Forces Squadron Ravens team and 437th Aerial Port Squadron for an upcoming segment of the TODAY show. Each interview included hands-on interaction with Airmen who explained their jobs and their roles in achieving the Air Force mission. (U.S. Air Force photo/ Senior Airman George Goslin)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1248850"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5295614004135132,"wiki_prob":0.5295614004135132,"text":"Number of items: 135.\nAbushagur, Mustafa A. G. (1984) Scattering of Light from Large Cylinders. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/akkw-r889. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11102005-102554\nAines, Roger Deane (1984) Trace Hydrogen in Minerals. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/n7vk-f724. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11092018-122937399\nAlam, Md. Khairul (1984) Nucleation and Condensational Growth of Aerosols: Application to Silicon Production. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/t1x1-p304. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11092005-142825\nAskew, Deidre A. (1984) Electrochemistry of absorbed organic dye molecules. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3yjq-7a97. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:03292010-082538471\nAudett, Jay Douglas (1984) (2,2-Dimethylcyclopropyl)carbinyl Grignard Reagents and the Reactivity of Osmium Tetraoxide and Peroxycarboxylic Acids with Low Valent Iridium Compounds. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/z4g9-cb82. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11122018-101217195\nBanerjee, Utpal (1984) Alamethicin: Secondary Structure in Solution and Interactions with Phospholipid Membranes. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/9y1x-zh89. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10292018-120530235\nBardet, Jean-Pierre (1984) Application of Plasticity Theory to Soil Behavior: A New Sand Model. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Z23J-9E80. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12212005-143343\nBartroli, Javier Francisco (1984) Stereoselective Aldol Condensations via Boron Enolates. The Syntheses of (+)-Prelog-Djerassi Lactone and (+)-Tylonolide. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3v27-xh37. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11092018-094859390\nBartur, Meir (1984) Utilization of Silicides for VLSI-Contacts with Aluminum and Thermal Oxidation. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/V36Y-BW59. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11032005-130746\nBassett, Mark Elliott (1984) Mathematical Modeling of Atmospheric Aerosol Equilibria and Dynamics. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/9mvc-2t06. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11092005-105529\nBaxter, David Verge (1984) EXAFS Studies of La-Ga Metallic Glasses. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/NHED-5T47. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11072005-153348\nBerry, Donald Harry (1984) Studies of the Reactivity of Permethylzirconocene Complexes with Binuclear Transition Metal Carbonyl Compounds. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/yahb-n031. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10242018-111901394\nBoslough, Mark Bruce (1984) Shock-Wave Properties and High-Pressure Equations of State of Geophysically Important Materials. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/C9GZ-3121. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09262002-154053\nBrinza, David Edward (1984) I. Millimeter Microwave Spectroscopy of Radicals. II. Laser Spectroscopy of the Van der Waals Molecule Ne-Cl₂. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/b03t-1z96. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10242018-130045424\nBrooks, Eugene David, III (1984) Non-Perturbative Analysis of Some Simple Field Theories on a Momentum Space Lattice. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/333S-XC47. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-04132005-100141\nButtry, Daniel Alan (1984) Effects of Electron Exchange on the Photochemical, Electrochemical and Electrocatalytic Responses of Polymer Modified Electrodes. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/x5vq-d546. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10312018-105602325\nCasassa, Michael Paul (1984) Infrared Photodissociation of Van der Waals Molecules. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/n43s-1339. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10262018-123200794\nChang, Samuel Kwang Yeh (1984) Crack Propagation in Viscoelastic Materials under Transient Loading with Application to Adhesively Bonded Structures. Engineer's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/ZHV3-TK46. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06102005-155309\nChen, Wen-Chi (1984) Hierarchy of Graph Isomorphism Testing. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/pgav-zy26. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:03272012-160759964\nChiang, Chao-Lin (1984) Towards Concurrent Arithmetic: Residue Arithmetic and VLSI. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/mh9h-1v86. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04022012-150108167\nCimbala, John Michael (1984) Large Structure in the Far Wakes of Two-Dimensional Bluff Bodies. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/KZ05-YC02. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09132005-131650\nClark, Douglas S. (1984) Molecular Level Investigations and Mathematical Modeling of Immobilized α-Chymotrypsin Preparation, Utilization and Deactivation. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/0z80-4946. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11082005-133605\nCorbett, Edward John (1984) Seismicity and Crustal Structure Studies of Southern California: Tectonic Implications from Improved Earthquake Locations. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/h8mm-4v50. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10082018-123143470\nCornet, Jean-Luc (1984) Evaluation of the Unsteady Effects for a Class of Wind Turbines. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/JVZE-1485. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11082005-093825\nCronin-Golomb, Alice Mary (1984) Intrahemispheric Processing and Subcortical Transfer of Non-Verbal Information in Subjects with Complete Forebrain Commissurotomy. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/vt51-7x14. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10032018-103359828\nCrowley, Thomas Edward (1984) Functions and Regulation of RNAs Transcribed from the Drosophila melanogaster 68C Puff. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/7vtr-zc75. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10302018-171502394\nDerby, Howard (1984) Using logic programming for compiling APL. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/gmjh-z702. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04092012-134858703\nDurand, Richard Raymond, Jr. (1984) Catalysis of the Electroreduction of Dioxygen by Monomeric and Dimeric Cobalt Porphyrins. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/h738-ft41. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10072016-152635305\nEatock, Ruth Anne (1984) Sensory Adaptation in Hair Cells of the Bullfrog's Sacculus. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/6pam-hv78. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12072018-092224939\nEriksen, K. Jeffrey (1984) Biophysical Source Modeling of Some Exogenous and Endogenous Components of the Human Event-Related Potential. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/SPSG-FX90. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11072005-143659\nFilippenko, Alexei Vladimir (1984) Physical Conditions in Low-Luminosity Active Galactic Nuclei. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/34v9-vc35. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09092008-083654\nFitzsimmons, Brian Joseph (1984) The Total Synthesis of the Enantiomer of Lasalocid A. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/w5gn-5650. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12072018-114316546\nFowler, Joel Christopher (1984) Topics in Linear Spaces and Projective Planes. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/d8gp-ka37. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10302018-173228813\nFroidevaux, Lucien (1984) Photochemical Modeling of the Earth's Stratosphere. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/hzdt-5z21. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10012018-103419193\nGiven, Jeffrey Wayne (1984) Inversion of Body-Wave Seismograms for Upper Mantle Structure. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/cgdh-0e19. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10242018-091909982\nGoldberg, David Alan (1984) Molecular Studies on the Alcohol Dehydrogenase Gene of Drosophila melanogaster. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/skx9-0t33. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10302018-173746907\nGoodgame, Marvin Mark (1984) Exchange Forces in Transition-Metal Bonding. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/xs72-nm31. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10232009-150307132\nGordon, Herman J. (1984) Postnatal Development of Motor Units in Rabbit and Rat Soleus Muscles. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3ecg-0z58. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10032018-123356944\nGray, Murray Ross (1984) The Effects of Moisture and Ash Content on the Pyrolysis of a Wood Derived Material. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/ZEMV-CV64. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11152005-102832\nGreene, Glenn Joel (1984) ICRF Antenna Coupling and Wave Propagation in a Tokamak Plasma. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/ppan-gp26. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11102005-144119\nGurer, Cigdem (1984) Time Dependent and Equilibrium Stress-Strain Behavior of Rubbers in Moderately Large Deformations. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/e0xe-8w83. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-02252004-105813\nHaas, Jean-François Luc (1984) Interaction of Weak Shock Waves and Discrete Gas Inhomogeneities. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/T37C-X215. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06232005-110318\nHandly, Neal Bruce (1984) Studies of regulatory networks in cells : roles of ions and small molecules. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/nwzk-dr03. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05122010-113308417\nHanle, Daniel Dale (1984) In vitro Fluid Dynamics of Prosthetic Aortic Heart Valves in Steady and Pulsatile Flow. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/JC5A-5J46. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11092005-152937\nHereld, Mark (1984) A Search for Gravitational Radiation from PSR 1937+214. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/gyg6-rj98. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10302018-175018310\nHertzberg, Robert P. (1984) Cleavage of DNA with Methidiumpropyl-EDTA. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/vcna-tp03. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10102018-114702204\nHill, Robert Ian (1984) Petrology and Petrogenesis of Batholithic Rocks, San Jacinto Mountains, Southern California. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/9x01-1n85. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:09132016-161520143\nHo, Kuo Ting (1984) Evolution of Nitrogen Impurities in Metal-Silicon Binary Couples and their Effect on Silicide Formation. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/tz19-ww79. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-11072005-080724\nHo, Tai-Ping (1984) The Dialogue Designing Dialogue System. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/5v76-gn68. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01022007-104438\nHofmeister, Anne Marie (1984) A Spectroscopic and Chemical Study of the Coloration of Feldspars by Irradiation and Impurities, Including Water. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/bj75-5674. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10172018-114703911\nHouseworth, James Evan (1984) Longitudinal Dispersion in Nonuniform, Isotropic Porous Media. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/0vtp-g766. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01122007-131711\nHuang, Moh-jiann (1984) Investigation of Local Geology Effects on Strong Earthquake Ground Motions. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/pm3k-w086. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12122018-092221333\nHushmand, Behnam (1984) Experimental Studies of Dynamic Response of Foundations. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/6TJK-6088. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-08152006-091708\nIkeda, Richard Alan (1984) I. Bismethidium Intercalators: The Binding of Nucleic Acids and II. Experiments in the Design of Site Specific DNA Cleaving Agents. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/xp0y-6y73. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11122018-122020454\nKaiser, Robert James, Jr. (1984) Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and Kinetic Studies of the Catalytic Mechanism of the Serine Proteases. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/xg11-xg51. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11162018-115223569\nKatz, Lawrence Charles (1984) Intrinsic Connectivity of Identified Projection Neurons in Cat Visual Cortex Brain Slices. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/kahn-q578. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11202018-101534170\nKhanna, Rohit (1984) Control Model Development for Packed Bed Chemical Reactors. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/VK3Y-QN30. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152003-160535\nKoller, Jeffrey George (1984) Yang-Mills Theory in Six-Dimensional Superspace. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/RP3T-S865. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:06042014-113206988\nKoochesfahani, Manoochehr Mohseni (1984) Experiments on turbulent mixing and chemical reactions in a liquid mixing layer. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Y7BR-C556. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12132006-131143\nKoop, Dale E. (1984) Prompt Electron Production in Electron-Positron Annihilations at 29 GeV. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/x378-b766. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11202018-125614284\nKravaris, Constantine (1984) Identification of Spatially-Varying Parameters in Distributed Parameter Systems. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/m0kv-m285. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01092007-104956\nKrouse, Mauri Eugene (1984) Investigation of Competitive Antagonist Binding to the Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor Using Voltage-Jump and Light-Flash Techniques. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/wb48-ph26. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05282015-161004818\nKuo, Chia-lam (1984) Use of Temperature Sensitive Mutants to Study Yeast DNA Replication. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/gekb-yq20. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11212018-100547724\nLarson, Peter Brennan (1984) I. An ¹⁸O/¹⁶O Investigation of the Lake City Caldera, San Juan Mountains, Colorado. II. ¹⁸O/¹⁶O Relationships in Tertiary Ash-Flow Tuffs from Complex Caldera Structures in Central Nevada and the San Juan Mountains, Colorado. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/aeb1-ct78. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:09142018-134243270\nLe, Anthony T. (1984) Synthesis of the β-ketoimides and their chemical transformations. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/canh-7y33. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:03292010-082952526\nLee, Chi-Woo (1984) Adsorption and Electrochemistry of BIS-1, 10-Phenanthroline Complexes of Copper (I,II) and Fungal Laccase A. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/f4sv-x904. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11272018-091510836\nLichten, Stephen Morris (1984) Turbulence and Mass Motion in Galactic Molecular Clouds. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/wbm2-9x67. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09092008-083043\nLim, Christopher S. (1984) I. Mixing in doorway flows. II. Entrainment in fire plumes. Engineer's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/MWGY-CY05. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12212006-153204\nLutz, Christopher (1984) Design of the Mosaic Processor. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/cs85-zs74. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04122012-093644670\nLyberatos, Gerasimos (1984) Dynamic and Steady-State Bifurcation for Modeling Chemical Reaction Systems. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/bspw-np07. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01112007-103406\nMacFarlane, David Brian (1984) Nucleon Structure from Neutrino Interactions in an Iron Target with a Study of the Singlet Quark Distribution. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/93ev-4g25. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11272018-121922950\nMacdonald, Douglas Alan (1984) Black-Hole Electrodynamics. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/vv78-at49. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:09012017-133647841\nMailhiot, Christian (1984) Theoretical Investigations of Electron States in Small-Scale Semiconductor Structures. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/0470-nf89. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01112007-111123\nMarcus, Neil (1984) Finiteness in Supersymmetric Theories. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/4t2f-t947. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11262018-165108335\nMargoliash, Daniel (1984) Songbirds, Grandmothers, Templates: A Neuroethological Approach. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/2yhr-5t19. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11282018-101712728\nMayne, Jeffery Terrell (1984) The Post-Translational Processing of Sindbis Virus Glycoproteins. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/jvbk-es85. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11282018-124040200\nMcCue, Kenneth Frank (1984) The Structure of Individual Decisions in American Elections: the Influence of Relevant Alternatives. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/rpsf-5g81. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11302018-120557222\nMcElwee-White, Lisa Ann (1984) Theoretical and Experimental Assessment of the Viability of 1,4,6,9-Spiro[4.4]Nonatetrayl as a Reactive Intermediate. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/nytz-bf09. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10262009-151524640\nMeisling, Kristian Erik (1984) Neotectonics of the North Frontal Fault System of the San Bernardino Mountains, Southern California: Cajon Pass to Lucerne Valley. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/RSDP-BS67. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01222009-094629\nMikolič-Torreira, Igor (1984) Norm Constant Holomorphic Functions on Banach Spaces. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/smv6-ca65. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10302018-181155071\nMoonan, William Kevin (1984) Superposition of the Effects of Time, Temperature, and Pressure in Polymetric Materials. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/e970-mg79. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06152004-145433\nMoore, Eric Jan (1984) Synthetic, Structural and Mechanistic Studies of Interactions of Carbon, Nitrogen, and Oxygen Nucleophiles with Bis-Pentamethylcyclopentadienyl Zirconium and Hafnium Derivatives. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/18vn-5737. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04082013-141952473\nMoser, David Randall (1984) Regulation of ColE1 Plasmid DNA Replication in Escherichia coli. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/bf0f-4378. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10302018-183325232\nMyers, Jay J. (1984) Cognitive Transfer from Right to Left Hemisphere after Section of the Forebrain Commissures. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/agst-h905. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10302018-184155718\nNeikirk, Dean Paul (1984) Integrated Detector Arrays for High Resolution Far-Infrared Imaging. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/jxk1-9t91. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01092007-104136\nNgai, John Yee-Keung (1984) The General Interconnect Problem of Integrated Circuits. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/fgcc-ks03. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04132012-084100294\nNgo, Khai Doan The (1984) Topology and Analysis in PWM Inversion, Rectification, and Cycloconversion. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/M91H-FZ91. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-04222005-160253\nNocera, Daniel George (1984) Spectroscopy, Electrochemistry, and Photochemistry of Polynuclear Metal-Metal Bonded Complexes. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/T14G-4N32. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-02012005-160716\nOyang, Yen-Jen (1984) HEX: A Hierarchical Circuit Extractor. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/mptd-b683. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:05022012-105611552\nPaine, Scott Nelson (1984) High Energy Heavy Ion Beam Enhanced Adhesion of Gold Films to GaAs. Senior thesis (Major), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/Z9XD0ZWZ. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:02202018-132931271\nPapachristidis, Alexandros Christou (1984) Heterogeneous Data Base Access. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/5sdf-7w07. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01022007-110210\nPartridge, Richard Allan (1984) Study of the ψ\"(3770) Using the Crystal Ball Detector. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/yg5v-dv86. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12172018-095221901\nPatel, Apoorva Dayaram (1984) Monte-Carlo Renormalisation Group for Lattice QCD. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/m791-na19. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10312018-091543048\nPearson, Laurence Timothy (1984) A Model for the Lateral Organization of Protein Molecules in Lipid Bilayers. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/k7m9-xb92. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12142018-113612227\nPerry, Joseph Walter (1984) Nature and Energy Redistribution of Highly Vibrationally Excited Polyatomic Molecules. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/YDWZ-Z639. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-04032008-111559\nPiepgras, Donald John (1984) The Isotopic Composition of Neodymium in the Marine Environment: Investigations of the Sources and Transport of Rare Earth Elements in the Oceans. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/GATW-C580. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-08152006-132531\nPolivka, William M. (1984) Applications of Magnetics to Problems in Switched-Mode Power Conversion. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/31G4-8128. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01022007-112439\nPurohit, Milind Vasant (1984) Nucleon Structure Functions from ν_µ-Fe Interactions and a Study of the Valence Quark Distribution. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/4RBK-RV59. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04082013-111418042\nRedmount, Ian H. (1984) Topics in Black-Hole Physics: Geometric Constraints on Noncollapsing, Gravitating Systems and Tidal Distortions of a Schwarzschild Black Hole. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/mp3n-4r06. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:08232017-105535039\nReinelt, Douglas Alan (1984) The Penetration of a Finger into a Viscous Fluid. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3T53-9Q51. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12212006-104724\nRobinson, Allen Conrad (1984) Existence and Stability of Vortices and Vortex Arrays. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/0db7-mr48. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-12212006-111951\nRoddick, Dean Michael (1984) Synthesis, Structure, and Reactivity of Hydride and Phosphide Complexes of Hafnium and Zirconium. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/wbgr-yd42. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10222018-111603289\nSadanand, Asha B. (1984) Three Essays in Law and Economics. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/ws6s-ac41. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12102018-101952412\nSaha, Abhijit (1984) A Survey of Halo RR Lyrae Stars. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/d56z-kf18. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09092008-080231\nSan, Ka-Yiu (1984) Studies on the On-Line Identification and Optimal Control of Bioreactors. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/b5p1-5c02. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01082007-153733\nSchultz, Jocelyn Chupka (1984) Photoelectron Spectroscopy of Alkyl and Alkenyl Free Radicals. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/r2r1-k971. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10032018-091338203\nSchultz, Peter G. (1984) I. Ground and Excited State Studies of Persistent 1,1-Diazenes. II. Design of Sequence Specific DNA Cleaving Molecules. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/6vcz-qs72. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-06252004-112048\nSchulz, Robert (1984) Electrical Transport During Phase Transformation in Metallic Glasses. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/yxsm-vx37. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01252007-153245\nSelinger, Stephen Richard (1984) Three Essays in Theoretical, Applied, and Normative Economics. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/21dr-cz26. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10312018-092033160\nSenior, Constance Lynn (1984) Submicron Aerosol Formation During Combustion of Pulverized Coal. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/70GT-H495. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-02022007-105020\nShatz, Michael Phillip (1984) A QCD Based Model of Hadron Hadron Scattering. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/krfv-d594. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10242019-101001451\nShaw, Henry Francis, III (1984) Sm-Nd and Rb-Sr Isotopic Systematics of Tektites and Other Impactites, Appalachian Mafic Rocks, and Marine Carbonates and Phosphates. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/x0zc-7w22. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12142018-091056975\nShih, Thomas Loong (1984) Use of Enantioselective Aldol Condensations: Efforts Directed Towards the Total Synthesis of Ionomycin. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/vhx3-s283. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10192018-103740684\nSimmen, Jeffrey Alan (1984) Steady Deep-Water Waves on a Linear Shear Current. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/H88C-1G49. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01192007-153942\nSiu, Byron Bong (1984) Upper Bounds on the Magnetization of Ferromagnetic Ising Models. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/vwa3-1c66. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09232005-133517\nSmyth, Noel Frederick (1984) Part I: Soliton on a Beach and Related Problems. Part II: Modulated Capillary Waves. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/VXDD-1M21. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01252007-143608\nSoto, Jorge Gonzalez (1984) Mechanistic Aspects of the Ziegler-Natta Polymerization. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/AXPG-AG37. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:07072014-083212737\nSteigerwald, Michael Louis (1984) 2ₛ + 2ₛ Reactions at Transition Metals. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/S0HZ-TF05. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01032007-142600\nSu, Wen-King (1984) Supermesh. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/yvj1-jt57. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:04122012-161148552\nSwartz, Barry Allan (1984) Free Jet Expansion Laser Spectroscopy of van der Waals Molecules Containing Ne and Br₂. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/mp06-am61. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10312018-092920492\nTanveer, Saleh Ahmed (1984) Topics in 2-D Separated Vortex Flows. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/BR0B-QH56. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-02012007-133412\nTempleton, Michael Karpovich (1984) The Identification of Stable Reaction Intermediates on Aluminum Oxide Surfaces with Inelastic Electron Tunneling Spectroscopy. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/et22-8s13. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01262007-130514\nTurner, Steve Ronald (1984) Nitrogen protecting groups in the ester enolate claisen rearrangement of amino esters. Synthesis of a furanomycin derivative. Master's thesis, California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/x02s-jt53. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:03292010-081412450\nVan Dyke, Michael W. (1984) MPE•Fe(II) Footprinting: Drug Binding Sites on Native DNA. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/vy36-rq29. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:12052018-113900386\nVorpérian, Vatché (1984) Analysis of Resonant Converters. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/NWMH-AP27. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-04082005-150525\nWalck, Marianne Carol (1984) Teleseismic Array Analysis of Upper Mantle Compressional Velocity Structure. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/76q0-ye98. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:10092013-142945359\nWang, Chiun (1984) The Effects of Curvature on Turbulent Mixing Layers. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/BC48-BE98. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01222007-142548\nWarne, Larry Kevin (1984) Electromagnetic Radiation and Scattering in a Plasma with an Azimuthal Biasing Field. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/tja8-zp12. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01232007-143259\nWhite, Jeffrey Owen (1984) Four-Wave Mixing and Phase Conjugation in Photorefractive Crystals. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/f9ef-m894. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01192007-152414\nWilson, John Charles (1984) Analysis of the Observed Earthquake Response of a Multiple Span Bridge. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/5321-6p57. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechTHESIS:11262018-124513833\nWinget, James Michael (1984) Element-by-Element Solution Procedures for Nonlinear Transient Heat Conduction Analysis. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/G7VB-EV65. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01252007-132425\nWinkler, Jay Richmond (1984) Spectroscopy and Photochemistry of Metal-Oxo Complexes. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/DE5E-2Y69. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-02272006-082939\nYang, Vigor (1984) Pressure Oscillations in Liquid-Fueled Ramjet Engines. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/rfpg-es59. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09052006-153951\nYu, Paul Kit-Lai (1984) Long Wavelength InGaAsP/InP Lasers and Optoelectronic Integration. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/4dk7-wn36. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01232007-131641\nZur, Amikam (1984) Theoretical Investigations of Solid Interfaces: 1. The Position of the Fermi Level at a Metal-Semiconductor Interface. 2. Geometric Lattice Match and Its Application to Heteroepitaxy. 3. Ab-initio Calculation of the Elastic Properties of Silicon, Using Small Clusters. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/w8vp-2g07. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01222007-152908","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line343786"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7745075225830078,"wiki_prob":0.7745075225830078,"text":"Official Merchandise Genesis: t-shirts, clothing and gadgets at unbeatable prices\nGenesis are an English rock band that formed in 1967. The band currently comprises the longest-tenured members Phil Collins (lead vocals and drums), Mike Rutherford (guitar and bass guitar), and Tony Banks (keyboards). Peter Gabriel, Anthony Phillips and Steve Hackett also played major roles in the band in its early years. Genesis are among the top 30 highest-selling recording artists of all time with approximately 150 million albums sold worldwide.Genesis began as a 1960s pop band. During the 1970s, they evolved into a progressive rock band, incorporating complex song structures and elaborate instrumentation. Their concerts became theatrical experiences with innovative stage design, pyrotechnics, elaborate costumes and on-stage stories. This second phase was characterised by lengthy performances such as the 23 minute \"Supper's Ready\" and the 1974 concept album, The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway. In the 1980s, the band produced their first number one album in the United Kingdom, Duke, and their only number one single in the United States, \"Invisible Touch\".Genesis has changed personnel several times. Founding member Anthony Phillips left the band in 1970. In 1975, Collins, then the band's drummer, replaced Peter Gabriel as lead singer. Bill Bruford, and later Chester Thompson, played drums for the band as they toured, with Collins joining in briefly during lengthy instrumental passages. In 1977, guitarist Steve Hackett left the band. After Phil Collins left the band in 1996, Genesis recruited Ray Wilson (formerly of Stiltskin). Wilson appeared on the 1997 album Calling All Stations, after which the band announced an indefinite hiatus. However, in 2007, Banks, Collins and Rutherford reunited for a 20-city tour of Europe and North America, which included a free concert at Rome's Circo Massimo in front of 500,000 fans. Genesis was among five bands inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2010.\nGenesis products in store\nGenesis shop: 0 items available online\nSort by: Best Sellers Top rated New arrivals product name (A-Z) Price (cheaper) Price (higher)\nGenesis Men's Tee: Vintage Logo - Green\nGenesis Unisex Tee: An Evening With\nGenesis Print 419793\nVynil Genesis - The Lamb Lies In Rochester Vol.2 (2 Lp)\n£ 11.37£ 16.25\nGenesis Unisex T-Shirt: ABACAB 8-Track\nGenesis Men's Tee: Vintage Logo - Golden\nGenesis T-shirt Foxtrot Graf\n£ 9.63£ 13.76\nGenesis Patch Logo\nGenesis Keychain: Classic Logo (Double Sided Patch)\nGenesis Standard Patch: Classic Logo\nVynil Genesis - From Genesis To Revelation\nGenesis Men's Tee: Mad Hatter\nGenesis Men's Tee: Scatter\nGenesis Men's Tee: Watchers of the Skies\nVynil Genesis - Trespass\nGenesis Men's Tee: Mad Hatter 2\nGenesis Men's Tee: The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway\nGenesis Men's Tee: Collage\nGenesis Men's Tee: The Way We Walk\nSort by Best Sellers Top rated New arrivals product name (A-Z) Price (cheaper) Price (higher)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line301161"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9938259124755859,"wiki_prob":0.9938259124755859,"text":"Republican Milne considers run for governor\nTerri Hallenbeck\nFree Press Staff Writer\nMONTPELIER – Scott Milne, president of Milne Travel, said Monday he is considering running for governor this year as a Republican.\nMilne, of Pomfret, said by email that he was traveling in Africa this week and would make no decision on running for a month. The deadline to file for office is June 12.\nMilne joins Rep. Heidi Scheuermann of Stowe and former Sen. Randy Brock of Swanton as Republicans who are considering challenging two-term incumbent Democrat Peter Shumlin. Both have said they would make announcements soon.\nFormer Wall Street banker Bruce Lisman of Shelburne has said he has no plans to run but continues to hear from people urging him to, though it's unclear whether that might be as an independent or Republican. Emily Peyton of Putney, who has run before as an independent, has said she will run in the Republican primary, but party officials have said they will not support her.\nRepublican Party Chairman David Sunderland said he has talked to Milne, but \"nothing in great detail.\" Milne is well-known among Republicans, Sunderland said. \"I think Scott would make a great candidate. He could bring fresh ideas and new energy,\" Sunderland said.\nMilne has a bachelor's degree in political science and politics in his bloodline. His mother, Marion Milne, was a Republican state legislator representing the town of Washington from 1994-2000. She lost her bid for re-election in a Republican primary after voting for civil unions for same-sex couples. She started Milne Travel in 1975.\nScott Milne's father, Don Milne, also served one term in the Legislature, and has been clerk of the House since 1993.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1276218"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5354813933372498,"wiki_prob":0.5354813933372498,"text":"What a Penguin Random House divisional president said to me about titles\nby Neil | Dec 14, 2016 | Book Publishing, Content Strategy, Writing Tips | 4 comments\nBack in my Penguin days, my former boss made all of us a deal. If someone came up with an amazing title for a book we were meant to publish, he would give them five dollars.\nYes, five whole dollars.\nBut here’s the funny thing. It was the most coveted prize any of us could ever dream of getting – as valued as a 401(k) matching program and even more valued than a dental plan.\nAnd yet, despite how much each of us wanted to get that five dollars, there was an almost infinitesimally small chance of us winning that money.\nWhy? Why was my boss so hard to please?\nAnd why are so many titles so awful?\nBecause a great title is a really, really, really, really, really really hard thing to create.\nMy former boss was the president and publisher of the division for which I used to work, and at one point he gave me the job to be the primary editor of a fitness book authored by a celebrity trainer. But the problem was that the fitness book as it had originally been conceived by the author’s co-writer didn’t have a good title. It included an invented word for transforming one’s life and otherwise was fairly generic.\n“A good title for a fitness book,” my boss said one day, “needs to have a promise.”\nIn other words, if the title didn’t convey a specific thing that the reader would get out of the experience of consuming the book’s information, they were far less likely to be attracted to it. It needed to promise them something they already cared about.\nThis made sense, for the most successful fitness books likewise conveyed a promise. Bill Phillips’ Body for Life conveyed the promise of having a great body for, you know, life. Bigger, Leaner, Stronger by Michael Matthews promises three qualities that fitness enthusiasts want to be. And though The New Rules of Lifting for Women by Lou Schuler might not be too heavy on promises, its subtitle, “Lift Like a Man, Look Like a Goddess” certainly does.\nThe thing is, great titles aren’t just reserved for fitness books, and a great title isn’t even limited to making promises. There’s something at work of greater significance here, something that pervades not only all fitness book titles, and not even all non-fiction book titles, but all titles everywhere.\nThere are many different categories of books, both within the world of non-fiction (fitness, diet, personal growth, politics, entertainment, biography, etc.) and within the world of fiction (literary, women’s, historical, science fiction, fantasy, etc.). And yet every great title in all of these different categories has something in common.\nThey’ve all gained a person’s attention.\nIn the film Shakespeare in Love, when someone said a title that someone else liked, the other person said, “good title.” Those moments were screenwriter Tom Stoppard’s equivalent of my boss giving someone on the editorial staff five dollars. These reactions are the result of someone paying attention, for a compelling title commands such attention instantaneously. But what is it that makes this happen?\nWhat the title with a promise does is convey a possibility in the reader’s mind. They don’t have a great body, but if they buy a book they could then have a body for life. This disparity between the reader’s current reality and a future, possible reality is defined by a sense of yearning. They want their life to be one way but that reality hasn’t yet taken place.\nIn other words, they experience tension.\nIn other other words, tension begets a-ttention.\nThe reason why we can house all types of non-fiction titles with all types of fiction titles is that, no matter the category of content, your job as author is to create tension in the browser’s mind so that they then have to resolve that tension as quickly as possible. This tension can show up in many ways, and does through the best titles out there:\n• A promise: The tension between the reader’s current reality and one for which they yearn (Body for Life, The 4-Hour Work Week, You Can Heal Your Life)\n• Curiosity: Uncertainty about the significance of a title’s contents creates a gap that must be filled (Who Moved My Cheese?, The Da Vinci Code, The Hunger Games)\n• Scarcity: The lack of explanation in a (typically concise) title creates a drive for more (Jaws, Lolita, 1984)\n• Shock: The unabashed severity of a title forces the browser out of complacency (Skinny Bitch, You Suck, Go the F**k to Sleep)\nAnd there are, of course, many more examples of how a title can create tension. But the ultimate point here is that if a title doesn’t convey a promise, or arouse curiosity, or somehow disrupt the book browser’s experience in some way, it’s unlikely to be an asset to you in how you position your book – or anything else that requires a title, for that matter.\nTension begets attention. And the sooner you embrace this idea, the sooner you will create a title that will force someone to say, “good title.”\nAnd maybe you’ll even get five dollars to boot.\nIf you’re feeling confident in your title and are deciding whether to pursue a traditional publishing deal or to self-publish, check out my cheat sheet here.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line100832"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6982772350311279,"wiki_prob":0.30172276496887207,"text":"Newton County Schools » Departments » Public Relations » News » 2021 Partner of the Year\nZeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.-Phi Omicron Zeta Chapter Named NCSS 2021 Partner of the Year\nNewton County School System (NCSS) and the Newton County Chamber of Commerce are pleased to announce that Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.-Phi Omicron Zeta Chapter, is the 2021 NCSS Partner in Education of the Year! NCSS School Superintendent Samantha Fuhrey made the announcement at a special reception on Monday, June 21, 2021 at the Newton County Board of Education.\n“We’ve seen many partners—mainly small businesses—have to close their doors either temporarily or permanently this year, and this has affected our schools,” said Fuhrey. “Fortunately, we saw an increase in assistance from local organizations such as yours who stepped to the plate and went above and beyond to assist our schools.”\nIn her partner of the year nomination letter, Newton High School principal Dr. Shannon Buff noted Zeta Phi Beta Sorority’s “unwavering partnership” and how their continuing support boosted the morale of both students and staff. In fact, Dr. Buff stated that the women of Zeta Phi Beta “had become part of the Newton High School family” through their various service projects.\n“You began the school year by providing hot meals after practice and games to various athletic teams in partnership with Emanuel Community Church,” said Fuhrey. “You also created hygiene bags for students. In September, you served Newton High School faculty and staff breakfast and provided goodie bags for all teachers, which included PPE, snacks, and gift cards. Needless to say, the staff were both surprised and appreciative.”\nIn October, the organization invited students and parents to attend a college essay-writing workshop sponsored by the chapter. During the event, students were able to prepare their college essays for submission to various colleges and scholarship organizations.\n“This was especially important to our students as so many were attending school virtually and felt overwhelmed by the college application process,” Buff explained.\nThe group’s support did not stop there. This spring, the chapter continued their good work by replenishing the hygiene bags for Newton High School students. They also hosted two different teacher appreciation events to recognize the faculty and staff for their hard work. And finally, they ended the school year by providing a scholarship to a very deserving senior on Newton High School Honors Night.\n“Your unwavering support for all of Newton High School’s stakeholders has been nothing short of amazing,” said Buff. “You stood in the gap at a time when other organizations were unable to provide the normal level of support. When Newton High School needed assistance, you were there to provide whatever we asked.”\n“I can’t thank you enough for your organization stepping up in a time when a lot of us didn’t know what to do,” said Debbie Harper, President of the Newton County Chamber of Commerce. “When Dr. Buff reached out to you, you knew exactly what to do. I appreciate that. The fact that I am a graduate of Newton High School makes it even more special. Your support for this school is truly amazing.”\nUpon accepting the award, Ms. Katheryn Williams, president of the Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc.—Phi Omicron Zeta Chapter, addressed the assembled group and stated, “Dr. Buff, my sorority has four principles—scholarship, service, sisterhood and finer womanhood. While scholarship is the first principal…we pride ourselves on world-class service. Please know that we do this not for recognition; we do this because it is the right thing to do. My mom and dad always told me ‘to those who much is given, much is expected.’ And so we are very blessed and we are thankful that you allow us to use your school to help us facilitate the service that is so important to us.”\nWilliams noted that the organization would continue their partnership with Newton High School and promised even greater things to come.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line443525"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5615878105163574,"wiki_prob":0.4384121894836426,"text":"Schantz Russell family fonds., 1 results 1\nUniversity of Waterloo. Special Collections & Archives, 1 results 1\nBook Collection, 1 results 1\nUniversity of Waterloo. Special Collections & Archives Schantz Russell family fonds. Book Collection\nTop-level description Schantz Russell family fonds.\nSchantz Russell Family Library.\nIncluded are 19th-century Canadian imprints, books on horticulture, early school textbooks, scarce local imprints, such as the 1886/89 County of Waterloo Gazetteer and Directory and the Assessment Roll of 1897 of the Town of Berlin, and a selection of Victorian literature. There are extensive runs of early 20th-century periodicals, such as The Youth's Companion, St. Nicholas, The Ladies' Home Journal, and the Canadian Forestry Journal. The Schantz/Russell Family library offers a unique insight into the reading habits and the interests and activities of a Canadian family in Berlin, Ontario during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.\nTobias Schantz (1842-1925) worked as an itinerant book salesman at the end of the 19th century, and more than 40 examples of books known as \"salesman's dummies\" are present in the collection. These books were made up by the publishers as samples for their salesmen to show to potential customers. Each one displays the most noteworthy features of the book offered for sale, including the table of contents, the illustrations, selections from the text, and examples of the variety of elaborate binding styles available. Blank pages at the end of each sample book were used by the itinerant salesman to record his orders and, in this collection, some of the dummies contain up to as many as 8 pages of hand-written lists of local subscribers to the books that Tobias marketed in his trips around the region.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1246251"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9459372758865356,"wiki_prob":0.9459372758865356,"text":"Outlander: a new theory could reveal the end of the series\nMRT· August 20, 2021\nSince the end of filming was announced, fans are eagerly awaiting the broadcast of the sixth season of Outlander. However, the next six chapters will not arrive until next year, the same moment in which the seventh edition will begin filming. And, although there is still no official release date, many of the followers found a way to reduce the wait.\nFor several months, after the closing of the fifth part, the faithful of Outlander they began to generate some theories about what is to come. Some are focused on the fate of the protagonists, Jamie and Claire, others on the ghost of the Scottish heartthrob, but it was only now that one emerged that could reveal the true end of the strip.\nOutlander, which is based on the novels of Diana Gabaldón, originally has ten books. There are still two to be released, while the series is close to filming its season seven, that is why whenever a theory is discussed, it is based on what the original author wrote.\nDiana Gabaldón would have revealed the end of the series. Photo: (Getty)\nAnd, on this occasion, many fans have relived a Gabaldon interview from 2015 in which he would have revealed the true ending that this story will have. Beyond not mentioning when it will be or if there will be more than seven parts on the small screen, it does make it clear what the fate of the Frasers will be.\n“I think the books of Outlander will end in approximately 1800 in Scotland”Are Diana’s words. But, as he does not talk about anything else, this comment raised many doubts about what the series is since in season five the protagonists still live in the 18th century in the United States.\nRoger and Brianna could take the lead in Outlander. Photo: (Starz)\nHowever, it should be noted that, although many of the thoughts were guided to that Jamie could die in his native Scotland, more than once it was speculated that Brianna and Roger could end up being the protagonists. That is why, everything indicates that the portrayed characters of Sam Heughan and Caitriona Balfe will die in America, and then their daughter, husband, and grandchildren will go on to live in the home country of the most respected Fraser landowner.\nThe Curse of Hill House / Bly Manor","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line461574"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7084429860115051,"wiki_prob":0.2915570139884949,"text":"Significant Changes to Supply Chain Protocols After Covid-19\nPosted by Land Link Traffic Systems on Jun 18, 2020 9:11:03 AM\nThe COVID-19 pandemic has hit global trade and investment at an unprecedented speed and scale. Multinational companies faced an initial supply shock, then a demand shock as more and more countries ordered people to stay at home. Governments, businesses and individual consumers suddenly struggled to procure basic products and materials, and were forced to confront the fragility of the modern supply chain. The urgent need to design smarter, stronger and more diverse supply chains has been one of the main lessons of this crisis.\nWhat the Data Tells Us\nRecent data from Tradeshift, a global platform for supply chain management, reveals the magnitude of the impact on trade and demand. It suggests the effects of the initial shock may continue to linger for the coming months. In China, domestic and international trade transactions suffered a week-on-week drop of 56% beginning mid-February. The United States, United Kingdom, and Europe followed suit, with a combined initial drop of 26% in the beginning of April, and a continuing decline of 17% in late April.\nFurthermore, trade has flatlined in every region affected by the lockdown. Overall weekly transactions on the Tradeshift platform since March 9th are down by an average of 9.8%, compared to pre-lockdown figures, with a pronounced decline in invoices and orders since the end of March.\nTwo side effects of the contractions in global trade have emerged. One is that it takes longer to settle an invoice, reversing a previous trend of faster payments. According to Tradeshift’s data, businesses took an average of 36.7 days to settle an invoice in 2019, compared to 36.8 days in 2018. In the first quarter of 2020, average payment terms have risen 1.7% to 37.4 days.\nSecondly, the lack of orders going through the supply chain is building up to another tidal wave with new orders slowing and invoices dropping off. Average weekly order volumes on the Tradeshift platform have dropped by 15.9% since March 9th. Invoices have dropped by 16.7% during the same period. So far, businesses are still receiving money from orders placed before the lockdown, but those are drying up. The coming months could be very difficult for suppliers globally.\nReshaping the Future\nCOVID-19 has exposed the vulnerabilities of complex global supply chains built on lean manufacturing principles. This is particularly true in the healthcare sector, where the scramble for protective equipment has laid bare the inherent risks of inventory and single-sourcing models driven exclusively by cost control.\nThe impact of China’s lockdown and its dominance in key areas of manufacturing have further highlighted the problem with modern supply chains. When Chinese factories closed, manufacturers struggled to pivot due to a lack of flexibility in their supplier base. One likely consequence is that global firms will diversify their supply chains in the future, instead of relying only on China. Manufacturing hubs such as Vietnam, Mexico, and India are likely to benefit from that shift.\nWe will also see a decentralization of manufacturing capacity, with companies looking to bring production home. This trend grew with the likes of automation and small batch production, which had become so cheap that a number of countries started moving portions of their supply chain back home. Policymakers may be increasingly pressured to consider whether certain products need to be manufactured in the country or the region.\nThe transition to a new model for supply chains will be underpinned by a rapid and wholesale digitization of the paperwork that accompanies global trade.\nDespite rapid advances in technology, the relationship between buyers and suppliers remains predominantly paper-based. Digitizing the buyer-supplier relationship is a fundamental element for building sturdy supply chains, and will make identifying and recruiting new suppliers far less time-consuming. With technologies like artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things, supply chains could quickly switch to alternative providers when regular suppliers face disruption.\nThe current crisis is an opportunity to reset a system that has relied on outdated processes. Creating smart and nimble supply chains is the key to building a global trade and investment network that’s capable of weathering future storms.\nStay Safe Everyone.\nTopics: Freight Bill Auditing, Intermodal Freight, Reducing Freight Rates, Logistics Business, Maximizing Routing Efficiencies, Freight Bill Audit, Shipping News, Logistics News, Industry Trends, Big Data","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line64538"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5393067598342896,"wiki_prob":0.46069324016571045,"text":"A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK(R) Guide-Sixth Edition / Agile Practice Guide Bundle (ARABIC) PDF\nby Project Management Institute\nTo support the broadening spectrum of project delivery approaches, PMI is offering A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) – Sixth Edition as a bundle with its latest, the Agile Practice Guide.\nThe PMBOK® Guide – Sixth Edition now contains detailed information about agile; while the Agile Practice Guide, created in partnership with Agile Alliance®, serves as a bridge to connect waterfall and agile.\nTogether they are a powerful tool for project managers.\nPMBOK® Guide – Sixth Edition The PMBOK® Guide – Sixth Edition – PMI's flagship publication has been updated to reflect the latest good practices in project management.\nNew to the Sixth Edition, each knowledge area will contain a section entitled Approaches for Agile, Iterative and Adaptive Environments, describing how these practices integrate in project settings.\nIt will also contain more emphasis on strategic and business knowledge-including discussion of project management business documents-and information on the PMI Talent Triangle™ and the essential skills for success in today's market.\nAgile Practice Guide Agile Practice Guide has been developed as a resource to understand, evaluate, and use agile and hybrid agile approaches.\nThis practice guide provides guidance on when, where, and how to apply agile approaches and provides practical tools for practitioners and organizations wanting to increase agility.\nThis practice guide is aligned with other PMI standards, including A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) – Sixth Edition, and was developed as the result of collaboration between the Project Management Institute and the Agile Alliance.\nPublisher:Project Management Institute\nEPUB from £118.79\nEPUB | Published 21/05/2018 | £118.79 | View now\nAlso by Project Management Institute | View all\nA guide to the Project Management Body...\nThe Standard for Risk Management in...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1826315"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7536661624908447,"wiki_prob":0.7536661624908447,"text":"#World Health Organisation\nAnother 11 people in Kuwait have tested positive for coronavirus over the past 24 hours,\nbringing the total number of confirmed cases to 123, a health ministry spokesman said on Monday, Al Arabiya reported.\nOne of the infected person is linked to travel to the US, one to Iran, four travelled to the UK while three came into contact with another case that recently travelled to the UK. Another person who tested positive has recently arrived from Qatar.\nAll of the aforementioned cases are Kuwaiti nationals, according to the spokesman while the eleventh case is for an Egyptian national who recently travelled to Egypt.\nKuwait has recorded nine recoveries as of Monday, bringing the total number of those receiving medical care for coronavirus infections to 114, said the spokesman.\nOnly four people are currently in the intensive care unit (ICU) with three being in critical condition and one in stable condition.\nThe spokesman said four cases who were previously in the ICU had recovered and were taken out of the ICU.\n“These are positive signs that give us hope,” he added.\nKuwait has administered 9,981 coronavirus tests, according to the health ministry.\nOn Saturday, Kuwait announced it would close shops, malls, and barbershops to prevent the spread of the virus.\nThere are about 156,000 confirmed cases worldwide and 76,000 recoveries, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).\nKeywords: World Health Organisation\nCategory: #Coronavirus, #Government | 2020/03/18 latest update at 12:00 AM\nSource : Gulf News | Photocredit : Google\nKuwait demands urgent action from WHO to...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line127207"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5496231317520142,"wiki_prob":0.45037686824798584,"text":"What makes war between the US and China or Russia inevitable?\nThere is a dangerous and not so new idea currently making the rounds that not only is conventional war between the great powers inevitable, but that it would be much less of an existential threat to humanity than we have been led to believe and even might be necessary for human progress.\nThe appearance of this argument in favor of war was almost predictable given that it was preceded by a strong case being made that war was now obsolete and at least in its great power guise was being driven out of history by deep underlying trends towards prosperity and peace. I am thinking here mostly of Steven Pinker in his Better Angels of Our Nature, but he was not alone.\nThe exact same thing happened in the 19th century. Then, voices arose that argued that war was becoming unnecessary as values became global and the benefits of peaceful trade replaced the plunder of war. The counter-reaction argued that war had been the primary vector for human progress and that without it we would “go soft” or de-evolve into a species much less advanced than our own.\nGiven their racist overtones, arguments that we will evolve “backward” absent war are no longer made in intelligent circles. Instead, war has been tied to technological development the argument being that without war in general and great power war in particular we will become technologically stuck. That’s the case made by Ian Morris in his War What is it Good For? where he sees the US in shepherding in the Singularity via war, and it’s a case made from opposite sides of the fence regarding transhumaism by Christopher Coker and Steve Fuller.\nThe problem with these new arguments in favor of great power conflict is that they discount the prospect of nuclear exchange. Perhaps warfare is the heir of technological progress, but it’s better to be the tortoise when such conflicts hold the risk of driving you back to the stone age.\nThat said, there is an argument out there that perhaps even nuclear warfare wouldn’t be quite the civilization destroyer we have believed, but that position seems less likely to become widespread than the idea that the great powers could directly fight each other and yet some how avoid bringing the full weight of their conventional and nuclear forces down upon the other even in the face of a devastating loss at the hands of the other. It’s here where we can find Peter W. Singer and August Cole’s recent novel Ghost Fleet: A novel of the Third World War that tells the story of a conventional war, mainly at sea, between the US and China and Russia.\nIt’s a copiously researched book, and probably gives a good portrait of what warfare in the next ten to fifteen years will look like. If the authors are right, in the wars of the future drones – underground, land, air, and sea will be ubiquitous and AI used to manage battles where sensors take the place of senses- the crew of a ship needs never set sight on the actual sea.\nCyber attacks in the future will be a fully functional theater of war- as will outer space. The next war will take advantage of enhancement technologies- augmented reality, and interventions such “stim tabs” for alertness. Advances in neuroscience and bioelectronics will be used at the very least as a form of enhanced, and brutal, interrogation.\nIf the book makes any warning (and all such books seem to have a warning) it is that the US is extremely reliant on the technological infrastructure that allows the country to deploy and direct its’ global force. The war begins with a Chinese/Russian attack on American satellites, which effectively blinds the American military. I’ve heard interviews where Singer claims that in light of this the US Navy is now training its’ officers in the art of stellar navigation, which in the 21st century is just, well… cool. The authors point out how American hardware is vulnerable as well to threats like embedded beacons or kill switches given that much of this hardware has come out of Chinese factories.\nThe plot of Ghost Fleet is pretty standard: in a surprise attack the Chinese and Russians push the US out of the Pacific by destroying much of the American navy and conquering Hawaii. Seemingly without a single ally, the US then manages to destroy the Chinese fleet after resurrecting the ships of its naval graveyard near San Francisco- a real thing apparently, especially a newfangled battleship the USS Zumwalt, which is equipped with a new and very powerful form of rail gun. I am not sure if it helped or hindered my enjoyment of the book that its’ plot seemed eerily similar to my favorite piece of anime from when I was a kid- Star Blazers.\nThe problem, once again, is in thinking that we can contain such conflicts and therefore need not do everything possible to avoid them. In the novel there never seems to be any possibility of nuclear exchange or strategic bombing and with the exception of the insurgency and counterinsurgency in Hawaii the war is hermetically contained to the Pacific and the sea. Let’s hope we would be so lucky, but I’m doubtful.\nGhost Fleet is also not merely weak but detrimental in regards to the one “technology” that will be necessary for the US to avoid a war with China or others and contain it should it break out.\nIf I had to take a vote on one work that summed up the historical differences between the West and everyone else, differences that would eventually bring us the scientific revolution and all of the power that came with it, that work wouldn’t be one of science such as the Principia Mathematica or even some great work of philosophy or literature, but a history book.\nThe thing that makes Herodotus’ The Histories so unique was that it was the first time that one people tried to actually understand their enemies. It’s certainly eurocentric to say it, but the Greeks as far as I am aware, were first and unique here. It wasn’t just a one off.\nThucydides would do something similar for the intra-Hellenic conflict between Athenians and Spartans, but the idea of actually trying to understand your enemy, no doubt because so much about being an enemy lends itself to being hidden and thus needs to be imagined was brought to its’ heights in the worlds of drama and fiction. The great Aeschylus did this with the Persians as well with his tragedy named for that noble people.\nIt’s a long tradition that was seen right up until The Riddle of the Sands a 1903 book that depicted a coming war between the British and the Germans. Much different than the dehumanizing war propaganda that would characterize the Germans as less than human “Huns” during the First World War, The Riddle of the Sands attempted to make German aggression explicable given its’ historical and geographical circumstances even while arguing such aggression needed to be countered.\nIn Ghost Fleet by contrast the Chinese especially are reduced to something like Bond Villains, US control of the Pacific is wholly justified, its’ characters largely virtuous and determined. In that sense the novel fails to do what novels naturally excel at; namely, opening up realms to the imagination that otherwise remain inaccessible, and in this specific case the motivations, assumptions, and deep historical grievances likely to drive Chinese or Russian policy makers in the run up to and during any such conflict. Sadly, it is exactly such a lack of understanding that makes war great power wars and the existential risks to humanity they pose, perhaps not inevitable, but increasingly more likely.\n6 Comments Posted in Dystopia Tagged 21 century naval war, August Cole, China, Cyber-war, Ghost Fleet: A Novel of the Next World War review, International Relations, Is war between the US and China inevitable?, P.W. Singer, Politics, War\nThe Kingdom of Glass Walls: A Fable\nThere once was a king of extraordinary vanity who liked to spend his time riding throughout the great city he ruled on his gilded coach allowing all who saw him to marvel at his attire which was woven of gold thread and bejeweled with diamonds and sapphires.\nThe vain king especially liked parading himself in the neighborhoods of the poor reasoning that their sight of him would be the closest thing to heaven such filthy people would have before they died and met God’s glorious angels. It was during one of these “tours” that a woman threw a bucket of shit out of her window which landed squarely on the king’s head.\nWho knows if it was by accident as the poor peasant girl claimed that she was merely emptying onto the streets the overflow of her commode when the bucket slipped from her hands and fell onto the king? In any case the king awoke from unconsciousness after the blow a changed man with his vanity transformed.\nThe changed king adopted the unusual style of doing away with all prerogatives of royal privacy and ordered the bricks of his castle walls be replaced with the most transparent glass. Anyone could now literally see all the doings of the royal household as if the court were now fish in a bowl to the great annoyance of the queen.\nThe king soon went so far as to abandon his former golden attire for no clothes at all. The queen at this point wanted to have the royal doctors declare the king mad on account of him having been hit by a bucket on the head, but there were powerful courtiers in the court who decided that the king was to remain on his throne.\nAfter having a dream that his city-kingdom had been invaded by an enemy that feared the naked king was planning a surprise attack he had the defensive walls of the city leveled, so that no one could might think he meant them ill. Having experienced how liberating it felt to be open to all the world through his glass or torn down walls and nakedness the king wished that all his subjects could experience what he had.\nHe thus offered to pay out of his own treasury the cost of any of his subjects replacement of their walls of wood, brick or straw with walls of glass. Many of his subjects took the king up on the offer, for who would not want their cold house with walls of straw or dilapidated wood to be replaced with walls of clean, shiny glass?\nBut then a bug was placed in the king’s ear from a powerful anonymous courtier : “He with nothing to hide has nothing to fear” and with that the suspicion entered the king’s mind that the only people who would have kept their opaque walls must be hiding something.\nCriminals and bandits soon found ways game this system largely by using disguises and fake scenes painted on their glass walls while those with enough money found that with the proper “donation” they could keep their brick houses if they just put in a few more windows. However most law abiding persons now completely surrounded by glass had left themselves open to all sorts of peeping toms, shisters, and burglars. And with the walls of the city taken down some said they could see the torch lights of an army on the nearby hills at night.\nCitizens began to complain that perhaps replacing the walls of their homes with glass and tearing down the walls of the city was not a good idea. Just then the king announced to everyone’s’ surprise that he had fallen in love with a pig and wished to divorce the queen and marry his newly beloved scrofa domesticus.\nAt this the queen and even more importantly the powerful courtiers had had enough. The king was arrested and placed in a dungeon, although, not to be accused of cruelty, he was allowed to keep his pig with him. New walls much thicker than before replaced the castle’s walls of glass and the walls around the city were rebuilt.\nA decree went out from the court declaring that no citizen was allowed to replace the glass walls of their homes. The queen claimed that such total transparency among the subjects was necessary to catch criminals and even more so spies from neighboring kingdoms who meant to do the city harm, and after many years the people forgot that things had ever been different or that they had once been ruled by a transparent king.\nLeave a comment Posted in Archives Tagged David Cameron, Dystopia, Emperor's New Clothes, Encryption back doors, Mass Surveillance, Politics, Privacy and surveillance, Sousveillance, Transparency, UK Snooper's Charter\nStalinism as Transhumanism\nThe ever controversial Steve Fuller has recently published a number of jolting essays at the IEET,(there has been a good discussion on David Roden’s blog on the topic), yet whatever one thinks about the prospect of zombie vs transhumanist apocalypse he has managed to raise serious questions for anyone who identifies themselves with the causes of transhumanism and techno-progressivism; namely, what is the proper role, if any, of the revolutionary, modernizing state in such movements and to what degree should the movement be open to violence as a means to achieve its ends? Both questions, I will argue, can best be answered by looking at the system constructed in the Soviet Union between 1929 and 1953 under the reign of Joseph Stalin.\nThose familiar with the cast of characters in the early USSR will no doubt wonder why I chose to focus on the “conservative” Stalin rather Leon Trotsky who certainly evidenced something like proto-transhumanism with quotes such as this one in his essay Revolutionary and Socialist Art:\nMan will make it his purpose to master his own feelings, to raise his instincts to the heights of consciousness, to make them transparent, to extend the wires of his will into hidden recesses, and thereby to raise himself to a new plane, to create a higher social biologic type, or, if you please, a superman.\nIt was views like this one that stood as evidence for me of the common view among intellectuals sympathetic to Marxism that it was Trotsky who was the true revolutionary figure and heir of Lenin, whereas Stalin was instead a reactionary in Marxists garb who both murdered the promise latent in the Russian Revolution and constructed on the revolution’s corpse a system of totalitarian terror.\nSerious historians no longer hold such views in light of evidence acquired after the opening up of Soviet archives after the USSR’s collapse in 1991. What we’ve gained as a consequence of these documents is a much more nuanced and detailed view of the three major figures of the Russian Revolution: Lenin, Trotsky and Stalin all of which in some ways looked at violence as the premier tool for crafting a new social and political order.\nTake the father of the Russian Revolution- Lenin. The common understanding of Lenin in the past was to see him as a revolutionary pragmatist who engaged in widespread terror and advocated dictatorship largely as a consequence of the precarious situation of the revolution and in the atmosphere of danger and bloodshed found in the Russian civil war. In fact the historical record presented in the archives now makes clear that many of the abhorrent features of state communism in Russia once associated with Stalin in fact originated under Lenin, obscenities such as as the forerunner to the KGB, the Cheka, or the Soviet system of concentration camps- Solzhenitsyn’s gulag archipelago. Far from seeing them as temporary expedients in precarious situation of the revolution and the atmosphere of danger and bloodshed found in the Russian civil war, Lenin saw these innovations as a permanent feature of Marx’s “dictatorship of the proletariat”, which Lenin had reimagined as the permanent rule of a revolutionary, technocratic elite.\nTrotsky comes off only a little better because he never assumed the mantle of Soviet dictator. Trotsky’s problems, however, originate from his incredible egotism when combined with his stunning political naivete. His idea was that in the 1920’s conditions were ripe to export the communist revolution globally barely grasping just how precarious the situation was for the newly victorious communist revolutionaries within even his own country. Indeed, to the extent that both domestic communist in non-Russian countries identified with Soviet communism and prematurely pushed their societies towards revolution this only ended up in empowering reactionaries and leading to the rise of fascist parties globally who would come quite close to strangling the infant of state communism while it was still in its cradle.\nThen there’s Stalin who those sympathetic to communism often see as the figure who did the most to destroy its’ promise. The so-called “man of steel” is understood as a reactionary monster who replaced the idealism of the early Soviet Union with all the snakes that had infected czarist Russia’s head.\nThis claim too has now been upended. For what is clear is that although Stalin reoriented the USSR away from Trotsky’s dream of world revolution to focus on “socialism in one country” the state Stalin managed to create was perhaps the most radical and revolutionary the world has yet seen.\nThe state has always played a large role in modernization, but it was only in the types of communists regimes which Stalin was the first to envision that the state became synonymous with modernization itself. And it wasn’t only modernization, but a kind of ever accelerating modernization that aimed to break free of the gravity of history and bring humanity to a new world inhabited by a new type of man.\nIt was his revolutionary impatience and desire to accelerate the pace of history that led Stalin down the path to being perhaps the most bloody tyrant the world has yet know. The collectivization of Soviet agriculture alone coming at the cost of at least 5 million deaths. What Stalin seemed to possess that his fellow revolutionaries lacked was a kind of sociopathy that left him flinch-less in the face of mass suffering, though he also became possessed by the paranoia to which tyrants are prone and towards the end of his reign killed as much out of fear as he did as a consequence of his desire to propel the USSR through history.\nHere I return to Fuller who seems to have been inspired by state communism and appears to be making the case that what transhumanism needs is a revolutionary vanguard that will, violently if necessary, push society towards transformative levels of technological change. Such change will then make possible the arrival of a new form of human being.\nThere is a great deal of similarity here with the view of the state as presented by Zoltan Istvan in his novel The Transhumanist Wager though that work is somewhat politically schizophrenic with elements of Ayn Rand and Bolshevism at the same time, which perhaps makes sense given that the Silicon Valley culture it emerged from was largely built on government subsidies yet clings to the illusion it is the product of heroic individuals such as Steve Jobs. And of course, The Transhumanist Wager exhibits this same feature of believing violence necessary to open up the path to radical transformation.\nOne of the important questions we might ask is how analogous was the Russian situation with our own? What the Soviets were trying to do was to transform their society in a way that had been technologically experienced elsewhere only under a brand new form of political regime. In other words the technological transformation – industrialization- was already understood, where the Soviets were innovative was in the political sphere. At the same time, modernization to be accomplished in the Soviet Union needed to overthrow and uproot traditional social forces that had aligned themselves against industrialization- the nobility and the clergy. A strong state was necessary to overcome powerful and intransigent classes.\nNone of these characteristics seem applicable the kinds of technological change taking place today. For one, the type of complete technological transformation Fuller is talking about are occurring everywhere nearly simultaneously- say the current revolutions in biotechnology, robotics and artificial intelligence where no society has achieved some sort of clear breakout that a revolutionary movement is necessary to push society in the direction of replicating.\nNor does the question of technological transformation break clearly along class or even religious lines in a world where the right to left political spectrum remains very much intact. It is highly unlikely that a technological movement on the right will emerge that can remain viable while jettisoning those adhering to more traditional religious notions.\nLikewise, it is improbable that any left wing technological movement would abandon its commitment to the UN Declaration and the world’s poor. In thinking otherwise I believe Fuller is repeating Trotsky’s mistake- naively believing in political forces and realignments about to surface that simply aren’t there. (The same applies to Zoltan Istvan’s efforts.)\nYet by far the worst mistake Fuller makes is in embracing the Stalinist idea that acceleration needs to be politicized and that violence is a useful tool in achieving this acceleration. The danger here is not that justifying violence in the pursuit of transhumanist ends is likely to result in widespread collective violence in the name of such goals, but that it might start to attract sadists and kooks whose random acts of violence “in the name of transhumanism” put the otherwise humane goals of the movement at risk of social backlash.\nAt the same time Fuller is repeating the grave error of Stalinism which is to conflate power and the state with the process of technological transformation. The state is many and sometimes contradictory things with one of its’ roles indeed to modernize society. Yet at the same time the state is tasked with protecting us from that very same modernization by preventing us from being treated as mere parts in a machine rather than as individuals and citizens.\nFuller also repeats the error of the Stalinist state when it comes to the role and efficacy of violence in the political sphere for the proper role of violence is not as a creative force that is able to establish something new, but as a means of resistance and protection for those already bound together in some mutual alliance.\nStill, we might want to take seriously the possibility that Fuller has tapped into a longer term trend in which the ways technology is developing is opening up the possibility of the reappearance of the Stalinist state, but that’s a subject that will have to await for another time.\n1 Comment Posted in Dystopia Tagged David Roden, Modernization and violence, Philosophy, Politics, Stalin and revolution, Stalinism, Steve Fuller and violence, Transhumanism and communism, Transhumanism and the state, Transhumanism and violence, Trotsky and Transhumanism, Zoltan Istvan\nThe debate between the economists and the technologists, who wins?\nFor a while now robots have been back in the news with a vengeance, and almost on cue seem to have revived many of the nightmares that we might have thought had been locked up in the attic of the mind with all sorts of other stuff from the 1980’s, which it was hoped we would never need.\nBig fears should probably only be tackled one at a time, so let’s leave aside for today the question of whether robots are likely to kill us, and focus on what should be an easier nut to crack and a less frightening nut at that; namely, whether we are in the process of automating our way out into a state of permanent, systemic unemployment.\nAlas, even this seemingly less fraught question is no less difficult to answer. For like everything the issue seems to have given rise to two distinct sides neither of which seems to have a clear monopoly on the truth. Unlike elsewhere however, these two sides in the debate over “technological unemployment” usually split less over ideological grounds than on the basis of professional expertise. That is, those who dismiss the argument that advances in artificial intelligence and robotics have already, or are about to, displace the types of work now done by humans to the extent that we face a crisis of permanent underemployment and unemployment the likes of which have never been seen before tend to be economists. How such an optimistic bunch came to be known as dismissal scientists is beyond me- note how they are also on the optimistic side of the debate with environmentalists.\nEconomists are among the first to remind us that we’ve seen fears of looming robot induced unemployment before, whether those of Ned Ludd and his followers in the 19th century, or as close to us as the 1960s. The destruction of jobs has, in the past at least, been achieved through the kinds of transformation that created brand new forms of employment. In 1915 nearly 40% of Americans were agricultural laborers of some sort now that number hovers around 2 percent. These farmers weren’t replaced by “robots” but they certainly were replaced by machines.\nStill we certainly don’t have a 40% unemployment rate. Rather, as the number of farm laborer positions declined they were replaced by jobs that didn’t even exist in 1915. The place these farmers have not gone, or where they probably would have gone in 1915 that wouldn’t be much of an option today is into manufacturing. For in that sector something very similar to the hollowing out of employment in agriculture has taken place with the decline in the percentage of laborers in manufacturing declining since 1915 from 25% to around 9% today. Here the workers really have been replaced by robots though just as much have job prospects on the shop floor declined because the jobs have been globalized. Again, even at the height of the recent financial crisis we haven’t seen 25% unemployment, at least not in the US.\nEconomists therefore continue to feel vindicated by history: any time machines have managed to supplement human labor we’ve been able to invent whole new sectors of employment where the displaced or their children have been able to find work. It seems we’ve got nothing to fear from the “rise of the robots.” Or do we?\nAgain setting aside the possibility that our mechanical servants will go all R.U.R on us, anyone who takes serious Ray Kurzweil’s timeline that by the 2020’s computers will match human intelligence and by 2045 exceed our intelligence a billionfold has to come to the conclusion that most jobs as we know them are toast. The problem here, and one that economists mostly fail to take into account, is that past technological revolutions ended up replacing human brawn and allowing workers to upscale into cognitive tasks. Human workers had somewhere to go. But a machine that did the same for tasks that require intelligence and that were indeed billions of times smarter than us would make human workers about as essential to the functioning of a company as Leaper ornament is to the functioning of a Jaguar.\nThen again perhaps we shouldn’t take Kurzweil’s timeline all that seriously in the first place. Skepticism would seem to be in order because the Moore’s Law based exponential curve that is at the heat of Kurzweil’s predictions appears to have started to go all sigmoidal on us. That was the case made by John Markoff recently over at The Edge. In an interview about the future of Silicon Valley he said:\nAll the things that have been driving everything that I do, the kinds of technology that have emerged out of here that have changed the world, have ridden on the fact that the cost of computing doesn’t just fall, it falls at an accelerating rate. And guess what? In the last two years, the price of each transistor has stopped falling. That’s a profound moment.\nKurzweil argues that you have interlocked curves, so even after silicon tops out there’s going to be something else. Maybe he’s right, but right now that’s not what’s going on, so it unwinds a lot of the arguments about the future of computing and the impact of computing on society. If we are at a plateau, a lot of these things that we expect, and what’s become the ideology of Silicon Valley, doesn’t happen. It doesn’t happen the way we think it does. I see evidence of that slowdown everywhere. The belief system of Silicon Valley doesn’t take that into account.\nAlthough Markoff admits there has been great progress in pattern recognition there has been nothing similar for the kinds of routine physical tasks found in much of low skilled/mobile forms of work. As evidence from the recent DARPA challenge if you want a job safe from robots choose something for a living that requires mobility and the performance of a variety of tasks- plumber, home health aide etc.\nMarkoff also sees job safety on the higher end of the pay scale in cognitive tasks computers seem far from being able to perform:\nWe haven’t made any breakthroughs in planning and thinking, so it’s not clear that you’ll be able to turn these machines loose in the environment to be waiters or flip hamburgers or do all the things that human beings do as quickly as we think. Also, in the United States the manufacturing economy has already left, by and large. Only 9 percent of the workers in the United States are involved in manufacturing.\nThe upshot of all this is that there’s less to be feared from technological unemployment than many think:\nThere is an argument that these machines are going to replace us, but I only think that’s relevant to you or me in the sense that it doesn’t matter if it doesn’t happen in our lifetime. The Kurzweil crowd argues this is happening faster and faster, and things are just running amok. In fact, things are slowing down. In 2045, it’s going to look more like it looks today than you think.\nThe problem, I think, with the case against technological unemployment made by many economists and someone like Markoff is that they seem to be taking on a rather weak and caricatured version of the argument. That at least was is the conclusion one comes to when taking into account what is perhaps the most reasoned and meticulous book to try to convince us that the boogeyman of robots stealing our jobs might have all been our imagination before, but that it is real indeed this time.\nI won’t so much review the book I am referencing, Martin Ford’s Rise of the Robots: Technology and the Threat of a Jobless Future here as layout how he responds to the case from economics that we’ve been here before and have nothing to worry about or the observation of Markoff that because Moore’s Law has hit a wall (has it?), we need no longer worry so much about the transformative implications of embedding intelligence in silicon.\nI’ll take the second one first. In terms of the idea that the end of Moore’s Law will derail tech innovation Ford makes a pretty good case that:\nEven if the advance of computer hardware capability were to plateau, there would be a whole range of paths along which progress could continue. (71)\nContinued progress in software and especially new types of (especially parallel) computer architecture will continue to be mined long after Moore’s Law has reached its apogee. Cloud computing should also imply that silicon needn’t compete with neurons at scale. You don’t have to fit the computational capacity of a human individual into a machine of roughly similar size but could tap into a much, much larger and more energy intensive supercomputer remotely that gives you human level capacities. Ultimate density has become less important.\nWhat this means is that we should continue to see progress (and perhaps very rapid progress) in robotics and artificially intelligent agents. Given that we have what is often thought of as a 3 dimensional labor market comprised of agriculture, manufacturing and the service sector and the first two are already largely mechanized and automated the place where the next wave will fall hardest is in the service sector and the question becomes is will there be any place left for workers to go?\nFord makes a pretty good case that eventually we should be able to automate almost anything human beings do for all automation means is breaking a task down into a limited number of steps. And the examples he comes up with where we have already shown this is possible are both surprising and sometimes scary.\nPerhaps 70 percent of financial trading on Wall Street is now done by trading algorithms (who don’t seem any less inclined to panic). Algorithms now perform legal research and compose orchestras and independently discover scientific theories. And those are the fancy robots. Most are like ATM machines where its is the customer who now does part of the labor involved in some task. Ford thinks the fast food industry is rife for innovation in this way where the customer designs their own food that some system of small robots then “builds.” Think of your own job. If you can describe it to someone in a discrete number of steps Ford thinks the robots are coming for you.\nI was thankful that though himself a technologist, Ford placed technological unemployment in a broader context and sees it as part and parcel of trends after 1970 such as a greater share of GDP moving from labor and to capital, soaring inequality, stagnant wages for middle class workers, the decline of unions, and globalization. His solution to these problems is a guaranteed basic income, which he makes a humane and non-ideological argument for. Reminding those on the right who might the idea anathema that conservative heavyweights such Milton Friedman have argued in its favor.\nThe problem from my vantage point is not that Ford has failed to make a good case against those on the economists’ side of the issue who would accuse him of committing the Luddite fallacy, it’s that perhaps his case is both premature and not radical enough. It is premature in the sense that while all the other trends regarding rising inequality, the decline of unions etc are readily apparent in the statistics, technological unemployment is not.\nPerhaps then technological unemployment is only small part of a much larger trend pushing us in the direction of the entrenchment and expansion of inequality and away from the type of middle class society established in the last century. The tech culture of Silicon Valley and the companies they have built are here a little bit like Burning Man an example of late capitalist culture at its seemingly most radical and imaginative that temporarily escapes rather than creates a really alternative and autonomous political and social space.\nPerhaps the types of technological transformation already here and looming that Ford lays out could truly serve as the basis for a new form of political and economic order that served as an alternative to the inegalitarian turn, but he doesn’t explore them. Nor does he discuss the already present dark alternative to the kinds of socialism through AI we find in the “Minds” of Iain Banks, namely, the surveillance capitalism we have allowed to be built around us that now stands as a bulwark against preserving our humanity and prevent ourselves from becoming robots.\n3 Comments Posted in Dystopia Tagged Artificial Intelligence, Inequality, John Markoff, Luddite Fallacy, Martin Ford, Politics, Rise of the Robots, Robots, Technological Unemployment:, Technology, What will happen if Moore's Law Ends?\nWhy aren’t we living in H.G. Wells’ scientific dictatorship?\nOne of the more depressing things to come out of the 2008 financial crisis was just how little it managed to effect our expectations about the economy and political forms of the future. Sure, there was Occupy Wall Street, and there’s been at least some interesting intellectual ferment here and there with movements such as Accelerationist Marxism and the like, but none have really gone anywhere. Instead what we’ve got is the same old system only now with even more guarantees and supports for the super rich. Donald Trump may be a blowhard and a buffoon, but even buffoons and blowhards can tell the truth as he did during last Thursday’s debate when he essentially stated that politicians were in the pocket to those with the cash, such as himself, who were underneath it all really running the show.\nThe last really major crisis of capitalism wasn’t anything like this. In the 1930’s not only had the whole system gone down, but nearly everyone seemed convinced that capitalism, (and some even thought the representative democracy that had emerged in tandem with it) was on the way out.\nThen again, the political and economic innovation of the early 20th century isn’t the kind of thing any of us would wish for. Communists, which to many born after 1989 may seem as much like antiquated creatures from another world as American revolutionaries in powdered wigs, was by the 1930’s considered one of the two major ways the society of the future would likely be organized, and its’ competitor over the shape of the future wasn’t some humane and reasoned alternative, but the National Socialism of Hitler’s dark Reich.\nIf one wants to get a sense of the degree to which the smart money was betting against the survival of capitalism and democracy in the 1930’s one couldn’t do much better than that most eerily prescient of science-fiction prophets – H.G. Wells. In many ways, because he was speaking through the veneer of fiction Wells could allow himself to voice opinions which would have led even political radicals to blush. Also, because he was a “mere” fiction author his writings became one of the few ways intellectuals and politicians in liberal societies could daydream about a way out of capitalism’s constant crises, democracy’s fissiparousness and corruption, and most importantly for the survival of humanity in light of the nation-state’s increasingly destructive wars.\nWell’s 1933 The Shape of Things to Come, published not long after the Nazis had come to power in Germany, is perhaps his best example of a work that blurs the boundaries between a work of fiction and a piece of political analysis, polemic, and prediction. In the guise of a dream book of a character who has seen the future of the world from the 1930’s to the middle of the beginning of the 22nd century, Wells is able to expound upon the events of the day and their possible implications- over a century into the future.\nWriting six years before the event takes place Well’s spookily imagines World War II beginning with the German invasion of Poland. Also identifying the other major aggressor in a world war still to come, Wells realizes Japan had stepped into a quagmire by invading China from which much ill would come.\nThese predictions of coming violence (Wells forecast the outbreak of the Second World War to be 1940- one year off) are even more chilling when one watches the movie based upon the book, and know that the bombings of cities it depicts is not some cinematographer’s fantasy, but will no doubt have killed some of those who watched the film in theaters in 1936- less than five years later.\nNevertheless, Wells gets a host of very important things, not only about the future but about his present, very wrong. He gets it ass backwards in generally admiring the Soviet Union and seeing its’ problem not being the inhuman treatment by the Communist regime of its citizens, but the fact that they have wed themselves to what Well’s believes is an antiquated, dogmatic theory in Marxism.\nIndeed, Wells will build his own version of dictatorship in The Shape of Things to Come (though versions of it can be seen in his earlier work) using the ideas of two of Soviet communism’s founders- Trotsky’s idea of a global revolutionary movement which will establish a worldwide government and Lenin’s idea of an intellectual nucleus that will control all the aspects of society.\nNor, did Wells really grasp the nature of Nazism or the strange contradiction of a global alliance of fascist regimes that ostensibly worship the state. Wells saw Hitler as a throwback to a dying order based on the nation-state. His only modernity being\n“…control by a self-appointed, self-disciplined élite was a distinct step towards our Modern State organization.” (192)\nWells therefore misses the savagery born of the competition between world shaping ideologies and their mobilization of entire societies that will constitute the Second World War and its aftermath.\nIronically, Wells mistakenly thinks WWII will be short and its fatalities low because he gets his technological predictions right. He clearly foresees the role of the importance of the tank, the airplane, and the submarine to the future war and because of them even anticipates the Nazi idea of blitzkrieg. At one point he seems to have a glimmer of the death spirit that will seize over humankind during the war when he compares the submarine to a sacrificial altar:\nThe Germans supplied most of the flesh for this particular altar; willing and disciplined, their youngsters saluted and carried their kit down the ladder into this gently swaying clumsy murder mechanism which was destined to become their coffin. (70)\nNevertheless, he fails to see that the Second World War will unleash the kinds of violence and fanaticism formerly only seen in religious wars.\nTwo decades after Wells’ novel many would think that because of the introduction of nuclear weapons wars would be reduced to minutes. Instead conflict became stretched out across multiple decades. What this is should teach us is that we have no idea how any particular technology will ultimately affect the character of war – especially in terms of its intensity or duration- thus those hoping that robotic or cyber weapons will return us to short decisive conflicts are likely seeing a recurrent mirage.\nWells perhaps better understood than other would be revolutionaries and prophets of the time just how robust existing societies were despite their obvious flaws. The kind of space for true political innovation had seemingly occurred only during times of acute stress, such as war, that by their nature were short lived. A whole new way of organizing society had seemingly revealed itself during World War I in which the whole industrial apparatus of the nation was mobilized and directed towards a particular end. Yet the old society would reassert itself except in those societies that had experienced either defeat and collapse or Pyrrhic victory (Italy, Japan) in the conflict.\nWells thus has to imagine further crises after economic depression and world war to permanently shatter Western societies that had become fossilized into their current form. The new kind of war had itself erased the boundary between the state and the society during war, and here Wells is perhaps prescient in seeing the link between mass mobilization, the kinds of wars against civilians seen in the Second World War and insurgency/terrorism. Yet he pictures the final hammer blow not in the form of such a distributed conflict but coming in the form of a global pandemic that kills half of the world’s people. After that comes the final death of the state and the reversion to feudalism.\nIt is from a world ruled by warlords that Wells’ imagined “Air Dictatorship” will emerge. It is essentially the establishment of global rule by a scientific technocracy that begins with the imposition of a monopoly over global trade networks and especially control over the air.\nTo contemporary ears the sections on the Air Dictatorship can be humorously reminiscent of an advertisement for FedEx or the US Navy. And then the humor passes when one recalls that a world dominated by one global straddling military and multinational corporations isn’t too far from the one Wells pictured even if he was more inspired by the role of the Catholic Church in the Dark Ages, the Hanseatic League or the what the damned Bolsheviks were up to in Russia.\nOddly enough, Wells foresaw no resistance to the establishment of a world-state (he called it The Modern State) from global capitalists, or communists or the remnant of the security services of the states that had collapsed. Instead, falling into a modernist bias that remains quite current, Wells sees the only rival to the “Modern State” in the form of the universal religions which the Air Dictatorship will therefore have to destroy. Wells’ utopians declare war on Catholics (Protestants oddly give no resistance) forcefully close Mecca and declare war on Kosher foods. And all this deconstruction to be followed by “re-education” Wells thinks could be done without the kinds of totalitarian nightmares and abuses which are less than two decades away from when he is writing The Shape of Things.\nI am not particular fan of the universal confusion called post-modernism, but it does normally prevent most of us from making zingers like Wells’ such as this:\nThey are going to realize that there can be only one right way of looking at the world for a normal human being and only one conception of a proper scheme of social reactions, and that all others must be wrong and misleading and involve destructive distortions of conduct. (323)\nLike any self-respecting version of apocalypse, Wells imagines that after a period of pain and violence the process will become self sustaining and neither will be required, though most honorably for the time Wells thinks this world will be one of racial equality that will never again suffer the plague of extreme want.\nAnalogous to the universal religions, after the establishment of the Modern State all of humankind will become party to ultimate mission of the scientific endeavor which the protagonist in the movie version sums up manically in this crazy speech at the end of the film:\nFor man, no rest, he must go on. First this little planet and its’ winds and ways, and then all of the laws of mind and matter that restrain him. Then the planets above and at last out across immensity to the stars. And when he conquers all the depths of space and all of time still he will not be finished.\nAll the universe or nothing! Which shall it be?\n(As a side note Ken Stanley Robinson seems to think this modernist’s dream that the destiny of humanity is to settle the stars is still alive and kicking. In his newest novel he is out to kill it. Review pending. )\nTo return to our lack of imagination and direction after 2008: we, unlike Wells, know how his and similar modernist projects failed, and just how horribly they did so. Nevertheless, his diagnosis remains largely sound. It might take a crisis the scale none of us would wish for to engender real reform let alone the taking of radically new directions. Given historical experience such crises are much more likely to give rise to monsters than anything benign.\nAnarchists seem to grasp the shape of the time but not its implications. In a globalized world power has slipped out of the grasp of democratic sovereignty and into the hands of networked organizations- from multinational corporations, to security services, to terrorists and criminal groups able to transcend these borders. Yet it is tightly organized “machine like” organizations rather than decentralized/anarchic ones that seem to thrive in this feudal environment, and whereas that very feudalism and its competition makes achieving a unified voice in addressing urgent global problems even more difficult, and where despite our current perceptions, war between the armed groups that represent states the gravest existential threat to humanity, we, unlike Wells, know that no one group of us has all the answers, and that it is not only inhumane but impossible to win human unity out of the barrel of a ray gun\n11 Comments Posted in Dystopia Tagged Dystopia, Globalization, H.G. Wells and WWII, H.G. Wells new world order, H.G. Wells The Shape of Things to Come, Modernist Utopia, Politics, Predictions of WWII, Revolution, Things to come film, World Government, World State\nThe death of our Republic is inevitable, but what should replace it?\nHappy two hundred and thirty ninth birthday, America! Although it’s more accurate to claim the country is younger and date the current republic’s birth from the adoption of the constitution in 1787. Amazingly, it’s a constitution that in most respects remains essentially the same despite all the enormous changes that have happened in the centuries since it was written.\nAmericans are constantly claiming that their country is “exceptional” which has to bug the hell out of non-Americans and is only really true if exceptional is taken to mean something like weird. What makes us so weird is that we’re a country whose identity is based not on some real or imagined ethnicity, religion, or ancient civilization, but on allegiance to a set of political documents and the system of government those documents sanction. What unites a gun toting bible-belter and an atheist card carrying member of the ACLU is adherence to the same document, though their interpretations of it are radically different. Lately, it seems, this tug of war over the constitution is about to tear the document in two.\nThe tension of mutually contradictory interpretations was on full display in the recent fight over marriage equality where both sides, in all sincerity, believed their case justified by the very same document. The constitution considered by members of the right as a “Christian document” and one that enshrined authority over the question of marriage to the states, or that same constitution, and much more so the Declaration of Independence that came before it, considered by those on the left fighting for equal rights as what Martin Luther King Jr called a “promissory note” that held within itself the extension of the rights implicit in the Declaration and their extension to all citizens.\nThis dispute over the constitution’s meaning is at the root of the current fight over the Confederate flag, a debate which otherwise appears so superficial that seen in this light makes much more sense. What I think very few white Americans, myself included, have understood is to what extent the Confederate States of America claimed for itself the mantle of the constitution and its “true” meaning and turned what most of us have seen as the nation’s greatest hypocrisy and sin- the existence of slavery in a country supposedly founded on the principles of freedom and equality- as its’ justification.\nFor African Americans, the Confederate flag represents not just the brutality of slavery, but a claim of possession to a narrative of American history that claims freedom and equality is a privilege of whites alone. Something that is radically different than romantic ideas of the Confederacy as a tragic lost cause and rebellion against authority that we’re so prevalent in my youth. At a bare minimum the state capitals of governments whose insurrection against the Union resulted in deaths of tens of thousands of American soldiers should never have been flown such a flag.\nFull throated affection for the Confederacy when combined, as seems to often be the case, with strong American nationalism or patriotism always seemed contradictory to me as a Yankee. How could one worship the Confederacy while at the same time loving the Union that crushed it? What was lost on me was that such a view was not contradictory in so far as one thought that it was the Confederacy that had fought to defend the “real” and “legitimate” constitution. In other words that there was this dark and inegalitarian interpretation of the constitution and the American story that existed side-by side with the progressive (if far less than radical) understanding that I had always been taught. Since its beginnings and for a long time to come the greatest internal danger to the republic (in terms of violence) will continue to emerge from this ancient dispute over the constitution’s meaning and come from those who think they are acting in defense of some lost and ultimately inegalitarian version of it.\nYet such a conflict as a danger to the Republic itself, a sort of replay of the Civil War, seems very unlikely to be the way the Republic will ultimately end, and end it must just as every other system of government and civilization has eventually passed from the scene. On that score, the political scientists Francis Fukuyama and David Runciman recently held a fascinating public discussion that grappled with the question of not just American democracy’s future, but the future of democracy itself.\nFukuyama is of course famous for his 1989 essay and subsequent book “The End of History and the Last Man” which argued that history seemed to have a direction moving politics ever closer to what we would consider democratic forms. After 9-11 that view has taken a shellacking as trends towards democratization have gone into reverse. Fukuyama still thinks that democracy holds the greatest attraction as a system of government globally, though the process of democratization will likely be very slow and move forward in fits and starts. His biggest concern isn’t the arrival of some real alternative system of government out of a place like China, Russia or the Middle East to rival democracy in its attractiveness. Rather, his concern is with what he calls political decay- a phenomenon he finds particularly troubling in the United States.\nFukuyama is not some kind of anarchist outsider but an essentially a conservative thinker which makes his view that the financial crisis essentially enable political capture by elites who stymied any efforts at real reform all the more troubling. What he considers the archaic system of American government enables a “vetocracy” in which any special interest with deep enough pockets can initiate legal action to block or delay indefinitely policies regardless of such vetoes impacts on the public good. The system is therefore both hobbled and weak while at the same time being open to capture to manipulation and gaming on account of its monetized elections and revolving door. It is perhaps the worst mixture government for the long term health of society- too weak to make difficult decisions in the nation’s long term interests and too corrupt to make good ones.\nDavid Runciman is much less well known than Fukuyama but he shouldn’t be having written one of the most thought provoking tracks on democracy in recent years- The Confidence Trap. Runciman’s point in his discussion with Fukuyama build off of the argument he had presented in that book. That argument basically is that the greatest danger to democracy is its success. Runciman points out that the public sense of democracy has always been that it is failing miserably, which in a sense it is.\nYet it is that system’s very fickleness that gives rise to its sense of lacking direction and failure that allow democracies during periods of extreme crisis to respond with a flexibility its more stable rivals do not possess. The problem Runciman sees and adds to the fear of decay identified by Fukuyama is that democracy’s technocrats have become extremely adept and preventing crises from getting to the point that the public is jarred into pushing forward systemic change, and the system and society therefore rots over time.\nA possibility that troubles Runciman is that the time scales of the potential crises facing democracy seem to have decoupled from the elections that remain the primary route through which democratic change is effected. Potential crises are either now too extended in time – like global warming, or possess the lightning speed of technology in comparison to which electoral cycles can seem almost testudine. Are we superficially preventing the full onset of crises only to face much more systemic ones we will not have the wherewithal to respond to in the future?\nSome had hoped that if politics would not change itself, technology would end up changing the way we did politics. Yet the promise of technology to transform democracy in the early days of the internet have also proven to be false- technology is convenient and immediate – like an app- whereas politics seemingly by its nature is anything but.\nAnother point Runciman mentions but does not elaborate upon to this degree which seems particularly relevant today is the extension of democracy’s concerns not merely in terms of time but of space. Many of the most important issues facing us are global in scope. Thus the great hope of some democracy advocates that the European Union offered was as an emerging model for how democracy could be extended into the international sphere. It is a hope now dashed by the crisis in Greece. The EU is not a nascent new form of transnational democracy, but appears to be a new form of technocratic hegemony exercised in the interest of the strongests states.\nThe public at large has become exhausted with politics to the extent that some have argued we turn our decision making over to our increasing intelligent machines. Perhaps the ultimate end of not just the American Republic but democracy itself will come when our current systems of electoral competition are replaced by bureaucratic mechanism administered rationally and impartially by AI- an aloocracy. Or we’ll rule the world from our smart phones and their descendants deciding everything by means of constant referendum. The problem here is that most of the questions that face us can’t be algorithmically decided because they are questions of values, nor is it clear transforming decision making into something like referendum represents real freedom rather than surrendering our ability to think and debate to the equivalent of an electronic mob. Which leaves me with the questions: what system might replace our Republic that would actually be better than a reformed version of it that actually lives up to our more just and egalitarian aspirations for it?\n2 Comments Posted in Dystopia Tagged Confederate Flag, Constitution and Slavery, David Runciman, Fourth of July, Francis Fukuyama, Politics, The Confidence Trap, The Future of Democracy, United States, Vintage Lady Liberty\nIs Pope Francis the World’s Most Powerful Transhumanist?\nI remember once while on a trip to Arizona asking a long-time resident of Phoenix why anyone would want to live in such a godforsaken place. I wasn’t at all fooled by the green lawns and the swimming pools and knew that we were standing in the middle of a desert over the bones of the Hohokam Indians whose civilization had shriveled up under the brutality of the Sonora sun. The person I was speaking to had a quick retort to my east coast skepticism. Where I lived, he observed, was no more natural than where he did, for the constant need for air conditioning during much of the year in a place like Phoenix was but the flip side of the need for heat in the cold months in the backwoods of my native Pennsylvania. Everywhere humankind lives is in some sense “unnatural”, every place we have successfully settled it was because we had been able to wrestle nature’s arm behind her back and make her cry “uncle”.\nSometime around then, back in 2006, James Lovelock published what was probably the most frightening book I have ever read- The Revenge of Gaia. There he predicted the death of billions of human beings and the retreat of global civilization to the poles as the climate as we had known it throughout the 100,000 or so years of of species history collapsed under the weight of anthropogenic climate change. It was not a work of dystopian fiction.\nLovelock has since backed off from this particular version of apocalyptic nightmare, but not because we have changed our course or discovered some fundamental error in the models that lead to his dark predictions. Instead, it is because he thinks the pace of warming is somewhat slower than predicted due to sulfuric pollution and its reflection of sunlight that act like the sunshields people put on their car windows. Lovelock is also less frightened out of the realization that air conditioning allows large scale societies- he is particularly fond of Singapore, but he also could have cited the Arabian Gulf or American Southwest- to seemingly thrive in conditions much hotter than those which any large human population could have survived in the past. We are not the poor Hohokam.\nThe problem with this more sanguine view of things is in thinking Singapore like levels of adaptation are either already here or even remotely on the horizon. This is the reality brought home over the last several weeks as the death toll from an historic heat wave sweeping over India and Pakistan has risen into the thousands. Most societies, or at least those with the most people, lack the ability to effectively respond to the current and predicted impacts of climate change, and are unlikely to develop it soon. The societal effects and death toll of a biblical scale deluge are much different if one is in Texas or Bangladesh. Major droughts can cause collapse and civil war in the fragile states of the Middle East that do not happen under similar environmental pressures between Arizona or Nevada- though Paolo Bacigalupi’s recent novel The Water Knife helps us imagine this were so. Nor has something like the drought in California sparked or fed the refugee flows or ethnic religious tensions it has elsewhere and which are but a prelude of what will likely happen should we continue down this path.\nIt is this fact that the negative impacts of the Anthropocene now fall on the world’s poor, and given the scale of the future impacts of climate change will be devastating for the poor and their societies because they lack the resources to adjust and respond to these changes, that is the moral insight behind Pope Francis’ recent encyclical Laudato Si’, on Care for Our Common Home . It could not have been more timely.\nI have to say that much of the document has a beauty that is striking. Parts such as this:\nThe Psalms frequently exhort us to praise God the Creator, “who spread out the earth on the waters, for his steadfast love endures for ever” (Ps 136:6). They also invite other creatures to join us in this praise: “Praise him, sun and moon, praise him, all you shining stars! Praise him, you highest heavens, and you waters above the heavens! Let them praise the name of the Lord, for he commanded and they were created” (Ps 148:3-5). We do not only exist by God’s mighty power; we also live with him and beside him. This is why we adore him.\nLines like these reminded me of the poetry of Walt Whitman, or perhaps better even that most eloquent atheist Lucretius. And there are points in the letter where the relationship of God to non-human animals is portrayed in almost post-humanist terms, which makes a lot of sense given the pope’s namesake. But the purpose of Laudato Si isn’t to serve as poetry or even as a reminder to Christians that care for the natural world is not only not incompatible with their faith but a logical extension of it. Rather, the purpose of the pope’s letter is to serve as a moral indictment and a call to action. Pope Francis has, rightly and justly, connected our obligations to the global environment with our obligations to the world’s poor.\nThe problem with religious documents, even beautiful and uplifting documents such as the Laudato Si is that as a type they do not grapple with historical or moral ambiguity. Such documents by their nature try to establish continuity with the past, as in claiming the church contained whatever teaching is being communicated all along. They also by their very nature try to establish firm moral lines not only for the present and future but also in the past rather than grapple with the fact that we are more often confronted with much more ambiguous moral trade-offs -and always have been.\nWhat Laudato Si lacks is ironically the same acknowledgement that New Atheists so critical of Christianity often lack, namely the recognition that the history of our understanding of nature or the universe through science is part and parcel of the history of Christianity itself. It was Christians, after all, who having won over the Roman elites in the 3rd century AD managed to do what all the natural philosophers since Thales had never managed to, namely, to rid nature of “gods” as an explanation for everyday occurrences thus opening up a space for our understanding of nature as something free of intention. Only such a dis-enchanted nature could be considered predictable and machine-like by thinkers such as Newton, or made a subject for “interrogation” as it was by the philosopher Francis Bacon in the 17th century. And it’s with Bacon that we see how morally complicated the whole conquest of nature narrative Pope Francis grapples with in Laudato Si actually is.\nIt was Christianity that inspired Bacon’s quest for scientific knowledge – his search for what he believes to be the lost true knowledge of Adam that will give us mastery over nature. The very purpose of this mastery for him was a Christian and charitable one “the relief of man’s estate”. And yet such mastery and relief cannot be won without treating nature as an object to be tamed or forced into the constraints of a machine. The universe as clock.\nTragically, it wouldn’t only be the natural world that the West would subjugate in its quest to escape the pain and privation often inflicted by nature, it would be other human beings as well. The conquest and exploitation of non-Western societies that began, not coincidentally, at the same time as the Scientific Revolution would be justified on the grounds that civilization itself and human progress found such conquest necessary as a means of escaping the trap of nature.\nFor a long time indeed the argument that the “civilized” had a right to exploit and take from “savages” was a biblical one. When responding to his own rhetorical question of how it could be that English settlers in the New World had the right to seize the lands of the Indians who also were “sons of Adam” the Puritan John Winthrop answered:\nThat which is common to all is proper to none… Why may not Christians have liberty to dwell among them in their wastelands and woods (leaving such places as they have manured for their corne) as lawfully as Abraham did among the Sodomites? (117)\nThe point Winthrop was making was drawn from God’s command of Adam to a life of labor, which was considered the birth of society by John Locke and made the basis of property- that anything not developed and claimed was without value or ownership and there for the taking.\nThis was not just a matter of Protestant reinterpretations of the Bible. Before Winthrop the Catholic Columbus and Spanish understood their mission and the distinction between them and Native American along millenarian lines. In 1493 Pope Alexander IV gave the New World to Spain and Portugal (as if he owned them). During the opening phase of the modern world Christianity and any globalizing scientific and capitalist project were essentially indistinguishable.\nCenturies later when the relationship between Christianity and science was severed by Charles Darwin and the deep time being uncovered by geology in the 19th century neither abandoned the idea of remaking what for the first time in history was truly “one world” in their own image. Yet whereas Christianity pursued its mission among the poor (in which it was soon joined by a global socialist movement) science (for a brief time) became associated with a capitalist globalization through imperialism that was based upon the biological chimera of race- the so-called “white man’s burden”. This new “scientific” racism freed itself from the need to grapple, as even a brutally racist regime like the Confederate States needed to do, with the biblical claim that all of humankind shared in the legacy of Adam and possessed souls worthy of dignity and salvation. It was a purely imaginary speciation that ended in death camps.\nThe moral fate of science and society would have been dark indeed had the Nazis racial state managed to win the Second World War, and been allowed to construct a society in which individuals reduced to the status of mere animals without personhood. Society proved only a little less dark when totalitarian systems in the USSR and China seized the reigns of the narrative of socialist liberation and reduced the individual to an equally expendable cog in the machine not of nature but of history. Luckily, communism was like a fever that swept over the world through the 20th century and then, just as quickly as it came, it broke and was gone.\nInstead of the nightmare of a global racist regime or its communist twin or something else we find ourselves in a very mixed situation with one state predominant -the United States- yet increasingly unable to impose its will on the wider world. During the period of US hegemony some form of capitalism and the quest for modernity has become the norm. This has not all been bad, for during this period conditions have indeed undeniably improved for vast numbers of humanity. Still the foundation of such a world in the millenarian narrative of the United States, that it was a country with a “divine mission” to bring freedom to the world was just another variant of the Christian, Eurocentric, Nazi, Communist narrative that has defined the West since Joachim de Fiore if not before. And like all those others it has resulted in a great amount of unnecessary pain and will not be sustained indefinitely.\nWe are entering an unprecedented period where the states with the largest economies (along with comes the prospect of the most powerful militaries) China and at some point India- continue to be the home of 10s of millions of the extremely poor. Because of this they are unlikely to accept and cannot be compelled to accept restraints on their growth whose scale dwarfs that of the already unsustainable environmental course we are already on. These great and ancient civilization/states are joined by states much weaker some of which were merely conjured up by Western imperialist at the height of their power. They are states that are extremely vulnerable to crisis and collapse. Many of these vulnerable states are in Africa (many of those in the Middle East have collapsed) where by the end of this century a much greater portion of humanity will be found and which by then will have long replaced Europe as the seat of the Christianity and the church. We are having a great deal of difficulty figuring out how we are going to extend the benefits of progress to them without wrecking the earth.\nPope Francis wants us to see this dilemma sharply. He is attempting to focus our attention on the moral impact of the environmental, consumer and political choices we have made and will make especially as we approach the end of the year and the climate summit in Paris. Let us pray that we begin to change course, for if he doesn’t, those of us still alive to see it and our children and descendants are doomed.\nThough I am no great fan of the idea that this century is somehow the most important one in terms of human survival, we really do appear to be entering a clear danger zone between now and into the early years of the 22nd century. It is by sometime between now and then that human population growth will have hopefully peaked, and alternatives to the carbon economy perfected and fully deployed. Though the effects of climate change will likely last millennia with the halting of new carbon emissions the climate should at least stabilize into a new state. We will either have established effective methods of response and adaptation or be faced with the after effect of natural disasters- immense human suffering, societal collapse, refugee flows and conflicts. We will also either have figured out a more equitable economic system and created sustainable prosperity for all or tragically have failed to do so.\nWhat the failure to adapt to climate change and limit its impact and/ or the failure to further extend the advances of modernity into the developing world would mean was the failure of the scientific project as the “relief of man’s estate” begun by figures like Francis Bacon. Science after a long period of hope will have resulted in something quite the opposite of paradise.\nHowever, even before these issues are decided there is the danger that we will revive something resembling the artificial religious and racial division of humanity into groups where a minority lays claim to the long legacy of human technological and cultural advancement as purely its own. This, at least, is how I read the argument of the sociologist Steve Fuller who wants us to reframe our current political disputes from left vs right to what he “up- wingers” vs “down wingers” where up wingers are those pursuing human enhancement and evolution through technology (like himself) and down wingers those arguing in some sense against technology and for the preservation of human nature – as he characterizes Pope Francis.\nThe problem with such a reframing is that it forces us to once again divide the world into the savage and the civilized, the retrograde and the advancing. At its most ethical this means forgetting about the suffering or fate of those who stand on the “savage” side of this ledger and taking care of oneself and one’s own. At its least ethical it means treating other human beings as sub-human, or perhaps “sub-post human”, and is merely a revival of the Christian justification for crimes against “infidels” or white’s rationale for crimes against everyone else. It is the claim in effect that you are not as full a creature as us, and therefore do not possess equivalent rights. Ultimately the idea that we can or should split humanity up in such a way is based on a chronological fantasy.\nThe belief that there is an escape hatch from our shared global fate for any significant segment of humanity during the short time frame of a century is a dangerous illusion. Everywhere else in the solar system including empty space itself is a worse place to live than the earth even when she is in deep crisis. We might re-engineer some human beings to live beyond earth, but for the foreseeable future, it won’t be many. As Ken Stanley Robison never tires of reminding us,the stars are too far away- there won’t be a real life version of Interstellar. The potential escape hatch of uploading or human merger with artificial intelligence is a long, long ways off. Regardless of how much we learn about delaying the aging clock for likely well past this century we will remain biological beings whose fate will depend on the survival of our earthly home which we evolved to live in.\nIn light of this Fuller is a mental time traveler who has confused a future he has visited in his head with the real world. What this “up-winger” has forgotten and the “down-winger” Pope Francis has not is that without our efforts to preserve our world and make it more just there will either be no place to build our imagined futures upon or there will be no right to claim it represents the latest chapter in the long story of our progress.\nIn this sense, and even in spite of his suspicion of technology, this popular and influential pope might just prove to be one of the most important figures for the fate of any form of post-humanity. For it is likely that it will only be through our care for humanity as a whole, right now, that whatever comes after us will have the space and security to actually appear in our tomorrow.\n2 Comments Posted in Dystopia, Utopia Tagged Climate Change, Climate change and inequality, Francis Bacon, Global Warming, James Lovelock, Laudato Si, Philosophy, Politics, Pope Francis, Post-humanism, Progress, Steve Fuller, Transhumanism\nThe Man Who Invented the Future\nIt is strange how some of the most influential individuals in human history can sometimes manage to slip out of public consciousness to the extent that almost no one knows who they are. What if I were to tell you that the ideas of one person who lived almost 900 years ago were central to everything from the Protestant Reformation, to the French Revolution, to Russia and America’s peculiar type of nationalism, to Communism and Nazism, to neo-liberal optimists such as Steven Pinker and now Michael Shermer, to (of most interest to this audience) followers of Ray Kurzweil and his Singularity; would you believe me, or think I was pulling a Dan Brown?\nThat individual was a 12th century was a monk named Joachim de Fiore, very much for real, and who up until very recently I had never heard of. In some ways this strange monk not only was a necessary figure in formation all of the systems of thought and political movements listed above, he also might seriously be credited with inventing the very idea of the future itself.\nWhether you’re a fan of Game of Thrones or not put yourself for a moment in the mind of a European in the Middle Ages. Nothing around you has what we would consider a rational explanation, rather, it can only be understood in reference to the will of an unseen deity or his demonic rival. It is quite a frightening place, and would even be spatially disorienting for a modern person used to maps and ideas regarding how the different worlds one sees while looking at the ground or up towards the sky, especially at night, fit together. It would have seemed like being stuck at the bottom of a seemingly endless well, unable to reach the “real” world above. A vertical version of Plato’s famous cave.\nStarting in the 13th century there were attempts to understand humankind’s position in space more clearly, and some of these attempts were indeed brilliant, even anticipating current idea such as the Big Bang and the multiverse. This was shown recently in a wonderful collaboration between scholars in the humanities, mathematicians and scientists on the work of another largely forgotten medieval figure, Robert Grosseteste.\nEven before Grosseteste was helping expand medievals’ understanding of space, Joachim de Fiore had expanded their notion of time. For time in the medieval worldview time was almost as suffocating as the stuck-in-a-well quality of their notion of space.\nMedievals largely lacked a notion of what we would understand as an impersonal future that would be different from the past. It wasn’t as if a person living then would lack the understanding that their own personal tomorrow would be different than today- that their children would age and have children of their own and that the old would die- it was that there was little notion that the world itself was changing. It would be a tough sell to get a medieval to pay for a trip into the future, for in their view whether you’d travel 100 or 1000 years forward everything would be almost exactly the same, unless, that is, the world wasn’t there to visit at all.\nBeing a medieval was a lot like being on death row- you know exactly how your life will end- you just wouldn’t know when exactly you’ll run out of appeals. A medieval Christian had the end of the story in the Book of Revelation with it’s cast of characters such as the Antichrist and scenes such as the battle of armageddon. A Christian was always on the look out for the arrival of all the props for the play that would be the end of the current world, and if they believed in any real difference between the present and the future it was that the world in which these events were to occur would be what we would consider less technologically and socially advanced than the Roman world into which Christ had been born. History for the medievals, far from being the story of human advancement, was instead the tale of societal decay.\nWell before actual events on the ground, improvements in human living standards, technological capacity and scientific understanding, undermined this medieval idea of the future as mere decadence before a final ending, Joachim de Fiore would do so philosophically and theologically.\nJoachim was born around 1135 into a well of family with his father being a member of the Sicilian court. Joachim too would begin his career as a court official, but it would not last. In his early twenties, while on a diplomatic mission to the Byzantine Emperor, Joachim broke away to visit the Holy Land, and according to legend felt the call of God.He spent the Lenten season in meditation on Mt Tabor where “on the eve of Easter day, he received ‘the fullness of knowledge’”. (3)\nHe became a monk and soon a prior and abbot for of Corazzo one assumes on account of his remarkable intelligence, but Joachim would spend his time writing his great trilogy: The Harmony of the New and Old Testaments, Exposition of Apocalypse, and the Psaltery of Ten Strings eventually receiving a dispensation from his work as abbot by Pope Clement III so he could devote himself fully to his writing.\nEventually a whole monastic order would grow up around Joachim, and though this order would last only a few centuries, and Joachim would die in 1202 before finishing his last book the Tract on the Four Gospels his legacy would almost fully be felt in the way we understand history and the future.\nJoachim constructed a theory of history based on the Christian Trinity: the Age of the Father – from Adam to the birth of Christ, the Age of the Son- from Christ until The Age of the Spirit. There had been examples of breaking history into historical ages before, what made Joachim different was his idea that:\n“… Scripture taught a record of man’s gradual spiritual developments, leading to a perfected future age which was the fulfillment of prophetic hope.” (13)\n“… one to be ushered in with a New Age of guidance by the Holy Spirit acting through a new order of meditative men who truly contemplated God. “ (12)\nWhat is distinct and new about this was that history was spiritualized, it became the story of humankind’s gradual improvement and moving towards a state of perfection that was achievable in the material world (not in some purely spiritual paradise). And we could arrive at this destination if only we could accept the counsel of the virtuous and wise. It was a powerful story that has done us far more harm than good.\nJoachimite ideas can be found at the root of the millennia fantasies of the European religious wars, and were secularized in the period of the French Revolution by figures like the Marquis de Condorcet and Auguste Comte. The latter even managed to duplicate Joachim’s tri-part model of history only now the ages only now they were The Theological, The Metaphysical, and the Positive Stage which we should read as religious, philosophical and scientific with Joachim’s monks being swapped for scientists.\nHegel turned this progressive version of history into a whole system of philosophy and the atheist Marx turned Hegel “upside down” and created a system of political economy and revolutionary program. The West would justify its imperial conquest of Africa and subjugation of Asia on the grounds that they were bringing the progressive forces of history to “barbaric” peoples. The great ideological struggle of the early 20th century between Communism, Nazism, and Liberalism pitted versions of historical determinism against one another.\nIf postmodernism should have meant the end of overarching metanarratives the political movements that have so far most shaped the 21st century seem not to have gotten the memo. The century began with an attack by a quasi- millenarian cult (though they would not recognize Joachim as a forbearer). The 9-11 attacks enabled an averous and ultimately stupid foreign policy on the part of the United States which was only possible because the American people actually believed in their own myth that their system of government represented the end of history and the secret wish of every oppressed people in the world.\nNow we have a truly apocalyptic cult in the form of ISIS while Russia descends into its own version of Joachimite fantasy based on Russia’s “historical mission” while truth itself disappears in a postmodern hall of mirrors. Thus it is that Joachim’s ideas regarding the future remain potent. And the characters attracted to his idea of history are, of course, not all bad. I’d include among this benign group both singularitarians and the new neo-liberal optimists. The first because they see human history moving towards an inevitable conclusion and believe that their is an elite that should guide us into paradise – the technologists. Neo-liberal optimists may not be so starry eyed but they do see history as the gradual unfolding of progress and seem doubtful that this trend might reverse.\nThe problem I have with the singularitarians is their blindness to the sigmoid curve – the graveyard where all exponentials go to die. There is a sort of “evolutionary” determinism to singularitarianism that seems to think not only that there is only one destination to history, but that we already largely know what that destination is. For Joachim such determinism makes sense, his world having been set up and run by an omnipotent God, for what I assume to be mostly secular singularitarians such determinism does not make sense and we are faced with the contingencies of evolution and history.\nMy beef with the neo-liberal optimists, in addition to the fact that they keep assaulting me with their “never been better” graphs is that I care less that human suffering has decreased than the reasons why, so that such a decrease can be continued or its lower levels preserved. I also care much more where the moral flaws of our society remain acute because only then will I know where to concentrate my political and ethical action. If the world today is indeed better than the world in the past (and it’s not a slam dunk argument even with the power point) let’s remember the struggles that were necessary to achieve that and continue to move ourselves towards Joachim’s paradise while being humble and wise enough to avoid mistaking ourselves with the forces of God or history, a mistake that has been at the root of so much suffering and evil.\n1 Comment Posted in Dystopia, Utopia Tagged American exceptionalism, End of history, historical determinism, History, ISIS, Joachim of Fiore, Joachim of Fiore: A Study in Spiritual Perception and History, medieval prophecy, Neo-conservatism, Philosophy, Politics, Robert Grosseteste, Russian exceptionalism, Singularitarianism, The end of the world\nFreedom in the Age of Algorithms\nReflect for a moment on what for many of us has become the average day. You are awoken by your phone whose clock is set via a wireless connection to a cell phone tower, connected to a satellite, all ultimately ending in the ultimate precision machine, a clock that will not lose even a second after 15 billion years of ticking. Upon waking you connect to the world through the “sirene server” of your pleasure that “decides” for you based on an intimate profile built up over years the very world you will see- ranging from Kazakhstan to Kardasian, and connects your intimates, and those whom you “follow” and, if you’re lucky enough, your streams of “followers”.\nPerhaps you use a health app to count your breakfast calories or the fat you’ve burned on your morning run, or perhaps you’ve just spent the morning by playing Bejeweled, and will need to pay for your sins of omission later. On your mindless drive to work you make the mistake of answering a text from the office while in front of a cop who unbeknownst to you has instantly run your licence plate to find out if you are a weirdo or terrorist. Thank heavens his algorithm confirms you’re neither.\nWhen you pull into the Burger King drive through to buy your morning coffee, you thoughtlessly end up buying yet another bacon egg and cheese with a side of hash browns in spite of your best self nagging you from inside your smart phone. Having done this one too many times this month your fried food preference has now been sold to the highest bidders, two databanks, through which you’ll now be receiving annoying coupons in the mail along with even more annoying and intrusive adware while you surf the web, the first from all the fast food restaurants along the path of your morning commute, the other friendly, and sometimes frightening, suggestions you ask your doctor about the new cholesterol drug evolocumab.\nYou did not, of course, pay for your meal with cash but with plastic. Your money swirling somewhere out there in the ether in the form of ones and zeroes stored and exchanged on computers to magically re-coalesce and fill your stomach with potatoes and grease. Your purchases correlated and crunched to define you for all the machines and their cold souls of software that gauge your value as you go about your squishy biological and soulless existence.\nThe bizarre thing about this common scenario is that all of this happens before you arrive at the office, or store, or factory, or wherever it is you earn your life’s bread. Not only that, almost all of these constraints on how one views and interacts with the world have been self imposed. The medium through which much of the world and our response to is now apps and algorithms of one sort or another. It’s gotten to the point that we now need apps and algorithms to experience what it’s like to be lost, which seems to, well… misunderstand the definition of being lost.\nI have no idea where future historians, whatever their minds are made of, will date the start of this trend of tracking and constraining ourselves so as to maintain “productivity” and “wellness”, perhaps with all those 7- habits- of- highly- effective books that started taking up shelf space in now ancient book stores sometime in the 1980’s, but it’s certainly gotten more personal and intimate with the rise of the smart phone. In a way we’ve brought the logic of the machine out of the factory and into our lives and even our bodies- the idea of super efficient man-machine merger as invented by Frederick Taylor and never captured better than in Charlie Chaplin’s brilliant 1936 film Modern Times.\nThe film is for silent pictures what the Wizard of OZ was for color and bridges the two worlds where almost all of the spoken parts are through the medium of machines including a giant flat screen that seemed entirely natural in a world that has been gone for eighty years. It portrays the Tramp asserting his humanity in the dehumanizing world of automation found in a factory where even eating lunch had been mechanized and made maximally efficient. Chaplin no doubt would have been pleasantly surprised with how well much of the world turned out given the bleakness of economic depression and soon world war he was facing, but I think he also would have been shocked at how much we have given up of the Tramp in us all without reason and largely of our own volition.\nStill, the fact of the matter is that this new rule of apps and and algorithms much of which comes packaged in the spiritualized wrapping of “mindfulness” and “happiness” would be much less troubling did it not smack of a new form of Marx’s “opiate for the people” and divert us away from trying to understand and challenge the structural inadequacies of society.\nFor there is nothing inherently wrong with measuring performance as a means to pursue excellence, or attending to one’s health and mental tranquility. There’s a sort of postmodern cynicism that kicks in whenever some cultural trend becomes too popular, and while it protects us from groupthink, it also tends to lead to intellectual and cultural paralysis. It’s only when performance measures find their way into aspects of our lives that are trivialized by quantifying – such as love or family life- that I think we should earnestly worry, along, perhaps, with the atrophy of our skills to engage with the world absent these algorithmic tools.\nMy really deep concern lies with the way apps and algorithms now play the role of invisible instruments of power. Again, this is nothing new to the extent that in the pre-digital age such instruments came in the form of bureaucracy and the rule by decree rather than law as Hannah Arendt laid out in her Origins of Totalitarianism back in the 1950:\nIn governments by bureaucracy decrees appear in their naked purity as though they were no longer issued by powerful men, but were the incarnation of power itself and the administrator only its accidental agent. There are no general principles behind the decree, but ever changing circumstances which only an expert can know in detail. People ruled by decree never know what rules them because of the impossibility of understanding decrees in themselves and the carefully organized ignorance of specific circumstances and their practical significance in which all administrators keep their subjects. (244)\nIt’s quite easy to read the rule of apps and algorithms in that quote especially the part about “only an expert can know in detail” and “carefully organized ignorance” a fact that became clear to me after I read what is perhaps the best book yet on our new algorithmically ruled lives, Frank Pasquale’s The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money and Information.\nI have often wondered what exactly was being financially gained by gathering up all this data on individuals given how obvious and ineffective the so-called targeted advertisements that follow me around on the internet seem to be, and Pasquale managed to explain this clearly. What is being “traded” is my “digital reputation” whether as a debtor, or insurance risk (medical or otherwise), or customer with a certain depth of pocket and identity- “father, 40’s etc”- or even the degree to which I can be considered a “sucker” for scam and con artists of one sort or another.\nThis is a reputation matrix much different from the earlier arrangements based or personal knowledge or later impersonal systems such as credit reporting (though both had their abuses) or that for health records under H.I.P.A.A in the sense that the new digital form or reputation is largely invisible to me, its methodology inscrutable, its declarations of my “identity” immune to challenge and immutable. It is as Pasquale so-aptly terms a “black box” in the strongest sense of that word meaning unintelligible and opaque to the individual within it like the rules Kafka’s characters suffer under in his novels about the absurdity of hyper- bureaucracy (and of course more) The Castle and The Trial.\nMuch more troubling, however, is how such corporate surveillance interacts with the blurring of the line between intelligence and police functions – the distinction between the foreign and domestic spheres- that has been what of the defining features of our constitutional democracy. As Pasquale reminds us:\nTraditionally, a critical distinction has been made between intelligence and investigation. Once reserved primarily for overseas spy operations, “intelligence” work is anticipatory, it is the job of agencies like the CIA, which gather potentially useful information on external enemies that pose a threat to national security. “Investigation” is what police do once they have evidence of a crime. (47)\nIt isn’t only that such moves towards a model of “predictive policing” mean the undoing of constitutionally guaranteed protections and legal due process (presumptions of innocence, and 5th amendment protections) it is also that it has far too often turned the police into a political instrument, which, as Pasquale documents, have monitored groups ranging from peaceful protesters to supporters of Ron Paul all in the name of preventing a “terrorist act” by these members of these groups. (48)\nThe kinds of illegal domestic spying performed by the NSA and its acronymic companions was built on back of an already existing infrastructure of commercial surveillance. The same could be said for the blurring of the line between intelligence and investigation exemplified by creation of “fusion centers” after 9-11 which repurposed the espionage tools once contained to intelligence services and towards domestic targets and for the purpose of controlling crime.\nBoth domestic spying by federal intelligence agencies and new forms of invasive surveillance by state and local law enforcement had been enabled by the commercial surveillance architecture established by the likes of corporate behemoths such as FaceBook and Google to whom citizens had surrendered their right to privacy seemingly willingly.\nGiven the degree to which these companies now hold near monopolies hold over the information citizens receive Pasquale thinks it would be wise to revisit the breakup of the “trusts” in the early part of the last century. It’s not only that the power of these companies is already enormous it’s that were they ever turned into overt political tools they would undermine or upend democracy itself given that citizen action requires the free exchange of information to achieve anything at all.\nThe black box features of our current information environment have not just managed to colonize the worlds of security, crime, and advertisement, they have become the defining feature of late capitalism itself. A great deal of the 2008 financial crisis can be traced to the computerization of finance over the 1980’s. Computers were an important feature of the pre-crisis argument that we had entered a period of “The Great Equilibrium”. We had become smart enough, and our markets sophisticated enough (so the argument went) that there would be no replay of something like the 1929 Wall Street crash and Great Depression. Unlike the prior era markets without debilitating crashes were not to be the consequence of government regulation to contain the madness of crowds and their bubbles and busts, but in part from the new computer modeling which would exorcise from the markets the demon of “animal spirits” and allow human beings to do what they had always dreamed of doing- to know the future. Pasquale describes it this way:\nAs information technology improved, lobbyists could tell a seductive story: regulators were no longer necessary. Sophisticated investors could vet their purchases. Computer models could identify and mitigate risk. But the replacement of regulation by automation turned out to be as fanciful as flying cars or space colonization. (105)\nComputerization gave rise to ever more sophisticated financial products, such as mortgage backed securities, based on ever more sophisticated statistical models that by bundling investments gave the illusion of stability. Even had there been more prophets crying from the wilderness that the system was unstable they would not have been able to prove it for the models being used were “a black box, programmed in proprietary software with the details left to the quants and the computers”. (106)\nIt seems there is a strange dynamic at work throughout the digital economy, not just in finance but certainly exhibited in full force there, where the whole game in essence a contest of asymmetric information. You either have the data someone else lacks to make a trade, you process that data faster, or both. Keeping your algorithms secret becomes a matter of survival for as soon as they are out there they can be exploited by rivals or cracked by hackers- or at least this is the argument companies make. One might doubt it though once this you see how nearly ubiquitous this corporate secrecy and patent hoarding has become in areas radically different from software such as the pharmaceuticals or by biotech corporations like Monsanto which hold patents on life itself and whose logic leads to something like Paolo Bacigalupi’s dystopian novel The Windup Girl.\nFor Pasquale complexity itself becomes a tool of obfuscation in which corruption and skimming can’t help but become commonplace. The contest of asymmetric information means companies are engaged in what amounts to an information war where the goal is as much to obscure real value to rivals and clients so as to profit from the difference in this distortion. In such an atmosphere markets stop being able to perform the informative role Friedrich Hayek thought was their very purpose. Here’s Pasquale himself:\n…financialization has created enormous uncertainty about the value of companies, homes, and even (thanks to the pressing need for bailouts) the once rock solid promises of governments themselves.\nFinance thrives in this environment of radical uncertainty, taking commissions in cash as investors (or, more likely, their poorly monitored agents) race to speculate on or hedge against an ever less knowable future. (138)\nOkay, if Pasquale has clearly laid out the problem, what is his solution? I could go through a list of his suggestions, but I should stick to the general principle. Pasquale’s goal, I think, is to restore our faith in our ability to publicly shape digital technology in ways that better reflect our democratic values. That the argument which claims software is unregulable is an assumption not a truth and the tools and models for regulation and public input over the last century for the physical world are equally applicable to the digital one.\nWe have already developed a complex, effective, system of privacy protections in the form of H.I.P.A, there are already examples of mandating fair understandable contracts (as opposed to indecipherable “terms of service” agreements) in the form of various consumer protection provisions, up until the 1980’s we were capable of regulating the boom and bust cycles of markets without crashing the economy. Lastly the world did not collapse when earlier corporations that had gotten so large they threatened not only the free competition of markets, but more importantly, democracy itself, were broken up and would not collapse were the like of FaceBook, Google or the big banks broken up either.\nAbove all, Pasquale urges us to seek out and find some way to make the algorithmization of the world intelligible and open to the political, social and ethical influence of a much broader segment of society than the current group of programmers and their paymasters who have so far been the only ones running the show. For if we do not assert such influence and algorithms continue to structure more and more of our relationship with the world and each other, them algorithmization and democracy would seem to be on a collision course. Or, as Taylor Owen pointed out in a recent issue of Foreign Affairs:\nIf algorithms represent a new ungoverned space, a hidden and potentially ever-evolving unknowable public good, then they are an affront to our democratic system, one that requires transparency and accountability in order to function. A node of power that exists outside of these bounds is a threat to the notion of collective governance itself. This, at its core, is a profoundly undemocratic notion—one that states will have to engage with seriously if they are going to remain relevant and legitimate to their digital citizenry who give them their power.\nPasquale has given us an excellent start to answering the question of how democracy, and freedom, can survive in the age of algorithms.\n2 Comments Posted in Dystopia Tagged Algorithms and freedom, Can software be regulated?, Charlie Chaplin Modern Times, Frank Pasquale, Hannah Arendt Bureaucracy, Kafka Bureaucracy, Philosophy, Politics, Privacy and surveillance, Taylor Owen The Violence of Algorithms, Technology, The Black Box Society: The Secret Algorithms That Control Money and Information\nTruth and Prediction in the Dataclysm\nLast time I looked at the state of online dating. Among the figures was mentioned was Christian Rudder, one of the founders of the dating site OkCupid and the author of a book on big data called Dataclysm: Who We Are When We Think No One’s Looking that somehow manages to be both laugh-out-loud funny and deeply disturbing at the same time.\nRudder is famous, or infamous depending on your view of the matter, for having written a piece about his site with the provocative title: We experiment on human beings!. There he wrote:\nWe noticed recently that people didn’t like it when Facebook “experimented” with their news feed. Even the FTC is getting involved. But guess what, everybody: if you use the Internet, you’re the subject of hundreds of experiments at any given time, on every site. That’s how websites work.\nThat statement might set the blood of some boiling, but my own negative reaction to it is somewhat tempered by the fact that Rudder’s willingness to run his experiments on his sites users originates, it seems, not in any conscious effort to be more successful at manipulating them, but as a way to quantify our ignorance. Or, as he puts it in the piece linked to above:\nI’m the first to admit it: we might be popular, we might create a lot of great relationships, we might blah blah blah. But OkCupid doesn’t really know what it’s doing. Neither does any other website. It’s not like people have been building these things for very long, or you can go look up a blueprint or something. Most ideas are bad. Even good ideas could be better. Experiments are how you sort all this out.\nRudder eventually turned his experiments on the data of OkCupid’s users into his book Dataclysm which displays the same kind of brutal honesty and acknowledgement of the limits of our knowledge. What he is trying to do is make sense of the deluge of data now inundating us. The only way we have found to do this is to create sophisticated algorithms that allow us to discern patterns in the flood. The problem with using algorithms to try and organize human interactions (which have themselves now become points of data) is that their users are often reduced into the version of what being a human beings is that have been embedded by the algorithm’s programmers. Rudder, is well aware and completely upfront about these limitations and refuses to make any special claims about algorithmic wisdom compared to the normal human sort. As he puts it in Dataclysm:\nThat said, all websites, and indeed all data scientists objectify. Algorithms don’t work well with things that aren’t numbers, so when you want a computer to understand an idea, you have to convert as much of it as you can into digits. The challenge facing sites and apps is thus to chop and jam the continuum of the of human experience into little buckets 1, 2, 3, without anyone noticing: to divide some vast, ineffable process- for Facebook, friendship, for Reddit, community, for dating sites, love- into a pieces a server can handle. (13)\nAt the same time, Rudder appears to see the data collected on sites such as OkCupid as a sort of mirror, reflecting back to us in ways we have never had available before the real truth about ourselves laid bare of the social conventions and politeness that tend to obscure the way we truly feel. And what Rudder finds in this data is not a reflection of the inner beauty of humanity one might hope for, but something more like the mirror out of A Picture of Dorian Grey.\nAs an example take what Rudder calls” Wooderson’s Law” after the character from Dazed and Confused who said in the film “That’s what I love about these high school girl, I get older while they stay the same age”. What Rudder has found is that heterosexual male attraction to females peaks when those women are in their early 20’s and thereafter precipitously falls. On OkCupid at least, women in their 30’s and 40’s are effectively invisible when competing against women in their 20’s for male sexual attraction. Fortunately for heterosexual men, women are more realistic in their expectations and tend to report the strongest attraction to men roughly their own age, until sometime in men’s 40’s where males attractiveness also falls off a cliff… gulp.\nAnother finding from Rudder’s work is not just that looks rule, but just how absolutely they rule. In his aforementioned piece, Rudder lays out that the vast majority of users essentially equate personality with looks. A particularly stunning women can find herself with a 99% personality rating even if she has not one word in her profile.\nThese are perhaps somewhat banal and even obvious discoveries about human nature Rudder has been able to mine from OkCupid’s data, and to my mind at least, are less disturbing than the deep seated racial bias he finds there as well. Again, at least among OkCupid’s users, dating preferences are heavily skewed against black men and women. Not just whites it seems, but all other racial groups- Asians, Hispanics would apparently prefer to date someone from a race other than African- disheartening for the 21st century.\nRudder looks at other dark manifestations of our collective self than those found in OkCupid data as well. Try using Google search as one would play the game Taboo. The search suggestions that pop up in the Google search bar, after all, are compiled on the basis of Google user’s most popular searches and thus provide a kind of gauge on what 1.17 billion human beings are thinking. Try these some of which Rudder plays himself:\n“why do women?”\n“why do men?”\n“why do white people?”\n“why do black people?”\n“why do Asians?”\n“why do Muslims?”\nThe exercise gives a whole new meaning to Nietzsche’s observation that “When you stare into the abyss, the abyss stares back”.\nRudder also looks at the ability of social media to engender mobs. Take this case from Twitter in 2014. On New Years Eve of that year a young woman tweeted:\n“This beautiful earth is now 2014 years old, amazing.”\nHer strength obviously wasn’t science in school, but what should have just led to collective giggles, or perhaps a polite correction regarding terrestrial chronology, ballooned into a storm of tweets like this:\n“Kill yourself you stupid motherfucker”. (139)\nAs a recent study has pointed out the emotion second most likely to go viral is rage, we can count ourselves very lucky the emotion most likely to go viral is awe.\nThen there’s the question of the structure of the whole thing. Like Jaron Lanier, Rudder is struck by the degree to which the seemingly democratized architecture of the Internet appears to consistently manifest the opposite and reveal itself as following Zipf’s Law, which Rudder concisely reduces to:\nrank x number = constant (160)\nBoth the economy and the society in the Internet age are dominated by “superstars”, companies (such as Google and FaceBook that so far outstrip their rivals in search or social media that they might be called monopolies), along with celebrities, musical artist, authors. Zipf’s Law also seems to apply to dating sites where a few profiles dominate the class of those viewed by potential partners. In the environment of a networked society where invisibility is the common fate of almost all of us and success often hinges on increasing our own visibility we are forced to turn ourselves towards “personal branding” and obsession over “Klout scores”. It’s not a new problem, but I wonder how much all this effort at garnering attention is stealing time from the effort at actual work that makes that attention worthwhile and long lasting.\nRudder is uncomfortable with all this algorithmization while at the same time accepting its inevitability. He writes of the project:\nReduction is inescapable. Algorithms are crude. Computers are machines. Data science is trying to make sense of an analog world. It’s a by-product of the basic physical nature of the micro-chip: a chip is just a sequence of tiny gates.\nFrom that microscopic reality an absolutism propagates up through the whole enterprise, until at the highest level you have the definitions, data types and classes essential to programming languages like C and JavaScript. (217-218)\nThing is, for all his humility at the effectiveness of big data so far, or his admittedly limited ability to draw solid conclusions from the data of OkCupid, he seems to place undue trust in the ability of large corporations and the security state to succeed at the same project. Much deeper data mining and superior analytics, he thinks, separate his efforts from those of the really big boys. Rudder writes:\nAnalytics has in many ways surpassed the information itself as the real lever to pry. Cookies in your web browser and guys hacking for your credit card numbers get most of the press and are certainly the most acutely annoying of the data collectors. But they’ve taken hold of a small fraction of your life and for that they’ve had to put in all kinds of work. (227)\nHe compares them to Mike Myer’s Dr. Evil holding the world hostage “for one million dollars”\n… while the billions fly to the real masterminds, like Axicom. These corporate data marketers, with reach into bank and credit card records, retail histories, and government fillings like tax accounts, know stuff about human behavior that no academic researcher searching for patterns on some website ever could. Meanwhile the resources and expertise the national security apparatus brings to bear makes enterprise-level data mining look like Minesweeper (227)\nYet do we really know this faith in big data isn’t an illusion? What discernable effects that are clearly traceable to the juggernauts of big data ,such as Axicom, on the overall economy or even consumer behavior? For us to believe in the power of data shouldn’t someone have to show us the data that it works and not just the promise that it will transform the economy once it has achieved maximum penetration?\nOn that same score, what degree of faith should we put in the powers of big data when it comes to security? As far as I am aware no evidence has been produced that mass surveillance has prevented attacks- it didn’t stop the Charlie Hebo killers. Just as importantly, it seemingly hasn’t prevented our public officials from being caught flat footed and flabbergasted in the face of international events such as the revolution in Egypt or the war in Ukraine. And these later big events would seem to be precisely the kinds of predictions big data should find relatively easy- monitoring broad public sentiment as expressed through social media and across telecommunications networks and marrying that with inside knowledge of the machinations of the major political players at the storm center of events.\nOn this point of not yet mastering the art of being able to anticipate the future despite the mountains of data it was collecting, Anne Neuberger, Special Assistant to the NSA Director, gave a fascinating talk over at the Long Now Foundation in August last year. During a sometimes intense q&a she had this exchange with one of the moderators, Stanford professor, Paul Saffo:\nSaffo: With big data as a friend likes to say “perhaps the data haystack that the intelligence community has created has grown too big to ever find the needle in.”\nNeuberger : I think one of the reasons we talked about our desire to work with big data peers on analytics is because we certainly feel that we can glean far more value from the data that we have and potentially collect less data if we have a deeper understanding of how to better bring that together to develop more insights.\nIt’s a strange admission from a spokesperson from the nation’s premier cyber-intelligence agency that for their surveillance model to work they have to learn from the analytics of private sector big data companies whose models themselves are far from having proven their effectiveness.\nPerhaps then, Rudder should have extended his skepticism beyond the world of dating websites. For me, I’ll only know big data in the security sphere works when our politicians, Noah like, seem unusually well prepared for a major crisis that the rest of us data poor chumps didn’t also see a mile away, and coming.\n2 Comments Posted in Dystopia Tagged Algorithmization, Analytics, Anne Neuberger Paul Saffo Long Now Interview, Big Data, Christian Rudder, Dataclysm: Who We Are When We Think No One's Looking review, NSA, OkCupid, Online Dating, Politics, Science, Technology, Wooderson’s Law","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1074140"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7018723487854004,"wiki_prob":0.7018723487854004,"text":"Front Page, Industry News\nUK films take lowest share of global box office since 2009\nMonday March 24th 2014\nThis year’s Oscars may have been awash with British accents, thanks to the dominance of Gravity and 12 Years a Slave’s best picture win. But the UK’s share of the 2013 global box office actually fell to its lowest levels in four years, according to new figures released by the British Film Institute.\nFilms produced in (though not by) the UK accounted for 11.4% of the global box office last year, the lowest since 2009. The BFI calculates that the £2.5bn ($4.1bn) combined take is over a billion dollars down on the 2012 figure of £3.2bn ($5.3bn) – which represented a 15.3% share.\nAs the controversy over the Gravity’s win of the best British film Bafta over Slave (which wasn’t eligible) demonstrated, the British credentials of films can be confusing. The vast majority of what the BFI class as UK films are either wholly or partly US backed, but showcase UK settings, cast and crew. Such films accounted for 9.8% of the global box office this year, compared to just 1.6% for independent British films.\nTop three films produced in the UK\n1) Fast and Furious 6 – £478m ($789m)\n2) Gravity – £428m ($708m)\n3) Thor: The Dark World – £388m ($641m)\nTop three films produced by the UK\n1) Red 2 – £90m ($148m)\n2) Rush – £55m ($90m)\n3) Philomena – £54m ($89m)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line77874"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9262983798980713,"wiki_prob":0.9262983798980713,"text":"Share this Story: The U of R Rams' Aaron Picton is now a Rider\nThe U of R Rams' Aaron Picton is now a Rider\nThe Saskatchewan Roughriders may have traded for Aaron Picton on Tuesday, but they made Al Picton's day.\nThe Roughriders acquired the rights to University of Regina Rams offensive lineman Aaron Picton from the Calgary Stampeders on Tuesday. Photo by Bryan Schlosser /Regina Leader-Post\n\"My grandpa is a huge fan - he has had season tickets for years - so I think he may be the most happy,\" Aaron Picton, an offensive lineman, said with a grin before his University of Regina Rams practised at U of R Field.\nThe U of R Rams' Aaron Picton is now a Rider Back to video\n\"(The trade) was definitely a surprise. Of course, it's very exciting getting to stay home and play for the team that I grew up watching. I've been to their games for years.\"\nThe Roughriders acquired the CFL rights to Picton from the Calgary Stampeders for import offensive lineman Randy Richards. Richards, 24, dressed for two regular-season games this season. He may be best known for the high hit he put on Calgary returner Tim Brown in a game Aug. 22 - a hit for which Richards was ejected and later fined.\nThe Stampeders selected Picton in the sixth round (53rd overall) of the 2015 CFL draft and took the 23-yearold to training camp. After the 6-foot-4, 295-pounder was released, he returned to the Rams for his fifth and final season of CIS eligibility.\nOn Tuesday, Picton admitted he didn't picture himself playing for the Roughriders when he was sitting in the stands watching their games.\n\"It was a goal of mine just to get a chance in the CFL and that was something I was working toward,\" he said. \"Playing for the Riders is something that's in the back of your mind - 'That'd be pretty cool' - but throughout my university experience, it never really mattered to me.\n\"Now that I'm here, it's sweet. It's definitely something\nthat will hopefully be enjoyable for me in the future.\"\nPicton can play centre, guard or tackle and Rams head coach Mike Gibson - a former offensive line coach in the CFL - said that versatility makes Picton attractive to pro teams.\nGibson believes Picton needs to get stronger in his lower body if he's to make it in the CFL. But his experience in Calgary this summer will give him some idea of what's coming when he goes to camp with the Roughriders.\n\"I'm pretty close with those guys in Calgary, so I talked to them when he was out there and when he left,\" Gibson said. \"They liked a lot of the things he did and thought he had a real chance. He just needed to continue to grow into his body.\n\"That was his first pro camp, so he knows what to expect now.\"\nThe experience in Calgary gave Picton a good handle on what he needs to do to survive in the CFL.\n\"I think when I get on the football field I'm a pretty decent player, but there are a lot of aspects off the field I could get better at, like getting stronger and more lean,\" he said.\n\"The off-season will really benefit me and hopefully I can go (to camp) and show them what I can do.\"\nEXTRAS: On Tuesday, Roughriders linebacker Macho Harris was named the CFL's top performer for Week 14. Harris had five tackles and tied a team record with three interceptions - one of which he returned 50 yards for a touchdown - in Sunday's 33-21 victory over the Montreal Alouettes ... The Roughriders have added import receiver LaQuan Williams to the practice roster. The 6-foot-0, 195-pound product of Maryland had NFL stints with the Baltimore Ravens and New England Patriots over the past five seasons ... The Riders announced they had released import tailback Steven Miller and Canadian receiver Matt Norzil. Miller played in three games this season, recording 16 kickoff returns for 310 yards, 13 punt returns for 84 yards, 12 carries for 63 yards and four receptions for 35 yards.\nihamilton@leaderpost.com twitter.com/IanHamiltonLP","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line978757"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7118865251541138,"wiki_prob":0.28811347484588623,"text":"Homefp\nWhat Working At A Call Center Taught Me\nDuring the initial years of my university life, I was volunteering part-time at a call center to gather local exposure in the hopes of bolstering my CV and building connections. I was in my first year, and without prior experience or a concrete qualification, the idea of working over the phone seemed more lucrative than anything else. The pay wasn’t great, and as I progressed, I realized I was hardly ever going to get paid anything substantial. Most of these jobs require one to close deals.\nIf you happen to work for a telemarketing firm, the number of times you manage to sell a particular product will determine your weekly and, in most cases, monthly wages. There is a basic salary that the company assigns each salesperson, but eventually, if they fail to meet their targets, less than a quarter of that amount usually gets paid to the employee.\nOver the last couple of months, I have received hundreds of emails from various professionals. But most can be classified in one of two categories. The first category consists of people who are simply trying to promote their product: be it a physical commodity, their YouTube Channel, or anything self-promotional. The other consists of people who ask for a referral with regards to a job.\nIfI was to give my verdict regarding the former category, I can testify that regardless of one’s choice, such individuals often sell or promote products that they themselves would never purchase simply to make ends meet. But this notion of working for pennies and cut-throat bosses empowers these individuals with a unique skill. The power to negotiate. You see, for the most part, I used to be an introvert. I would rarely go to any sort of gathering or event that involves masses of people.\nBut what I realized was that it is the people that I tried avoiding the most that had the power to change my destiny.\nThe conversations were not meant to be personal, but professional. However, every single deal I closed had a “personal touch”. People will buy your idea, only if they can relate to you in some form or another and that is where the “personal” touch comes into play.\nIf you are solely focusing on “selling yourself” most people won’t even bother knowing the minute details.\nMost top-level sales executives appear to be inhuman to their subordinates, but when it comes to a client, their tone drastically changes to one solely focussed on “society’s wellbeing”.\nLearning to negotiate and making the person on the other side of the conversation hear you out completely, is what can make or break a deal. The same deal which could fetch you a “handsome daily wage” if you happen to do things right.\nAs for the latter, the current COVID-19 situation has caused most employees around the world to be terminated abruptly. As the economy worsens, random messages from strangers on LinkedIn is going to become the norm for most of us.\nImage: benedettocristofani.net\nWhat do you do when you get a message from someone desperately seeking a job to make ends meet?\nPreviously, I wouldn’t necessarily pitch in a word for anyone I hadn’t interacted with, simply because I was unsure of what the person was actually like. My referees are mostly in the upper echelon, with little to no sympathy for outsiders, and I was afraid if I kept pitching in every single person who had approached me ever, they would simply stop taking my word seriously. But the current landscape of things made me reconsider my approach. I tried pitching in a word for every single person I met.\nWhen I spoke to such candidates, I made sure to break down my jargon into simple terms and not confuse them with industry nomenclature. The key was to reply in a way that would be helpful.\nMost messages are along the lines of “I have been out of work for three months and I am losing all hope and my sanity. I have a wife and two kids who are depending on me and I don’t know what to do”.\nWhat I had come to realize from all these conversations was that ‘a glimmer of hope is all one needs to make it to the next day’.\nEven if you are not in a position to refer or employ someone, refer some books or other technical manuals that might help them upgrade their skills for their next role. Keep them mentally motivated until they find a role. Follow up once in a while as you would do with your sales clients.\nViktor Frankl, one of the great psychiatrists of the twentieth century, survived the death camps of Nazi Germany. His little book, Man’s Search for Meaning, is one of those life-changing books that everyone should read.\nIn the book, Frankl mentions the story of a woman who called him in the middle of the night to calmly inform him she was about to commit suicide. Frankl kept her on the phone and talked her through her depression, giving her reason after reason to carry on living. Finally, she promised she would not take her life, and she kept her word.\nWhen they later met, Frankl asked which reason had persuaded her to live?\n“None of them”, she told him.\n“What then influenced her to go on living, he pressed.\nHer answer was simple, it was Frankl’s ‘willingness to listen’ to her in the middle of the night.\nA world in which there was someone ready to listen to another’s pain seemed to her a world in which it was worthwhile to live. Often, it is not a brilliant argument that makes a difference. Sometimes the small act of listening is the greatest gift we can give”.\nThe fact of the matter is no one likes on the receiving end of a cold call or cold e-mail. But we ought to remember that there was a point in time when we all were in a similar spot. The hardest part you deal with when looking for a job is not losing belief in yourself.\nIf you happen to be working at a call center now, I can promise you things will get better, and you will come out of this whole thing as a better negotiator and more importantly a stronger human being.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line817501"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7427209615707397,"wiki_prob":0.7427209615707397,"text":"THE YEAR THE CLOUD FELL\nby Kurt R.A. Giambastiani\n341pp/$6.99/March 2001\nKurt R.A. Giambastiani has created a world in which the Cheyenne Indians have managed to maintain a strong nation in the face of President George Custer’s anti-Indian administration in the 1880s. The novel focuses on Custer’s son, George Custer, Jr., who is taken captive in May, 1886 after the dirigible he is piloting crashes in Cheyenne Territory.\nGiambastiani is most interested in the political situation which has arisen between his version of the United States and the Cheyenne Alliance. As the US prepares to go to war against the Cheyenne, the Indians use the presence of George, Jr. to work out a way to end the continual strife between the \"Horse Nations\" of the United States and themselves.\nGiambastiani has introduced numerous changes to his world. Physically, the Gulf of Mexico extends far to the north and Florida is missing. Ecologically, dinosaurs still live in the Great Plains, and politically, many of the European nations maintain a presence in North America in the 1880s. While his changes are intriguing, he does not explain how they all work together. Why are the Indians, dinosaurs, and Gulf of Natchez such as small influence on the political history of the United States. A presumed lack of a California Gold Rush, at least one which kept people within the United States, should have had some effect on the world of 1886.\nThe characters who populate the world of The Year the Cloud Fell never really connect with each other. They aren’t quite caricatures, nor are they archetypes, although the potential for either appears in most characters. George Junior’s relationship with Storm Arriving, one of his captors, seems less natural and more like a necessity to allow Giambastiani to advance the plot and explain the Cheyenne world to the reader. Other relationships appear just as contrived, particularly Storm Arriving’s relationship with the Cheyenne visionary Speaks While Leaving, who foresaw George’s crash and subsequent capture.\nUnfortunately, while many of the ideas Giambastiani works with are interesting, he seems too intent on tossing in every possible idea, thereby creating a stew which has a variety of disparate flavors which do not manage to coalesce into a complementary meal. Had Giambastiani elected to focus on one or two of these ideas, whether in the realm of natural history, politics or science, the novel would have been tighter and more enjoyable.\nGiambastiani has announced a sequel to The Year the Cloud Fell. With luck, he'll be able to further develop his characters and their relationships while focusing on fewer items to give it a more cohesive feel.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1693057"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5121140480041504,"wiki_prob":0.5121140480041504,"text":"World Experts To Convene Conference On Sexual Violence As International Crime\nwww.americanbarfoundation.org\nLuis Moreno Ocampo, International Criminal Court Prosecutor, and Navanethem\nPillay, U. N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, will keynote Hague conference\nCHICAGO, IL -June 2, 2009 – The Center on Law and Globalization will convene an international conference, Sexual Violence as International Crime: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Evidence, June 16-18, The Hague, the Netherlands. The conference will be co-hosted by Center co-director John Hagan, PhD, recipient of the 2009 Stockholm Prize in Criminology, co-director Charlotte Ku, PhD, University of Illinois College of Law, in cooperation with the Grotius Center for International Legal Studies, Leiden University Campus/The Hague and The International Victimology Institute, Tilburg (INTERVICT), Tilburg University. The conference will bring together world experts on international law, global health, and social science and human rights to focus on innovations and challenges of empirical and other evidence for the prosecution of cases of sexual violence. Conference topics will include the development of evidence in relation to charges ranging from sexual slavery to crimes against humanity and genocide, procedural differences involved in prosecuting sexual victimization in domestic versus international courts, and the development of new social scientific, archival and medical data collection techniques to assist in the prosecution of these crimes.\nHagan, who is also a research professor at the American Bar Foundation and the John D. MacArthur Professor of Sociology and Law at Northwestern University, will receive the 2009 Stockholm Prize in Criminology one week later on June 23, 2009, for his work on the causes and prevention of genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan and in the Balkans. Hagan’s empirical research places the crime of mass rape in the examination of genocide and crimes against humanity.\nNew York Times columnist Bob Herbert’s column of May 30, 2009 addresses the crimes of rape in the precise locations at the heart of Hagan’s empirical research, refugee camps in Chad, across the border from Sudan. To access a two-part video interview of Hagan on his work on genocide and sexual violence, visit: http://www.youtube.com/user/ABFCOMM.\nWHAT: Sexual Violence as International Crime: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Evidence\nOrganized by the Center on Law and Globalization of the American Bar Foundation and the University of Illinois College of Law, in cooperation with The Grotius Center for International Legal Studies, Leiden University Campus/The Hague and The International Victimology Institute, Tilburg (INTERVICT), Tilburg University\nWHO: John Hagan, PhD, Center on Law and Globalization, American Bar Foundation, and Northwestern University\nKelly Askin, Open Society Justice Initiative\nAnne-Marie de Brouwer, The International Victimology Institute Tilburg (INTERVICT), Tilburg University\nCharlotte Ku, University of Illinois College of Law and Center on Law & Globalization\nTerence Halliday, PhD, Center on Law and Globalization, American Bar Foundation\nCarsten Stahn, Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies, Leiden University, The Hague\nChristine Tremblay, Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies, Leiden University, The Hague\nLarissa van den Herik, Grotius Centre of International Legal Studies, Leiden University\nKEYNOTE ADDRESSES:\nLuis Moreno Ocampo, Prosecutor, International Criminal Court, The Hague\nNavanethem Pillay, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights\nWHEN: June 16, 2009 3:00pm-5:00pm - Opening Session\nJune 17, 2009 -9:30am -5:00pm - Panels and Working Group Sessions\nJune 18, 2009 9:30am-5:45pm – Working Group Sessions and Closing Addresses\nWHERE: June 16 Opening Session: Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA); Bezuidenhoutseweg 67, The Hague. Note: Admission to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is by advance registration only. Passport required for entry.\nJune 17 and 18 Sessions: Aula and breakout rooms, Campus The Hague, Leiden University; Lange Voorhout 44, The Hague\nThe conference will have a distinct policy focus, assessing the role of new kinds of social\nscience evidence for criminal prosecutions. The conference will also seek to document practices that non-lawyers must confront in intervening in conflict situations.\nThe Center on Law and Globalization is a Partnership of the American Bar Foundation and the University of Illinois College of Law. The Center brings together the top legal officials of international organizations, key journalists, and academic experts to understand behavioral and legal dimensions of critical global issues, to stimulate well-informed global policy choices, to advance empirical research on globalization and law and to advance the effective use of the law. To access the Center’s Smart Libraries – clustering the leading scholarship on globalization- visit www.lexglobal.org","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line173849"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.585705041885376,"wiki_prob":0.585705041885376,"text":"Brand Identity Standards\nBrett Boatright\nDirector, Institute Creative Strategy\nBrett.Boatright@comm.gatech.edu\nThe Institute has adopted a refreshed brand visual identity system as of September 2021. The following policy is currently under revision to reflect the updated brand standards available at https://brand.gatech.edu. All expectations for approval routing remain intact during this transition.\nIn the meantime, please direct any questions to Institute Communications via: https://comm.gatech.edu/about/contact.\nThe quality and consistency of Georgia Institute of Technology’s communication is critical to maintaining our reputation as a leading brand in academics and research. Institute Communications worked collaboratively with campus communicators to conduct a redesign of Georgia Tech’s print, digital, and messaging standards. This policy outlines standards for the use of brand elements and trademarks. The adoption of these standards provides a number of key benefits including building awareness of Georgia Tech’s brand and increasing efficiency in the creation of communications and marketing materials that represent Georgia Tech, its colleges, schools, units, and affiliate organizations.\nThis policy exists to facilitate consistency and promote standardized Institute branding across Georgia Tech’s communications. Georgia Tech’s communications are the primary channel for connecting with key constituents including peers, prospective students, parents, legislators, corporate partners, faculty, staff, students, alumni, fans, as well as the general public. A consistent use of the Institute’s brand brings together the efforts of all who constitute the Institute, unifies and strengthens Georgia Tech’s reputation, and distinguishes Georgia Tech from other institutions of higher learning, thereby enhancing its relationships with all constituencies, public and private.\nThis brand identity policy governs the use of all Institute trademarks and brand assets for any purpose and applies to the entire Institute. Specific details of the approved Institute brand are outlined in the Georgia Tech Brand Identity Standards (http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand).\nColleges, schools, departments, and individuals may only use the Institute’s names, logos, and trademarks as permitted by this policy and in accordance with requirements listed on the Georgia Tech Brand Identity Standards website (http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand).\nThe following rules apply to all uses of Institute trademarks and brand assets.\nGeorgia Tech Nomenclature: The consistent use of the Georgia Institute of Technology and Georgia Tech name helps build recognition and awareness. When used in external communications, the complete name “Georgia Institute of Technology” should be used upon first mention in copy. Thereafter, “Georgia Tech” may be employed to reference the Institute. Georgia Tech units may not use the acronym “GT” when communicating with outside audiences with the exception of social media applications that have character restrictions, and Athletics. Exceptions to this policy include informal and interoffice correspondence, internal presentations, and other unofficial communication.\nGeorgia Tech Logo and Wordmarks: The Georgia Institute of Technology logo and Georgia Tech logo are key elements of the Institute’s visual identity system, and one or the other must appear on all official Georgia Tech print and digital communications and marketing material. The logos may not be modified in any way or attached to any other typographic or graphic elements. No other logos, symbols, or marks may be used by administrative or academic units to represent the Institute. Individual units may not create their own logo or visual identity.\nUnits are required to use the Georgia Tech wordmark in connection with official Institute business. Colleges, schools, and units may use their respective Georgia Tech wordmark for their unit in connection with official Institute business and in their official web headers.\nGeorgia Tech Seal: The seal is reserved for use by the Office of the President and the Office of Government and Community Relations. Executives whose offices are in the Carnegie building also have permission to use the seal on business cards and stationery only. Programs directly sponsored by the Office of the President, such as the Stamps President’s Scholars program, may also use the seal. No other Georgia Tech units are permitted to use the seal. The seal is also used on official Institute documents, such as certificates and diplomas. To request use of the seal, contact Institute Communications. More information about the use of the seal can be found at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/visual.\nSpirit Marks: Georgia Tech’s spirit marks — including but not limited to Buzz, the Interlocking GT, and the Ramblin’ Wreck — are licensed trademarks that require prior approval for use from Georgia Tech Institute Communications. Georgia Tech’s spirit marks are primarily used by student and alumni groups, and Athletics. More information about the use of spirit marks can be found at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/visual.\nInstitute Words: The following marks are federally registered in the name of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia by and on behalf of the Georgia Institute of Technology. All other names, symbols, initials, colors, images, graphic designs, or other indicia that refer to Georgia Institute of Technology are protected by federal and state laws.\nRamblin’ Wreck\nThe word \"Helluva\" is only to be used for athletics activities, school spirit and related internally-focused/campus communications and should not be used for external marketing.\nInstitute Tagline: Creating the Next® is the official tagline of the Institute. Units should use the official Creating the Next® wordmark when representing the tagline graphically. More information about the Creating the Next tagline can be found at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/visual.\nAthletics taglines can not be used for academic or research activities.\nOfficial Colors: White and gold are key components of Georgia Tech’s visual identity system and are the primary colors available for use by all Georgia Tech units. Consistent use and careful matching of colors are essential in establishing and maintaining a consistent and unified image. Detailed color information can be found in the Georgia Tech Brand Standards. More information about Georgia Tech’s colors can be found at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/colors.\nTrademarks and Licensing: Campus use of trademarks includes items and materials produced and consumed internally by the Institute, its departments, and official campus clubs and organizations. Items and materials that are made available for sale, such as a T-shirt for a fundraiser, must follow the commercial use policies in the next section.\n• Items and materials bearing any of Georgia Tech’s trademarks must be approved, in writing, through Georgia Tech Licensing and Trademarks (http://www.licensing.gatech.edu/).\n• Trademarks must adhere to Georgia Tech’s brand standards and may not be altered in any way without approval, in writing, through Georgia Tech Licensing and Trademarks.\n• Georgia Tech trademarks are not to be used in conjunction with alcohol, tobacco, recreational drugs, gambling products, national flags and symbols, and/or religious programs. Trademarks should not be used in conjunction with the color red.\n• Georgia Tech trademarks are not to be used in conjunction with other brands, names, or trademarks in a way that might appear as an endorsement by the Institute.\n• Designs using Georgia Tech trademarks must be approved prior to printing or manufacturing through Georgia Tech Licensing and Trademarks.\n• All items and materials bearing any Georgia Tech trademarks must be printed, produced, or manufactured by an official licensed vendor. Georgia Tech Licensing and Trademarks has more than 400 approved licensed vendors. Please visit http://www.licensing.gatech.edu/ vendors for a current list of approved licensees.\n• A registered trademark symbol, either ® or TM, is to be used next to every trademarked logo. The symbol should appear near the bottom right of the trademarked logo. It is not necessary to include the symbol following trademarked words appearing in copy text. For example, when writing about Georgia Tech’s mascot, Buzz®, a writer may exclude the ® and simply write Buzz.\nThe Institute’s trademarks are protected by federal law, either by federal trademark registrations or through common law use, and by the State of Georgia through state registrations. The Institute’s trademarks are federally registered in the name of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia by and on behalf of the Georgia Institute of Technology.\nThe Institute has delegated the responsibility for maintaining, managing, licensing, and protecting the Institute’s trademarks to the vice president of Institute Communications.\nThe Georgia Tech licensing manager is the sole authority for granting permission to use any Georgia Tech trademark. For trademark usage permission and questions, contact Georgia Tech Institute Communication’s licensing manager. More information about Georgia Tech’s Licensing and Trademarks can be found at http://www.licensing.gatech.edu./\nInformation about the University System of Georgia policy 6.2 on the Use of Institution Names, Symbols, and Trademarks can be found at https://www.usg.edu/policymanual/section6/C351\nUse of Trademarks\nAs outlined in the University System of Georgia policy 6.2 on the Use of Institution Names, Symbols, and Trademarks the name, logo, or trademark of any University System of Georgia (USG) institution may only be used for products, projects, events, and services officially sponsored by the USG or a USG institution. The name, logo, or trademark of any USG institution shall not be used by an independent business enterprise that is not under the complete control of the USG, excluding approved Cooperative Organizations, to imply an official relationship with the institution or USG.\nBy Faculty, Staff, and Students\nNo individual faculty or staff members, students, or groups may use any Institute trademark, stationery or the official web template header and footer, or refer to his or her affiliation with the Institute, in any manner that suggests or implies Institute support or endorsement of a point of view or personal or political opinion, business, activity, movement, or program that is not official Georgia Tech business. Faculty, staff, and students are required to use an approved licensee to produce any merchandise or apparel with the Georgia Tech name and/or trademarks.\nBy Student Organizations\nAffiliated Georgia Tech student organizations are required to use an approved licensee to produce any merchandise or apparel with the Georgia Tech name and/or trademarks. This includes merchandise used within the organization (staff shirts, pens, etc.), given as gifts, or sold.\nStudent organizations are not allowed to alter trademarks without permission from Licensing and Trademarks.\nBy Persons and/or Entities Outside the Institute\nInstitute trademarks may be used by persons or entities outside the Institute only pursuant to a license, memorandum of understanding, or sponsorship agreement stating the terms and conditions of such use. Persons or entities outside of Georgia Tech are required to use an approved licensee to produce any merchandise or apparel with the Georgia Tech name and/or trademarks.\nProhibited Uses of Institute Trademarks\nNeither the name of the Institute nor any Institute trademark, including Institute colors, may be used in any way that gives a false impression, is misleading, or could cause confusion regarding the Institute’s relationship with any person or entity. Statements that the Institute is a user or purchaser of a product or program are permitted if true. Statements that imply the endorsement of a product, service, or event are prohibited by state law.\nGeneral Prohibition\nNeither the name of the Institute nor any Institute trademark may be used in connection with any person, entity, product, or service if the association could adversely affect the Institute’s image or standing, or would for any other reason be inappropriate for a state agency or public research Institute. Such proscribed uses include, but are not limited to, the use of Institute trademarks in connection with alcoholic beverages, cigarettes or other tobacco products, sexually oriented products or services, religious products, political parties or organizations, gaming or gambling products, and firearms.\nUse of Non-Georgia Tech Logos\nThe use of non-Georgia Tech logos on official Georgia Tech digital and print communications and marketing requires prior approval from Institute Communications. Lists acknowledging use, sponsorship, or donor gratitude are permissible.\nUnder no circumstances, through word or display, may any Georgia Tech unit imply endorsement of a product or company. The unit may state what the company does but may not include any measure of quality, performance, improvement, enhancement, or endorsement.\nSponsorships, Partnerships and Co-branding\nUsing a corporate logo to acknowledge a donor, sponsor, joint venture, partnership, or in co-branding arrangements is allowed with some important restrictions, but should not be used routinely. NOTE: For a joint venture or partnership, a written agreement of partnership should exist and must have been approved by the Georgia Tech Office of Legal Affairs.\nIn the case of a contract that calls for the display of a corporate logo on a Georgia Tech website, specific approval of the contract must be obtained from Georgia Tech’s Office of Legal Affairs. Legal Affairs must review and approve all contracts. Should Georgia Tech’s Office of Legal Affairs approve such contract language, then displaying corporate logos under an approved contract is allowed.\nNon-Georgia Tech logos, when used, must be preceded by this statement: “The following companies support this program” or something similar, followed by, “The listing of corporate logos on this site does not constitute an endorsement by Georgia Tech.” All variations of this language must be reviewed and approved by Institute Communications prior to publishing.\nGeorgia Tech websites hosted on Georgia Tech web servers or cloud service(s) centrally managed by or on behalf of Georgia Tech must comply with the standards outlined in the website standards (http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/websites). This includes the colleges, schools, and administrative and research units.\nExceptions to the web standards include:\nStudent, faculty, and staff personal pages, course management pages, intranets and internal sites (defined as sites requiring a restricted-access login), web applications that are open- or closed-sourced and cannot be easily modified, and student organizations and academic research labs and centers that are not part of an IRI or IRC and are not funded through the Office of the Executive Vice President for Research.\nAny sites that exist to communicate the work of a consortium or other multi-party organization of which Georgia Tech is a part, but which is not an affiliated Georgia Tech organization.\nSites that are being redesigned are required to meet the Georgia Tech web standards (http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/websites). Legacy sites will be updated as time and resources allow. Institute Communications will provide official font, color, and header and footer Drupal templates to campus. Web standards will be reviewed by Institute Communications in collaboration with campus periodically to determine when updates are needed.\nUnits that are creating new sites or redesigning existing sites are encouraged to work with their respective Institute Communications consultant to coordinate their efforts. To find your unit’s communications consultant, go to http://www.comm.gatech.edu/account-management.\nWhile units of Georgia Tech are free to develop or modify the content of their own communications, Institute Communications is responsible for ensuring adherence to the standards in this policy and for maintenance and upkeep of the Institute’s brand communication standards.\nIn the instance of non-compliance, Institute Communications will make reasonable efforts to contact the unit’s communications manager and/or the individual responsible for creating and maintaining the content. Institute Communications will work with the unit to establish a schedule for compliance. More information about Georgia Tech’s web standards can be found at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/websites.\nThe internet domain name assigned to the Georgia Institute of Technology is gatech.edu. The Institute recognizes gatech.edu as its official domain name. The name gatech.edu is legally registered to the Institute and, like other marks of the institution, is subject to the Institute’s use, policies, and guidelines.\nIn order to create a cohesive web identity and to ensure the integrity of the Institute’s commitment to a unified web presence, the Institute has established the following standards with respect to domain names.\nAll websites that are funded and/or sponsored by the Institute are required to have a gatech.edu-based web address. This includes all websites for academic, administrative, student-sponsored, and/or other organizational units within the Institute. This also includes personal websites that are hosted by the Institute.\nUnless otherwise permitted by Institute Communications, Institute funds may not be used to purchase or maintain non-gatech.edu domain names\nOrganizational units within the Institute do not have the authority to register internet domain names on behalf of the Institute or their respective organizational unit. The Office of Institute Communications is the official institutional contact for domain names on behalf of Georgia Tech. The Office of Information Technology is the official registrant of Institute domain names.\nGeorgia Tech’s domain name criteria are outlined at: (http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/websites/domain_names)\nRequesting a Third-Level Domain Name\nTo request a third-level domain name (www.xxxxx.gatech.edu), contact the Office of Institute Communications. This office is responsible for approving/disapproving requests.\nTo appeal a denial of a www.xxxxx.gatech.edu domain name, submit additional written information or clarification in support of the request to the appropriate Institute Communications consultant (www.comm.gatech.edu/account-management) and request a review\nDomain Name Exceptions\nThe Institute may consider granting an exception to the domain name requirement in these cases:\nExternal organizations that have been approved to be hosted by the Institute are permitted to have non-www.xxxxx.gatech.edu domain names if they are not wholly owned or controlled by the Institute. Examples of this exception include non-Georgia Tech organizations, professional affiliations, consortia, and cooperatives in which Georgia Tech is a member institution.\nOn a case-by-case basis and in unique circumstances, the Institute may grant an exception to the above requirements. Such requests must be reviewed by the Office of Institute Communications. Requests for an exception must establish that a non-www.xxxxx.gatech.edu domain name is necessary as part of the normal web operations of the organizational unit.\nPublications: Georgia Tech’s print and digital communications offer opportunities to build Georgia Tech’s identity. To achieve the greatest effectiveness, communication materials should reflect that they are part of the Georgia Tech visual identity system. Official Georgia Tech publication templates are available for download at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/downloads-templates.\nPublication Covers: The front cover of publications for Georgia Tech or a Georgia Tech unit must prominently display the Georgia Tech name. The Georgia Tech logo is the preferred method for identifying the piece. The suggested positions for the Institute logo are the upper left-hand corner or lower right-hand corner. The Georgia Tech logo should be set apart from other graphic elements, and clear space around the logo should be maintained.\nPublication Back Covers: The Georgia Tech logo (or relevant Georgia Tech college, school, or unit) should appear on the back of multipage publications.\nBrand Elements: Georgia Tech trade dress is made up of several key elements including the Georgia Tech wordmark, chevrons, color, fonts, and the Creating the Next® tagline. These elements should appear on all Georgia Tech publications and collateral. These elements are available for download at the Georgia Tech Brand Standards.\nExisting graphics, symbols, or icons unique to individual units within Georgia Tech may not be used as dominant, freestanding components resembling a logo. Other visual elements may be used as secondary elements. They must be subordinate to the Georgia Tech logo.\nModel Releases: All photo or video subjects should sign a model release form prior to filming. The signed release form should be kept on file by the project’s manager, in perpetuity. For large events, general signage indicating that photography will be taken and potentially used in communications should be prominently posted. Model releases can be found at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/photography#release.\nPhoto and Video Archiving: Photography and video taken by staff and freelancers for use in publications and digital media paid for by Georgia Tech is required to be archived in Georgia Tech’s Image Portal photo database. A Georgia Tech account login is required to access this database. The Image Portal database is located at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/photography#download.\nVideo Brand Standards: When producing digital content for Georgia Tech external websites or audiences, it is important to maintain an experience that reflects Georgia Tech’s identity. Using Georgia Tech’s branded lower thirds and closing slides is required for public-facing video. These file requirements and branding guides apply to all digital content produced by Georgia Tech communicators and outside vendors. More about Georgia Tech’s video branding can be found at http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand/video/style-guide.\nStationery: The use of official Institute letterhead and business cards is required in all matters of official Institute business. Official Georgia Tech stationery is provided through Printing and Copying Services (PCS). More information about Printing and Copying Services can be found at https://www.oit.gatech.edu/service-item/custom-printing.\nSee the following link for brand standards: http://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand\n5.1 Web Standard Compliance\nCommunications that are being redesigned are required to meet the brand standards. Legacy communications will be updated as time and resources allow.\n5.2 Official Header and Footer\nInstitute Communications will be the official source of policy and information regarding the correct use of Institute brand standards including logo, colors, fonts, design style, and use of visuals in a range of applications.\nhttp://www.comm.gatech.edu/brand\nWhat are Georgia Tech’s brand standards?\nWhere can I find the logo, print, web and digital templates?\nWhere can I find information about how to use Georgia Tech’s trademarks?\nWho do I contact regarding trademark and licensing questions? gtlicensing@gatech.edu\nWho do I contact regarding brand and graphic identity questions? gtbrand@gatech.edu\nInstitute Communications is responsible for the management of Georgia Tech’s trademarks, brand identity, and web standards. Institute Communications is responsible for communicating, interpreting, revising, and enforcing the policy.\nInstitute Communicators\nCommunicators in the colleges, schools, and administrative units are responsible for knowing and understanding this policy and assisting with communicating and interpreting it in their respective areas.\nOffice of Legal Affairs\nGeorgia Tech’s Office of Legal Affairs is responsible for reviewing and acting on memoranda of understanding sponsorship agreements and contracts, and will consult with Institute Communications when such documents include marketing, trademark, or branding considerations.\nWhile units of Georgia Tech are free to develop or modify the content of their own communications, Institute Communications will be responsible for ensuring adherence to the standards in this policy and for maintenance and upkeep of the Institute’s Brand Standards.\nIn case of violations, Institute Communications will make reasonable efforts to contact the unit’s communications manager and/or the individual responsible for creating and maintaining the content. Institute Communications will work with the unit to correct issues and establish a schedule for compliance.\nGeorgia Tech Trademark Policy\nUnit Client Managers\nBoard of Regents Policy 6.2. Use of Institution Names, Symbols, and Trademarks\nJuly 2018 Institute Communications New Policy\n‹ Bicycle and Personal Mobility Devices Use Policy up Campus Alcohol Policy ›\nBicycle and Personal Mobility Devices Use Policy\nCampus Alcohol Policy\nCampus Use\nCatering Providers Policy\nFacility Planning / Plant Operations\nFilming and Photography on Campus\nFreedom of Expression Policy and Campus Use Procedures\nFuel Card Use Policy\nInsurance and Claims Management\nLow Speed Vehicle Policy and Golf Cart Policy\nMandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Policy\nMinors in Laboratories, Hazardous Areas and Animal Facilities\nMotor Vehicle Maintenance Policy\nYouth Programs Policy","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line147297"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8576522469520569,"wiki_prob":0.8576522469520569,"text":"Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan\nJordan Health Access Study Team, Lebanon Health Access Study Team\nPurpose The influx of Syrian refugees into Jordan and Lebanon over the last 5 years presents an immense burden to national health systems. This study was undertaken to assess utilization of maternal health services among Syrian refugees in both countries. Description A cross-sectional survey of Syrian refugees living in urban and rural (non-camp) settings was conducted using a two-stage cluster survey design with probability proportional to size sampling in 2014–2015. Eighty-six percent of surveyed households in Lebanon and 88% of surveyed households in Jordan included women with a live birth in the last year. Information from women in this sub-set of households was analyzed to understand antenatal and intrapartum health service utilization. Assessment A majority of respondents reported seeking antenatal care, 82% and 89% in Jordan and Lebanon, respectively. Women had an average of at least six antenatal care visits. Nearly all births (98% in Jordan and 94% in Lebanon) took place in a health facility. Cesarean rates were similar in both countries; approximately one-third of all births were cesarean deliveries. A substantial proportion of women incurred costs for intrapartum care; 33% of Syrian women in Jordan and 94% of Syrian women in Lebanon reported paying out of pocket for their deliveries. The proportion of women incurring costs for intrapartum care was higher in Jordan both countries for women with cesarean deliveries compared to those with vaginal deliveries; however, this difference was not statistically significant in either country (Jordan p-value = 0.203; Lebanon p-value = 0.099). Conclusion Syrian refugees living in Jordan and Lebanon had similar levels of utilization of maternal health services, despite different health systems and humanitarian assistance provisions. As expected, a substantial proportion of households incurred out-of-pocket costs for essential maternal and newborn health services, making cost a major factor in care-seeking decisions and locations. As health financing policies shift to account for the continued burden of refugee hosting on the health system, sustained attention to the availability and quality of essential maternal and newborn health services is needed to protect both refugee and host populations women’s rights to health and health care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period.\nhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-017-2315-y\nCesarean\nDive into the research topics of 'Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.\nHealth Care Utilization Social Sciences 100%\nLebanon Medicine & Life Sciences 93%\nJordan Medicine & Life Sciences 88%\nRefugees Medicine & Life Sciences 84%\nPatient Acceptance of Health Care Medicine & Life Sciences 80%\nMaternal Health Medicine & Life Sciences 77%\nrefugee Social Sciences 58%\nMaternal Health Services Medicine & Life Sciences 51%\nJordan Health Access Study Team, & Lebanon Health Access Study Team (2017). Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan. Maternal and child health journal, 21(9), 1798-1807. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-017-2315-y\nMaternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan. / Jordan Health Access Study Team; Lebanon Health Access Study Team.\nIn: Maternal and child health journal, Vol. 21, No. 9, 01.09.2017, p. 1798-1807.\nJordan Health Access Study Team & Lebanon Health Access Study Team 2017, 'Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan', Maternal and child health journal, vol. 21, no. 9, pp. 1798-1807. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-017-2315-y\nJordan Health Access Study Team, Lebanon Health Access Study Team. Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan. Maternal and child health journal. 2017 Sep 1;21(9):1798-1807. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-017-2315-y\nJordan Health Access Study Team ; Lebanon Health Access Study Team. / Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan. In: Maternal and child health journal. 2017 ; Vol. 21, No. 9. pp. 1798-1807.\n@article{4ee7c492dbdb4fabb7a50151a1163c51,\ntitle = \"Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan\",\nabstract = \"Purpose The influx of Syrian refugees into Jordan and Lebanon over the last 5 years presents an immense burden to national health systems. This study was undertaken to assess utilization of maternal health services among Syrian refugees in both countries. Description A cross-sectional survey of Syrian refugees living in urban and rural (non-camp) settings was conducted using a two-stage cluster survey design with probability proportional to size sampling in 2014–2015. Eighty-six percent of surveyed households in Lebanon and 88% of surveyed households in Jordan included women with a live birth in the last year. Information from women in this sub-set of households was analyzed to understand antenatal and intrapartum health service utilization. Assessment A majority of respondents reported seeking antenatal care, 82% and 89% in Jordan and Lebanon, respectively. Women had an average of at least six antenatal care visits. Nearly all births (98% in Jordan and 94% in Lebanon) took place in a health facility. Cesarean rates were similar in both countries; approximately one-third of all births were cesarean deliveries. A substantial proportion of women incurred costs for intrapartum care; 33% of Syrian women in Jordan and 94% of Syrian women in Lebanon reported paying out of pocket for their deliveries. The proportion of women incurring costs for intrapartum care was higher in Jordan both countries for women with cesarean deliveries compared to those with vaginal deliveries; however, this difference was not statistically significant in either country (Jordan p-value = 0.203; Lebanon p-value = 0.099). Conclusion Syrian refugees living in Jordan and Lebanon had similar levels of utilization of maternal health services, despite different health systems and humanitarian assistance provisions. As expected, a substantial proportion of households incurred out-of-pocket costs for essential maternal and newborn health services, making cost a major factor in care-seeking decisions and locations. As health financing policies shift to account for the continued burden of refugee hosting on the health system, sustained attention to the availability and quality of essential maternal and newborn health services is needed to protect both refugee and host populations women{\\textquoteright}s rights to health and health care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period.\",\nkeywords = \"Antenatal care, Cesarean, Humanitarian assistance, Intrapartum care, Jordan, Lebanon, Maternal health, Refugee, Syria\",\nauthor = \"{Jordan Health Access Study Team} and {Lebanon Health Access Study Team} and Hannah Tappis and Emily Lyles and Ann Burton and Arwa Oweis and Zaheya, {Laila Akhu} and Timothy Roberton and Gilbert Burnham and William Weiss and Baptiste Hanquart and Lara Chela and Nour Aridi and Nour Kassab and Aline Keyrouz and Deena Al-Shatti and {de La Roche}, Francois and Michael Woodman and Shannon Doocy\",\nnote = \"Funding Information: The Jordan study was funded by the World Health Organization and the Lebanon study was funded by the European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection Department. Publisher Copyright: {\\textcopyright} 2017, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.\",\ndoi = \"10.1007/s10995-017-2315-y\",\nT1 - Maternal Health Care Utilization Among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon and Jordan\nAU - Jordan Health Access Study Team\nAU - Lebanon Health Access Study Team\nAU - Tappis, Hannah\nAU - Lyles, Emily\nAU - Burton, Ann\nAU - Oweis, Arwa\nAU - Zaheya, Laila Akhu\nAU - Roberton, Timothy\nAU - Burnham, Gilbert\nAU - Weiss, William\nAU - Hanquart, Baptiste\nAU - Chela, Lara\nAU - Aridi, Nour\nAU - Kassab, Nour\nAU - Keyrouz, Aline\nAU - Al-Shatti, Deena\nAU - de La Roche, Francois\nAU - Woodman, Michael\nAU - Doocy, Shannon\nN1 - Funding Information: The Jordan study was funded by the World Health Organization and the Lebanon study was funded by the European Commission Humanitarian Aid and Civil Protection Department. Publisher Copyright: © 2017, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.\nN2 - Purpose The influx of Syrian refugees into Jordan and Lebanon over the last 5 years presents an immense burden to national health systems. This study was undertaken to assess utilization of maternal health services among Syrian refugees in both countries. Description A cross-sectional survey of Syrian refugees living in urban and rural (non-camp) settings was conducted using a two-stage cluster survey design with probability proportional to size sampling in 2014–2015. Eighty-six percent of surveyed households in Lebanon and 88% of surveyed households in Jordan included women with a live birth in the last year. Information from women in this sub-set of households was analyzed to understand antenatal and intrapartum health service utilization. Assessment A majority of respondents reported seeking antenatal care, 82% and 89% in Jordan and Lebanon, respectively. Women had an average of at least six antenatal care visits. Nearly all births (98% in Jordan and 94% in Lebanon) took place in a health facility. Cesarean rates were similar in both countries; approximately one-third of all births were cesarean deliveries. A substantial proportion of women incurred costs for intrapartum care; 33% of Syrian women in Jordan and 94% of Syrian women in Lebanon reported paying out of pocket for their deliveries. The proportion of women incurring costs for intrapartum care was higher in Jordan both countries for women with cesarean deliveries compared to those with vaginal deliveries; however, this difference was not statistically significant in either country (Jordan p-value = 0.203; Lebanon p-value = 0.099). Conclusion Syrian refugees living in Jordan and Lebanon had similar levels of utilization of maternal health services, despite different health systems and humanitarian assistance provisions. As expected, a substantial proportion of households incurred out-of-pocket costs for essential maternal and newborn health services, making cost a major factor in care-seeking decisions and locations. As health financing policies shift to account for the continued burden of refugee hosting on the health system, sustained attention to the availability and quality of essential maternal and newborn health services is needed to protect both refugee and host populations women’s rights to health and health care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period.\nAB - Purpose The influx of Syrian refugees into Jordan and Lebanon over the last 5 years presents an immense burden to national health systems. This study was undertaken to assess utilization of maternal health services among Syrian refugees in both countries. Description A cross-sectional survey of Syrian refugees living in urban and rural (non-camp) settings was conducted using a two-stage cluster survey design with probability proportional to size sampling in 2014–2015. Eighty-six percent of surveyed households in Lebanon and 88% of surveyed households in Jordan included women with a live birth in the last year. Information from women in this sub-set of households was analyzed to understand antenatal and intrapartum health service utilization. Assessment A majority of respondents reported seeking antenatal care, 82% and 89% in Jordan and Lebanon, respectively. Women had an average of at least six antenatal care visits. Nearly all births (98% in Jordan and 94% in Lebanon) took place in a health facility. Cesarean rates were similar in both countries; approximately one-third of all births were cesarean deliveries. A substantial proportion of women incurred costs for intrapartum care; 33% of Syrian women in Jordan and 94% of Syrian women in Lebanon reported paying out of pocket for their deliveries. The proportion of women incurring costs for intrapartum care was higher in Jordan both countries for women with cesarean deliveries compared to those with vaginal deliveries; however, this difference was not statistically significant in either country (Jordan p-value = 0.203; Lebanon p-value = 0.099). Conclusion Syrian refugees living in Jordan and Lebanon had similar levels of utilization of maternal health services, despite different health systems and humanitarian assistance provisions. As expected, a substantial proportion of households incurred out-of-pocket costs for essential maternal and newborn health services, making cost a major factor in care-seeking decisions and locations. As health financing policies shift to account for the continued burden of refugee hosting on the health system, sustained attention to the availability and quality of essential maternal and newborn health services is needed to protect both refugee and host populations women’s rights to health and health care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the postpartum period.\nKW - Antenatal care\nKW - Cesarean\nKW - Humanitarian assistance\nKW - Intrapartum care\nKW - Jordan\nKW - Lebanon\nKW - Maternal health\nKW - Refugee\nKW - Syria\nU2 - 10.1007/s10995-017-2315-y\nDO - 10.1007/s10995-017-2315-y","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line554488"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5367292165756226,"wiki_prob":0.46327078342437744,"text":"ATSU CCPA students support Day of the Farm Worker health and resource event\nStudents in A.T. Still University's Central Coast Physician Assistant program in Santa Maria, California, volunteered at the recent Day of the Farm Worker event.\nA.T. Still University (ATSU) launched the Central Coast Physician Assistant (CCPA) program to make a difference in underserved communities across the globe, specifically in the program’s home city of Santa Maria, California, and The Golden State’s entire central coast region.\nIt has been just a bit more than two months since ATSU CCPA opened its doors to the first cohort of students, and those impacts are already being felt. On Dec. 5, more than 30 ATSU students and faculty members volunteered to support the Community Health Centers of the Central Coast’s (CHCs) annual Day of the Farm Worker event. The health and resource fair included medical screenings, COVID-19 and flu vaccinations, healthcare activities, education, and resources, and providers to answer questions.\nThe last such event, held in 2019 (2020 was missed due to the COVID-19 pandemic), provided services to about 300 individuals. This year’s edition, with the influx of ATSU students, addressed healthcare needs of about 500 people.\n“It was really awesome to see our students, because we had one-third of our class show up, be able to take so much of that workload and help wherever they were able,” said Liny Varghese, a first-year ATSU CCPA student. “All of our students were flexible in their roles and we were able to give care to a few hundred more people.”\nSome ATSU CCPA faculty members are also providers at CHCs, and they helped the recently formed Student Government Association get the University involved. Many of the farm workers are Spanish speakers, and ATSU students who speak Spanish filled several roles in assisting with registration and throughout the event where language services were needed. Students also helped providers, assisted with administrative work, delivered health education information to families, and hosted fun activities for children.\n“It was a pretty seamless collaboration, which is really exciting,” Varghese said. “It’s going to be a relationship that will be here for years to come.”\nJohn Butler, a first-year ATSU CCPA student, said the event showed students the great need for healthcare services in the area. Many of the farm workers come to the U.S. on work visas and do backbreaking work in fields across the region.\n“What Liny and I discovered at the event is (the farm workers are) an invisible population to many, many people up here. It’s amazing how much help they need,” Butler said. “This put a face to those individuals and we learned how to serve them. It was really powerful.”\nMuch of Varghese’s childhood was spent following her mother, a nurse, around at a senior care facility. Varghese became interested in community healthcare in underserved populations during trips to India to visit their family.\n“That became so much a part of my psyche and who I am, everything about me,” Varghese said. “It really got me thinking about our underserved populations here in the spaces around us.”\nOriginally from southern Arkansas, Butler has spent most of the last two decades in Los Angeles and worked in the entertainment industry. Looking to change careers, Butler spent time preparing for PA school while working at the Los Angeles LGBT Center, doing HIV and transgender medical care for homeless and underserved populations.\nBoth Varghese and Butler were drawn to ATSU after discovering the University’s mission of service to the underserved.\n“That really resonated with me,” Varghese said. “It’s amazing that within the first few months of our program we’ve already been able to accomplish so much on such a big event. It’s been so fulfilling to see.”\nButler said students were aware of the opportunity to showcase their skills and introduce ATSU to the community in a new way, by putting into practice what they’ve been learning over the past few months. Not all of each cohort’s 100 students will stay in Santa Maria after graduation, but those who do will make a difference in what Butler termed a “medical desert.”\nEither way, having a couple hundred students available to serve at events like Day of the Farm Worker can increase capacity and relieve some of the burden on the area’s providers. Varghese noted patients in the area sometimes wait up to four months before their scheduled appointment with a primary care provider.\nVarghese said in speaking to providers at the clinic, the common refrain for the past few years has been “just wait until the students get here” and the tide would begin to turn.\n“This program brings so much to this community. It brings a lot of hope,” Varghese said.\nATSU Santa Maria\nMaster of Science in Physician Assistant\nHospital Physician\nHealthcare Physician\nHospital Physician Assistant\nPhysician Office Assistant\nHealthcare Physician Assistant\nDecember 17th, 2021 | Jason Hunsicker | Student Headlines","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line245830"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9825390577316284,"wiki_prob":0.9825390577316284,"text":"MELBOURNE, Australia — Novak Djokovic faces deportation again after the Australian government revoked his visa for a second time, the latest twist in the ongoing saga over whether the No. 1-ranked tennis player will be allowed to compete in the Australian Open despite being unvaccinated for COVID-19.\nImmigration Minister Alex Hawke said Friday he used his ministerial discretion to cancel the 34-year-old Serb’s visa on public interest grounds — just three days before play begins at the Australian Open, where Djokovic has won a record nine of his 20 Grand Slam titles.\nDjokovic’s lawyers were expected to appeal at the Federal Circuit and Family Court, which they already successfully did last week on procedural grounds after his visa was first canceled when he landed at a Melbourne airport.\nDeportation from Australia usually leads to a three-year ban on returning to the country. That would make Djokovic 37 the next time he would be allowed to compete at the Australian Open.\nHawke said he canceled the visa on “health and good order grounds, on the basis that it was in the public interest to do so.” His statement added that Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s government “is firmly committed to protecting Australia’s borders, particularly in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic.”\nMorrison and Hawke are part of a conservative government which prides itself on being tough on border control.\n“This pandemic has been incredibly difficult for every Australian but we have stuck together and saved lives and livelihoods. … Australians have made many sacrifices during this pandemic, and they rightly expect the result of those sacrifices to be protected,” Morrison said in a statement. “This is what the Minister is doing in taking this action today.”\nEveryone at the Australian Open — including players, their support teams and spectators — is required to be vaccinated for the illness caused by the coronavirus. Djokovic is not inoculated and had sought a medical exemption on the grounds that he had COVID-19 in December.\nThat exemption was approved by the Victoria state government and Tennis Australia, apparently allowing him to obtain a visa to travel. But the Australian Border Force rejected the exemption and canceled his visa when he landed in Melbourne on Jan. 5.\nDjokovic spent four nights in an immigration detention hotel before a judge on Monday overturned that decision. That ruling allowed Djokovic to move freely around Australia and he has been practicing at Melbourne Park to prepare to play in a tournament he has won each of the past three years.\nDjokovic has held practice sessions every day since he was released from detention, posting a photo on social media late Monday of himself with his team on Rod Laver Arena.\nHe had a scheduled mid-afternoon practice booked for Friday on the tournament’s main show court, but switched his times to start and finish early.\nMedia started gathering at the vehicular entry to the building where Djokovic was reported to be meeting with his lawyers after the minister’s decision was handed down.\nWith his legal situation still in limbo, Djokovic was placed in the tournament bracket in Thursday’s draw, slated to face Miomir Kecmanovic in an all-Serbian matchup in the first round.\nMelbourne-based immigration lawyer Kian Bone said Djokovic’s lawyers face an “extremely difficult” task to get court orders over the weekend to allow their client to play next week.\nSpeaking hours before Hawke’s decision was announced, Bone said: “If you left it any later than he has done now, I think from a strategic standpoint, he’s really hamstringing Djokovic’s legal team, in terms of what sort of options or remedies he could obtain.”\nDjokovic’s lawyers would need to go before a duty judge of the Federal Circuit and Family Court, or a higher judge of the Federal Court, to get two urgent orders. One order would be an injunction preventing his deportation, such as what he won in court last week. The second would force Hawke to grant Djokovic a visa to play.\nJacqui Lambie, an influential independent senator, argued that Djokovic should be sent packing if he had broken Australia’s vaccine rules. But hours before the visa cancellation was announced, she complained about how long Hawke was taking to reach a decision.\n“Why does this keep dripping out of the tap? Alex Hawke, where are you? Missing in action?” Lambie asked.\n“If you can’t make a decision on Novak Djokovic, goodness me, how are you guys running the country? This is an absolute shambles,” she added.\nMurray collects first win of the season as Senators upset Flames 4-1\nIn vaccination battles, pro athletes become proxy players","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line800310"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.61232590675354,"wiki_prob":0.38767409324645996,"text":"Notice Requirements For Professional Liability Insurance\nby ILSTV Daily News | Jul 12, 2019 | Business, Canadian Insurance, Insurance | 0 comments\nArticle by Deepshikha Dutt and Stevan Manojlovic\nOn June 18, 2019, the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal released its decision in the case involving Trisura Guarantee Insurance Company of Canada (Trisura) and Duncan et al. This decision is noteworthy, as it may lessen an insured’s obligation to notify and disclose potential claims, and increase the burden of diligence on the insurer.\nTrisura provided professional liability coverage to Keybase National Financial Services Inc. (Keybase) from July 2008 to July 2012. Gregory Duncan and James White (Duncan and White) were Keybase advisors during this time.\nDuncan and White assumed responsibility for John Allen’s (Allen) clients. Allen was also a Keybase advisor. He was dismissed by Keybase in September 2007. Allen was sued by his former clients in 2009. Allen was convicted for criminal offences, and his former clients were successful in their action against him (2014 NSSC 31 (CanLII)).\nHowever, following the 2014 decision against Allen, the clients (Allen Clients) turned around and commenced a claim against Duncan and White as well, complaining of improper advice concerning mitigation of losses caused by Allen (2015 Action).\nDuncan and White applied for, and were granted, an order compelling Trisura to defend the 2015 Action (2018 NSSC 92). Trisura appealed this decision. It asserted that the Court erred: (1) in its interpretation of notice obligations under the policy; (2) in finding that Duncan and White complied with those obligations; and (3) in finding that relief from forfeiture was available in the circumstances. The decision was upheld.\nThe Appellate Court’s decision\nTrisura stated that: (1) it was not notified of any claims or potential claims during the policy periods; and (2) Keybase knew or should have foreseen that Duncan and White had exposure when Keybase first applied for insurance in 2008.\nWith respect to Trisura’s first argument on notification, the Court disagreed. Although the 2015 Action arose after the Trisura policy expired, the policy afforded coverage if Trisura was notified during the policy period. In 2010, Keybase’s third party insurance consultant (the “Consultant”) had reported potential claims from the Allen Clients. Trisura argued that these reports were related to Keybase and Allen’s negligence. They argued that “notice” was not collective. Further, notice respecting one Duncan and White client could not be notice for all clients. The circumstances needed to be differentiated.\nThe Court stated that Trisura’s knowledge of what transpired between Keybase, Allen and the Allen Clients underpinned its understanding of how Duncan and White, as subsequent advisors, were exposed to claims of liability. Trisura, as a sophisticated player in the insurance industry, with the benefit of prior knowledge and context, should have known the potential for further claims. Without prior knowledge, it was safe to assume that Trisura would have sought more explanation in the reports.\nTrisura’s argument that notification with respect to potential liability regarding one client cannot be notification with respect to the others failed, because there was no material difference between the former Allen Clients’ claims against Duncan and White, and the losses sought.\nIn June 2010, the Consultant indicated there were seven client complaints against Allen and “two current agents”. Furthermore, on July 2, 2010, Trisura received an adjuster’s report stating:\n“There could be exposure for the alleged failure by the subsequent Keybase advisors (Jim White and Greg Duncan) to rectify the situation or to have caused an aggravation of the situation”.\nTrisura argued that the report was misconstrued. The actual focus was whether potential claims against Duncan and White should have been disclosed prior to placement of coverage with Trisura.\nNevertheless, on December 29, 2010, the Consultant wrote to Trisura’s adjuster:\n“We confirm that any subsequent claims will be treated by Trisura as having arisen in the period in which these circumstances were reported … July, 1, 2009 to July 1, 2010.”\nTrisura did not respond.\nTrisura also argued that claims against Duncan and White were not commenced during the policy period, because Duncan and White themselves did not think they had any exposure. However, the Court noted that it was unnecessary for the insured to provide notice personally. Additionally, the Consultant was reporting to Trisura on behalf of Duncan and White, and Keybase. The purpose of notice was satisfied in light of the adjuster’s assessment of the potential exposure.\nConsidered alone, this is not a novel decision. However, it may form part of a broader legal framework, which will make it difficult for insurers to challenge the adequacy of notification and disclosure moving forward.\nAbout Dentons\nDentons is the world’s first polycentric global law firm. A top 20 firm on the Acritas 2015 Global Elite Brand Index, the Firm is committed to challenging the status quo in delivering consistent and uncompromising quality and value in new and inventive ways. Driven to provide clients a competitive edge, and connected to the communities where its clients want to do business, Dentons knows that understanding local cultures is crucial to successfully completing a deal, resolving a dispute or solving a business challenge. Now the world’s largest law firm, Dentons’ global team builds agile, tailored solutions to meet the local, national and global needs of private and public clients of any size in more than 125 locations serving 50-plus countries. www.dentons.com\nThe content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances. Specific Questions relating to this article should be addressed directly to the author.\nSource: Mondaq\nPlease enter a valid value. * Time limit is exhausted. Please reload CAPTCHA. 1 + 6 =","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line783306"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.598710834980011,"wiki_prob":0.401289165019989,"text":"Divorce and Recovery\nBy Erik Alsgaard\nIn 2008, while in his 40’s, Ian Usher got divorced. Like millions of others before him, he searched for ways to cope with the divorce. Wanting a fresh start, Usher developed a plan that would lead him to places he had never thought of: He sold everything he owned on eBay.\nIn one week, Usher sold everything except for one set of clothes, a wallet, and his passport. In the run-up to the auction, however, a new plan began to emerge. He set a goal of 100 challenges to accomplish in 100 weeks.\nToday, Usher’s two-year journey is over. He managed to complete 93 of the 100 challenges (such as sky diving, climbing the Eiffel Tower, and seeing Mount Everest), has written a book about the adventure, and is under contract to Walt Disney Pictures for a possible movie.\nUsher’s method of coping with divorce is unusual; however, the trauma he experienced in his divorce is not. “Getting through” or “dealing with” the aftermath of a divorce is often a long, complicated process. Author and licensed social worker Susan Pease Gadoua, writing a blog for Psychology Today magazine, notes that recovery from a divorce depends on many factors, including “how long you were together, how good the relationship was and how committed you were to your spouse, whether the divorce was a surprise, [and] whether you have children.”\nDivorce Rates and the Economy\nIn the United States, although the accepted statistic is that approximately 50 percent of marriages end in divorce, accurate divorce numbers are hard to come by. According to Divorce.com, “the U.S. National Center for Health Statistics has not collected any divorce data since 1996. Since then, most divorce statistics have been based on different data collection systems like surveys, and those methods can vary widely from state to state.”\nA new survey by the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia reported that the current economic recession “has both stressed and strengthened American marriages.” While around 29 percent of couples reported that the recession has deepened their commitment to marriage, 38 percent of couples who had been contemplating divorce decided to postpone it or put it aside.\nChristians and Divorce\nChristians are certainly not immune from divorce. Donald Hughes, author of The Divorce Reality, says, “In the churches, people have a superstitious view that Christianity will keep them from divorce, but they are subject to the same problems as everyone else, and they include a lack of relationship skills. . . . Just being born again is not a rabbit’s foot.”\nAccording to a 2008 Barna survey and report, mainline Protestants have a divorce rate of 25 percent; non-denominational Christians, 34 percent; Baptists, 29 percent; Mormons, 24 percent; and Catholics and Lutherans, 21 percent each. George Barna, president of the Barna Research Group, commented on the survey, saying, “When [born-again Christians] experience a divorce many of them feel their community of faith provides rejection rather than support and healing. But the research also raises questions regarding the effectiveness of how churches minister to families. The ultimate responsibility for a marriage belongs to the husband and wife, but the high incidence of divorce within the Christian community challenges the idea that churches provide truly practical and life-changing support for marriages.”\nHowever, David Popenoe, co-director of the National Marriage Project at Rutgers University, questioned the Barna report. He believes that Christians follow biblical models of the family, making a bond that “the secular world doesn’t have. . . . It just stands to reason that the bond of religion is protective of marriage, and I believe it is.”\nClergy are not immune from divorce either. I, myself, am a clergy person who has been divorced. My first marriage ended after 16 years, when it became clear that my relationship with my wife could not be saved. Facing the thought of divorce, I was distraught. I did everything I could to keep the marriage alive and only considered divorce as a last resort. I sought out the advice and counsel of a trusted clergy friend, mainly because I was torn by the idea of disobeying my wedding vows. When, in the course of a conversation, my friend said, “What vow troubles you the most?” I replied, “I promised ‘til death do us part.’ ” He replied, “What happens when the relationship dies?” Only then was I able to come to grips with the reality of what I needed to do.\nDivorce Recovery and the Church\nSusan Pease Gadoua has good news for people going through divorce: There are ways to make the process easier. Among them, she writes, are asking for help and letting help in; talking about grief with others; getting as much information as possible; and allowing feelings to come to the surface. “With any loss of a marriage comes grief,” she writes. To get through it, she advises that people be gentle with themselves, allow all the emotions surrounding the divorce to be felt, get adequate support, and keep a journal to track progress.\nMany programs and ministries exist to help people recover from divorce. At Lovers Lane United Methodist Church in Dallas, Texas, a recovery group has been meeting there for the past 29 years. Called Starting Over, the weekly meeting is designed to encourage participants to experience emotional personal growth; learn the grief process and how to deal with loneliness, anger, and depression; and begin to move on to experience new relationships. “I think it’s a great program that will allow me to get through my difficult time,” writes Felicia on the group’s website. “I will definitely recommend it to others.”\nMany churches offer divorce recovery classes to help persons cope with the “rollercoaster feelings” associated with divorce. The aim is to bring inner healing and wholeness. The classes cover such issues as forgiveness, dealing with an ex-spouse and children, dating, biblical perspectives on divorce and remarriage, and building healthy relationships. Others offer in-depth divorce recovery workshops with trained facilitators, the workshops include sessions on finances and legal matters that also address such issues as denial, rejection, grief, self-worth, and hope. Most important is that these groups offer a caring, non-judgmental environment for those going through the pain of divorce.\nHealing Through Faith\nIn April 1999, Lila Fraizer wrote an article about how divorce recovery should be. Her husband had announced to her on their 25th wedding anniversary that he wanted a divorce. At age 50, she started life over again. Fraizer began attending a nearby church. After worship, she set up an appointment with the pastor for counseling. “After meeting with her, I left that office feeling a load had been lifted from my shoulders,” she said.\nFraizer continued to attend the church because she felt the congregation cared. “I was always accepted, never ostracized. They showed me God’s unconditional love.” Fraizer further notes, “Divorce happens. Was it God’s will that I be divorced? I doubt it. But I do believe that God has helped me develop emotionally and spiritually, which may not have happened had I stayed in an unhappy marriage. And my church, in reaching out to me, has helped me find healing through faith.”\nThis article is part of FaithLink, a weekly downloadable discussion guide for classes and small groups. FaithLink motivates Christians to consider their personal views on important contemporary issues, and it also encourages them to act on their beliefs. The complete study guide accompanying this article can be purchased here.\nErik Alsgaard\nErik Alsgaard is managing editor in the Ministry of Communications for the Baltimore-Washington Conference. read more…\nCaring for mental health in your congregation\nEveryone Wants to Know How to Talk to Grieving Kids\nBy Joseph M. Primo\nBy Martin Nicholas","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1707380"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8940280675888062,"wiki_prob":0.8940280675888062,"text":"Daily Cover| Jan 13, 2020, 06:00am EST |\nThe 47,500% Return: Meet The Billionaire Family Behind The Hottest Stock Of The Past 30 Years\nAbram Brown\n(Clockwise: Victor, Larry and Eric Mendelson.)\nEverybody told us it was impossible,” says Victor Mendelson.“Couldn’t be done,” adds his brother, Eric. “That we were going to fail,” Victor says.\nIt’s lunchtime on a Thursday in Miami, and the brothers are seated at their offices with their father, Laurans, for lunch—salads on picnic plates and a shared bag of pita chips. Eric and Victor are finishing each other’s thoughts, as they often do, especially when it’s a tale they enjoy telling, and they very much like to recount this one, the origin story of Heico Corp., their publicly traded manufacturer of replacement aircraft parts. Because rather than fail, Eric, 54, Victor, 52, and their dad, 81, who goes by “Larry,” have succeeded in unquestionably spectacular fashion.\nSince 1990, when the Mendelsons took over the Hollywood, Florida-based business, Heico has generated a total return of some 47,500%. (No, that’s not a typo. All those digits are correct.) During the past decade, its shares have increased by 1,270%, soaring past the S&P 500 (250%) and even, say, Berkshire Hathaway (240%). That’s been enough for the Mendelsons, who control 17% of the company, to amass a fortune that Forbes estimates at $1.2 billion. Revenue reached $2.1 billion on profit of $328 million in fiscal 2019, both record highs.\nAll those numbers are pretty solid evidence that their detractors at the beginning were wrong: The Mendelsons have been able to earn a foothold in an industry dominated by the so-called original equipment manufacturers, the GEs and Boeings of the world, who are the first to develop the parts and keep prices high on any replacements to help recoup the original R&D costs. They have done so by acquiring 78 companies over the years and by pricing their parts cheaply. Last year, with Larry as CEO and chairman and the brothers as co-presidents, Heico produced nearly 100,000 parts, sold to nearly every major airline in the world as well as defense customers like the U.S. government. This includes everything from wheels and brakes to lights and power cords to the little latch that secures a flight attendant’s cabinet.\n“They’re clearly an outlier,” says Ken Herbert, a managing director at Canaccord Genuity. “I mean, it’s hard to envision family businesses that have been this successful for this long. They’ve remained very disciplined, stuck to their knitting and do what they do well.”\nThe origins of this story date back to 116th Street in Manhattan at Columbia University, their father’s alma mater. There, the brothers studied business and economics and grew particularly interested in one of the most prevalent trends of the time: the buyout game. The more they learned, the more convinced they became that they could pull off an LBO, too. Victor was the one to find Heico—started in 1957 and taken public in 1960—after chatting up a friendly stock broker familiar with the company.\nThey figured their dad, a former Arthur Andersen accountant and real estate investor in Florida, would supply the capital. After studying Heico’s financials and annual reports in a Columbia library, Victor decided it looked like a perfect target: a manufacturing business with solid numbers but unenthused executives. “The board owned nothing—owned no shares,” recalls Larry. “They weren’t motivated.” Victor pitched the idea to his brother and father, and after buying $3 million in Heico stock—half cash, half debt—by January 1990 they controlled the firm. Out went the old management, in came the Mendelsons.\nAt the time, Heico sold a single item, an engine combustion chamber, having acquired the rights and data for making it a few years earlier from the original manufacturer, Pratt & Whitney. It brought in $26 million in sales, peddled to customers like Pan-Am and Eastern Airlines. It wasn’t long before they were casting about for similar opportunities in the after-parts market, which they found to be particularly alluring. Everything needed Federal Aviation Administration approval, which ensured that not every Tom, Dick and Larry could easily enter the industry. Plus, replacement parts weren’t generally patent-protected, so all the Mendelsons had to do was reverse engineer them, then prove to the FAA that they were up to snuff.\nMachinery that works on a component of airplane engines whirls at one of Heico's south Florida factories.\nTim Pannell\nTo do so, Eric practically came to live in the hallways of the FAA’s Washington, D.C., headquarters. “They were really very, very thorough,” he says. But Eric wore them out with his own thoroughness. “We do full a metallurgical inspection on every single lot of parts we produce,” he says. “That includes material hardness, grain size”—Eric can go on like this at length, and often does—“grain-flow structure, coatings. . . . The reason we do it is because we can’t afford to have a failure.” In 1991, the FAA gave Heico the green light for its second part, a tube used in jet engines. That was key to winning over customers, as was Lufthansa’s investment in Heico—a tacit stamp of approval—six years later.\nAs their business gained altitude, Larry insisted they live by a blunt rule: “We don’t try to screw the customer.” Heico keeps its prices locked between a third to a half off what an original manufacturer would charge. Heico’s net margin hovers around 15%. It could be more than that if the Mendelsons pushed harder (and some defense products are more profitable). “They’ve historically been reluctant to print a margin over 20%,” says Hebert, the Canaccord Genuity analyst. “They never want to be perceived as gouging or excessively profiting from their airlines.”\nThe Mendelsons are shrewd buyers themselves, having in 2019 completed seven more acquisitions. They shop for owners or top executives who resemble them. “The companies we buy are very entrepreneurial—entrepreneurs that started years ago, started businesses in their garages,” says Larry. “They started with nothing,” which, he says, means “they watch every nickel.” Generally, the acquired businesses have around $10 million in earnings and margins north of 20%. The Mendelsons don’t usually buy an entire firm. More often than not, they leave a fifth of it in the hands of the owners or the chief executives running the place to keep them incentivized.\nVaughn Barnes, the cofounder of Corona, California-based Thermal Structures, is one such owner. He and his partners sold their business, a manufacturer of things like the insulation foil that cools a plane’s combustion engine, to Heico in 1999 for approximately $35 million. Sales then were around $17 million, and they’ve increased more than sixfold since. “As long as you do what you say you’re going to do, they”—the Mendelsons—“leave you alone,” Barnes says. “And they ask, ‘Do you need anything?’”\nA close-up of a device in Heico's Hollywood, Florida, facility that conducts metallurgical analysis on aircraft parts.\nSince the start, Larry, Eric and Victor—similar reflections of each other with their smiles, well-knotted neckties and cuff links—have operated in a particular way. “All major decisions have to be unanimous,” Larry says. “We will get together, and one [of us] might not agree, but when we’re all done, it’s all worked fine.” While Larry stays at home base in Miami, the brothers are on the road two days a week, reviewing operations at the company’s scattered facilities across the world. “Eric and Victor do the heavy lift,” admits Larry. “They operate the divisions,” with Eric mostly managing the business with the commercial airlines, while Victor handles the parts for defense aircraft. “I don’t micromanage them. I mean, if there is a particular issue, we sit down, and we talk about it.”\nThe Mendelsons purposefully live within 20 minutes of each other and the office, Eric in Miami Beach and Victor and Larry in Coconut Grove. Larry’s home is filled to the ceiling with his art, and he is an indefatigable collector (“I like Miró. I like Renoir. I like Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol.”), carefully cataloging each purchase in a manila folder. He dines often at the nearby Capitol Grill. (“The parking is easy.”)\nHeico has made a lot of other people wealthy, too. The company’s biggest shareholder, the Mendelsons’ friend Herbie Wertheim, is a billionaire partially from his 10% stake. But it’s not just Wertheim. The Mendelsons have long encouraged their employees to take advantage of a lucrative retirement plan. They match up to 5% of what workers sock away in their 401(k)s—not in cash but in Heico stock. So, put in $5,000, get $5,000 worth of Heico shares, which, of course, have done nothing in the past 29 years but wildly appreciate. In other words, the stock has turned a lot of ordinary Heiconians, especially early staffers, into millionaires.\nNo, that’s incorrect, Larry says. “Multimillionaires.”\nGet Forbes’ daily top headlines straight to your inbox for news on the world’s most important entrepreneurs and superstars, expert career advice and success secrets.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1399785"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6606724858283997,"wiki_prob":0.33932751417160034,"text":"English Premier League, Betting Preview 16 October\nBob Brogan\n3 months 3 days ago\t#827059 by Bob Brogan\nEnglish Premier League, Betting Preview 16 October was created by Bob Brogan\nThe English Premier League continues after a short break and we select 3 of Saturday’s matches to have a bet on.\n......................................................................................................................................\nwww.africanbettingclan.com\n@SAFBETTINGCLAN\nThe following user(s) said Thank You: spartanza, cross\nspartanza\n3 months 1 day ago\t#827060 by spartanza\nspartanza on topic English Premier League, Betting Preview 16 October\nGonna be an interesting weekend\n\"When the seagulls follow the trawler, it's because they think sardines will be thrown into the sea. Thank you very much.\"\n2 hours 3 minutes ago","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1003358"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6299460530281067,"wiki_prob":0.3700539469718933,"text":"An OBGYN Doctor on the Impact of Mississippi's abortion case\nBy Ari Shapiro,\nKaren Zamora, Patrick Jarenwattananon\nThe Supreme Court heard a case today which could ultimately reverse the constitutional right to an abortion. The justices are considering a Mississippi law that bans the procedure after 15 weeks, but the state of Mississippi argued further that the court's previous decisions establishing the right to an abortion were wrongly decided.\nSCOTT STEWART: Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey haunt our country. They have no basis in the Constitution. They have no home in our history or traditions.\nSHAPIRO: That's Mississippi Solicitor General Scott Stewart. One of those fighting to keep abortion legal is Dr. Jamila Perritt. She is president and CEO of Physicians for Reproductive Health. Welcome.\nJAMILA PERRITT: Thank you so much for having me.\nSHAPIRO: Today's arguments left many with the impression that the justices will hollow out Roe, if not overturn it altogether. Is that your sense?\nPERRITT: It's hard to say. I mean, we don't know what the justices are going to do, you know, or what the court is going to do until we have a decision in June. However, the conservative members of the court did signal an openness to upholding the abortion ban, but they're divided on whether to completely overturn previous decisions like Roe and Casey.\nSHAPIRO: Let's talk about those different options before them. First, walk us through, what happens if the justices adopt the most sweeping argument made by Mississippi lawyers, that there is no constitutional right to abortion? What would the immediate consequences across the U.S. be?\nPERRITT: Well, I want to start by just being really clear. I'm not a lawyer. I'm not a politician. I'm a doctor. And as a doctor, I take care of real people, people who will be deeply impacted by overturning - or upholding this legislation and overturning access to abortion care. What that means for folks in Mississippi and around the country is whether or not you have access to the safe, essential, medically necessary care is going to depend wholly on where you live in the country and what kind of resources you have access to.\nSHAPIRO: Tell us more about that. I mean, it doesn't affect everybody equally. Who would be most affected by it?\nPERRITT: Well, it's not going to affect everyone equally, because access to abortion has never been equal around the country. Folks with means, with resources will always have access to this care regardless of what happens at the level of the Supreme Court. We saw that happening prior to Roe v. Wade, and we'll see that - and we see that continuing to happen with state level abortion restrictions around the country. So what that means is that those living on low income - young people, people of color in particular, immigrants, folks who don't have child care, who don't have time off from work - are always going to be left out from any - are going to be deeply impacted by anything that restricts access to abortion care. And so this is going to have a disproportionate and inequitable impact on many communities.\nSHAPIRO: You're describing the impact on patients. What about for doctors who perform abortions?\nPERRITT: I think it's complicated for doctors who perform abortions. It's - one of the oaths that we take when we are entering and leaving medical school is to make sure that we are supporting people with the care that they need in the way that they needed, this oath to first do no harm. And by passing these kinds of restrictions, it is directly misaligned with our oath to follow ethical guidelines in providing individuals with non-judgmental and complete patient care. We see this reflected in statements like those that come out of the leading medical organizations, including the American College of OBGYNs, the American Medical Association, who oppose these limits on accessing safe and essential medical care like abortion care.\nSHAPIRO: And so what happens when a doctor is faced with that apparent conflict?\nPERRITT: Well, we only have to look to states like Texas, to what's happening now in Mississippi and Tennessee and Ohio to find out what the impact is. We have physicians and health care providers who support abortion care really put in a difficult place of trying to be able to provide this comprehensive care to the communities that they serve and being put in the - in a position to have to make really tough decisions about what they can and cannot say, who they can and cannot refer to care. And that's not medicine. That's not ethical.\nSHAPIRO: If we are looking at a future where the U.S. has a patchwork of state laws regarding the legality of abortion, describe what that means in practical terms for somebody who wants to end a pregnancy.\nPERRITT: What that means is you have to be able to make the arrangements. You need to have money. You need to have time. You need to have resources. You need to be able to find a provider who is willing to care for you. Often what that means is traveling hundreds, sometimes thousands of miles to be able to get care. And so it makes it exceedingly difficult. But the reality is that that's the point, right? That's the point of passing these state-level restrictions. The point is to eliminate access to abortion, period. So whether it shows up in gestational age bands like we're seeing in Mississippi, whether it looks like trap laws, whether it looks like physician providing only restrictions on care, the intent is the same.\nSHAPIRO: And so just briefly, what do you think the response from abortion rights supporters needs to be?\nPERRITT: Well, where - we saw that response today. We're organizing. We're lifting our voices. We're centering the stories of people who've had an abortion, people who are providing abortions. And so we're really making sure that folks understand there is no state in the country where the majority of people do not support access to abortion care. We need to say that frequently and often.\nSHAPIRO: Dr. Jamila Perritt is president and CEO of Physicians for Reproductive Health. Thank you very much.\nPERRITT: Thank you so much for having me.\nSHAPIRO: And in another part of the program, we hear from an abortion rights opponent. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.\nKaren Zamora\nSee stories by Karen Zamora","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1039145"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9162588119506836,"wiki_prob":0.9162588119506836,"text":"Home / Music /\nPrince Was Supposed To Be on Michael Jackson’s Song ‘Bad’ but It Never Happened\nAramide Tinubu\nPrince and Michael Jackson are two of the most legendary entertainers of all time, but they didn’t always agree. In fact, the feud between the pair began in 1983 when they both attended a James Brown concert.\nDuring the concert, the “Off the Wall” singer wowed the crowd with his dance moves and moonwalks. Prince followed suit. However, in a rare misstep, he fell into the crowd taking down a prop with him. From then on, the men never saw eye to eye.\n“It was just very obvious what the hell happened — [Prince] made a d*mn fool out of himself.,” Quincy Jones told GQ in 2018. “Michael went up there, in 40 seconds, sang ‘I love you, I love you.’ Then they went up-tempo, and he did a little dance and did the moonwalk and whispered in [James Brown’s] ear, ‘Call Prince up — I dare him to follow me.’” Still, despite their feud, the men almost made an epic record together.\nPrince | Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images\nMichael Jackson’s ‘Bad’ was one one of the biggest songs of his career\nNo one knew how Jackson would top his iconic 1982 album “Thriller,” which is still one of the best-selling albums of all time. However, when he released the follow-up album “Bad,” in 1987, there were no more questions.\n“Bad” was the final collaboration between Jackson and Quincy Jones, and it was highly anticipated since it was his first album in five years. “Bad” and the single of the same name were still enormously successful even without Prince, who was supposed to be featured on the song.\nRELATED: What Was Michael Jackson’s Net Worth At the Time of His Death?\nPrince was supposed to be featured on Michael Jackson’s ‘Bad’\nAs two of the most legendary performers of all time, it would have been beyond comprehension to hear Prince sing with Jackson on “Bad.” That was the original plan for the sequel but, instead, fans will notice that actor Wesley Snipes is in the video with the King of Pop.\n“You know that Wesley Snipes character [from the video]? That would have been me,” Prince explained in a 1997 interview with Chris Rock.\nHowever, Snipes has boasted that Jackson decided to replace him with Prince on a whim. “Me and Prince were auditioning together, and I blew Prince out of the water,” he claimed in a 2017 interview with Conan O’Brien. “Michael had told Prince that he had the role, and then he met me and kicked Prince to the curb. Imagine that.”\nWhile we mostly think the Blade actor was joking, there is a reason why Prince and the Jackson 5 legend never appeared on a song together.\nPrince hated the lyrics to Michael Jackson’s ‘Bad’\nJackson had written, produced, and composed the song with Jones. However, some of the lyrics made Prince take pause. It appears that the “1999” singer was not so comfy with some of the words used.\n“You run that video in your mind,” Prince told Rock. “The first line in that song is, ‘your butt is mine’ so I was saying, ‘Who gonna sing that to whom? Because you sure ain’t singing it to me, and I sure ain’t singing it to you.’ So right there we got a problem.”\nPrince’s band member and former fiancée, Susannah Melvoin remembers Prince reworking the song, but Jackson ultimately rejecting it. On the podcast Love City with Toure, Melvoin said,\nPrince] couldn’t believe Michael had the nerve to call it “I’m Bad.” There’s nothing badass about him. He could not let Michael get away with it. Not only was he not going to sing it with him, he went into the studio and re-recorded it to what he thought it should be and sent it back to Michael. Like ‘No. And by the way, this is what it should be.’ That was the end of that. But that’s how Prince was.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line599284"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5569804906845093,"wiki_prob":0.4430195093154907,"text":"Botswana steps up anti doping measures\nThe Botswana National Olympic Committee (BNOC) has moved a step forward in its endeavours to protect local athletes against involuntary taking of banned substances.\nIn what is considered a positive development, the BNOC has now trained at least one medical doctor to deal with the Therapeutic Use Exemption (TUE) for local athletes. The move is expected to ensure athletes with chronic diseases and those with need for medicines at different times do not fall victim to anti doping tests and sanctions and are not sidelined from active competition.\nSpeaking in an interview, BNOC Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Tuelo Serufho said the move to train local doctors is part of Botswana’s plan to ensure deserving and honest athletes are not banned from sport for doping despite using medicines sanctioned by doctors. “It is a well known fact that some athletes have chronic illnesses and constantly need to use prescription drugs.\nThe international sports federations are aware of this and the plan is that athletes with such illnesses should not be marginalised from active competition. TUE is made to address this while also curbing dishonest athletes from using prohibited substances,” the BNOC CEO explained.\nHe said under the TUE, athletes with chronic illnesses or in need of certain medicines must apply for use of prescription drugs, something that ensures they can be exonerated should their samples return an adverse analytical finding during anti doping tests. On what measures will be taken to ensure that the TUE is not abused, Serufho said a panel of doctors have to agree to the exemption before it can be granted to the athlete, something which ensures fairness in the process. In the case of Botswana, the BNOC CEO said the panel to look at the TUE of local athletes will include a local doctor and some doctors from neighboring South Africa.\n“Even the athletes using prescription drugs for chronic illnesses can be easily monitored under the system. For any athlete using prescription drugs, there is always a certain level or amount of such drugs to be found in his system at any given time. Should an athlete be found to have more than the acceptable amount in his/her sample analysis, that athlete will be liable to be taken to task for doping violations,” the BNOC CEO explained.\nHe however cautioned that it is still the responsibility of an individual athlete to ensure that where possible, only medicines without banned substances are used. “We encourage athletes not to buy over the counter medications for any illnesses, but rather go for prescription medicines. This will ensure that where they get caught in anti doping stings, they have detailed documents to prove their innocence,” Serufho said. To ensure that athletes do not involuntarily use banned substances, the BNOC CEO said athletes are always encouraged to ask their pharmacists whether the drugs prescribed to them are free of banned substances.\n“This is the reason why a pocket sized book listing all the banned substances has been made for athletes. This is to ensure that they can always show it to their pharmacists to ascertain that the medicines they prescribe are free from banned substances and will also need documents from such Pharmacists confirming this,” Serufho said.\nMeanwhile, the BNOC CEO has alluded that local sport is in need of an independent National Anti Doping Organisation (NADO). He said as such, the BNOC will continue engaging all stakeholders to help the country have its own NADO. He said while the government has been willing to help, the economic downturn that had engulfed the world and Botswana in particular had restricted the country from taking this big step. The BNOC CEO concluded by saying that when finances become available, a fully fledged NADO will be established in the country.\nBotswana steps up anti doping campaigns\nBotswana Athletics optimistic of meeting new anti doping obligations\nBotswana steps up campaign to woo investors","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line39022"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7112383246421814,"wiki_prob":0.2887616753578186,"text":"Bert Seager is an internationally recognized jazz performer and composer. His seventeen compact discs have won him unanimous critical acclaim from the New York Times, Keyboard Magazine, The Chicago Tribune, The Boston Globe and many other publications.\nBert’s compositions, improvisations and teaching reflect both an inward and outward-looking view of life and music. He plays a varied program of originals, jazz classics and spontaneous music: always striving for transparency – framing each song’s improvised narrative in a playful conversation.\nBert has performed and recorded with jazz numerous luminaries. He has toured with his band extensively both in the United States and internationally in China, Hungary, Bulgaria, Ecuador, Peru, Canada, Israel, Jordan, and Japan.\nBert is on the faculty of the New England Conservatory of Music, and has been a recipient of a National Endowment of the Arts grant for jazz.\nHe is also a three-time winner of an extended residency in music composition at MacDowell, the artists’ colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire.\nHe is a graduate of Haverford College and earned a masters degree from the New England Conservatory of Music in 1984.\nBert is an official Steinway artist","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1533088"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5963140726089478,"wiki_prob":0.40368592739105225,"text":"Diploma on-lineFind CareersFor EnterprisePara alunos\nEntendo a indústria da música: quanto vale a música?\nUniversidade Vanderbilt\n4.5 (139 classificações)\nThis course will examine the music industry in the United States, with the unique perspective gained by Vanderbilt University’s location in Nashville, TN. Nashville is a major center of music in the United States, and the music created here has a global reach, particularly in the country, rock, pop, singer-songwriter, and Americana genres. However, students will learn that the basic principles of recording, marketing, copyright, licensing, and live performance are the same, regardless of musical style or genre. The music business is one of the most rapidly changing industries in the US today. It is also an industry filled with contradiction, and media headlines and anecdotal stories often add to the confusion. Here are just a few statements paraphrased from recent news stories: * The music business has collapsed * Demand for music is expanding at the greatest rate in history * Historic recording studios are closing at an alarming rate * More people are making recordings than ever before * Musicians usually lose money touring * Musicians usually make money touring * Major artist pulls songs off streaming services because they don’t pay fairly * Major artist makes a fortune from streaming services * People won’t buy records anymore * Vinyl record sales are soaring This course will attempt to make sense of these seemingly contradictory trends and data, outline the basic structure and mechanisms of today’s music industry, and encourage students to think critically and entrepreneurially about the future of music. Leaders from various areas of the music business will lend their perspectives through in-depth interviews, and footage from a recording session will give learners a behind the scenes look at how a song goes from the spark of an idea hummed into a cell phone to a finished recording. Participants will grapple with questions about art and commerce which are both timeless and crucially important today, and will emerge from this course with tools allowing them to make more informed decisions as creators, promoters, and consumers of music. Course launches February 19, 2016.\nLoved it.\\n\\nIt gave me insight to how thing work in this business.\\n\\nGreat Job.\nit's great, all vivid content and clear explanations.\nRecording & Record Labels, Part 1\nPart 1 of this module will cover the basics of audio recording. You’ll learn about the pros and cons of home vs. studio recording, hear perspectives from both home and professional studio owners, and learn about different jobs and roles in recording environments. Finally, you will watch the evolution of the theme song for our course, starting with a rough demo sung into a phone recording app, and following through to the end of the recording session with professional musicians in Nashville.\nIntroduction1:48\nHome Recording3:57\nInterview: Dave Coleman43:18\nProfessional Studio Recording2:49\nInterview: John McBride55:37\nA Walk Through Blackbird Studio12:03\nStudio Jobs & Roles3:47\nHome vs Studio4:24\nEvolution of a Song Recording19:01\nJen Gunderman\nAssistant Professor of Musicology\nSelecionar um idiomaInglês\n[MUSIC] Home audio recording has been steadily increasing in popularity. It's actually possible to make an entire recording in your bedroom these days on a laptop computer. There's been a decrease in the cost of professional grade audio equipment that makes it possible. There has been an increase in access to technology that allows for recordings to be made at home. A lot of the work that gets done in a home recording studios are just done out of necessity. The recording budgets from record labels and other sources are not what they used to be and so people make do with what they have. The setup that people have in their homes range wildly in complexity and professionalism. Anyone can take a little mini recorder on a smartphone or an iPad or a laptop. Make a quickie video or recording and upload it to YouTube in no time. But our focus here's going to be on home recording studios that are little bit more elaborate and that strive to make professional sounding recordings that can be distributed and sold. The components of a home studio vary from person to person and it really depends on the style of music that the person wants to make. That will determine what kind of components are a part of these home studios. Every home studio however's, going to need a recording device of some sort. Digital audio workstations are very common. And this is computer software that's used on a computer, [LAUGH] plus a hardware audio interface, something that works in between the instrument or the voice and the computer in the recording process. Some people still prefer to work on analog tape. There's a lot of love for the analog format still, but the tape machines tend to be very large, and so most home studios use digital setups. Because of the size of these tape machines, those big analog machines are normally found just in professional studios. You're also going to need a motorized system in your home studio. This can include speakers, so that you can here playback of what the musicians have done. And usually also includes a headphone system as well. Both for the producer and engineer, and for the musicians in your room who need to be able to hear what they're doing when they're playing. You're going to need some microphones, probably. You're going to need some musical instruments. Although it is true that if you are programming electronic music or you're working in EDM or you're a DJ, you may not need all that much in the way of either microphones or instruments. A keyboard or even some software that generates beats could be all you need to make the music that you like. As a home studio owners budget allows, they can add other pieces of gear which help to make the recording sound more professional. You may add a mixing board that helps get the sound that you want. There are also outboard gear pieces like compressors, pre-amps, and effects units, reverb units and so forth, and additional playback monitors. A lot of home studios that I've worked in will have, for example, big speakers and a set of small speakers too, so you can hear the difference in different kinds of audio playback systems. Many sound effects are available as software plugins. And so sometimes the choice a person has is whether you want the actual physical piece of gear or a piece of software that sort of emulates the piece of hardware that you can also get. The interesting thing about all of this is that it's possible to build up a home studio in a modular kind of way. You can learn as you go. You can figure out what is most important to you in terms of the sounds that you're trying to create. And you can save up money [LAUGH] along the way to buy that microphone that you're really wanting or buy the compressor that you're really wanting. And along the way, as your gear gets better, you can increase the professional sounds of your recordings. [MUSIC] [SOUND] >> [APPLAUSE]","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line337230"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6546759605407715,"wiki_prob":0.3453240394592285,"text":"Colombia | English\nLiebherr Group: Products & Services for Colombia\nOther websites for Colombia\n06/13/2018 Liebherr sponsors charitable trust's two-day engineering event at Vertikal Days\nThe “Crane Off” competition was a great success.\nLiebherr-Great Britain Ltd was delighted to sponsor the two-day “My Future My Choice” event for the fourth consecutive year at this year’s Vertikal Days at Donington Park, United Kingdom. “My Future My Choice”, part of the Bristol Initiative Charitable Trust, is a charity that provides opportunities for young people to engage with the world outside school. One of its aims is the promotion of engineering careers to young people.\nA total of 60 Year 10 and Year 11 students from Lees Brook Community School in Chaddesden, Derby, and Chellaston Academy, also in Derby, took part and were given an insight into what a career in engineering could involve by participating in a practical project. As well as working with Liebherr apprentices to build a crane from a cardboard template and taking part in a “Crane Off” competition, the students had the opportunity to operate a Liebherr LTM 1040-2.1, generously supplied by Bryn Thomas Cranes.\n“Business support is invaluable to the work we do and the team from Liebherr have striven each year to build on the exceptional experience they provide for the students at Vertikal Days”, Polly Barnes from “My Future My Choice” said. “Feedback from the students shows that they have a far greater understanding of the range of opportunities available to them in the lifting and access industry as a result of attending the Lifting Aspirations workshops at Vertikal Days. Particularly pleasing was the number of girls keen to discuss possible career pathways in an industry that offers great variety of opportunity”.\nEd Hudson, General Manager of Customer and Product Support for mobile and crawler cranes at Liebherr-Great Britain Ltd, concluded: “All the students who took part were very engaged in the activities and I hope that many of them will be talking to Liebherr about careers in a few years’ time”.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line163696"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6350504159927368,"wiki_prob":0.3649495840072632,"text":"Pavol Krajcer\nI put there just a blank paper because there was nobody who represented me\nPavol Krajcer, Student\nA lot of my views about communism are from my parents. Both of my parents had negative attitudes towards communism. My mom’s family in Nitra had a piece of land and a factory so they lost it when private ownership was banned. It was like it was stolen from them. The communists harassed her father, my grandfather, until he died. My dad could not get into the university that he wanted to, despite being a good student, because his father was not a member of the party. So they did not have a good experience with communism.\nNormally I don’t think about how much freedom I have because I don’t know what it looks like to live without freedom, but sometimes it hits me. When my dad talks about what it was like when he was growing up I realize how different it is for me. I have never been chased by somebody or watched by somebody so I don’t know how that feels. But to have the freedom to travel and the right to vote freely in an election I know how that feels and these freedoms are important.\nIn the most recent election I went to vote because I think that it’s my duty, but I put there just a blank, white paper because there was really nobody who I agreed with or who represented me. It is stupid for me to not vote, so I went, but I don’t feel that it is right to vote for people who I don’t feel good about.\nSometimes I think that I might want to get into politics because I have the feeling that I want to change something, but you see a lot of young people who went into politics full of ideals and after a couple of years they change. I don’t want that to happen to me - to lose my faith. But I am also an idealist and I want to make change, maybe by being a teacher. Everybody can make change at some level.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1803201"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5840190649032593,"wiki_prob":0.5840190649032593,"text":"https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-steel-projects-worse-than-expected-shipments-in-2015-1446589798\nU.S. Sets New Duties on Chinese Steel\nRuling places preliminary duties of up to 236% on some imports; U.S. Steel posts another loss\nU.S. Steel posted another quarterly loss and cut its outlook for shipments and prices amid what it called excessive imports.\nPhoto: U.S. Steel via Bloomberg News\nJohn W. Miller\n@wsjmiller\nJohn.Miller@wsj.com\nUpdated Nov. 3, 2015 8:51 pm ET\nThe U.S. Department of Commerce slapped preliminary duties on some steel from China on Tuesday, as U.S. Steel Corp. X -0.12% posted another quarterly loss and cut its outlook for shipments and prices amid what it called excessive imports.\nSix American steelmakers including U.S. Steel filed three trade complaints earlier this year. On Tuesday, they received a preliminary ruling on the first as the Commerce Department established preliminary duties of up to 236% on imports of corrosion-resistant steel from China. The tariff goes into effect immediately and will be set for five years if a final ruling in favor of the duty is made in January.\nPittsburgh-based U.S. Steel on Tuesday reported a net loss of $173 million, or $1.18 a share, as total shipments fell 25% from a year earlier, to 3.9 million tons.\nThe effect of the sharp drop in volumes was magnified by lower prices. The benchmark hot-rolled coil price in the U.S. stands at $393 a ton, down by more than a third from the start of the year, reflecting pressure on global prices from a flood of Chinese steel exports. In the first nine months of 2015, China exported 71.4 million tons of steel, up 31% from the same period in 2014, though U.S. imports from China declined slightly in that time.\nU.S. Steel Chief Executive Mario Longhi pointed to the role of Chinese imports in a company statement Tuesday, saying that “excessively high levels of imports, much of which we believe are unfairly traded” hit steel prices.\nThe company said in July that it expected improved market conditions in the second half as supply chain inventories rebalanced, primarily in flat-rolled markets.\nThe imports, Mr. Longhi said Tuesday, “had a negative impact on the rebalancing of supply chain inventories, decreasing customer order rates in the second half of the year.” As a result, the company said it expected significantly lower shipments and average realized prices than previously projected.\nA U.S. Steel spokeswoman said the tariffs were “a good first step” and that the company is looking forward to the next decision, “encouraged that our federal agencies tasked with this critical oversight and enforcement of our trade laws will halt these harmful, illegal and unfair practices.”\nChina’s Commerce Ministry declined immediate comment, saying it was looking into the decision. Phone calls to the China Iron and Steel Association weren’t answered.\nSteelmakers in China and other countries have denied taking advantage of domestic subsidies or other favors to dump low-cost steel on U.S. markets.\nOverall, imports of steel into the U.S. are slightly down in 2015, but they have increased dramatically for certain key steel categories, including the corrosion-resistant steel hit by the preliminary tariff.\nMany categories of steel are offered at such low rates that they’re “toxic for pricing,” said Phil Gibbs, an analyst for Cleveland-based Keybanc Capital Markets.\nThe tariffs will provide some support for prices in the U.S., but some analysts say companies are going to have make longer-term structural changes.\n“We could see steel prices stay this low for the next 10 years,” Mr. Gibbs said.\nU.S. Steel has now lost money in eight of the past 10 quarters, and the company has reported losses totaling $509 million so far this year. Even the flat-rolled segment, which sells to the booming automotive industry and is supposed to be one of the company’s most lucrative units, lost money. Its earnings declined to a $18 million loss from a $347 million profit in the third quarter of 2014.\nThe Commerce Department also set smaller duties on imports from India, South Korea and Italy. A separate ruling on the case will be issued in December.\n—Rose Yu in Shanghai contributed to this article.\nWrite to John W. Miller at john.miller@wsj.com","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line598166"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8839336037635803,"wiki_prob":0.8839336037635803,"text":"Winter Storm Jonas: New Jersey Hit Hard With Snow, Flooding, Street Closures And High Tides Reported Along Coast\nBy Adam Lidgett @AdamLidgett\nFloodwater covers Third Avenue in Stone Harbor, New Jersey, because of the major winter storm that struck the U.S. Northeast Jan. 23, 2016. Photo: Andrew Renneisen/Getty Images\nUPDATE: 7:55 p.m. EST — The blizzard sweeping across the East Coast of the country has left 18 people dead, the Associated Press reported Saturday. Three people died in New York while shoveling snow, and medical examiners were working to determine the exact causes of their deaths. The storm is expected to be among the worst to ever hit the city.\nIn the nation’s capital, both Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport and Washington Dulles International Airport were expected to remain closed through Sunday. Conditions there forced both Vice President Joe Biden and Defense Secretary Ash Carter to have their flights diverted to Florida, the Hill reported.\nUPDATE: 3:45 p.m. EST — The Associated Press has put the current death toll resulting from the winter storm at 12, including a fatal heart attack caused by shoveling snow and crashes on icy highways and streets.\nNew Jersey's coastal areas took a heavy pounding from the severe winter storm that pounded the Northeast United States with snow Saturday, with flooding and huge tides recorded in some areas of the state still recovering from the 2012 Hurricane Sandy. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie declared a state of emergency Friday night, and New Jersey Transit suspended service a couple of hours later, WCBS-TV of New York reported.\nThe storm was part of a massive system that blanketed a large area stretching from Tennessee and Kentucky to New England. About 2 feet of snow swamped the Washington area, and hundreds of accidents and thousands of power outages were reported in the storm's path. New York City officials said a travel ban would go into effect at 2:30 p.m., and anyone out on the street after that would be subject to arrest.\nParts of Sea Isle City and Ocean City, New Jersey, reported flooded streets, and North Wildwood Mayor Patrick Rosenello said the flooding was so rampant it reminded him of what the area experienced with Sandy, WCAU-TV of Philadelphia reported. Hotels have reported wind damage, cars have been abandoned on the street, and thousands of New Jersey residents have been left without power.\nCurrent view of JFK in Sea Isle #6abcAction #stormjonas pic.twitter.com/tLwlMqZnqF\n— Sea Isle Chamber (@SeaIsleChamber) January 23, 2016\nIn the flooded streets of Wildwood, ice could be seen in the water, which appeared to move like a small river, according to a tweet. Huge waves could also be seen pounding the coast of Atlantic City.\nIce barges and cold water Rapids in Wildwood, NJ. @ACPressSkeldon pic.twitter.com/5A14tmeX58\n— Jonathan Long (@Jonathan_Long91) January 23, 2016\nFirst tide took lower half of Arizona ave water came up thur floor just like Sandy @ACPress_Hughes @ACPressSkeldon pic.twitter.com/ZwjfNSNNis\n— City Of Atlantic (@CityOfAtlantic) January 23, 2016\nGreat Channel and Stone Harbor in New Jersey have seen so much flooding, the record set during Sandy was broken, Weather.com reported. Some areas of Ocean County have been under a voluntary evacuation order, while a mandatory evacuation order was issued for Barnegat.\nTidal flooding forced the closure of Route 30, which runs through Atlantic City, Saturday morning. Across the entire length of the New Jersey Turnpike, the speed limit was reduced by officials to 35 mph, but Christie warned people to stay off the roads until the storm passes.\nAdding to the storm was the weekend’s full moon, which increased the size of the tides pounding the coast, NBC News reported. The high winds already reported may have pushed these high tides even farther up the coastline.\nAbout 50 people around Atlantic City were displaced from their homes as a result of flooding. Some 90,000 New Jersey residents were without power by noon Saturday, USA Today reported.\nAt least 10 people have died as a result of the storm. A man in Fort Washington, Maryland, shoveling snow Saturday morning suffered a apparent fatal heart attack, local media reported.\nSnow totals were steadily increasing in many areas across the United States, and in some areas were heading to historic levels. About 20-25 inches of snow was expected in the Washington area, and if the level reaches 28 inches, it will be the largest snowfall on record in the district.\nIn the New York City area, snow totals have measured 6-12 inches, while in Philadelphia the unofficial count was at 17 inches as of 11 a.m., ABC News reported. New Jersey has seen 9-14 inches, while some areas of Virginia have seen as much as 30 inches of snow.\nAt noon, all Metropolitan Transportation Authority bus service in New York was suspended due to the weather, while subway service was to run with delays, DNAinfo.com reported. Commuter rail and above-ground subway service was to be suspended at 4 p.m. Service out of New York City’s airports, John F. Kennedy International and LaGuardia, was canceled as well.\nDrivers have been experiencing significant road trouble, with parts of the Pennsylvania Turnpike turned into parking lots. The Duquesne men’s basketball team, traveling back to Pittsburgh from a game at George Mason, got stranded Friday night in the snow, and as of noon Saturday, the team still was stranded, the team’s Twitter account revealed.\nWe're not in this alone! Dukes hanging out with middle schoolers from Iowa on the bus stuck next to us pic.twitter.com/8vBWa1x68c\n— Duquesne Basketball (@DuqMBB) January 23, 2016\nStudents from as far as Nebraska were stuck on the Pennsylvania Turnpike. About 330 students and chaperones from Omaha who were traveling home after attending the March for Life in Washington when they got stuck on the road, local media reported.\nJust before noon, the National Guard arrived to help the stranded drivers, the Pennsylvania Turnpike’s Twitter account said. Water and rations were being given to those stranded by fire and rescue crews Saturday.\nFire & rescue crew has been providing water & rations to stranded motorists @PA_Turnpike. Need assistance? Dial *11\n— PennsylvaniaTurnpike (@PA_Turnpike) January 23, 2016\nNew York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Saturday he was issuing a travel ban for later Saturday, closing roads in New York City, downstate New York and on Long Island by 2:30 p.m., local media said on Twitter. Two of the MTA’s train lines, Metro North and the Long Island Railroad, will be shut down starting at 4 p.m.\nBlizzard Creeps North After Dumping 2 Feet On DC\nNY, DC Mayors Make Urgent Pleas To Drivers","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1843674"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8387622237205505,"wiki_prob":0.8387622237205505,"text":"C.J.R. de Lisle\nTune of the Day: Presto by Bellinzani\nfrom Recorder Sonata in B-flat major\nThis Presto is the second movement of the first sonata from Sonate a flauto solo con cembalo, o violoncello (“Sonatas for solo flute with harpsichord or cello”) by Italian Baroque composer Paolo Benedetto Bellinzani, originally published in Venice in 1720.\nCategories: Baroque Sonatas Difficulty: intermediate\nTuesday 2 June 2020\nTune of the Day: Duet in E major by Berbiguier\nfrom “36 Petits Duos Mélodiques Faciles et Chantants”\nThis is the eleventh duet from Trente-six Petits Duos Mélodiques Faciles et Chantants pour deux Flûtes (36 Easy Flute Duets) by French Romantic composer Benoit Tranquille Berbiguier.\nCategories: Romantic Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate\nTune of the Day: Study in D major by Hugues\nfrom “30 Studies”\nThis study in double tonguing is the sixteenth piece from 30 Studi, Op. 32, by Italian flutist, composer and arranger Luigi Hugues.\nThis study has also been published as the eleventh piece in a selection of 24 Studies for Flute from Hugues's Opp. 32 and 75.\nCategories: Double tonguing Etudes Romantic Written for Flute Difficulty: intermediate\nThursday 4 June 2020\nTune of the Day: Ciuri, ciuri\nTraditional Italian song\n“Ciuri ciuri” (“Flowers, flowers”) is one of the most popular folk songs from the Italian island of Sicily. Its melody was written in 1883 by composer and conductor Francesco Paolo Frontini to lyrics by an unknown author.\nFlowers, flowers of all the year,\nThe love you gave me I give you back.\nFriday 5 June 2020\nfrom Flute Sonata in G major\nThis Vivace is the second movement of the last of 12 sonatas for flute and continuo by Italian composer Pietro Antonio Locatelli, originally published in Amsterdam in 1732.\nTune of the Day: Will You Come to the Bower\nTraditional Irish song, arranged for two flutes\nThis song was composed by the famous Irish poet, singer and songwriter Thomas Moore, based on an earlier song and tune by the same title.\nWill you come to the bower I have shaded for you?\nOur bed shall be roses all spangled with dew.\nWill you, will you, will you, will you\nCome to the bower?\nAccording to tradition, this tune was played by a fifer and drummer from the rag-tag army of Sam Houston at the battle of San Jacinto in 1836. However, according to Davis family lore, there were no fifers or drummers in Houston's forces at the time, only two fiddlers. Houston's plan was to draw near the Mexican forces under Santa Anna by parading his men, as if on drill, before sounding a final charge. He hoped such a non-aggressive appearing maneuver would allay the Mexican alertness and allow him an element of surprise. To that end, he had the fiddlers play something the Texans would know, but not particularly martial in nature. Not knowing any marches, the fiddlers over and over played “Will You Come to the Bower?”, a love song popular on the frontier, and it was to the strains of the song on stringed instruments that the Texans marched in their crude fashion. Houston's trick worked, and he was victorious.\nDuring the second half of the 19th century, the song was adopted by the Fenian movement (a movement dedicated to the establishment of an independent Irish Republic), and a new lyric gained wide currency:\nWill you come to the bower o’er the free boundless ocean,\nWhere the stupendous waves roll in thundering motion;\nWhere the mermaids are seen and the fierce tempest gathers,\nTo loved Erin the green, the dear land of our fathers.\nWill you come, will you, will you, will you come to the bower?\nThe present arrangement for two flutes appeared in Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine, published in 1833.\nCategories: Love songs Patriotic Traditional/Folk Difficulty: intermediate\nSunday 7 June 2020\nTune of the Day: Study in E minor by Prill\nfrom “24 Studies for the Development of Technique”\nThis is the fourth piece from 24 Etüden zur Förderung der Technik (24 Studies for the Development of Technique), Op. 12, by German flutist Emil Prill. It was first published in Bremen in 1913.\nTune of the Day: Sarsfield's Lamentation\nThe oldest appearance of this tune is in The Hibernian Muse, printed in London in 1787. Tune collector Francis O'Neill writes:\nThis lamentation derives its importance from the historical prominence of General Sarsfield as the Irish Commander at the Siege of Limerick. That circumstance obviously accounts for its being confounded in later times with “Limerick's Lamentation”.\nTune of the Day: Largo by Bellinzani\nThis Largo in G minor is the third movement of the first sonata from Sonate a flauto solo con cembalo, o violoncello (“Sonatas for solo flute with harpsichord or cello”) by Italian Baroque composer Paolo Benedetto Bellinzani, originally published in Venice in 1720.\nCategories: Baroque Sonatas Difficulty: easy\nTune of the Day: Duet in D major by Berbiguier\nThis is the twelfth duet from Trente-six Petits Duos Mélodiques Faciles et Chantants pour deux Flûtes (36 Easy Flute Duets) by French Romantic composer Benoit Tranquille Berbiguier.\nTune of the Day: Study in F-sharp major by Hugues\nToday's piece is the fourteenth study from 30 Studi, Op. 32, by Italian flutist, composer and arranger Luigi Hugues.\nThis study has also been published as the twelfth piece in a selection of 24 Studies for Flute from Hugues's Opp. 32 and 75.\nTune of the Day: Eriskay Love Lilt\nTraditional Scottish air\nThis lovely little love song is named after Eriskay, a small island in the southern section of the Westen Isles of Scotland. It is famous as the place where Bonnie Prince Charlie first landed at the start of his ill-fated Jacobite Rebellion in 1745.\nWhen I’m lonely, dear white heart,\nBlack the night and wild the sea,\nBy love’s light, my foot finds\nThe old pathway to me.\nThanks to Peter for suggesting this tune!\nCategories: Love songs Slow airs Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy\nTune of the Day: Allegro by Locatelli\nThis Allegro is the third movement of the last of 12 sonatas for flute and continuo by Italian composer Pietro Antonio Locatelli, originally published in Amsterdam in 1732.\nTune of the Day: The Carnival of Venice\nThe “Carnival of Venice” folk tune traces its roots back to at least the early 19th century, when it was popularized by violinist Niccolò Paganini, who wrote twenty variations on the original tune. Since then, the tune has been used for a number of popular songs such as “If You Should Go to Venice” and “My Hat, It Has Three Corners”. As you probably know, there is also a famous arrangement for the flute by Briccialdi.\nThe present arrangement for two flutes appeared in Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine, published in Philadelphia in 1833.\nCategories: Nursery rhymes Traditional/Folk Difficulty: easy\nTune of the Day: Study in D major by Prill\nThis is the fifth piece from 24 Etüden zur Förderung der Technik (24 Studies for the Development of Technique), Op. 12, by German flutist Emil Prill. It was first published in Bremen in 1913.\nTune of the Day: Now is the Hour\nPopular 20th-century song\nThe origins of this popular song are unclear. It has been credited to several people, and is often erroneously described as a traditional Māori (the indigenous Polynesian people of New Zealand) song.\nThe tune first became known in 1913, when it was published by W.H. Paling and Co. as a piano-variations piece in Australia, called “Swiss Cradle Song” and credited to “Clement Scott”. Some sources say that, after a tour of New Zealand, the British music critic and travel writer Clement Scott wrote the tune. However, the family of an Australian, Albert Saunders, has long claimed that the “Clement Scott” who wrote the tune is a pseudonym for Saunders. Australian composer Clarence Elkin also claimed to be the author.\nMāori words were added around 1915 and the tune was slightly changed. It became known as “Pō Atarau” and was used as a farewell to Māori soldiers going to the First World War. After this, some New Zealanders mistakenly thought the song was an old Māori folksong.\nThe song achieved world-wide popularity in 1948, when no less than seven recordings of the song reached the Billboard charts in the USA. The most notable of these recordings was Bing Crosby's, which was No. 1 for three weeks, and (quite appropriately, considering the lyrics) the final No. 1 hit of his career.\nNow is the hour, when we must say goodbye.\nSoon you'll be sailing far across the sea.\nWhile you're away, oh, then, remember me.\nWhen you return, you'll find me waiting here.\nTune of the Day: Allegro by Bellinzani\nThis is the fourth and final movement of the first sonata from Sonate a flauto solo con cembalo, o violoncello (“Sonatas for solo flute with harpsichord or cello”) by Italian Baroque composer Paolo Benedetto Bellinzani, originally published in Venice in 1720.\nThis movement has actually no tempo indication in the original manuscript, but it usually appears as an “Allegro” in modern editions.\nThis is the thirteenth duet from Trente-six Petits Duos Mélodiques Faciles et Chantants pour deux Flûtes (36 Easy Flute Duets) by French Romantic composer Benoit Tranquille Berbiguier.\nCategories: Romantic Written for Flute Difficulty: easy\nTune of the Day: Study in A major by Hugues\nfrom “40 New Studies”\nToday's piece is the seventeenth study from 40 Nuovi Studi, Op. 75, by Italian flutist, composer and arranger Luigi Hugues.\nThis study has also been published as the thirteenth piece in a selection of 24 Studies for Flute from Hugues's Opp. 32 and 75.\nTune of the Day: Hornpipe form Ruddigore\ntranscribed for solo flute\nThis fine hornpipe is taken from Act I of Gilbert and Sullivan's 1887 comic opera Ruddigore; or, The Witch's Curse.\nCategories: Opera excerpts Piccolo tunes Show-off pieces Difficulty: intermediate\nTune of the Day: Presto by Locatelli\nThis Presto is the fourth and final movement of the last of 12 sonatas for flute and continuo by Italian composer Pietro Antonio Locatelli, originally published in Amsterdam in 1732.\nTune of the Day: Dieu d'amour\nfrom “Les mariages samnites”, arranged for two flutes\nThis piece was originally a chorus from André Grétry's 1776 opera Les mariages samnites (The Samnite Marriages), sung in Act I by a group of young girls. The theme is well known to pianists because of a set of variations composed by Mozart in 1781.\nThe present arrangement for two flutes is taken from Blake's Young Flutist's Magazine (Philadelphia, 1833), in which it appears with the title “March des samnites” and is erroneously attributed to Mozart.\nCategories: Classical Marches Opera excerpts Difficulty: intermediate\nTune of the Day: Study in B minor by Prill\nThis is the sixth piece from 24 Etüden zur Förderung der Technik (24 Studies for the Development of Technique), Op. 12, by German flutist Emil Prill. It was first published in Bremen in 1913.\nTune of the Day: The Dark-eyed Gypsy\nThis air appears in Francis O'Neill's collection Waifs and Strays of Gaelic Melody, published in Chicago in 1922. The cited source is a P.J. Healey of San Francisco. O'Neill writes:\nAlthough suggestive of an English origin, “The Dark-eyed Gypsy” was the name of a popular song in Tipperary, Mr. Healey's native county.\nTune of the Day: Adagio by Bellinzani\nfrom Recorder Sonata in D minor\nThis is the first movement of the second sonata from Sonate a flauto solo con cembalo, o violoncello (“Sonatas for solo flute with harpsichord or cello”) by Italian Baroque composer Paolo Benedetto Bellinzani, originally published in Venice in 1720.\nTune of the Day: Duet in B-flat major by Berbiguier\nThis is the fourteenth duet from Trente-six Petits Duos Mélodiques Faciles et Chantants pour deux Flûtes (36 Easy Flute Duets) by French Romantic composer Benoit Tranquille Berbiguier.\nCategories: Romantic Waltzes Written for Flute Difficulty: easy\nTune of the Day: Study in E major by Hugues\nToday's piece is the seventh study from 40 Nuovi Studi, Op. 75, by Italian flutist, composer and arranger Luigi Hugues.\nThis study has also been published as the fourteenth piece in a selection of 24 Studies for Flute from Hugues's Opp. 32 and 75.\nTune of the Day: Cnoic Uisnach\nThis air appears in Francis O'Neill's collection Waifs and Strays of Gaelic Melody, published in Chicago in 1922. The cited source is a P.J. O'Donohue of San Francisco. O'Neill writes:\nI am informed by our liberal contributor, Mr. Francis E. Walsh of San Francisco, that variants of the above air are known to several of his musical acquaintances but by different names such as “Knuck Usnach Gathering”; “Knuck Costhnach”; “The Coming of Lugh”; and “The Poor Man's Friend”. Mr. O'Donohue, whose setting is presented, insists that it is the true air of “Willy Reilly”, the old time favorite of an earlier generation. The melody is the real thing however.\nThe Hill of Uisneach (Irish: Uisneach or Cnoc Uisnigh) is a hill and ancient ceremonial site in County Westmeath, Ireland. It is a protected national monument, consisting of numerous monuments and earthworks including a probable megalithic tomb, burial mounds, enclosures, standing stones, holy wells and a medieval road.\nTune of the Day: Passepied by Telemann\nfrom Suite in A minor for Recorder and Strings\nTelemann's Ouverture-Suite in A minor, TWV 55:a2 contains two consecutive passepieds. While the first is played by the strings alone, in the second one only the flute and the bass appear.\nCategories: Baroque Passepieds Difficulty: intermediate\nTune of the Day: My Lodgings Is On the Cold Ground\nTraditional folk song, arranged for two flutes\nThis old air, better known today as the tune of Thomas Moore's 19th-century song “Believe Me, if All Those Endearing Young Charms”, has been claimed alike by England, Scotland and Ireland, but according to Scottish musicologist George Farquhar Graham the probability seems to be that it is an old English dance tune. English composer Matthew Locke's 17th-century folk song “My Lodging is in the Cold, Cold Ground” was set to this tune some time after its original setting to a different, also traditional, air.\nCategories: Celtic Music Love songs Traditional/Folk Difficulty: intermediate","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line618159"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9300421476364136,"wiki_prob":0.9300421476364136,"text":"Home » TV & Movies » Black List Scribe Elyse Hollander Signs With APA (EXCLUSIVE)\nBlack List Scribe Elyse Hollander Signs With APA (EXCLUSIVE)\nScreenwriter Elyse Hollander has signed with APA for representation, Variety has learned exclusively. She continues to repped by Bellevue Productions and Hansen Jacobson.\nHollander started her career as an assistant to Alejandro González Iñárritu on the set of “Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance)” before breaking out with her Black List topping screenplay “Blonde Ambition” in 2016. The script is about Madonna overcoming sexism to become a superstar in the early 1980s. It went on to sell to Universal with Michael De Luca producing.\nShe again made the Black List in 2018 with “Queens of the Stoned Age,” based on the GQ article of the same name. Sony and Escape Artists are producing with Dakota Johnson attached to star. Her other work includes “Murder on the Dance Floor” for Sony and Marc Platt Productions as well as an untitled K-Pop feature for 20th Century Studios, Epic Magazine, and SB Projects. The latter project landed at 20th after an extensive bidding war.\nMost recently, sources say that Hollander worked on the screenplay for a new Amy Winehouse biopic. She is now working on the script for the “Guys and Dolls” film from director and co-writer Bill Condon at TriStar.\nNews of the Hollander signing comes after APA had an impressive day thanks the release of the 2021 Black List. The agency landed six spots on the annual list of the best unproduced screenplays, including “In the End” by Brian T. Arnold and “The College Dropout” by the team of Thomas Aguilar and Michael Ballin. Likewise, Bellevue also had a good day, with nine total entries on this year’s list.\nJhené Aiko Repackages the Gift of Song with 'Wrap Me Up' Rerelease\nBillie Eilish started watching porn at 11-years-old and it ruined her sex life","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line833669"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6065287590026855,"wiki_prob":0.39347124099731445,"text":"Home News Briefs Toronto-based OneClass nabs $1.6 mln in Series A funding\nToronto-based OneClass nabs $1.6 mln in Series A funding\nOneClass has raised $1.6 million in Series A funding. Asian private equity firm SAIF Partners led the round with participation from existing investors, such as Canadian early-stage venture capital firm Real Ventures. Based in Toronto, OneClass is an educational platform that crowdsources university course content. Update: The company is a 2012 graduate of FounderFuel, a Montréal-based accelerator that helps early stage web, mobile and SaaS startups raise seed capital.\nToronto, Canada, Oct 21, 2013 – OneClass announces a $1.6M Series A led by SAIF partners and follow-on investments from existing investors such as Real Ventures. OneClass is an educational platform crowdsourcing university course content. The startup is currently on its way to becoming the largest global interactive library for educational content across all levels of education.\nSince its inception in September 2010, the site has evolved from a simple course note repository to a richer and more comprehensive platform. The site now covers over 10,000 courses with notes, exam prep videos and common university subject videos from introductory level calculus to 1st-year chemistry.\n“Making that transition from high school to university is difficult, especially from a 20 person classroom to a 500 person class. Students have limited and costly options to find extra help after a lecture ends – the choices are Google, Youtube and private tutors charging $40-80/hr. OneClass is tackling an issue that affects millions of students worldwide.” says Jack Tai – CEO and Co-Founder of OneClass.\nOneClass leverages its community of students to help produce top-notch content and allows subject experts to create videos and other supplementary material tackling common questions on midterms and exams for popular university courses. Every day, OneClass saves thousands of students hours from filtering through unrelated and outdated content from the web.\nStudents contribute to OneClass’s rapidly expanding archive of hundreds of thousands of course notes, adding up to 10,000 different courses to date. The team is extremely focused on maintaining and improving the quality of all site content. One successful method they utilize is their use of badges and rewards for top contributors. Never losing sight of their vision, the OneClass team is focused on providing every student with the content they need. Simply reading class slides is just not enough for the average student to excel in their courses.\nTo date, this Canadian start-up has established its presence in over 50 schools across Canada and the US with 200,000 users and is on its way to taking the company to the next level.\nThe team is looking beyond just post-secondary students. They are also considering a vertical expansion to both high school and graduate school course resources. The company’s ultimate goal is to instantly deliver invaluable educational content that is immediately useful and relevant to any knowledge seeker on one platform.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line981138"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7127957940101624,"wiki_prob":0.7127957940101624,"text":"Home Bollywood Rustom: ‘Honourable Murderer’ Inspired by a real Life Incident\nRustom: ‘Honourable Murderer’ Inspired by a real Life Incident\nLinnet silver\nThe Khiladi Kumar is ridding high on success after his latest blockbuster movie Airlift. The movie was a huge box office hit, earning 100 cores in 10 days. This time Akshay Kumar will be seen in a new avatar in his forthcoming film “Rustom.” The Bollywood star is a versatile actor and has played various different roles. Audience has always loved the actor in his patriotic action roles. Akshay Kumar played an Indian Intelligence Officer in “Baby” and an Army man in “Holiday” and also a patriotic do-good common man in “Airlift” and “Gabbar.” Now with “Rustom” Akshay is back as a naval officer.\nThe movie Rustom is based on a real life story that has shades of the late 1950’s. The movie is directed by Tinu Suresh Desai and the scripts are written by Vipul K. Rawal. Akshay Kumar plays the lead role as a naval officer named Rustom Pavri and Ileana D’Cruz in the lead role alongside. The movie is based on the real life sensational incidences of Nanavati murder case in 1959. The movie focuses on the theme of love and dignity for our country India.\nThe Nanavati Murder Case 1959\nKawas Maneckshaw Nanavati was second in command of the Indian Navy’s flagship INS Mysore and a devoted family man. He had an English wife named Sylvia and two children. On the afternoon of April 27, 1959, Nanavati’s wife confessed to him that she has fallen in love with a family friend named Prem Ahuja. The officer without betraying any emotion, dropped his wife Sylvia and his children at a theater. The officer carrying a revolver and six bullets with him asked his senior officer permission to leave for Ahmednagar. Nanavati went to Prem Ahuja’s house and shot him with three bullets. He then surrenders himself up to the police and confessed that he has done the murder. The case went on for many years. Eventually, Nanavati got a reputation as the “honorable killer.” Nanavati was finally pardoned in 1962. Later, Nanavati migrated to Canada with his family.\nThe First Look\nThe first look of” Rustom” was revealed on Feb 25, 2016, where Akshay is seen with his intense look. The poster unfolds much of the mystery in the movie. The action hero this time is playing the role of a naval officer. Akshay Kumar in the poster is wearing a naval officer’s uniform with a thin moustache. The foreground of the poster is a zoomed newspaper with a small image of Ileana D’Cruz facing her back towards a man. The poster has a rose sepia tint with three bullet shot on the title, adding drama to the poster. The poster silently speaks of the real life incidence of 1956 saying “3 Shots that Shocked the Nation”.\nMovie Rustom and Love Affair Sharing the Similar Plot\nThe movie “Love Affair” of Pooja Bhatt is based on the similar subject. Hence, both the movies are sharing a similar story. Speculations were made that the film-makers will drop the movie. Pooja Bhatt says the movie is not just about Nanavati, but the movie “Love Affair” is very human and has a woman’s perspective.\nFinally, Rustom the much-awaited project release date has been announced by Akshay Kumar as Aug 12, 2016. Looking to the previous movies of Akshay Kumar, there is a confidence that Rustom will also be an excellent movie to be watched. The movie will surely do good business, as it will be released around the Independence Day weekend.\nRustom earning day wise\nDAY 1 Rs. 14.11 croce\nDAY 2 Rs. 16 crore (approx)\nPrevious articleThis Summer Let’s Enjoy the Cool Time with Ice Age Herds in the Ice Age 5\nNext article8 things every woman does secretly but doesn’t admit to do it\nMasaba Masaba – The Reel and Real Collide In This One.\n10 Bollywood Movies Every Guy finds Relatable\nRaat Akeli Hai: A Bollywood Movie, But Way Too Nuanced For It.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1350567"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9901800751686096,"wiki_prob":0.9901800751686096,"text":"How ‘Pretty Little Liars’ Alum Lucy Hale Really Feels About Reboot\nWhat’s old is new again. Pretty Little Liars will be rebooted with HBO Max’s Pretty Little Liars: Original Sin, and OG star Lucy Hale revealed that she’ll support the new show — even if the mere existence of a remake has her feeling ancient.\n“Oh my God, it’s so depressing that I already have to give advice to a new generation,” Hale, 32, told TVLine with a laugh in an interview released on Saturday, November 26. “But I think it’s great. It’s an honor that they want to continue the legacy of Pretty Little Liars. Like, how cool is that?”\nThe Hating Game star played Aria Montgomery on Freeform’s Pretty Little Liars from the show’s pilot 2010 until the series finale in 2017. The show’s spinoff starring Janel Parrish and Sasha Pieterse, Pretty Little Liars: The Perfectionists, was canceled after a 10-episode first season in 2019.\nHale hopes the new cast can learn from her mistakes during the original show’s run.\n“When I was doing Pretty Little Liars, I was always thinking about the next year,” the Tennessee native explained. “I was never in the moment, so I missed a lot of the little moments. We were worrying about things we shouldn’t be worrying about. It’s very vague, but my advice is just to enjoy it. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience. People are going to love you guys, and I’m definitely going to be watching. All the love to everyone involved.”\nHBO Max announced Original Sin in September 2020 with Riverdale showrunner Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa and Chilling Adventures of Sabrina writer Lindsay Calhoon Bring penning the new mystery. While the show is still set in the universe that Aria and her Liars are in, it’s a new town with a 20-year-old secret. A group of teenagers in the fictional town of Millwood find themselves haunted by a decision their parents made before they were born, and someone wants to make them pay for their guardians’ mistakes.\nPLL: Original Sin has rounded out their cast with Chandler Kinney, Maia Reficco, Malia Pyles, Zaria, Mallory Bechtel, Sharon Leal, Elena Goode, Lea Salonga, Alex Aiono, Eric Johnson and Bailee Madison. Hale is particularly excited to see the Good Witch alum on the small screen.\n“I also know Bailee Madison, who’s in the show, and I adore her,” the Ragdoll star added. “I’ll always support other artists and actors, no matter what the venture is. I think it’s important that we do that, because there’s not enough of that. And I’m as curious as anyone to see what they’re going to do with it.”\nHale echoed what she exclusively told Us Weekly in November 2020, shortly after the plans for a new PLL were announced. “I sincerely wish everyone the best and I hope it’s a huge success,” she said at the time. “Some people get angry about a reboot, but I think it’s important to be supportive of up-and-coming artists. I’m curious to see what they do with it!”\nHBO Max has not yet announced a premiere date.\nListen to Watch With Us to hear more about your favorite shows and for the latest TV news!\nFans Think Teddi Mellencamp Looks Like Kyle Richards in Pic\nClear up That Comedian Fan’s Present-Giving Dilemma\nClear up That Comedian Fan's Present-Giving Dilemma","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line494572"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6112072467803955,"wiki_prob":0.6112072467803955,"text":"Kate Middleton is not the most elegant nobleman\nMost elegant woman\nwantedon 01/14/2014 | 15:19\nSince her wedding to Prince William in 2011 at the latest, Kate Middleton has had fans around the world. Especially with her modern look, the 32-year-old has been able to convince her followers in recent years. But now the Duchess of Cambridge’s fashion throne seems to have shaken. When the magazine “Hello!” Voted the most elegant woman in the world, Kate Middleton no longer reached pole position.\nIn her public appearances, Kate Middleton regularly impresses with modern and, at the same time, often particularly inexpensive looks. Before long, Prince William’s wife makes sure the boxes are ringing over and over with the respective designers when choosing her clothes. But this nimbus seems to be slowly losing Kate Middleton. Readers of the magazine “Hello!” They no longer see real beauty as the most elegant woman in the world.\nKate Middleton says goodbye to fashion throne\nInstead, readers only placed Kate Middleton in third place in a current poll. Only 22 percent of the participants saw British women as their current style role model. Especially bitter for Kate Middleton: even in aristocratic circles, she is no longer ahead. A royal colleague, of all people, secured her spot in the sun with 55 percent of the vote.\nKate Middleton has to give way to another noblewoman\nIn place of Kate Middleton, who was expected in this role, Crown Princess Mary of Denmark can now look forward to victory. This means that the 41-year-old is the new benchmark for “Hello!” When it comes to elegance. British actress Olivia Newton-John took second place and therefore also ahead of Kate Middleton. But it was worse for the duchess. In another magazine poll looking for the sexiest woman of the year, Kate Middleton didn’t even make the top 3. Swedish Princess Madeleine won ahead of newly crowned Golden Globe winners Jennifer Lawrence and Diane Kruger.\nIsn’t Kate Middleton the unbeatable style model of yesteryear? The sales figures for the clothes you wear speak a different language. Perhaps the readers of “Hello!” They just wanted to give other women in the world a chance.Image Source: © Getty Images / Chris Jackson\nWhatsApp Telegram Tweet\nTags:Elegant, Kate, Middleton, nobleman\nThis woman has the perfect butt, this is what she looks like\nFirst tattoo: 10 things you should know\nLea Michele already has the top 10 in sight","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1104677"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5593519806861877,"wiki_prob":0.44064801931381226,"text":"Home » Blog » The Growing Interest of Australia in Philippine BPO Services\nThe Growing Interest of Australia in Philippine BPO Services\nJuly 6, 2011 • EB Call Center • Business Process Outsourcing\n© markrubens / Dollar Photo Club\nPhilippine BPO services are the best in Asia solely because Filipinos are comfortable with the use of the English language. With a culture that is closest to western influence, the Philippines is a continually growing back-office sector, that has now expanded its outsourcing partnerships with countries like Canada, U.K., France, Spain, and most especially Australia. The Philippine BPO partnership provides a highly skilled workforce with individuals whose educational attainment is unmatched in the rest of Asia.\nThe country provides a better climate for business as well as great opportunity for growth. Outsourcing in the Philippines is a thriving business because of its proactive government, which encourages businesses to plant their roots within their country. Most of all, the Filipino himself is the greatest human capital asset.\nIn line with that, the Philippine IT/BPO industry has certainly caught Australian interest. Based on estimates by the Business Processing Association of the Philippines (BPAP), the share of the Australian market in the total revenue generated by the industry has grown from 1.5 percent in 2008 to 6 percent in 2010. The US remains the top market with 70 percent share, followed by the UK and Japan.\nThe Australian Contact Centre Outsourcing Market Report 2011, published by callcentres.net, a leading Sydney-based research company, points to increasing outsourcing to the Philippines among Australian companies surveyed, compared to results of prior surveys. In previous years, while majority of Australian companies outsourced to service providers within Australia, India was the second most popular destination to outsource.\nThe Philippines has really defined professionalism in Business Process Outsourcing today. With the best technical support, IT-analysts, and customer service representatives, there is no doubt that the Philippines has succeeded in doing what it does best.\nHealthcare BPO Services\n4 Office Tasks You Should Consider Outsourcing","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line126318"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9315478205680847,"wiki_prob":0.9315478205680847,"text":"Is There a New Instagram Owner?\nThe rumor of a new Instagram owner has been floating around the internet for quite some time now. However, the truth is that Instagram was founded in 2010 by Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger. The two men, who are now the co-owners of the popular social networking site, are still working for the company. Earlier this year, Mr. Systrom and Mr. Krieger sold the company for $1 billion to Facebook. In September of this year, they stepped down from their role at Facebook and have not said why they are leaving.\nDespite the hype, Instagram is still owned by its founders. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg bought the company in March of this year and has now acquired Instagram for $1 billion. The acquisition, which was reportedly a surprise to Systrom and Krieger, is yet another indication that Systrom and Krieger did not see the potential of the social media site and were reluctant to sell it. Although Instagram was originally a startup, the company has become one of the largest social networks in the world.\nIn the summer of 2016, the company was sold to Facebook for $1 billion. The two founders stayed on as CEO and heads of engineering. They quickly turned Instagram into the largest social network in the world. In fact, Instagram now boasts a user base of over 500 million people. And they’re not the only ones! The founders of Instagram have been in the industry for a long time and they know how to make a successful product.\nThe company’s founders, Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, created Instagram in 2010. The company was started as a side project of Systrom and Krieger, who graduated from Stanford University and worked as programmers. They didn’t intend to build the huge business Instagram is today. The company went through many development stages in the beginning. It was later acquired by Facebook, but its founders did not plan it that way. The newest owners of Instagram did.\nThe Instagram founders were known to work together for years before the company was sold to Facebook. The company’s founders spent money to keep the app online. They didn’t care who owned Instagram. They were motivated to continue working together in order to build a successful product. They did not want the company to fail and therefore opted to sell it. Besides, this is what makes it such an attractive option for advertisers. There’s no need to worry about their business.\nThe founders of Instagram are the founders of the company. They spent many years working on the app. But it didn’t take long for them to find a buyer for the company. It was created by Kevin Systrom and Mike Krieger, and they made the deal in October of 2010. The deal was a great deal for Instagram. As a result, the company now has a new owner. This is an awesome opportunity to expand your business.\ninstagram ceo salary\ninstagram founder country\nis mark zuckerberg the owner of instagram\nkevin systrom net worth\nmike krieger net worth\nwhat is instagram\nwho is the owner of instagram 2020\nPrevious articleLa Sirenita Mexican Restaurant in South Philly\nNext articleInstagram Hires a Twitter Exec to Lead Its Product Team\nWhat are the best celebrity news apps?\nApps Musa - December 22, 2021\nVideoMing – The Best Website to Download Videos For Free\nApps Musa - June 19, 2021\nHow to Access WhatsApp on a Computer\nApps Musa - May 13, 2021\nApps Musa - April 13, 2021","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1204943"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7186098694801331,"wiki_prob":0.7186098694801331,"text":"Ergo Proxy Season 1 Episode 2\nRe-l struggles to convince her peers of her encounters with the monsters, which she learns are called Proxy. She is removed from the investigation and finds that Iggy has had his memories of recent events erased. Meanwhile, Vincent finds himself on the run from a proxy and then the city’s authorities.\nSerie: Ergo Proxy\nGuest Star: Hiroshi Kamiya\nEpisode Title: Confession\nThe Slim Shady Show\nThe Slim Shady Show is an animated television series created by American rapper Eminem. Each episode is approximately five minutes in length. The shorts focus on the fictional adventures of…\nChuggington is a British computer-animated television series for children produced by Ludorum plc and on the BBC children’s channel CBeebies in the UK and Disney Channel and Disney Junior in…\nAfter swearing off music due to an incident at the middle school regional brass band competition, euphonist Kumiko Oumae enters high school hoping for a fresh start. As fate would…\nGenre: Animation, Comedy, Drama\nOuran High School Host Club is a manga series by Bisco Hatori, serialized in Hakusensha’s LaLa magazine between the September 2002 and November 2010 issues. The series follows Haruhi Fujioka,…\nAssassins Pride\nIn the world only the aristocrats have the power to fight the monster – mana. Even though Melida Angel was born in an aristocracy and studies at an academy developing…\nGenre: Action & Adventure, Animation, Crime, Drama\nTsugumomo\nKazuya Kagami never goes anywhere without the precious “Sakura Obi” his mother gave him. One day a beautiful, kimono-clad girl named Kiriha appeared before him. Kiriha naturally began to live…\nZixx\nZixx is a Canadian television series that airs on YTV. This series was developed by Savi Media and The Nightingale Company with YTV Original Productions. The series was created by…\nDragons: Race to the Edge\nUnlock the secrets of the Dragon Eye and come face to face with more dragons than anyone has ever imagined as Hiccup, Toothless and the Dragon Riders soar to the…\nGenre: Animation, Family, Kids\nXiaolin Showdown is an American animated television series that aired on Kids WB and was created by Christy Hui. Set in a world where martial arts battles and Eastern magic…\nThe Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That!\nThe Cat in the Hat is back — and this time, he’s teaching Sally and her brother, Nick, some awfully nifty things to think about! KissAnime Review: The Cat in…\nIn this series of cartoon shorts, Mickey Mouse finds himself in silly situations all around the world! From New York to Paris to Tokyo, Mickey experiences new adventures with his…\nHamtaro is a Japanese children’s manga and storybook series created and illustrated by Ritsuko Kawai. The manga is serialized in Shogakukan’s all girl’s magazine Ciao in 1997, focusing on a…","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line360235"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6679789423942566,"wiki_prob":0.3320210576057434,"text":"What a Year of Sobriety Has Taught Me\nJune 12, 2020 / Amanda Woodard\nI’m lounging on my sectional, thumb hovering over the “Deliver” button in Uber Eats. I have Feel Good on the TV, a Netflix original about a queer girl with a drug addiction that she considers past tense. I just texted a friend asking if it was too risky to get cake delivered to me. I’ve been sheltering in place for a while at this point, and I haven’t had dessert in ages. Before quarantine, I considered cutting sugar out of my diet to see if it would ease my anxiety. Since I’ve been alone, I’ve done a lot of back-pedaling and calling it “self-care.”\nToday is March 24, 2020: My one-year anniversary of being sober. It’s nine o’clock at night and I’m just now realizing I never thought I would make it this far. My sobriety feels so surreal that I’m constantly having dreams about cheating on it and disappointing myself. I used to have dreams like that when I was in serious relationships too; I’d cheat on them and have to confess. I never got to experience the “fun” parts of those dreams — the drinking, getting high, the sex. Just the consequences.\nAnyway, a whole year of anything feels like it deserves recognition.\nWell, that settles it, I text my friend. I’m buying the cake.\nFeel Good is easy to blast through at 25 minutes an episode. It’s a dramedy, situationally funny with dark undertones. But the more I watch, the more my chest tightens. I recognize all these characters — not the actors, but the roles they’re playing.\nI’m new to delivery apps so I accidentally buy two cakes, and yes, I eat both. The texture is moist with soft cranberries and crispy walnuts mixed in. There’s entirely too much icing, but it’s so creamy, just a hint of sweetness among the cream cheese, caramelized sugar dusting the top layer, that I eat it all anyway, dipping my fork in for more and letting it make my tongue raw.\nA specific scene in the Feel Good finale stays with me long after the credits roll. One character relapses with a member of her NA group, a guy who represents everything she hates. She’s at his house when they run out of coke, and there’s this moment when panic widens her eyes: She knows she’ll come down soon. She turns to the guy and just says, “Do you want to have sex?”\nThe tightness in my chest spreads to a sickness in my gut, a sadness that washes over me like a fog. Not even the carrot cake can dull it. Earlier in the episode, she told the guy she wasn’t interested in sleeping with him. I know she never would have done this if she were sober.\nI just binged the entire season and now I’m stewing in shame — like I stayed up drinking instead of watching TV and eating cake. Like I’m the one who propositioned a man I would never love into sleeping with me. To risk his rejection. To feel adrenaline pulse where his fingers touched me, to feel more in my body than in my head, for once. To have him grab my wrists and make me feel small.\nThat’s just what happens in the show. It’s not real. I didn’t do that. I didn’t.\nBut I have before.\nAbout a week before social-distancing mandates shut down the country, I went to San Antonio for a writing conference. Most of the seminars I wanted to attend were canceled because the authors were proactively staying home. I had a lot of time to kill, so I stayed at my Airbnb working on the second draft of an article my editor didn’t like. I felt restless. Antsy. Before I became even “sober curious,” I’d quell this feeling by getting high, drinking, or sneaking into abandoned buildings alone at night. The trouble is: I crossed all these off my list of coping mechanisms, but I don’t know any healthier alternatives. Meditation pisses me off. Yoga doesn’t slow my heart rate. My antidepressants help, but they don’t get me high — and that’s the point.\nI decided on a whim to get a tattoo, a line from an E. E. Cummings poem: “Nobody, not even the rain, has such small hands.” After paying, a boy in the waiting room stops me to ask about the writing conference I’m in town for. He was reading a book, an actual work of fiction. He told me he’s a writer too. I liked the way his sad eyes looked into mine. We both knew I’d leave in a few days and that this couldn’t turn into anything, and it’s maybe because of that that I asked if he’d go out with me that night.\nLater, as he takes sips from a Lone Star and drags from a cigarette, I nurse a Dr. Pepper and explain myself: Alcoholism is in my blood. But I caught it in time before anything really bad happened. I told him I wasn’t an alcoholic and that I was sober by choice.\nI tell him: “I just didn’t like how much I liked drinking.” I didn’t tell him that I’d lose track of my drinks. How alcohol, even at its sweetest, never tasted good to me; I always gulped down the drinks until I couldn’t feel my face anymore, until I had intimate conversations with strangers. I didn’t tell him that I almost always drank until I threw up, then wallowed in bed the next day feeling sick and ashamed, wondering what I did the night before to make a fool of myself. I didn’t tell him about puking in my purse, driving drunk and wondering how much it would hurt if I turned into oncoming traffic, sleeping on my side so I wouldn’t choke in my sleep.\nI did tell him that I’d been reflecting a lot on my sobriety with my one-year anniversary looming. It helped me discover other places where I was hiding from myself: I celebrate by eating sugar. I numb myself with TV. I shop when I’m sad. Things like that.\nI was more open with him than I normally would be on a first date, thinking about how he’d take this information, how he’d interpret me. Daring him to reject me, to show me I was just as undesirable and worthless as I felt.\nI invited him back to my Airbnb, with no pretense that we would enjoy a few drinks there.\nWe didn’t have to sleep together. He might have pushed it, but he didn’t. I’m the one who initiated that conversation, letting myself disappear into the present for once. I just wanted him to make me feel full.\nAlthough my encounter was unlike that scene on Feel Good, I can’t keep myself from thinking about it now: the chase, the rush, the awareness of an ending that kept me in the moment. The shame that found me in the car on the drive home. The voice in my head that said, “Where’s your sense of self-preservation, Amanda? He could have hurt you.”\nHe didn’t. But people had before.\nI hadn’t even been drinking. I couldn’t blame my recklessness on that.\nBut being with Mr. San Antonio — binging him through the weekend — felt like getting drunk. I felt exactly the same feelings of worthlessness after I got home as I did after a night of drinking.\nSitting in bed after turning off the TV, the lingering ache of Feel Good rattling around in my ribcage, I’m thinking, It feels impossible that I’ve been sober for a year.\nIn a way, I haven’t been completely sober. I stopped drinking and I stopped doing drugs, but I’ve continued to chase highs in other places.\nI’ve been fooling myself into thinking that I wasn’t an addict because I didn’t have to go to rehab. I haven’t relapsed. Drinking didn’t interfere with my daily life before I became sober — not in the way it did for people on TV.\nBut today is my one-year anniversary since I quit drinking and doing drugs, and I’m crying because I don’t want to be sober.\nNot because I feel like I’m missing out with my friends or because, culturally, I don’t know how to celebrate or mourn something without drinking.\nI don’t want to be sober because I don’t want to be here. I want to escape. I want that glorious 30 minutes where you’re getting drunk — but you’re not drunk yet — but you’re too buzzed to realize you should stop drinking, and everything is perfect. And the truth is, I’ve wanted to escape from my life at least weekly since I quit drinking. The craving is in me like an itch under the skin, deep in the muscle.\nIf it weren’t for the immense support of my friends — if just one person had said, “It’s no big deal, just have one drink” — I never would have lasted this long.\nNow, in quarantine, I think, No one would judge me if I started drinking again. Everyone would understand. Everyone is already posting on Instagram and Twitter about having champagne for breakfast, that the days are just separated by coffee and wine.\nI’d blend right in.\nAnd it’s this thought that finally makes me admit to myself that I’m an alcoholic. I’m not the kind of person who can have a glass of wine with dinner and stop. There’s something lurking deep inside me, something that wants to put me in harm’s way. After a year of sobriety, I am only now beginning to question: Why can’t I be alone with myself?\nAmanda Woodard is an MFA candidate at Antioch University and a freelance copywriter at mediamanda.com. Her work has been performed in Oral Fixation and published in Ten Spurs, Keep This Bag Away from Children and FlashFlood. When she’s not reading and writing, she enjoys playing board games, rock climbing and practicing yoga.\nFriday Lunch Archive","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1358632"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8130852580070496,"wiki_prob":0.8130852580070496,"text":"US court ruling backs Ill. position on juvenile life terms\nSPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) — About 100 convicted Illinois murderers sentenced as teenagers to life without parole are assured of resentencing after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Monday. The high court found its 2012 opinion barring automatic life terms for young offenders is retroactive. The Illinois Supreme Court decreed the same two years ago. Heidi Lambros is with the Office of the State Appellate Defender. She says two Illinois cases have already undergone resentencing. One involved Addolfo Davis, the subject of the 2014 Illinois case. He was resentenced to life in prison. Lambros says the other was released after serving 30 years. The U.S. ruling — involving a 17-year-old Louisiana man who shot a sheriff’s deputy in 1963 — solidifies the Illinois position. Lambros says the other Illinois cases will be scheduled for court hearings.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line82589"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7939767837524414,"wiki_prob":0.7939767837524414,"text":"NBA Summer League 2012: Reggie Jackson Taking Advantage Of Playing Time\nBy Matt Conner Jul 11, 2012, 8:00am CDT\nShare All sharing options for: NBA Summer League 2012: Reggie Jackson Taking Advantage Of Playing Time\nReggie Jackson is one of the more high profile players for the Oklahoma City Thunder this week in the NBA Summer League in Orlando. WIth only a handful of games against Eastern Conference teams, the Thunder's roster features last year's first round choice with Jackson out of Boston College as well as this years in Perry Jones III out of Baylor. They have 10 others, but those two players are the ones expected to break out if anyone can. And Jackson says he's ready for that role.\nIn a recent interview with Nick Gallo from the OKC Thunder's official web site, Jackson discussed his goals for this summer and many other things. More than anything, he's focused on improving all aspects of his game by participating in summer league action.\n\"Hopefully I just become a well-rounded player, fix some of my flaws and try to minimize some of my deficiencies,\" said Jackson. \"This is just a way to get some playing time. It's good to get your legs moving, get going, try to get your wind up and just have fun. Playing with these guys is great for me and hopefully we become better teammates and just get better.\"\nJackson played in 45 games in his rookie season and averaged just over 11 minutes per game. With Eric Maynor coming back from injury, he could find less time this next season which means he needs to take advantage of every opportunity he can. In fact, he said he didn't even want to leave after the NBA Finals were over but wanted to stay and perfect his game.\n\"I went home to Colorado Springs. It was terrible,\" he said. \"I hate being away from the gym. I felt like I was forced out of there. The coaches wanted me to stay away. I snuck in a few days and shot but didn't do too much. It was tough being away from these guys and then the fires didn't really help either. So it hurt, but once we drafted Perry (Jones) I wanted to get around this young talent and just have fun and try to go on this journey together and just be with these guys. I missed them, I wanted to see some of the faces that have come in for summer league and see what we can do this week.\"\nYou can watch every game of the 2012 Orlando Summer League on NBA TV or via a subscription to Summer League Broadband.\nFor more on the Orlando Pro Summer League and the Las Vegas Summer League, stay tuned to this StoryStream.\nNBA Summer League Schedule: Thunder Top Nets\nOrlando Summer League 2012: Thunder Finish With 3-Game Winning Streak\nNBA Summer League Schedule: Thunder Face Pacers In Tuesday's Action","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1095408"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8112002015113831,"wiki_prob":0.8112002015113831,"text":"How an ancient Egyptian artefact was discovered in Aberdeen - and what it is?\nBy Chelsea Rocks\nUpdated Wednesday, 16th December 2020, 4:09 pm\nIn a miraculous case of ‘the right place at the right time’ an Egyptian researcher at the University of Aberdeen has discovered an ancient artefact which has been missing for over a century.\nWooden splits found in a cigar tin in the university’s Asia collection, could have been mistaken for something insignificant.\nBut the relic has now been confirmed as belonging to the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.\nSo why is the discovery so important, and how did the artefact end up in Aberdeen of all places?\nWhat is the missing artefact?\nThe wooden fragments of the relic date back to somewhere between 3341-3094BC, making it around 5000 years old.\nThe cedar wood pieces are part of the Dixon Relics, originally discovered in the pyramid’s Queens Chamber in 1872 by engineer Waynman Dixon.\nSome have speculated that the piece of cedar was originally a measuring rule which may have been used for construction of the pyramid.\nWhat are the other Dixon Relics?\nThe other two artefacts which make up the collection are a ball and hook.\nThey are now housed in the British Museum.\nHow did the artefact end up in Aberdeen?\nIt is thought that engineer Dixon befriended James Grant, a medical student at the university, after they met in Egypt while Grant was helping with an outbreak of cholera in the 1860s.\nGrant then assisted Dixon with the exploration of the Great Pyramid, where they discovered the relics in 1872.\nDuring this time, Dixon gave the cedar wood to Grant and it remained in his possession until his death in 1895, when the rest of his collections were then donated to the University of Aberdeen.\nHowever, the wooden splints remained with his daughter until 1946 when she then handed them over to the university.\nThere was no classified record of this donation and so there was no official record of the artefact being stored there among the hundreds of thousands of other pieces of history stored in various collections.\nWho discovered the missing piece in Aberdeen?\nIn 2001, a record indicating that the wood fragment may have been donated to the University of Aberdeen's museum collection was discovered.\nHowever, the record had never been classified and the artefacts never materialised, until they showed up in 2019.\nWhile Egyptian researcher and curatorial assistant Abeer Eladany, was sorting through the Asia collection at the university, she recognised a cigar tin with the former Egyptian flag on it.\nAfter cross-referencing the fragments inside with other records, she recognised them as the missing artefact.\nThe archaeologist, originally from Egypt, said of her discovery: ”I'm an archaeologist and have worked on digs in Egypt but I never imagined it would be here in north-east Scotland that I'd find something so important to the heritage of my own country.\n\"It may be just a small fragment of wood, which is now in several pieces, but it is hugely significant given that it is one of only three items ever to be recovered from inside the Great Pyramid.\n“The university’s collections are vast – running to hundreds of thousands of items – so looking for it has been like finding a needle in a haystack. I couldn’t believe it when I realised what was inside this innocuous-looking cigar tin.”\nDespite the artefacts being discovered in 2019, coronavirus held up the dating of the wood, but results now show it can be dated to somewhere in the period 3341-3094BC.\nWhat is the Pyramid of Giza?\nThe Great Pyramid of Giza is the oldest and largest of the three pyramids in a complex bordering Giza in Greater Cairo, Egypt.\nDating back to around 3000 B.C., it is the oldest of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, as well as the only one still remaining as it appeared thousands of years ago.\nIt originally stood 146.5 metres high, making it the tallest man-made structure in the world for more than 3,800 years - until the Lincoln Cathedral was built in 1311.\nThe pyramid is made up of three chambers - the Lower Chamber, the Queen’s Chamber and the King’s Chamber.\nIt was initially thought that the pyramid was built for Pharaoh Khufu - however, the dating of the cedar wood artefact could call this into question as they are thought to date back to 500 years before Khufu was born.\nWhy is the discovery so important?\nThe new dating of the cedar wood raises questions about the history of the pyramid, as they date back to some 500 years earlier than it was believed the Egyptian pyramid was built.\nThe pyramid is the last Wonder of the Ancient World which is largely intact and the relics are one of only three remaining original objects from the time the pyramid was built.\nNeil Curtis, head of museums and special collections at the University of Aberdeen, said: \"Finding the missing Dixon relic was a surprise but the carbon dating has also been quite a revelation.\n\"It is even older than we had imagined. This may be because the date relates to the age of the wood, maybe from the centre of a long-lived tree.\n\"Alternatively, it could be because of the rarity of trees in ancient Egypt, which meant that wood was scarce, treasured and recycled or cared for over many years.\n\"This discovery will certainly reignite interest in the Dixon relics and how they can shed light on the Great Pyramid.\"","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line792447"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5275562405586243,"wiki_prob":0.47244375944137573,"text":"DACHSER continues to provide highly efficient transport solutions to its valued customers in India.\nThe dedicated rake of containers carrying aluminum silos to be used in the petrochemical industry were imported from the Netherlands and are a part of a three month long project, expected to be completed by September 2019. Around 350 FEUs are estimated to be shipped over this period of time. The containers were shipped from the Netherlands to Mundra Port where it gets loaded onto the train to Ludhiana ICD and covered their last leg to the destination by truck.\nDachser India handled a port-to-door shipment with multi-model transportation.\nCommenting on the momentous occasion, Huned Gandhi, Managing Director, Air & Sea Logistics for the Indian Subcontinent, said “Our highly experienced teams at Dachser have once again designed an efficient multi-modal transport solution for a time bound project cargo”\n“The credit also goes to all the stakeholders associated with the project at different stages and the ocean freight colleagues in Delhi and Netherlands for their intense involvement and close coordination for completing such a humongous assignment successfully”, he added.\nOptimizing the balance sheet\nAt DACHSER, focusing on the importance of competitive criteria such as providing efficient, cost-effective, reliable and convenient trade routes to our valued customers and business partners are always a priority, and this achievement serves as a testimony to the same.\n“The Port-to-Door service will surely help in optimizing the balance sheet of our customer which is at the heart of the DACHSER mission”, said Narayan Shankar, Head of Ocean Freight Indian Subcontinent.\nThe team is highly motivated by the achievement, and we are looking forward to the successful accomplishment of the entire project and to provide this service to more customers in the future, Shankar explained.\n\"Preserving the good, increasing agility\"\nBurkhard Eling has been at the helm of family-owned DACHSER as CEO since January 1. He also marks the start of the next generation on the Executive Board. Burkhard Eling on a strong team and upcoming challenges.\nOperational disruptions at the port of Hamburg cause backlogs\nWith this update, DACHSER would like to inform you that port operations in Hamburg are currently affected in their flow due to various factors.\nThe current situation of congestion in the northern and western ports has become even more acute in Hamburg. The deployment of the explosive ordnance disposal service twice to defuse World War II bombs in construction areas, together with a demonstration by climate activists which led to the temporary closure of an important access road last week, are causing disruptions in handling operations.\nPlease note that this is causing significant delays at all operational interfaces in the port of Hamburg area and has created a backlog that will continue for some time.\nFor detailed information on possible impacts on your current shipments, please contact your local DACHSER representative.\nCOVID-19 pandemic: Impact on operational processing in the USA\nAs can already be seen from various press releases, the US authorities have enforced a ban with effect from 13 March 2020, 23:59 h, which prevents all entries from Europe into the United States, in addition to the already existing entry ban for visitors from several Asian countries.\nThis leads to a large number of flight cancellations on routes between Europe and the United States. However, the affected passenger routes also represent a significant portion of the available cargo capacity and therefore there is a massive impact on available cargo space and freight rates.\nOur team of experts continues to work hard on alternative options and routes that will allow us to carry urgent cargo and we are committed to providing our customers with priority access to available capacity. As with the successful implementation of our charter program between China and Germany, we are now exploring similar solutions for transportation between Germany and the USA.\nOur teams around the world will stay in touch with you, but please do not hesitate to get in touch with your contact at the respective DACHSER branch to discuss your particular situation and make further arrangements for your freight shipments.\nSea freight: update on the global situation\nDue to the ongoing disruption of the sea freight market, the after-effects (container shortages and frequent port congestion) continue to impact global supply chains. Below, we provide an update on all developments to minimize potential disruptions to your business.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line712648"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7208843231201172,"wiki_prob":0.7208843231201172,"text":"Home Culture Scott Miller A Performer Who Performs\nScott Miller A Performer Who Performs\nUsually the opening act's primary purpose is to warm up the audience, and that task is assigned to the lesser performer.But the Friday night (May 6) performance of Scott Miller and Steve Forbet at Rams Head OnStage proved, sometimes it's the name in smaller print who proves to be the showstopper. Yes, I know Forbet has the bigger name literally and figuratively and the big following of fans who were gratified to see him perform such old favorites as “Romeo's Tune “ (Billboard #11 of the top 100 in 1980) and “Blinked Once”, but if they were really listening to what they were hearing Friday night, they'd realize Forbets' voice has unfortunately deteriorated.\nMeanwhile Miller, who by his own humble mannerisms presents himself as a “supporting player” has continued to cultivate a voice which serves as a finely tuned instrument hitting the high and low notes with grace and clarity. True enough, Miller at age 43 is 14 years younger than Forbet, but many singer continue to flourish well past middle age, depending on their lifestyle and their vocal training and approach Both performers Friday evening are master songwriters who have many albums under their belt, and both performers play the harmonica and an acoustic guitar as their musical accompaniments, but it is Scott Miller who delivers a fine musical stage performance in a day and age when there is so much of music can be technologically enhanced in the recording studio.\nHaving listened to Miller's Latest album recorded with the Commonwealth Band, entitled “For Crying Out Loud,” I was not prepared for the power and beauty of his solo performance. Songs like “I Made a Mess of This Town” and “Amtrak Crescent “from his 2003 “Upside Down album, had me tapping my toes, while “Los Sientos Spanishburg West Virginia” was witty and lovely to listen to. Other selections included . “Good Night You Loser,” from the days when Johnson sang with the VRoys Band,, reprised as a solo, and the spiritual lament “Is there Room on the Cross for Me?”\nMiller is planning on releasing a new album, and perhaps some of those songs I enjoyed, but couldn't trace as being currently available, will be included on this new CD slated for fall.\nArts+Entertainment In Print The Arts Year Issued: 2011 Month Issued: 05","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1303569"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6913787722587585,"wiki_prob":0.6913787722587585,"text":"Nestled in the Flint Hills alongside the Neosho River, Council Grove received its name August 10, 1825, when the US Commissioners met with Chiefs of the Great and Little Osage Indian tribes beneath a tree later named the “Council Oak”, to sign the first treaty establishing the right-of-way for the famed Santa Fe Trail. In the years following, Council Grove became the pre-eminent rendezvous point for wagon trains heading west.\nIt was at Council Grove that small wagon trains and individual travelers gathered to form large wagon trains, since Council Grove was the furthest west point to which they could safely travel alone or in small groups. Also, at Council Grove was the last stand of hardwood timber from which wagon repairs could be made. However, the first permanent settlement in Council Grove did not occur until Seth Hays, great-grandson of the famed Kentucky frontiersman Daniel Boone, established a trading post here in 1847. With the arrival of the railroad, the last Santa Fe wagon train passed through Council Grove in 1866, and the town became a trade center for the local agricultural economy. Today small industries, an active retail community and tourism form a large part of the local economy.\nA town of a little over 2,200 residents, Council Grove proudly boasts its many historic sites, more than 24 of which have attained national recognition. The nearby Council Grove City Lake and Council Grove Federal Reservoir attract fishermen, boaters, and campers from everywhere. The Kaw Mission State Historic Site in Council Grove and the Kaw Nation’s Allegawaho Memorial Heritage Park (about 3.5 miles southeast of Council Grove), are dedicated to telling the story of the Kaw (or Kansa) Indian Tribe, whose reservation was located here from 1847 to 1873.\nLearn More about Council Grove.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line994756"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.738438606262207,"wiki_prob":0.26156139373779297,"text":"Title: The Pieces We Keep\nAuthor: Kristina McMorris\nPublication Information: Kensington Books. 2013. 464 pages.\nFavorite Quote: \"She had learned there was more to our world than what any of us could see or fully comprehend. That's when it hit her. Maybe heaven was much like a lake at dawn, offering a different view depending on the person. Maybe heaven entailed more than a soul residing in a single place but instead having pieces of yourself spread among the hearts and memories of the people you touched.\"\nThe time is 2012. The place is Portland, Oregon. Audra is a single mother, still trying to recover from the devastating death of her husband Devon. She is attempting to rebuild a life for herself and her seven year old son Jack. Meredith and Robert are Devon's parents attempting to hold on to their son's memory and their grandson. Jack is suffering from fears and anxiety. The fear is manifesting itself in nightmares, disturbing artwork, and other psychological impact. Are these a ramification of Devon's death or is it something else?\nThe time is the late 1930s. The place is London, England. Vivian James is a young woman enjoying her life. Isaak is the young man she is seeing. Life seems to be good, but Europe rumbles with thoughts of war and Nazis. What will war mean for these young lovers?\nWhat do these stories have in common? The book tells both stories in alternating sections, moving forward piece by piece. Is Jack still reeling from Devon's death? Will Vivian leave Europe as her diplomat father wants her to? Is Jack disturbed? Is Isaak and his love for Vivian genuine? Is Audra somehow responsible for her son's condition? Will Vivian create a new life for herself in the US?\nWho to trust and what to believe? Gradually, the pieces start to draw closer and closer. The individual characters and stories are developed beautifully such that each is complete onto itself. Each section leaves the reader wanting to know what comes next. Yet, the book also keeps you guessing at the exact connection between the two.\nFor its length, the book is a very quick read. Each section is not long, and the structure adds to the drama of the story and the questions in the story. This is the first book I have read by Kristina McMorris. I will seek out more.\nSome Nerve: Lessons Learned While Becoming Brave\nTitle: Some Nerve: Lessons Learned While Becoming Brave\nAuthor: Patty Chang Anker\nPublication Information: Riverhead. 2013. 368 pages.\nBook Source: I received this book through the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program free of cost in exchange for an honest review. The book arrived as a paperback uncorrected proof.\nFavorite Quote: \"The thing is, fear serves a function .... You can't just say 'Fear, go away!' and expect it to. You need to ask 'Fear, why are you here? What are you trying to protect me from? Is it something I need protection for? Or is it a response to a situation that resolved years ago or that maybe even happened to somebody else?' If so, you can recognize the fear for what it is and say that this isn't necessary anymore.\"\nPatty Chang Anker is the creator of the blog Facing Forty Upside Down and the mother of two daughters. Close to her fortieth birthday, she undertook a mission to try things she never had before and to overcome some of her fears in order to be a better role model for her daughters. Along her journey, she met and learned from other people facing similar fears. So, she set out to learn more and see if her input could help others conquer their own fears.\nThis book is a compilation of her research and her experiences. She includes numerous stories from friends and people she has met along the way. She also includes information gathered from therapists and other experts who can shed light on this journey.\nOverall, the stories are interesting, and most people can find things to relate to - whether in the fact that we overcome a fear or in the fact that we feel the fear. Two things I feel are missing for the book. First, the fears that the book addresses are pragmatic ones - fear of water, public speaking, heights, and even death. An entire world of fears exist that are just as common but less concrete - fear of loss, abandonment, etc - and not surmountable by doing what scares you. Overcoming those fears is also a key element of becoming brave. I wish that book addressed at least some aspect of these more nebulous fears.\nSecond, the book has a very pragmatic tone. The book presents evidence and data from many different sources and tells many different stories. The number of stories decreases the level of depth in any one story. I would have preferred fewer, but in depth stories that delve deeper into the process. Overcoming any fear is very much an emotional journey, and I wish the book conveyed that emotion in a stronger way.\nI Am Malala\nTitle: I Am Malala\nAuthor: Malala Yousafzai with Christina Lamb\nPublication Information: Little, Brown and Company; Hachette Book Group. 2013. 327 pages.\nBook Source: I read this book because I want to read and learn from Malala's story.\nFavorite Quote: \"On the shelves of our living room are awards from around the world - America, India, France, Spain, Italy, and Austria, and many other places. I've even been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, the youngest person ever. When I received prizes for my work at school I was happy, as I had worked hard for them but these prizes are different. I am grateful for them, but they only remind me how much work still needs to be done1 to achieve the goal of education for every boy and girl. I don't want to be thought of as the 'girl who was shot by the Taliban' but the 'girl who fought for education.'\"\nIt is difficult to be tuned into the news recently and not have heard the story of Malala Yousafzai, a young woman in the northern regions of Pakistan who spoke out for education, was shot by the Taliban, and has become a world celebrity. She is now the youngest person in the world to ever be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.\nThis book is her story, and through her story, a history of the northern part of Pakistan and somewhat a history of the fight for education. The culmination of the book, of course, is the event that brought Malala worldwide attention. The bulk of the book builds the background of the situation that leads to her shooting.\nI was actually not sure I wanted to read the book. It sat on my night stand for a week before I read it. Not because I do not want to share in her story, but rather because I was not sure how the story would be told. Would it be a medium for publicity? Would it be the voice of the adult co-author instead of this young woman? Would a reader be able to read the book as a book and not get bogged down in political statements? Would the book be her story or a way of depicting history and politics? Would the book be a one-sided view of Pakistan and its people? An article that appeared in The Washington Post captures my concern: \"It can sometimes feel as if the entire West were trying to co-opt Malala, as if to tell ourselves: \"Look, we're with the good guys, we're on the right side. The problem is over there.\" Sometimes the heroes we appoint to solve our problems can say as much about us as about them. Malala's answer is courage. Our answer is celebrity.\" (Max Fisher. \"The Nobel committee did Malala a favor in passing her over for the peace prize.\" The Washington Post, October 11, 2013)\nSurprisingly, the book does a good job of balancing the personal story of Malala and her family and the history and unsettled political climate of the Swat Valley. To me, the book projects the voices of both authors - a young woman coming through life altering changes and an experienced journalist investigating a part of the world. This history covered goes beyond Malala's young life, presenting background through the stories of her father and the generations before. Her voice comes through as that of a young woman - stories of arguing with siblings, spending time with friends, and longing for a home that remains out of reach. \"Over the last year I've seen many other places, but my valley remains to me the most beautiful place in the world. I don't know when I will see it again, but I know that I will.\"\nThe issue of eduction is a global issue. Malala's story is only one of so many more. I hope this book and the fact that her story caught the world's attention leads to real global changes and efforts to help all the children. I hope that Malala is always known as the \"girl who fought for education.\"\nLabels: 2010s, 300-399 pages, 4 stars, Memoir/Biography, review\nThe Explanation for Everything\nTitle: The Explanation for Everything\nAuthor: Lauren Grodstein\nBook Source: I received this book through the LibraryThing Early Reviewers program free of cost in exchange for an honest review. The book came as a paperback advance reading copy.\nFavorite Quote: \"As long as we're on this earth we should do right by other people. Especially those who have been good to us.\"\nAndy Waite is a widowed father raising his two daughters. He is still attempting to reconcile with the loss of his wife six years ago. He is a college professor who has built his life and his career around the theory of evolution.\nEnter into the picture Melissa. Melissa is a student who wishes to study intelligent design, a idea that suggests that certain aspects of our world cannot be explained by evolution and natural selection but rather by the hand of a designer. Melissa convinces Andy to direct her study even though their views conflict.\nI feel that the intent of the book is to look at the philosophical discussion of evolution versus creation especially at times of difficulty or tragedy. To me, however, it's a sad book about a man attempting to reconcile the sadness in his life. He loses his wife in a tragic way; yet, the moral dilemma of the existence of something beyond death comes six years later? He builds his career and work around one central idea, but calls it all into question based on the work of one student? He is a father of two attempting to build a life for his daughters, but he puts it at risk for a young woman?\nThe motivations and actions do not ring true. Andy Waite comes across as a man lost in his own life, somewhat sad and directionless. As such, the book's intent to raise a discussion about philosophical issues seems to lose direction in the individual characters.\nThe Light in the Ruins\nTitle: The Light in the Ruins\nAuthor: Chris Bohjalian\nPublication Information: DoubleDay. 2013. 320 pages.\nBook Source: I read this book because I have read other books by the author and enjoyed some of them (The Night Strangers and The Sandcastle Girls).\nFavorite Quote: \"We make compromises. We look the other way. Then, when it's over, we can't look at ourselves in the mirror.\"\nThe Light in the Ruins is a story of World War II as it comes to Italy and a story of a war vendetta carried out about ten year later. The story moves back and forth between the two time periods, slowly revealing bits and pieces about the characters and the events that transpired.\nThe story centers around the Rosati family. During the war, the Rosatis live on their estate, the Villa Chimera near Florence. Two brothers, Vittore and Marco, serve in the war. Eighteen year old Cristina, along with her parents and Marco's wife and children, live at Villa Chimera. The hope is that the war will end before it truly reaches them. Unfortunately, that is not to be. Italy becomes a battleground, as the Allies reach near, Germany makes a stand, and the Italian partisans fight in the nearby hills. The Rosatis are caught up in the fighting, becoming host to both the Nazis and the partisans.\nTen years later, Francesca, Marco's wife is found brutally murdered in Florence. The police investigate. One of the investigators, Serafina Bettina, was one of the partisans during the war and discovers her own link to the Rosatis.\nThe book continues with the story from both time periods. Interspersed throughout the thoughts or words of the killer, possibly to provide hints as to the killer's identity and motive. The suspense builds in both time periods throughout the book as the killings and the investigation continue, and as the war comes closer and touches Villa Chimera. Chris Bohjalian's writing brings both time periods and the characters to life.\nMost of Chris Bohjalian's books have an unexpected ending, one that makes you look back through the book to see if you could have seen it coming. With this book, the unfortunate thing is that you could not have seen it coming. The ending and the resolution was almost tangential to the main story built throughout the book. As a reader, that takes some of the fun out of it. It's one thing to be surprised. It's quite another to feel that it was almost unrelated. Still, the writing is enjoyable.\nTitle: Cloud Atlas\nAuthor: David Mitchell\nPublication Information: Random House Trade Paperbacks, The Random House Publishing Group, Random House Inc. 2004. 500 pages.\nBook Source: This book is required summer reading for the Advanced Placement English class at our high school. I read it because I wanted to see what our school will be teaching.\nFavorite Quote: \"Every nowhere is somewhere.\"\nI have to admit. I finished reading this book a while ago. I have taken this time to dwell on it, reread passages, think about it some more, and really consider how I describe it. Reading this book, I feel, will be an intensely personal experience. This book will not work for everyone. For me, it did.\nFrom its description, the book is a set of six loosely related stories. Each is set in a different time and place. Each is written in an entirely different style. The first is the journal of a traveler. The second is letters from a young musician. The third is the story of a young reporter and big business. The fourth is the adventure of a publisher institutionalized because of illness. The fifth is the tale of a futuristic world of clones and slavery. The sixth comes full circle to life on a primitive post-apocalyptic island.\nThe stories are not told in their entirety, instead in halves. They build from the first to the sixth and then weave their way back. The first set of sections stop rather abruptly and at a climatic moment. Only the story of the post-apocalyptic world is told in one go. As such, it forms the crux of the novel.\nBased on the description, I was not sure I was going to enjoy the book. As I read the first section, I wasn't sure I would like it. Yet, I kept reading. The writing styles of certain sections appealed to me more so than others. Slowly, though, themes start to emerge in the book - statements of ideology and philosophy - and it coalesces into a whole. The book is one about human nature, power, control, and the past being redefined to suit the needs of the future. These themes repeat throughout the book:\nFrom the traveler's journal: \"Scholars discern motions in history & formulate these motions into rules that govern the rises & falls of civilizations. My belief runs contrary, however. To wit: history admits no rules, only outcomes. What precipitates outcomes? Vicious acts and virtuous act. What precipitates acts? Belief. Belief is both prize & battlefield, within the mind & in the mind's mirror, the world.\"\nFrom the musician's letters: \"Wars do not combust without warning. They begin as little fires over the horizon. Wars approach ... Another war is always coming, Robert. They are never properly extinguished. What sparks wars? The will to power, the backbone of human nature. The threat of violence, the fear of violence, or actual violence is the instrument of this dreadful will ... The nation-state is merely human nature inflated to monstrous proportions. QED, nations are entities whose laws are written by violence.\"\nFrom the reporter's story: \"Yet how is it some men attain mastery over others while the vast majority live and die as minions, as livestock? The answer is a holy trinity. First: God-given gifts of charisma. Second: the discipline to nurture these gifts to maturity, for though humanity's topsoil is fertile with talent, only one seed in ten thousand will every flower - for want of discipline ... Third: the will to power. This is the enigma at the core of the various destinies of men. What drives some to accrue power where the majority of the compatriots lose, mishandle, or eschew power? Is it addiction? Wealth? Survival? Natural selection? I propose these are all pretexts and results, not the root cause. The only answer can be 'There is no \"Why.\" This is our nature.' 'Who' and 'What' run deeper than 'Why.'\"\nFrom the publisher's tale: \"Mother used to say escape is never further than the nearest book. Well, Mumsy, no, not really .... Books don't offer real escape, but they can stop a mind scratching itself raw.\"\n[Okay, I know this has nothing to do with the themes, but I love comments in books about books.]\nFrom the future world: \"In a cycle as old as tribalism, ignorance of the Other engenders fear; fear engenders hatred; hatred engenders violence; violence engenders further violence until only \"rights,\" the only law, are whatever is willed by the most powerful.\"\nFrom the post-apocalyptic world: \"Human hunger birthed the Civ'lize, but human hunger killed it too.\"\nWhat I found amazing was how completely David Mitchell is able to change his writing style from section to section. Each section is like reading a completely different book - the voice, the language, the writing style, the descriptions - pretty much everything about the story. I feel that David Mitchell describes his own work within the book. \"Spent the fortnight gone in the music room, reworking my year's fragments into a \"sextet for overlapping soloists\": piano, clarinet, 'cello, flute, oboe, and violin, each in its own language of key, scale, and color. In the first set, each solo is interrupted by its successor: in the second: each interruption is recontinued, in order. Revolutionary or gimmicky? Shan't know until it's too late, and by then it'll be too late.\"\nI vote revolutionary. I did not expect to like this book, but I did. I expected to toil through it, and through some sections, I did. The themes and the ideas of this book will stay with me for a long time, and I can see myself periodically rereading.\nThe Execution of Noa P. Singleton\nTitle: The Execution of Noa P. Singleton\nAuthor: Elizabeth L. Silver\nPublication Information: Crown Publishers, Crown Publishing Group, Random House Inc. 2013. 320 pages.\nBook Source: I read this book because it sounded like it has an interesting premise.\nFavorite Quote: \"When you try to find the answer or explanation for a law, a scientific discovery, a tumor, and you can't identify its reasons, then you just cut it out. Surgically remove anything potentially cantankerous. Cauterize society around it so that we'll never know the real answer.\"\nNoa P. Singleton is a death row inmate, convicted of capital murder. As the reader meets her, she has been on death row for many years and is now a short time away from her execution date. Enter into the picture - two attorneys - one who is young and idealistic and one who happens to be the mother of Noa's victim. Through Noa's recollections, the book brings the reader through her life, particularly the months prior to the crime.\nThe characters in this are not likable. Noa appears to have no interest in her own life or trying to save it. Marlene is a grieving mother, but as the book slowly reveals, her motives go beyond that grief. Noa's family includes her mother who has not reached out to her since her arrest and conviction and her father who was absent for most of her life.\nThe premise of the book is a strong one, dealing with issues like capitol punishment and the impact childhood has on adult life. Unfortunately, the execution of that premise is lacking for two primary reasons.\nFirst, the author's writing style, particularly some of the descriptions, distract from the story itself. For example, papers and evidence \"eviscerate, peeling into orange curls and blackened petals in the crematorium of dead documents\". A beating heart is described as \"the beat of those four musicians ... making their own metronome of quarter notes, eighth notes, half notes\". Rather than adding to the story, these descriptions seem out of place.\nSecond, the first half of the book builds a storyline with Noa, her relationship with her father, and the events surrounding her crime, and her lack of interest in saving her own life. Unfortunately, the resolution and the \"reveal\" of Noa's motivations for her actions goes in a completely different direction. Without a spoiler, let me just say it was a disappointment.\nBellman & Black\nTitle: Bellman & Black\nAuthor: Diane Setterfield\nFavorite Quote: \"The things a man does not think about can incubate in him without benefit of conscious attention.\"\nThe short description of this book says that it is the story of William\nBellman and how one action in his childhood has ramifications throughout his life. The subtitle of the book is \"A Ghost Story.\" The book does not live up to that description and ends up in an entirely different place.\nAs a young man, William kills a rook with a slingshot. The reference to rooks appears throughout the book as a symbol in or commentary on the direction of William's life. As William grows up, his business sense leads to great wealth and great power. His personal life begins on a positive note. He is young, smart, and handsome. Life brings him love and success.\nTragedy falls and brings with it a bargain between William and a man named Black. That bargain leads to a new business and even greater professional success. Yet, what of his personal life? As William's success grows, what is the parallel impact on his person and his personal life?\nTo me, this entire book just simmers and never truly finds its grip. The anticipation of a big moment exists throughout the book; yet, the moment never comes. The book is called a ghost story, but it is not quite that. The book is based on the ramifications of a cruel childhood action, but the impact seems exaggerated. The book is about a mysterious bargain in a desperate moment, but that does not end up where you expect. The book in some descriptions is classified as horror, but it is not that other than the macabre business that William Bellman ends up in. The book in some descriptions is classified as historical fiction, but it not that either other than the descriptions that evoke a time and place. In other words, the book could have been a lot of things, but it never quite gets there.\nThe descriptions even the extensive ones about the Bellman business are enjoyable to read, and the dark somber atmosphere is created well and held through the bulk of the book. Thus, what saves the book is Diane Setterfield's writing.\nThe Ocean at the End of the Lane\nTitle: The Ocean at the End of the Lane\nAuthor: Neil Gaiman\nPublication Information: HarperCollins Publishers Inc. 2013. 182 pages.\nBook Source: I read this book because I have seen so much publicity about this author's work but never read anything by him.\nFavorite Quote: \"Different people remember things differently, and you'll not get any two people to remember anything the same, whether they were there or not. You stand two of you lot next to each other, and you could be continents away for all it means anything.\"\nThe Ocean at the End of the Lane is pure fantasy. The author intended for it be a short story, but the story evolved into a novel. The book pulls the reader into its world and does not let go.\nA man returns to the place of his childhood for a funeral and takes a trip down memory lane. His home is no longer there, but he visits a neighbor's home - the family of a childhood friend. From there, the story is a reflection back into his childhood.\nHe grew up on a farm with his parents and sister. A lonely quiet seven year old boy. His family struggles with money. He becomes friendly with a young girl, Lettie, who lives with her grandmother and mother at the end of the lane.\nFrom there, the story draws the reader into a world of creatures from another world, of good and evil, of friendship and sacrifice. There are allusions to traditions honoring women, mythology, and mysticism. Fantasy creeps into reality and leaves you wondering what is read. The tale is a dark one, but the ultimate message is about friendship and childhood memories.\nThis is a short book and a very quick read. What I love about this book is how visual it is. It feels like watching a story unfold not just reading one. I also enjoy the fact that it leaves you wondering what to believe. The boy in this book is a reader and his words describe this book for me: \"I liked myths. They weren't adult stories and they weren't children's stories. They were better than that. They just were.\"\nTitle: Heartburn\nAuthor: Norah Ephron\nPublication Information: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. 1983. 153 pages.\nFavorite Quote: \"Why do you feel you have to turn everything into a story? ... Because if I tell the story, I control the version. Because if I tell the story, I can make you laugh, and I would rather have you laugh at me than feel sorry for me. Because if I tell the story, it doesn't hurt as much. Because if I tell the story, I can get on with it.\"\nRachel Sampstat is a cookbook author, a wife, and her mother. Mark Feldman is a syndicated columnist and Rachel's husband. The book begins as Rachel, seven months pregnant, learns that her husband is having an affair and has been for several months.\nWhat ensues through the rest of the story are different reflections on relationships through Rachel and Mark's stories and the stories of the couples around them. What keeps people together? What drives them apart? Can you move beyond a betrayal like infidelity?\nThe emotions and complicated relationships in this book are real life - sometimes clear and sometimes a jumbled mess. Some parts of the book are funny, but to me, the sadness emerges more so than the humor.\nThe book's pace is somewhat frantic. To me, it adds to the sadness, leaving an impression of \"if you run fast enough, you can outrun your own emotions\". Written from Rachel's point of view, the book seems to flit between her varied thoughts and sometimes goes in all different directions - her first marriage, her husband's infidelity, the Washington DC political scene, friends, recipes, her parents, and other things. Sometimes it is like following a really long monologue without any given thread becoming fully developed.\nThis book was made into a movie starring Meryl Streep and Jack Nicholson. Usually, I prefer the books over the movies. With that cast and the nature of the story, this one may be better as a movie. I guess I will have to watch and decide.\nLabels: 1980s, 199 and under, 2 stars, Book Club, Fiction, review\nSongs of Willow Frost\nTitle: Songs of Willow Frost\nAuthor: Jamie Ford\nPublication Information: Ballantine Books, The Random House Publishing Group, Random House, Inc. 2013. 331 pages.\nBook Source: I read this book based on how much I enjoyed the author's first book, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet.\nFavorite Quote: \"The uncomfortable truth is that no one is all bad, or all good. Not mother and fathers, sons and daughters, or husbands and wives. Life would be much easier if that were the case. Instead, everyone ... was a confusing mix of love and hate, joy and sorrow, longing and forgetting, misguided truth and painful deception.\"\nWillow Frost is a Chinese American actress. William Eng is a twelve year old Chinese American boy living in an orphanage. He has lived there for five years since his mother's body was carried away from their apartment in Seattle. He remembers a life before; he remembers his mother's love.\nOne day, as a special treat, the orphanage children are taken to the movies. He sees Willow Frost on the screen and believes that she is his mother, Liu Song, even though he has believed that she died. He and his friend Charlotte, a young blind resident of the orphanage, run away to find Willow Frost.\nThe story continues with William's, Charlotte's, but most of all Willow Frost's story. The reader learns a story of abuse, loss, love, betrayal, and the difficult choice of a parent. Set in the twenties and the Depression, it becomes also a story of the times and the struggles of people who could not provide for their children. The historical references to the early days of the film industry and events like the massacre at Seattle Wah Mee Club provide the backdrop to this story.\nThe book is predictable - the story of William's birth, Charlotte's story, even the ending. The other incongruous note in the book is that William and Charlotte are so young. Yet, the insight the characters show is well beyond their years. You might say that this makes the book somewhat unrealistic or you might choose to say that the traumatic experiences of their children makes them older than their chronological age. I choose to go with the latter interpretation.\nThe bottom line is that Jamie Ford weaves such an emotionally gripping tale that the other things don't matter. The emotions hit you even as you anticipate them. The age of the characters ceases to matter as you feel their sense of pain and abandonment and even joy.\nLoved Jamie Ford's first book. Loved this one. Can't wait to see what comes next.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line669115"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.623792827129364,"wiki_prob":0.376207172870636,"text":"Israeli Ground Invasion an Aggressive Action\nby Kennedy Graham\nMy comment a week ago on the Israel-Gaza situation occasioned considerable comment, supportive and critical. No surprise; on such an important and sensitive issue, personal opinions run deep, including mine.\nComments in support take the long view – advocate a political re-alignment that reduces the US role as biased mediator; strengthen in various ways the UN capacity to take and enforce decisions and act as mediator; encourage judicial settlement; and explore the avenue of non-violence (Gandhi-style) and reconciliation (Mandela-style).\nCritical responses take the short view – stand in protest against the atrocities that are occurring from the Israeli rain of death; protect the right of Hamas to fight against occupation and suppression.\nBoth views are fair, and they are not necessarily inconsistent. The criticism that has been advanced is not only from the Palestinian side but also the Israeli side. The 4th principle in the Green Charter is non-violent conflict resolution. This requires a preparedness to maintain dialogue with all parties to a dispute, irrespective of the competing merit of their claims.\nA few years ago, I commenced the formation of NZ-Palestine MP friendship group, and am in regular contact with the Palestinian ambassador to NZ (in Canberra). I remain a member of the NZ-Israel MP friendship group, and have asked the Israeli ambassador (in Wellington) to meet me to explain what he takes to be the moral-political-legal justification for his country’s actions.\nOver the past week, what has occurred? Some 223 Palestinian deaths, 1 Israeli death, a failed ceasefire agreement. Hamas rocket attacks and Israeli bombing, both in violation of international law.\nAnd now, overnight, an Israeli ground invasion.\nNot even this is new. Israel invaded in January ’09. That occasioned a UN report headed by esteemed South African jurist, Richard Goldstone. The report’s findings are worth revisiting:\n– Israeli forces potentially committed war crimes when they launched attacks on civilians with no justifiable military objective.\n– Israel has potentially committed the crime of persecution, a crime against humanity, by denying Palestinians in the Gaza Strip of their means of subsistence, employment, housing and water, limiting their freedom of movement, and limiting their access to a court of law and an effective remedy.\n– There have been serious human rights violations, including arbitrary arrests and extra-judicial executions of Palestinians by the authorities in Gaza and by the Palestinian Authority in the West Bank.\n– As a result of the attacks, Gaza inhabitants have suffered materially (because of the destruction of food supplies, water sanitation systems, and housing) as well as from immense trauma.\n– Palestinian armed groups committed war crimes, as well as possibly crimes against humanity, in their repeated launching of rockets and mortars into southern Israel\nSo, not much has changed. There will be no end in sight to this conflict as long as there is a relationship of oppressed – oppressor in Israel and Palestine. Israel has a right to exist, peacefully and securely, but they will not find this in the sustained brutal and dehumanising oppression of Palestinians.\nThere will be no end in sight as long as the only options open to Hamas are surrender or resistance. The accord between the Palestinian Authority and Hamas went some way to recognising the legitimacy of discontent of each. I say this not to offer support for all policies of each, but to reiterate that, although the struggles and opinions of some might stir distaste, the grievances of a people deserve to be heard with open ears, and engaged with respectfully.\nHamas has articulated three demands: the release of political prisoners who were released in a prisoner-swap last year, but subsequently rearrested; the opening of border crossings between Israel and Gaza to allow movement of civilians and goods; international supervision of the Gaza seaport, in place of the current Israeli blockade.\nNone of these is extremist; none would harm Israel. But they would require that Israel give up some power and control, and it is this to which Israel clings in its hopes of being a secure nation. That is an illusory stance, disproved by historical experience.\nI do not think that power over others will ever lead to lasting peace for Israel. Work needs to be done to build mutual respect for the lives and livelihoods of Palestinians, and Israelis. This will need an abundance of empathy, and a re-humanising of each in the other’s eyes.\nI have personally heard abusive language of each other from both Palestinians and Israelis in my time living in Jordan. The world has an obligation to fight these sorts of perceptions.\nI do not condone violence by anyone, ever. But we must recognise the violence of Hamas for what it is – a desperate attempt at resistance by an oppressed people. And so following, we must recognise Israel’s violence for what it is – not the right to self-defence, but a continuation of oppression and systemic violence.\nBoth are crimes, and both require condemnation. But in the longer term, it requires a political realignment, and refashioning of mind-set perhaps on all our parts, before a settlement is achieved, and peace finally secured.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line775443"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7444097399711609,"wiki_prob":0.2555902600288391,"text":"PDG Hires New Government Affairs Policy Associate\nShane Palmer has joined the team at the Peter Damon Group in the new role of Government Affairs Policy Associate. A Virginia native, Palmer holds a bachelor’s degree in government & international politics with a concentration in public policy and administration from George Mason University. His passion for effective policy and interest in government affairs were honed through internships at Washington Premier Group, Mid-Tier Advocacy Group, and Information Technology Industry Council.\nPalmer’s appointment was effective September 7, 2021.\n700 12th Street, NW, Suite 700\nWebsite Designed by Sonnie Design","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1487477"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7350414991378784,"wiki_prob":0.2649585008621216,"text":"UTILITIES AND TRANSPORTATION\n[ Docket PL-120350 -- Filed October 24, 2012, 11:16 a.m. ]\n�����Original Notice.\n�����Preproposal statement of inquiry was filed as WSR 12-07-087.\n�����Title of Rule and Other Identifying Information: Chapter 480-75 WAC, Hazardous liquid pipelines -- Safety.\n�����Hearing Location(s): Commission's Hearing Room 206, Second Floor, Richard Hemstad Building, 1300 South Evergreen Park Drive S.W., Olympia, WA 98504-7250, on December 19, 2012, at 9:30 a.m.\n�����Date of Intended Adoption: December 19, 2012.\n�����Submit Written Comments to: Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission, P.O. Box 47250, Olympia, WA 98504-7250, e-mail records@utc.wa.gov, fax (360) 586-1150, by November 26, 2012. Please include Docket PL-120350 in your communication.\n�����Assistance for Persons with Disabilities: Contact Debbie Aguilar by November 26, 2012, TTY (360) 586-8203 or (360) 664-1132.\n�����Purpose of the Proposal and Its Anticipated Effects, Including Any Changes in Existing Rules: The 2011 legislature amended the underground utilities law, chapter 19.122 RCW. These changes take effect on January 1, 2013. This new law, assigned to the Washington utilities and transportation commission (commission), affects the commission's authority to enforce the underground utilities law as it relates to pipelines. The commission initiated this rule making to require hazardous liquid pipeline companies to report additional information about damage to their facilities caused by excavators that have violated the underground utilities law, and to provide to violators information about their rights under the revised law.\n�����Reasons Supporting Proposal: Proposed revisions will provide sufficient supplemental reporting and evidentiary records and documentation needed by the commission to sustain an action to enforce violations of chapter 19.122 RCW.\n�����Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 80.01.040(4), 81.01.010, 81.04.160, 81.88.040, 81.88.065, and sections 1, 2, and 5, chapter 142, Laws of 2007.\n�����Statute Being Implemented: Chapter 19.122 RCW.\n�����Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.\n�����Name of Proponent: Washington utilities and transportation commission, governmental.\n�����Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting, Implementation and Enforcement: David W. Danner, 1300 South Evergreen Park Drive S.W., Olympia, WA 98504, (360) 664-1208.\n�����No small business economic impact statement has been prepared under chapter 19.85 RCW. The proposed rules will not result in or impose more than minor costs. Because there will not be more than minor increase in costs resulting from the proposed rule changes, a small business economic impact statement is not required under RCW 19.85.030(1).\n�����A cost-benefit analysis is not required under RCW 34.05.328. The commission is not an agency to which RCW 34.05.328 applies. The proposed rules are not significant legislative rules of the sort referenced in RCW 34.05.328(5).\nDavid W. Danner\nand Secretary\nAMENDATORY SECTION(Amending Docket PL-070974, General Order R-548, filed 5/30/08, effective 6/30/08)\nWAC 480-75-630 Incident reporting. (1) Each hazardous liquid pipeline company must give telephonic notice to the commission within two hours of discovery of an incident involving that company's pipeline, such as a release of a hazardous liquid, that results in:\n���� (a) A fatality;\n���� (b) Personal injury requiring hospitalization;\n���� (c) Fire or explosion not intentionally set by the pipeline company;\n���� (d) Spills of five gallons or more of product from the pipeline;\n���� (e) Damage to the property of the hazardous liquid pipeline company and others of a combined total cost exceeding twenty-five thousand dollars (automobile collisions and other equipment accidents not involving hazardous liquid or hazardous-liquid-handling equipment need not be reported under this rule);\n���� (f) A significant occurrence in the judgment of the hazardous liquid pipeline company, even though it does not meet the criteria of (a) through (e) of this subsection;\n���� (g) The news media reports the occurrence, even though it does not meet the criteria of (a) through (f) of this subsection.\n���� (2) Each hazardous liquid pipeline company that has an incident described in subsection (1) of this section shall send a written report to the commission within thirty calendar days of the incident. The report must include the following:\n���� (a) Name(s) and address(es) of any person or persons injured or killed or whose property was damaged;\n���� (b) The extent of injuries and damage;\n���� (c) A description of the incident including date, time, and place;\n���� (d) A description and maximum operating pressure of the pipeline implicated in the incident and the system operating pressure at the time of the incident;\n���� (e) The date and time the pipeline returns to safe operations; and\n���� (f) The date, time, and type of any temporary or permanent repair.\n���� (3) A hazardous liquid pipeline company must give the commission telephonic notification within twenty-four hours of emergency situations including emergency shutdowns, material defects, or physical damage that impairs the serviceability of the pipeline.\n���� (4) In the event of damage to a hazardous liquid pipeline, each hazardous liquid pipeline company must provide to the commission the following information using either the commission's web-based damage reporting tool or its successor, or the damage reporting form located on the commission's web site:\n���� (a) The reporting requirements set forth in RCW 19.122.053 (3)(a) through (n);\n���� (b) If the damage is believed by the company to be the result of an excavation conducted without a facilities locate first being completed, the hazardous liquid pipeline company must also report the name, address, and phone number of the person or entity that the company has reason to believe may have caused the damage. The company must include this information in the comment section of the web-based damage reporting tool form or sent to the commission separately. If the company chooses to send the information separately it must include sufficient information to allow the commission to link the name of the party believed to have caused the damage with the damage event reported through the damage reporting tool;\n���� (c) Each hazardous liquid pipeline company must retain all damage and damage claim records it creates related to damage events, including photographs and documentation supporting the conclusion that a facilities locate was not completed, reported under subsection (b) of this section for a period of two years and make those records available to the commission upon request.\n���� (5) Each hazardous liquid pipeline company must provide to an excavator who damages a hazardous liquid pipeline facility, the following information set forth in chapter 19.122 RCW:\n���� (a) Notification requirements for excavators under RCW 19.122.050(1);\n���� (b) A description of the excavator's responsibilities for reporting damages under RCW 19.122.053; and\n���� (c) Information concerning the safety committee referenced under RCW 19.122.130, including committee contact information, and how the excavator may file a complaint with the safety committee.\n���� (6) Each hazardous liquid pipeline company must report to the commission the details of each instance of the following when the company or its contractor observes or becomes aware of either of these events:\n���� (a) An excavator digs within thirty-five feet of a transmission pipeline, as defined by RCW 19.122.020(26) without first obtaining a locate; or\n���� (b) Someone maliciously damages or removes marks indicating the location or presence of pipeline facilities.\n���� The company must only report information to the extent that an employee or contractor of the company observes or becomes aware of these events.\n[Statutory Authority: RCW 80.01.040, 80.04.060, 81.88.040. 08-12-045 (Docket PL-070974, General Order R-548), � 480-75-630, filed 5/30/08, effective 6/30/08. Statutory Authority: RCW 80.01.040, 81.01.010, 81.88.060. 07-09-001 (Docket PL-061026, General Order R-541), � 480-75-630, filed 4/4/07, effective 5/5/07. Statutory Authority: RCW 80.01.040 and 80.04.160. 02-18-032 (Docket No. TO-000712, General Order No. R-500), � 480-75-630, filed 8/26/02, effective 9/26/02.]","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1657260"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6508434414863586,"wiki_prob":0.6508434414863586,"text":"MAAC basketball, NCAA Basketball\nMAAC Basketball Update: Iona, Siena, Fairfield\nDecember 11, 2010 at 10:21 pm Andrew Kahn\tLeave a comment\nLast night’s Siena/Fairfield game was the last MAAC game until 2011, which makes this a good time to review what’s been happening in the conference. Which teams have exceeded preseason expectations? Which have been underwhelming? Who are the players to watch?\nLet’s start with the team I know best and analyze the other two teams many prognosticators had in their preseason top three, before looking at the rest of the league.\nIona Gaels (7-3, 2-0 in MAAC)\nI covered the Gaels last season and attended their first three home games this season before today. Although Iona was picked fourth in the only official preseason poll, all signs indicate this is one of the top two teams in the MAAC.\nMost of the returning players have improved, some even more than expected. And no matter what logical criteria you used to make your vote, Mike Glover would be the MVP of the league if voting took place today.\nAs can be expected for a new head coach coming from outside the program, it was clear during Iona’s preseason practices that Tim Cluess was still getting familiar with his players. Losing to Bryant to cap an 0-3 trip to Cleveland is unacceptable, but the seven straight wins Iona has rattled off since make that a distant memory (for fans at least; Cluess still wears a t-shirt from that tournament to remind his players of how bad the Gaels can be if they don’t work hard).\nMike Glover throws it down with power. (Credit: Walt Middleton/ICGaels.com)\nThe revival has been led by Glover. After he hung 39 on Canisius, head coach Tom Parrotta said: “He asserted himself early and often. Glover was the difference in the game. Clearly we didn’t have an answer for him.” The 6’7, 215-pound forward scored 21 and pulled down 17 boards in an upset victory over Richmond. I am excited to see him matched up with the preseason Player of the Year (more on that later).\nGlover’s dominating inside play has opened up things for Iona’s outside shooters as well. Jermel Jenkins and Kyle Smyth are Nos. 1 and 2, respectively, in the conference in three-pointers made per game. Both are shooting at least 40 percent from downtown. Niagara coach Joe Mihalich was certainly impressed. “My goodness, Smyth doesn’t even look—great shooter, quick release. They have great balance; a guy that scores around the basket and guys that shoot the ball. You can’t cheat. You’ve got to play them honest. They’ve got a lot of ways to get you.”\nFairfield Stags (6-3, 2-0)\nFairfield didn’t pick up an impressive nonconference win, but last night’s 72-55 smackdown of Siena at the Times Union Center—where the Saints had won 28 straight MAAC games—is enough to validate its preseason No. 1 ranking.\nLast year’s Rookie of the Year, point guard Derek Needham, is joined by forwards Warren Edney and Yorel Hawkins, to make up Fairfield’s top three scorers. Due to injuries, Edney missed all of last season and Hawkins missed the last 10 games. Greg Nero is another upperclassman who was a top player two years ago but missed all of last season. He had been averaging 20 minutes per game this season but fatigue issues kept him from making the trip to Albany for last night’s contest.\nThis is clearly a top-tier MAAC team that has the advantage Siena held the last two seasons: The conference tournament will be at its home arena. The Stags’ early-season MAAC schedule is favorable, so it will be interesting to see how far Fairfield can make it without a conference loss.\nSiena Saints (2-6, 1-1)\nSome were alarmed immediately, after Siena saw its 39-game home winning streak snapped in the opener against Vermont. Most were concerned heading into yesterday’s showdown with Fairfield, but optimistic observers could point out that Minnesota and Butler are quality teams and the other two losses were in overtime. Perhaps it was just bad luck for the Saints.\nBut after the loss to Fairfield, in which Siena was outrebounded 32-19 and its star player, Ryan Rossiter, was held to seven points, it’s hard to find a confident Siena supporter. I, however, don’t think the sky is falling in Albany. I’m simply not sure why the expectations were so high for the Saints.\nLet’s not forget that in addition to their coach, they lost All-MAAC performers Ronald Moore, Edwin Ubiles, and Alex Franklin, last year’s Player of the Year. Rossiter (the aforementioned preseason POY) and Clarence Jackson are returning players any coach in this league would love to have, but the supporting cast has not been good enough so far this season. But many of those guys are underclassmen and have the potential to develop into more valuable role players. How much they develop will determine whether or not Mitch Buonaguro’s first year as head coach is a success.\nElsewhere in the MAAC:\nThe Niagara Purple Eagles (2-7, 0-2) are off to a terrible start, but this is both a young and injury-depleted team. Mihalich says that is just an excuse for their poor play. After the loss to Iona last weekend, he said: “We knew we weren’t going to be good in December. Our goal is to get better all the time. We’ve got to hope that by the end of February, beginning of March, we can be a team that can win some games.” That’s what happened last season after Niagara’s ideal starters were all healthy at the same time. This team relies far more heavily on freshmen, but I expect this team to be much more competitive later in the year.\nAfter seeing them in person, I’m not sure the Canisius Golden Griffins (3-3, 0-1) have the guard play to improve upon their preseason No. 7 ranking.\nThe St. Peter’s Peacocks (4-4, 2-2) were the interesting choice for third in the preseason poll, but star senior Wesley Jenkins is back after missing only four games. He scored 22 in St. Pete’s last game, against Manhattan.\nThe Marist Red Foxes (2-8, 2-0) have already exceeded their win total from last season. Let that sink in, especially since both victories have come in conference. Marist swept a weekend at home against Niagara and Canisius and doesn’t play another MAAC team until January 7.\nThe Manhattan Jaspers (2-8, 0-2) were picked just one spot ahead of Marist in the preseason poll, and they simply don’t have the offensive firepower to be a serious contender.\nThe Rider Broncs (6-4, 1-1) and the Loyola (MD) Greyounds (3-5, 0-2) were picked to finish in the middle of the pack. Rider’s top three leaders in minutes and points are all upperclassmen, so the loss of superstar Ryan Thompson might not be as critical as expected. Senior Jamal Barney has led the Greyhounds in scoring every year he’s been on campus.\n2010-11 college basketball seasonFairfield basketballIona GaelsSiena basketball\nPrevious PostJimmy V Classic: Kansas, Michigan State, Syracuse, MemphisNext PostNew York Jets Suspend Sal Alosi for Tripping Player","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line114955"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8951920866966248,"wiki_prob":0.8951920866966248,"text":"at the Harold Pinter Theatre, London\nAbout Oscar Wilde\nThe history of Oscar Wilde is notorious; he was an Irish writer working in the late 19th Century and is one of the most infamous figures in modern literature. He is revered for his numerous plays and only novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, as well as numerous short stories and essays on aestheticism. He is also remembered for his turbulent personal life, trials over homosexuality, imprisonment and early death.\nWilde in 1882 by Napoleon Sarony\nOscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde was born in Dublin on 16th October 1854 to Sir Robert Wills Wilde, a successful surgeon, and Jane Francesca Wilde, a literary hostess and writer. He studied at Trinity College in Dublin and then Magdalen College Oxford, where he became interested in the aesthetic values of art and literature. After graduating he moved into prominent fashionable circles in London before publishing a range of works on aestheticism and lecturing in the USA and Canada. Even in his younger years he was known for his flamboyancy, Dandyish dress sense and wit, becoming a well known personality of the day. He was even caricatured as a sunflower in the satirical magazine Punch.\nDuring the early 1890s he published his only novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, focusing on his obsession with opulence and beauty. Society largely found Wilde’s mockery of Victorian values insulting, but the book gained a large cult following during the 20th and 21st Centuries. Following this he wrote the play Salome, entirely in French, whilst in Paris but it was refused a license in England. Wilde then penned four comedies in the early 1890s, sometimes referred to as the ‘comedies of society’, which include Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892), An Ideal Husband (1895) and The Importance of Being Earnest (1895). He was still interested in mocking the Victorian upper classes but had found a way to do so without offending them; indeed the majority of his audiences were members of high society. He is most remembered for The Importance of Being Earnest, with it’s quick witted and ridiculous characters.\nWilde and Douglas in 1893\nWilde married Constance Lloyd in 1884 and they had two children, but he began a homosexual affair with Lord Alfred Douglas in the following years. Douglas’ father, the Marquess of Queensberry, discovered them dining together in the Cafe Royal in 1894. The Marquess began a campaign against Wilde during the opening of the Importance of Being Earnest, culminating in his attempt to sabotage the first production in 1895 by throwing rotten vegetables. He was barred from the theatre but persisted in harassing Wilde over the coming days. He sent a note to the Albemarle Club where Wilde was socialising, addressed to ‘Oscar Wilde, posing sodomite’, which started a trial of the Marquess under harassment charges. However, during the trial the accusation was turned round on Wilde for his homosexual affairs and he became the prosecuted. He was arrested for sodomy and gross indecency and spent two years in Reading Gaol.\nImprisonment and final years\nDuring his imprisonment Wilde wrote poems and love letters to Douglas, including the famous epistle De Profundis. He was released from prison in 1897 and lived out his final years in Europe under the name Sebastian Melmoth, beginning a relationship with Robert Ross. He wrote the The Ballad of Reading Gaol, along with two letters to the Daily Chronicle describing the harsh conditions of English prisons and campaigning for reform. Wilde contracted cerebral meningitis on 25th November 1900 and asked to be baptised, which a priest performed on the 29th November. It’s rumoured that Wilde’s last words were ‘My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or other of us has got to go’, but it has never been officially confirmed. He passed away on 30th November 1900 at the age of 46.\nThe tomb was so badly damaged by the lipstick marks of fans that a glass wall was erected in 2011\nHe was buried in the Cimetière de Bagneux outside Paris, but in 1909 his remains were moved to Père Lachaise Cemetery. Robert Ross commissioned his tomb and had a compartment built in for his own ashes, which were added in 1950. The epitaph on the tomb is taken from Wilde’s own Ballad of Reading Gaol:\n‘And alien tears will fill for him\nPity’s long-broken urn,\nFor his mourners will be outcast men,\nAnd outcasts always mourn.’\n1895 The First Production\n1939 Globe Theatre London\n1982 National Theatre London\n2011 Broadway Revival\n2014 Harold Pinter Theatre London\nTop 10 quotes\nTop 10 Lady Bracknell quotes\nKieran Mackay on Tickets\nAbigail Hamilton on Top 10 Lady Bracknell quotes\nbrian on Top 10 Lady Bracknell quotes","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line495148"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8503168821334839,"wiki_prob":0.8503168821334839,"text":"Difference between revisions of \"Rick Schwartz\"\nGeorgie (talk | contribs)\n(→Domaining)\n'''Rick Schwartz''' is the self-anointed \"[[Domaining|Domain]] King\", who made millions off of [[domaining]] in the mid-90s. He purchased his first domain name in 1995; paying $100 for LipService.com. Eight years later, he made international news when he sold Men.com for $1.32 million. He is particularly known as a pioneer of [[Direct Navigation|direct navigation]] traffic, and more generally as an expert on domain names and traffic[http://www.ricksblog.com/about.html Ricksblog.com]\n'''Rick Schwartz''' is the self-anointed \"[[Domaining|Domain]] King\", who earns an income from domain names purchased in the mid-90s. He purchased his first domain name in 1995; paying $100 for LipService.com. Eight years later, he made international news when he sold Men.com for $1.32 million. He is particularly known as a pioneer of [[Direct Navigation|direct navigation]] traffic, and more generally as an expert on domain names and traffic[http://www.ricksblog.com/about.html Ricksblog.com]\nRick is the founder, CEO, and President of the [[T.R.A.F.F.I.C.]] domaining conference, which has awarded him the \"Domainer Of The Year\" award and also inducted him into the \"Domainer Hall of Fame\".[http://www.ricksblog.com/about.html Ricksblog]\nRick Schwartz is the self-anointed \"Domain King\", who earns an income from domain names purchased in the mid-90s. He purchased his first domain name in 1995; paying $100 for LipService.com. Eight years later, he made international news when he sold Men.com for $1.32 million. He is particularly known as a pioneer of direct navigation traffic, and more generally as an expert on domain names and traffic[1]\nRick is the founder, CEO, and President of the T.R.A.F.F.I.C. domaining conference, which has awarded him the \"Domainer Of The Year\" award and also inducted him into the \"Domainer Hall of Fame\".[2]\nHe is a visible domainer blogger who has \"retired\" from daily blogging on different occasions.\n2.2 T.R.A.F.F.I.C.\nMr. Schwartz attended a few months of community college before working in sales. He is a past bankruptee. [3] For a time, he sold Asian made products at trade shows and in trade magazines. He recognized the benefit of the Internet to a salesman and claims the day that he learned about the File Transfer Protocol was the day that changed his life. He began putting his brochures and sales materials online, and around this time he discovered the monetary potential of domain names via acquiring such names as Porno.com.[4]\nRick credits much of his success to being early on the domaining rush. His initial investment consisted of $1,800 dollars, but soon spent $42,000 on porno.com. To generate additional resources, he sold a \"sales\" business for 7 figures in 1998. Around this time he was purchasing domains such as candy.com, porno.com [5], men.com, childpornography.com [6] and gaycock.com [7] .\nMr. Schwartz has over 4,300 domains that he claims bring in a combined traffic of 95,000 - 115,000 visitors each day. His sites tend to be parked pages with revenue-producing links. Schwartz's portfolio is managed by Moniker.[8] Many of his sites, approximately half, are \"adult\" oriented domains, though he insists that none of these pages have any actual illicit content, beyond the name, and that they are merely parked advertising space.[9]\nRick Schwartz has stated that he makes \"a few million [dollars] a year\" in revenue from his many parked pages.[10]\nGiven his persona, Rick has a large number of detractors who deride his behavior, ideas and actions.[11]\nRick Schwartz does not usually buy domains to sell them, preferring to build up advertising revenues as opposed to one time profits.[12] Those he has sold include:\nFlowers.mobi - $ 6500 [13] (Originally purchased for $200,000 [14])\nTokyoHotels.com - $200,000+\niReport.com to CNN - $750K[15]\nPunchbowl.com to MyPunchBowl - (Undisclosed, 6-figure sum rumored)[16]\nRick included i-report.com to CNN for free in order to more quickly finalize the deal for the more desirable, ireport.com.[17]\nMr. Schwartz sold Property.com to Foreclosure.com in 2008; the actual sale price was never disclosed. Rick initially purchased the domain 3 years prior for $750,000 [18][19]\nIn November, 2011, it was announced by Michael Berkens that his site, MostWantedDomains.com, had succesfully brokered the sale of the domain, \"meet.me\" for a record $450,000. The domain was part of a portfolio that was acquired at an earlier T.R.A.F.F.I.C conference by Mr. Berkens, Rick Schwartz, and Ammar Kubba. Other domains in this portfolio include date.me, love.me, and marry.me. Michael Berkens speculated that by selling the domain for a record amount in the .me namespace, he effectively raised the price of the rest of their joint-owned .me domains.[20]\nT.R.A.F.F.I.C.\nOn October 20 - 23, 2004, the first T.R.A.F.F.I.C.. conference took place in Delray Beach, Florida; it was the first major trade show specifically aimed at the domaining industry.[21] Rick co-founded the event with his longtime lawyer, and domaining attorney, Howard Neu. The conferences provide domaining forums, workshops, and obvious networking opportunities. The inaugural event counted some 125 attendees, by the next year this number was more than doubled to 300.[22] The conference has since been held in both an East coast and West coast format, wherein a meeting takes place on each U.S. coast during the same year. It has travelled the world, going to Amsterdam and Australia in addition to a U.S. event; and it continues to go new places and be held at least once a year.[23] The shows are not intended for day-domainers, but aim to help those that consider domaining their profession a chance to learn and meet with other successful domainers. T.R.A.F.F.I.C. conferences are invitation only events, in an attempt to keep the show focused and not let it fall into the category of general trade shows.[24]\nThe conferences have begun to incorporate live auctions of domain names, via a partnership with Moniker; those auctions accounted for 39 of the top 100 domain sales for 2007.[25] That year's New York T.R.A.F.F.I.C. auction brought in some $12 million.[26]\nIn December, 2011, Mr. Schwartz announced that, while he had signed onto T.R.A.F.F.I.C. through 2013, he did not know whether or not he would continue with the conference. At the time he was also announcing his retirement from daily blogging on the domain industry. Mr. Schwartz said that T.R.A.F.F.I.C. would continue if he could turn it into \"something very grand\".[27]\nMr. Schwartz became involved in a high-profile lawsuit and counter-suit when Lilly Industries Inc., claimed that his goofoff.com address violated their trademarked Goof Off paint remover. Rick was informed by Network Solutions that Lilly had filed a dispute on the namespace and that he would have to litigate or face his site being placed on hold. At that time, the site was running as a travel and entertainment portal. He saw this as another example of \"Fortune 500 Bullies\" using their financial resources to push small business owners away from legitimately acquired and retained domains.[28] A visit to goofoff.com today shows that the site remains in Rick's hands.[29] The settlement agreement allowed Rick to keep the site under certain restrictions, and Lilly Industries assumed all legal fees.[30]\nHe says that he as received so many cease and desist letters that he owns ceaseanddesist.com.[31]\nRick filed a suit against Afternic, Network Solutions, and Register.com in May, 2001. The alleged incident involved the illegal transfer of a domain he purchased, properties.com, from Afternic, back to its original owner via Network Solutions.[32]\nDomainer of the Year, 2005 (T.R.A.F.F.I.C Award, the conference he co-founded)\nInducted into the Domain Hall of Fame, 2006 (T.R.A.F.F.I.C Award, the conference he co-founded)\nReceived the Epik.com Domain Industry \"Pioneer Award\", 2010[33]\n2008's Domain Name Wire ranked Rick as the most influential domainer, and T.R.A.F.F.I.C as the best domain conference.[34]\n↑ BizJournals.com\n↑ ChefPatrick.com\n↑ DNJournal.com/ Royal King or Royal Pain?\n↑ Fusible.com\n↑ DomainNameNews.com\n↑ DMueller.com\n↑ MostWantedDomains.com Brokers the Sale of Mee.me, TheDomains.com]\n↑ TargetedTraffic.com\n↑ WebmasterWorld.com\n↑ Mission Accomplished, RicksBlog.com\n↑ FindArticles.com\n↑ DomainNameWire.com","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line899513"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8712759613990784,"wiki_prob":0.8712759613990784,"text":"NYSSenate14.com\nMalcolm A. Smith\nThis was the official website for Malcolm A. Smith.\nMalcolm A. Smith was a Democratic member of the New York State Senate for the 14th district, a portion of southeast Queens that includes Hollis, St. Albans, Cambria Heights, Queens Village, Springfield Gardens and parts of Jamaica. From 2009 to 2010, Smith was Temporary President of the New York State Senate, the first African American to hold that position.\nOn April 2, 2013, Smith was arrested by the FBI on federal corruption and other charges. The United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York and the New York FBI alleged that Smith attempted to secure a spot on the Republican ballot in the 2013 New York City mayoral election through bribery of New York City Councilman Dan Halloran and two other Republican officials who were also arrested.\nIn September 2014 primary voters in Queens rejected Smith, mainly due to his indictment on corruption charges of bribery and extortion. His opponent Leroy Comrie, a former city councilman, won in a landslide. The following year Malcolm A. Smith was convicted of all charges against him, and sentenced to 7 years in federal prison.\nThe content below is from this site's 2005-2008 archived pages.\n— Senator Malcolm A. Smith\nSenator Malcolm A. Smith was unanimously elected State Senate Minority Leader by his fellow Senators in November of 2006. Senator Smith brings unique skills and a diverse background in both the private and public sector to the State Senate, where he has served the 14th Senate District since 2000. As a real estate developer, economic development expert and legislative aide, Senator Smith has been a major contributor to bringing jobs and opportunity to his Southeastern Queens community.\nThroughout his career in public service, Senator Smith has used his skills as a manager and real estate developer to help revitalize the Queens community. Prior to being elected to the State Senate, Senator Smith served as a senior aide to former Congressman Floyd H. Flake, chief aide to former City Councilman Archie Spigner, a City Hall assistant to former Mayor Edward I. Koch and was a member of the national advance staff for Vice-presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro.\nSenator Smith is a former executive in the New York City Mayor’s Office of Economic Development and has served as President of the Neighborhood Housing Services of Jamaica. Senator Smith created the not-for-profit Southeast Queens Housing Development Corporation to purchase, rehabilitate and sell City and HUD owned properties. Senator Smith is also well known in his community as the founder of Operation Excellence, a training program for students in real estate development, which is regularly featured on local television.\nIn 1985, as President of the Neighborhood Housing Services of Jamaica, Senator Smith created two citywide loan programs: a home improvement optional loan program and a mixed-use rehabilitation loan program designed to restore commercial and residential properties on commercial strips. Senator Smith was successful in convincing five banks and the City of New York's Housing Preservation and Development Agency to capitalize the program with $2.2 million in loans.\nSenator Smith also developed the \"Challenge to Minority Banks Program,\" which highlighted the need for increased business at minority-owned banks in the city. Deposits in minority-owned banks rose to an average of $22 million annually between 1983 and 1985, due in part to this successful program.\nAs a private sector developer and President and Founder of Smith Development Corporation, Senator Smith has built over 100 much needed housing units in Southeastern Queens, Far Rockaway and Brooklyn, including several noteworthy commercial projects such as Pathmark Plaza-Springfield Gardens, the interior of the FAA building and the baseball fields at Roy Wilkins Park in Jamaica.\nIn the State Senate, Senator Smith has fought to expand social and economic opportunities for his constituents. Senator Smith has brought tens of millions of dollars back into his district to help build affordable housing, improve Queens schools, provide health care for the needy, keep higher education affordable and create good paying jobs.\nAs a believer in his \"thinking forward\" philosophy and the principle that \"relationships yield results,\" Senator Smith has worked to bring together diverse groups with a common goal in mind. In 2004, as part of the New York to Shanghai Trade Mission, Senator Smith led a delegation of local businesses to China, to open up a robust reciprocal exchange between our two wondrous cultural and economic commonwealths. Several of the businesses that traveled with Senator Smith overseas are currently conducting business in China in the areas of cosmetics and perfume, beer distribution, jewelry and professional services. The trip was so successful that Senator Smith has expanded his business-to-business relationships to include an economic, cultural and educational \"Sister to Sister\" relationship between New York State and India.\nIn addition to his interests in community revitalization and affordable housing, Senator Smith has worked on several other issues affecting his constituents, including the environment, economic development, transportation and technology. In his first year in the State Senate, Senator Smith secured $10 million from the MTA for much needed improvements to LIRR Stations in his Queens District. In the same year, Senator Smith collaborated with Assemblywoman Barbara Clarke to secure $1 million for the Jamaica Clinic, a first-of-its-kind health clinic in Hollis, New York.\nIn 2002, Senator Smith collaborated with City and State officials to negotiate an agreement yielding $10 million to clean up the Westside Corporation Toxic Site in Jamaica, Queens. These much needed funds were secured despite the Superfund being bankrupt. Working with Assemblywoman Audrey Pheffer and the Governor, Senator Smith also helped secure $1 million for support programs in the Rockaways in the wake of the Flight 587 plane crash tragedy in November 2001.\nSenator Smith's representative governance and leadership style is essentially about individual will manifesting itself into a substantive vision for the collective common good of all. He believes that every challenge we encounter in life is simply an opportunity for solution.\nToward this end, he has created progressive and visionary programs in his district, including Operation Everybody Works (OEW), a pilot program that found a meaningful job for one individual a day for a period of 90 consecutive days. He has shepherded a purposeful litany of task forces, including Operation Safe Southeast Queens (OSSEQ), a program that formed a nexus between the NYPD, civic organizations, church leaders and local businesses to effectively address the hot spots of crime in local communities.\nIn terms of policy, Senator Smith has distinguished himself as an effective legislator and advocate in the areas of Economic Development, Minority- and Women-owned Business Enterprise Issues, Health, Housing, Education and Judicial Diversity. In a pre-reform environment, he found ways to draw attention to these most important issues -- through public forums with expert testimony and lobby days with passionate advocates -- when the traditional institutional means were blocked.\nEver a believer in the true economic principle that competition is what drives innovation, results, and excellence, Senator Smith is a proud supporter of public charter schools. He is the founder of Peninsula Preparatory Academy, the first public charter school in the Rockaways, and serves on the Board of Trustees of the Merrick Academy-Queens Public Charter School in Jamaica Queens.\nMost recently, Senator Smith has been chairing a series of statewide public forums concerning the important topic of judicial diversity. The stated goal of these forums is to create a \"Lasting Blueprint For Judicial Diversity\" in New York State, so that the judges on our benches, both elective and appointive, are eminently and robustly reflective of the rich diversity that is a source of absolute strength for our State.\nSenator Smith is a graduate of Fordham University, where he earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration with a concentration in Economics. Senator Smith furthered his education with a certificate program on negotiations from Harvard Law School and obtained an MBA with a concentration in Finance and Operations Management from Adelphi University.\nSenator Smith is married to the former Michele Lisby. They are the parents of two children, Julian and Amanda. Senator Smith is a member of the Greater Allen Cathedral in Queens, New York, where Floyd H. Flake and Elaine M. Flake serve as Pastor and Co-Pastor, respectively.\nAs Senate Minority Leader, Senator Smith is an ex officio member of all Senate standing committees and the ranking Minority member of the Rules Committee.\nSTATEMENT FROM STATE SENATOR MALCOLM A. SMITH circa 2008\n\"Today, as an Elector for the people of New York, I will have the honor of casting a vote for Barack Obama to become the next President of the United States. 145 years since Abraham Lincoln declared all people, regardless of race, to be free citizens and just 50 years since our country recognized that separate is never equal and segregation can never be tolerated, I am deeply humbled to have the privilege of being part of the process to formally elect the first African American President.\nThe voters of New York have spoken, asking for change and a new approach to governing and government. With our new president in Washington and a new day in Albany, I look forward to bringing the voters the change we need.\"\nIn the News 2008\nSean Bell Verdict\nOn Friday, April 25 I sent a letter to the United States Attorney General after the verdict in the Sean Bell case was announced seeking an investigation of the facts of this case under federal criminal civil rights laws. As you may know, on Friday afternoon, the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York and the FBI, New York Field Division, announced that they are undertaking an investigation of the facts and circumstances of this case.\nthis is a test to see where this comment goes\nMy name is Patrick Sullivan and am sending this as a test comment\nMario P. Hepp\nThis phony Black Muslim Bastard Barack Hussein Obama wants change you know change ? Come Help A Nigger Get Elected\nMario you need to get over yourself and past the color of skin! You're a bigot! Guess what? Gods in charge and there ain't nothing you can do about it! God Bless Barack and God Bless the \"New\" America to come!!!!!!\nCapitol Visits Our Capitol Building is the focal point of an impressive complex of Government buildings which make a rewarding and educational visitor experience. That is why I am pleased to offer my assistance in arranging Tours of the State Capitol, the State Museum and the Empire State Plaza. If you are planning a visit, contact my officeto assist in your planning -- we will answer questions regarding trips and advise you when the Legislature is in session.\nStatement from Senator Malcolm A. Smith on the Anniversary of the March on Selma\nBeing in Selma to commemorate the historic events of 42 years ago was a highly emotional experience for me. It filled me with a sense of great humility and gratitude for the generation of leaders that came before me, who literally risked life and limb so that future generations would enjoy greater freedom and greater opportunities.\nPresident Bill Clinton's offer to travel with him to be part of the March, witness his induction to the Voting Rights Hall of Fame and the 4 hours of conversation was an experience I will never forget. He is one of the most charming and brilliant individuals I have ever had the pleasure to meet.\nStatement from Senator Malcolm A. Smith on the Worker's comp agreement\nState Senate Democratic Leader Malcolm A. Smith said \"Reform of the State's Workers' Compensation system has been one of the most contentious issues facing our State Government. The fact that both the Business Council of New York and the AFL-CIO are supportive of the Governor's proposal speaks volumes about the merits of the agreement. Once again message delivered, message received, action taken.\"\nThe Senate Minority Applaud Bonacic Measure to Equalize Resources Among Legislators\nSenate Democratic Leader Malcolm A. Smith today applauded Senator John Bonacic (R-New Paltz) for introducing a measure requiring that all Legislators receive equal allocations to run their offices and serve their constituents.\nSmith noted the measure is one long supported by Senate Minority, most recently during the adoption of Senate Rules.\n\"This is a true reform measure,\" Smith said. \"It would ensure that all New Yorkers receive adequate and equal representation, as guaranteed by our Constitution.\"\nBonacic’s measure would provide \"reasonable additional assistance for Committee Chairs and Ranking Members,\" who have additional responsibilities.\nSmith said he is pleased \"members of the Majority conference are adopting the reform measures that Senate Minority has long advocated. Real changes and real reform are finally coming to Albany and to the State Senate.\"\nTHE ETHICS REFORM BILL PASSED BY THE STATE SENATE TODAY\nSenate Democratic Leader Malcolm A. Smith said the ethics reform bill passed by the State Senate today \"contains many of the provisions Senate Minority have been trying for years to enact.\"\nSmith noted that the Senate Minority Conference attempted in January to reform the rules of the Senate to make it more accountable and responsive to the people of New York. The proposals were rejected by the Majority.\nIn the three most recent Senate elections, The Senate Minority voiced a strong reform message and emerged victorious in districts that had been represented by the Majortiy.\nNewly-elected State Senator Craig Johnson (D-Port Washington) who won a February 6 special election, said \"One reason health care and property taxes have soared over the last decade is that our Legislature has been too dysfunctional to appropriately address the issue. This measure brings us closer to our goal of a properly functioning State government, which for the people of New York will be a less expensive State government.\"\nAndrea Stewart-Cousins (D-Yonkers) who defeated a 20 year Senante Majority incumbent in 2006, said the ethics reform bill \"brings us closer to fulfilling the promise we made to voters to bring real change to Albany. Senate Democrats will continue the fight to make our State Government accountable and responsive to the people.\"\nSenator David J. Valesky (D-Oneida) a vocal proponent of reform who first came to Albany in 2004, said \"this measure is a positive step towards a State Government that has the full faith and confidence of the people it represents.\" Valesky credited Governor Spitzer for \"using his mandate to smash the status quo,\" and noted that the Governor set the tone for ethics reform shortly after taking office when he initiated changes in the regulations governing the Executive’s office.\nThe bill passed by the Senate includes anti-nepotism provisions, today:\n· Prohibits gifts from lobbyists and their clients of more than nominal value, including travel, lodging and other expenses, and broaden the types of lobbying activities that lobbyists must disclose;\n· Prohibits elected government officials and candidates for elected local, state or federal office from appearing in taxpayer-funded advertisements;\n· Closes the \"revolving door\" loophole by prohibiting former legislative employees from directly lobbying the Legislature for two years, and expands the revolving door restrictions for Executive Chamber employees to preclude appearances before any state agency;\n· Prohibits non-legislative employees from using their authority or influence to \"compel or induce\" any other employee to make political contributions;\n· Prohibits state employees from participating in any personnel decision or contracting matter concerning a relative.\nSenator Smith Speaking at NYS Inter-Agency Black History Month Celebration\nGood Morning! I wanted to let everyone on my team know that I will be speaking today at the New York State Inter-Agency Black History Month Celebration, an event celebrating the story of Africans in the Americas. The program, which begins at noon, will be held in ESP Meeting Room 6.\nI hope that many of you will be able to attend and lend your support for Black History Month, an opportunity to reflect on the sacrifices of the past, and in our dreams for the future. I look forward to seeing you later today.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line767840"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.999414324760437,"wiki_prob":0.999414324760437,"text":"Neural respiratory drive predicts clinical deterioration and safe discharge in exacerbations of COPD\nEui-Sik Suh Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nSwapna Mandal Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nRachel Harding Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nMichelle Ramsay Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nMeera Kamalanathan Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nKatherine Henderson Emergency Department, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nKevin O'Kane Department of Acute Medicine, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nAbdel Douiri Division of Health and Social Care Research, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nNicholas S Hopkinson NIHR Respiratory Biomedical Research Unit at the Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust and Imperial College, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nMichael I Polkey NIHR Respiratory Biomedical Research Unit at the Royal Brompton & Harefield NHS Foundation Trust and Imperial College, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nGerrard Rafferty Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nPatrick B Murphy Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nJohn Moxham Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nNicholas Hart Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, Guy's and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK Division of Asthma, Allergy and Lung Biology, King's College London, London, UK PubMed articlesGoogle scholar articles\nCorrespondence to Dr Eui-Sik Suh, Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, St. Thomas’ Hospital, Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7EH, UK; eui-sik.suh{at}nhs.net\nSuh E, Mandal S, Harding R, et al\nThorax 2015;70:1123-1130.\nRevised June 22, 2015\nAccepted June 27, 2015\nFirst published July 20, 2015.\nOnline issue publication\nPrevious version (20 July 2015).\nData supplement 1 - Online supplement\nPublished by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/ This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1137615"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9345457553863525,"wiki_prob":0.9345457553863525,"text":"Prince Louis would have had different name and title if Queen hadn’t ‘stepped in’\nKing George V set out guidance on which royals were allowed to have titles in 1917\nZoe Forsey\nBeth CruseSenior reporter\nQueen Elizabeth II attends a scaled down ceremony to mark her official birthday at Windsor Castle on June 13, 2020 (Image: Getty Images)\nPrince Louis would have had a different name and title if it was for the Queen, according to a new report.\nWhen the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge welcomed their third child, three years ago today, they named him Louis Arthur Charles.\nLouis is a popular name in the royal family and William and George have it as a middle name, in honour of Prince Charles's mentor Lord Louis Mountbatten, who died in an IRA bombing in 1979.\nAs the Mirror reports, Charles is a nod to little Louis's grandfather, the Prince of Wales, who said he was delighted to have another baby in the family when he was born.\nPrincess Anne was convicted of a criminal offence because of her dog\nPeter Phillips and Zara Tindall's secret sister who shared their horsey life on Princess Anne's Gloucestershire estate\nA statement from Charles and Camilla at the time said: \"We are both so pleased at the news. It is a great joy to have another grandchild, the only trouble is I don’t know how I am going to keep up with them.\"\nHis official title is His Royal Highness Prince Louis of Cambridge, but he only has a HRH title because his great-granny the Queen stepped in.\nShe intervened to overwrite a rule put in place by King George V, reports the Express.\nBack in 1917, he set out new guidance on which royals were allowed to have titles - and who was too far down the line of succession to qualify for one.\nHe decided that all of the sovereign's children would automatically become a Prince or Princess, as well as any grandchildren born through the male line.\nHowever, great-grandchildren weren't included on the list.\nThis caused a bit of an issue when Prince George was born, as despite being our future king he shouldn't have had the title.\nThe Queen stepped in and said that George would get a title, and decided to extend the change to all of Kate and William's children.\nPrince William and Kate with their three children Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis (Image: Kensington Palace via Getty Images)\nThis means that even though Charlotte and Louis, who are further down the line of succession and are unlikely to ever sit on the throne, are also a prince and princess.\nIf the Monarch didn't make the change, it's likely that Louis would have been Master Louis Cambridge or Master Louis Windsor instead.\nHowever she didn't make this change for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's son, something which has caused rows and confusion following their interview with Oprah Winfrey.\nIt was widely believed that the couple didn't want Archie to have a HRH title in their bid for him to enjoy a 'normal' life, much like Harry's cousins Peter Phillips and Zara Tindall.\nBut during the interview, Meghan said that it would impact his security.\nShe told her pal Oprah: \"They were saying they didn't want him to be a Prince or Princess, which would be different from protocol, and that he wasn't going to receive security. This went on for the last few months of our pregnancy where I was going, hold on for a second.\"\nPalace 'a lot calmer' without Harry and Meghan as Prince Charles starts Royal Family 'shake-up'\n\"They said [he's not going to get security], because he's not going to be a Prince.\n\"Okay, well, he needs to be safe so we're not saying don't make him a Prince or Princess, but if you're saying the title is what's going to affect that protection, we haven't created this monster machine around us in terms of clickbait and tabloid fodder you've allowed that to happen which means our son needs to be safe.\"\nHowever experts have denied Meghan's claims that it was \"different to protocol\".","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1579321"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.807765543460846,"wiki_prob":0.807765543460846,"text":"Interactive Icons Made for the Modern Web\nIconic is trying to push iconography forward into the web age.\nicons-preview\nIconic is a set of icons that's designed for the modern web. Image: Iconic\nAround five years ago P.J. Onori was designing his website when he made, in hindsight, a questionable choice. “I made the horrible decision to make everything on my personal website open source,” the designer jokes. This included the CSS, HTML and even the icons he used on his site. Onori, who considers himself an open source evangelist, began making simple symbols for his RSS feed, calendar and documents. \"I figured, maybe I’ll make a few more,” he recalls. “Then for whatever reason it really caught on.” As Onori continued to design icons, he also began developing tools and techniques for displaying them. And before he knew it, he’d created Iconic, a set of simply designed icons that could be used free of charge.\n>Today, most of the icons you see on the web are static.\nIn the past four years, Iconic has grown to include more than 200 icons, but its development has stalled since Onori has, you know, a real, paying job that he has to attend to. Now Onori and his partners Ryan Teuscher and Dave Johnson, who run San Francisco-based design firm Waybury, have decided to build Iconic into a commercial set of icons and tools that will help expand their capabilities far beyond the open source version.\nTheir goals, outlined on their Kickstarter page, are idealistic: “Were trying to push iconography forward into the web age and have it reflect the technology and the approaches and philosophies of the web,” explains Onori. But they’re also necessary. Today, most of the icons you see on the web are static. They sit on sites like little pictures in a book and do little to engage with the people who are using them. This is, in the guys' opinions, a total waste of the internet's potential. “The problem is that we’ve been displaying icons essentially the same way we were displaying them 60 years ago, where they’re just these static image illustrations that show up on a screen,” says Onori. “There’s really no reason for that any more. The technology has matured to a point where that doesn’t need to be the case.”\nOnori and his partners are hoping to create an integrated icon system that expands the functionality of icons and makes them smarter, more legible and more responsive. “We all believe that icons are going play an increasingly important role in interfaces,” Onori says, explaining that as screens shrink, so does the room designers have to communicate ideas and actions. “Screens are considerably smaller than they were five years ago. We need to find ways to communicate information in smaller spaces; we need to be denser about how we communicate that information, and icons are perfect for that.”\n>'We need to find ways to communicate information in smaller spaces.'\nIconic’s distinguishing factor, even years ago, was that the images were created as SVG files, a vector format that allows designers to tweak the size, color and general appearance of an icon. They’re still working with that format type (though icons are available in PNG, WebP and font formats, too), only now they’re looking to add in new capabilities like making icons responsive to the size of screen. For every icon designed, there will be three versions and sizes so it can scale appropriately. For example, the microphone you see on your 27” desktop will be more detailed than the microphone you see on your smartphone screen. “When you start cramming that detail into smaller sizes it become illegible—it’s like a blob,” says Onori. “If an icon isn’t legible, then it’s useless.”\nThis extends to the aesthetic of the icons, which is nondescript by design. The images' simplicity was intentional, says Teuscher, who explained that the team would like to see Iconic become a standard or baseline for iconography design and functionality in the future. “We want them to be reliable and we want them to work in every single use case,” Onori elaborate. “We’ve been jokingly saying that it would be like the Helvetica of icons ... don’t quote that.” Jokes aside, what he really means is that by getting the icons' appearance out of the way allows designers more freedom to tweak and stylize however they see fit.\nUltimately, the team is aiming to build in added context to the icons through a java script. This allows designers to set values and create visual nuances like a battery that shows how charged it is or a document in its various states of not-saved, in progress and saved. This context is vital, they say, to propelling icons into the 21st century. “We’re able to inject life into these things so they’re able to respond directly to the person seeing it, and I think that’s pretty powerful,” says Onori. “I don’t have the illusions that we’ll be the only people to do it, but I hope that were the people who can help start that conversation.”\nLiz writes about where design, technology, and science intersect.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1462068"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5674769282341003,"wiki_prob":0.5674769282341003,"text":"Gagetown building advances energy efficiency to \"net-zero ready\"\nScott Stevenson, Visiting ADM, Canada Lands Company, Sia Salehi, Senior Project Manager, DND, Scott Nason, Ross Welsman, DCC Vice-President, Operations–Business Management, Sonia Powell, President of the RPIC Board of Directors, and Kevin Radford, Assistant Deputy Minister, Real Property, Public Services and Procurement Canada (retired), at the award ceremony in Ottawa on November 20, 2019.\nDCC has helped its Client-Partner, the Department of National Defence (DND), take a big step forward in energy efficiency and sustainability, with its first \"net-zero ready\" building.\nThe 3,389-m2, $15.7-million Explosive Ordnance Disposal Training Facility at CFB Gagetown has nearly all the features required to run completely off the grid, including geothermal heating and its own well, water treatment system and septic system.\nThe last piece of the puzzle is solar arrays, which is scheduled to be installed next summer. They will provide power to the building and grid that will offset the annual electricity consumption currently purchased from the province.\nThe building is located in the range and training area 15 km from the Gagetown Garrison, so having it be as self-sufficient as possible is important to ensure ongoing operations, explains Scott Nason, Coordinator, Construction Services. He led the DCC team of Doug Thompson, Coordinator, Commissioning, Danny Dobbelsteyn, Coordinator, Electrical, and Michel Picard, Coordinator, Construction Services, on the project.\n\"Achieving net-zero energy consumption with a building is a first for DND,\" Scott says. \"The project was a good starter step to learn from. DCC was instrumental in streamlining the problem-solving process and providing sound advice to resolve issues as we worked with advanced technology to ensure maximum energy efficiency.\"\nThe project won an award for best practices in environmental sustainability from the Real Property Institute of Canada. In addition, DND will be applying to have the facility's current LEED Silver certification upgraded to Gold once the solar arrays are in place.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1614078"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.71028733253479,"wiki_prob":0.28971266746520996,"text":"ESC Clermont Business School\nESC Clermont Business School is a private university offering undergraduate & postgraduate programmes. It is a Grande Ecole recognised by the Ministry of Higher Education, Research & Innovation, AACSB & EPAS-accredited.\nClermont-Ferrand (France)\n4 Boulevard Trudaine\nhttps://www.esc-clermont.fr/en/\nESC Clermont Business School is private institution located in the heart of France, in the city of Clermont-Ferrand. It is one of the oldest business schools in France, established in 1919. The school of management is a Grande Ecole that is recognized by The French Ministry of Higher Education and Research. The business school holds AACSB accreditation since 2005, one of the largest and most influential business school accreditations in the world. The school is a Grand Ecole and is also part of «Conférence des Grandes Ecoles», the Consortium of Graduate Schools of Management which comprises a network of the best Management and Engineering schools in France.\nESC Clermont strives for accompanying students to achieve academic and professional excellence by offering high quality programmes, having a strong partner and corporate network and following strong values. faculty members have varied multicultural backgrounds: professors who have international academic qualifications, business executives coming from multinational corporations, practicing consultants and entrepreneurs that are recognized as experts in their fields.\nESC Clermont Business School,\nClermont-Ferrand, France\nAlumni network of 12,000 graduates living in more than 120 countries\nThe business school’s foremost programme. The programme is a 2-year master degree that provides students with the necessary skills and experience to be fully operational as soon as they begin their career and ready to take on the top-level posts in Management. Throughout the program, students will be offered a broad range of possibilities in terms of study tracks, specializations and work environments. There are also various options in terms of academic exchanges, double diplomas and language courses.\nhttps://www.esc-clermont.fr/en/program/master-in-management/\nThe Bachelor Programme is a 3-year undergraduate programme that is designed to give students solid grounding in the main fields of business and management and a broad knowledge of disciplines as management, marketing, international business and so on. Students consolidate their knowledge in the area of specialization during the second year. In the third year, students are able to spend a semester abroad for exchange or a year abroad for a dual-degree in one of the partner universities.\nhttps://www.esc-clermont.fr/en/program/bachelor-in-international-management/\n- Early bird scholarships\n- ESC Clermont Foundation scholarships\nhttps://www.esc-clermont.fr/en/scholarships/\nUniversity of Economics in Katowice\nVarna University of Management (VUM)\nMetropolia University of Applied Sciences\nToulouse Business School\nAudencia Nantes School of Management Nantes\nEURECOM, Sophia Antipolis, FRANCE","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line334023"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8600859642028809,"wiki_prob":0.8600859642028809,"text":"Home › Releases › Vanden Plas - Chronicles of the Immortals - Netherworld\nChronicles of the Immortals - Netherworld\nGenre: Metal progressive\nWelcome to a new dimension in the Vanden Plas universe! With their new work, “Chronicles of the Immortals – Netherworld,” the spectacular German progressive metal band has again shown artistic growth, continuing a pattern of development from album to album that we have grown accustomed to.\nIn this case, the developmental step was a bit bigger than usual, due to the story behind the birth of “Chronicles of the Immortals – Netherworld.” Wolfgang Hohlbein, who with 43 million books sold worldwide is not only Germany’s biggest selling author but also a fan of VANDEN PLAS, suggested their creative collaboration: a rock opera for the stage based on his series “The Chronicle of the Immortals.” The result: “Bloodnight” (“Blutnacht”). The libretto was written by VANDEN PLAS singer Andy Kuntz, together with Hohlbein and his manager Dieter Winkler, himself a respected author. The VANDEN PLAS team of Stephan Lill/ Günter Werno/Andy Kuntz composed 19 songs for the stage production.\n“Bloodnight,” with Kuntz in the lead role and the VANDEN PLAS musicians in the orchestra pit, celebrated a stunning premiere on the stage of the Pfalztheater in Kaiserslautern in 2012. 25 sold-out performances in the 2012 and 2013 seasons with standing ovations that never seemed to end speak for themselves. Overwhelmed by this success, Hohlbein responded by writing another novel; the story of “Bloodnight.”\nThe next step for the band was to turn the successful theatre piece into an equally successful VANDEN PLAS album. “Chronicles of the Immortals - Netherworld - Path 1” has 10 tracks comprising the first act of “Bloodnight.” “Path 2,” the second half of the album, is scheduled to bring the story to a conclusion in early 2015. Kuntz, in agreement with Hohlbein, adapted the stage version to fit an album format. On it he appears as the storyteller, so that unlike the stage production_he is not only the main character Andrej Delany but also embodies the roles of the other protagonists. In this way the story line is richer and more easily understood by the listener for whom the powerful visions from the stage production are not available.\nThe music of “Chronicles of the Immortals – Netherworld” is pure VANDEN PLAS. The songs are noticeably harder than in the stage version_and many solos have been included that were too difficult to stage in the theatrical production. Amendments to some of the arrangements can be heard_and some scenes have been completely rewritten. Thus, some large chorus scenes from the stage production reappear with stark intimacy on the album, while in other sections a lush orchestral accompaniment replaces the piano line that had led the action in the stage version. At the same time, all the elements come into play that have long been distinctive to VANDEN PLAS. Kuntz’s incisive lyrics are interwoven with Lill’s defining riffs and Werno’s diverse keyboard parts. A solid base is provided by bass player Torsten Reichert and drummer Andreas Lill, whose collaboration has produced an atmosphere that seems more homogenous and transparent than ever.\nIt is the details that make this album different from other VANDEN PLAS recordings. It is clearly evident that this album recounts the story from a newly staged theatre production, which makes the VANDEN PLAS music to “Chronicles of the Immortals – Netherworld” even more diversified and vivid.\nVANDEN PLAS fans will immediately feel at home with this album. Hohlbein was also immediately thrilled the first time he heard the music. “Great album; I loved it! I’m happy that fans of “The Chronicles of the Immortals” can re-experience the story through the rock opera ‘Bloodnight’.”\nThe theme of “Chronicles of the Immortals – Netherworld” examines the essential question of human existence. …“What is immortality? Andrej Delany knows the answer. Those who meet him sense that he is somehow different from them, more powerful, more experienced. They call him a sorcerer, revile him as a vampire or a demon. Yet he differs from them in only one aspect: he has lived much, much longer than they themselves have. Andrej desires only to be a human being, but he is incapable of sharing his life with mortals. In the search for his salvation, he wanders through the centuries, not knowing that doing so threatens to put him at the mercy of powers that themselves have Eternity on their side and are slowly tightening a noose around his neck. With satanic trickery, a dark shape shifter tries to convince the immortal one to join him and storm the Pantheon of the old gods and wrest the throne from them. Restless chimeras from the other side warn him against this unholy alliance. They tell him about lost love, the souls of forgotten children, and point him to a “forbidden way”, to Marius - the son he believed to be dead - and Maria, the great love of his life. Suddenly Andrej finds himself between the front lines of two worlds. He is in the middle of the eternal war raging between Heaven and eternal Darkness. But which of the archaic shadow beings is heresy and which is illumination? Which wants to help Andrej - and which wants to deceive and destroy him? He must choose which vision to follow, for in the end the truth lies only within him.”… (Bloodnight) “Chronicles of the Immortals – Netherworld – Path 1” ends at a point where all seems to be hopelessly lost - if it weren’t for the soon-to-be released “Path 2,” which promises redemption. The VANDEN PLAS/Hohlbein collaboration is a creative cornucopia still filled to overflowing! But first, we welcome you into the new but still familiar dimensions of VANDEN PLAS. There is much to discover in “Chronicles of the Immortals – Netherworld – Path 1.” Stefan Glas (Rock Hard, Rocks, Underground Empire), translated by Cynthia Nay The Band\nAndy Kuntz (Vocals), Stephan Lill (Guitar), Günter Werno (Keyboard), Torsten Reichert (Bass), Andreas Lill (Drums)\nDemos and Self-productions\n1986 - Raining in My Heart (Single)\n1991 - Days of Thunder (Demo)\n1992 - Fire (Single)\n1994 - Colour Temple\n1997 - The God Thing\n1999 - Far Off Grace\n2000 - Spirit of Live (live)\n2002 - Beyond Daylight\n2006 - Christ 0\n2010 - The Seraphic Clockwork\n2014 - Chronicles of The Immortals - Netherworld - Path 1\nSingles and EPs\n1996 - AcCult (EP)\n1996 - Des hauts, Des Bas (Single, France)\n1999 - Inside of Your Head (Single, France)\n2000 - I Don't Miss You (Single, Europe)\n2007 – Abydos\n2009 - Ludus Danielis\nCIRCUS MAXIMUS - Nine\nVanden Plas - The Ghost Xperiment: Illumination\nAbout a year ago, the German progressive metal band Vanden Plas delivered the music world part one of their two part concept album, “The Ghost Xperiment”.\nBeyond The Bridge - The Old Man And The Spirit\nNOVENA - The Stopped Clock\nNovena are proud to present 22 minutes of new music in a new 3-track EP, \"The Stopped Clock.\" The single and video for the track 'Bury A Friend' (Billie Eilish cover) is out today.\nVanden Plas - The Seraphic Livework\nIn their long career, Vanden Plas has until now produced only one live album: \"Spirit of Live,\" recorded in Paris at the legendary Elysée Montmartre, was released in 2000. With the upcoming release of \"The Seraphic Liveworks,\" the wait for another live long-player is finally over.\nTurbulence - Frontal\nTurbulence is a new progressive rock/metal band from Lebanon founded in 2013 by two extremely gifted composers, guitarist Alain Ibrahim and keyboardist Mood Yassin. Omar El Hage (vocals), Sayed Gereige (drums) and Anthony Atwe (bass) round out the band's line-up. Coming from a region not exactly famous for prog music, Turbulence has emerged and is ready to compete on a world stage. The band is preparing to unleash their sophomore album, “Frontal,” a concept album which showcases Turbulence's ability to combine compelling musical storytelling with modern sounds and production.\nWithem - The Unforgiving Road\nWithem is an upcoming Progressive Metal band hailing from Norway inspired by the likes of Symphony X, Pagan’s Mind, Dream Theater and Circus Maximus.\nLords of Black - II\nLords Of Black is the band formed by world class singer Ronnie Romero, renowned guitarist Tony Hernando and monster drummer Andy C.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1273247"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7264267802238464,"wiki_prob":0.7264267802238464,"text":"admin\t4 April, 2018 Comments Off on Pakistan shines in Mr Ocean 2017 2,568 views views\nTHE EXPRESS TRIBUNE\n> LIFE & STYLE > FASHION\nLAHORE: Hailing from Lahore, Hassan Bhatti represented Pakistan in Mr Ocean 2017 and secured a position among the top 15. Contestants from over 60 other countries such as the USA, UK, Japan, India, Canada, Italy, Germany and China were also a part of the pageant. According to Hassan’s supervising company, he represented Pakistan in its true sense and earned fame for the country by participating and proving himself in different criterions of the pageant, which was held in Taiwan this month.\nWhile he has been engaged in preparing for Mr Ocean 2017 since beginning November, the grand finale of the pageant was held this week. Speaking to The Express Tribune, Hassan revealed that it was a proud moment for him to represent Pakistan on a global scale.\nPHOTO: PUBLICITY\nInterestingly, he has been offered film projects as well. “After I participated in Mr Pakistan World 2016, I immediately began preparing for Mr Ocean 2017. For this reason, I did not accept any film offers that came my way,” mentioned Hassan. “Now, that people are starting to recognise me through these events, I am keen on making my film debut. Whenever I get a good opportunity, I will take my first step towards showbiz.”\nThe budding model was not afraid to admit his deep fondness for acting. “I am very interested in joining the Pakistani film industry. I hope that one day I will be a Lollywood star and work in other film industries as well. I have been dancing and acting since I was a child and luckily, this gives me an upper-hand in talent competitions,” stated Hassan.\nHassan represented the country in Mr Pakistan World 2016 in Canada. Over there, he was associated with a company that groomed young boys with a passion for modelling. It was under the company, Touchgate Global that Hassan participated in his first pageant.\n“Taking part in these competitions has boosted my confidence. I have also learnt a lot from my experiences so far so I am hopeful that it will help me in the film industry and possibly even open more doors for me. However, my top priority will always be to represent Pakistan in good taste through my skills,” he said.\nToughgate Global president, Sonia Ahmed, shared she was impressed with Hassan’s talent. “We were expecting a lot from him as we worked very hard to groom him for these competitions. It’s not easy to compete against 60 other countries. Hassan mesmerised the judges when he performed on a Shehzad Roy song. In the future, we will surely involve him different film projects as well,” she said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line665984"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9646134376525879,"wiki_prob":0.9646134376525879,"text":"7 December 2021 / SF News / Jay Barmann\nBay Area Marks 80 Years Since Attack on Pearl Harbor\nTuesday marks the 80th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, and by extension the United States' entry into World War II over the following days. Commemorations are happening around the Bay Area, which is also home to a handful of the remaining survivors of the attack.\nThat \"day that will live in infamy\" happened on a Sunday morning, December 7, 1941. BuzzFeed has a series of photographs from the aftermath, showing flames and smoke rising from the massive Navy battleships that were torpedoed or bombed that day. The USS Arizona, USS Oklahoma, USS California, USS West Virginia, USS Utah, USS Maryland, USS Pennsylvania, USS Tennessee, and USS Nevada were all heavily damaged that day, and more than 2,400 Americans were killed, including over 1,000 civilians. The wreckage of the USS Arizona and USS Utah remain at the bottom of the harbor, with some of the dead still entombed there, while the rest of the ships were ultimately repaired and put back into use. Nearly half, or 1,177 of the dead were aboard the Arizona.\nA few dozen of the estimated 50 to 70 living survivors of the attack gathered in Oahu today to mark the 80th anniversary. One of those was 99-year-old Herb Elfring, who was assigned to the 251st Coast Artillery, part of the California National Guard, that December and recalls Japanese planes overhead and \"bullets strafing his Army base at Camp Malakole\" which was a few miles down the coast from Pearl Harbor.\n\"It was just plain good to get back and be able to participate in the remembrance of the day,\" Elfring tells the Associated Press, adding that he's been to about 10 of these memorial events over the years.\nThe capsized the USS Oklahoma and the USS Maryland, were two of the ships destroyed in the attack on Pearl Harbor. (Photo by © CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)\nHere in the Bay Area, 102-year-old Warren Upton of San Jose recalls his harrowing escape from the sinking USS Utah, swimming to shore and helping a shipmate who couldn't swim. Upton is one of the last three living survivors of the USS Utah, which tipped over and sank that day.\n\"One thing I have to say is that war is hell,\" Upton tells the Mercury News.\n\"I try to look on the bright side,\" adds Upton, who also served in the Korean War. \"And remember that bad things do happen.\"\nUpton was attending a brunch Tuesday with some fellow Pearl Harbor survivors in Cupertino. And while the Navy offers a burial at sea — with an urn placed atop the wreckage of one of the sunken ships in Pearl Harbor — to those who survived the attack on one of those ships, Upton says he has no interest. \"I got off there once,\" he tells the Mercury News. \"I’m not going back.\"\nAt the California State University campus in Concord, a ceremony was being held Tuesday to remember Pearl Harbor, as they do every year. The campus is home to a Pacific War Exhibit, and in 2020, the U.S. Navy gifted a piece of the USS Arizona to the school in recognition of its annual memorials.\nOn the anniversary last year, the East Bay Times profiled three Pearl Harbor survivors, Michael “Mickey” Ganitch and Clarence Byal of San Leandro, and Earl “Chuck” Kohler of Concord.\nGanitch, 102, retells the story that he was suited up to play a football game that day, the so-called \"Super Bowl of the Navy,\" which his team from the dry-docked USS Pennsylvania would be playing against the USS Arizona.\n\"I had my [football] gear on me throughout the attack, they couldn’t hurt me,\" Ganitch told the East Bay Times. \"We never played the game. We had things to do, like fighting a war.\"\nAnd he says he spent part of the morning up in the crow's nest of the ship, reporting on the action. \"I had a bird’s eye view. I was higher than the main deck of the ship. I was higher up than some of the planes that were flying around there. Kinda scary,\" Ganitch said. He also remembers the oil slick catching fire on the harbor, surrounding them with intense heat.\nWhile most of those aboard the drydocked ship survived, Japanese bombers still hit the Pennsylvania with a 500-pound bomb, which Ganitch says missed him by 45 feet.\nThe Chronicle's Carl Nolte described, on the occasion of the 70th anniversary, how the attack on Pearl Harbor transformed the Bay Area permanently — both directly with the war effort and indirectly with mass industrialization and the growth of suburbs.\nRoughly two-thirds of all Army soldiers who served in the Pacific passed through Fort Mason, many seeing San Francisco for the first time and heading to war via the Golden Gate. The bridge and the Bay became powerful symbols to many, and as one historian, Neil Morgan, wrote, \"The veteran who had first seen California when in uniform was determined to have a piece of its future.\"\nThus California's population boomed after the war, and so did the Bay Area's. Our region had a population of under 2 million before the war, but following migration and the post-war boom, the Bay Area's population soared to over 3.5 million by 1960, and to 7.8 million today.\nTop image: Burning and damaged ships at Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941. Left to right are the USS West Virginia, the USS Tennessee and the USS Arizona. (Photo by © CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images)\nSoMa Sandwich Shop Deli Board Vandalized and Robbed, But Quickly Crowdfunds $13,000 For Repairs\nFriday Morning Constitutional: Big Rig at Fault In Deadly Richmond Bridge Crash\nDay Around the Bay: Casa Sanchez Building Officially Gets Historical Landmark Status\n‘Butt Divots’ Are Coming Back, as Muni Is Rolling Out New, Redesigned Train Seats\nYour “back door” will be more comfortable again on Muni trains, as SFMTA is rolling out a new fleet of seats, and two trains with the new seats are already in the wild.\nAnti-Vaxxers Bring Chaos to Healdsburg, Rallying Around Unvaccinated City Council Member\nA Healdsburg city council meeting turned into a mini-January 6 insurrection Monday, as anti-vaccine zealots stormed city hall and forced a council meeting onto Zoom.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1432575"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.615940272808075,"wiki_prob":0.615940272808075,"text":"Kensall D. Wise: Michigan, MEMS and Microsystems\nCatharine June • September 2, 2012\nThis retrospective of Kensall D. Wise, William G. Dow Distinguished University Professor Emeritus, provides a view of how he built a world-class program in MicroElectroMechanical Systems (MEMS).\nKen Wise outside the Lurie Nanofabrication Facility\nKensall D. Wise, William G. Dow Distinguished University Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, officially retired in June, 2011, though he continues to participate in ongoing research projects – giving his colleagues hope that he will never truly retire.\nWhen Ken came to the University of Michigan from Bell Labs in 1974, he envisioned working with students and colleagues to expand his doctoral research in the use of silicon micromachining for neural probes. As the first hire in his field, the challenges were\nenormous – but Michigan now had Ken, and Michigan became Ken’s playground.\nWith his unique combination of boundless enthusiasm, inventiveness, practicality, focus on teamwork and education, and dogged determination, he built a world-class program in MEMS (MicroElectroMechanical Systems) and microsystems that is supported by one of the top nanofabrication facilities in the nation.\nDivision News; Electronics, Devices, Computers; Kensall Wise; MEMS and Microsystems; Profile","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1850923"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8429556488990784,"wiki_prob":0.8429556488990784,"text":"NCAA to consider allowing athletes to profit from names, image and likeness\nBy Jill Martin, CNN\nPublished 9:15 AM EDT, Wed May 15, 2019\n'The first reality show': 'Hoop Dreams' at 25\nThe NCAA is going to start talking about the idea of updating its rules to compensate college athletes. However, the organization maintains it will not consider any concepts that could be construed as payment for participation in college sports.\nOn Tuesday, the NCAA announced that president Mark Emmert and the board of governors have formed a working group to examine issues related to athletes’ names, image and likeness.\nThe group will be made up of member representatives from all three NCAA divisions and will be led by Big East commissioner Val Ackerman and Ohio State athletics director Gene Smith.\n“This group will bring together diverse opinions from the membership – from presidents and commissioners to student-athletes – that will examine the NCAA’s position on name, image and likeness benefits and potentially propose rule modifications tethered to education,” Ackerman said in a statement.\n“We believe the time is right for these discussions and look forward to a thorough assessment of the many complexities involved in this area.”\nREAD: New Orleans Pelicans win the NBA draft lottery – and likely the Zion Williamson sweepstakes\nREAD: ‘We all have Hoop Dreams’ – Bittersweet tale of first ‘reality TV show’\nA final report will be turned in to the NCAA board of governors in October.\n“While the formation of this group is an important step to confirming what we believe as an association, the group’s work will not result in paying students as employees,” Smith said in a statement. “That structure is contrary to the NCAA’s educational mission and will not be a part of this discussion.”\nThe NCAA’s amateurism rules have been tested in recent years. Notably, former UCLA men’s basketball player Ed O’Bannon challenged the NCAA in 2009 for the opportunity for athletes to be paid for the use of their names, images and likenesses.\nIn 2014, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken sided with O’Bannon, ruling that the NCAA could set a cap on the money paid to athletes, as long as it allows at least $5,000 per athlete per year. However, that part of the decision later was overturned on appeal.\nCurrently, college athletes cannot earn money for autographs, which has gotten some in trouble in the past. Todd Gurley, for example, was suspended for receiving money for autographs in 2014 when he was with the University of Georgia.\nJohnny Manziel, then at Texas A&M, was suspended for the first half of a game against Rice in 2013 for what was called an “inadvertent violation regarding the signing of certain autographs.”\nIn March, Rep. Mark Walker, a Republican from North Carolina, announced the Student-Athlete Equity Act, legislation which would amend the definition of a qualified amateur sports organization in the tax code to remove the restriction on student-athletes using or being compensated for use of their name, image and likeness.\nThe NCAA’s press release Tuesday said the group was created “to examine issues highlighted in recently proposed federal and state legislation.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line533005"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5318242311477661,"wiki_prob":0.4681757688522339,"text":"Towed Car Earns Columbus Department of Safety a $500 Billion Lawsuit\nDanny Gallagher\nDanny Gallagher Published: June 9, 2012\nAn Ohio woman took the phrase \"frivolous lawsuit\" to a new level with her lawsuit over her towed car.\nMichelle R. Mathis of Columbus, Ohio asked for $500 billion in damages from the city after they impounded her 2002 Saturn SC2.\nShe claimed in her lawsuit that her car was towed as she was being treated at a university medical hospital for a medical procedure. She had been in a car accident and required some recovery time. She said she was unable to receive any mail during this recovery time, including any notification from the city's Department of Public Safety that they had taken possession of her car. She claimed that the city never even sent her a notification.\nThen after she was released from the hospital, she said she tried to recover her car but learned that the impound lot had sold it. So she filed the lawsuit seeking damages. Her lawsuit was filed in a handwritten document. She also claimed the city \"holds a grudge against her.\"\nThe lawsuit ruled against Mathis on the grounds that the city had not violated any constitutional laws by refusing to return her car and found no malfeasance to merit a $500 billion damage claim. The judge also dismissed the lawsuit.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1603411"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6702495813369751,"wiki_prob":0.6702495813369751,"text":"The Principal School Law receives the ULS recognition Award 2021\nProf. Christopher Mbazira, the Ag. Principal of the School of Law Makerere University has received the 2021 award from Uganda Law Society (ULS) for his Distinguished service in the Promotion of Legal Education.\nProfessor Mbazira, who is also coordinator of the Public Interest Law Clinic (PILAC) was recognized for entrenching the use of Clinical Legal Education methodology in the training of Law students.\nIn a statement shared on the ULS social media platforms, it was stated that Professor Christopher Mbazira has also spearheaded the mainstreaming of Social Justice and Human Rights across the School curricular. ‘He was one of the 9 academic staff who approached the supreme Court of Uganda and were admitted as amici in the 2016 Presidential Elections.\nA number of persons and organizations have applauded the ‘well deserved’ award by Uganda Law society.\nIn the year 2012, Prof. Christopher Mbazira started Public Interest Law Clinic and with the 12 pioneer students, the School of Law started a journey of training a new cadre of social justice lawyers. The Mission of PILAC is ‘to promote social Justice through legal education, legal research, legal aid, public interest litigation and building strategic partnerships.\nA practical experiential training has been emphasized through programs like The Community Law and Mobile Clinic, (CLAPMOC) which involves students supported by advocates reaching out to the poor and less served communities to address the identified social justice issues through literacy sessions as well as provision of free legal services.\nThe Clinical Legal Education (CLE), a law module has been mainstreamed in most programs in the Law School. If offers experiential teaching approach intended to equip law students with public interest lawyering skills.\nStudents also learn through Internships and Externships where they experience real life legal problems and this serves as an opportunity for them to collaborate with various organizations and legal practitioners working on specific problems.\nIn April 2017, PILAC was accredited as a legal aid service provider by the Uganda Law Council. The establishment of a fully -fledged walk- in legal aid unit at the School of Law exposes students to learning opportunities from real cases.\nOther pedagogical methodologies include Public Lecture Series designed to create a forum to discuss contemporary law and justice issues at the University. The Guest Lecture series that enable students to interact with experts in a given field.\nHarriet Musinguzi\nPrincipal Communication Officer School of Law\nIsemaghendera Alex, Web Administrator School of Law","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line819980"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5179769396781921,"wiki_prob":0.5179769396781921,"text":"Full Report from Maiden Edition of the Jewel Writing Workshop 2020\nTeach Socially>\nApplied Worldwide partners with Jewel Writing Workshop to help support writing mentorship in Nigeria.\nPost author:Adamu Usman Garko\nPost category:Professional Development / Teach Socially\nThe influx of many young talented writers in Nigeria with neither support nor mentorship has called for immediate intellectual action. Unlike other writers that are being supported massively by government and private agencies, Non- Governmental Organizations (NGOs), teen writers are left to wander aimlessly in the open field of creative productivity.\nTherefore, the young award-winning writer, Adamu Usman Garko, author of “When Day Breaks” and a winner to many local and international competitions, including the 2020 Nigeria Prize For Teen Authors, swung into action with the creation of an initiative, Jewel Writing Workshop which the first maiden held on the 31st October, 2020 at National Library Gombe branch.\nJewel Writing Workshop was initiated to nurture and mentor young aspiring writers to regurgitate their silent rich talents through the art and principles of writing, and to encourage and make vivacious their zeal. The Initiative aims at linking up these young aspiring writers with support from different enthusiastic organizations that are always ready to support their intellectual compositions. Aside nurturing and grounding them in art and principles of writing, the program also establishes a solid connection between teen writers and different highly prolific mentors that are willing to share their experiences and views.\nThe first maiden edition targeted 50 teenagers who are mostly in junior and senior secondary schools, who followed a systematized selection process. The call for Participation was released on social and other media to allow for interested participants to apply. To much of our surprise, before the set out deadline, we almost doubled the target which necessitated additional screening procedures; and the deadline was extended to reach out to those offline in order to objectively have a balanced candidature.\nThereafter, a team was established to monitor screening and selection processes. And a host of other professional writers, including facilitators for the workshop were organized to come up with the modus operandi of how the workshop and facilitation should be, and how evaluation and assessments of the candidates will be at the end of the workshop.\nOPENING CEREMONY:\nIn the morning around 7am, the convener, Adamu Usman Garko and his team arrived at the venue of the event carrying along with them: customized jotters, pens, sound system, banners and refreshment.\nImmediately after arranging seats and sorting out management stuff in the right direction, roles and responsibilities among volunteers were shared. The team members began to wait for the arrival of the participants. Not very long after, they began to arrive one after the other, obviously anxious and eager.\nSequel to the arrival of the participants, the committee in charge of verification organized and set the participants on process. The participants were duly verified, registered and ushered into the hall with well-arranged seats. Once a participant was verified and registered, a customized jotter, a pen and a tag would be given to them. Immediately the registration was over and everyone happily seated, the opening ceremony started, as scheduled from 10am-11am.\nThe Workshop was anchored by Sadiq Yahaya the initiative and as well a linguist and one of the great literary enthusiasts in northern Nigeria. The opening session began with the introduction of the purpose of the workshop where the convener, Adamu Usman Garko spoke on the aims of the workshop which as he said was “ bridge the gap between young writers and highly prolific writers. It will also create an avenue for young writers to stabilize their feet in the open field of writing”. Other objectives include contributing to qualitative education in the country and eradication of illiteracy through workshops, distribution of books, etc.\nThe host of the event, Abubakar Yakubu served as the keynote speaker during the opening ceremony. He talked on the importance of reading as a tool to better one’s craft as a writer. He also urged young people to actively participate in critical reading, because reading was the key to meaningful writing. He finally called upon aspiring writers to make sure their writings are qualitatively made to impact and effect or intrigue changes in the society.\nWith his encouraging and challenging words, Muhammad Gaude, the president of Gombe Jewel Writers’ Association came on to wrap up the opening ceremony with a speech on why the workshop came at the right time when free mentoring platforms were extremely scarce, more especially for young writers.\nWORKSHOP SESSION:\nThe participants were divided into three groups.\nThe first group were the most matured ones who were also better at the craft. In order to expose them to hands-on experience on the creative writing processes, Uzairu Uba, an all-around literary giant got them through as their facilitator for the whole workshop time.\nThe second group were average participants , but they were also excellent in their own capacity and their passion to enhance themselves was genuine. In order to give them two distinct experiences, Sadiq Yahaya took charge of them through the poetry writing process, and Ibrahim Sambo, an intellectual and a highly gifted story writer put them through the prose writing session\nThe last group were the youngest in age and in grasping of knowledge as it relates to the writing processes. Muib, an educationist who is also an astute writer took them through introductory writing Skills, and instigated them to wholeheartedly embrace reading, dearly.\nAnd all the groups were given exercises, tests and assignments to bring during the closing. They were also linked with platforms, for instance Gombe Jewel Writers Association, Creative Club Gombe State University etc to get more drilled online and offline. And short and long term targets were set for the participants to carry out the principles of the art of writing bestowed to them, through a consistent care of their various facilitators especially online. This was meant to provide sustainability to knowledge and experience given to them.\nCLOSING CEREMONY:\nThe closing ceremony started at exactly 4pm on that very day. Attendance at this stage of the event was not restricted. It was open to everyone. Important guests from without and within Gombe state graced the event.\nThe participants during the closing have written from what they have learned poems, short stories and other literary writings which they were given the opportunity to present. This was aimed to demonstrate the impact of the workshop practically on them. Sadiq Yahaya moderated the session.\nAfter opening with the national anthem, Muib Introduced the purpose of the event on behalf of the workshop facilitators, where he expressed the cooperation and enthusiasm that dressed the participants throughout the workshop session. This as he said “was an encouragement for the convener to do more and to prepare for more”. Usman Nurain Muhammad, PR expert, writer and the author of “High School Verses” gave an astonishing welcome address to the invited guests, participants and invitees. Thereof, the anchor took over and introduced the keynote speaker and other Special guests of the event.\nThe Director-General of Centre for Information and Development Agency, Dr. Y.Z Ya’u served as the keynote speaker. He spoke extensively on the topic: “Digital Opportunities for Young Writers. In his words: “I am impressed by the passion, commitment, resourcefulness and determination by both the young writers and those workshop facilitators. Here we have young people trying to find the skills to craft their stories without support from the government and our rulers.”\nLecturer with the department of English, Gombe State University Dr. Yunana Ahmed spoke on the topic: “Creativity a No Man’s Field”. It was really an enticing lecture that invigorated the audience and especially the participants towards innovation and creativity. And the last presenter, Ahmed Musa Hussain spoke on the topic: “Self Development: A Key to Unlocking 21st Century’s Fortunes”. It was a speech that so much focused on the quest for self discovery and improvement of the self literarily, especially leveraging on the enormous inborn talents and creativity that we have as youths.\nAfter receiving poetry rendition by one of the facilitators, Uzairu Ubah, the guest of honor, Muhammad Gaude, president of Gombe Jewel Writers Association gave a tantalizing remark from whence certificates were given to all the participants and facilitators. Along with the certificates was also a poetry book, “When Day Breaks” by Adamu Usman Garko, which was given to all the participants. Thereafter, the event was wrapped up with closing remarks by the convener.\nFinally, after the recitation of the national anthem, Group photographs were taken and the event was declared closed.\n1. Center for Development and Information Agency\n2. National Library Gombe Branch\n3. Fombina Imprints\n4. Applied Worldwide\nAdamu Usman Garko\nAdamu Usman Garko is a short story writer, an essayist and poet. He is the author of When Day Breaks, a collection of poetry, which was listed among the 15 Best Published Books in 2018 by DailyTrust newspaper; also, the book is a recommended text for 400l English students of Gombe State University in 2019. He is the 2020 winner of the Nigeria Prize for Teen Authors He is the convener of Gombe Book and Arts Festival, an in-coming literary festival in Nigeria to kickstart in 2020. You can connect with Adamu Usman Garko on Twitter.\nThe Sociological Studies and Solutions to Teachers’ Problems in Nigeria\nWorkbooks: A New Approach for Teaching Online Sociology Courses\nIs there Good Work to be done with a Master’s in Sociology?\nThe Story of @SociologyTheory: Part 1\nStudent-Centered Teaching in Sociology\nReasons to Use Twitter in the Sociology Classroom","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line682043"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.780418336391449,"wiki_prob":0.780418336391449,"text":"Home / Industry / Infotech / SMS revolution for the disabled\nSMS revolution for the disabled\nCo-founded by Arun Mehta in 2009, Bapsi helps people who have limited access to information because of their disability. Photo: Ramesh Pathania/Mint\n3 min read . Updated: 17 Aug 2016, 02:01 AM IST Sohini Sen\nApps created by Bapsi help deaf-blind people communicate using vibration as a medium on their smartphones\nNew Delhi: Almost a decade ago, Arun Mehta was delivering a talk in Bengaluru about technology access for the disabled, when he felt fingers touching his throat. Zamir Dhale, a young deaf and blind boy, was trying to feel the vibrations on his throat as he spoke. Dhale’s inability to communicate led Mehta to speak to Fernando Botelho, a visually-impaired software developer from Brazil.\n“We decided to try using Morse code in SMS,\" says Mehta, president of Bidirectional Access Promotion Society (Bapsi), a non-governmental organization (NGO). Bapsi was established in 2009 by Mehta and his partner Vickram Crishna in New Delhi.\nBapsi’s aim was to increase public awareness on the potential of telecommunications, broadcasting and Internet as well as to enable maximum access at the lowest costs.\nBapsi supports the “information poorest\", people who have limited access to information because of their disability and information is not presented in a user-friendly way.\nFor example, the Morse code generally replaces letters with long and short sound or light signals. But, for children like Dhale, who have multiple disadvantages, it would have to include the sense of touch.\nThe team at Bapsi started working on the Vibration Series in 2012. With the help of Anmol Anand, an intern at Bapsi, they created applications that would help deaf-blind people communicate, using vibration as a medium, on their phones.\nOf these, PocketSMS (an SMS app that uses vibrations as in Morse code to read text), Narangi (a slate for deaf and blind children, where once the sketcher traces his or her drawing, it vibrates) have already helped improve lives.\nBapsi is a winner in the inclusion & empowerment category of the mBillionth Award South Asia 2016, organized by the Digital Empowerment Foundation for the Vibration Series project.\nMehta, an Indian Institute of Technology alumnus, is a software writer, teacher, disability activist and human rights activist, while Crishna is a technologist, human rights and personal privacy protection activist.\nBapsi has been able to attract some institutional support—$20,000 from the International Development Research Centre for Bapsi’s SKID project and a grant worth $21,000 from the Information Society Innovation Fund for the Vibration Series.\nMehta explains that Bapsi is not looking at fund-raising right now. “Technology moves so fast. In 14 months, the project might not even be relevant,\" he says.\nThe other challenge lay in the financial aspect of the target audience, or those who suffer from more than one disability, such as deaf-mute, blind-mute etc. Mehta found out that a severely disabled person in the US, on an average, spends $20,000-25,000 a year on technology—beyond what most families can afford in India.\nIt is probably the reason why Mehta and Crishna, through many Right to Information (RTI) petitions, could not find a single deaf-blind person in the education system in India, in spite of half-a-million deaf-blind people in the country.\n“When we started with the project, we wanted to understand things such as the demographics, where are they, and how educated are the parents,\" says Mehta.\nThe growing popularity of smartphones has changed a lot of things for disabled people. Earlier, a disabled child would be conscious of taking a text-to-speech device out to a public place. “But now, it is not a stigma to be carrying access technology anymore,\" he says.\nBapsi’s applications are free to download from the Google Play Store. “Our distribution is worldwide, but we don’t know who our clients are,\" says Mehta, who is soon going to start teaching open source software at Sharda University and hopes to take the project forward with its help.\nThe other challenge lies in the fact that parents want to send their special needs children to regular schools.\nBapsi’s role increases from just designing the software required to teaching the caregiver how to use the software.\nThe NGO has been working on developing technology that would allow a normal school teacher to teach a class of disabled persons.\nBapsi is looking at developing technology that is much cheaper—around $500-1,000 for the entire class and will approach the government once there is a prototype.\nMint has a strategic partnership with Digital Empowerment Foundation, which hosts the Manthan and mBillionth awards.\nmint-india-wire digital-edge","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line889354"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9929341077804565,"wiki_prob":0.9929341077804565,"text":"Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh\nLife of Prince Philip the Duke of Edinburgh commemorated with new £5 coin to mark Armed Forces Day\nThe design on the coin was approved by the Duke himself before he died earlier this year\nNylah SalamMultimedia Reporter\nGold coin commemorating the life of the Duke of Edinburgh (Image: PA)\nA new £5 coin commemorating the life of Prince Phillip, the Duke of Edinburgh, has been unveiled.\nThe limited edition coin features a portrait of the Duke and was approved by him just weeks before his death on April 9, 2021.\nYesterday (Saturday, June 26) marked the Armed Forces Day on which the coin was launched.\nREAD MORE: Palace admits it ‘must do more’ to improve ethnic diversity among staff\nChancellor Rishi Sunak said: “This coin is a fitting tribute to the Duke of Edinburgh, who moved and inspired so many people around the world with his decades of service both to the nation and Her Majesty the Queen.\n“I’m proud to unveil the coin on Armed Forces Day, considering his distinguished naval career and unwavering dedication to our monarch and to his royal duties, and it is only right that he and the Queen are depicted together on both sides of it.”\nSign up to the HertsLive newsletter below for the latest news straight to your inbox:\nThe coin will be struck by the Royal Mint and is available from its website, as well as post offices around the UK and special stockists across the Commonwealth and worldwide, the Treasury said.\nThe Royal Mint will also make a £50,000 donation to the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award to support its community work in the UK and internationally, it added.\nThe Duke of Edinburgh served as the president of the Royal Mint Advisory Committee for 47 years.\nThe design drawn by artist Ian Rank-Broadley was approved by the Duke and the coin bears the inscription 'HRH The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh 1921-2021'.\nSilver and gold limited edition coins (Image: PA)\nThe coin is legal tender but has been designed as a limited-edition collectable or gift and will not be entering general circulation, the Treasury said.\nAnne Jessopp, chief executive of The Royal Mint, said: “Since the passing of the Duke of Edinburgh in April, many have commented that he led a life well-lived.\n“He was the longest-serving consort in British history, and patron or president to over 750 organisations – including The Royal Mint Advisory Committee.\nEnter your postcode below for the latest events happening in your area:\n“The Royal Mint has marked significant Royal events for centuries and is honoured to unveil an original new coin which celebrates the life and legacy of a remarkable man.\n“It feels fitting that this coin – which was personally approved by the prince – will also support the work of The Duke of Edinburgh’s Awards.\n“The awards have benefited millions of young people since they were formed in 1956, and are perhaps Prince Philip’s greatest legacy.”\nWatford FC hands out 300 jabs in one hour at 'Super Sunday' Covid walk-in clinic\nHertfordshire couple bought a £460,000 cottage in Wales without ever stepping inside","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1009048"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.682723879814148,"wiki_prob":0.682723879814148,"text":"Ceo lauren | bmgt 317\nWrite two paragraphs explaining each of the parties’ point of view – Lauren’s as well as the CEO’s. Explain your final decision on whether or not to go through with the sale as well as WHY this is your decision.\nDiscuss the advantages and disadvantages of using a group decision making process versus an individual decision making process by applying these concepts to the case study.\nDiscuss Lauren’s bias in her decision making process and how it may have affected her choice to make the decision alone.\nIdentify the CEO’s bias that may have entered the decision making process.\nDiscuss the business related facts within the scenario to develop an argument in favor of a group decision versus an individual decision.\nYou must use course material to support your responses and APA in-text citations with a reference list.\nLauren Becall is the top salesperson for Mudge Paper Company. She also leads the sales team that supports Mudge’s largest client, Bart’s Office Supplies. Bart’s is an international office supply chain that is growing rapidly. During the month of May, Lauren and her team members, Andy Griffith and Ronnie Howard, underwent intense negotiations with Bart’s purchasing agent, Jack Black and Bart’s CEO, Cary Grant, to restructure the current sales contracts.\nThe new contract spelled out Bart’s yearly paper requirements (contracted sales amounts) as well as payment and credit terms. The negotiations had been particularly hard for several reasons:\nBart’s sales had increased internationally causing shipping and custom duties to increase the cost to Mudge, resulting in an increase in sales price to Bart’s;\nThe volume of sales directed to Bart’s required Mudge to offer a volume sales discount to remain competitive with other paper companies;\nBart’s wanted a longer time to pay on the purchases. Bart’s wanted 60 days to pay on orders invoiced rather than the current 30 days;\nBart’s also wanted Mudge to extend its current credit line from $850,000 to $1,250,000;\nMudge’s CEO (Jimmy Cricket) was reluctant to tie so much of the company’s cash flow to the success of Bart’s. The concern was raised because in the last six months, Bart’s was paying down the credit line every 60 days rather than in the 30 days that had been agreed to in the current contract. Bart’s did not appear to have credit issues but Mudge was not in a position to give interest free loans for 60 days.\nThis week, in time for the Memorial Day holiday vacation, the final agreement was reached between Mudge and Bart’s. Bart’s would contract to purchase $1,750,000 of paper products from Mudge. Invoice payment terms were 45 days, with a 3% interest on invoices paid later than 45 days. The credit limit was extended to $1,000,000. Lauren Becall was not completely happy with the contract, as she felt Mudge was not protected from cash flow damage should Bart’s not pay on time, not to mention the larger line of credit. Still, the parties agreed, including her boss who was skeptical for the same reason as Lauren. The parties were due to sign the contract on Tuesday after the Memorial Day holiday.\nOn Friday evening, Lauren was packing her belongings readying to leave the office for the Memorial Day holiday, when her cell phone pinged. The caller was Jack Black, the Purchasing Agent for Bart’s. It appeared that a recent deal on Bart’s end with UMGC tripled its need for copy paper from Mudge. This deal would raise the total contract sales to $2.5 million. Jack Black made it clear that he wanted to change the credit limit from $1 million to $1.5 million and to extend the payment terms from 45 days to 50 days. Bart’s would not pay interest on late invoices until after 60 days. Black also made it clear to Lauren that if the new terms were not agreed on by the end of that Friday evening, he would be prepared to look at an offer supplied to him by Bart’s biggest competitor, King Paper. Black further stated that, while Bart’s is pleased with Mudge’s work, money is always the most important factor in purchasing. Bart’s president wanted an immediate answer so he could go on vacation with a clear mind. Lauren was aware that most of Jack’s talk was a negotiating technique, but did not doubt that there is competition waiting in the background. Images of last month’s teamwork ran through Lauren’s mind as she listened to Black talk.\nLauren winced at the memory of her teammate Griffith’s constant posturing in front of Black and the Bart’s CEO. She had hoped to be able to pick her own team when she was promoted to leader but that was not to be. Andy Griffith is a problem on this team. All month long, he had challenged her ideas in front of Bart’s CEO. Lauren knows that she was promoted over Griffith because her sales record was 20% higher than his was and she could close a deal better than he could. Griffith resents her promotion and reminds Lauren, as often as possible, that he brought in the Bart’s account and that he and Bart’s CEO have a great relationship. They play golf together and often go to dinner together with their wives. Lauren thinks Griffith is a good salesperson, but believes he should not be on this team. The tension is at times very thick especially during the negotiations this month. Griffith seemed to want to give away the store.\nUnfortunately, Ronnie Howard seemed to be sitting on the fence when it came to the negotiations. Lauren had expected that Ronnie would support her negotiation position with the client rather than Griffith’s because it protected Mudge. Since Ronnie was the niece of Mudge’s owner and CEO, Lauren believed she should be supportive of protecting the company’s money. Still, Ronnie was the one who came up with the idea of paying interest on the late invoices. It just seemed to Lauren that one day Ronnie was agreeing with Griffith and on another day with her. Lauren supposed that it was Ronnie’s new position at the company that made her want to please everyone, including Griffith. Lauren believed that pleasing people is a nice gesture but does not add to the efficiency of the team’s decision-making. Lauren believed that Ronnie would be looking for the general thoughts of the group, so she could appear to agree with the group.\nOverall, the month’s negotiation process had been long and difficult. The thought of going over it all again to make the changes seemed mind-numbing to Lauren. Yet, making the decision on her own would mean obligating the company to an even greater cash flow commitment. Her boss would not be happy with this obligation because he specifically warned her when they started that there was nothing to prevent Bart’s from continuing to pay its bills every 60 days despite the new contract agreement. Lauren rationalized and thought to herself, “Bart’s knows we are not likely to cut them off easily. They are too big a customer to us. However, the extra sales volume should offset the lost interest due for ten days on late invoices.”\nLauren told Black that he could tell the CEO that she would agree to the terms. When Lauren hung up the phone, she said aloud to nobody in particular, “I supposed I should have consulted the group, but it was worth the risk of not having to make another team decision.”\nAssignment: You are Jimmy Cricket, CEO of Mudge Paper Company and Lauren’s boss. You have come into the office early on the day after the Memorial Day Holiday to find Lauren’s report on your desk explaining the events of the Friday before and her subsequent decision. You are not happy because this is the exact reason why you wanted group decisions and, as a result, you would like to bring Lauren up on the carpet ASAP. However, you decide to take a moment and collect your thoughts.\nYou decide to ask Lauren to explain her reasoning behind making the decision solo as opposed to having the group decide. You also decide to explain why you wanted the group to make decisions of this kind.\nhttp://payforessayonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/whatsapp-logo-1.jpeg 0 0 Pay for essay online http://payforessayonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/whatsapp-logo-1.jpeg Pay for essay online2021-12-15 10:01:492021-12-15 10:01:49Ceo lauren | bmgt 317\nMarjory gordon’s functional health patterns nursing essay. Nurs 6221 | NURS 6221 – Managing Human Resources | Walden University","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1560678"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5755325555801392,"wiki_prob":0.42446744441986084,"text":"Eve 6 offer free download of Friend Of Mine\nEve 6 are offering a brand new acoustic version of their song ‘Friend Of Mine’ which originally appeared on their 2003 album ‘It’s All In Your Head’. Listen to the song above and grab your download here.\n‘It’s All In Your Head’ is the band’s latest release but they have entered the studio to record a brand new album which may be released later this year.\nDownloads, News\nGreen Day release lyrics for brand new song Amy\nJesse Leech demoing solo material for album","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line407772"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9182391166687012,"wiki_prob":0.9182391166687012,"text":"Dangerous Migration\nWarmer temperatures in high elevation regions are leading to spread of mosquitoes and vector-borne diseases.\nI t is a winged migration that has researchers and health officials alarmed.\nAs highland regions in Africa and the Americas experience warmer temperatures, disease-carrying mosquitoes, which thrive under such conditions, have slowly been making their way upslope, putting people at risk for viruses that previously affected only populations in lower-lying regions.\n“It’s one of the more interesting findings that’s backed up by field observations,” says Douglas O. Fuller, professor of geography and regional studies in the University of Miami’s College of Arts and Sciences, who studies the distribution patterns of mosquitoes around the world.\n“What we’re seeing most likely is upslope migration, particularly in the Andes, of some vectors,” Fuller says. “As climate changes and tropical bioclimatic zones shift upslope to replace temperate zones, a lot more people will be exposed to disease.”\nAgencies and institutes like the World Health Organization, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the U.S. Global Change Research Program have all sided with that view, warning that vector-borne diseases will spread more widely as the planet continues to heat up.\nGeography Professor Douglas O. Fuller uses a laser rangefinder to measure tree canopy heights. Trees and shrubs are ideal resting habitats for mosquitoes because they provide excellent shade and sugar-feeding opportunities between blood meals.\nUM College of Arts and Sciences, @UMCAS\nMiller School of Medicine, @umiamimedicine\n“There’s been a big debate in the literature about malaria being found at higher and higher elevations as a result of climate change, with melting snows of Kilimanjaro, for example, being a primary indicator of how things are changing in the montane regions of Africa,” explains Fuller. “Well, the same thing is happening in the Americas, but there hasn’t been a lot of attention in the literature.”\nFuller has studied mosquito populations using environmental remote sensing and other geospatial technologies for years. More recently he has concentrated on spatial modeling, mapping urban sites throughout the Americas and in Haiti where disease-transmitting vectors can be found. His digital precision mapping technique uses environmental data such as climate layers to reveal the probability of a species occurring within a specific pixel on a map.\n“And we’ve been pretty successful,” he says. “The idea is that some of these maps will feed into mosquito control efforts and help local authorities do a much better job at targeting whatever elimination or control activities they’re engaged in—whether it’s spraying, the distribution of bed nets, or more public awareness about areas that are likely to be at higher risks.”\nIn his crosshairs: the Anopheles mosquito, which can spread malaria.\n“We’re now at a point of talking about the elimination of malaria in Mesoamerica, where the vectors are still there but transmission rates are now fairly low,” says Fuller. “We’re not really seeing outbreaks, but if we turn our backs and don’t continue elimination efforts, malaria can pop up again.”\nFuller is an expert in tracking mosquitoes. About ten years ago he helped develop a model to predict dengue fever outbreaks in Costa Rica using data showing a link between transmission rates of the disease in that country and the occurrence of certain environmental conditions such as fluctuations in sea-surface temperatures.\nHe’s also conducted fieldwork in West Africa and is currently collaborating with John Beier, professor of public health sciences at the Miller School of Medicine, on a project focusing on the distribution of Aedes aegypti breeding sites in Honduras.\nNow, everybody’s focusing on the Aedes aegypti because of their ability to transmit multiple viruses. It is the original yellow fever mosquito.\n“We’ve been wrestling with that critter for a long time,” Fuller says of Aedes aegypti, noting that the mosquito has garnered more and more attention in the research community because of its ability to transmit multiple viruses such as chikungunya, dengue, and Zika.\n“One of the sad facts of life is, despite all the efforts to wipe out certain insect species by bombing with DDT and taking other extreme measures,” Fuller says, “we’ve never been able to cause one of them to go extinct.”\n- Robert C. Jones Jr. / UM News","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1286222"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5796189904212952,"wiki_prob":0.5796189904212952,"text":"Transformers: Age of Extinction\nMy View: Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014) PG-13 Four years after the invasion of Chicago, a mechanic (Mark Wahlberg) and his daughter (Nicola Peltz) find a broken down semi -truck. It turns out the truck is a deactivated Optimus Prime. The mechanic fires up the truck and starts a chain of events that could destroy the world. If you like dumb, pointless movies with loads of bad dialogue and action sequences that make no sense, then this is your movie. It’s one long (almost three hours) mess of a film franchise that has never valued its human actors over the robots. The first third of the film was promising, as we got to know Wahlberg’s character and his first interactions with Optimus. But, by the end, we really don’t care what happens. Yes, there are robots riding dinosaur robots, but, at this point, we don’t care, and we just want all the robot violence to end. By the there are so many product placement products in this film, it would make a great drinking game. The film is not worth seeing in 3-D, and there are no bonus scenes during the credits. Mr. Bay, I would like my 3 hours back, now! My Rating: You Would Have to Pay Me to See it Again Transformers: Age of Extinction Website\nIndiefest: Obvious Child (2014) R A standup comedian (Jenny Slate) gets dumped by her boyfriend in the bathroom of a comedy club. She finds out that her day job, at a bookstore she loves, is closing. After doing a miserable standup routine while drunk, she meets a nice guy and sleeps with him. A few weeks later she discovers that she is pregnant and makes the decision to have an abortion. Now, the question is, does she tell her parents, and, more importantly, the guy she slept with? This is a downright funny film, and Jenny Slate is perfect in the role of a girl with a wicked sense of humor whom you just can’t help rooting for. The film is getting a lot of attention due to the topic of abortion is the centerpiece of the film, but it’s really a movie about relationships. How we try to hang on to old ones, how we need our close friends and family for support, and how we must be open to new ones is what this film is about. I laughed throughout this romantic comedy, finding myself falling in love with Jenny Slate, and I think you will too. My Rating: Full Price Obvious Child Website\nIndiefest: Ivory Tower (2014) PG-13 A documentary about the high cost of college and dealing with the mounting problem of student loans. This is an interesting film that looks at the high cost of higher education and how the student loan system has become such a big business. What I liked about this film is it explores a number of solutions to the problem, whether it be online education or non-traditional education (like a college in Death Valley that is on a working ranch). It’s a film that any parent needs to see and the debt of student loans (more than the credit card debt in this country) is something that needs to be explored. My Rating: Full Price Ivory Tower Website\nIndiefest: We Are the Best! (2013) Three girls, Bobo (Mira Barkhammar), Klara (Mira Grosin) and Hedvig (Liv LeMoyne) in 1980’s decide to form a punk band. The only problem - they can’t play any instruments. Oh, and, by the way, they are told that punk is dead. This is a joy of a film to watch as the three actress give incredible performances. Grosin, who plays the outspoken Klara, pinballs from scene to scene with energy of a girl who wants to get everything she can out of life. LeMoyne, playing the more restrained Hedvig, has real musical talent and a nice presence on screen. The film relies on Barkhammar as Bobo, to carry the film and she does so with ease. The musical soundtrack helps the film move along, using old punk songs from the late 70’s and early eighties. This is one of those films that you are glad you spent some time with the characters. My Rating: I Would Pay to See it Again We Are the Best! Website\nForgotten Film: Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1989) NC-17 A former mental patient (Antonio Banderas) seeks out a former lover (Victoria Abril), who happens to be an actress and part-time porn star. When she rebukes his marriage proposal, he kidnaps her and holds her prisoner. This film isn’t for everybody, but I found it funny and extremely witty. Banderas is the best he has ever been in this film and has chemistry with Abril, who plays the woman he is trying to make love him, even though his methods are a bit extreme. Directed by Pedro Almodovar, it’s a film that never takes itself seriously. It’s a movie that just should be enjoyed. My Take: Full Price Tie Me Up, Tie Me Down! Info\nWeird Credits: From the credits of Transformers: Age of Extinction: sculptor gang boss\nComing Soon to a Theatre Near You: Boyhood (2014) R The buzz from critics on this Richard Linklater film is hitting a fever pitch. The film about a boy growing up, was shot over a 12 year time period. The film stars Ellar Coltrane, Patricia Arquette, Ethan Hawke, and Elijah Smith. Boyhood Website\nLabels: Boyhood, Ivory Tower, Mark Wahlberg, Nicola Peltz, Obvious Child, Optimus Prime, Transformers, Transformers: Age of Extinction, We Are the Best\nMy View: Jersey Boys (2014) R The film tells the story of four young men from the wrong side of the tracks who become the bestselling singing group, Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons. There are so many things that are wrong with this movie. First, this is a movie with songs, not a musical (even though it’s based on the long-running Broadway musical). What I mean by that is, in a musical a character breaks out into song, usually to express what is happening or how they are feeling. In this film, each song is done when they perform in front of an audience (state fair or Ed Sullivan show), or they are in a recording studio. The film is incredibly choppy, and the narrative between songs jumps around the timeline very quickly. One minute one of the characters is happily married, the next scene his marriage is in trouble due to him sleeping around and his wife becoming an alcoholic. The characters narrate the film while talking to the camera, which can work in certain films (like Ferris Bueller’s Day Off (1986) but in this film, it works to make the film slow down and rarely gives us any insight to what is happening. The film has an R rating, solely due to the language in the film. It’s a film where the Mob is involved heavily with the band, but there is almost no violence or sex. There is an incredibly creepy moment in the film when Valli, trying to comfort his daughter, sings \"My Eyes Adored You.\" Finally, while John Lloyd Young comes close to singing like Frankie Valli, he has no charisma on screen, something the real Valli had just standing on stage. All more frustrating is, during the closing credits, there is a rousing musical number with the whole cast singing and dancing in the streets of New Jersey, showing the potential of this film. I wish someone creative, like Martin Scorsese, would have directed this film. Instead, it’s Clint Eastwood, who plays it too close to the vest and gives us a boring film with songs. My Rating: Cable Jersey Boys Website\nIndiefest: The Grand Seduction (2014) PG-13 A small fishing village must get a lucrative business contract to escape financial ruin, but their odds are slim as a town doctor is needed to land the contract. The problem is they've been searching for years for a doctor, and no one has taken the bait. After the mayor skips town, resident Murray French (Brendan Gleeson) takes it upon himself to find his village a doctor. The town is able to get a doctor to come but only for thirty days, now they must convince him that this town is paradise. This is a delightful film to watch, a kind of combination of Northern Exposure meets Waking Ned Devine. Taylor Kitsch (yes, that Taylor Kitsch) is perfect as the big city doctor that the town is trying to woo. Brendan Gleeson is brilliant as the fisherman who has a plan to save the town. This is one of those films that you will want to buy to watch when you need a laugh. It's incredibly well done and a joy to watch. My Rating: Full Price The Grand Seduction Website\nForgotten Film: Murderball (2005) R This is a documentary about a group of young men who are quadriplegics who play full-contact rugby in wheelchairs. The men are trying to make it to the Paralympics in Athens. It’s a rough sport and the men in this documentary hold nothing back, whether talking about the injuries, their sex life or how they compete in a grueling, tough sport. It’s an inspiring film that makes you appreciate life and all it has to offer. My Rating: Full Price Murderball Fan Site\nIn Memory of Ed Wood (A Movie I’ve Only Seen in Trailers But Just Looks Like a Bad Idea): Dolphin Tale 2 (2014) PG I liked the first film, but it’s very hard to capture the magic twice. Dolphin Tale 2 Website\nIn Case You Missed It (A Film Just Released on DVD/Blue Ray): The Grand Budapest Hotel (2014) R Gustave H (Ralph Fiennes) is one of the best concierges in the world, and he works at the famous Grand Budapest Hotel. He hires Zero Moustafa (Tony Revolori) as a lobby boy. Now, Gustave and Zero are about to go on a great adventure. An absolute joyride of a film that takes a Wes Anderson (the director) type of film and adds the Marx Brothers to it. Fiennes is hilarious in the role of the stuck up, pompous concierge with a heart of gold. Revolori, as the “Lobby Boy,” perfectly works off of the energy of Fiennes creating great chemistry between them. An absolute delight of a film. My Rating: I Would Pay to See it Again The Grand Budapest Hotel Website\nWeird Credits: From the credits of Jersey Boys: pig wrangler\nComing Soon to a Theatre Near You: Life Itself (2013) R Documentary on one of my heroes, the Pulitzer Prize winning Roger Ebert. Ebert was an incredibly talented writer who could make a film review seem like a work of a master artist. Ebert was a flawed man, who battled many problems, but ultimately, he was a man who loved life. I am guessing I will shed a tear or two watching this film. Life Itself Website\nLabels: Brenden Gleesom, Dolphin Tale 2, Frankie Valli, Jersey Boys, John David Young, Murderball, The Four Seasons, the Grand Seduction, The Last Seduction\nMy View: 22 Jump Street (2014) R The boys are back! Schmidt (Jonah Hill) and Jenko (Channing Tatum) have left high school behind and now are ready to go undercover at the hallowed halls of a local university. Now that they are big men on campus, will their friendship survive? I wasn’t a huge fan of the first film, but I did like some of the comedic moments, especially when some of the TV cast showed up. I was mildly amused by this film but was put off by the number of jokes making fun of how homosexual Schmidt and Jenko’s relationship seems to be. Too often the film went for the easy joke and sometimes it felt like we were watching a live action cartoon. At one point I swear I heard the Benny Hill theme music. I did enjoy the performance of Jillian Bell, who plays a roommate with an attitude. I think some people will enjoy this movie, but I can say I only liked it. There is a funny sequence during the first part of the closing credits, and there is a very small bonus scene at the end of all the credits. My Rating: Bargain Matinee 22 Jump Street Website\nFamily Faire: How to Train Your Dragon 2 (2014) PG It’s been five years since Hiccup (Jay Baruchel) and Toothless the dragon saved the day and created peace between the dragons and the Vikings. Hiccup and Toothless stumble upon a faraway cave that houses hundreds of new wild dragons. The two friends discover that there is evil brewing as there is a Viking named, Drago (Djimon Hounsou), that plans on conquering the world. I loved the first film and I very happy to say that the sequel is it’s equal, and due to the excellent animation, maybe even better. The storyline moves at a quick pace, and the characters are fun and well developed, and the animation is incredibly detailed and colorful. It’s film that kids and adults will both love, possibly seeing it several times. The film also has a great message about friendship, family and taking responsibility. Go see this film in 3-D, as it uses the technology to great advantage throughout the film, especially during the flying sequences. My Rating: I Would Pay to See it Again How to Train Your Dragon 2 Website\nForgotten Film: Cat Ballou (1965) A young woman (Jane Fonda) wants her murdered father avenged. She hires a gunfighter (Lee Marvin) to fight her battles but she doesn’t realize that there is one problem, the gunfighter is a drunk. This is a hilarious comedy that makes fun of all the arch-typical western stereotypes. Fonda is excellent as the girl who thinks just about everything in the west is amazing. Marvin is brilliant as the boozing gunfighter, Kid Shellen, making this film so much fun to watch. My Rating: Full Price Cat Ballou Info\nIn Memory of Ed Wood (A Movie I’ve Only Seen in Trailers But Just Looks Like a Bad Idea): Step Up: All In (2014) PG-13 Dancers from the previous films compete in a dance off in Las Vegas. I think I will sit this one out. Step Up: All In Facebook page\nIn Case You Missed It (A Film Just Released on DVD/Blue Ray): Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (2014) PG-13 Jack Ryan (Chris Pine) is a junior analyst for the CIA. When he uncovers evidence of an imminent terrorist attack, he is sent to Moscow to continue his investigation. He encounters Viktor Cherevin (Kenneth Branagh) who is intent on taking down the world’s economy. I enjoyed this action film, especially the interplay between Pine and Kevin Costner, who recruits Pine’s character into the CIA. My Rating: Bargain Matinee Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit Website\nWeird Credits: From the credits of 22 Jump Street: Football coordinator\nComing Soon to a Theatre Near You: Snowpiercer (2014) R In the future, almost all life on Earth has perished. The only people still alive are on a train that travels across the globe. The film sounds really weird but the trailer makes it look awesome. Snowpiercer Website\nLabels: 22 Jump Street, Cat Ballou, Channing Tatum, Chris Pine, How to Train Your Dragon 2, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit, Jay Baruchel, Jillian Bell, Jonah Hill, Kenneth Branagh, Step Up: All In\nMy View: The Fault in Our Stars (2014) PG-13 Gus (Ansel Elgort) is a cancer survivor with a prosthetic leg. Hazel (Shailene Woodley) has cancer, and her constant companion is an oxygen tank. They meet at a cancer support group and fall in love. Just how long will this relationship last? Get out your box of tissues (you will need a full box), and get ready for an excellent story of how thrilling first loves can be and how life can be so unfair. Woodley, in her best performance to-date, is magical as the girl fighting cancer with her attitude and her heart. Elgort is perfectly cast as the boy with a great sense of humor who falls hard for Hazel. Their chemistry is amazing to watch, and there is a real connection between the two. While cancer is present in almost every scene (almost as its own character), the real heart of the story is about two people finding each other and accepting that they must make every moment count. My only complaint (and it’s a small one) is that there were moments in the film where I got choked up, but there never was that big, hard hitting emotional spot, just a whole bunch of little ones. My Rating: Full Price The Fault in Our Stars Website\nIndiefest: Cold in July (2014) R Awakened in the middle of the night, Richard Dane (Michael C. Hall) kills an unarmed intruder in his home. When the dead man’s father (Sam Shepard) shows up, Richard feels threatened. So he hires a private detective (Don Johnson) to protect him and his family, but things just get more and more complicated. I loved this suspenseful film that had numerous twists and turns with one big twist that I didn’t see coming. Hall does an excellent job of playing a man who gets deeper and deeper into a situation that he isn’t equipped to handle. Shepard is perfect as a man who could explode at any moment. I loved Don Johnson as the outrageous P.I., chewing up scenery with gusto. This is a brilliant film that keeps you on your toes. My Rating: Full Price Cold in July Website\nIndiefest: Words and Pictures (2014) PG-13 Dina Delsanto (Juliette Binoche) is an artist who has developed rheumatoid arthritis. She needs help on a daily basis to get around, so she moves to a new town and begins teaching at a prestigious private high school. She instantly clashes with the English teacher, Jack Marcus (Clive Owen), an alcoholic writer who hasn’t written anything in years. Now the question is which is more meaningful…words or pictures? Binoche and Owen are let down by the script, which starts out strong but ends up being predictable and heavy-handed. The film works best during the first half where the two characters are debating, but as the film progresses, and the two become more than just colleagues, their chemistry seems to fizzle. My Rating: Bargain Matinee Words and Pictures Website\nForgotten Film: Klute (1971) R John Klute (Donald Sutherland) is a Private Investigator who is hired to find out what happened to a businessman who has been missing for six months. His only clue - a handwritten obscene letter written to a Manhattan call girl (Jane Fonda) by the missing man. Now, Klute is part of a cat and mouse game where no one can be trusted and his life may be in danger. This is an interesting film where you really don’t know what is going on or whom you can trust. Sutherland is very different in this role, playing a man who isn’t too sure of himself or his abilities. Fonda is absolutely gorgeous and is perfect in the part of the call girl who is in way over her head. It’s a film that will keep you guessing until the very end. My Rating: Full Price Klute Info\nIn Case You Missed It (A Film Just Released on DVD/Blu-ray): Son of God (2014) PG-13 The story of Jesus (Diogo Morgado) from his humble beginnings, his lifelong teaching, his crucifixion and to his resurrection. Morgado is admirable in the role and has a pleasing presence on the screen with the perfect amount of charisma the part needs. I felt that while Son of God isn’t a bad film, it just doesn’t bring anything new to the story of Jesus. My Rating: Bargain Matinee Son of God Website\nWeird Credits: From the credits of The Fault in Our Stars: Textile Artist\nComing Soon to a Theatre Near You: Wish I Was Here (2014) Zach Braff is a father who, at age 35, is still trying to find his way. His life is changed when he takes his kids out of private school and begins home schooling them. I really enjoyed Braff’s first film that he wrote and directed, Garden State (2004), so I can’t wait for this one. Wish I Was Here Website\nLabels: Ansel Elgort, Clive Owen, Cold in July, Don Johnson, Juliette Binoche, Michael C. Hall, Sam Shepard, Shailene Woodley, Son of God, The Fault in Our Stars, Wish I Was Here, Words and Pictures, Zac Braff","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line219952"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8616792559623718,"wiki_prob":0.8616792559623718,"text":"Nominations now open for both S.C. Arts Awards\nNominations are now open to honor persons or organizations in South Carolina who exhibit the highest levels of achievement, influence, or support of arts and folklife with the South Carolina Arts Awards.\nSouth Carolina Governor’s Awards for the Arts\nThe South Carolina Arts Commission (SCAC) is accepting nominations for the South Carolina Governor’s Award for the Arts, which recognizes persons or organizations in South Carolina who exhibit outstanding achievement or support of the arts. The Governor’s Awards use a simple, online nomination process, and all it takes to make a nomination is one letter, which should describe the nominee’s exemplary contributions to the arts in South Carolina in these categories: Artist, Individual, Arts in Education, Government, Business/Foundation, and Organization. A nomination letter should address any characteristics included in the category descriptions. The nomination letters are due Friday, Nov. 5, 2021 at 11:59 p.m. ET.\nFor complete nomination guidelines or more information about the South Carolina Governor’s Awards for the Arts, visit SouthCarolinaArts.com or contact Senior Deputy Director Milly Hough: [email protected] or 803.734.8698.\nJean Laney Harris Folk Heritage Awards\nThe SCAC, with McKissick Museum at the University of South Carolina, honors the state’s exceptional folklife and traditional arts practitioners and advocates with the Jean Laney Harris Folk Heritage Awards. The South Carolina General Assembly created the awards in 1987 to recognize lifetime achievement in the traditional arts and presents them annually to honor the work of stewarding and furthering the traditional arts significant to communities throughout the state.\nMcKissick Museum is collecting nominations until Friday, Nov. 5, 2021 at 11:59 p.m. ET. For additional information and advisement, contact museum Executive Director Jane Przybysz: [email protected] or 803.777.7251.\nThe South Carolina Governor’s Awards for the Arts and Jean Laney Harris Folk Heritage Awards are presented at the South Carolina Arts Awards ceremony in the spring. Nine distinguished recipients were recognized in May 2021 for exceptional achievements in, support of, or advocacy for the arts at a professional produced virtual ceremony. Details about the 2022 South Carolina Arts Awards will be announced later.\nAbout the South Carolina Arts Commission\nThe mission of the South Carolina Arts Commission (SCAC) is to promote equitable access to the arts and support the cultivation of creativity in South Carolina. We envision a South Carolina where the arts are valued and all people benefit from a variety of creative experiences.\nA state agency created by the South Carolina General Assembly in 1967, the SCAC works to increase public participation in the arts by providing grants, direct programs, staff assistance and partnerships in three key areas: arts education, community arts development, and artist development. Headquartered in Columbia, S.C., the SCAC is funded by the state of South Carolina, by the federal government through the National Endowment for the Arts, and other sources.\nPrevious Post: Joe Wilson Bus Tour 2021\nNext Post: Ed White endorses Tifani Moore for LR5 School Board","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line173038"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5247024893760681,"wiki_prob":0.4752975106239319,"text":"O’er the Fields\nNovember 23, 2018 /in Flash Prose, Flash Prose, Winter-Spring 2019 / by Andie Francis\nIt was true it was Christmas. It was my first day in Phnom Penh. My boyfriend bought our tickets for Cheong Ek, a genocide memorial site. Yes, perhaps I was an artist when I agreed. My boyfriend adjusted the headphones, his best friend took a Klonopin.\nThe tour began with facts. A curator’s voice told us that in four years, an estimated 1.5 million Cambodians died under Pol Pot’s regime, many of them in “killing fields.” I listened to this section twice. My stomach tensed up as if a ball were being thrown at me, again and again.\nTourists gravitated toward a monkey pod tree (the “Killing Tree”), which executioners used to beat children to death in front of their mothers. The sun suspended from its pendulum rod. The air was a taut sheet. Before we left for Cambodia, my boyfriend suggested we unpack the Christmas tree. What for? I asked.\nBeneath the Killing Tree, fragments of bone and red cloth had surfaced on the dirt paths. In another killing field 100 miles south of Phnom Penh, local villagers have raided bones looking for gold jewelry to sell for food. Days later, we won’t think twice when ordering Tomb Raider cocktails in Siem Reap. A mediocre drink made of Cointreau, lime juice and tonic water, it was invented for Angelina Jolie, a refreshment after a long day on set raiding the tombs of Angkor Wat. We slurp them down and buy Christmas gifts in the open-air market of Psar Chaa: embroidered flats, earrings, and sundry baubles.\nThe truth is, I heard my boyfriend and his friend laugh about the red fabric materializing on the path’s surface. He mentioned how his mother used to plant red fabric in the chimney flue to simulate Santa’s tattered ass. I always thought she got the fabric from JoAnn’s, he said. I told them to shut up and finished the audio tour on my own, falling purposely behind. My boyfriend’s best friend said to me, laughing, I’ve been here too many times.\nThe tour led me to another monkey pod tree known as the Magic Tree. It was used to hang a loudspeaker. Khmer Rouge had blasted music from the speaker to drown out the sounds of victims being executed at night. The pock-marked fields behind the Magic Tree were mass graves. There were signs telling us how many victims were buried without heads, that many were naked. I was asked how I felt by another woman tourist. The graves were surrounded by wooden fences with friendship bracelets knotted to them. From the bushes, a boy asked me for money, his feet resting on a lower rung of the fence that guarded the mass graves. I did.\nAs I stood at these landmarks, I no longer wanted to go out for Christmas. Still, we ate lemongrass curry with rice noodles and Angkor beer at a Cambodian restaurant in a French colonial building. We visited a bar where the DJ, who had an impressive record collection, agreed to play our obvious request: “Holiday in Cambodia” by the Dead Kennedys. We took a picture next to a Santa mannequin. At another bar, we were meant to lose games of Connect Four to bar hostesses. And we did. Every time we lost, we owed a “ladies drink” to our competitor. Turns out, they pocketed a dollar off the top. I had no idea what I was doing there. When we arrived back at our hotel bar, they played different versions of “Jingle Bells” on repeat. I wanted to hear “o’er the fields we go” without the “ha-ha-ha.”\nIn the memorial stupa, there were 9,000 skulls stacked one on top of the other. Signs told us which heads were injured by which tool: hoe, axe, hook knife. Red and blue stickers told us male or female, under twenty years old. The tour ended with a roomful of portraits. The Khmer Rouge took a photograph of each prisoner both alive and dead. There was an image of a woman prisoner with her baby. I wanted to have something to say when I met my boyfriend and his best friend outside. Something smart, careful. It could have been any one of us, and yet I knew that wasn’t true. The faces from the photographs were once the faces on those skulls. Instead, I said nothing. It was just me and the pendulum sun, finding a slight way to disappear, a way back to the hotel.\nAndie Francis is the author of the chapbook I Am Trying to Show You My Matchbook Collection (CutBank Books 2015). She holds an MFA from The University of Arizona, and is an assistant poetry editor for DIAGRAM. Her work appears in Berkeley Poetry Review, Cimarron Review, Columbia Poetry Review, Greensboro Review, Portland Review, TAMMY, and elsewhere.\nPhoto Credit: Lawrence Lenhart\nhttps://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png 0 0 Sara Voigt https://lunchticket.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/lunch-ticket-logo-white-text-only.png Sara Voigt2018-11-23 11:33:142018-11-24 11:37:13O’er the Fields","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1343160"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.682485818862915,"wiki_prob":0.682485818862915,"text":"Agilis Biotherapeutics’ AADC Gene Therapy Ready for Submission to FDA\nby Joana Carvalho | February 19, 2019\nOnly 18 months after its initial licensing, Agilis Biotherapeutics‘ gene therapy for aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) deficiency has been deemed ready for submission to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).\nGiven its rare disease status, with roughly 120 cases of AADC deficiency described to date, this is a “remarkable pace of successful drug development,” researchers say in the case study, “Acceleration of rare disease therapeutic development: a case study of AGIL-AADC,” published in Drug Discovery Today.\nAADC deficiency is a rare genetic disorder caused by mutations in the DDC gene, which provides instructions to make the AADC enzyme. This enzyme is necessary for the production of neurotransmitters — chemical substances that allow communication between nerve cells — in the brain.\nHowever, when AADC malfunctions, infants may experience severe developmental delays and movement impairments that usually emerge during the first year of life and remain forever.\nOne of the most promising therapeutic avenues for AADC patients is gene therapy, because it enables the correction of faulty genes in a specific and efficient manner.\nAgilis — now part of PTC Therapeutics — in collaboration with the National Taiwan University (NTU) developed a new type of gene therapy (AGIL-AADC) aimed to increase the amount of AADC in the brains of patients with AADC deficiency. It uses an adeno-associated virus (AAV) to deliver healthy copies of the gene, in an attempt to normalize the production of neurotransmitters and improve patients’ neurological function.\n“Once the Agilis team established the license agreement for AGIL-AADC with NTU in January 2016, it was clear that a considerable amount of time and resources would need to be invested to gain FDA approval,” the researchers wrote.\nThis involved the formation of a partnership between Agilis and the Therapeutics for Rare and Neglected Diseases (TRND) program of the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to facilitate the development of AGIL-AADC, and the announcements of promising and accurate data from clinical trials for AGIL-AADC.\nThe first proof-of-concept compassionate study for AGIL-AADC, including eight children younger than 8 years old with AADC, was the first evidence that long-term gene therapy might improve neurotransmitters’ production and children’s motor function.\nThis was followed by an open-label Phase 1/2 trial (NCT01395641) undertaken in Taiwan involving a total of 10 patients under 8 years old that confirmed AGIL-AADC was safe and highly effective for children with severe AADC deficiency.\n“By July 2017, after a year of intensive work requiring sourcing data to the case records, database auditing, and further statistical analysis, a comprehensive data package was presented to an FDA review panel, which judged AGIL-AADC to be [ready for a biologics license application] ready. In merely 18 months, AGIL-AADC has been accelerated through a translational ‘Valley of Death’ and is now positioned for FDA submission and review and potential U.S. approval,” the investigators wrote.\n“This case study of Agilis demonstrates the power of public-private partnerships and international collaboration orchestrated by a committed and focused small private biotech. With the proper alignment of stakeholders, the challenges of rare disease drug development can be addressed more successfully, and life-saving therapies need not fall through the cracks,” they concluded.\nPTC is planning to submit a request for FDA approval in 2019 and begin AGIL-AADC’s commercialization upon approval.\nJoana Carvalho Joana holds a BSc in Biology, a MSc in Evolutionary and Developmental Biology and a PhD in Biomedical Sciences from Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal. Her work has been focused on the impact of non-canonical Wnt signaling in the collective behavior of endothelial cells — cells that made up the lining of blood vessels — found in the umbilical cord of newborns.\nAGIL-AADC, Agilis Therapeutics, biologics license application, BLA, FDA, gene therapy, PTC Therapeutics","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line653341"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9248514771461487,"wiki_prob":0.9248514771461487,"text":"What country is r. o. c.?\nRussia was banned from the Olympics when sanctioned by the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) after it was accused of running a state-backed doping program. Russia has been allowed to get around this by competing under R.O.C., which stands for Russian Olympic Committee.\nWilliam MacLeod\nWhat is r. o. c. country?\nWhat country is abbreviated r. o. c.?\nWhich country is abbreviated r. o. c.?\nWhat country is p. r. c.?\nWhat country is r. p. c.?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1445592"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9732003808021545,"wiki_prob":0.9732003808021545,"text":"officer randolph holder\nSuspect in custody after NYPD cop fatally shot in the head\nSuspect in custody after NYPD shot, killed\nEAST HARLEM, N.Y. -- A career criminal wanted by police in the shooting of a gang member last month is expected to be charged in the deadly shooting of NYPD Officer Randolph Holder on a pedestrian bridge after stealing a bike in East Harlem on Tuesday night, investigators said.\nPolice have identified Tyrone Howard, 30, as the suspect in custody. Howard has multiple prior arrests, they said. Howard had also been wanted in connection with a Sept. 1 shooting in Manhattan, said James O'Neill, the NYPD's chief of department. Investigators suspected Howard had shot at a member of the East Army gang, but he wasn't arrested because he skipped out on court dates and police couldn't track him down at his home, O'Neill said.\nFamily and friends paying respects at family home of fallen NYPD officer #RandolphHolder in Far Rockaway. pic.twitter.com/5HRCFvOOyn\n— CeFaan Kim (@CeFaanKim) October 21, 2015\nOn Tuesday night, Holder and his partner responded to a report of shots being fired at around 8:30 p.m. near a public housing development at 102nd Street. They saw people shooting at each other, and asked for assistance. According to the NYPD, many officers responded.\nPolice said Howard fled toward the FDR Drive promenade where he stole a bike and headed north. Holder and his partner caught up to the suspect on a pedestrian overpass that spans the FDR at 120th Street. Police said Howard fired and Holder was struck in the front of the head. Holder's partner returned fire, police said. Howard fled down a river path near the highway, tossing his gun and ammunition along the way, according to police.\nPHOTOS: NYPD officer shot, killed in East Harlem\nNYPD officer shot in East Harlem\nAn NYPD officer was shot Tuesday night after he responded to shots fired and chased a suspect to a footbridge at the FDR Drive.\nDuring a search, police apprehended Howard, who had been wounded, at East 125th Street. The suspect was taken to New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center and has been released into police custody.\nA gun and a bicycle were recovered at the bridge, police said. Divers found a loaded magazine from a semiautomatic pistol in the Harlem River. Ballistics were recovered on the FDR Drive.\nThe three other men are in custody in connection with the initial shots that were fired, preceding the officer's shooting. Those shots were fired from up to three separate weapons, investigators said.\nHolder, 33, was assigned to PSA 5, which polices the city's public housing developments. He was a five-year veteran and native of Guyana.\nVIDEO: Officer killed was member of NYPD for 5 years\nOfficer killed has been member of NYPD for 5 years\nHolder, 33, was assigned to the New York City Police Department's PSA 5, which polices the city's public housing developments.\n\"Our hearts are heavy and we offer our thoughts and prayers to his family who are experiencing unimaginable pain as we saw when we met with them earlier this evening,\" Mayor Bill de Blasio said.\n\"Say a prayer that this family will get through this emptiness that they will always have,\" said Pat Lynch, Patrolmen's Benevolent Association. \"New York City police officers everyday go out and carry themselves like superheroes but the reality is when we're attacked we bleed, when we bleed we die and when we die we cry.\"\nVIDEO: NYPD names Tyrone Howard as suspect in shooting death of officer\nNYPD names suspect in shooting death of officer\nThe New York City Police Department has named the suspect in the fatal shooting of an NYPD officer.\nIn honor of Holder, all flags in New York state and in New Jersey were lowered to half-staff immediately until the day of Holder's interment.\nNationwide, 100 officers have died in the line of duty so far in 2015. NYPD Officer Brian Moore, 25, was killed on May 9 during a patrol. A suspect was charged with murder. And at the end of 2014, on Dec. 20, officers Wenjian Liu, 32, and Rafael Ramos, 40 were ambushed and killed by a man who said he wanted to kill some cops in Brooklyn. The suspect killed himself in a nearby subway station.\nDozens of Holder's fellow officers stood outside the hospital early Wednesday and saluted as the ambulance carrying their fallen colleague left. Afterward, many embraced one another.\n\"Tonight, he did what every other officer in the NYPD does when the call comes - he ran toward danger,\" Bratton said. \"It was the last time he will respond to that call.\"\nClick here for full coverage on the fatal shooting of NYPD Officer Randolph Holder.\nnew yorkpolice officer killedcrimearrestnypdofficer randolph holdershootingpolice officer shotu.s. & worldofficer killed","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1374559"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6781301498413086,"wiki_prob":0.3218698501586914,"text":"Coaldale man charged with sexual assault of teen\nRegistered sex offender Trevor Pritchard charged\nupdate January 25, 2017:\nThe Coaldale RCMP are continuing with their investigation of Trevor Pritchard, of Coaldale, Alberta. Two additional victims have since been identified. Pritchard will appear in Lethbridge Provincial Court on Jan. 25, 2017. At that time the following additional charges will be heard:\nSexual Assault Contrary to Section 271 of the Criminal Code\nSexual Assault with a weapon Contrary to Section 272(1)(a) of the Criminal Code\nSexual touching of a person under the age of 16 years Contrary to Section 151 of the Criminal Code\nCommunicate with a person under 18 years of age to commit a sexual related offence Contrary to Section 172. 1(1)(b) of the Criminal Code\nRCMP Alberta - On the morning of January 18, 2017 the Coaldale RCMP were informed of a sexual assault of a 15 year old female at a residence in Coaldale on Tuesday, January 17, 2017.\nThe initial complaint was lodged with the Lethbridge Regional Police Service and then turned over to the Coaldale RCMP. With the assistance of the Lethbridge Police Service and ALERT Internet Child Exploitation (\"ICE\") team, a search warrant was executed at a Coaldale residence in the early evening yesterday, Jan 18. During the service of the search warrant one man was arrested and taken into RCMP custody.\n32 year-old Trevor Pritchard, of Coaldale, who is a registered sex offender, has been charged with six criminal offences. They include:\nFor a sexual purpose unlawfully touch a person under 16 years of age Contrary to section 151 of the Criminal Code\nAbduction of a Person under the age of 16 Contrary to Section 280(1) of the Criminal Code\nUtter threats Contrary to Section 264.1 (1) (a) of the Criminal Code.\nCommunicate with a person under 16 years of age to commit a sexual related offence Contrary to Section 172.1 (1) b) of the Criminal Code\nCommunicate with a person under 18 years of age to commit a sexual related offence Contrary to Section 172. 1(1) (a) of the Criminal Code\nTrevor Pritchard has been remanded into custody and will make his next appearance in Lethbridge Provincial Court on January 25, 2017 at 9:30 am.\nIf you have any information about this matter, or believe you have any information about any other offences related to this matter, please contact the Coaldale RCMP at 403-329-5080.\nIf you want to remain anonymous, you can contact crime stoppers by phone at 1-800-222-8477 (TIPS), by internet at www.tipsubmit.com, or by SMS (www.crimestoppers.ab.ca for instructions). You do not have to reveal your identity to Crime Stoppers, and if you provide information to Crime Stoppers that leads to an arrest, the recovery of stolen property, and/or the seizure of illicit drugs, you may be eligible for a cash reward. Crime Stoppers does not subscribe to call display and the identity of the caller will remain anonymous.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line258788"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8797978162765503,"wiki_prob":0.8797978162765503,"text":"BREAKING: Donald Trump Invited All Living Presidents To His Inauguration, Guess How Many Are Attending?\nOne month out, Jimmy Carter is the only former president to RSVP to Donald Trump’s inauguration, while Bill Clinton and George W. Bush are putting off their decision until the new year.\nThe Clintons have been keeping a low profile since the election and have made no decisions about whether to attend, according to a person familiar with the planning.\nBush’s spokesman said that GWB will not announce whether he will attend until the new year, while a source familiar with the matter said Bush is also still weighing whether to show up. George W. Bush had tweeted out a statement of congratulations to Trump after the election, but neither he nor his father endorsed Trump, who often mocked his brother Jeb throughout the GOP primary.\nGeorge H.W. Bush has confirmed that he will not be at the inauguration, according to his spokesman, Jim McGrath, who cited the 41st president’s age, 92, as the reason why he will skip.\nFollowing tradition, all former presidents are invited to attend the ceremony on Jan. 20 when Trump will be sworn in. But not all living presidents have consistently attended the inaugurations of their successors.\nPresident Barack Obama in 2009 enjoyed the presence of all four living presidents— both Bushes, Carter and Clinton — at his first inauguration, but the Bushes skipped Obama’s second event in 2013, citing George H.W. Bush’s compromised health.\nSource: Truthmonitor\nRelated Topics:Donald TrumpNews","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1246374"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9644637107849121,"wiki_prob":0.9644637107849121,"text":"Enugu father hacks 32-year-old son to death for threatening to kill him\nRaphael Ede\nA 60-year-old father, Ikechukwu, has allegedly killed his son in Ogbozinne-Ndiagu Akpugo community, in the Nkanu West Local Government Area of Enugu State.\nThe father of four reportedly killed his son on Thursday on the claim that the 32-year-old allegedly threatened to kill him over issues yet to be ascertained.\nPUNCH Metro gathered that Ikechukwu and his son were at home when an argument ensued between them.\nWhen the argument became intense, the father reportedly placed a distress call to the chairman of Ogbozinne village, claiming that his son threatened to kill him.\nIn a bid to salvage the situation, the village chairman alerted the community chief security officer.\nOur correspondent learnt that the chairman and the CSO and his team rushed to Ikechukwu’s house with the intention of rescuing him.\nA source said when the group got to the house around 2am on Thursday, Ikechukwu’s son warned them against entering the compound.\n“After a while, Ikechukwu, who said he was held hostage by his son, came out and opened the gate. He asked the CSO and his men to tie the deceased till morning so his son would not kill him. However, while the security men were tying the boy, the father used an axe to cut his back.\n“The chairman and the security men later left the house after the deceased had been tied and dumped on the ground. Unfortunately, by morning, Ikechukwu called the community members that his son had died and that they should come and bury him,” the source added.\nLand sale: Police arrest man over hacking of visually impaired 94-year-old brother to death\nWoman flees as man hacks rival lover to death in Ogun\nAggrieved son hacks father to death over chicken, charged to court\nAnother source said the community members refused the request, as Ikechukwu threatened to employ labourers to dig a grave and get the police to supervise the burial.\n“Unfortunately for him, when he went to the Agbani Police Division to get policemen to supervise the burial, leaders of the community stormed the station and reported the incident and he was subsequently detained,” the source said.\nThe state Police Public Relations Officer, Daniel Ndukwe, confirmed the incident, adding that three suspects had been arrested.\nNdukwe said, “Three suspects have been arrested in connection with the case of alleged conspiracy and murder. Investigation is ongoing at the State Criminal Investigation Department, Enugu State.\n“The father of the deceased, the chairman of the community and the CSO are helping the police in their investigation.”\nContact: theeditor@punchng.com\nTags: Enugu father hacked to death","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line226501"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7766494154930115,"wiki_prob":0.7766494154930115,"text":"Ben Needham\nowner/principal designer\nBen Needham is designer and educator specializing in computer visualization. His work includes designs for Theatre, Television, Film and Theme Parks. He currently is the Resident Designer and Director of Technical Theatre for the Academy for the Performing Arts while also owning and operating Digital Squirrel Studio, a full service design studio located in Bedford Ohio.\nMr. Needham has designed over 500 theatre productions for a wide range of theatres, venues and touring groups. Past clients include Virginia Musical Theatre, Atlanta Lyric Theatre, Knoxville Opera, Lyric Opera of Cleveland, Porthouse Theatre, Sign Stage Theatre on Tour, Circle Theatre Orlando, Virginia Governors School of the Arts, and Beck Center for the Arts among many others. His design work features extensive computer pre-visualization to create virtual versions of the final designs during the conceptual phase of the process.\nMr. Needham’s Film and Television work includes feature and independent films, regional and national commercials and television shows as well as a national award show. Highlights include Set Designer on Stephen Spielberg’s LINCOLN which received the 20130Academy Award (Production Design Rick Carter), KILLING LINCOLN for National Geographic starring Tom Hanks, KILLING KENNEDY for National Geographic starring Rob Lowe, the HORATIO ALGER ASSOCIATION AWARDS filmed at Constitution Hall, Washington D.C., and the new AMC Productions new series TURN.\nOther notable works include, Designer for Inaugural season of Geauga Lake Amusement Park’s stage and water ski productions, Theming Design for a Motor-Sports Hall of Fame, Computer Rendering for many architectural projects and Animation Services for training and promotional events both local and national.\nAs an educator Mr. Needham has taught at high school, college and graduate levels having instructed in all aspects of technical theatre and animation. Among the schools Mr. Needham has taught at are The University of Georgia, Case Western Reserve University, Kent State University, Lake Erie College, Lakeland Community College, and the Performing Arts Academy at Chagrin Falls Schools.\nBen currently resides in Bedford, Ohio with his wife Christie and three children.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line774740"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5001029372215271,"wiki_prob":0.4998970627784729,"text":"Tag: defence force\nDo we need the intelligence services? Featured\nFebruary 7, 2021 by Socialist Party Zambia in Opinions\nOur intelligence officers – ba shushushu, ba OP – are hated and feared.\nIs this the way things should be? The answer is a categorical No!\nDo we need the intelligence services? Yes, we do.\nFrom time immemorial, nations, governments and communities have relied on intelligence as an essential guide to statecraft. It is on record, for example, that the Persian Empire, the Moguls of India and the City State of Venice utilised intelligence in a systematic manner as an essential feature of government. They recorded their concepts of intelligence in texts that are available for study today.\nIt is evident from this history that intelligence techniques have been used in pursuit of different objectives and that statecraft and its instruments are\nalways a reflection of the culture and value system of a given society.\nSome nations believed in conquest and the creation of empires that exploited the resources of their subjects. Others used intelligence as an instrument in pursuit of wars and military supremacy. Still others sought dominance in trade and wealth creation for themselves and their peoples.\nWith the emergence of modern democratic states – be they capitalist or socialist, a fundamental change has occurred in the nature of intelligence as an instrument of government.\nWhereas previously the emphasis was on the security of the state and the survival of the regime, now there is a strong emphasis on human security and\nhuman rights and freedoms.\nIn our country the Constitution is the supreme law and it enshrines the\nprinciples, culture and values of our multiparty democratic state and people. Our constitutional arrangements are not confined to setting out the distribution of power and the means for the peaceful change of ruling parties, presidents and settlement of disputes. The Constitution also reflects the basic values of our multiparty democracy and the economic and social principles for ensuring a cultured existence for all our people and their diverse political parties.\nUnlike many other jurisdictions, our Constitution provides expressly for the setting up of intelligence services as part of the security system in the country – Constitution of Zambia (Amendment) [No. 2 of 2016 81 Establishment of Defence Force and functions Establishment of national security services and functions (3) The Zambia Security Intelligence Service shall— (a) ensure national security by undertaking security intelligence and counter intelligence; (b) prevent a person from suspending, overthrowing or illegally abrogating this Constitution; and (c) perform other functions as prescribed.\nThere are also statutes that describe in detail the role and functions of the intelligence services – An Act to provide for the establishment of the Zambia Security Intelligence Service, its functions and discipline; and to provide for matters incidental thereto or connected therewith [1st October, 1974]; An Act to provide for the continued existence of the Zambia Security Intelligence Service, its functions and discipline; to constitute the National Intelligence Council and define its functions; to repeal and replace the Zambia Security Intelligence Service Act, 1973; and to provide for matters connected with or incidental to the foregoing [24th April, 1998. Whilst operational techniques of covert collection of information are secret, the rest of our intelligence activities should be open and above board. This reflects confidence that our objectives and policies are ethical, honourable and in accordance with fundamental human rights and freedoms.\nOur intelligence and other security services are not supposed to be oppressors of the people but protectors of their security and well-being. Hence our services are supposed to\ncount on the full support of the people. But that is not the case today – our security services are feared and even hated.\nThe intelligence function comprises the gathering, evaluation and dissemination of information relevant to decision-making, and may include prediction based on such information, as well as planning for future contingencies. In short, intelligence involves the acquisition of information and planning in exercise of all the intellectual tasks required of decision-makers. The relation between the intelligence function and community goals is particularly subtle: although intelligence operates within the frame of authorised goals, one duty of effective intelligence is to appraise these goals in the context of knowledge and, where appropriate, to bring new attention areas, for the purposes of goal clarification, to the focus of decision-makers.\nIntelligence is a critical function at all levels of decision-making, yet its very ubiquity seems to have obscured it from visibility to public inquiry.\nThere is no dearth of historical examples demonstrating the critical importance of reliable intelligence. Napoleon put it to use with devastating effect. Both Stalin and Hitler, in our own day, have shown that the utility of the most accurate and timely intelligence depends upon a decision-maker capable and willing to use it.\nWhat, then, are the ideal intelligence services we are striving for? We\nenvisage intelligence services that are fully conscious and proud of our multiparty democratic and constitutional foundations. We expect our intelligence\noperatives, researchers and analysts to be highly trained and sophisticated.\nThe main function of our services should be the collection of true and relevant information that can serve as a basis for first class decision-making on security.\nOur intelligence services must be seen to be collectors of information both inside the country and abroad, using human resources and the latest modern technology. They must rely on brains rather than brawn. They must be\neffective and efficient and deliver quality products superior to those ordinarily available.\nOur intelligence services are not and must never be another police service\nwith powers of arrest. It is true that the modern trend is to use the special methods of intelligence to assist the police in the realm of combating serious\ninternational crime syndicates, but essentially the services must aim at\nproviding information for decision-makers rather than prosecution or persecution of criminals.\nThe intelligence services have been given special powers but these powers\nmust be exercised in accordance with legislation, regulations, guidelines and\nrules. It is essential that intelligence services behave in an ethical and lawful manner. In Zambia these matters are considered so important that they are governed by the Constitution itself.\nIntelligence services have the particular misfortune of going unnoticed and\nunappreciated when they are successful. We wish to record our thanks to and\nrespect for the Zambian intelligence services and all their members, who\nmake a significant contribution to the security of our country and people.\nMultiparty democracy is founded on every citizen’s right to take part in the management of public affairs. This requires the existence of representative institutions at all levels and, as a cornerstone, a parliament in which all components of society are represented and which has the requisite powers and means to express the will of the people by legislating and overseeing government action.\nA multiparty democratic state must ensure the enjoyment of civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights by its citizens. Hence, multiparty democracy goes hand in hand with an effective, honest and transparent government that is freely chosen and accountable for its management of public affairs.\nPublic accountability applies to all those who hold public authority, whether elected or appointed, and to all bodies of public authority. Accountability has the political purpose of checking the power of the executive and therefore minimising any abuse of power. The operational purpose of accountability is to help to ensure that governments operate effectively and efficiently.\nFor this reason, no institution, function or act of the state, and no organisation or activity of the government can be exempted from public scrutiny and accountability.\nThere’s need to strengthen mechanisms of control of our civilian intelligence structures in order to ensure full compliance and alignment with the Constitution, constitutional principles and the rule of law, and particularly to minimise the potential for illegal conduct and abuse of power.\nThere’s need to review the executive control of the intelligence services; control mechanisms relating to intelligence operations; control over intrusive methods of investigation; political and economic intelligence; political non-partisanship of the services; the balance between secrecy and transparency; and controls over the funding of covert operations.\nThere’s need to bear in mind the fact that an effective state can contribute powerfully to sustainable development and the reduction of poverty. But there is no guarantee that state intervention will benefit society. The state’s monopoly on coercion, which gives it the power to intervene effectively in economic activity, also gives it the power to intervene arbitrarily. This power, coupled with access to information not available to the general public, creates opportunities for public officials to promote their own interests, or those of friends or allies, at the expense of the general interest. The possibilities for rent seeking and corruption are considerable. We must therefore work to establish and nurture mechanisms that give state agencies the flexibility and the incentive to act for the common good, while at the same time restraining arbitrary and corrupt behaviour in dealings with businesses and citizens.\nIt’s not the duty of the intelligence services to keep the incumbent president in power and help secure him a third term of office. It’s the duty of the intelligence services to ensure free, fair and peaceful elections and let the best candidates, the most supported and trusted candidates win.\nPresident of the Socialist Party","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line469590"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9369866847991943,"wiki_prob":0.9369866847991943,"text":"Walt Disney Imagineering debuts new website, social media presence\nby Brittani Tuttle November 15, 2019\nwritten by Brittani Tuttle November 15, 2019\nWalt Disney Imagineering has debuted a new website alongside new social media accounts on YouTube and Instagram to give Disney fans a deeper insight into the work behind the magic.\nPhotos courtesy of Walt Disney Imagineering\nThe website features the new logo for Walt Disney Imagineering, which takes on a classic look with Walt Disney’s signature.\nOn the site, fans can learn more about how Imagineering makes the impossible possible through the combination of imagination and engineering.\nOne section of the website, “Our Story,” details the history of Imagineering through the decades, from the 1940s all the way up to today – highlighting significant moments in the group’s history.\nAnother section of the site is “Our Culture,” which describes the community and work environment of Imagineering, which, as you can imagine, looks pretty fun despite all the hard work.\nIn the “What We Do” section of the site, fans can learn more about some of Imagineering’s more recent projects, like Star Wars: Galaxy’s Edge and Pandora – The World of Avatar. There are even detailed descriptions of modern technology used in these projects, like the A-1000 animatronics, ‘stuntronics,’ and autonomous characters. The “What We Do” section also describes the creative process of Imagineering from conception to completion, as well as the impact of their work.\nThere’s even a section for careers and internships for the aspiring Imagineer, as well as details on the annual Imaginations Design Competition.\nAs for Walt Disney Imagineering’s new social presence, Disney fans can find them on Instagram @waltdisneyimagineering and on YouTube. The Instagram account only has two posts for now, but we are sure there will be more to come. The Imagineering YouTube channel is currently home to the webseries “Imagineering in a Box,” which shows viewers just what it’s like to work at Walt Disney Imagineering.\nFor those who want an even deeper dive into Walt’s historic “think tank,” a new 6-part docuseries called “The Imagineering Story” is currently streaming on Disney+. We’ll have a Q&A with the series’ director and documentarian Leslie Iwerks in our upcoming Winter issue.\nCheck out the trailer for “The Imagineering Story” below:\nThe Imagineering Story | Official Trailer | Disney+\nYou can check out the new website for Walt Disney Imagineering here.\nSeaWorld Parks to celebrate 36,000th animal rescue with Rescue Weekend\nNetflix, Nickelodeon form multi-year deal to produce original animated films, series\nSuper7 reveals Disney Ultimates collectible figures\n‘IT’ Neibolt House Experience coming to Warner...\nAttractions Adventures – Dropping Into Branson, Missouri","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line399912"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5468820333480835,"wiki_prob":0.5468820333480835,"text":"Brett Ball\nDr. Rachel Grant: Narrative Justice Project and Media Coverage of Communities of Color\nDr. Rachel Grant was interviewed on July 13, 2020 by Ph.D. student Brett Ball about her research and the new Narrative Justice Project. Below the video is an edited transcript of that interview. Ball: Tell us about the Narrative Justice Project. Grant: So the research project that I am working…\nWe Are CJC: Brett Ball\nWE ARE CJC is a multicultural initiative created to highlight and support the College’s diverse faculty, staff, and student body. In celebration of Black History...\nCJC Launches “We Are CJC” Multicultural Initiative\nThe University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications today launched “We Are CJC,” a multicultural initiative created to highlight and support the College’s diverse faculty, staff, and student body. In celebration of Black History Month, “We Are CJC” will highlight five Black, female faculty, staff and students who are…\nFor Us, by Them?: A Study on Black Consumer Identity and Brand Preference\nBlacks in the United States reportedly spend over $1.2 trillion annually with projected spending of nearly $2 trillion by 2021. The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that the number of Blacks in the U.S. will reach 61.4 million by 2050, making this group an ideal target for researchers, marketers, advertisers and…\nYulia Strekalova Co-Authors Two Chapters in New Mental Health Communication Book\nYulia Strekalova, University of Florida College of Journalism and Communications research assistant professor and director of Grants Development, is the co-author on two chapters in the new book Communicating Mental Health: History, Contexts, and Perspectives. The book, to be published on Dec. 15, explores mental health through the lens of…\nSTUDENT PROFILE: Brett Ball, doctoral student\nBrett Ball watched the time tick by as she sat on the couch of her newly assigned sports psychologist. It felt like she had lost everything. She spent her entire life preparing to be a basketball star, following a legacy of professionals in her family — both of her aunts…","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line490452"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7237492799758911,"wiki_prob":0.2762507200241089,"text":"Ephraim Stern\nHome → Scientific Committee Members → Ephraim Stern\nEphraim Stern was the doyen of Israel archaeologists. As such he was, for 11 years, the chairman of The Archaeological Committee of Israel. Other chairs that he occupied in the past were that of the board of directors of the Israel Exploration Society as well as the renowned Ben Zvi Institute, named in honor of Israel’s second President. The committees chaired by him or in which he participated are too numerous to mention here.\nHis major activities, however, had always revolved around his fieldwork, when he led, or participated in, many digs, most prominently at Ein Gedi on the shores of the Dead Sea, at Tel Mevorakh and at Tel Dor, the ancient port city on the Mediterranean coast. He paid special attention to the cultural aspects of the Phoenicians. Notably he issued final reports for these and other sites and subjects.\nAbout him it can truly be said that only busy people can find the time to do so many things. In addition to his fieldwork and teaching chores, his public activities and participation, he served also as editor for a great variety of professional books, and periodicals such as the Encyclopedia Biblica and Qadmoniot. Notably he headed the huge team that produced the monumental 4-volume The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land, published by Carta and the Israel Exploration Society, and volume 5, a 10-year update published by IES and the Biblical Archaeology Society.\nIn addition to his epic volume of professional literature, Ephraim published a number of academic titles for the general public.\nOver his long career he received many awards, among them the EMET prize on behalf of the Israeli Prime Minister and also from Yad Ben-Zvi, the American Society of Biblical Archaeology, The Israel Museum and Beer Sheva University.\nOn Wednesday, November 28th, 2012 / Scientific Committee Members / Comments Off on Ephraim Stern","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line972260"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5842447876930237,"wiki_prob":0.5842447876930237,"text":"What is a good net worth by age?\nA better indicator is the overall median net worth of U.S. households, which is $121,700….\nAge of head of family\nMedian net worth\nAverage net worth\n35-44 $91300 $436200\n45-54 $168600 $833200\n55-64 $212500 $1175900\nWhat can be done with 1 million dollars?\nWhat Can You Do With a Million Dollars?\nInvest in a Swanky New York City Apartment ($1.1 million)\nBuy a Lush Private Island.\nDrive a Fancy Sports Car.\nBuy a Painting by a Famous Artist.\nWear a Gorgeous Piece of Jewelry.\nGet a Hold of Rare, Vintage Comics.\nGet the Latest Million-Dollar Tech.\nPlan a Lavish Getaway.\nHow much money do I need to invest to make $3000 a month?\nIn order to get $3,000 a month, you would potentially need to invest around $108,000 in a revenue-generating online business. A growing online business is likely to give you more than $3,000 a month.\nHow long will it take to spend a million dollars?\nIf you start with $20,000 and save or invest an additional $400 each month while earning 6.00% on your money. Answer: You’ll have one million dollars in 39.83 years.\nHow much interest will 3 million dollars earn?\nHow much will an investment of $3,000,000 be worth in the future? At the end of 20 years, your savings will have grown to $9,621,406. You will have earned in $6,621,406 in interest.\nWhere can I retire on 2000 a month?\n10 places to retire abroad for less than $2,000 a month\nAbruzzo, Italy. Image credit: DEA / ARCHIVIO J.\nLas Terrenas, Dominican Republic. Image credit: Marka / Contributor, Getty Images.\nMedellin, Colombia. Image credit: Bloomberg / Contributor, Getty Images.\nCarcassonne, France. Advertisement.\nAlgarve, Portugal.\nGeorge Town, Malaysia.\nTralee, Ireland.\nCayo, Belize.\nCan I retire at 55 with 300k?\nIn the UK, you don’t need to wait until the state pension age to retire. You can generally access your pension pot from the age of 55. This means retiring at 55 is a very real possibility for Britons in their mid-fifties.\nWhat is the cheapest country to retire in?\nBelow, you can review our list of the cheapest countries where you can retire well.\nPortugal. Cost of Living Index: 50.39.\nMalaysia. Cost of Living Index: 39.38.\nSpain. Cost of Living Index: 54.70.\nCosta Rica. Cost of Living Index: 50.89.\nPanama. Cost of Living Index: 51.45.\nCzech Republic.\nPeru.\nSlovenia.\nWhat if you won a million dollars what would you do with the windfall?\nTo summarize, about half of the one million dollar windfall would go to giving and saving with the other half to investing in buy-and-hold cash flow producing real estate. The investing will hopefully produce many more millions of dollars over and over again.\nWhat is the average 401k balance for a 65 year old?\nAverage 401k Balance at Age 65+ – $422,960; Median – $165,740.\nWhat is a reasonable amount of money to retire with?\nMost experts say your retirement income should be about 80% of your final pre-retirement salary. 3 That means if you make $100,000 annually at retirement, you need at least $80,000 per year to have a comfortable lifestyle after leaving the workforce.\nWhat is the average retirement nest egg?\nCan you live the rest of your life on 10 million dollars?\nBy taking more risk, your 10 million dollars could conceivably generate $300,000 – $400,000 in retirement income. If so, you should be able to live well for the rest of your life. The one thing I must caution is having a retirement withdrawal rate much higher than 3X the risk-free rate of return.\nCan you live off 2 million dollars?\nEarning supplemental retirement income with two million dollars is a nice combination to retire comfortably. However, the ideal retirement net worth to shoot for is about $10 million. Once you get to $10 million, you can really live it up in retirement.\nHow long will $800000 last retirement?\nHow long will savings of $800,000 last? When will $800k run out? Your savings will last for 12 years and 8 months.\nThe short answer is, Yes. It is possible to retire at 55 with 300K in the UK.\nHow long will 500k last in retirement?\nKey Takeaways. It may be possible to retire at 45 years of age, but it will depend on a variety of factors. If you have $500,000 in savings, according to the 4% rule, you will have access to roughly $20,000 for 30 years.\nWhere can I retire on $3000 a month?\n15 Best Places to Retire on $3,000 a Month\nKnoxville, Tennessee.\nFort Smith, Arkansas.\nAlton, Illinois.\nBirmingham, Alabama.\nMemphis, Tennessee.\nSan Marcos, Texas.\nDuluth, Georgia.\nLouisville, Kentucky.\n“When you factor in the average monthly Social Security benefit of $1,381.79 and consider the average cost of living in the United States, $1 million could actually last as long as 29 years, 1 month and 24 days,” GoBankingRates.com “life and money” columnist Cameron Huddleston wrote.\nHow much should you have in 401k to retire?\nIf you are earning $50,000 by age 30, you should have $50,000 banked for retirement. By age 40, you should have three times your annual salary. By age 50, six times your salary; by age 60, eight times; and by age 67, 10 times. 8 If you reach 67 years old and are earning $75,000 per year, you should have $750,000 saved.\nWhat is the cheapest and safest place to live in the world?\n1. Porto, Portugal. Nomad List ranks Porto as one of the top safest places for expats and digital nomads. This stunning coastal city is located north of Lisbon and is best known for its port wine production.\nWhat net worth is considered rich?\nTo be among the richest 1% in the world takes over $744,000 in net worth, while to be in the richest 1% in the U.S. takes closer to $10 million in net worth. Wealth is relative depending on who you’re comparing, and what is considered “rich” varies by your age.\nHow much does the average American have in savings for retirement?\nNearly six in 10 have no retirement savings whatsoever. But financial experts advise that the average 65-year-old has between $1 million and $1.5 million set aside for retirement.\nHow much interest can 1 million dollars earn?\nThe first way where you can invest million dollars is through US Treasury bonds. The present rate for a 30 year US Treasury security is 3.08% so you would gain roughly $30,800 from the one million dollars every year.\nWhat is the average net worth of a 60 year old?\nWhat is the cheapest and safest country to live in?\nHere are 10 of the cheapest countries to live and work this year, according to meaningful travelers like YOU.\nVietnam. For those wanting to live and work in an exotic place, but not pay a fortune, Vietnam is any budget travelers dream.\nCosta Rica.\nBulgaria.\nMexico.\nSouth Korea.\nBest Cities to Retire on a Budget of $1,500 a Month\nGrand Forks, N.D.\nLawton, Okla.\nCedar Rapids, Iowa. Total Monthly Expenditures: $1,441.\nLorain, Ohio. Total Monthly Expenditures: $1,442.\nLubbock, Texas. Total Monthly Expenditures: $1,456.\nDavenport, Iowa. Total Monthly Expenditures: $1,472.\nCasper, Wyo. Total Monthly Expenditures: $1,473.\nIs 500000 enough to retire on?\nAssuming you have $500,000 in retirement, you could realistically withdraw $20,000 your first year of retirement. That amount would shrink incrementally each subsequent year, assuming zero portfolio growth. That’s assuming, however, that you wait until your full retirement age to claim Social Security benefits.\nHow long will a million dollars last in retirement?\nHowever, if you are no longer working, just how long will a million dollars last in retirement? The financial technology company SmartAsset looked at average household expenses and found that, nationwide, a $1 million nest egg should last 23.46 years.\nWhat are the 10 worst states to retire in?\n10 Worst States for Retirement\nRhode Island.\nNew Mexico.\nNorth Dakota.\nVermont.\nNebraska.\nCalifornia.\nPrevious Previous post: What is holistic and analytic scoring?\nNext Next post: What is the best answer for Tell me about yourself?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line567689"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.833099365234375,"wiki_prob":0.833099365234375,"text":"Chicago Med Bosses Reveal When Ethan Will Return For A 'Moving Story' In Season 7\nBy Laura Hurley published 28 December 21\nBrian Tee will return as Ethan in Season 7 for a moving storyline.\nChicago Med closed out the first half of Season 7 with an episode that set up some serious fallout for characters in 2022, but Brian Tee was absent as Dr. Ethan Choi in the midseason finale. Ethan has spent most of Season 7 off screen to recover from his gunshot wound at the end of Season 6, and his brief return to the ED came to a painful end, but is that it for Season 7? Chicago Med showrunners Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider previewed when Ethan will be back, and what kind of story will be involved.\nEthan was well on the road to recovery when he returned to the ED back in November, but his work took too much of a physical toll on him, and an MRI confirmed that he needed a big surgery requiring at least a couple more months of recovery. He’s not gone for good, though! When I spoke with showrunners Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Frolov shared when fans can expect to see him again:\nActually, we're gonna see him again in Episode 12. So, in three more episodes, we'll see him again. He's still in recovery, and then he will come back a little bit later in the season. He's going to have a very moving story with Dr. Charles in Episode 12.\nEthan will be back, but that doesn’t mean he’ll have an easy time of it! Moving storylines involving Dr. Charles can be emotional for all characters involved, for better or worse, and Ethan had a lot of baggage even before his most recent injuries. Plus, Ethan’s biggest storylines have primarily involved April or, more recently, Steven Weber’s Dean Archer as his former commanding officer, so it should be interesting to see what the show has in store with this new story with Dr. Charles.\nAs for whether or not this “moving story” bodes well for fans who have been waiting to get Ethan back full-time, only time will tell. Andrew Schneider did preview a bit of what Episode 12 has on the way for his arc, however, saying:\nWell, we learn more about his background, his past, his family.\nChicago Med has explored his past before, particularly with regard to how his history with the Navy affected him, and the arrival of Dr. Archer added some workplace complications due to that history. His sister Emily also appeared in several episodes in earlier seasons. Still, compared to a character like Will, Ethan has more blanks that could be filled in, and a moving storyline for him could be just what Season 7 needs.\nAnd Episode 12 isn’t too far off! The midseason finale was the ninth episode of Season 7, and Chicago Med will return with the tenth in early January. Based on how the show wrapped in 2021, the first episodes back will have some loose ends to deal with, particularly when it comes to Will and Goodwin with their fraud investigation.\nBe sure to tune in to NBC on Wednesday, January 5 at 8 p.m. ET to catch the midseason premiere of Chicago Med, followed by the returns of Chicago Fire at 9 p.m. and Chicago P.D. at 10 p.m. For more of what to watch and when to tune in, check out our 2022 winter and spring premiere schedule!\nLaura Hurley\nResident of One Chicago, Bachelor Nation, and Cleveland. Has opinions about crossovers, Star Wars, and superheroes. Will not time travel.\nAhead Of The Flash Movie, The Original Flashpoint Story Is Finally Getting A Comics Sequel\nNetflix Just Cancelled Another Show, And This One Personally Bums Me Out\nWhy The Walking Dead Creator Robert Kirkman Is Being Sued Over Prime Video's Invincible\nJohn Boyega Picks His Favorite Star Wars Movie, And The Answer Might Surprise You","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line935866"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5054115653038025,"wiki_prob":0.4945884346961975,"text":"REVIEW: “Mythicals” by Dennis Meredith\nPosted on December 27, 2018 by Michael Cook\nI love a good sci-fi book, that much is well known. But what about a sci-fi book that puts forth the idea that all the mythological creatures from Earth’s history (fairies, pixies, werewolves, vampires, etc) are actually alien species exiled to our planet as punishment for crimes made on their own planets? Well, a book like that would be right up my wheelhouse. That’s exactly the kind of book that Dennis Meredith’s Mythicals is. It’s also a very good one, too.\nDrunken journalist Jack March can’t believe his bleary eyes when he stumbles onto a winged fairy! She vaults away into the night sky, and his unbelievable—and unbelieved—encounter leads to a stunning revelation that all the creatures of myth and legend are real!\nFairies, pixies, trolls, werewolves, ogres, vampires, angels, elves, bigfoot—all are alien exiles to the planet. For their crimes, these “mythicals” are serving out banishment disguised in flesh-suits enabling them to live among the planet’s natives.\nJack reveals their secret to the world, along with a horrendous discovery: they have decided that the native “terminal species” must be eradicated before it ruins its home planet’s ecology.\nIn this riveting scifi/fairy tale, Jack joins with sympathetic fairies, pixies, and ogres to attempt to save the planet from the mythicals, as well as the mysterious alien cabal known as the Pilgrims.\nMythicals is a delightful book that starts out seeming like it’s going to be more of a political thriller (involving mythological creatures) that ends up becoming something more epic than that. And it really works. There is honestly no reason for this book to work as well as it does. I mean, it’s the kind of premise that seems sort of absurd, but it’s one that is just so sci-fi that I can’t believe this isn’t something we see more often. There’s something undeniably fun about this book. It starts off a little slowly as all the various pieces are moved into place, but once the story really gets going, it quickly becomes a page-turner that you really don’t want to put down. It starts off seeming like Jack is going to spend most of the book trying to prove that these Mythicals exist, but by about the 1/4 mark, that all changes into a different plotline that later morphs into another one. Each plot is well-developed and well-concluded and it’s all a very satisfying read.\nMythicals is written by Dennis Meredith, a “science communicator” who has worked with a number of universities and has published a number of nonfiction books about science in addition to his work as a novelist. You can kind of tell that Meredith comes from more of a science background in the way he’s written this book, and I mean that as a good thing! This world of this book has clearly been meticulously plotted out by Meredith and he does an excellent job at explaining all the various elements of the world to his readers without descending completely into sci-fi jargon. This world makes sense. Yes, it’s foreign and magical and there are a lot of aliens and a lot of futuristic technology, but Meredith explains it in such a way that it all seems totally believable and mundane. Not much time is spent on characters reacting wildly to it; they get a moment of surprise and then the novel moves on with it. It’s all handled very well.\nThe story itself is also thoroughly entertaining. It tackles a number of subjects – primarily climate change and the impacts we are having on our global environment – with a surprising amount of poise and nuance for a book that seemed, on the surface, to be a kind of b-film romp of a sci-fi book. I was not expecting these deeply important issues to be such a focus in this book. That’s not to say that it’s a preachy story; it’s not. There’s plenty of fighting between the Mythicals and world building and fun, sci-fi goodies. But it’s always nice when sci-fi books have something to say and it’s clear that Mythicals had a lot to say.\nAs I mentioned early, the book is plotted very well. I must commend Mr. Meredith for how well-paced this story is. There are a lot of characters in this novel, and, while it does occasionally feel overwhelming, he’s able to juggle all those characters with immense talent and care, ensuring that each of our main characters has some kind of arc and journey to go on. Jack is, for all intents and purposes, our main character, but the Mythicals that end up surrounding him are just as well-developed as he is. And, let me tell you, Jack is very well-developed. I started out the book thoroughly disliking his character, and by the end of it, I truly adored him. There’s an excellent twist involving his character that happens about 2/3 through the novel, and it honestly flips everything on its head in the best possible way. It’s the kind of twist that makes perfect sense while still being totally surprising and I love it.\nAll in all, Mythicals is an excellent book. It’s got a great premise that’s explored masterfully by an author who clearly put a lot of time into developing it. It features characters that are interesting and well-developed. It focuses on some important issues currently plaguing our society, and actually has something to say about them. It’s well-written and well-paced and is a thoroughly enjoying read that I would recommend to anybody who’s a fan of sci-fi or fantasy. You won’t be disappointed by this book.\n4.5 out of 5 wands\nThis entry was posted in books and tagged dennis meredith, fantasy, mythicals, sci-fi, science fiction by Michael Cook. Bookmark the permalink.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line737177"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9431256651878357,"wiki_prob":0.9431256651878357,"text":"Embassy of Azerbaijan in Bern, Switzerland\nAzerbaijani embassy in Switzerland: detailed information on locations, including address, e-mails, phone numbers and guide to Apply Azerbaijan Visa in Switzerland\nAzerbaijani Embassy Dalmaziquai 27 3005 Berne Switzerland\nThe information for Embassy of Azerbaijan in Bern, Switzerland may not be completely accurate. If you know any errors or have any additional information, please contact us to update. Thank you.\nQ: What is the location of the embassy of Azerbaijani in Bern?\nA: The Azerbaijani embassy in Bern is located at Azerbaijani Embassy Dalmaziquai 27 3005 Berne Switzerland\nQ: How to obtain a visa to visit Azerbaijan in Bern, Switzerland?\nA: Visitors from Bern, Switzerland can contact the embassy by phone: (+41) 31 350 50 40 or email: or visit the embassy website for procedures at:\nQ: How long does it takes to obtain a visa through Azerbaijani embassy in Bern?\nA: Normally, it takes 3-5 working days. However, it is advised that you contact the embassy of Azerbaijan in Bern, Switzerland for the updated information.\nQ: What is the working time of Azerbaijan embassy in Bern?\nA: The working time of the embassy is as follows: 09.00-18.00\nOther Embassies of Azerbaijan\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Tashkent, Uzbekistan\nConsulate General of Azerbaijan in Los Angeles, United States\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Washington, United States\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Kiev, Ukraine\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Ashkabad, Turkmenistan\nConsulate General of Azerbaijan in Kars, Turkey\nConsulate General of Azerbaijan in Istanbul, Turkey\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Ankara, Turkey\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Madrid, Spain\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Bucharest, Romania\nConsulate General of Azerbaijan in St. Petersburg, Russia\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Moscow, Russia\nEmbassy of Azerbaijan in Islamabad, Pakistan\nEmbassy Office of Azerbaijan in Chisinau, Moldova\nCountries near Azerbaijan","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1057245"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6653870344161987,"wiki_prob":0.6653870344161987,"text":"MyBookList\nСписки книг\nThe War of the Jewels\nДобавить в \"список\"\nПоделись книгой!\nАвтор: Christopher Tolkien, J. R. R. Tolkien\nПереплёт: Мягкая обложка, 496 страниц\n🔖 The second of two companion volumes which documents the later writing of The Silmarillion, Tolkien’s epic tale of war.\nIn The War of the Jewels Christopher Tolkien takes up his account of the later history of The Silmarillion from the point where it was left in Morgoth’s Ring. The story now returns to Middle-earth, and the ruinous conflict of the High Elves and the Men who were their allies with the power fothe Dark Lord. With the publication in this book of all J.R.R. Tolkien’s later narrative writing concerned with the last centuries of the First Age, the long history of The Silmarillion, from its beginning in The Book of Lost Tales, is completed; and the enigmatic state of the work at his death can be understood.\nThis book contains the full text of the Grey Annals, the primary record of The War of the Jewels, and a major story of Middle-earth now published for the first time: the tale of the disaster that overtook the forest people of Brethil when Hurin the Steadfast came among them after his release from long years of captivity in Angband, the fortress of Morgoth.\nКнига найдена в следующих публичных списках\nСундучок толкиниста\nОтправить (надо залогиниться)\nПолноразмерная обложка\n© 2022 Bolide Software","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line441306"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8832689523696899,"wiki_prob":0.8832689523696899,"text":"Amy Adams Gal Gadot Gif\nGadot is an Israeli supermodel and the most recent member of the Wonder Women team. At age eighteen, she became the youngest member of the Israeli parliament, later winning a seat in Tel Aviv. She later served two years in the Israeli army as an officer, before continuing to study at the prestigious IDC Herzliya university. Throughout her time serving the military, she became famous for her daring fashion sense, a bold attitude, and her beauty, which earned her a number of modeling assignments in Europe and the USA.\nGal Gadot is known for her role as the “Gotham City” Girl from the movie “Suicide Squad”. In that movie she played the part of the ruthless Batgirl; though her appearance was motivated by the original Batwoman, Catwoman. This resulted in her gaining international recognition. However, her first real acting role came in the animated film “The Mask” where she played the role of Wonder Woman. This made her famous around the world.\nGadot is known for her beauty, her features, her curves, and her fierce sense of pride. Her career has spanned over thirty years, during which time she’s won more than seventy awards. She’s gone on to play unique characters in TV shows, movies, theatre plays, and cartoons. The majority of her appearances have been as a character in a comic book or cartoon based story. Most of her roles were showcased in Israel, in TV series such as”The Finder”,”Girls in Gold”, and”The Ten”. However, her most popular and critically acclaimed role was in the award winning film “The Matrix”.\nGadot was Created in Southern California. She is of Jewish descent and was believed to be an ethnic Israeli by her parents. She certainly seems to have inherited her mother’s fierce sense of pride and determination in her childhood. She was born in Los Angeles, the daughter of immigrants from what is now Israel. It was here that she met her future husband. During the first years that they were together, she kept her status as an American citizen and never married an Arab.\nAt age eighteen, Gadot decided to enter the Miss America competition, and she became the first ever Miss USA contestant from outside of the United States. Her stunning looks, her talent, and her decision have all been seen by Americans through her involvement in this prestigious event. Through this experience, she came to understand the importance of maintaining the cultural differences of her nation in mind when entering into a romantic relationship with an American man, as she did with her former boyfriend.\nGadot didn’t let her dual citizenship lead her down a darker path. She is seen by many as an honest and affectionate woman, which is quite refreshing in an industry which often portrays women as evil, or as poor people due to their nationalities. Gadot is of Israeli decent but was born in California. This means that she can freely choose to go on her path to becoming an actress in the Justice League, or to proceed on to be a significant leader of peace.\nNow, Gal Gadot is famous for more than her ability to perform with the super-spinning poor girl, Wonder Woman. She is known as one of the best and most successful actresses in Hollywood. Her talents are not limited to playing this character, but she is recognized for her amazing physique. Gal Gadot is dieting and is trying to get in shape for her role as the loveable, most powerful woman in Hollywood. It’s interesting that one of the principal characters in the Justice League has a hot, petite girl as her love interest, and it seems like she will succeed. For many women their fantasy is to be a strong, sexy woman who can hold their own, but today’s movie industry has shown that women can look great and look even better when they lose the weight.\nGal Gadot became a worldwide phenomenon in her brief stint in the realm of theater. She impressed critics, both new and old, with her brilliant acting abilities, and then went on to star in two blockbuster hits. Gadot is a true Hollywood success and is highly respected among all the other actresses of her generation. She is one of the best options for the female part in a superhero team ever. If Patty Jenkins and gal Gadot perform their roles nicely, there is no telling if superhero movies will still be going strong in the future.\nAlma Versano And Gal Gadot\nAnissa Kate As Gal Gadot In Wonder Woman Xxx","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1620067"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6957082152366638,"wiki_prob":0.3042917847633362,"text":"Tour the Course\nThis par 5 opening hole is down hill with a slight dog leg right. It is a comfortable opening hole to a magnificently groomed golf course which is probably one of the best kept secrets in the Coachella Valley. How to Play: The opening tee shot should be kept out of the trees on the right side of the fairway. It is best to be down the left side of the fairway as this will open up the fairway for your second shot. The second shot needs be no more than two hundred yards that will keep the lake on the right side of the green out of play. The more daring can risk the green in two. Leave yourself a 100 yard third shot and all flag locations will be accessible. An opening par is a good start to begin your round.\nHole: 1, Par: 5\nMen's Handicap: 8\nWomen's Handicap: 3\nThe first of six par threes on the golf course can be tricky as it calls for a mid iron over water early in the round to a large green bunkered on the right side and behind the green. How to Play: Do not panic as the carry over water is really only 145 yards from the silver tees and 170 from the back. Center of the green is always a good shot here and with a solid two putt to walk away with par. For those not comfortable over the water there is a bail out area down the right side of the lake.\nWomen's Handicap: 13\nDescription: Almost straight away off the tee with an ever so slight dog leg right. A good solid driver off the tee will leave a comfortable short iron into a small but tricky green. How to Play: This is the number one handicap hole on the front side which can be deceiving. On a benign day, it will play easier than on the days when the prevailing wind comes out of the west. One must be careful on the windy days as the slightest of slices will end up out of bounds down the right side. Play your second shot to the center of the small green and give yourself a birdie putt.\nDescription: The shortest of the six par threes should be taken advantage of. But be careful as taking this hole for granted can lead to a bogey or worse. How to Play: A short iron should be all that is needed. It must be straight as bunkers on either side of the green offer protection to this short hole. The green slants slightly from back to front and when putting from the back to front, one must be careful that the putt does not get away from you.\nHole:4, Par: 3\nMen's Handicap: 18\nDescription: This par four hole is a dog leg right off the tee. The second shot with a short iron needs to find the right level of this two-tiered green and not be above the flag on this slippery green. How to Play: This tee shot has two options. Either hit the big fade between the large eucalyptus trees bordering both the left and the right side of the fairway or take your tee shot, if you can, over the eucalyptus trees on the right. On windy days, the fade may be your best option. Once again a short iron should be all that is left to this two-tiered green. If the flag is on the lower part of the green, one must be sure to hit your second shot on that level. Anything above the flag can lead to an easy bogey with another downhill slippery putt. If the flag is on the upper level, take an extra club to get it back there.\nDescription: The sixth hole on the front side brings the first dogleg left on the golf course. There is a punitive fairway bunker on the left of the fairway 215 yards off the tee. The green once again is small, sloping fairly steeply, from back to front, with the back part of the green being a small plateau for a great flag location. How to Play: The tee shot is the most demanding to this point. Hit it left and you end up in the punitive fairway bunker. Hit it right and you end up in trees with not much of a shot to the green. A good draw off the tee leaves another short iron to this tricky green. Do not be above the hole no matter where the flag is positioned as it will be a real tester for a two-putt. If the flag is blue and on the small upper tier, it is better to be short of the tier with an easier two-putt, than be over the green with a near impossible up and down for par.\nDescription: The seventh hole is one of the best on the front side. Even though this slight dogleg right seems quite benign from the teeing ground, if one does not stay focused on the task at hand, a large number can be the result, especially if you are playing into the prevailing wind. How to Play: The tee shot needs to be down the center or favoring the left side of the fairway. Do not let the tee shot getaway and drift into the trees on the right, which makes the second shot even more difficult. Even if one has a play from the right side, make sure to take enough club as the perception is that the yardage to the green seems shorter and can result in your third shot from the right-side bunker. Down the center or to the left side of the fairway opens the green to a second shot. If the prevailing wind is up, hitting the green in regulation can be quite difficult as the ball must be struck solidly with plenty of club. Once on the green, the breaks are more severe to Indio than the naked eye's perception. Once again it is best to be under the hole and never above.\nDescription: The eighth hole is the third of the six par threes and believe it or not, the easiest of the remaining four par threes. Even though it is listed at 204 yards from the silver tees, it is downhill and plays slightly less with the prevailing wind out of the right. Bunkered on both sides of the green a tee shot to the center is a job well done. The front of the green is actually downhill even though an optical illusion makes it look uphill. How to Play: A good solid long iron or fairway wood is the play recommended at this straight away par three. A tee shot drifting left or right will find one of the two greenside bunkers which will make par a challenging effort. With a flag location on the front, anything short of the green must be thought out carefully as the chip shot will run downhill for the first third of the green even though it looks uphill. The green is challenging in itself as both sides of the green slope severely to the center.\nDescription: The par-five ninth is a dogleg left that is uphill from tee to green and trees bordering both sides of the fairway that come into play predominantly on the tee shot. The fairway bunker comes into play approximately 215 yards off the tee. The green slopes severely from back to front and is protected by a greenside bunker on the left and a short-sided bunker on the right. How to Play: The tee shot on the ninth sets up this hole for either a birdie or par, or, bogey or worse. One cannot see the green from the teeing ground as a good solid draw off the tee is the recommended play. Anything straight away can lead one into the tree's on the right and not much of chance to reach this green in two, which can be easily done for the big hitters out of the fairway. The third shot to this severely sloping green from back to front must always be below the flag for the best chance at making birdie. Anything above the hole will lead to a delicate, speedy, turning putt for birdie or par that can easily lead to a three-putt bogey.\nDescription: The tenth hole begins a stretch of three holes that are the most spectacular at Mission Lakes Country Club. These three holes are a must at this country club as it is a test of golf for precision shot-making and nerves of steel. This stretch begins with a par five dog leg right off the tee and then again another dog leg right for the second shot if you wish to make in two. It is like a small canyon chiseled out of the hills. If you come to MLCC to play, be sure to check the large eucalyptus trees on the right and left of the fairway from the tee, and also on the right side of the green, as they have been home to the resident red-tail hawks that have visited us for the last seven years and raise their offspring. The green is two-tiered and once again slopes severely from back to front. Par is a good score here and of course, a birdie is better. How to Play: The tee shot on this par five is not as demanding as the eye tells you. There is more room to the right than is expected and a driver is not necessarily needed. Two, two hundred yard shots leave only a wedge to the green and a solid two-putt gives one a good score of par, which isn't bad. The third shot one must remember is uphill and can be into the prevailing wind so an extra club may and can be necessary. This is one hole that you must NEVER be above the hole, it can just as easily be a three-putt from that position.\nHole: 10, Par: 5\nDescription: The eleventh hole at MLCC is our signature hole at the club and has also been voted one of the top eighteen holes in the Coachella Valley. It is the highest elevation at the country club at about 1,550 feet above sea level and offers spectacular views both to the east and west. During certain times of the seasons, one can find our resident red tail hawks, both parents and their young, riding the thermals directly above. It is also not uncommon for one to see one, two, and even three rainbows directly to the flats in the east during stormy weather. This hole takes the nerves of steel for par or better. How to Play: The tee shot on this hole, that runs parallel to the par-three eighth, is the same club that you used on the eighth. That will land you on the flat of the upper fairway which is about two hundred yards in distance. From the upper fairway, you must cross the ravine with another two hundred yards carry that should land you in the center of the green. For those who do not have those nerves of steel, a small wedge will land you on the lower fairway 75-100 yards from the green. The toughest flag location is when our superintendent, Andy Diaz, puts the blue flag on the top tier on the back of the green which makes a two-putt spectacular.\nDescription: The twelfth hole is the third of our own little \"Amen Corner\". This teeing ground once again offers spectacular views of the valley, and also the whole country club of Mission Lakes. From tee to green there is a 150-foot drop and from the black tees, one cannot even see the green. How to Play: yards to the center of the green under normal conditions. From the blue tees, one must pick your line and trust the swing to make par or better. The twelfth is a relatively easy hole with calm winds, but with even a slight breeze, doubt and anxiety can play into club selection.\nMen's Handicap:15\nDescription: The thirteenth hole looks relatively easy as it is straight away and all trouble can be seen from the teeing ground. Even though it is a short 384 yards from the silver tees, par can be as elusive as any hole on the golf course. The fairway comes to an end at 90 yards left to the green. From this point forward the wash is with heavy rough. Getting to the green in two, which is protected by three bunkers, right, left, and directly behind, is only half the battle as this green is one of the most difficult to read on the golf course. It does slope slightly from back to front, but the challenge comes in putting from side to side as the break is more than expected. How to Play: Driver is the play from the teeing ground to get as far down the fairway as possible to leave the shortest of irons left to the green. When the flag is in the front, one must be sure to have enough club to reach the green as the severe slope in front will prevent anything from bounding on which makes for a difficult chip. Reading this green for a two-putt is well done.\nDescription: The fourteenth hole is the easiest on the back nine and must be taken advantage of. It is definitely the most realistic chance for birdie on this difficult nine as the following closing holes are some of the most demanding in the Coachella Valley. Even though it is 506 yards, it does play with the prevailing wind and makes it a short par five. The only protection to the green is two bunkers that protect a back flag and a second or third shot that carries long. The green is relatively easy to read as long as Indio's influence on the putt is kept in mind.\nDescription: The fifteenth hole is the beginning of the four most difficult and demanding holes at MLCC. Measuring 234 yards from the silver tees and 249 from the black tees, any tee shot on the green is more than acceptable, (very few holes in one at this par three).\nDescription: This hole commands three good swings to reach the green in regulation, if you can. It can at times play into the wind which only doubles the severity of this golf hole. Not much trouble from tee to green as long as the shots are long and true.\nDescription: The last of the six par threes can produce a score anywhere from a birdie to a double bogey. If the wind is present, the hole will play shorter than the yardage listed. Keep your tee shot to the left portion of the green and all is well. If your tee shots slides to the right, either in the bunkers or right of them, you bring the double bogey into play.\nDescription: A superb finishing hole. Anyone who walks away with par or better on this hole will walk away satisfied no matter what the score for his or her round. This demanding hole plays uphill from tee to green and many times directly into the westerly winds. The green has three tiers with the back portion, along with the front, quite small. No matter where the flag, do not be above the hole.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line991852"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6841747164726257,"wiki_prob":0.6841747164726257,"text":"Anime DVD Review: Naruto Shippuden Set 6\nPosted on July 7, 2013 by Lesley Aeschliman\nNaruto Shippuden Set 6 is a three-disc set that contains Episodes 66 through 77 of Naruto Shippuden. All three discs contain four episodes, but only the third disc includes any special features.\nNaruto Shippuden Set 6\nEnglish Publisher: VIZ Media\nThis box set continues and concludes the story arc of Sora, the monk in training at the Fire Temple. The next story arc also begins on this set, and it introduces two more members of the Akatsuki organization: Hidan and Kakuzu. They are on a mission to find the tailed beast hosts. At the beginning of the arc, they are in battle with the host of the two-tail beast. After that battle, they come to the Land of Fire to look for other tailed beast hosts. While this is going on, Kakashi and Yamato are working with Naruto as he tries to devise a new, more powerful jutsu.\nTsunade receives word that the Fire Temple has been attacked, and that their leader, Chiriku, was killed during the fight. Suspecting the attack was launched by the Akatsuki, she sends out several groups of ninja in order to track down the culprits. Both of the stories in this set have a strong emphasis on Asuma, due to his connection with Chiriku.\nThe second storyline in this disc returns the series to “canon” material from Masashi Kishimoto’s Naruto manga series. I have to give the anime writers a lot of credit for finding ways to tie in the “filler” story with the “canon” material. If a viewer didn’t know better, they would assume that the Sora story arc wasn’t “filler” material. Also, as you watch the second story arc in the set, the viewer can tell that a plot point is building for Asuma. However, that plot point doesn’t appear in this set, since the arc just gets going in the last few episodes in the box. I’m really anticipating seeing Box 7 in order to see where the story is heading to.\nWhen it comes to the actual DVD box set, it follows the same format that was introduced with Naruto Shippuden Set 5. Instead of including bonus features on all three discs, only the third disc has an “Extras” menu selection. The first two discs include trailers for Naruto Shippuden: The Movie and Bleach the Movie: The DiamondDust Rebellion when the disc first starts playing before proceeding to the main menu.\nThere are a total of six bonus features included on the third disc. The first three are advertisements for Shonen Jump magazine and various VIZ Media manga releases, information on where to purchase VIZ Media releases online, and the English credits.\n“Storyboards” contains five screens of storyboards from episodes in this Naruto Shippuden box set. Unfortunately, the storyboards have white lines on a black background, and it’s actually harder to see it in order to be able to tell what scene the storyboards are for. I wish there was an option to view the scene being shown in the storyboards in order to help the viewer better understand what it is that they’re seeing.\n“Production Art” includes 15 pages of production sketches of the characters that appear in this Naruto Shippuden set. This is exactly like the “Production Art” feature that has been seen on previous DVD boxes for Naruto and Naruto Shippuden.\nThe final extra is labeled as “Omake.” The omake are the short pieces included after the ending credits of Naruto Shippuden. While these tend to be comedic in nature, there are also a few that are on the serious side that provide additional information about aspects of the series. This feature takes all of the omake that are included in this box set and put them together back-to-back in one continuous piece. The English dub versions of the omake are included in this feature. I still believe this feature would have been stronger if there was a menu where a viewer could choose which omake they wanted to see, or choose to see them all back-to-back. The feature as it’s done on the set seems rather pointless.\nIf you’re a fan of the Naruto franchise and want to have all of the episodes of the series on DVD, then I would recommend purchasing this box set to add to your home video collection.\nAdditional posts about Naruto:\nanime anime review Naruto Naruto Shippuden\nKodansha Comics Is Speeding Up Its Release of the Attack on Titan Manga\nSentai Licenses Sunday Without God","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1548557"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7323030829429626,"wiki_prob":0.7323030829429626,"text":"Gradam Ceoil Award\nBy s j\nMusic / School Events\nOur amazing Music Teacher, Catherine McEvoy, (known at St Joseph’s as Ms. McGorman) made us all very proud in February when she was awarded traditional music’s highest accolade of Musician of the Year, at TG4’s Gradam Ceoil Award ceremony, in Belfast. Catherine plays the concert flute and, over the years, has introduced the children at St. Joseph’s to the joy of listening to and playing traditional Irish music on a wide range of instruments- tin whistle, accordion, fiddle, flute, piano, to name a few! Here is a link to the Gradam Ceoil Concert. https://www.tg4.ie/en/programmes/gradam-ceoil/gradam-ceoil-home/\nMaths Week in Room 6, Izak 9 Playing at NCH Ensemble Concert\nOrientation & Mobility, Auditory Abilities\nOrientation & Mobility, Positional Concepts & Body Awareness","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line730895"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5420446991920471,"wiki_prob":0.4579553008079529,"text":"Posted on June 30, 2017 by Delaware Gazette\nAsbury United Methodist Church, 55 W. Lincoln Ave. Worship service is at 10:45 a.m. Sunday school for all ages is at 9:30 a.m. Handicap-accessible.\nBellpoint United Methodist Church, 4771 State Route 257 South, just North of U.S. 42 S. Combined worship service at 10 a.m. Sunday School for everyone at 9 a.m. Nursery available. Holy Communion celebrated on the 1st Sunday of the month. www.bellpointumc.com.\nCalvary Baptist Church, 1450 Troy Road. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; morning worship, 10:45 a.m.; evening worship, 6 p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.\nCentral Community Baptist Church. Traditional American Baptist 10:15 a.m. worship hour on Sunday at All Occasions Catering, 6989 Waldo/Delaware Road. Our mission is to support those serving in the mission field as well as needs in our local community.\nChurch of the Messiah United Methodist Church, 51 N. State St., Westerville. The church has deep roots in Methodism and is Wesleyan in theology and practice. For information, call 614-882-2167.\nDelaware Church of Christ, 71 State Route 203, Delaware. DelawareChurch.org. Keith Ball’s sermon is “The Rise and Fall of King Solomon.” Bible study for all ages at 9:30 a.m.; worship services at 10:30 a.m.; evening worship 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday 7 p.m. Please bring family and friends to worship of God in song, prayer and scripture.\nDelaware Grace, 375 Hills-Miller Road. Join us at 9:30 a.m. or 11 a.m. at Delaware Grace. Visit delawaregrace.org or call 740-363-3613.\nEast Side Mission Church, 32 Joy Ave., Delaware. 740-369-0057. Sunday school at 9:45 a.m.; Sunday evening services at 6 p.m.; Wednesday evening services and youth group at 7 p.m. Pastor: Rev Donnie B. Akers.\nEpic Life Church, 8930 Commerce Loop Drive in South Old State Business Center. Services at 10 a.m. Go to epiclifechurch.net.\nFather’s House International Church, 420 Park Ave., Delaware. Website: fathershouseonline.com. Pastor is the Rev. Mike Sanders. Father’s House is a word of faith, spirit-filled church. Our services are a time of music, fun and a practical message that we believe will be truly helpful. Services on Sundays at 10:30 a.m.\nFirst Baptist Church, 101 N. Franklin St., 740-363-7021. Website: fbcdelaware.org. The Rev. Mark Allison is the pastor. We are an American Baptist Church that welcomes all who seek fellowship, spiritual growth and service to others. Summer Sunday worship is at 10 a.m. We celebrate Holy Communion on the first Sunday of each month. Handicap accessible.\nFirst Presbyterian Church, 73 W. Winter St. Websites: delfpc.org and Facebook. All are welcome to FPC. Join us for worship at 10 a.m. After the children’s moment, children and pre-school through fifth grade are invited to our Sunday school program. A restless room and nursery are available, and we are handicap accessible. Following worship, we offer Sunday school programs for adults and high school students. Worship at Willow Brook Christian Village is held the third Sunday of every month at 2 p.m.\nGospel Light Baptist Church, 35 South Galena Road, Sunbury (Gossing Construction Center). Pastor Chris Tullos, 740-817-2597, glbcsunbury.org. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; traditional worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday, 6:30 p.m. Listen to Shine the Light, 3 p.m. Saturdays on 91.5 FM.\nKilbourne United Methodist Church, 5591 State Route 521, worship at 10:30 a.m. every Sunday. Sunday school is available at 9:30 a.m. Interested children may attend Junior Church for the last part of worship. Fellowship time for all ages follows worship. We have ministries available for all ages throughout the week. Contact us at 740-524-6041 or at kumc1@frontier.com Check out our website at www.kilbourneumc.com.\nMorrow Bible Church, 423 County Road 204 (near intersection of CR 204 and CR 15, 2.5 miles southwest of Sparta). Sunday School will be at 9:30 a.m., the morning worship service at 10:45 a.m.\nNew Beginnings United Methodist Church, State Route 37 East. Pastor: Rev. David Carter. Traditional worship service is at 9 a.m. The contemporary service is at 10:30 a.m. Sunday school and small groups for all ages meet during the worship times. Call the church office at 740-363-2092 or visit elawarenewbeginnings.com for more information about our different ministries.\nOstrander Presbyterian Church, 117 North St. The church was established in 1834.\nPeachblow United Methodist Church, 3247 Peachblow Road, Lewis Center. Call 740-548-7024 or visit peachblowumc.org. Pastor Tom Keene can be reached at 614-561-5047. Sunday 9:30 a.m. Bible study; worship celebration 10:30 a.m. We celebrate Holy Communion the first Sunday of each month. You can also find us on U-Stream each Sunday at 10:30 a.m.; just click on the blue “Live Broadcast” button.\nPleasant Hill Free Will Baptist Church, 230 Hayes St., Delaware. Phone number is 740-363-5295. Sunday school at 10 a.m.; church service is at 11 a.m.; and evening service at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bible study is at 7 p.m.\nPromise Church, 9012 Cotter St., Lewis Center. Everyone is welcome at 10 a.m. Sunday. The worship service is informal and contemporary. It includes an opportunity to ask questions and dialog with the pastor. For information, visit ThePromiseChurch.net.\nRadnor Congregational Church, 4407 State Route 203. Sunday worship is at 10:30 a.m. with Pastor Dan Bill. Children’s Sunday school will be during worship with teacher Mel Kerr.\nRelentless Glory Ministries; motto: “Real — Simple — Church.” Worship services: 1st and 3rd Sundays at 4 p.m. at Common Ground Free Store, 193 E. Central Ave.; includes free community meal. Leaders: Doug and Amy Wright. 740-815-7131; rgmhab214@gmail.com. Find Relentless Glory Ministries on Facebook.\nSt. John Neumann Catholic Church, 9633 Ohio 37 East, Sunbury.\nSt. Mark’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, 28 E. William St. Services: 8 a.m. traditional; 10:30 a.m. blended. Sunday School for all ages at 9:15 a.m. Late service broadcast on Channel 21 or 96-104. Rebroadcast on Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m. Late service also on WINF (98.5 FM). Now streaming www.stmarksdelaware.com.\nSt. Mary Catholic Church, 82 E. William St. Phone: 740-363-4641. Website: www.delawarestmary.org.\nSt. Peter’s Episcopal Church, 45 West Winter Street. Join us every Sunday for warm, welcoming fellowship and traditional worship services at 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m., each with Holy Communion. The later service features uplifiting and inspiring organ music performed by the new St. Peter’s music director and choirmaster Jeff Ward. Don’t miss this! And bring the family, because young people are a vibrant part of our congregation. You will often see youngsters participating in the services. To find out more, visit stpetersdelawareohio.org or our Facebook page. Phone: (740) 369-3175.\nSunbury United Methodist Church, 100 W. Cherry St. For information, contact the church office at 740-965-3813.\nUnity Church of Delaware, 4277 U.S. 23 North (across from Camp Lazarus). Sunday service is at 10:30 a.m. Visit Visit Facebook.com/unitychurchofdelaware or UnityDelawareOhio.org, or call 740-363-7800. Handicap accessible, one of the non-profit organizations associated with the Delaware County Community Market, and affiliated with the Association of Unity Churches International. All are welcome. Love offering. For information, www.unitydelawareohio.org\nVictory Seventh-Day Adventist Church, 200 S. Liberty St. Sabbath school: 9:30 a.m. Worship hour: 11 a.m.\nWarrensburg United Methodist Church, 1025 Ohio 257 (intersection of Ohio 257 and Warrensburg Road, halfway between U.S. 36 and Ohio 37). Like us on Facebook: facebook.com/warrensburgumc.\nWest Berlin Presbyterian Church 2911 Berlin Station Road. The “Little Church with the Big Heart” holds worship service Sunday mornings at 10:30 a.m. and Sunday School for everyone at 9:30 a.m. Holy Communion is celebrated the first Sunday of the month. Second Sunday Fellowship is held the second Sunday of the month. Established in 1876. Phone 740-362-5305; website westberlinpc.info.\nWhite Lily Chapel, 20 S. Main St., Ashley. 740-747-2233. Pastor is the Rev. Cindy Berkshire. Inspirational study class at 9:30 a.m. Children’s Sunday school at 10 a.m. Worship and healing service at 11 a.m. Sunday worship service at 11 a.m. Public Community Dinner Wednesdays 2-7 p.m. $4 adults; $2 children.\nWilliam Street United Methodist Church, 28 W. William St. Website: williamstreetumc.org. For more than 195 years, we are a downtown church with open doors, open minds and open hearts — where all are welcome. Join us for worship at 10:25 a.m. Sunday school meets at 9 a.m. for both children and adults.\nZion A.M.E. Church, 140 S. Washington St. Join us for our 10 a.m. service where the Rev. Madonna Gray will bring the weekly message. Bible study is at 7 p.m. Wednesdays. Every fourth Saturday from 4-6 p.m. you can enjoy a free community home-cooked meal.\nZion United Church of Christ, 51 W. Central Ave., will welcome Rev. Seth Stout to its pulpit this coming Sunday, July 2, at the 10:00 a.m. worship service when Communion will be shared. An Open and Affirming congregation, Zion’s members and friends emphasize service in the community as well as intelligent, faithful understanding of scripture and a dynamic music program directed by Brian White. The elevator entrance is adjacent to the parking lot, which is accessed from W. Central Ave. Contact Zion at 740-362-6691, leaving a message, or e-mail to zionunited@frontier.com.\nMESSIANIC CONGREGATION\nShabbat Yeshua, 51 W. Central Ave. (parking and entrance to rear). Friday worship service is at 7 p.m. For information, call Mark Butler at 740-953-0292.\nUNITARIAN\nDelaware Unitarian Universalist Fellowship, 190 W. Winter Street. Please join us at 10 a.m. Sunday.\nNorth Unitarian Universalist Congregation, 1574 Franklin St., Lewis Center. We gather together in love and fellowship to worship and foster spiritual growth, to serve humanity and to understand ourselves and our universe at 10:30 a.m. Sundays.\nChurches that schedule one-time events which are open to the public — such as musical performances, revivals or vacation Bible schools — are invited to submit these announcements as news items in The Gazette. Information can be submitted at newsroom@aimmedianetwork.com.\nHi! A visitor to our site felt the following article might be of interest to you: CHURCH LISTINGS. Here is a link to that story: https://www.delgazette.com/news/religion/59111/church-listings-22","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line253920"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6593710780143738,"wiki_prob":0.3406289219856262,"text":"Amazon’s official trailer for The Wheel of Time gives us our best look yet\nNews October 28, 2021 0\nWith November 19 fast approaching, Amazon has dropped an official trailer for The Wheel of Time. After we got a short look at The...\nAmazon just dropped The Wheel of Time teaser trailer and it looks incredible\nNews September 3, 2021 0\nIt's been a long, LONG time coming, but The Wheel of Time TV series is finally, nearly here. On November 19, 2021, the first...\nGear January 10, 2022 0\nGear January 7, 2022 0\nGear December 24, 2021 0\nOnline December 22, 2021 0\nFeatures December 18, 2021 0","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line812324"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5542615652084351,"wiki_prob":0.44573843479156494,"text":"Other Pitt Sports\n11 Pitt track and field performers reach NCAA regionals\nBy CardiacHill@AnsonWhaley May 20, 2016, 8:00am EDT\nShare All sharing options for: 11 Pitt track and field performers reach NCAA regionals\nPhoto used with permission of University of Pittsburgh athletics department - www.pittsburghpanthers.com\nAfter the ACC Tournament, 11 members of the Pitt men's and women's track and field teams are headed to the NCAA regional championships next week. That event will be held over next weekend at North Florida in Jacksonville from Thursday, May 26th through Saturday the 28th.\nWhile there, the Panthers will be competing with a host of others to reach the NCAA national championships later this summer. Those will be held in Eugene, Oregon from June 8th through the 11th.\nThis year's pack is led by junior Desmond Palmer, who will be participating in three different events. Last week, Palmer won the ACC title in the 400m event and is ranked second in that event, per the Pitt article linked above. He will also be trying to punch his ticket for the 110m hurdles event as well as the 4x400 relay where he is part of an experienced team consisting only of upperclassmen.\nBe sure to join Cardiac Hill's Facebook page and follow us on Twitter@PittPantherBlog for our regular updates on Pitt athletics. Follow the author and founder/editor @AnsonWhaley.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line242809"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.740524172782898,"wiki_prob":0.25947582721710205,"text":"Meet Dr. Wick\nIV Chelation\nDietary Detox\nIntravenous Hydrogen Peroxide Therapy\nThe Natural Choice Family Health Clinic Blog Intravenous Hydrogen Peroxide Therapy\nby Ron Kennedy, MD\nBio-oxidative medicine is the addition of oxygen directly to the tissues of the body in the form of singlet oxygen (lone oxygen atoms) in a highly reactive state.\nIn living systems oxygen (as O2) is transported by hemoglobin, a protein found in red blood cells. This is a highly efficient way of conducting oxygen from the lungs to the tissues of the body and insuring it does not react with anything along the way. Because it is bound by hemoglobin, it is unable to react to anything else until it is released by the hemoglobin (which then picks up carbon dioxide and transports it to the lungs).\nIn bio-oxidative medicine, oxygen is introduced directly into the body as hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) or as ozone (O3). Although ozone is used safely and with great benefit throughout Europe and in many other parts of the world, the medical establishment in the United States refuses to recognize it as a valid therapy, although new studies are underway in this country. Luckily, hydrogen peroxide is not treated in this way, even though it is an equally powerful oxidative approach.\nThe chemical reaction looks like this:\nH2O2 becomes H2O + O-\nThis is chemical shorthand to indicate that in the body, hydrogen peroxide is converted to water and singlet oxygen. This singlet oxygen located at the end of this reaction is a powerful oxidizing agent. It is the active agent in hydrogen peroxide therapy.\nIn IV H2O2 therapy, Hydrogen peroxide is infused into the circulatory system through a vein in the arm. It drips in over a ninety-minute period. Five cc of pharmaceutical-grade, three-percent hydrogen peroxide are put in 500 cc five percent glucose in water as a carrier solution. Two grams of magnesium chloride are added along with a small amount of manganese to prevent vein sclerosis. (We are using higher doses of peroxide as part of our research study- Dr. G)\nIn the blood, it encounters two enzymes: catalase and cytochrome-C. Catalase drives the above reaction to completion immediately. That part of the hydrogen peroxide that binds with cytochrome-C, however, is not allowed to become water and singlet oxygen for a period of forty minutes. After forty minutes of being bound to cytochrome-C this enzyme begins to act like catalase and breaks down the hydrogen peroxide to water and singlet oxygen. By this time, the hydrogen peroxide/cytochrome-C complex has been spread throughout the body. In this way the benefits of hydrogen peroxide are made available to all cells.\nThe effect of singlet oxygen in the human body is twofold. It kills, or severely inhibits the growth of, anaerobic organisms (bacteria and viruses that use carbon dioxide for fuel and leave oxygen as a by-product). This action is immediate, on contact with the anaerobic organism. Anaerobic bacteria are pathogens, the organisms which cause disease. All viruses are anaerobic.\nAerobic bacteria (those that burn oxygen for fuel and leave carbon dioxide as a by-product – as humans do) found in the human intestine are friendly bacteria, which aid in digestion. These organisms thrive in the presence of hydrogen peroxide.\nThe second effect of hydrogen peroxide is that it provides singlet oxygen, which, in turn, transforms biological waste products and industrial toxins into inert substances by oxidizing them. This makes them easy to handle for the kidneys and liver. It doubles the rate of enzymatic metabolism in the mitochondria within each cell, thus enabling the body to cleanse itself of toxins and still have plenty of energy to handle the business of living from moment to moment. This increase in metabolism probably accounts for some of the antibacterial, anti fungal, and anti viral effects of hydrogen peroxide.\n(Singlet oxygen is highly reactive and reacts with whatever bio-molecule it encounters. These include cell walls and proteins that circulate in the blood. When this happens, the body’s own antioxidant system is activated resulting in an outpouring of many anti-inflammatory compounds which “turn on” the body’s immune system and healing mechanisms. This is the effect that we are using to enhance the effect of the RIT injections in our research study – Dr. G)\nHydrogen peroxide is a part of normal metabolism. Your body produces it constantly. There are units in certain white blood cells called “peroxisomes,” which produce H2O2. These white cells then engulf bacteria which cause disease and mix them together with these peroxisomes. They both then disappear as the singlet oxygen from H2O2 destroys the bacteria or virus. This happens naturally, without any help from outside sources of hydrogen peroxide.\nWhen an infective disease becomes obvious to the person who has the infection the hydrogen peroxide defense mechanism already has been overwhelmed by the number of viruses or bacteria involved, and the immune system is into its secondary line of defense: the tedious process of analyzing the invading organism and making antibodies, which deal specifically with that organism.\nThe invention of man-made antibiotics, beginning in the 1920s, was a revolution in medical science. However, as a strategy for fighting infection it is clearly second best, as the body itself demonstrates. When the body is challenged with an infection, it first turns to hydrogen peroxide. Only when this fails does it turn to its own antibody production.\nConditions which can be treated with H2O2 include those conditions which can be treated with antibiotics, but without the serious toxicity often associated with laboratory produced synthetic antibiotics. Some of these conditions are candidiasis (yeast), viral infections, influenza, the common cold, sinus infection, Epstein – Barr virus, and gangrene.\nHydrogen peroxide also has been found to dissolve cholesterol and calcium deposits associated with atherosclerosis. Therefore, it is a good treatment for vascular disorders. This can result in lessening or disappearance of angina, leg pain, and transient ischemic attacks to the brain, which causes dizziness. It also can help reverse some of the damage left over by a stroke, if treatment is instituted early enough.\nResearch in the 1960s at Baylor University showed conclusively that intra-arterial hydrogen peroxide dissolves plaque in large arteries. This makes H2O2 a wonderful complement to EDTA in the treatment of vascular disease, as EDTA has been shown to clear small vessels and create collateral circulation around large vessel blockages. This combination is called “Chelox Therapy.”\nIt also clears the lungs, in cases of emphysema, by producing oxygen bubbles in the alveoli (tiny air sacs in the lungs), literally lifting the mucus deposits up, so they can be coughed out.\nHydrogen peroxide has a remarkable clearing effect on the skin. After only a few intravenous treatments the skin takes on a translucent clarity usually seen only in children. In addition, hydrogen peroxide benefits asthma, leukemia, multiple sclerosis, degenerative spinal disc disease, and high blood pressure. It is particularly effective with asthma, arthritis, and back disorders.\nAll of these illnesses have a component of toxicity from accumulated pesticides, preservatives, and organic industrial pollutants. Often the clearing of these toxins is enough to allow the body to heal, or at least partially repair itself. Obviously, where there is anatomic change such as in disc disease, this anatomic change will not be altered. However, what the person with disc disease, arthritis, and other such illnesses is interested in is the disappearance of pain and the return of function. This often is possible with hydrogen peroxide.\nMuch more research needs to be done in this area. Claims of cure should not be made unless they can be rigorously substantiated with cause and effect proven beyond any reasonable doubt. At the present time, we can say only that the oxidative therapies are valuable, arresting disease processes, but not necessarily curative.\nIf hydrogen peroxide is so effective, why is it not made use of in “modern” medicine? The reason is simple. Hydrogen peroxide cannot be patented. It is present in the ocean, it is present in rainwater, it is present in vegetables, and it is present in every cell of your body right now. It must be classified as a food, because it is part of all fresh food of plant origin. Because it is produced in the human body, it is undeniably safe. Since it is a food and cannot be patented, there is no big profit to be made on it. .\nPeople have been traveling to the baths at Lourdes, in southwest France at the base of the Pyrenees Mountains, since 1858 when a girl is said to have seen there a vision of the Virgin Mary. The waters at the baths in Lourdes are believed by many people to have miracle healing powers. Perhaps it is no coincidence these waters are loaded with, you guessed it, hydrogen peroxide. People go there to bathe in and drink the water.\nHow does one take hydrogen peroxide? You can go to Lourdes, or you can go to a good organic grocery store and buy a bottle of food grade (35%) hydrogen peroxide, dilute it and drink it, or bath in it. If you go to Lourdes, be prepared to shell out thousands of dollars. If you go to the grocery store, be prepared to pay a few dollars. Be sure to dilute it, because the 35% solution will cause burning of the skin on application, or internal damage, if you try to drink it. (I DO NOT SUGGEST THAT YOU TAKE HYDROGEN PEROXIDE ORALLY-Dr. G)\nIf you take it orally, you should dilute it approximately ten drops in an eight ounce glass of water, two or three times each day, on an empty stomach (three hours after your last meal). If you take it with food in your stomach, the hydrogen peroxide will react with the food, and you will not get the benefit from it. Even if you take it on an empty stomach it reacts to the cells of the stomach wall, as well as whatever food fragments still are present, and you receive not only hydrogen peroxide into your circulation, but also oxidation products of H2O2 plus sloughed off cells from the lining of your stomach and miscellaneous food.\nBecause of these considerations I cannot, and I do not, recommend you take H2O2 by mouth. I believe intravenous H2O2 to be far superior to the oral route of administration. However, because people do report good results with the oral route, I cannot recommend you absolutely do not take it by mouth. This is a gray area.\nTo benefit your body, the H2O2 must reach your circulation, where it can be broken down by catalase and bound by cytochrome-C for distribution throughout your body in the following forty minutes. You should not eat anything for at least twenty minutes after taking the H2O2.\nYou will notice hydrogen peroxide, even in this very dilute state, tastes terrible. It makes many people nauseated. You may be able to mask this effect by taking it with fresh lemon or berry juice or with aloe vera juice.\nYou also can bathe in hydrogen peroxide by putting a pint in your bath water. Be sure to stir it up well before getting in to avoid burning your skin. Many people with arthritis swear by this treatment.\nIf you are confronting a serious illness, or if oral and topical applications are not getting the job done, you can turn to intravenous infusion of hydrogen peroxide. Intravenous H2O2 is far more powerful than the oral ingestion or topical application. For this form of treatment, you must find a physician who is familiar with the proper preparation of pharmaceutical grade H2O2 in a bottle of sterile, isotonic intravenous fluid.\nThe infusion lasts ninety minutes. You will notice a warm feeling during treatment, not much more. The main effect of hydrogen peroxide infusions is that you regain your health through the increased ability of your blood to carry a high concentration of oxygen. In this sense, IV hydrogen peroxide therapy is an oxygen therapy. Treatments are one to three times per week, occasionally five times per week for an acute illness and, just as with chelation therapy with EDTA, the number of treatments needed depends on the nature of the illness with which you are dealing. From ten to fifty treatments will get the job done in most cases, and you should be able to maintain on oral hydrogen peroxide or the occasional intravenous infusion after that.\nAs I alluded to above, there is an exciting new development in the treatment of vascular disease, Chelox Therapy, which involves the combination of treatment with EDTA and H2O2, not in the same infusion however as they would oxidize/reduce each other. These two therapies work in different ways and cross react with each other, causing a thirty percent incidence of intravenous thrombosis. They can be given in combination to the same patient but not on the same day. The combination of these two therapies, given correctly, has been found to be more powerful than either one used alone.\nAddendum by Richard I. Gracer, MD (May 2005):\nWe are using IV hydrogen peroxide as a method of increasing the healing action of Regenerative Injection Therapy (RIT). Our research protocol calls for the use of ozone major autohemotherapy to supplement the specific ligamentous injections that are performed with ozonated blood. Peroxide is much easier and less expensive to use. The co-author of my paper on this subject (in Medical Hypotheses to be published July 2005), Velio Bocci, MD, has started using this modality in his practice at the University of Siena and feels that it is very effective. Theoretically, they should do the same thing. Patient acceptance and tolerance is high. The main side effect is soreness in the veins. We are using manganese and magnesium to reduce this effect. Dr. Bocci uses higher doses than those in this paper. We are increasing doses carefully without any problems. Please see the protocol for more specific information.(Bocci, 2005)\nOliver TH, Cantab BC, Murphy DV, Influenzal pneumonia: the intravenous injection of hydrogen peroxide. Lancet 1920;1:432-433.\nRoot RK, Metcalf J, Oshino N, et al. H2O2 release from human granulocytes during phagocytosis. J Clin Invest 1975;55:945-955.\nFinney JW, Jay BE, Race GJ, et al. Removal of cholesterol and other lipids from experimental animals and human atheromatous arteries by dilute hydrogen peroxide. Angiology 1966;17:223-228.\nUrschel HC, Finney JW, Morale AR, et al. Cardiac resuscitation with hydrogen peroxide. Circ 1965;31 (suppl II);II-210.\nUrschel HC, Finney JW, Balla GA, et al. Protection of the ischemic heart with DMSO alone or with hydrogen peroxide. Ann NY Adad. Sci. 1967; 151:231-241.\nGorren AC, Dekker H, Wever R Kinetic investigations of the reaction of cytochrome C oxidase by hydrogen peroxide. Biochem Biophys Acta 1986; 852(1):81-92.\nNathan CF, Cohn ZA Antitumor effects of hydrogen peroxide in vivo. J Exp Med 1981;154:1539-1553.\nManakata T, Semba U, Shibuya Y, et al. Induction of interferon-gamma production by human natural killer cells stimulated by hydrogen peroxide. J Immunol 1985;134(4):2449-2455.\nLebedev LV, Levin AO, Romankova MP, et al. Regional oxygenation in the treatment of severe destructive forms of obliterating diseases of the extremity arteries. Vestn Khir 1984;132:85-88\nProbiotics - Should We Take Them?\nMany people take probiotics. Often, they take the same one every day. Is that good? Do we need to do that? How should we help heal our intestinal lining or help increase our gut flora? It's not always what we've been led to believe.\nTelehealth: The Advantages of Telemedicine\nStruggles to get to the clinic? Trying to reduce your exposure to COVID-19, as well as other contagious illnesses, and still need to see your doctor? Telehealth is safe and easy — receive quality care from anywhere.\nThe Battle for Health\nIn this time of instability and fear, we need some perspective on how our bodies are made to function. This is a summary of why we don't need to fear, and in fact should not fear.\nEDTA Chelation Clinical Research\nJohn Myers, MD, a physician from Baltimore, Maryland, pioneered the use of intravenous (IV) vitamins and minerals as part of the overall treatment of various medical problems.\nOndaMed Therapy\nEnergy Medicine is any healing modality that affects positive change in the energetic system of living beings. This article will focus on a form of energy medicine called Pulsed Electromagnetic Field (PEMF) therapy.\nBonnie L. Wick, NMD, Mesa, AZ\nAddress: 1840 E. University, STE 4, Mesa, AZ 85203","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line668888"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7888635993003845,"wiki_prob":0.7888635993003845,"text":"Information service of the Pontifical Mission Societies since 1927\nSunday, 16 January 2022 [GMT +1]\nMISSIONARIES KILLED\nActs of the Holy See\nCEP Appointments\nASIA/UZBEKISTAN - Testimony of the new parish priest in Samarkand: \"Let God's beauty shine through the joy of fraternity\"\nWednesday, 3 March 2021 local churches priests\nMissionaries at the service of the \"little flock\", with great hopes for the new year\nThirty years of Franciscan presence and apostolic work\nThe new law \"On freedom of conscience and religious associations\" clarifies what is meant by \"mission\"\nArt as an instrument of evangelization\nAn oratory, a place of knowledge and proclamation of the Gospel\nTestimony of the new parish priest in Samarkand: \"Let God's beauty shine through the joy of fraternity\"\nSamarkand (Agenzia Fides) - \"A month has passed since our arrival in Samarkand. During this first phase, we seek to define pastoral priorities. For example, we think that we have to launch maintenance works in the St. John the Baptist Church. It is a very beautiful building of worship, built 105 years ago in Gothic style, visited by many tourists, but also a bit old and empty. This is why we believe that it is necessary to refurbish it and, at the same time, strengthen its identity and decorum, so that whoever enters feels welcomed. Two other areas of commitment are the launching of new works of charity and the creation of an oratory in Salesian style, a point of connection between the charisms of our Congregation. We would like to set up a football pitch, a volleyball court and create a space where young people have the opportunity to spend time.\nThe objective, as Don Bosco said, is to bring out the beauty of God through play, the joy of being together and fraternity\". This is what Father Ariel Alvarez Toncovich, from the Institute of the Incarnate Word, recently appointed Parish priest of Saint John the Baptist of Samarkand in Uzbekistan, told Agenzia Fides.\nAfter spending 8 years on a mission in Kazakhstan, Fr. Alvarez was sent to Samarkand together with his confrere, Fr. Paolo Giacinti, in order to revive the pastoral activity of the local parish, without a priest for a long time. \"In this city, during the nineties, lived a large number of Catholics. On the basis of the parish archives, we found traces of meetings and retreats in which more than a hundred people participated. The economic crisis of recent years has led many of them to return to their countries of origin, especially Poland, Germany, Ukraine. To this, we must add the fact that, for about three years, the community did not have a parish priest, but was assisted, as much as possible, by priests from other cities who came here during the weekend. Without a fixed point of reference, the faithful have dispersed a bit. Now we are two and we will try to make our presence felt. From a pastoral point of view, there is a lot to do\".\nThe community of the faithful of Samarkand is currently made up of a small group of 20 to 30 people, which includes a dozen children, some adolescents, their parents and some women over eighty: \"These elderly ladies represent for us true heroines of the faith, because they lived the period of repression of the USSR, keeping in their hearts the faith and transmitting it. The children come from Catholic families, almost all of them have already made their first communion and are attending catechism to prepare for confirmation. We will focus a lot on formation, despite the small numbers, so that those who will approach in the future can recognize in the eyes of this small community the evangelical spirit. There is a lot to do but I am optimistic\", he concludes.\nIn addition to that of Samarkand, in Uzbekistan there are four other parishes and about 3,000 baptized: there are about 700 faithful present in the capital Tashkent, in addition to others present in Bukhara, Urgench and Fergana. In Angren, where the construction of a new Church is planned, there are 25 faithful. The Uzbek population, made up of 30 million inhabitants, is 90% Muslim. About 3.5% are of the Russian Orthodox Christian faith, while another 3% include small Christian communities of other denominations, including Catholics. (LF-PA) (Agenzia Fides, 3/3/2021)\nAMERICA/HAITI - Twelve years after the earthquake: Redemptorists inaugurate the parish church of St. Gerard after being rebuilt\nAMERICA/NICARAGUA - Bishop of Matagalpa: Human dignity and freedom are prerequisites for a new beginning\nAFRICA/CAMEROON - Catholic priest arrested in the south-east of the Country\nAMERICA/BOLIVIA - The first indigenous diocesan priest of the Apostolic Vicariate of El Beni has died\nThe contents of the site are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License\nContact editorial staff\nCancel your subscription to the newsletter","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line431390"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7260331511497498,"wiki_prob":0.27396684885025024,"text":"Choir Testimonials\nMeet the Choir . . .\nLatest testimonial received November 2020 from Caroline M . . .\n\" I had the absolute pleasure of joining Holme Valley Choir in February 2020. From the start, my initial contact with David was helpful and very welcoming and I was encouraged to pop along to choir practice, meet other members and experience the choir before deciding to become a member. At the time (pre Covid) the choir were rehearsing at Holmfirth High School, close to where I live. There is plenty of space and an easy location to find.\nI could not have experienced a warmer welcome from all members of the group. Kim, the Choir Director, was encouraging and helped me to orientate into the group and what practice involved. There were no ‘tests’ or embarrassing moments singing in front of the group (this is my first experience of a choir in 35 years!). There are incredible voices in the room and each and every member made me feel welcome and less nervous. After a few weeks Kim took me to another room and after singing through a few scales, we concluded that I was an Alto and needed to move from Sopranos!\nMargaret was lovely and ensured I had the music sheets to practice at home and during choir rehearsals. I don’t read music and that wasn’t a problem. There’s a wide range of ages and experiences in the choir, always someone on hand to help and encourage you and to learn from.\nI cannot begin to explain the choral quality of the choir - so many moments where I had goosebumps listening to the harmonies and voices. The range of songs is wide, modern, classic and traditional. Each harmony is carefully rehearsed but there’s a lot of fun and laughter in the room at appropriate times throughout the evening.\nThroughout the Covid pandemic the choir have found innovative ways to keep in touch, from zoom meetings to choir practice over the internet and each of us making our own recording which the very talented Dave G put together to produce a wonderful recording - all from our own contributions at home.\nSadly I'm now relocating and having to say goodbye to this wonderful choir group. Due to Covid I didn’t get the opportunity to sing at an event but hope to return to have the pleasure of listening to the Choir in the future.\nIf you are thinking about joining a Choir, and like me were a little apprehensive I would say go for it. You will not get a warmer welcome elsewhere, the Choir is fun and enjoyable and run in a professional way. It’s not just about singing together once each week, with Kim’s expert leadership the quality of the performances are exceptional and continues to improve through each and every practice. It’s a wonderful group to be part of. \"\nExperience of a new member who had never sung in a Choir before . . .\nMy wife and I moved into the Holme Valley when we both decided to take early retirement and relocate to wonderful West Yorkshire from ‘over the hill’ in Cheshire.\nI was introduced to singing by a long term friend in the form of Karaoke at his house and then later in my own house and found that, to my surprise, I not only enjoyed singing, but as I tried new songs my vocals got better (over time) and I developed a good repertoire of modern and old pop/rock songs.\nWhen we moved to “The Valley” I had seen a Gareth Malone choir program and wondered what it would be like to be a part of a group of singers and try to make those beautiful lilting harmonies I had heard on TV.\nI turned to the trusty Google and typed in “Choir Holme Valley” and was presented with the website and contact details for Holme Valley Singers. I am quite a shy person (until you get to know me and then I NEVER shut up) but I sent off an email to the contact and asked if I could try out for the choir. I explained that I sang a bit if Karaoke but that I could not read music.\nDavid Brown (the current choir Chairperson) replied and suggested we meet in a pub to discuss, so, liking the idea of the pub, I agreed. David soothed my fears and explained that “enthusiasm, commitment and an ability to want to learn, far outweighs a need to be able to read music or any prior experience” so I agreed to attend my first choir rehearsal the following Tuesday evening.\nThe choir is a mixed voice choir of 30+ members with ages ranging from 30’s up to 80’s. Some newbies like myself were there and other members had been with the choir for over forty years. Musicians and non musicians from all trades and walks of life, a real tapestry of the community, if you’ll let my poetic juices run a little.\nI’d explained my karaoke songs to David and he suggested I sit in the Baritone Section of the choir next to one of the longest serving members who would show me the ropes.\nI cannot tell a lie, that first evening blew my mind. I was given a piece of music which had words, lines and dots and a whole host of other things. Some of the words were not even in english (a Swahili song we were learning) but my mentor kept reminding me it was my first night and it would get easier, and it did.\nI kept going back, because I love to sing, I love learning new songs, I love the feeling of making those lilting harmonies I was hoping for, I love how friendly the choir members are, I’ll be honest and say, after 10 months I still don’t know everyone's name but I’m working on it.\nWe have a fantastic musical director and accompanist, it is great that we have fun while rehearsing, a few of us (anyone is welcome, it's not a click) visit the pub after our Tuesday rehearsal.\nThe choir tend to work towards a couple of concerts in the summer months and then a few concerts around Christmas which, after you’ve done your first, and no I can tell you they cannot hear your knees knocking in the front row, are a joy to perform. This year we are taking a portion of our choir to a Pop Concert for choirs in Otley and some of the choir are going on a trip over to Italy to visit a choir we have links with to perform with them. Quite a\nfew of our members are involved with other choirs, choral societies, quartets and octets and would be happy to share their knowledge with you.\nIf you like to sing or would like to try, like the idea of being a part of a choral family, singing songs from Take That’s “Shine” to Magnificat and Nunc Dimitis (no I hadn’t heard of it either but it is rousing) please contact chair@holmevalleysingers.co.uk our subs are low and the fun is turned up to 11.\n\"I joined Holme Valley Singers about 9 months ago after attending an 'Open Rehearsal'. Everyone in the choir was very friendly and welcoming. I don't read music very well but find I can manage OK by listening and attending rehearsals regularly. The Choir has a good repertoire of music and is professional yet friendly - I would encourage anyone to join!\"\n\"I have been a member of Holme Valley Singers for some 20 years or more, during which time I have taken part in many performances both in concert and competition. These are always rewarding experiences particularly from a musical point of view. The wide range of music in the Choir's repertoire appeals to singers and listeners alike and continues to give me great satisfaction and pleasure.\nWeekly practices are always undertaken in a relaxed and enjoyable manner and atmosphere, with the objective to achieve a high standard of performance. I have no formal training or education in music but with the benefit of experience with the Choir I do not find this to be a problem and I am able to sight-read to an acceptable standard.\nI continue to enjoy the companionship and making of music with the Choir and the friendly atmosphere in which that takes place.\"\n\"I have been a member of the Choir since 1977. I loved singing as a child and took up the opportunity to carry on my interest in adulthood. As I don't read music I have to listen well to learn my part, then I'm fine.\nI get a lot out of choir and find the singing and friendship, enjoyable and therapeutic.\"\n\"I joined the Holme Valley Singers just over 2 years ago. When I was younger I sang solos in Church and was in school choirs and productions. I took piano exams up to Grade 6 and therefore can sight-read well, but apart from tinkling on the piano every now and then for my own pleasure, did nothing really musical from then until about 3 years ago when I joined a community choir with my daughter. I realised then that I wanted more of a challenge and when my children were old enough to leave alone I joined Holme Valley Singers. I love singing with them as they are not too serious, we have a laugh, and have a great variety of music, something for everyone I think, but I especially like the modern popular pieces. The musical director, Kim, is full of energy and a great conductor!\"\n\"I worked with Alan (Simmons) and sang in his school choir so became one of the founder members of Holme Valley Singers. I just enjoy the variety of the repertoire and the fun and laughter at rehearsal. I can read music but still prefer to hear the parts on the piano.\nSinging is good for all.\"\nHVS WebMistress","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line199138"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7003511786460876,"wiki_prob":0.29964882135391235,"text":"256 Chapman Road Suite 201\nFacebook-f Instagram Home\nFor Appointment\nClient Consent Form\nOur Mission and History\nClinical Training & Internship Programs\nCurrent Group Therapy Offerings\nMarriage and Relationships Counseling and Therapy\nTherapy for Teens\nParent-Child Interaction Therapy\nTherapy for Anxiety\nContact Us and Forms\nSunyana Benjamin, LCSW\nSunyana has a Master’s obtained from the University of New England and a Bachelor’s degree from Temple University. She specializes in working with children and families and has previously worked in an intensive outpatient therapy setting. Sunyana is experienced working with children and adolescents with various diagnoses including, but not limited to, Anxiety, Depression, Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder (DMDD), Attention Deficit Disorder (ADHD), and trauma.\nSunyana is well versed in various Art Therapy techniques used to best engage children at their level of readiness. She utilizes evidence based practices including, Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Diadatic Behavioral Therapy, Mindfulness Approach, and Play Therapy. Sunyana is also a military spouse, which allows her to be insightful and supporting of the military lifestyle, which can lead to difficulties transitioning in new settings.\nSunyana Benjamin\nOnline Consent Form\nRosanna Biondolillo, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nRosanna received her Bachelor of Science degree in Psychology from the University of Phoenix and later obtained her Master’s in Social Work from Delaware State University. She is currently working towards her licensure to become a Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW).\nRosanna enjoys working with children, adolescents, and young adults dealing with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and ADHD symptoms. She takes a person-centered approach, believing that to assist clients in reaching their goals, the clinician must meet them where they are. Rosanna combines a variety of evidence-based therapeutic modalities for treatment, such as Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), and Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT).\nRosanna Biondolillo\nKimberly Boulden, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nKimberly received her Bachelors Degree in Psychology from University of Delaware in 2016 and subsequently graduated with a Master of Social Work Degree from Widener University. She has been working with at-risk populations for over fifteen years. Her experience includes providing services in residential and office-based settings. Her clinical focus is a trauma-focused and strengths-based approach to work with children, adolescents, families, and adults.\nThroughout her career she has experience working with clients facing trauma, homelessness, addiction, anxiety, and depression. Kimberly incorporates a variety of evidence-based therapeutic models into treatment such as Cognitive-Behavior Therapy (CBT), Trauma Focused Cognitive Behavior Therapy (TF-CBT), Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT), and Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT).\nKimberly takes a holistic and empowering approach in her work. She believes in the principle of meeting clients where they are in order to establish and achieve treatment goals.\nKimberly Boulden\nTania Caceres, M.S. (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nTania is a graduate from University of Delaware, and West Chester University. She earned her Bachelors in Human Services with a minor in education. Afterward, she spent time as a behavioral interventionist at a local elementary school working to assist children with mental and behavioral issues. She was inspired to go back to school by a fellow co-worker and clinician after seeing the need for licensed mental health practitioners in schools. She continued her education at West Chester, earning her Masters of Science in Clinical Mental Health Counseling.\nShe has done research on mindfulness techniques and enjoys utilizing a person-centered approach with her clients. She has experience working with adults as well as children of various ages. Providing compassion in a nonjudgmental space, she acts as your guide as you remove blocks and recognize your own strengths. She is currently working toward becoming a licensed professional counselor.\nTania Caceres\nMelissa Clendaniel, LPCMH\nMelissa Clendaniel is a native Delawarean born and raised in Kent County. After earning a Bachelor’s degree in Behavioral Science from Wilmington University in 2014, she pursued her Masters of Clinical Mental Health Counseling also from Wilmington University, graduating in 2017. After passing the National Counselors Exam, she became a Nationally Certified Counselor through NBCC in May 2017.\nMelissa is a Licensed Professional Counselor of Mental Health. She provides client-centered therapy to children, teens, adults, and families. Melissa has experience with a variety of issues including trauma, addiction, anxiety, depression, mood disorders, psychosis, grief, and suicidal ideation.\nThroughout Melissa’s career as a therapist she has gained experience and training in a variety of specialized areas including Mindfulness, Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive Behavior Therapy, and Cognitive Behavior Therapy For Psychosis (CBTp).\nMelissa most recently worked as a Mobile Outpatient Therapist on the Delaware CORE Grant. In this position she provided therapy services to teens and young adults who were experiencing their first episodes of psychosis. She has also worked as an Outpatient Therapist at an inpatient substance use residential facility. Melissa is passionate about providing the most effective and genuine counseling experience for clients and their families. She especially believes unconditional positive regard for all clients and meeting the individual where they are at is at the core of any therapy relationship.\nMelissa Clendaniel\nLPCMH\nJeshonda Dennis, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nJeshonda grew up in the state of Delaware. She is a graduate of Delaware State University. In 2017, she earned a bachelor’s degree in social work. Thereafter, in 2018, she continued her education at Delaware State University and earned a master’s degree (MSW) in social work. In previous employments, Jeshonda has gained experience working as an outpatient therapist for children and teens. She has worked with children and teens between the ages of 4-17 who have had a wide array of mental and behavioral disorders. Jeshonda has been an interventionist during crisis situations for at risk youth. She is very passionate about being an advocate for children, teens, and families that need external support. Jeshonda engages clients in a variety of treatment methods, such as individual, couples, group, and family-based therapy. Jeshonda uses a variety of treatment methods, such as cognitive behavioral, trauma-focused, and person-centered. She believes that the best approach to therapy is the one that adapts to the clients’ specific needs. Jeshonda is, currently, working towards becoming a licensed clinical social worker (LCSW).\nJeshonda Dennis\nShavaughn Felder, M.S., NCC (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nShavaughn graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice and a Master of Science in Community Counseling from Wilmington University. She is a National Certified Counselor and is currently working to obtain her license as a Professional Counselor of Mental Health. Shavaughn has worked with at risk children, adolescents, and families for over 20 years and has a passion for helping youth reach their highest level of potential. She has experience with drug & alcohol counseling, trauma, anxiety, depression, career counseling, and treatment of behavioral issues. Shavaughn utilizes CBT, person-centered, and solution-focused approaches to best support youth.\nShavaughn Felder\nM.S., NCC\nJennifer Fontal, MS (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nJennifer Fontal received her Bachelors in Behavioral Science from Wilmington University in 2015 and subsequently graduated with a Masters of Science Degree from Springfield College. She has been working with at-risk children, adolescents and their families for five years and has experience providing services in community and residential settings. Jennifer conducts individual, family, and group counseling as has experienced providing crisis intervention. She has knowledge in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Solution Focused Therapy Models.\nJennifer Fontal\nTeisha Fooks, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nTeisha received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from Southern Utah University. She will graduate in December with her master’s in social work from Delaware State University and is currently working to obtain her license as a Licensed Master of Social Work. Teisha’s primary clinical focus is working with children and adolescents. Teisha uses a person-centered approach and employs Cognitive Behavior Therapy, Narrative Therapy, Play/Art Therapy, Narrative Therapy, and Visual Imagery. She is also trained in Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT).\nTeisha Fooks\nDenise Fuller, LMSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nDenise graduated from Widener University with a Master’s degree in Clinical Social Work and received a Master’s degree in Human Services from Springfield College. In addition, Denise is credentialed as a Delaware Community Mental Health Screener.\nDenise has over ten years of experience helping children and families achieve their goals. She has worked in multiple settings, including but not limited to client’s homes, the community and schools. Denise’s experiences have focused on crisis intervention, family dysfunction, trauma, anxiety & depression, grief & loss, coping, aggressive behaviors and impulsivity.\nMultiple therapeutic modalities such as Solution-Focused Therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Systems Theory and Motivational Interviewing are utilized to help achieve goals.\nDenise Fuller\nLMSW\nChelsea Gadberry, MS (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nChelsea Gadberry is a masters level clinician working towards obtaining licensure. She is a Nationally Certified Counselor and enjoys working with adults, adolescents, and children to achieve wellness. Chelsea conducts individual, family, and group counseling. Her approach to therapy incorporates the use of Mindfulness and CBT to help clients develop self awareness, develop coping skills, and facilitate intention and purpose when addressing life’s problems.\nChelsea Gadberry\nCasey Graney, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nCasey received her Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from the University of Delaware in 2007 and later earned her Master of Social Work from Widener University in 2021. She has over 14 years of progressive experience working with children and families in residential and community-based programs. Casey has a passion for empowering individuals to overcome obstacles to meet their goals. She takes a strengths-based approach in meeting each person where they are.\nCasey has experience working with individuals from birth through adulthood. She has worked with children and families experiencing an array of difficulties including anxiety, depression, grief and loss, ADHD, autism, mood disorders, psychosis, and trauma, among others.\nCasey Graney\nBrodieLynn Hughes, LCSW\nAlthough she grew up in Delaware, Brodie earned her bachelor’s degree in psychology from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, in 2004. From there she began working in residential treatment facilities with adolescents of various backgrounds. She and her husband served as foster parents to teenage boys in Utah while building their own family. They moved back to Delaware with their six children in 2012. She later earned her Master’s of Social Work from Delaware State University and became a Licenced Clinical Social Worker in 2021.\nShe utilizes a number of different modalities in her therapy sessions. Adolescents are her specialty, but she enjoys working with individuals of all ages\nBrodieLynn Hughes\nJere' Hunter, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nJere’ received her Bachelors of Science degree in Behavioral Science from Wilmington University in Delaware and her Masters in Social Work from Widener University in Chester, Pa. She has 8+ years of experience working in inpatient settings for dual diagnosis providing individual, family, and group therapy services.\nJere’s primary clinical focus has been working with adults with substance use and mental health challenges along with homelessness for the past 8+ years; experiences with school aged students in the school system, and adjudicated youth in the legal system. She also has experience working with the LGTBQIA+ community and with those with trauma related issues.\nJere’ is skilled in evidenced based treatment practices and utilizes a variety therapeutic modalities such as: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Solution Focused Therapy, Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT), and Motivational Interviewing (MI) along with being person centered. Jere’ works with her clients to build their self confidence to be able to achieve their goals in life while working towards independence.\nJere' Hunter\nOlivia Iaquinto, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nOlivia earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology as well as her Master of Social Work degree from West Chester University and is now working towards licensure. She has over five years of experience working with children, teens, and adults in a variety of settings including schools, residential facilities, and in the community. Additionally, Olivia has experience working with families as well as individuals and has facilitated numerous social-emotional skills groups for children and teens.\nOlivia’s primary therapeutic focus is working with children, teens, and adults struggling with mood disorders and/or a history of trauma. She has experience treating symptoms of anxiety and mood disorders, ADHD, ODD, and trauma/PTSD. In addition, Olivia has experience addressing relational issues both individually or in family sessions.\nOlivia utilizes several different approaches to therapy for which she has received training, including Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) and Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, and Ecosystemic Structural Family Therapy (ESFT). Olivia works to develop a meaningful therapeutic relationship with each client in order to encourage and support them through their mental health recovery.\nOlivia Iaquinto\nJeannette Jefferson, MA (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nJeannette is a graduate from Eastern University where she received a Masters degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling. She also received a Bachelors degree from Neumann University getting an Art degree in Psychology. Jeannette has over 5 years of clinical experience working with children and families in various different settings. Jeannette has experience working in a residential setting for children with severe mental and physical disabilities, schools, and foster care system. Jeannette is trained in play therapy along with sand tray therapy but also uses many strength based practices to assist clients with their needs and struggles. Jeannette provides individual and family based sessions.\nJeannette Jefferson\nEmily Jones, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nEmily received her Bachelor of Social Work degree in 2018 and graduated in 2021 with her Master of Social Work degree. Emily’s experience throughout her education consisted of working with at-risk youth and their families through a trauma-informed lens. Professionally, Emily has experience assisting and being a support for families accessing services whose children, birth to three, had a developmental delay or diagnosis. She specializes in working with youth ranging from ages birth to adolescent and has previously done work with families as a whole. Emily is experienced in working with children needing behavioral support, facilitating group therapy, and utilizing a coaching model.\nMelanie Klosiewicz, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nMelanie is a Delaware native who received her bachelor’s degree in psychology from Washington College in Chestertown, MD, in 1998. After graduating, she started her career in Child Welfare working with children and families experiencing the trauma and loss associated with abuse and neglect. Melanie obtained her Masters in Social Work from Delaware State University in 2001. After taking some time off to raise six children of her own, she returned to her work with Delaware’s children and families and is currently working toward becoming a licensed clinical social worker (LCSW).\nMelanie believes in coming alongside clients and giving them the tools they need to achieve their goals. These tools come from a variety of evidence-based treatment modalities. Melanie uses a whole person approach in therapy acknowledging the relationship between spiritual health, physical health, mental health, and environmental factors.\nMelanie provides school based services in lower Delaware and virtual services.\nMelanie Klosiewicz\nKelly Lackey, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nKelly is a graduate of the University of Delaware where she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology in 2004. After working directly with children and families for many years, she obtained her Masters in Social Work with an additional Trauma Certificate from Widener University in 2019.\nShe has spent her career serving children and families touched by trauma. She has spent 15 years working in child welfare, striving to keep children safe, strengthening at-risk families, and supporting adoptive children and families. She also serves on the Board of Directors of the About Child Trauma Foundation, a not-for-profit agency in Pennsylvania that provides advocacy and education about childhood trauma.\nKelly feels that true healing occurs within safe, supporting relationships. She believes in meeting each client where they are, and building upon every individual’s existing strengths. She has experience working with children, adolescents, and families and is currently working toward obtaining her Clinical Social Work license.\nKelly Lackey\nMarisa Maguire, MS (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nMarisa is a raduate from Wilmington University where she earned her Bachelors in Psychology and her Masters in Clinical Mental Health Counseling. Marisa is devoted to continuing to refine her skill and specialty training in a wide-range of therapeutic interventions including Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Motivational Interviewing, Solution-Focused Brief Therapy, and Mindfulness. She is currently working to become certified in Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.\nMarisa is a Pre-Licensed Mental Health Counselor who provides client-centered therapy to children, teens, and young adults. Marisa has experience treating a range of issues including, trauma, anxiety, depression, and more.\nMarisa is passionate about providing the most effective and compassionate counseling. She believes in empowering individuals to live their most authentic life by utilizing strength-based approaches to increase resilience of those with whom she works.\nMarisa Maguire\nRachel Newberry, MS (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nRachel is a native Delawarean. In 2018, she earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Salisbury University in Psychology. Immediately after graduation, she continued her education and received her Master of Science’s in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Wilmington University. Rachel is devoted to furthering her education and becoming well-trained in a variety of therapeutic interventions.\nRachel has experience working as a behavior interventionist, providing services to youth with behavioral and mental disorders. Additionally, she has worked in the school setting, where she provided assistance to children along the Autism Spectrum as well as other various developmental disorders. Her previous work with children benefits her tremendously as a therapist.\nIn her therapeutic work, she utilizes an evidence-based approach while providing individualized treatment to each of her clients. She specializes in working with children with a variety of needs including ADHD, Anxiety, and Autism. Rachel is currently working towards earning licensure in mental health counseling.\nRachel Newberry\nColeen O'Connor, M.S.\nColeen graduated with a Masters in Community Counseling from Wilmington University. She retired in 2015 after 30 years as the Program Coordinator at The First State School for Chronically Ill Children and Adolescents, Christiana Care. She is continuing her education to renew her National Certification and Delaware License as a Mental Health Counselor. She is excited to now offer her services as a school based counselor. Coleen has experience working in a private practice with children, adolescents, families, and adults. She has experience working with a wide variety of mental and behavioral health disorders. Coleen also has an extensive amount of experience in grief counseling, working with death and loss for children, adolescents and families. She was an instructor at Wilmington University in Development and Psychology courses for 12 years. Coleen is passionate about decreasing bullying in schools after the trauma bullying has caused in schools, families, and the workplace across the country. She served as the President of the Delaware Bullying Prevention Association and co-created a course for Bullying Prevention.\nColeen embraces the quote by Mahatma Gandhi “Be the change you want to see in the world.” The students and families that she has been honored to meet, have taught her so much. When we listen to their needs, and treat them with respect and positive regard, lives are changed for the better.\nColeen O'Connor\nAngela Pesce, PhD, LPCMH, NCC\nAngela graduated from Neumann University with a bachelor’s degree in Psychology, and a minor in Spanish. Additionally, she attended The University of Scranton to receive a master’s degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling. In 2021, she completed her PhD in Educational Psychology from Walden University. Angela has completed her requirements to become a Nationally Certified Counselor and is a Licensed Professional Counselor of Mental Health.\nSince 2016, Angela has had experience in working with a number of diagnoses, across all age ranges and varying backgrounds. Some of these diagnoses being ADHD, Autism, Conduct Disorders, Trauma and Anxiety. Though a Delaware native, she has also practiced in Scranton, Pennsylvania and Sharon Hill, Pennsylvania.\nAngela Pesce\nPhD, LPCMH, NCC\nShana Petruccelli, LMSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nShana earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Behavioral Science from Wilmington University and a Masters in Social Work from Widener University. She is a Licensed Master Social Worker with 14+ years experience working with children and families providing case management, crisis management, and therapeutic services. Her next goal is to become a Licensed Clinical Social Worker.\nShana’s primary clinical focus is a trauma-focused and strengths-based approach when working with children, adolescents, adults and families who have experienced grief, loss, trauma, and attachment issues. Additionally, she has experience treating at-risk youth and individuals with ADHD, anxiety, depression, and PTSD.\nShana utilizes a variety of treatment methods, such as art therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy, person-centered therapy and play therapy. Shana is passionate about working with, and advocating for, individuals of all ages and helping them meet their treatment goals.\nShana Petruccelli\nBrianna Ruiz, M.Ed (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nBri began her career in education by receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree in Early Childhood/Elementary Education from DeSales University. After being in the classroom for 5 years, working with children from pre-k through middle school, Bri followed her heart and obtained a Master of Education degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling from Springfield College. Bri completed her internship through CCD and is so excited to continue working with children of all ages, as well as teenagers and families.\nBri has experience working with children, adolescents, and families, and is PCIT trained. She has experience working with a variety of clinical concerns, including ADHD, Autism Spectrum Disorder, Trauma, Anxiety, and Depression. Bri also works with a variety of children who experience behavior concerns at home and at school, including anger, aggression, and defiance.\nBri’s therapeutic focuses include Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Trauma Focused-CBT, Strengths-Based-CBT, Play Therapy, and Parent-Child Interactive Therapy (PCIT). Bri loves to form relationships and connections and is excited to help children, teens, and families reach their full potential and meet their goals.\nBrianna Ruiz\nM.Ed\nRosa Sutton, LACMH, NCC (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nRosa is a native Delawarean who earned her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology and Sociology from Villanova University. After spending four years abroad supporting the military, she returned to Delaware to earn her Master’s in Human Services Administration from Wilmington University, followed by her Master’s in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, also from Wilmington University. Rosa is currently pursuing her Ed.D. in Community Care and Counseling with a focus on Traumatology/Trauma Studies from Liberty University. Rosa is a Nationally Board Certified Counselor and is a Licensed Associate Mental Health Counselor working towards full licensure. Rosa has a background an intensive outpatient provider and has experience providing therapy services to children, adults, and families. Rosa holds a certification in Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) and is also trained in Functional Family Therapy (FFT). Rosa predominantly uses traditional cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and for her younger clients includes elements of play therapy. Regardless of modality, Rosa prefers a strengths-based approach, focusing on the strengths that her clients bring with them and building upon that foundation.\nRosa Sutton\nLACMH, NCC\nSherri Tull-Hubbard, M.S. (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nSherri is a graduate of Bowie State College where she studied Psychology and earned her Bachelor of Science degree. After graduation, Sherri spent 28 years providing service to the communities in Wilmington Delaware, as a member of the Wilmington Police Department rising to the rank of Captain. While working for the police department, Sherri obtained a Master’s Degree in Education and a Master’s Degree in Community Counseling from Wilmington University. Sherri has experience working with children and families who have experienced and/or are in crisis. Additionally, she has been providing therapy to students in an elementary school setting, working with students in grades 1 through 8. Her therapeutic style of counseling is often eclectic however; she incorporates evidence-based theories and models as well. When working with younger children, Sherri primarily utilizes the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy model. She believes every child who has a mental health history can lead a productive life when services/interventions are provided early.\nSherri Tull-Hubbard\nBrandi Walker, MSW (Pre-Licensed Professional)\nBrandi was raised in the state of Delaware, where she decided to follow her parents and further her education at Delaware State University. She received her Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology (2016) and her Master’s in Social Work (2019). Brandi has experience working with Child Welfare and providing support to children and their families in Delaware’s schools. Brandi is also aware of the resources Delaware has to offer.\nBrandi is trained in Functional Family Therapy and has a passion for bringing families together as well as being a shining examples to young women and mothers. She is currently working towards obtaining her Social Work license.\nBrandi Walker\nSubscribe to us to always stay in touch with us and get the latest news about our company and all of our activities!\nClick Here to Schedule Your First Appointment or Contact Us At:\nPhone: 302-292-1334 x 101\n256 Chapman Road Suite 201, Newark, DE 19702 | Google Map\n© 2022 thecenterforchilddevelopment.com","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1288340"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6095408201217651,"wiki_prob":0.6095408201217651,"text":"Murray, Sandra and Susan Salter. \"Communities of Practice (CoP) as a Model for Integrating Sustainability into Higher Education.\" Handbook of Research on Pedagogical Innovations for Sustainable Development, edited by Ken D. Thomas and Helen E. Muga, IGI Global, 2014, pp. 170-188. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-5856-1.ch009\nMurray, S., & Salter, S. (2014). Communities of Practice (CoP) as a Model for Integrating Sustainability into Higher Education. In K. Thomas, & H. Muga (Ed.), Handbook of Research on Pedagogical Innovations for Sustainable Development (pp. 170-188). IGI Global. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-5856-1.ch009\nMurray, Sandra, and Susan Salter. \"Communities of Practice (CoP) as a Model for Integrating Sustainability into Higher Education.\" In Handbook of Research on Pedagogical Innovations for Sustainable Development. edited by Thomas, Ken D., and Helen E. Muga, 170-188. Hershey, PA: IGI Global, 2014. https://doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-5856-1.ch009\nPractice, Progress, and Proficiency in Sustainability\nEnvironmental, Agricultural, and Physical Sciences e-Book Collection\nEnvironmental Sustainability Collection - e-Books\nCommunities of Practice (CoP) as a Model for Integrating Sustainability into Higher Education\nSandra Murray (University of Tasmania, Australia) and Susan Salter (University of Tasmania, Australia)\nSource Title: Handbook of Research on Pedagogical Innovations for Sustainable Development\nThe University of Tasmania (UTas), Australia, made the commitment to adopt a plan for incorporating environmental literacy and sustainability into teaching and learning practices for all undergraduate and postgraduate students as well as within research, operational activities, and the community. The systematic goal was Education for Sustainability (EfS). To move towards this goal, a Community of Practice (CoP) in EfS was established in 2011. This chapter describes the establishment process for this CoP along with key milestones from 2011 through 2013. Paramount among these is the impact of the CoP on EfS at UTas and beyond and the phases involved—from initiation to maturation to ongoing regeneration—are explored. The diverse membership of the CoP, which includes students, academics, professional/operational staff, and community members, is elaborated upon in this chapter to ensure each role is understood as well as the challenges that arise from such diverse initiatives (60+ members).\nIn little more than three decades, ideas of sustainability have become indispensable in defining the fundamental problems of our age and in charting pathways towards more responsible futures. These ideas are now embedded globally in multiple disciplines from legislation and policy to advertising and community meetings. Sustainability is also a prominent focus for education at all levels (McMillan & Dyball, 2009). In recent years there has been an increased commitment to integrating sustainability principles into higher education with the United Nations proclaiming 2005 as the beginning of the first Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD).\nCoPs have been described by Wenger, McDermott and Snyder (2002) and more recently by McDonald and Star (2008) and Star & McDonald (in press) as a group of people who share a concern, a set of problems, or a passion about a topic and who deepen their knowledge and expertise in this area by interacting on an ongoing basis. This concept of community of practice has found a number of practical applications in business, organizational design, government, higher education, professional associations, development projects, and civic life which all use the combination of the three elements that constitute a CoP (McDonald & Star, 2006; Wenger et al., 2002). These elements centre around the domain, the community and the practice. The domain implies that a CoP is not merely a club of friends or a network of connections between people; it has an identity defined by a shared domain of interest. Community suggests that in pursuing a common interest in their domain, members engage in joint activities and discussions, help each other, and share information. The third element, practice, situates a CoP as not merely a community of interested people, but as members of a community of practitioners. They develop a shared repertoire of resources: experiences, stories, tools, and ways of addressing recurring problems - in short, a shared practice.\nOur EfS CoP was established in September 2011 as a strategic initiative in the Division of the Deputy Vice-Chancellor Student and Education and the Tasmanian Institute of Learning and Teaching, to bring together staff and the wider community with the goal of integrating sustainability as a core focus of the university curriculum, research activities, operations and community engagement. In less than one year, the CoP had grown to over sixty voluntary members, including students and academic and professional/operational staff from most faculties and departments across the many campuses. Members have significant skills and experience in undertaking research, developing curricula, managing multi-stakeholder projects and global and community engagement activities.\nThis chapter describes the establishment of an institution-wide CoP for integrating EfS across the broader university including curriculum, research, operations and community. It provides a description of the key milestones achieved from 2011 to 2013. It documents the journey of the CoP through the phases from initiation to maturation and ongoing regeneration. The challenges and achievements of the journey are discussed. It looks at the role of the CoP in establishing the current breadth of perspectives on EfS at our university, in documenting existing initiatives, and in promoting a university-wide conversation about the goal of integrating sustainability across the curriculum and into the broader community.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1797529"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8264679312705994,"wiki_prob":0.8264679312705994,"text":"Misogyny in action in Ireland\nTuesday 29 September 2020 Blog\nWith the Law Commission of England and Wales’ announcement of a public consultation into hate crime, the public will have a chance to have their say on whether misogyny should be considered a hate crime.\nIreland may provide a chance to see this in practice beforehand as our police force, An Garda Síochána, has confirmed that one of the nine strands of diversity in proposed hate crime legislation is “gender” along with age, disability, race, colour, nationality, ethnicity, religion and sexual orientation. The Garda press office has confirmed that “gender” includes sex.\nMisogyny in action\nThe charity Citizens UK was reported earlier this month as saying that women were three times more likely than men to experience threats and acts of sexual violence and assault.\nPhilip Grindell, chief executive of threat management consultancy Defuse Global, is reported as saying “My personal view is misogyny should be a hate crime – women are being disproportionately targeted on the basis of their gender.”\nWomen in particular are also being targeted over gender ideology and have been forced out of jobs, de-platformed and subjected to threats and abuse for having the temerity to defend ourselves as a sex with our own rights.\nExisting law in Ireland\nIrish law prohibits certain forms of threatening, abusive or insulting conduct that are intended or likely to stir up hatred against a group of persons on account of certain characteristics. These characteristics are race, colour, nationality, religion, ethnic or national origins, membership of the Travelling Community and sexual orientation, under the Prohibition of Incitement to Hatred Act 1989 Act.\nWe don’t currently have specific legislation dealing with hate crime, although a hate motive is an aggravating factor that judges can take into account (on a non-statutory basis) at sentencing for any criminal offence according to our Department of Justice and Equality. According to the Irish Examiner newspaper, Garda figures show there were 342 reported incidents of hate crime in 2018, compared to 323 in 2017 and 290 in 2016. These in turn compared to 164 incidents in 2015, 115 in 2014 and 112 in 2013.\nShortly before last Christmas, the Gardai produced a Diversity and Integration Strategy 2019-2021 in which hate crime is defined as “Any criminal offence which is perceived by the victim or any other person to, in whole or in part, be motivated by hostility or prejudice, based on actual or perceived age, disability, race, colour, nationality, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation or gender.”\nThere is also a category of “Hate Incidents – (Non Crime)” defined as “Any non-crime incident which is perceived by any person to, in whole or in part, be motivated by hostility or prejudice,” based on the same nine categories of diversity.\nAccording to the Gardai “gender” is defined as including “gender identity, transgender, intersex, gender expression and gender exploration.” Seeking clarification as to whether or not “gender” includes sex “i.e. a criminal offence or non-crime incident motivated in whole or in part by hostility or prejudice to a woman (born female) because of her sex?” the Gardai confirmed that “’Gender’ includes sex.”\n“The definition was constructed after a process of research, consultation and consideration of other jurisdictions,” the Gardai explained as to where the definition of gender was obtained and why it includes “intersex”.\nThose who actually have Differences of Sex Development (DSDs, formerly known as “intersex”) however have repeatedly pointed out that their medical conditions have nothing to do with gender identity and shouldn’t be conflated with it.\nThe Gardai say that “The production of this strategy coincides with the introduction by An Garda Síochána of a `working definition of hate crime`to ensure that our Policing Plan commitment of delivering a victim-centred policing service, focussed on keeping people safe, protecting the most vulnerable and providing a consistently high standard of service is met.”\nWhen it comes to actual crimes misogyny would appear to be a factor in the disproportionate number of sexual offences committed against women.\nAccording to our Central Statistics Office, 89% of victims of sexual violence crimes reported in 2018 where the crime occurred within one year of its reporting were females. (The number of male victims of recent crimes reported was significantly lower (192 males, compared to 1,562 females) but within this cohort, the male victim was under 18 years at the time of the offence in over half the cases.)\nSexual offences also had the lowest detection rate at 11% compared with homicide and related offences at 75% and controlled drug offences the highest at 85% in 2018.\nIreland’s self-id legislation\nIn 2015 Ireland’s legislators passed a self-id Gender Recognition Act permitting men (and women) to fill out a form and declare themselves to be of the opposite gender:\n“Once a Gender Recognition Certificate is issued, the gender of the person named on the certificate becomes for all purposes the preferred gender from that date forward.\nAccordingly, if the preferred gender is the male gender the person’s sex becomes that of a man, and if it is the female gender the person’s sex becomes that of a woman.”\nWomen in particular are also being targeted over gender ideology\nWhat could be more misogynistic than to deny women the truth of our biological definition by including men in the definition of women, to erase our name by saying “people get cervical cancer”; to allow men into women’s hitherto private spaces of toilets and changing rooms, sports, prison, political representation and awards? To do so shows a deep level of disrespect for women and a complete disregard for our fear of a male body in a private or confined space where we would not expect to be made vulnerable and at risk of being assaulted.\nMisogyny is defined as “a hatred of women”. Expressing the view that “transwomen are women” clearly displays hostility or prejudice towards women as a sex so it could perhaps be argued to fit the definition of a non-crime hate incident under the Gardai’s proposals.\nA hate speech public consultation was held late last year with around 3,800 responses including some 175 detailed written responses. The Department of Justice and Equality was reported in February as saying that draft laws to deal with hate crime and hate speech would be published later in spring. Two months ago the Department said that is was “working as a priority” to develop the new legislation\nJill Nesbitt is a former journalist who has worked freelance and on the staff of The Irish Times, as a researcher on The Consumer Show for RTE, Ireland’s national broadcaster, and more recently on news stories for The Sunday Times and The Times (Ireland editions).\nTo submit a response to the Law Commission consultation on hate crime law, visit: https://consult.justice.gov.uk/law-commission/hate-crime/\nClick here to subscribe to Fair Cop News to receive the latest campaign updates, blogs and Fair Cop news coverage.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line289923"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.565331220626831,"wiki_prob":0.43466877937316895,"text":"US university president poses with 'suicide bomber'\nhttp://www.michaelfreund.org/9124/us-university-president-poses-with-suicide-bomber\nTalkback quota full; click here to respond\nThe president of one of the leading universities in the United States last week posed for photographs with a student dressed as a suicide bomber, The Jerusalem Post has learned.\nIn copies of photos obtained by the Post, University of Pennsylvania president Dr. Amy Gutmann is seen standing with engineering student Saad Saadi at the annual Halloween costume party held at the president's home.\nSaadi is seen with a keffiyeh around his head, a toy Kalashnikov rifle in hand and six plastic sticks of dynamite strapped to his chest. Gutmann beams alongside him, dressed as Glinda, the Good Witch of the North, a character from L. Frank Baum's novel The Wizard of Oz.\nGutmann, who is herself Jewish, was inaugurated as university president in 2004. Her father, Kurt, fled Nazi Germany with his family in 1934.\nIn other photos taken at Gutmann's party that evening, Saadi can be seen carrying out a series of mock hostage executions, evoking images reminiscent of the series of abductions and murders of Westerners in Iraq in 2004.\nIn one instance, Saadi stands over a fellow student crouched on the ground, and points a gun at her head while reciting verses from the Koran.\nIn another image, Saadi poses with an unidentified child as he points Saadi's toy gun at the camera.\nThe day after the party, Saadi was quoted in the Daily Pennsylvanian, the campus newspaper, as saying that he attended Gutmann's affair dressed as a \"freedom martyr.\"\nFounded in 1751 by Benjamin Franklin, the University of Pennsylvania is based in Philadelphia and has over 23,000 students, including a large percentage of Jews. It consistently ranks among the top 10 schools of higher education in the country, and is a member of the prestigious Ivy League.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line863311"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5670928359031677,"wiki_prob":0.5670928359031677,"text":"Nature/\nClimate/\nWritten by Katie Burton\nI was planning for queues – I could not have been more prepared for queues given reports of chaos at the summit. Which is possibly why I was pleasantly surprised by today’s COP26 experience. After a pleasant sunny morning stroll along the Clyde, I joined the scrum, but given that this year’s summit features record turnout (I was one of 3,781 journalists signed up to attend), the resulting amble into the venue wasn’t unreasonable. Perhaps I’m just easy-going.\nSign up for the Geographical COP26 newsletter!\nCOP26 is set to be the most important climate conference since the Paris Agreement was signed in 2015. With live reporting from Glasgow every day of the conference and plenty of extra analysis, get all the COP content you need from Geographical.\nA few odd moments ensued – attendants outside a plenary session led by Mark Carney seemed somewhat bemused as to why journalists would want to gain entry. That aside, if you turned up early enough, you could wangle your way into most of the open events and the queue for an Irn Bru at lunch was no longer than ten minutes. Clearly there’s something to be said for only turning up when all the world leaders have left.\nThat said, there were plenty of big names up on podiums throughout finance day. Ex-governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, chaired several sessions and led on the big headline of the day: his coalition of international financial companies signed up to tackle climate change (The Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero – Gfanz) controls up to $130tn - ‘more than enough’ to get the world to net zero. Gfanz is made up of more than 450 banks, insurers and asset managers across 45 countries which together have around 40% of the world’s assets on their books. Participants include Santander, Bank of America and HSBC.\nThis matters, because transitioning economies away from fossil fuels and helping developing countries to build sustainable, renewable energy systems is going to cost a hell of lot. Carney says it will take $100tn. In short, finance is absolutely essential if we are to come anywhere close to net zero.\n$130tn was the ear worm of the day – you couldn’t escape it. The idea that we now have the ‘plumbing’ necessary to move climate change to the forefront of all financial decisions was also oft repeated. There was a sense that a real shift is occurring in the financial world. Janet Yellen, US secretary of the treasury, made the point that it has historically been uncommon for finance ministers to attend COPs – this was her first. It seems fairly extraordinary that the notion of money being important for climate change is only just gaining recognition – but better late than never.\nListen on however and it appears that the ‘plumbing’ needs significant work. Aside from the fact that the $130tn itself is heavily debated, it is also far from clear how it will be deployed. ‘The money isn’t the problem,’ said numerous people – the problem is getting it where it needs to be, in particular to green and renewable energy projects in developing countries and emerging markets. Rachel Kyte, a former World Bank Group president and former vice president at the International Finance Corporation told me as much in a pre-COP interview: ‘There are so many companies out there doing amazing things, but they are fighting extremely hard to get access to capital. On the other hand, we’ve got trillions of dollars divesting from fossil fuels; we’ve got pension funds all over the world. So we have to take the capital being freed up and connect it to the need. That has always been difficult and that’s still a big part of the stumbling block.’\nThere was a huge amount of emphasis on linking up public and private finance. Sessions tended to feature speakers from both sides. The point was made that public money alone won’t be enough (usually by private investors); the point was made that private finance alone won’t be enough (usually by central bankers).\nPrivate sector actors from investment funds were keen to demonstrate the increase and strong performance of ESG funds (investments that, in theory, align with strong environmental, social and governance standards) but frequently went on to add that they ultimately have a duty to their investors to secure a good return. Talk of assistance from central banks and multilateral development banks (such as the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development and the Asian Development Bank) to help ‘de-risk’ investments in emerging markets therefore came up a great deal.\nLarry Fink, CEO of asset manager Blackrock, started his speech this morning by imagining the $130tn deployed. ‘Let’s imagine what that does to global economies. Let’s imagine what it could do for jobs, what it can do for the entire world.’ However, he went on to say that ‘deploying [it] is going to be far harder than investing in a normal bond, public equity or treasury bond. We need a system in which we can rapidly deploy that capital to the developing world – and there’s not a system today that can do that.’ In short, funds can’t just invest their clients’ pension money in risky emerging-market projects willy-nilly. Not without help anyway.\nIn the afternoon, Rishi Sunak bounced onto the stage to reiterate the idea that ‘the challenge now is not the finance – we need to match that finance with bankable, viable projects,’ but David Malpass, president of the World Bank Group, who spoke shortly after, presented a much more sobering view. He noted that there are nowhere near enough ‘bankable’ green projects around the world (i.e. those likely to provide a return on investment) for us to reach net zero. What’s needed therefore, is a channelling mechanism for private sector money that won’t necessarily be returned. It all comes back to greater collaboration between public and private.\nThe good news is that such a system could emerge. Blackrock has announced a new public-private finance vehicle worth $500bn called the Climate Finance Partnership, which it hopes will set a precedent for governments and private companies teaming up to mobilise capital in emerging markets. 'It’s essential that the private and public sector come together to share the risks of addressing sustainability in the emerging world,’ Fink said.\nAt a closed-door meeting of finance ministers, the UK also reportedly committed £576 million for a package of initiatives to mobilise finance into emerging markets and developing economies.\nIt wasn’t easy to suss out concrete examples of this type of public-private finance in action – at least not when it comes to green projects in the developing world – but Jon Johnsen, CEO of Danish pension fund PKA, provided one when he spoke about the firm’s investment into the largest wind farm in Africa, based in Kenya. He explained that the investment worked because the Danish central bank agreed to take on some of the initial risk, allowing the fund to then scale up its offering. ‘It’s a real example of what you can do if you work together.’\nSuch schemes, along with a whole host of new, creative financial tools, will prove essential if the fabled $130tn is ever to find good home.\nCOP-WATCH: The Glasgow Climate Pact – a step in the right direction, but don't call it historic\nin Climate\nBy Marco Magrini\nCOP26 is over and the Glasgow Climate Pact is here\nCOP-WATCH: a historic but shaky draft agreement\nThe first COP26 draft agreement has been released\nThe expanded view: Best books and documentaries on climate change for COP26\nThe expanded view on climate change\nCOP-WATCH: Can the carbon markets be made to work?\nMarco Magrini explores the complex issue of carbon markets –…\nCOP-WATCH: Youth day at COP26 – Welcome to the greenwash festival\nThe youth found marching outside the COP26 conference in Glasgow…\nMore articles in NATURE...\nXavi Bou's artistic visions of flight beguile the eye\nHydropower is considered essential if the world is to reach…\nAcross the globe, the diversity of language overlaps with that of the natural world\nAn overlap between populations of grizzly bears and Indigenous groups…\nClimate change is having a huge impact on the oceans,…\nCOP-WATCH: COP26 limps to a close as new draft agreement contains much 'urging' but little 'mandating'\nThe world waits for COP to come to an official…\nCOP-WATCH: Energy day at COP26 — Can we really consign coal to history?\nEnergy day at COP26 was all about coal. Marco Magrini…\nWhy clouds make modelling climate change so complicated\nThe world is reliant on the climate models that forecast…\nClimate leaders of the Global South: the scientists, politicians and activists tackling the crisis at home\nThe Global South has contributed very little to the world…\nGeographical editor, Katie Burton, spends the day at COP26: finance…\nCOP-WATCH: Day three at COP26 – Slashing methane, halting deforestation and big finance for clean tech\nMarco Magrini's analysis of day three at COP26\nHolding to account: The rising power of climate litigation\nLawyers are using the power of the courts to challenge…\nCOP-WATCH: Day two at COP26 – World leaders speak, India makes a pledge, everyone talks money\nMarco Magrini sums up the action from day two of…\nThe expert climate view from the world's most vulnerable nations: Small island states\nCOP has been described as the 'best last chance' to…\nOpinion: Scotland, the host of COP26, is taking a lead on climate change\nMike Robinson, chief executive of the Royal Scottish Geographical Society…\nTwo China experts on whether the world's largest emitter of CO2 can and will turn the tide\nWill China's climate pledges be enough to achieve Xi Jinping's…","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line246438"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8291842937469482,"wiki_prob":0.8291842937469482,"text":"Has buscado: +Catalan language wikipedia Hemos resaltado las palabras coincidentes que aparecen en la página que está a continuación.\nConstructed scripts\nMultilingual Pages\nCatalan (català)\nCatalan is a Romance language spoken by about 9.5 million people. It is the official language of Andorra and an official language, along with Spanish, in Catalonia (Catalunya), Valencia (Comunitat Valenciana) and the Balearic Islands (Illes Balears). It is also spoken in parts of Aragon and Murcia, Pyrénées-Orientales in southern France, and in the Sardinian city of Alghero (l'Alguer)\nThe language of Valencia is known as Valencian, which some belief is a separate language, however most linguists view it as a variety of Catalan. The Acadèmia Valenciana de la Llengua (AVL) consider Catalan and Valencian to be two names for the same language.\nCatalan at a glance\nNative name: català [kətəˈɫa/kataˈɫa]\nLanguage family: Indo-European, Italic, Romance, Western, Gallo-Romance, Occitano-Romance\nNumber of speakers: c. 9.5 million\nSpoken in: Andorra, southern France, north east Spain, the Balearic Islands, Alghero in Sardinia, Italy\nFirst written: 11th century\nWriting system: Latin script\nStatus: official language in Andorra and in Catalonia, Valencia and the Balearic Islands in Spain. Recognised minority language in Pyrénées-Orientales in France, in Aragon in Spain, and in Alghero in Sardinia in Italy.\nCatalan appeared as a distinct language during the 10th and 11th centuries. During the 12th century, Catalan began to appear in writing in scientific, philosophical, financial, religious, legal, literary and historical documents. At that time, Latin and Provençal were the preferred languages for literary and philosophical texts.\nAfter the War of the Spanish Succession (1705-1715), Philip V abolished all the government institutions then existing in Catalonia and implemented Spanish laws. Catalan went through various periods of prohibition and repression.\nIn the 19th century, a period of economic, cultural and national recovery began, known as the Renaixença (Renaissance). Catalan was reborn as the language of literary culture through the Jocs Florals (Floral Games - a poetry contest) and through distinguished figures such as Jacint Verdaguer, Narcís Oller and Àngel Guimerà.\nThe Renaixença raised awareness of the lack of unity in the use of the language (there was no model for a common written language) and of the need to draw up rules on spelling. The founding of the Institut d'Estudis Catalans (Institute of Catalan Studies) in 1907 led to the language being codified through the publication of Normes ortogràfiques (Spelling Rules) in 1913, the Diccionari ortogràfic (Spelling Dictionary) in 1917, and the Gramàtica catalana (Catalan Grammar) by Pompeu Fabra in 1918.\nDuring the first 30 years of the 20th century, Catalonia went through a period of political fervour, culminating in the recovery of a degree of political power in the Generalitat (the Government of Catalonia) during the 1930s. During the Second Republic (1931-1939), Catalan was restored to its official language status, which it had lost in the 18th century. However, this promising future was checked by the Civil War and its consequences. The use of Catalan in public was forbidden and the language retreated into the home.\nEver since the restoration of democratic institutions, there has been a process to re-establish the use of Catalan. It is now a co-official language, along with Spanish, in Catalonia and the Balearic Islands, and is widely used an everyday language throughout Catalonia, Valencia, Andorrra and the Balearic Islands. Catalan is used as a medium of instruction in many schools. It is also used extensively in the media and in government.\nCatalan alphabet\nHear the Catalan alphabet with example words:\nCatalan pronunciation\nA and E = [ə] if unstressed in eastern dialects.\nC = [s] before i or e, and [k] elsewhere\nG = [ʤ~ʒ] before i or e, and [g~ɣ] elsewhere.\nGU = [g] before i or e, and [gw] elsewhere\nFinal IG is pronunced [it͡ʃ] after a consonant, and [t͡ʃ] after a vowel.\nI = [i̯] before vowels, and [i] elsewhere\nO = [u] if unstressed in eastern dialects, except in most of parts of Majorca.\nLl = [ʎ] in western dialects and [j] in eastern dialects.\nL·l officially = [lː], but is often pronounced [l]\nFinal R is silent, except in most parts of Valencia.\nU = [u̯] before vowels, and [u] elsewhere\nV = [v] in Balearic, Alghero and in some parts of Valencia.\nX = [t͡ʃ] in western dialects and [ʃ] in eastern dialects.\nK W and Y appear only in loan words\nDownload an alphabet chart for Catalan (Excel)\nSome information provided by Michael Peter Füstumum and based on http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-OqUeLz0Tg\nTots els éssers humans neixen lliures i iguals en dignitat i en drets. Són dotats de raó i de consciència, i han de comportar-se fraternalment els uns amb els altres.\nA recording of this text by Sergi Giménez Palomo from Barcelona\n(Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights)\nSample videos in and about Catalan\nInformation about Catalan | Phrases | Numbers | Family words | Time | Tongue twisters | Tower of Babel | Catalan learning materials\nLearn Catalan with Glossika\nLearn Catalan\nShipping time world-\nwide is typically 6 days.\nAdd to cart Try it for free\nInformation about Catalan\nhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan_language\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalan_orthography\nhttp://ca.wikipedia.org/wiki/Català\nhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/european_languages/\nlanguages/catalan.shtml\nhttp://www.orbilat.com/Languages/Catalan/Catalan.html\nInformation about Balearic varieties of Catalan\nhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balearic_dialect\nhttp://mymenorcavilla.co.uk/the-minorcan-dialect-and-how-it-differs-from-mainstream-spanish/\nOnline Catalan courses\nhttp://www.parla.cat\nhttps://www.loecsen.com/en/learn-catalan\nhttps://www.duolingo.com/enroll/ca/es/Learn-Catalan\nhttps://polymath.org/catalan.php\nhttps://www.101languages.net/catalan/\nCatalan phrases\nhttps://ilovelanguages.org/catalan_phrases.php\nhttps://ielanguages.com/catalan.html\nhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/languages/other/quickfix/catalan.shtml\nhttp://mylanguages.org/catalan_phrases.php\nhttps://wikitravel.org/en/Catalan_phrasebook\nGRup Enciclopèdia Catalana\nhttp://www.grec.net\nOnline Catalan dictionaries\nhttp://www.catalandictionary.org\nhttp://diccionaris.cat\nhttp://www.diccionarios.com\nhttp://termcat.cat\nhttp://hyperdic.net\nhttps://sinonims.com\nOnline radio in Catalan\nhttp://www.catradio.es\nhttp://www.rac1.org\nOnline Catalan news\nhttp://www.elpuntavui.cat\nhttp://www.vilaweb.cat\nhttp://www.ara.cat\nEl diari electrònic de referència en català\nhttp://www.e-noticies.com\nLa literatura catalana a internet\nhttp://lletra.uoc.edu\nhttps://www.contesencatala.com/\nInstitut Ramon Llull (the official institution representing Catalan culture and language abroad): http://www.llull.cat\nSoftcatalà - software in Catalan\nhttp://www.softcatala.org\nAragonese, Aranese, Aromanian, Asturian, Catalan, Corsican, Dalmatian, Emilian-Romagnol, Extremaduran, Fala, Franco-Provençal, French, Friulian, Galician, Gallo, Gascon, Genoese, Guernésiais, Istro-Romanian, Istriot, Italian, Jèrriais, Ladino, Ladin, Ligurian, Lombard, Lorrain, Megleno-Romanian, Mirandese, Moldovan, Monégasque, Mozarabic, Neapolitan, Occitan, Occitan (Auvergnat), Occitan (Languedocien), Occitan (Limousin), Occitan (Provençal), Picard, Piedmontese, Portuguese, Romanian, Romansh, Sardinian, Sicilian, Spanish, Valencian, Venetian, Walloon\nLanguages written with the Latin alphabet\nPage last modified: 28.10.21\nWhy not share this page:\nIf you like this site and find it useful, you can support it by making a donation via PayPal or Patreon, or by contributing in other ways. Omniglot is how I make my living.\nIf you need to type in many different languages, the Q International Keyboard can help. It enables you to type almost any language that uses the Latin, Cyrillic or Greek alphabets, and is free.\nNote: all links on this site to Amazon.com , Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.fr are affiliate links. This means I earn a commission if you click on any of them and buy something. So by clicking on these links you can help to support this site.\nLearn languages quickly\nOne-to-one Chinese lessons\nLearn Mandarin Chinese today!\nLearn languages with Varsity Tutors\nDaily bite-size stories in Mandarin\nLearn a new language today!\nLearn languages on iTalki\nJoin shareasale.com, Earn Cash!\nWriting systems\nCon-scripts\nCopyright © 1998–2022 Simon Ager | Email: | Hosted by Kualo","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line639331"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5812068581581116,"wiki_prob":0.4187931418418884,"text":"International Women’s Day March Takes Over Cabot Square\n“Women United Will Never Be Defeated!”\nNewsSheena Macmillan — Published March 8, 2020\nPhoto Sheena Macmillan\nThis International Women’s Day, Women of Diverse Origins organized the annual women’s march, something they have done since 2002.\nHundreds of people flooded Cabot Square, brandishing brightly coloured posters and flags from their home countries.\nProtests identical to this one happen globally on International Women’s Day, and serves to remind the public that the fight for equality is not over yet.\nNima Machouf, from the Association des femmes iraniennes de Montréal, spoke on women’s growing involvement in Iran’s public sphere. “The women are the ones in university, in the workforce, and at the protests,” she said.\nSeveral women have been imprisoned in Iran for protesting the country’s mandatory veil law. They protest to abolish the law to make the veil voluntary, not compulsory.\n“It should be a choice,” said Machouf. “If they want to wear the veil, they can, and if they don’t, they shouldn’t.”\n“We’re all in the same boat,” said Claudia Martinez from Chili en résistance jusqu’à la dignité.\nEach organization represented at the march—though from different corners of the world—had more things in common than one might expect. Women from Venezuela, Chile, Iran, Palestine, Lebanon, the Philippines, Mexico, and members of various Indigenous communities marched together.\nWhile their struggles might not look the same, they stand united and in solidarity with one another, said Marlene Hale, member of the Wet’suwet’en nation.\n“We have shut down Canada,” Hale said, referring to the wave of solidarity protests and train blockades calling attention to Wet’suwet’en land being used for the Trans Mountain Pipeline.\nProtesters chanted “So-so-so, solidarité, avec, avec, avec la Palestine,” and “Women united will never be defeated.”\nChilean women wore ornate masks, covering their entire heads with red fabric and brightly coloured beads. Led by Martinez, they performed a dance called “There’s Violence on Your Street.” They chanted as they stuck their arms forward, pointing at the metaphorical people oppressing them.\nBenedicte Carole Ze, from the Association des travailleurs et travailleuses d’agences de placement, spoke on the unjust working conditions she faced after first immigrating from Cameroon to Montreal. She regularly worked 10 to 12 hour days, doing the jobs of three people at once. After two years of working without time off, her request for two weeks vacation was denied.\n“If we’re good enough to work, we’re good enough to stay,” she said, about the numerous temporary workers who come to Montreal hoping to start a life here.\n“Our women are dying […] because of our present regime,” said Thelma Castro, founder of PINAY, a Filipino women’s organization.\nThe president of the Philippines, Rodrigo Duterte, has urged members of the public to kill people addicted to drugs to control the country’s drug problem. According to Castro, he’s doing more than just that—he’s killing the country’s activists as well.\n“The defenders of human rights, women activists, lawyers, and anybody who is working with the people are either jailed, disappeared, or harassed.”\nThese women and their families leave the Philippines to escape the hostile situation there, only to be racially profiled when they arrive in Canada, explained Castro.\nAfter departing from Cabot Square, protesters stopped in front of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police’s office before moving to the Israeli consulate. From there, protesters marched down Ste. Catherine with music blasting from speakers propped up in the back of a pick-up truck.\nSheena Macmillan is The Link's Editor-in-Chief. She was vol. 41 and 40's news editor. Niall was her favourite member of One Direction.\nFollow @seenamac\nInternational Women’s Day March Happening This Sunday\nKaity Brady – March 6, 2020\nEditorial: Women of Colour Need a Seat at the Table\nThe Link – March 10, 2020\nProtesters chant ‘Enough is enough’ to denounce domestic violence\nAngelica Rameau-Galette – April 2, 2021\nVigil honouring Rebekah Love Harry sheds light on domestic abuse problem in Quebec\nReina Ephrahim – April 4, 2021","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1574573"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8320153951644897,"wiki_prob":0.8320153951644897,"text":"Audio recording of the call with ANZ that financially crippled cancer-stricken mother\nSouth Australian mother Danielle Richardson is dying from cancer and has just months to live.\nBut instead of spending her precious time with her family, they have been embroiled in a bitter dispute with the ANZ bank.\nBack in 2016, Danielle got a call from a representative at the bank which ended up with her opening a super account with ANZ.\nDanielle and Brenton say this ordeal has put them \"through hell\" (A Current Affair)\nDanielle didn't know it at the time, but the consequences of that call would end up putting Danielle and her family \"through hell\".\nJust shy of her 50th birthday, the mother-of-two struggles to find the words to describe the ordeal. Nine months ago, Danielle was diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumour.\nThe news devastated the family. \"It's the sort of thing you don't wish on your worst enemy,\" Danielle's husband Brenton told A Current Affair. \"This is so hard.\"\nThe terrible situation was made worse though when Danielle and her husband tried to access Danielle's life cover they'd held for several years. \"We rang up and we went to claim,\" husband Brenton explains, \"and yeah, they said it wasn't there, it wasn't activated.\"\nDanielle and her husband Brenton have been inseparable since they married 27 years ago (A Current Affair)\nUnbeknownst to the Richardsons, Danielle had lost her life insurance after a call with the ANZ bank.\nDanielle received the call back in 2016, while she was working for the Save The Children charity.\nDanielle is at work when she receives the call and explains to the ANZ representative that she is driving between meetings. A Current Affair has obtained the damning audio recording.\n\"I'm just at work though at the moment,\" Danielle tells the telemarketer.\n\"Okay no problem, letting you know it does take between five to ten minutes of your time, so it's pretty straight forward,\" the ANZ representative responds, pushing to keep Danielle on the line.\nDanielle Richardson's daughter says she loves her mothers smile and laugh (A Current Affair)\n\"So, we'll be as quick as possible,\" the telemarketer continues. \"I don't have any info in front of me though,\" says Danielle.\n\"That's alright, you don't need anything in front of you.\" The call ends up lasting more than 30 minutes, during which time Danielle is clearly distracted and confused.\nAt one point during the call, Danielle actually asks the ANZ representative: \"So what if I, if I die, what would the family get?\"\nShe also tells the telemarketer that she has life insurance with another company. \"No problem… absolutely fine, no worries,\" the representative tells her.\nIn the end, she agrees to open a new super account with the ANZ.\nDanielle doesn't fully understand though that if she transfers her super, she'll lose the death cover attached to her old accounts. It is something the bank never explains during the call.\nThe warning that the new account could impact existing life insurance appears in the fine print of the bank's welcome letter, at the bottom of the second page. (A Current Affair)\n\"I just feel betrayed... I was an advocate for them [ANZ] and I basically was a salesman for them. I said, look Danielle, go with these guys, everything's great,\" husband Brenton says.\nThe Richardson family has now enlisted the help of Michael Fabbro from Erza Legal, who says he was gobsmacked when he heard the phone recording.\n\"I was really shocked that the pressure had been applied in a situation where Danielle was clearly distracted, didn't have time,\" Lawyer Michael Fabbro tells A Current Affair.\n\"It's poor, I think it's negligent, I think they had a real obligation to make sure that Danielle really understood what she was doing.\"\nFollowing the call, ANZ bank did sent a letter to the Richardson family warning them Danielle's new super account would impact her life insurance. But that warning is in the fine print of the bank's welcome letter, at the bottom of the second page.\n\"You will need to consider whether moving your money from your current fund will affect any insurance cover...\" the letter reads.\nThe ANZ also stands by the call to Danielle and claims they made it clear she was opting out of life insurance but could add it later. Their full statement appears below. Unfortunately, Danielle's prognosis isn't good. Her doctors predict her condition will only deteriorate as the weeks go by.\nDanielle and husband Brenton have been inseparable since they fell in love 27 years ago. (A Current Affair)\nHer only hope now a world away from the picturesque waters of Port Lincoln. In Japan researchers are trialing a revolutionary treatment. Trouble is the family just doesn't have the money to get there.\nWithout life insurance, Danielle's parents have had to pay the family's mortgage.\nDanielle's husband Brenton says he's already spent $60,000 on surgery, quitting his job to become Danielle's full-time carer.\nDanielle's previous death and disablement insurance totaled more than $600,000. A significant portion of which may have been paid out before she passed. \"I've had that achieved for a number of clients and it makes a significant difference to the way in which they can live out the balance of their lives,\" the family's lawyer Mr Fabbro says.\nA mother's anger\nCancer warning\n\"It's one thing that will help us, it really would,\" Brenton says. \"The next three months are going to be pretty, time to act now, the doctors told us Danielle had twelve to fourteen months to live, and we're nine months in.\"\nIn Danielle's hometown of Port Lincoln, the community have been rallying to support the family. Donna, who has been Danielle's best friend since grade four, launched the 'Smile for Danielle' fundraiser. It has raised more than $50,000.\nBut the goodwill from the community hasn't been echoed by the ANZ bank.\n\"I feel upset that they didn't treat us very well and didn't do the right thing,\" Danielle says. After nine months of difficult legal proceedings, the family are hoping their story will push ANZ to resolve their case.\n\"The whole thing's tough, it really is. But we remain hopeful,\" Brenton says.\nAn ANZ spokesman submitted the following statement to A Current Affair.\nANZ does not publicly discuss the specific details of our customers, however it is incredibly sad what this customer is currently going through and we sympathise with the pain the family must be enduring.\nWe have reviewed the matter thoroughly, including a tape of the phone call in question and the written correspondence that was sent following initial contact.\nIt is clear that the call was conducted at the request of the customer's husband.\nWe outlined the various insurance options on several occasions during the call to be sure the customer was clear about their circumstances, as we would on any call of this nature. In this case the customer advised they did not want life insurance as they already had it with another company.\nDuring the call we also made clear that even though the customer had opted out of life insurance, they could add it later by contacting us on the phone or online.\nAfter the call, we sent follow-up letters to the customer urging her to check her insurance cover with the following section included:\nCheck your insurance cover – if you haven't already done so\nInsurance isn't automatically transferred when you rollover. Any insurance in [previous super account] was not transferred and was cancelled when you rolled over. Please check your current cover meets your needs.\nWithout going into specifics, there was a period of more than 12 months between the call in question and the customer activating her superannuation account which provided ample time for them to review the details.\nOur correspondence with this customer and the establishment of their superannuation account followed strict internal guidelines and codes, and was also in line with the many laws that are necessary to govern superannuation and life insurance.\nWe have asked our independent Customer Advocate to review this case as a priority.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1725789"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8803330659866333,"wiki_prob":0.8803330659866333,"text":"Bloomington High School “The Frank”\n—-The basketball arena at Bloomington High School in Bloomington, Illinois, known as “The Frank”, bears more of resemblance to an airport hanger than 95% of the high school gyms in the state, Dec. 2021. (photo by Vincent D. Johnson).\nWhen Civic Pride & Design Mattered\nBloomington High School’s Robert Frank Sports Complex, commonly referred to as “The Frank”, is a holdover from the days when civic pride was often behind the design of the local high school’s gyms & football fields.\nThe Frank is the rare high school venue that has an interior and exterior aesthetic to it. The gentle curvature of the roof beams, that extend outside the building, to the curved floor to ceiling glass windows that line the north side of the facility, letting in natural light, but never direct sunlight. There’s even a beautiful symmetry between the conference championship banners and local sponsorship banners.\nBloomington High School’s Robert Frank Sports Complex, is as stunning to look at as it is functional, 1950s civic pride in full display. (Photo copyright of Vincent David Johnson)\nNatural light entering the arena can create a very unique light during a game. (photo by Vincent D. Johnson)\nA frosted glass wall on the south side of The Frank lets in some natural light, but not too much. Conference championship banners and sponsor banners mirror each other in a way that it’s not as tacky as it is in some gyms. (photo copyright of Vincent David Johnson)\nThis A Sports Arena, Not A Gym\nThere are few high school basketball courts in the state, or the country for that matter, that calling them a gym would be a disservice. The Frank truly deserves to be called a sports arena. Built in 1959 the building has a slight arch, with 10 large-metal I beams the protrude from the east & west sides of the building creating a sloping cantilever overhang.\nThe exterior of the Robert Frank Sports Complex at Bloomington High School, Illinois has a low profile as a majority of the seating and all of the court are below ground level. (Photo copyright of Vincent David Johnson)\nWith the playing surface below ground, all fans enter at ground level and head directly to seating in the upper section, or make their way down stairs at all four corners of the floor so they can sit court-side. A sliding wall is hidden away towards the south end of the main level. Both west and east sides can be turned into separate playing areas when the bleachers are retracted against the wall.\nStairs at all four corners of the arena lead to the court-side seating areas.\nIt wouldn’t make sense for a regulation game, but with the main level walls closed and bleachers retracted, warmups or practices could happen simultaneously with a game at The Frank. For the State Farm Classic basketball tournament one side was used as the hospitality room for officials, volunteers, & media.\nTrophy cases and a purple 8 foot wall are what greats you when you enter The Frank. That wall blocks out a view of the court so people don’t crowd the entrance area, but also is short enough to let in a lot of light from the wall of windows on the north side.\nThe Robert Frank Sports Complex at Bloomington High School in Bloomington, Illinois, also known as “The Frank”.\nFirst round girls basketball action between Rochester and Washington during The State Farm Classic at The Frank, Dec. 2021.\nView this list of best high school gyms in Illinois | See the gallery of other high school gyms","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1171400"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5230737924575806,"wiki_prob":0.5230737924575806,"text":"Home/ Free Essays/ Health/ Health Policy for Uninsured\nFree Health Policy for Uninsured Essay Sample\nGenerally, policies are the structural processes that determine the way the government acts on various matters that touch on the welfare of the citizenry. In the healthcare sector policies often, refer to the approaches that guide the government in the making of decisions concerning the provision of health care services for the citizens. The formulation of the health polices in the United States is generally governed through a sequence of actions that ultimately yield a workable policy framework. The policy framework is then integrated within the system of government so that it serves as the reference points for all future actions and plans of the sector. Generally, the processeses that determine the formulation of a policy include building of the agenda, the formulation of the policy, policy implementation, evaluation, and policy termination.\nThe agenda building stage in the policy making process usually begins with the need to deliberate on an existing or emergent problem. A certain issue or phenomena results and causes strain on the society, thus necessitating sections of the society to deliberate on the possible ways of mitigating the resultant adverse effects. One of the most sensitive issues in any society is the health care sector. It is also the most cost intensive sector. Therefore, this sector will demand a multi-spectral approach that would address it in accordance with the complex needs of the society.\nIn the United States, the issue of insurance cover for the citizenry has often yielded debates regarding the best possible approach. The agenda building stage for the health care sector often involves the deliberation on the balance between the costs and the provision of quality health care services to the citizens. This provision is considered a fundamental basic right. Over the years, the agenda building stage has influenced varying perspectives regarding the best possible approach that would offer appropriate balance between care and costs.\nThe formulation and adoption stage in the policymaking process entails the designing of some specific approach that would constitute the structures and mechanics of addressing the identified matter or problem. Various institutions may be involved in the formulation and adoption stage of the policy. These institutions may include lobby groups, courts and congress. At this stage, the various organs and institutions that are engaged in the process of formulating and adopting the policy tend to adopt contradictory approaches that suit their specific interests. At the advanced stage of the process, a bill may be presented before Congress. Alternatively, a specific regulatory agency may assume the task of drafting the proposed laws. These processes generally prepare the ground for the adoption of the policy.\nThe final adoption or rejection of the policy will be determined by the decision of the Congress. The Congress may adopt or reject the bill. The passage of the bill would imply that the regulations and rules designed at the earlier stages become fully functional. However, the Supreme Court may intervene to determine the fate of the bill in case any contentious issues are brought before it for final determination. After the formulation and adoption of the policy, the next stage becomes its implementation. The implementation process of the policy is placed under the charge of specific bodies that lay down the structures and operational details that ensure the workability of the policy. This process usually involves bodies and agencies that have been known to deliberate on adoption processes of the policy. The earlier stages of adoption and formulation do not provide the mechanics of the implementation of the policy.\nGenerally, this process would involve the setting up on rules and procedures that would customize the policy. Usually, the process would entail the need for integrating the details of the policy within the existing framework and systems in a way that would not yield operational conflicts. Sometimes the implementation process turns out to be problematic due to the mismatch between the details of the policy and the existing framework where it needs to be absorbed. It is because of this reason that sufficient deliberation and positive criticism need to precede the adoption process in order to streamline it within the existing structures. A second challenge that often faces the implementation process of the bill concerns the compliance levels by the stakeholders.\nStakeholders may tend to adopt approaches that are contrary to the letter and spirit of the policy. Certain sections of the society may adopt critical approaches to the policy thus rendering its workability problematic. Lobbyists, interest groups, and political opponents may pose compliance problems at the implementation stage of the policy. However, the streamlining of the policy into the official frameworks of the government makes it obligatory for everybody across the board to adopt its requirements and specifications. It becomes binding as long as no group or individual challenges its legitimacy before the Supreme Court.\nThe next stage after the implementation stage of the policy is the evaluation and termination stage. The evaluation of the policy is anchored on the need to determine the levels of the policy’s efficacy in line with the specific objectives, for which the bill was originally designed to address. The evaluation of the bill is usually conducted within the broad concept of the cost-benefit analysis. Stakeholders will tend to be critical of the bill if the evaluation reveals that the cost of maintaining the policy is not commensurate with the attendant benefits. However, evaluation stages of policies are often faced with the challenges of method, because different methods and approaches will yield contradictory perspectives regarding the efficacy of the bill.\nUsually, the merits of evaluating the policy are marred with vested interests from the political class, groups, and individuals with stakes in the policy. Health policies are some of the most divisive policies in the United States because of the conflicting perspectives between the government and insurance providers. The contention between these two parties is explained by the fact that the government will aim to include all its citizenry within the insurance umbrella, whereas the insurance groups would want policies that shield them from every possible risk or loss. The termination of policies is often a rare occurrence. However, certain developments may arise to make a particular policy obsolete or expensive. Generally, technological innovations may render certain policies problematic. When such situations arise, the policy makers will initiate debate that could lead to the eventual overhauling of the policy and replacing it with one that suits the interests of the stakeholders.\nPolicies may also be terminated due to political will. Politicians may assume office on the promise of bringing about specific changes in the healthcare sector. Alternatively, pressure groups may initiate campaigns that could culminate into the changing of certain policies, which they deem to be unproductive to certain interests. Certain policies may be made in such a way that they only require strategic revisions in different political or ideological dispensations. They could also be structured to align them with the fluid nature of social realities. Makers of policies often take precautionary measures to include flexible structures that would guarantee the survival of the policies in different political, ideological, and social realities. Policies that combine prevailing conditions and the likely scenarios tend to outlast those that are generally modeled on transient stimuli.\nPima Health System Health Nation\nHealth Nation\nMysterious Illnesses\nPima Health System\nOrganizational Stress","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1646529"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9022111296653748,"wiki_prob":0.9022111296653748,"text":"Mermaid Fairy Tales that Mothers Can Tell to Children\nJakarta – Reading fairy tales can be a useful routine for children, Mother. There are many fairy tales that we can tell our children before going to bed, such as the fairy tale of the Mermaid. The fairy tale of the Mermaid or The Little Mermaid was first written by Hans Christian Andersen in 1837. This fairy tale was later adapted into an American animated film in 1989. The story of the Mermaid is very interesting to tell to children because it can increase their imagination, Mother. Your little one will create a new underwater world to illustrate the storyline. Then what kind of fairy tale Mermaid can you tell your child? Come on, take a look at the following story, such as quoting the Stories to Grow By page! The Tale of the Mermaid and the Kind Prince It is told that in a very deep and wide sea, there lived a Sea King who ruled the underwater world. The king lived in a beautiful palace, made of blue coral with a shell roof that could be opened and closed. There the Sea King lived happily with his mother and four daughters. The four of them have a short age gap with each other. The King’s youngest daughter was named the Little Mermaid. Unlike her brothers, the Little Mermaid spends most of her time going to sunken ships that have fallen to the bottom of the sea. These ships held many treasures from the outside world, a world the Litte Mermaid had never known. While spending time on shipwrecks, the Little Mermaid often sings while organizing the collection of treasures he finds. He really likes to sing with other fish. Everyone knows that the Little Mermaid’s voice is the most beautiful there is. There was one rule made for the Little Mermaid and her sisters. When they are 15 years old, they can swim to the surface of the sea. The Little Mermaid was eagerly waiting for this moment because she was the last one in her family to be allowed to swim there. But because she was so curious, Little Mermaid made her grandmother tell her about life on land. “There are ships, cities and people up there,” said the grandmother. Mermaid Illustration/ Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto/totallyjamie Before long, the eldest sister turned 15 years old. She became the first princess to be allowed to rise to sea level. When he returned, he brought the story to his three younger siblings. He tells the story while resting on the soft white sand, looking at the sky and clear clouds, and the sunset turning golden red. He had even seen birds flying high above him. After that, it was the turn of the Little Mermaid’s second sister who swam to the surface after she was 15 years old. He tells of an iceberg floating in the sea and shining brightly. All the ships looked away from the iceberg, as if frightened and the iceberg looked uninhabited. The next story was brought by the Little Mermaid’s third sister. After returning from sea level, he told the story as he swam closer to the city gates. He heard human voices calling to one another, the sound of horses being pinned down on the road. This Little Mermaid’s third sister even heard music for the first time at sea level. All the stories shared by the three sisters made the Little Mermaid even more curious about the life above him. When he was 15 years old, he came to the surface to see for himself the story his brother was sharing. When it appeared above sea level, the Little Mermaid was next to a large ship. From his place, he could hear beautiful music and sailors dancing. They seemed to be laughing and having fun. Suddenly the Little Mermaid saw a handsome young man stepping off the deck of the ship. At the same time, the sound of fireworks rang out and the Little Mermaid approached. The young man seemed favored by the sailors. At that time, the Little Mermaid thought that he was a prince. “He must be a prince,” said the Little Mermaid. However, suddenly the party turned into a disaster. Big waves came followed by lightning and rainstorms. The ship was adrift in the ocean. Little Mermaid saw that the handsome prince earlier was the only one on the ship. He seemed to help the sailors who fell into the sea. Unfortunately, the handsome prince was also thrown and fell into the sea. Knowing that humans cannot live underwater, the Little Mermaid dives in and saves the prince. The Little Mermaid then swam to the surface and pulled the prince’s body to the shore. The Little Mermaid looked confused because the prince didn’t come to his senses and opened his eyes. “Is he dead?” asked the Little Mermaid in her heart. The Little Mermaid then sang a sad song. Suddenly, the prince started to move and opened his eyes. “Oh! Are you all right?” asked the Little Mermaid while touching the prince’s forehead. At the same time, the voices of several women appeared on the beach. The Little Mermaid immediately dived quickly so that her identity would not be exposed. Since then, the Little Mermaid never met the handsome and kind prince again. He returned home without saying anything to his brothers. Years later, the Little Mermaid still can’t forget the prince. She then told her grandmother and said she wanted to meet the handsome prince again. “My dear, you know that a Mermaid can’t walk on two legs! The only one who can do that is a Sea Witch. But of course it’s too dangerous to meet her,” said the grandmother to the Little Mermaid. Mermaid Illustration/ Photo: Getty Images/iStockphoto/totallyjamie Little Mermaid doesn’t listen to Grandma’s advice. He went to the far end of the sea to meet the Sea Witch. Hearing the Little Mermaid’s request, the Witch Laur gave a potion to give her two legs. The condition is, the Little Mermaid must throw away her melodious voice. In addition, the Sea Witch also said that the prince had to marry her if the Little Mermaid wanted to live. Her sweet voice won’t come back either. “If the prince marries someone else, you will die the next day and your voice will stay with me forever,” said the Sea Witch. The Little Mermaid agreed and immediately drank the potion from the Sea Witch. He passed out and woke up on the ground with two legs like a human. At that time, the Little Mermaid was found by her idol prince. He was invited to the prince’s palace and heard all the stories of his idol man. The next day was the royal feast. The prince took the Little Mermaid. The prince wanted the Little Mermaid by his side every day. The Little Mermaid thought the prince would surely fall in love with her and she still had hope of marrying the man with the beautiful voice she had saved. However, suddenly the King called the prince to and asked his son to choose a bride, a princess from a nearby country who came to the party. The prince’s heart was broken, and so was the Little Mermaid. Unbeknownst to the Little Mermaid, her voice has been transferred by the Sea Witch to the woman betrothed to the prince. The prince was amazed by the sound of the princess being betrothed and agreed to marry her. The Little Mermaid’s heart was breaking even more. The next day, the Little Mermaid went to sea and told her three brothers about the prince’s problem. Little Mermaid’s brothers told the father. Unfortunately, the Little Mermaid turns out to be held captive by a Sea Witch who wants the Sea King’s wand. Seeing the princess pressed, the Sea King agreed to give his scepter and kingdom to the Sea Witch. The Sea Witch then turned into a monster came to the wedding and made a mess. The Little Mermaid tried to save the prince until he was trapped by the monster’s tentacles. The Little Mermaid used the knife she was carrying to stab the monster’s chest. The prince then helped him by shooting arrows at the monster. The Sea Witch fell into the water and lost. At that moment, the Little Mermaid’s melodious voice returned again. The prince who heard the Little Mermaid’s true voice immediately realized that he had been misjudging all this time. The prince remembered the voice as the voice of the woman who helped him when the shipwrecked. At the same time, the princess who was the prince’s match came to attack because she didn’t accept the Little Mermaid’s presence. Suddenly, the Sea King came and again took his wand and helped the princess against the evil princess. The evil princess was defeated and the Sea King immediately waved his wand and lifted the Little Mermaid back to the ship. The prince came and hugged the Little Mermaid. “Now I know that you saved me first. Will you marry me?” asked the prince. The Little Mermaid answered ‘yes’ in her sweet voice. Both of them live happily. See also 3 benefits of storytelling to children, in the following video:\n[Gambas:Video Haibunda] (ank/som) .\nchild activityfairy talesfairytale\n5 HP Oppo AMOLED screens, recommendations for January 2022\n7 Portraits of Joe Taslim and His Wife, Praised Like a Couple of Korean Artists Bun","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line660068"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9884494543075562,"wiki_prob":0.9884494543075562,"text":"Utes football: Cornerback Justin Thomas not taking anything for granted\nBy Dirk Facer Apr 18, 2013, 8:10pm MDT\nShare All sharing options for: Utes football: Cornerback Justin Thomas not taking anything for granted\nJustin Thomas practices with the University of Utah football team in Salt Lake City, Thursday, April 18, 2013. Ravell Call, Deseret News\nJustin Thomas works to get free during University of Utah football practice in Salt Lake City, Thursday, April 18, 2013. Ravell Call, Deseret News\nJustin Thomas runs a punt return during University of Utah football practice in Salt Lake City, Thursday, April 18, 2013. Ravell Call, Deseret News\nSALT LAKE CITY — Although Justin Thomas is pleased to be on top of the depth chart at one of the cornerback spots, the redshirt freshman from Texas isn’t taking anything for granted as Utah closes out spring camp.\n“Everything is like temporary right now,” Thomas said. “Nothing’s locked in. So I’ve got to keep on working.”\nThe 21-year-old is especially eager to play in a game. It’s been awhile since he’s done so.\n“I’m really excited about it,” said Thomas, who wasn’t allowed to play for West Orange-Stark High School as a senior because he surpassed the University Interscholastic League’s maximum age mark. “I haven’t played a game in two years. I’m ready.”\nThe former four star-rated prep star spent his first season with the Utes as a redshirt while senior cornerbacks Ryan Lacy, Moe Lee and Reggie Topps completed their eligibility.\n“He’s very talented. He’s maybe the fastest kid on the team — certainly in the top three or four, which is a requisite for playing corner,” said Utah coach Kyle Whittingham. “You’ve got to be able to run. So he’s got that. He’s got great quickness and balance and he’s eager to get in there.”\nWhittingham added that Thomas has had a nice spring and would be a starter, in the 4-3 package at cornerback with Keith McGill, if the Utes were to play tomorrow.\n“He’s really got a bright future in our opinion,” Whittingham said.\nThe former four-star recruit, though, shies away from such recognition.\n“Anybody that can get the job done will do good for us,” Thomas said. “I’m a team player, so that will work for me.”\nAs for Utah’s ability to replace last year’s three contributing cornerbacks, Thomas is confident this year’s squad is capable of doing it.\n“Oh yeah. We can work something out,” he said. “Everybody’s coming along technique-wise.”\nJunior Davion Orphey and redshirt freshman Reginald Porter are also on this week’s depth chart at cornerback — as backups. Junior Joseph Smith and senior Michael Walker occupy the No. 1 spot at nickel back.\nSPRING GAME: As has become the norm in recent years, the teams in Saturday’s annual Red and White game (1 p.m., Rice-Eccles Stadium) will be divided up evenly.\n“It’s a chance for us to see guys in as game-like situations as we can create — find out who can finish, find out who can make the plays when they need to be made,” Whitingham said. “A lot of the position battles are very close and very heated and this will be one more opportunity to evaluate them.”\nA few healthy players, though, won’t be participating. Defensive tackle Tenny Palepoi and safety Eric Rowe are among those being held out of the game for precautionary reasons. Quarterbacks Trevor Wilson and Adam Schulz will play, but will be off-limits to tacklers.\nGREAT SHOWING: If Friday’s golf tournament is any indication, expect a lot of former Utes to be on hand for this weekend’s spring football finale. Whittingham said all 144 slots have been taken.\n“We’ve had great response,” he explained. “It’s just been building over the last five or six years, where we get more and more every year and so we’re looking forward to seeing them all.”\nEric Weddle and Sione Pouha are among those expected to be back for the spring game. An alumni flag football contest is scheduled for Saturday at noon.\nCHANGING TIMES: Utah’s spring game will be televised live on the Pac-12 Networks.\n“I think it’s great. It’s great for recruiting and I think that certainly we’ve come a long way in the last 15 years,” Whittingham said. “I remember when the spring game was maybe 100 people in the stands, tops, and now we’ve got several thousand and a live broadcast on national TV.”\nEmail: dirk@desnews.com\nTwitter: @DirkFacer\nAP Source: L.A. Lakers assistant coach Eddie Jordan agrees to coach Rutgers basketball\nUtah basketball's scholarship roster will be a 50/50 blend","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1762982"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7676949501037598,"wiki_prob":0.7676949501037598,"text":"West Torrens Library Service\nMatthew Bourne’s Romeo + Juliet\nMATTHEW BOURNE'S ROMEO + JULIET is a passionate and contemporary re-imagining of Shakespeare's classic story of love and conflict. Set in the not-too-distant future in 'The Verona Institute' and mysteriously confined against...\nMATTHEW BOURNE'S ROMEO + JULIET is a passionate and contemporary re-imagining of Shakespeare's classic story of love and conflict. Set in the not-too-distant future in 'The Verona Institute' and mysteriously confined against their will by a society that seeks to divide and crush their youthful spirits, our two young lovers must follow their hearts as they risk everything to be together.\nA timeless story about repressed emotions and teenage discovery is no better told than by the young', said Matthew Bourne. Inspired by this and as part of New Adventures' ambition to support the next generation of on-stage talent, Romeo & Juliet featured the finest emerging male and female dancers from around the UK. Bursting with youth, vitality, and Bourne's trademark storytelling, six young cast members were chosen following a nationwide audition tour and they performed alongside the New Adventures company at each theatre venue.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1857314"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5771171450614929,"wiki_prob":0.4228828549385071,"text":"The true state of the case considered\nThe true state of the case considered or, The Oxford Tracts, the public press, and the Evangelical party by G. P. de Sancta Trinitate.\nPublished 1986 by British Library in London .\nTracts for the times\nStatement by G. P. de Sancta Trinitate.\nPagination 1 microfiche (item 2, neg.) ;\nDownload The true state of the case considered\nAaron Hernandez was a former NFL player who was convicted of murdering a former friend. His case would be considered a \"celebrated case\" in the wedding cake model. If a person who was not a public figure carried out an identical crime, that case would fall under which layer of the wedding cake model? But, the full panel of the 9th Circuit eventually ruled that the case was more properly evaluated under true-threat analysis and that the Web site did in fact constitute a true threat. In , the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review this ruling. The American Digest System indexes and classifies all case law, both state and federal. True A memorandum opinion is an opinion of the entire court, rather than . Verse - He that is first in his own cause seemeth just; Revised Version, he that pleadeth his cause first seemeth just. A man who tells his own story, and is the first to open his case before the judge or a third party, seems tot the moment to have justice on his side.\nSo Green Book isn’t merely inspired by history, we’re told, or based on a true story: it is the “true story,” written by family, and furthermore, it depicts a “true friendship Author: K. Austin Collins. Clear and present danger was a doctrine adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States to determine under what circumstances limits can be placed on First Amendment freedoms of speech, press, or assembly. The test was replaced in with Brandenburg ' s \"imminent lawless action\" test. First, let's address what would be considered libel. In order to be libelous, a statement must meet these conditions: 1. There must be some negligence on the part of the writer. 2. It must be defamatory. Which means false and injurious to the plaintiff's reputation. 3. It must be published in some form. /5(K). Get this from a library! A true state of the case of Bosavern Penlez, who suffered on account of the late riot in the Strand: in which the law regarding these offences and the statute, commonly called the Riot Act, are fully considered. [Henry Fielding; Bosavern Penlez].\nAll Things Considered for May 9, That's no longer true. Women accounted for 55% of the rise in job losses last month. Lawyer Representing Ahmaud Arbery's Family Discusses Case. Books shelved as court-case: To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee, Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult, Perfect Match by Jodi Picoult, Deviant: The Shocking. A nation state is a state in which a great majority shares the same culture and is conscious of it. The nation state is an ideal in which cultural boundaries match up with political boundaries. According to one definition, \"a nation state is a sovereign state of which most of its subjects are united also by factors which defined a nation such as language or common descent.\". To clarify, there are in general two levels of ruach simply inspires and moves the person to take a specific action, like rescuing a community, as is the case with the various Judges of Israel (see, for example, Judges , ).The second and greater level of ruach ha-kodesh is when the person is granted divine knowledge, and may also be encouraged to Author: Yehuda Shurpin.\nThe Law of the Sea\neffect of multinational corporations on European integration.\nTrue brew\nRequirements Engineering for Sociotechnical Systems\nHitler Among the Germans.\nSeminar on AACR2\nNaming the Sky","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1569504"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5984260439872742,"wiki_prob":0.5984260439872742,"text":"ABOUT LEARN MORE CHAMPIONS OF ADULT EDUCATION ADULT LEARNER SUCCESS TEACHER SUCCESS EMPLOYER SUCCESS INNOVATIONS MAP LOCATOR TOOL SOCIAL MEDIA ROOM LATEST NEWS CONTACT\nHave an adult learner success story or testimonial?\nAdult Learner Success\nAlisha Cash\nA mother and full-time student “who never misses a day of school and always has a smile on her face,” Aisha Cash excelled at Waterbury Adult Education despite numerous trials and tribulations. With a “passion for learning so uplifting and rare,” Aisha achieved her goal of becoming a college student.\nIn fact, “Post University was so impressed with her enthusiasm and fantastic grades, that they came here to Waterbury Adult Education to tell her in person that she has indeed been accepted to the school of her dreams, Post University,” shared her teacher.\nWith plans to become a counselor to aid others on their journey, Aisha was one of two that placed college level on the Accuplacer Test as a student in the credit diploma program at Waterbury Adult Education. Mapping out the courses that would best prepare her for getting into the college program she wanted, Aisha did so well on her entrance exams that she earned course credit before starting her college journey.\nAlways concerned with the welfare of her fellow classmates, Aisha views the classroom as a community where everyone can help one another. Openly sharing about personal challenges she has overcome—including being incarcerated and dealing with a lifelong autoimmune disease—Aisha’s desire to help others is sincere and heartfelt.\n“She makes sure the person sitting next to her ate something that morning, she will get up from her seat and sit with a complete stranger if she thinks they might not understand the material in class, and if someone is missing from class, she wants to know why they were absent and reminds them of the importance of coming to school every day.”\nEdy Vasquez\nEdy Vasquez immigrated from Guatemala and works two jobs while attending classes at San Mateo Adult School as an ESL student. When Edy first arrived in the U.S., he focused only on working for several years, as there were no classes nearby that he could attend. Since discovering San Mateo Adult School, Edy has regularly attended classes, steadily progressing as a learner and contributor, while “always helping others as he ascended. He is a leader who lifts up others as he moves forward, always thinking of the community and sowing all his accomplishments back into the community so that others can excel, as well,” says Edy’s teacher.\nEdy hopes to work in a forensic lab or open a small business in the future. Edy attends school four evenings a week and enjoys making a positive impact in school and community life.\nHanan Chatila\nWith the goal of attending an American college, Hanan Chatila began taking adult education classes in Florence, South Carolina, in September 2012, having immigrated to America from Lebanon with a high school diploma and some college background. Entering school as an English language learner and ESL student, Hanan worked to achieve her literacy goals while overcoming domestic challenges and health issues, as well as engaging in her children’s education.\nDetermined to succeed, Hanan faithfully took adult education classes for 7 years, passing GED tests and earning her high school equivalency degree in January 2018. Upon graduation, she was recognized as a member of the Adult Education National Honor Society, participating on-stage as a cohort leader. Hanan also serves as a volunteer at a local regional hospital system and at Florence County Adult Education.\nIn October 2018, she became certified as an Arabic translator through LanguageLine and was approved as a translator for Florence One Schools. She currently attends classes at Florence-Darlington Technical College where she is studying to earn a degree as a radiology technician and has a 4.0 GPA.\nNazaria Valdez\nAs a young teen mother, Nazaria Valdez struggled to make ends meet, putting her education on hold to work and raise her daughter. Overcoming numerous challenges together through the years, including bullying and depression that caused her daughter to stop attending school, Nazaria and Sarahi recently celebrated their dual graduation!\nTheir mother-daughter journey began when Nazaria accompanied Sarahi to an orientation and registration session at Region One’s ESC Adult Education and Literacy Program. At her daughter’s suggestion, Nazaria signed up for GED classes too. They supported each other in class, first passing the RLA test and, with assistance from Operation College Bound testing vouchers, completing the rest of their tests in no time.\nNazaria graduated on November 6, and Sarahi graduated a week later, on November 14. The determined, inspirational mother-daughter duo plan to attend South Texas College in McAllen to continue their educational journey.\nKatelyn Moore\nKatelyn Moore possesses the potential and drive to one day serve as a United States Supreme Court judge, says her college math professor, describing Katelyn as “an amazing student, a true leader and a shining example of the opportunities that students can create for themselves when they have encouragement and support.”\nA single mother who enrolled in Spokane Community College after a 10-year break, “Kat” excels in her studies, community involvement and family life, despite financial and emotional hardships.\n“She inspires so many students, especially the nontraditional, female students who are also juggling family, school, and work,” says her Applied Math professor, who met Katelyn in 2018 in the Adult Basic Education Division’s College Prep Program and challenged her to get involved in student life.\n“She accepted my challenge and surpassed my expectations,” her professor noted, adding that Katelyn served as the Chief Justice for the SCC Associated Student Government in 2018–2019, and this year, served as SCC ASG Vice President. “Her efforts have helped to improve the school’s food bank, better student organization events, such as our Family Fun Night in October and the Latin American Club’s Feliz Navidad event.”\nAfter graduating this spring with an Associate of Arts degree with an emphasis on Communications and Legal Studies, Katelyn plans to attend Whitworth University to complete a Bachelor of Arts in Communication with a minor in Law and Justice. She will then attend Gonzaga University School of Law to earn her Juris Doctor and become a prosecutor and eventually a judge with the state court system.\nHaydee Gil\nAs the first person in her family to complete college and only the second to complete high school, Haydee Gil serves as an inspiration for many, including her fellow college students whom she tutors and family members like her niece, who was influenced by Haydee to finish high school after a series of setbacks.\nDrawing strength from personal challenges to reach her goals, Haydee aims to become a Parent Advocate for kids with special needs—as a parent of a son with Stickler Syndrome, Haydee learned firsthand the importance of support for families trying to navigate the healthcare system. She launched her career plan by sitting for her state test to become a certified Medical Assistant in 2020 after overcoming multiple challenges and resolving to pursue an education to better care for herself and her family.\nHaving dropped out of high school to help her family with their restaurant business more than 20 years prior, Haydee enrolled in Literacy Volunteers of Maricopa County. At her intake assessment she discovered she wasn’t that far behind academically, and bolstered by this news and the compassionate, nonjudgmental welcome she received from LVMC staff, she enrolled in GED prep classes.\nEight months later Haydee passed the GED exams, obtained her High School Equivalency (HSE) Diploma, and boldly moved on to the next phase of her education pursuing a Medical Assistant certificate at Brookline College. Eager to explore all facets of patient care in her first health care position, Haydee plans to further her education, weaving knowledge and experience together to reach her dream position of Parent Advocate, while continuing to sit at the kitchen table with her young children modeling academic pursuits and a pure love of learning.\nCaitlyn Robards\nCaitlyn left high school without a diploma due to family issues, including the death of her father. He had been Caitlyn’s main source of support and encouragement, and without him she was lost. She left school weeks shortly after her junior year began. She worked in minimum wage jobs and lived paycheck to paycheck, struggling to provide for her son and daughter Caitlyn decided to make a major life change and enrolled at the Iosco RESA Adult Education program. As her skills increased, she gained the confidence to apply for more professional jobs and was hired at a local credit union. Caitlyn completed her high school diploma in the fall of 2019. She finished her final class the day after her late father’s birthday. Within a few weeks of earning her GED credential, she received a promotion. Caitlyn is better able to provide for her children, enjoys a higher standard of living, and is fully invested in helping her children succeed in school and in life.\nJosiah Lewis\nAfter earning his high school diploma through the GED exam, former GED Prep student Josiah Lewis knew he wanted to continue his education at Seminole State College of Florida. He decided to pursue an engineering career and is now thriving at the college level. Josiah developed a real passion for helping others and for connecting students with college resources. So he now serves as the president of the Student Government Association at our Altamonte Springs campus. Read More.\nMadison Jackson\nFall 2020 Adult High School graduate Madison hopes that by sharing her story she can inspire students who, like her, started going down the wrong path in the traditional high school environment. When she enrolled in our Adult High School program, she worked hard to stay focused, to keep on the right path and reach her goal of graduating as soon as possible. She took control of her life by making that initial appointment to talk with an advisor which helped her to start moving forward. She urges fellow students to “stay strong-minded.” To any students who struggle with a learning disability, Madison would like to encourage you that everything happens for a reason and to remember that keeping end goals in mind can be crucial in overcoming adversity. “Your sense of achievement is so much greater because you worked so hard for something,” she said. Madison expressed appreciation for her Adult High School teachers who “cared ten times more than any teacher in public school.” After graduating this semester, Madison plans to transition to college, study Early Childhood Development and work with children in a daycare setting.\nAmran Firin\nFollowing the dreams of her mother, Adult High School student Amran immigrated from Somalia to the USA at 12 years old to find a better life and a quality education. Years later, she is now realizing her goal of earning a high school diploma as she raises her own two daughters. Coming to Seminole State College of Florida was “the best decision I’ve ever made,” Amran declares. In the past she sometimes felt discouraged when others made her feel less for not having an education. “My biggest motivation of all was that I wanted to prove to myself that I could do it. Education makes me feel powerful.” Her advice to fellow students: “Sometimes what we plan and what God plans are not the same. But don’t listen to the voice telling you to drop out. Do not let go of education because it is your life.”\nTo help her persist through difficulty, Amran keeps a vision board in her house to remember what is most meaningful: her freedom, her dreams, her family. She also takes time to reflect on her past and how it inspires her future. Amran is motivated by the helplessness she felt when her mother fell ill but could not find quality medical care. Unfortunately, this kind of experience was common in her home country. “I never want to feel powerless again. I want to help somebody’s mother,” she proudly proclaims. After graduation, Amran plans to continue her education and attend medical school. She aims to partner with Doctors Without Borders, a humanitarian medical organization known for working in countries severely impacted by disease. Amran encourages people of all ages to consider going back to school to further their education: “Don’t hear the voice telling you your time has passed. Ignore it and go back to your dream of having complete freedom with your finances, bills, life – education is the way. Education is freedom!”\nAlberto Rolando Hernandez\nAlberto worked as a paralegal in Mexico City and came to the U.S. to pursue the American Dream. He knew he needed to learn English to succeed and enrolled in a Beginning Literacy class. As his language skills improved, he qualified for an employment preparation class and sought to become a technology instructor. Through this program and with family support he developed skills in time management, organizational strategies, and goal setting. Vocational Rehabilitation Services supported him in job development and accessing assistive techniques to help him succeed. Alberto plans to become a fully certified teacher for the visually impaired. For Alberto, persistence has been the driving force helping him to achieve his academic, personal and professional goals.\nShakita Boyd\nShakita always loved school as a child, but instability disrupted her education. She spent her childhood in foster care and group homes due to her mother’s drug addiction. Shakita knew how challenging life would be without her education and was determined not to repeat her mother’s mistakes. “Regardless of what I was told, regardless of what program had tried to convince me that I wasn’t smart enough, I would get my diploma,” Shakita recalls. She faced many setbacks and challenges and started and stopped different programs over the course of ten years. When the pandemic hit and the testing center closed, Shakita was crushed, and she considered giving up. Then, she learned about a program that offered virtual classes and would loan her the technology she needed to continue. Finally, in December 2020, Shakita earned her high school credential. Shakita is passionate about helping people who, like her, have been discouraged and told they can’t achieve their dreams. Her next step is to enroll in community college to study environmental science. She then plans to transfer to a state college to study political science. She dreams of one day becoming President.\nGudelia Contreras\nGudelia came to the United States almost 25 years ago. Earning her GED diploma in Spanish at Oregon Adult Basic Skills, and improving her English reading and writing skills, propelled her from the brutal work on the processing floor of a fish cannery to HR and QC responsibilities. Gudelia then began doing her own outreach work, tutoring students for the Spanish GED and teaching English-speaking volunteers basic Spanish so they could better communicate with students. Five years ago, she was hired by a nonprofit to provide health outreach to low-income clients. Her good work earned her a spot on the boards of Seaside Providence Foundation and the Clatsop Community College Foundation. In 2018, she earned an associate degree from Clatsop Community College, and is now enrolled full-time at Portland State University to pursue a bachelor’s degree in Spanish with a minor in Black Studies/Latin America. Her goal is to become a professor. Gudelia is a testament to literacy and adult education programs and how they empower students to take charge of their futures and their families and fully participate in our communities.\nSandra Zavala\nSandra journeyed to the U.S. from Peru to give her son a better life. She stepped into her classes determined to grow. Learning was not without challenges—she navigated the public transportation system to work three jobs while also attending school. In June 2017, Sandra earned her high school equivalency diploma with her son proudly in attendance. One year later she was hired as the English Language Learner Paraprofessional/Secretary at Wayne Township Adult Education. As Sandra welcomes new students, she talks about the challenges on the journey while emphasizing the rewards awaiting each person who remains dedicated to their dreams. “Sandra is a role model who inspires our staff, our students, and our community. She exudes confidence, optimism and her determination is impacting the lives of hundreds of new immigrants,” says Christy McIntyre-Gray of Wayne Township Adult Education.\nMarty Finsterbusch\nFor 20 years, Marty Finsterbusch has led VALUEUSA, an organization devoted to giving voice to adult learners and developing leadership opportunities. “Whether adult learners can read or write, or whether they have learning disabilities, they can lead,” Marty explains. His commitment to adult education started with his own experience as an adult learner in the 1980s when he sought help for a learning disability that made it difficult for him to use written text. VALUEUSA currently connects with 2,500 adult learners and organizations nationally. It initiated two major research/evaluation projects, one to evaluate learner leadership and its outcomes and the other to identify barriers to entering adult education and solutions to support adult participation. As National Coalition for Literacy president from 2012 to 2014 and organized quadrennial Congressional visits by learners, fostering literacy “champions” in Congress.\nSabrina LeVan\nSeven years ago, Sabrina–and her service dog Saddie–enrolled in the ASPIRE program to give learning another chance. Sabrina is an example of what it takes to find the tools and solutions to persevere in the face of adversity and embrace lifelong learning. She has grown her skills substantially and is well on her way to earning her high school equivalency diploma. Sabrina has balanced caring for three children, single motherhood, extensive surgeries, the transportation barriers inherent in Appalachia, and even homelessness, while pursing her educational goals. Once a reluctant learner, she is now referred to by her peers as “That really smart girl with the dog!” Sabrina hopes to pursue a postsecondary degree in animal science with an ultimate goal of training service dogs.\nCecilia DeLeon\nOutstanding Adult Learner 2020\nCecilia battled stomach cancer and raised two children on her own while pursuing her GED diploma at Whatcom Community College. She became an advocate for other victims of sexual assault while also serving members of her community as a translator and resource. She has truly demonstrated leadership while overcoming the most difficult of circumstances. When Cecilia sets her mind to something, it will get done and done well. Helpful, engaged and encouraging, Cecilia brings out the best in her fellow students.\nYang He\nYang moved to Minnesota from Beijing, China, in December 2015, with her husband and two young daughters, Keyu and Miranda. Yang and her husband wanted the girls to have more opportunities than they had growing up in China. Her first year in the U.S. was very difficult. Yang felt very lonely and was nervous to go out into the community because she didn’t feel confident speaking English. She especially worried about her daughters who had been bubbly and social in China but isolated here due to language and cultural barriers. Despite these hardships, with the help of St. Paul Public Schools, they have become more comfortable in their new home. Yang plans to enter Concordia University soon and get her teaching license so she can become an elementary teacher.\nKarmel Radan\nKarmel grew up in the foster care system and endured an abusive childhood. She taught herself to read and write with the only books in the house—the Bible and a set of encyclopedias. Despite having no formal schooling, Karmel earned her GED® diploma after a mere 10 months of study. She is now a 4.0 student in college and leader on campus with dreams of a career in medicine or business. “I want to help people who believe the negative about themselves and don’t see that they are unique and have many possibilities,” Karmel explains. “They are smart and they are capable—they just don’t know it yet.”\nDov Yaffe\nDov’s studies have created more stability and security for his family of five. While pursuing his GED diploma, Dov was co-enrolled in Austin Community College’s Ability to Benefit program and began taking college credit classes. He earned his diploma in December of 2018 and a Level 1 Certificate in Network Administration the following year. He is currently pursuing his associate degree and plans to continue his internship Housing Authority of the City of Austin. Dov has become a mentor to his peers. He donated time outside of class and provided students with equipment and encouragement to help them succeed in their studies.\nCHAMPIONS OF ADULT ED\nEMPLOYER SUCCESS\nMAP LOCATOR TOOL\nSOCIAL MEDIA ROOM\nSome 65,000+ adult education leaders stand united in a national campaign to educate America about the importance of Adult Education in advancing career and college readiness for millions of people. We urge policy makers to stay informed on our successes and to fund Adult Education at the $685 million level as called for in the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act enacted in 2014.\nNASDAE and COABE office\n444 North Capitol Street NW\nOffice: 888-44-COABE\nEmail: info@EducateandElevate.org","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1155710"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8336141705513,"wiki_prob":0.8336141705513,"text":"Three cities to host events for BPA’s National Paralympic Day\nA number of British Paralympic medallists will join National Paralympic Day celebrations in Brighton, Nottingham and Plymouth. 30 Jun 2015\nParalympic medallists Ben Quilter, Sophie Wells and Will Bayley\nⒸGetty Images\nBy British Paralympic Association\n“These events are a great way for people across the country to find out more about the sports that they’ll be watching in Rio in just over a year’s time.”\nParalympic medallists Sophie Wells, Will Bayley and Ben Quilter have called on the British public to show their support for the Paralympics by joining celebrations for National Paralympic Day in Nottingham, Brighton and Plymouth, Great Britain on Saturday 25 July.\nThe three cities will be inviting residents to head down to their local event where they can enjoy free interactive and fun activities from 10:00–17:00. Fans – young and old, disabled and non-disabled – are all encouraged to have a go and test their skills to learn more about some of the extraordinary talents of our Paralympic athletes, plus find out how they can get more active.\nAt Jubilee Square in Brighton, London 2012 Paralympic medallists Will Bayley and Ben Quilter will be on hand to meet and greet fans, while Q&A sessions will give people the chance to ask questions and pick up sporting tips from the top.\nQuilter, a London 2012 bronze medallist in judo who was born and raised in Brighton, was delighted to see National Paralympic Day heading to his hometown.\nHe said: “I’m really looking forward to National Paralympic Day in Brighton, it’s going to be a really fun day and there will be plenty of opportunities for people to come along to try out disability sport and find out more about the Paralympics.\n“It means so much to me that this is all happening in my home town, and I hope lots of people take a little bit of time out of their day to come along and join us.”\nTable tennis player and reigning world number one Will Bayley, who won silver and bronze at London 2012, added:\n“Anyone can get involved in National Paralympic Day, so I’d encourage people to come and join us at Jubilee Square in Brighton on July 25 to see what it’s all about.\n“The support from the British public since London 2012 has been incredible, and this is a really good way for people to feel part of it before the Games in Rio next year. I can’t wait to meet everyone who turns out to support National Paralympic Day, and to celebrate the day with them.”\nSophie Wells MBE, a multi-medallist in equestrian, will be attending the event at Smithy Row in Nottingham on July 25. She said:\n“Paralympic sport has so much to offer and I hope people will come along to get involved on National Paralympic Day. It’s a fun way to find out more about the different sports and understand some of the skills that British athletes have to master to go out there and compete with the world’s best.”\nTim Hollingsworth, CEO of the British Paralympic Association, was very pleased to announce the regional events.\nHe said: “I’m delighted that we are taking celebrations for National Paralympic Day to these three cities for the very first time, building on last year’s regional celebrations in Liverpool and Birmingham.\n“These events are a great way for people across the country to find out more about the sports that they’ll be watching in Rio in just over a year’s time. They can also enjoy meeting some of the athletes who made us so proud in those incredible days of sport that we witnessed during London 2012.”\nNational Paralympic Day is brought to Nottingham, Brighton and Plymouth with the support of Spirit of 2012, a trust established by the Big Lottery Fund to recreate the spirit that radiated from the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympics. Spirit is committed to funding partners who help challenge perceptions of disability.\nDebbie Lye, Spirit of 2012’s Chief Executive, said: “The spirit that radiated from the London 2012 Paralympic Games is a huge inspiration to us and all that we do. I’m delighted that people in Nottingham, Brighton and Plymouth will have the chance to experience it first-hand, meeting ParalympicsGB medallists and getting the chance to try their hand at the sports themselves. With only a year to go until Rio, I hope National Paralympic Day will reignite the passion sparked by our winning London 2012 ParalympicsGB Team.”\nIn addition to the three regional events taking place on 25 July, Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in London will light up the following day as National Paralympic Day joins up with The Liberty Festival to showcase the finest talent in disability sport and arts.\nParalympic heroes Ellie Simmonds, Ollie Hynd and Jessica-Jane Applegate are among the star names set to compete in the London Aquatics Centre, while GB athletes will also be looking to impress in the IPC Athletics Grand Prix final, hosted alongside all of the action for National Paralympic Day in the former Olympic Stadium.\nLocal sports clubs across the country can also get involved in celebrations by hosting their own event, whether that be a come and try session, a cake sale, or a Paralympic quiz.\nFor more information about the National Paralympic Day, people are encouraged to log on to www.paralympics.org.uk/npd2015.\nSimmonds leads stellar cast of swimmers for National Paralympic Day\nGreat Britain women's wheelchair basketball team named\nBritish para-rowing coxed four set world best time","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1673210"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5155763030052185,"wiki_prob":0.5155763030052185,"text":"Stories from May 01st, 2013\nAfrica's Ancient Plant Diversity And Seed Independence Under Threat, Supposedly In The Name Of Progress\nfrom the it's-a-trick dept\nWed, May 1st 2013 11:46pm - Glyn Moody\nAs Africa continues to develop rapidly, Western countries and companies are increasingly interested in bringing it into existing international legal and commercial frameworks, but always on terms that maintain their dominance. One way of doing that is through intellectual monopolies: last year we wrote about proposals for a Pan-Africa Intellectual Property Organization (PAIPO), whose benefits for Africa seem dubious. Meanwhile, here’s another plan that is being presented as a vital part of Africa’s modernization process, and yet oddly enough seems to benefit giant Western companies most, as AllAfrica reports:\nthe proposal is to create a harmonised system of control around the presently fragmented African seed trade regime and create a system based on what is projected as modern best practice.\nThis includes uniform adherence to the strict 1991 Act of the International Union for the Protection of Plant Varieties (UPOV), across the board, for Africa. Because of the stringency of UPOV, the real impact of this will be the loss of control of the seed supply by indigenous small farmers. The consequences for food production and social cohesion across the continent will be dire.\nThe fear is that changes to how seeds are regulated will have major knock-on effects on African societies:\nOnce locally adapted seed varieties are lost, dependence on outside seed suppliers will rapidly become unaffordable. The implications will reverberate far beyond food production.\nIndebted farmers are at direct risk of losing land tenure. On the one hand this causes accelerating urbanisation and social dislocation. On the other, good agricultural land is appropriated by large conglomerates. There is already a massive thrust by nations and corporations to gain land tenure in fertile tropical African agricultural zones.\nIt’s well worth reading the rest of the article, which explores the continuing consolidation in the African seed industry, and how global giants like Monsanto hope to avoid some of the resistance they have experienced elsewhere in the developing world — for example, in Brazil, discussed in Techdirt last year. As the AllAfrica article concludes:\nIf there was ever a time for the vocal proponents for African unity and values to step forward, it is now. Should they fail, African leadership will be harshly judged for enabling the next phase of neo-colonialism to unfold unopposed.\nUnfortunately, given that PAIPO seems to be going ahead, despite major concerns about its lack of balance and transparency, the chances of the requisite African unity being achieved in order to stave off this latest attempt by the West to disadvantage the continent by locking it into inappropriate international structures look poor at the moment.\nFollow me @glynmoody on Twitter or identi.ca, and on Google+\nFiled Under: africa, paipo\nCompanies: monsanto\nBrazil's Marco Civil Not Dead Yet; Yahoo Voices Support\nfrom the not-google-this-time dept\nTechdirt has been following the story of Brazil’s innovative Marco Civil project, a civil-rights based framework for the Internet, for a while. Last time we wrote about it, it had been shelved following some aggressive work by lobbyists. As we noted then, it wasn’t clear whether it would be resuscitated or not, but here’s Kuek Yu-Chuang, Yahoo!’s Regional Public Policy Director, who seems to think it still stands a chance of being approved:\nI recently had the opportunity to travel to Brasilia with colleagues from Yahoo! representing our public policy, privacy, copyright, and communications teams. While in the Brazilian capital, we engaged with key officials to voice Yahoo!’s support for the Marco Civil da Internet (known as the Marco Civil), which some have described as Brazil’s “Constitution of the Internet.” The Marco Civil establishes the promotion of access to the internet as a right for all Brazilians. The draft bill also aims to provide safe harbors for Internet service providers, and allow free speech on the Internet.\nIn an impressive effort to incorporate the ideas of Brazilian citizens, the drafters of the Marco Civil made the initial version of the bill open to the public for comments in late 2009. More than 1100 contributions were received from around the country. The Marco Civil is now with the House of Deputies in the Brazilian Congress and a vote is expected in coming months.\nThat’s unexpectedly good news; it’s also great that Yahoo! is publicly supporting the Marco Civil in this way, since that may help to counterbalance renewed lobbying from other quarters when the vote in the Brazilian Congress takes place.\nThe fact that on this occasion it’s not Google trying to bolster moves to make the laws governing the Internet more balanced is important. That means the law’s opponents won’t be able to paint the Marco Civil bill as something largely for the benefit of Google, as has happened elsewhere. Let’s hope that Yahoo! continues speaking out on the issues of net neutrality, privacy and maybe copyright modernization: that would be good for burnishing the company’s image, and good for Internet users.\nFiled Under: brazil, marco civil\nDailyDirt: Advances In Wheelchair Technology\nWed, May 1st 2013 05:00pm - ITInnovation\nThere are nearly 6 million people in the US living with some form of paralysis. Despite some controversy, the FDR memorial has a statue of the president sitting in a wheelchair. Wheelchairs have been around for over a hundred years, but technology could improve how they work. Here are just a few examples.\nThe Tongue Drive System allows users to control their wheelchairs via tongue movements. This prototype requires a “clinical” tongue piercing and a dental retainer, so maybe a camera system would be a nice improvement. [url]\nTek RMD is a robotic mobilization device that might replace a wheelchair and give paraplegics the ability to move around upright. It’s not quite a powered exoskeleton, and it can’t do stairs, but it’s an interesting robotic alternative to a wheelchair (even though it costs a lot more). [url]\nA wheelchair from Kyoto University called the Permoveh has omnidirectional wheels, so it can move more freely and turn on a dime. The prototype has a top speed of 3.7 mph and costs over $36,000, but future models are expected to be cheaper. [url]\nFiled Under: omnidirectional wheels, paralysis, prototypes, tongue, ui, wheelchairs\nMainstream Press Waking Up To DOJ's Massive Overreaction To Minor Computer Hacks\nOverhype\nfrom the omg-it's-a-computer! dept\nWed, May 1st 2013 03:47pm - Mike Masnick\nWe’ve talked plenty about the government abusing the CFAA to pretend that some minor hacks were some giant criminal conspiracy, but now even the mainstream press is starting to recognize that an overactive Justice Department seems so freaked out by computers that it feels the need to use the CFAA over and over again against minor hacks. We’ve covered the various cases mentioned in the article in the past, but it’s good to see a paper such as the Washington Post call the administration out for its silly overreactions. It’s as if they see a computer and assume that something bad must be happening. At no point, when it comes to these cases, does the DOJ seem to step back and look at the actual seriousness of any of these cases.\nFiled Under: cfaa, doj, hacking\nCompanies: washington post\nNew Special 301 Report Shows Spain's Kowtowing Paid Off\nfrom the pat on the head dept\nWed, May 1st 2013 02:31pm - Leigh Beadon\nToday, the USTR released its 2013 Special 301 Report (pdf and embedded below), the notorious “watchlist” of foreign countries where intellectual property is supposedly in danger (which is in fact just a self-serving diplomatic pressure tool). Ukraine has been dubbed enemy number one, with Algeria, Argentina, Chile, China, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Russia, Thailand and Venezuela on the priority watchlist, so expect the diplomatic push for American-style IP laws to intensify in those countries.\nOne thing to note is the fact that Spain succeeded in staying off the list. As we recently noted, the Spanish government has essentially admitted that its recent copyright reform efforts were designed entirely to keep the country out of the 301 Report. Well, it looks like they got their wish, and all they had to do was sell out their country to US interests. Nobody will be able to say that they sit on a list of dirty thieves alongside backwards pirate nations like Canada and Finland, which brazenly ignore the kind US diplomats who surely have our best interests at heart. Congratulations, Spain!\nFiled Under: spain, special 301 report, ustr\nRead More\t31 Comments »\nHow Key Decisions In Copyright Cases Can Impact The Pace Of Technological Innovation\nfrom the don't-underestimate-the-importance dept\nNext month, I have a law review article coming out, specifically focused on how much innovation is held back and hindered when courts rule against new and innovative technologies based on the claim that they are infringing copyrights. This goes well beyond just the technology on trial itself, but many follow-on innovators who are held back or hindered in either designing their innovations or receiving investments for those same innovations. Markham Erickson, a telecom and internet lawyer, has written up a blog post that highlights this same point in looking at the recent ruling in the Aereo caes and how important the Cablevision case was in driving the innovation that led to Aereo, and to a variety of other investments in online services, and cloud computing in particular. First, Erickson notes that both the Cablevision and Aereo rulings helped create legal symmetry such that the length of a cable should not impact whether a technology is legal or not (i.e., a remote device is treated the same as a device in or on your home), and then he talks about the wider impact of that clarity:\nIn reaching this conclusion, the court placed utmost importance on certain technological designs such as the use of an individual antennae and copies unique to the individual. The court also made clear that Cablevision’s holding was not confined to particular, pre-approved technologies: “[W]e see no support in Cablevision or in this court’s subsequent decisions for the Plaintiff’s argument that Cablevision’s interpretation of the Transmit clause is confined to technologies similar to the VCR.” Aereo, 2013 WL at *11.\nThis rejection of a technology-specific reading of Cablevision should be heartening to cloud service providers. The reliance of cloud service providers on Cablevision is hard to overstate. After the Cablevision decision, the average quarterly investment in cloud computing in the United States increased by 41 percent. By one estimate, the certainty provided by Cablevision led to an additional incremental investment in US cloud computing firms of anywhere between $728 million and $1.3 billion in the 2 and 1/2 years following the decision. As the Second Circuit observed in Aereo, “many media and technology companies have relied onCablevision as an authoritative interpretation of the Transmit Clause. One example is cloud media services, which have proliferated in recent years.”\nAnd yet, he notes, this clarity and ability to invest and to innovate may be at risk. As we noted at the time, the stunning dissent in the Aereo case actually indicated that designing a system to be within the clear boundaries of the law as explained in the earlier case should be seen as intent to infringe. That’s a rather incredible interpretation when you think about it. Following the explicit nature of the law should be seen as trying to subvert it? Talk about a way to chill innovation. If that became the law, the chilling effects on innovation would be tremendous. Not only would innovators be fearful of creating new services that might be sued for infringement, they wouldn’t even know how to make sure their technologies were considered legal, due to a court system that explicitly argued that any attempt to obey the law may be seen as an attempt to subvert it!\nMeanwhile, other courts seem to be attacking these basic principles, which may result in more stifling of significant innovation and investment. We’ve avoided covering what’s now called either the “AereoKiller” or “BarryDriller” cases, because the service, which used to be known as FilmOn, seems much more focused on doing stupid promotional stunts, rather than something serious. His lawsuit against CBS, as well as changing the name of FilmOn to AereoKiller/BarryDriller, highlights the sort of focus that David seems to have. And, unfortunately, when you have someone more focused on publicity stunts and acting like a clown, rather than mounting a serious legal defense, you get bad rulings. AereoKiller is a somewhat similar service to Aereo, but may actually end up killing Aereo and a ton of other important innovations, not because it’s better/more innovative, but because it’s mounting a horrible defense on a similar issue, and has already lost at the district court. The impact on innovation could be huge. With a split decision and concerns about Aereo’s future success, investment in key innovations, including various cloud services, may be held back, while other countries continue to invest in such companies.\nIt’s incredible that we have a legal process, and a tool in today’s copyright law, that is being actively used to scare off key investment in new innovations at a time that we should be much more focused on innovation.\nFiled Under: markham erickson\nCompanies: aereo, cablevision\nNo Good Can Come Of Any Cybersecurity Bill Without A Clear Definition Of The Problem\nfrom the putting-the-cybercart-before-the-horse dept\nWed, May 1st 2013 11:56am - Leigh Beadon\nWith CISPA dead (mercifully) from a critical case of Senate disinterest, the conversation has inevitably turned to what the next cybersecurity bill should look like. Over at Wired, Julian Sanchez has laid out some guidelines for a cybersecurity bill that actually works, achieving the stated goals of CISPA without butchering civil liberties. His key point is that, according to CISPA’s authors, the bill’s sole purpose is to let companies and the government share technical data (or as Dutch Ruppersberger adorably called it last year, “formulas, Xs and Os, the virus code”) to help shore up network security and anticipate major attacks — and there’s no real reason that has to conflict with privacy at all.\nFew object to what technology companies and the government say they want to do in practice: pool data about the activity patterns of hacker-controlled “botnets,” or the digital signatures of new viruses and other malware. This information poses few risks to the privacy of ordinary users. Yet CISPA didn’t authorize only this kind of narrowly limited information sharing. Instead, it gave companies blanket immunity for feeding the government vaguely-defined “threat indicators” — anything from users’ online habits to the contents of private e-mails — creating a broad loophole in all federal and state privacy laws and even in private contracts and user agreements.\nThere’s no need to share [personally identifiable] data for security purposes anyway: Kevin Mandia, head of the cybersecurity firm Mandiant, insisted at a February hearing on CISPA that in 20 years in the industry, he had “never seen a package of threat intelligence that’s actionable” that included personally identifiable information.\nSanchez suggests some straightforward basic requirements for a cybersecurity bill that might actually get consensus from privacy watchdogs and the broader public: the removal of personal information before data reaches the government, a limited lifespan on the data (CISPA’s authors have stated that real-time information sharing to deal with immediate threats is the key point of the bill anyway), and the ability for companies to respect their contracts with customers. As written, CISPA would have exonerated service providers from keeping any promise they made to not share user data. Even a service provider that wanted to offer you the contractual certainty that they would protect your data would have been unable to do so.\nThe reason for that is a key piece of language that’s been drifting around CISPA since the beginning: “notwithstanding any other provision of law.” There are lots of bits and pieces to the bill, but that line is the exemption granted to companies that wish to share cyber threat information with the government, and it’s incredibly broad, allowing companies to ignore even the contracts they have with their customers.\nSo why is it there? That’s the question nobody seems to want to answer, and that’s the real issue with the whole push for cybersecurity legislation. Supposedly, according to the message that has accompanied CISPA and similar bills from the beginning, companies and the government are currently prevented from doing some harmless, common-sense information sharing to improve network security, because existing laws block such sharing. But… what laws? That has never been clear. Why does CISPA need to provide immunity “notwithstanding any other provision of law” rather than simply creating specific exceptions to the specific laws that are causing a problem? Why has nobody in Congress even been able to point out these problematic laws?\nPerhaps it’s not just one or two laws; perhaps it’s a whole cluttered legal framework that can’t easily be cleaned up and needs some broad, sweeping exceptions. But… nobody has made that case either. They just keep saying, non-specifically, “existing laws prevent it”. And yet we know that’s not true, at least to some degree: the FBI has had a system for sharing threat information back and forth with companies for 15 years. Why is that model not sufficient? Again, if there are reasons, nobody in Congress is offering them.\nI’d like to say Sanchez’s guidelines make an excellent starting point for cybersecurity legislation, but a starting point for legislation has to be a definition of the problem it’s trying to solve, and we still don’t have that. Nevertheless, they do serve as an excellent set of rules to hold Congress to if it is really so intent on barreling forward blindly. Cybersecurity grandstanders are likely to say that such restrictions would gut the legislation. Whether that’s ignorance, cognitive dissonance or a tacit admission of dishonesty I’m not sure, but the restrictions suggested by Sanchez, the EFF, the ACLU and others would do nothing to hinder CISPA’s stated and largely innocuous purpose — they would only interfere with the other much scarier potential uses that Congress insists aren’t going to happen.\nThe longer Congress offers only the vaguest of vague definitions of the problem it’s trying to solve, while at the same time seeming to betray even that vague definition with its response to suggested safeguards and restrictions, the harder it gets to afford them even one iota of trust on the subject of cybersecurity.\nFiled Under: cispa, cybersecurity\nIP Attorney Responds To Patent Application Rejection By Filing Ranting, Ad Hom 'Remarks'\nfrom the should-try-to-patent-a-scotch-that-isn't-also-a-whiskey dept\nWed, May 1st 2013 10:43am - Tim Cushing\nThere’s a lot of anger directed at the US Patent Office, but it mainly originates with people frustrated by the office’s “rubber stamp” approval process that has littered the road to success with hundreds of trolling speedbumps, each one waving a stack of overly broad patents and demanding that actual innovators hand over enough cash to cover the rent on their empty East Texas offices.\nPatently O has uncovered some anger directed at the USPTO, this time coming from the opposite direction. After a client’s application for a telescoping sprinkler was rejected for not being anything the patent office hadn’t seen before, patent attorney Andrew Schroeder fired off an apoplectic set of “remarks” to the patent examiner. It starts by suggesting the examiner has a drinking problem and then sinks even lower. Way lower.\nREMARKS: Are you drunk? No, seriously…are you drinking scotch and whiskey with a side of crack cocaine while you “examine” patent applications? (Heavy emphasis on the quotes.) Do you just mail merge rejection letters from your home? Is that what taxpayers are getting in exchange for your services? Have you even read the patent application? I’m curious. Because you either haven’t read the patent application or are… (I don’t want to say the “R” word) “Special.”\nAndrew Schroeder is too genteel to actually use the word “retarded,” but that doesn’t stop him from throwing around a bunch of synonymous phrases.\nSo, tell me something Corky…what would it take for a patent application to be approved? Do we have to write patent applications in crayon? Does a patent application have to come with some sort of pop-up book? Do you have to be a family member or some big law firm who incentivizes you with some other special deal? What does it take Corky?\nPerhaps you might want to take your job seriously and actually give a sh.t! What’s the point in having to deal with you Special Olympics rejects when we should just go straight to Appeals? While you idiots sit around in bathtubs farting and picking your noses, you should know that there are people out here who actually give a sh.t about their careers, their work, and their dreams.\nThe USPTO briefly posted these “remarks” before taking them down (and there’s more of this spectacular rant at Patently O). As for the patent in question (posted below), the patent reviewer found the tripod sprinkler wasn’t anything special, citing U.S. Patent No. 2,694,600, Patent No. 4,824,020 and Patent No. 5,484,154.\nApparently, attorney Andrew Schroeder sent another set of “remarks” to the examiner who rejected this patent application. Oddly enough, it was the same examiner who rejected the sprinkler: Alexander Valvis. This unlucky lightning rod/government employee lists seven patents in this rejection. These remarks have also been removed by the USPTO, somewhat limiting Schroeder’s infamy.\nClients hiring Schroeder to assist them in filing patent applications may be surprised to learn that “antagonizing the USPTO” is one of the bonus services the attorney provides. It’s certainly not included in the long list of services on his fee page. (It does, however, list an intriguing option called “Office Action,” which is available in 2 or 3-hour sessions [$500-$750].) Schroeder’s offerings cover a whole range of IP-related services, many of which are thoroughly “explained” by pages that appear to be still under construction. (Click on the “IP Piracy” page to watch a not-yet-uploaded video futilely attempt to buffer itself into existence and marvel as the attorney’s phone number [the only text on the page] tells you all you need to know about how “IP Law Stops IP Theft.”)\nAt the end of the day, it appears that patent examiners just can’t catch a break, especially if that patent examiner is Alexander Valvis, bane of Andrew Schroeder’s existence and destroyer of dreams.\nFiled Under: andrew schroeder, east texas, uspto\nCraigslist's Abuse Of Copyright And The CFAA To Attack Websites That Make Craigslist Better Is A Disgrace\nfrom the please stop this craig dept\nWed, May 1st 2013 09:29am - Mike Masnick\nCraigslist and Craig Newmark, specifically, have been very involved in being good corporate citizens on the internet. Craig was one of the key players in stopping SOPA, and has been involved in a number of other key internet activism campaigns, including the fight against CISPA. That’s part of the reason we were so surprised and disappointed last year to see Craigslist seek to abuse both copyright law and the CFAA to go after a couple of sites that added a layer of value on top of Craigslist. The key target seemed to be Padmapper, a site that combined data from Craigslist and other sources to make searches for real estate much more useful (adding maps and other data). Those results did not compete with Craigslist but layered more info on top, driving interested people right back to Craigslist. After Craigslist threatened Padmapper for scraping its site, Padmapper switched to using a third party, 3taps, which had figured out a way to get data from Craigslist, and Padmapper just used that instead.\nIn response, Craigslist sued them both (and another site that was using 3taps as well) making some highly questionable claims about how this was both copyright infringement and a CFAA violation because it violated its terms of service. The copyright claim seemed particularly bizarre, because Craigslist appeared to be claiming copyright on posts made by others, something that was obviously ridiculous. Making things even more farcical, Craigslist then tried to cover this up with a click through notice on the site telling visitors that when you post on Craigslist you’re granting an exclusive license to Craigslist — meaning you’re effectively giving it control over your copyright. After that raised significant backlash, including from the NY Times, Craigslist backed down on that one point.\nBut the lawsuit itself has continued and the judge recently ruled on the motions to dismiss the lawsuit from 3taps and Padmapper. The ruling is a mixed bag, but mostly bad. First we’ll start with the tiny “good” part, though: the court did dismiss the general copyright claims Craigslist was making over everyone’s posts on its site (outside that time period discussed above where Craigslist said it wanted an exclusive license).\nThe meaning of the phrase “You also expressly grant and\nassign to [Craigslist] all rights” was the subject of some debate at the hearing on these\nmotions, but the “all rights” language relates specifically to enforcement rights–not rights to\nthe content of the posts. The language assigning rights to the content did not use the phrase\n“all rights,” and did not specify that the rights granted were “exclusive.” Craigslist provides\nno authority for the proposition that an ambiguous grant of rights is presumptively exclusive,\nand the Court declines to read that term into the terms that Craigslist itself drafted\nBasically, it says that Craigslist’s regular terms of service didn’t grant Craigslist an exclusive license, which is necessary for a lawsuit over the copyrights.\nBut, in the long run, that’s a small victory. The court does say that Craigslist has a copyright in the “compilation,” claiming that adding geographic information is somehow creative.\nCraigslist has alleged that its “classified ad service is organized\nfirst by geographic area, and then by category of product or service,” with these categories\norganized in “a list designed and presented by craigslist.”… Construing the\nrelevant allegations in Craigslist’s favor at this early stage in the proceedings, the Court\nconcludes that Craigslist, in “deciding which categories to include and under what name,”\n… “display[ed] some minimal level of creativity,”\nIck. I have trouble seeing how that kind of activity raises to the level of creativity protected by copyright, so hopefully later in the process the court will reject this concept. Now, the next bad part of the ruling: the court says that Craigslist does actually have a valid copyright in the posts for those few short weeks when it had that clickthrough “reminding” people that it had the exclusive right. I still don’t see how this is possible, since an exclusive license is supposed to require a written confirmation, not clicking through on an oddly worded “reminder.” But, the court twisted some things around to say this is okay. I’ve read this over a few times and it still doesn’t make any sense.\nBasically, it says, as noted above, that Craigslist’s “regular” terms of use don’t grant the necessary exclusive license, but the combination of the terms that don’t grant an exclusive license with a “reminder” from Craigslist that it does grant an exclusive license, somehow makes the terms grant an exclusive license. I don’t see how that’s possible, especially as there’s no explicit or written agreement from the user to assign the exclusive license. Even though it was just written as a “confirmation,” the court says that “it is reasonable to infer that a Craigslist user would understand that this “confirmation” effected a transfer of rights.” But why? How could a statement that is written as if it reminds you of something actually be an official decision to transfer rights? Here’s what the reminder specifically said:\nClicking “Continue” confirms that craigslist is the exclusive licensee of this content, with the exclusive right to enforce copyrights against anyone copying, republishing, distributing or preparing derivative works without its consent.\nThat certainly sounds like a reminder of an existing situation and not an official agreement to transfer rights. But the court seems to think people will realize that clicking that single button is giving up entirely the rights to their own copyrights to Craigslist. That seems ripe for revisiting…\nThe impact of this — even if it only applies to posts from July 16, 2012 through August 8, 2012 — could be huge. As the EFF notes this could create serious problems:\nSo, if you posted a craigslist ad while this provision was live, you’re out of luck. craigslist’s ownership claims over user posts could potentially mean that the affected users can’t republish their ads on multiple services without risking a claim of infringement. And while not every craigslist post is going to go viral and have real value outside the original context (like the “Jesus Tap-Dancing Christ” car ad), users still need the right to post and repost their material in a variety of venues. Moreover, the exclusive license provision calls into question craigslist’s compatibility with common licensing schemes, like the Creative Commons ShareAlike license or the GNU Free Documentation License for the time that provision was valid. And, worse still: craigslist’s actions, and the court’s ruling, only increases the chance that other websites will start demanding ownership of the content you post there.\nSo, a tiny bit of good, but a lot bad on the copyright front.\nOn the CFAA front… it’s the same basic story. The court rejects the idea that merely accessing the website is a CFAA violation (thanks to the Nosal ruling). It rejects Craigslist’s claims that it was blocking access, rather than uses (which is the core of the Nosal ruling), noting correctly that within Craigslist’s terms, all of the restrictions are about uses.\nThe Court need not decide whether violating “restrictions on access to information”\ncontained in a website’s terms of use can ever support liability under the CFAA, because\nCraigslist’s TOU contain only “use” restrictions, not true “access” restrictions as the term is\nused in Nosal. Although the TOU include a section titled “Unauthorized Access and\nActivities,” parts of which are framed in terms of “access,” these restrictions depend entirely\non the accessor’s purpose. TOU at 6-7 (prohibiting, e.g., “access to or use of craigslist to\ndesign, develop, test, . . . or otherwise make available any program” that interacts with\nCraigslist).\nThat part is good. But… unfortunately, the CFAA claims stay alive on two counts. First, because Craigslist sent a cease and desist letter, the court says that violating that letter is unauthorized access. That seems extreme and ridiculous in the same way the argument that violating a terms of service violates the CFAA. The second issue is that Craigslist blocked the IP of 3taps… and 3taps (shocker) changed their IP. The court actually argues that changing your IP address when it was blocked is a violation of the CFAA. This is unfortunately similar to one of the arguments made against Aaron Swartz.\nAside from the TOU, however, Craigslist specifically denied authorization to use the\nwebsite “for any purposes” in its cease and desist letters, Kao Decl. Ex. A, and also used\ntechnological measures to block access from IP addresses associated with 3Taps, which Craigslist alleges that 3Taps bypassed by using different IP addresses and proxy servers to conceal its identity. Assuming that the CFAA encompasses information\ngenerally available to the public such as Craigslist’s website, Defendants’ continued use of Craigslist after the clear statements regarding authorization in the cease and desist letters and\nthe technological measures to block them constitutes unauthorized access under the statute.\nThe EFF points out how ridiculous both of these claims are. On the cease and desist:\nCease and Desist Letters Should Not Make Access to a Website Criminal\nThe CFAA is both a civil and a criminal statute. This is a civil case, but has criminal ramifications. While the court looked at the earlier Facebook v. Power Ventures case, it misread a key holding. There, the court recognized that imposing criminal liability based on the “receipt of a cease and desist letter would create a constitutionally untenable situation.” This would put too much power in the hands of private parties to decide what a crime would be.\nAnd on the IP address change, EFF points out how changing IP addresses is a common thing that happens all the time:\nChanging IP Addresses Is Not Hacking\nThe court’s ruling on IP address blocking is dangerous because it could criminalize innocent behavior.\n[….] There is nothing inherently improper, never mind unlawful, about switching IP addresses and thereby avoiding IP address blocking. Moreover, when a website is available without restriction to the public, a private party should not be able turn access into a crime to back up owner preferences or terms of service with the weight of criminal authority.\nGiven all that, there are very serious problems with this ruling, and the fact that Craigslist is driving such dangerous precedents is quite upsetting for a company that has been so involved and so at the forefront of helping fight back against such abuses of the law. Over at Freedom to Tinker, Steve Schultze asks Craigslist to dismiss the case with prejudice, and I second that call.\nIf Craig Newmark and Craigslist move forward with this lawsuit, which has the possibility of creating very dangerous precedents concerning both copyright law and the CFAA, it will do tremendous harm to Craigslist’s reputation and standing in the wider internet community. As Schultze notes, moving forward at this point, given the details in the latest ruling will just make Craig look petty and vindictive. I know Craig and he’s anything but vindictive and petty. Destroying his reputation and acting out just because a couple of sites tried to make Craigslist more useful? It just doesn’t make any sense at all. Hopefully Craig will realize this as well, and will call off his legal attack dogs, and think twice about future lawsuits of this nature.\nFiled Under: cfaa\nCompanies: 3taps, craigslist, padmapper\nChuck Schumer To Introduce Patent Reform Bill To Make It Cheaper To Fight Back Against Patent Trolls\nfrom the a step forward dept\nBack during the fight for the America Invents Act — the big patent reform effort from a couple years ago — Senator Chuck Schumer was able to add in an amendment that made it easier to get the USPTO to review business method patents. As we noted at the time, this amendment also effectively killed off some specific financial patents. This was a good step, though we wondered why it was limited just to business method patents. The general answer that we got back from those involved in the process was that this would be a “test bed.” That test bed is now known as Section 18 of the America Invents Act, which makes it easier for those sued to get the patent reviewed by the USPTO, and also makes it more likely that a court will put a lawsuit on hold while the USPTO reviews the patent. Given how often re-exams by the USPTO lead to claims being rejected, this process can certainly help dump some really bad patents before a defendant has to go through an incredibly pricey court case (and appeals and such).\nIt’s now being reported that Schumer is set to introduce a new bill that will expand Section 18 to cover technology patents, rather than just limiting it to business method patents (the more cynical among you will note the rapid growth of New York’s tech sector as a reason for this expansion). This is definitely a big step in the right direction. If something like this was also combined with the SHIELD Act, which shifts fees to the trolls for bogus patent lawsuits, it would really help limit some of the most egregious activities of trolls.\nThat said, this is only one step. There are some limitations and oddities within Section 18 which may have been necessary to get it into law, but which also limit the overall effectiveness of the bill against trolls. While we’re extremely encouraged that Congress and other parts of the federal government appear to finally be taking the issue of patent trolling seriously, there is still much more to be done. Thankfully, there are indications from a bunch of Senators and Representatives that they know this is a problem and they intend to do something to fix it. Kudos to Senator Schumer for jumping in with this fix, and we look forward to more efforts to fix our broken patent system and to limit innovation-hindering patent trolling.\nFiled Under: chuck schumer, patent reform","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1213676"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9773833751678467,"wiki_prob":0.9773833751678467,"text":"Big names, big stories: Details of Exit/In lore lost to time\nFriday, July 22, 2016, Vol. 40, No. 30\nBy Tim Ghianni\nAll who were there seem to agree that Steve Martin took his Exit/In audience down the street for burgers, though there is little agreement on which restaurant or whether burgers were purchased.\n-- Submitted\nSo, did you ever hear the story of Jimmy Buffett stepping through a small, open door, surprising the occupants, then successfully auditioning to play at a new club with a capacity of 90 people?\nHow about the one in which a young comic named Steve Martin led the crowd out the door and down the street and bought them hamburgers?\nWell, let’s get to Buffett first. First of all, he wasn’t there singing with wink-and-nudge abandon songs about slushy drinks, carnal adventures or pirates. He didn’t even wear a flowered shirt.\nIt’s a true story from the very start of Nashville’s Exit/In, 45 years ago.\nBuffett, looking like any typical Nashville songwriter (because that’s what he was), walked in the door off Elliston Place one day in the very early 1970s and smiled at the two 24-year-old dreamers – Brugh Reynolds and Owsley Manier – who were putting the finishing touches on their 90-seat nightclub.\n“Jimmy Buffett came in. We were kind of finishing the place up, the first incarnation,” says Manier, remembering that initial encounter with a guy who would later adopt the Parrothead-and-hung-over-pirate shtick that has made him untold millions.\nThe door of the old building onto Elliston Place was only opened for ventilation during the construction. Soon it would be sealed and the way in would be to go down a few stairs behind the building, using the exit to literally get in to hear music or nurse beers. Exit/In … get it?\n“He said he wanted to audition,” says Manier. “I told him to go ahead. Then we hired him.”\nThat was 1971, and Buffett became the first performer at the tiny “listening room” Reynolds and Manier had dreamed up, a place where the audience was “shushed” before “shushing” became cool.\n“We were very idealistic about it,” Manier adds. “We wanted people to remain silent. We made an announcement: ‘Refrain from talking,’ and we would throw people out if they wouldn’t be quiet.”\nIt was the birth of a tradition and a club that has evolved over the years from listening room roots to a storied rock barn reality.\nExit/In developed a reputation as a “must” stop for those early wandering troubadours: lovable losers, no-account boozers, honky-tonk heroes. And comics.\nThat’s where Steve Martin comes in … and leaves, taking the crowd with him for hamburgers, according to varied accounts of that incident.\nThere are many versions of this story, depending on who’s telling it. Current co-owner Chris Cobb has heard most of them.\n“In separate versions, some people say he took them to Friday’s (then a neighbor of the club). Other people say it was Krystal. I was talking to a guy two weeks ago who said he was there and it was Krystal. ‘I was there. He bought me a burger,’ the guy said.\n“I think what we know (for sure) is that he was there and he takes everyone somewhere that made some kind of burger,” Cobb says with a laugh.\nPerhaps then it’s best to just use Martin’s version from pages 164-165 of his book “Born Standing Up:’’\n“It (Exit/In) was a low-ceilinged box painted black inside, with two noisy smoke eaters hanging from the ceiling, to no avail. The dense secondhand smoke was being inhaled and exhaled, making it thirdhand and fourthhand smoke….\nThe room seated about two-hundred and fifty, and the place was oversold, riotous and packed tight, which verified a growing belief of mine about comedy: The more physically uncomfortable the crowd, the bigger the laughs…. (He began taking crowds outside to end the show and make room for the second set.)\n“One night at the Exit/In, I took the crowd down the street to a McDonald’s and ordered three hundred hamburgers to go, then quickly changed it to one bag of fries.’’\nSuch unexpected events became the norm for Martin’s crowd, and he began to realize that his comedy really had no boundaries:\n“Even though I had done the act hundreds of times, it became new to me this hot, muggy week in Nashville. The disparate elements I’d begun with ten years before had become unified; my road experience had made me tough as steel, and I had total command of my material. But most important, I felt really, really funny….’’\nMusician/nice guy Bill Lloyd is still sorry he missed that night, but he did see the wild-and-crazy legend-in-the-making at the club. “I wasn’t there the time he took everybody to Krystal’s. He acted like he was going to take us all out. Then he said ‘No, I did that last time.’”\nThere are many stories about the club. And then there are the half-truths and truths. But Buffett wasn’t the only young artist who got his first boost to stardom on Elliston Place.\nIt wasn’t that long after Buffett christened the place that “John Hiatt came in,” says Manier, remembering the sight of the skinny, 18-year-old with a guitar. And he kept coming in and performing even as the club made its transformation from small listening room to larger listening room (they added the building next door as an extension of the club in its first year) to a mini-arena-like place with more seats than bodies to fill them and then to the standing-room-only rock hall where acts like Jason & The Scorchers, R.E.M. and The Ramones would play.\nManier explains his original dream was initiated by visits to a similar club “called The Bottom of the Barrel, I think, in Underground Atlanta.”\nHe became a frequent visitor when he was on leave from Fort Benning where he was undergoing basic training for National Guard duty in the early 1970s.\n“It was this listening room in a little club. They had the early Allman Brothers, and mostly folk stuff. You could hear a pin drop, and I was really impressed by that.”\nSomething clicked inside Manier’s brain, and when he was back in Nashville, he met up with Reynolds at Bishop’s Pub. “I said ‘I saw this place in Atlanta. Why don’t we look at it? Why don’t we do it?’”\nThey did both. “We didn’t have any money. We both borrowed a little bit of money on our life insurance policies to buy it,” Manier adds.\n“Nothing like that had existed prior. We were seat-of-our-pants learners. It really was all about doing something cool. It was all about the music.\nJason Ringenberg of Jason and the Scorchers playing the Exit In in 1983.\n-- Submitted Photo By Alan Mayor\n“I don’t know how people started hearing about it. People talked, said it was a cool place to play.”\nNine months into its existence, the club expanded into a former H.G. Hill Grocery store next door, could seat about 200 people and the word continued to spread nationwide, through the music community.\n“We had a vision for a place with a stage where acts and small groups could play and have a venue for local talent of which we knew Nashville was full, and it wasn’t just county. In fact, we resisted anything that resembled a country act for the first couple years,” says Reynolds.\n“Back then there was no nightlife, no going out to hear music all the time like we have now. The only live music was in Printers’ Alley or on The Grand Ole Opry, two widely divergent experiences.”\n“We wanted people to behave like they would in a movie theater (in fact, they did host art house films when they had no music to offer.)\n“So we unwittingly became a cog in the music industry and learned that groups toured around clubs like this,” he adds, noting that the Exit/In – the funky little place where you came in the back and the acts dressed in an out-building to the rear of the property – became a major touring stop back when labels sent acts out on tour behind a new album.\n“Places you could compare it to were the Bottom Line in New York or what was that place in L.A.? The Troubadour,” Reynolds adds.\nThe eventual big-business growth of this club into what it is today – Nashville’s best-known rock hall – is chronicled elsewhere in this package of stories.\nBut Reynolds, Manier and Liz Thiels (who became a partner early on) created an indelible mark on Music City’s live scene and actually opened doors – both front doors and back doors – for a city that now has a seemingly endless number of listening rooms.\n“Our goal was to create an environment. … We were going to make the place so cool that they’d come even if a turtle was playing,” says Manier, laughing at that naivete.\n“But the reality was that we had some incredible people there, and no one was there [listening].” Crowds were slow catching on.\nThey began booking acts like B.B King, Odetta, Waylon Jennings. Heck, they even had Billy “The Piano Man” Joel play there for $1,500 back in the days when labels subsidized performers’ national tours to promote recently released albums. (That was when vinyl LPs were king, long before they became a collectible and sometimes pricey oddity in these compressed, digital years).\n“One thing that was interesting to me is that because in those days we played a lot of black artists, on any given night the place was 80 percent black people,” Manier explains, illustrating how inadvertently the Exit/In was breaking down societal barriers even while the dream materialized.\nThiels, now retired after a career in public relations and as an executive with the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, became in charge of publicity and carting the artists around town for radio interviews.\nThere were live broadcasts, WKDA did a rock night on Wednesday, and WPLN broadcast the Sunday night jazz – all fed to the stations via old-fashioned telephone lines.\nNot always were they successful, though.\n“The record labels and the artists were just thrilled to be broadcast, we never called for permissions,” Thiels says.\nThat caused one performance headache when Rahsaan Roland Kirk – multi-instrumental jazz player, best known for his tenor sax – came to perform. “He found out we were going to broadcast his show live (and he became angry) and he played a really short set and said ‘That’s all for a suck-ass rock station,” she recalls, with a laugh.\nWhile the owners were losing money, they were happy to see their club’s stature increase nationally.\nIn fact, Thiels illustrates that occasionally the glowing reputation – and high regard from national music magazines – sort of outpaced the reputation locally.\n“Dizzy Gillespie played there, and nobody came,” she says, awe and disappointment still flavoring her words all these decades later.\n“It was Dizzy Gillespie (the legendary jazz trumpet player), and we could not figure out why the jazz people didn’t come to see Dizzy Gillespie.\n“I asked a jazz guy ‘Why didn’t you come?’ And he told me he ‘didn’t think it would be him.’”\nStill none of those early owners has many regrets, and would do it again.\n“Outside of losing a bunch of money, sure,” notes Manier, when asked if he viewed the club as a success despite the fact the original owners piloted it into bankruptcy. “People love that place, and I can’t tell you how many people met their wives there … all of them.”\nThe national acclaim was not reflected in ticket sales. “We were struggling to survive. There were times when, as the owners… the wait staff and the bartenders would make more money than us.\n“Waitresses could make $200 or $250 a night, and that was a lot of money back then,” but he wouldn’t change it. “It was a place of magical musical happenings and the interaction between the musicians and the audience was energizing,” Manier says.\n“We didn’t go into it to make money,” says Reynolds. “Unfortunately that’s not a good way to go into a business venture, but we did what we wanted to do.\n“You had to be there to know what it was,” he says. “You had to be there.”\nOf course, the club had its ups and downs, but it did make it through its infancy to become what essentially was a cavernous concert hall, the perfect venue for rock bands.\nCurrent co-owner Cobb is proud of the club and its history.\n“I think it’s a very special place and a very special thing, and I think that, as a city and as a music community, Nashville is so fortunate to have the Exit/In,” he says.\n“I’m sure most of us take the Exit/In for granted. But it’s rare. There’s not a lot of places that have a 45-year-old rock club.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line252952"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9699257016181946,"wiki_prob":0.9699257016181946,"text":"Pvt. Albert P. Kourie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Kourie, 2002 W. Second street, now is stationed at Fort Sumner army air field, Fort Sumner, N.M.\nBruce D. Klas, son of Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Klas, 4619 Country club boulevard, was graduated recently from the operational supply course at the naval supply depot, Bayonne, N.J. He now will go to Harvard where he will be sworn in as a midshipman and start on four months additional training.\nClarence J. Heppe, chief pharmacist’s mate, has reported to San Pedro, Cal., for duty on a new destroyer, after completing a 16-day leave with his wife and family, 3326 Sixth avenue; his mother Mrs. Lydia B. Heppe, 3436 Sixth avenue, and other relatives. He entered the navy at the age of 17, retiring after four years service. As a member of the naval reserve his service record includes four additional years on the east coast. His new assignment will take him to the South Pacific area.\nSgt. Earl H. Seaton of the marine corps is spending a 30-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Seaton, Mitchellville, Ia., former Sioux City residents. Sgt. Seaton spent 27 months in the South Pacific. He was graduated from East high school and joined the marines in June, 1942.\nGeorge Rarick, aviation machinist’s mate second class, has departed after a visit with Mrs. Rarick’s mother, Mrs. Frances Rancipher, 210 Ross street, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Rarick, 4403 Grant street. He is on duty at the fleet postoffice in San Francisco. He worked at the postoffice here before going into the navy.\nPvt. Harry L. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bert F. Smith, 3719 Indiana avenue, is spending a 20-day furlough with his parents. He has completed his training as a paratrooper at Fort Benning, Ga., and will return there at the end of his furlough.\nCpl. Leo L. Carroll is spending a 21-day furlough in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carroll, 109 Perry street, after serving 18 months in the Aleutian area. He has three brothers in the service.\nNaval Aviation Cadet LeRoy John Ronning, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.L. Ronning, 3217 Fifth avenue, has completed his primary training at the naval air station, Glenview, Ill., and has been transferred to Pensacola, Fla. He is a graduate of East high school and began his aviation training at the preflight school at St. Mary’s college, Cal.\nRobert L. Harling, seaman first class, has arrived at a base in the South Pacific, according to word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Harling, 2715 S. Lemon street. He entered the Seabees in May, 1943.\nPfc. Wayne L. Skinner, 915 Pierce street, and Pfc. Earl F. Ely, 1623 Seventh street, are with the 713th railway operating battalion, which recently was commended by Lt. Gen. Jacob L. Devers, commander of the Sixth army group. Now in France, this battalion was the first unit of the military railway service to arrive on the Riviera beachhead in the southern France invasion.\nCpl. William H. Olson has completed training at the radar school at Boca Raton field, Fla., and is spending a furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Olson, 2923 Grandview boulevard. He will report to Salina, Kan., for assignment. Cpl. Olson’s twin brother, Pfc. Robert L. Olson, army air forces, is stationed on Galapagos islands, off the coast of Equador.\nOur Neighbors in Service\nHawarden, Iowa – T. Sgt. Max Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Miller of Hawarden, has arrived home from the Philippines, having received an honorable discharge on points. He flew to San Francisco from Manila in 40 hours. Sgt. Miller was in the army three years and seven months and served overseas for 41 months. During part of this time he was in Gen. MacArthur’s headquarters. The Hawarden youth has five combat stars and the presidential unit citation with an oak leaf cluster.\nHawarden, Iowa – Sgt. Richard L. Heeren, 19-year-old B-17 Flying Fortress waist gunner, has been awarded his fifth oak leaf cluster to the air medal for meritorious achievement while participating in Eighth air force attacks on vital targets and enemy held installations in Germany. Sgt. Heeren who entered the service in July, 1943, is the son of Mrs. J. C. Hendricks of Alcester, South Dakota.\nHawarden, Iowa -- M. Sgt. George Ross, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Earl Ross of Hawarden, suffered a fractured skull recently in a truck accident in New Guinea. His parents have been informed that he is recovering rapidly and soon will be able to leave the hospital.\nHawarden, Iowa -- T. Sgt. Willard Madson, son of Dr. and Mrs. William E Madson of Hawarden, is reported to be in a hospital on Mindanao, seriously ill with malaria and complications.\nHawarden, Iowa -- Pvt. Arthur Coleman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Coleman of Hawarden is home on a 30-day furlough, having recently returned from Germany after 11 months service overseas. Pvt. Coleman, who saw action in several battles, expects to go to the Pacific at the end of his furlough.\nHawarden, Iowa – Cpl. Kenneth Ruby, who recently returned from Germany, is spending a furlough with his wife at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Shoemaker of Hawarden.\nCherokee, Iowa – Sgt. John Anderson of the marines and Robert Melton, seaman first class, who were Cherokee friends, met recently on Saipan in the Marianas. Anderson has been overseas for 19 months and Melton’s ship docked at the island, so the two were able to meet.\nCherokee, Iowa- Technician Fourth Grade Darrell Olsen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Olsen, arrived home from northern Italy, making the trip as far as Miami, Florida by plane.\nCherokee, Iowa- Lt. Charles King, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry King of Cherokee, was slightly wounded on Luzon June 22. His wife received a message from the war department giving this information, but no details. Lt. King has been in the south Pacific since February, 1945. Prior to that he was stationed in the European theater, where he was a prisoner in Italy. With the fall of Italy, he fled from an Italian prison camp and found his way back to the allied lines.\nCherokee, Iowa—Sgt. James H. Nielson, son of Mrs. Marie Nielson of Cherokee, was awarded a citation for exceptionally meritorious conduct. He served on the Fifth Army front in Italy with the 168th (Rainbow) infantry regiment. When his battalion’s ammunition supply became very critical during the tenacious defense of positions on a high mountain, Nielson and six others, volunteered to deliver vital supplies. Loaded down with ammunition, they traveled over a muddy, slippery trail constantly under fire to reach the troops on the mountain.\nCherokee, Iowa—Lt. Dale Curtis, glider pilot and copilot on a transport plane, is spending a leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Curtis, in Cherokee. Lt. Curtis recently returned to the States from Europe, where he was stationed for two years.\nLeMars, Iowa – Sgt. Mathew Mertes, former LeMars youth, was in LeMars this week as a guest in the S. H. Luken home. Sgt. Mertes has just returned from one and a half years duty overseas. He has been officially discharged from the service and at present is visiting his wife and family in Sioux City. He has been in service the last 12 years. Immediately following D-Day he was wounded in France and was then flown to a hospital in England where he was confined for 10 months for treatment of shrapnel wound in his hip.\nLeMars, Iowa – Lane VandeSteeg received a letter from his son, Sgt. Bill VandeSteeg which was written July 4 somewhere in the tropical Islands.\nHe has been in the Pacific area for the past 34 months and is looking forward to being sent back to the states soon. Sgt. VandeSteeg has been helping publish the Yank Magazine, a publication for service men.\nRodney, Iowa – Raymond E. Daniels, seaman first class, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Daniels of Whiting, Iowa, recently underwent an appendectomy in an army hospital on an island in the South Pacific. He has now recovered and is back aboard his ship.\nDorothy Anne Comstock daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Comstock, 2021 McDonald Street, has been promoted to the rank of first lieutenant. She is serving as a hospital dietician with the 197th general hospital in the European theater of operations.\nPfc. Herbert F. Marshall, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Marshall, 1811 W. Palmer Avenue, is now returning home from Europe with the Eighth infantry division which participated in the Normandy breakthrough, the capture of Brest, the fight in the Hurtgen Forest and crossing the Roer River to launch the drive that reached the Rhine. He has been in service since April 1944 and has served overseas for five months. He was awarded the combat infantry badge. Before entering service he was employed by the Chesterman Company.\nPpl. Tony J. Letellier, reported to be from Sioux City, has been awarded the combat infantryman’s badge for exemplary conduct in action against the Japs in the Philippine liberation campaign He was previously awarded the expert infantryman’s badge for service in Dutch New Guinea and is a veteran of three campaigns, having served in the drive through central Luzon which was climaxed by the capture of Baguio, the Eummer capitol of the Philippines. He entered service January 29, 1942 and after serving in the Hawaiian Islands and New Guinea, he has been in the Philippines since February.\nCpl. Michael Moravian reported to be from Sioux City was one of eight men who spent three weeks in catching up to their outfit after getting separated during the attack on Dassau.\nFirst Lt. Claude R. Wright, 2325 Douglas Street, is a member of the 219th field artillery battalion which held five battle stars, 98 individual awards and a nomination for the presidential unit citation. The group is now serving with the 15th army in Germany.\nPvt. Milton W. Gregg, whose wife lives at 1810 ½ E. Fifth Street, is an assistant automatic rifleman with the third battalion of the 239th regiment in Italy. This was the group which discovered a vast collection of priceless art treasures that had been taken by the Germans from all over Italy and hidden in a 15th Century Castle.\nCpl. Raymond E. Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R. Cook, 5702 Lorraine Road, recently spent a 30-day furlough with his parents. He has just returned from 16 months overseas duty in England and has now reported to a base in Alabama for further assignment.\nGilbert E. Tweet, gunner’s mate, second class and Wesley L. Tweet, gunner’s mate first class, both of 603 Eden Avenue, participated in the battle of Okinawa, they were on duty on the battleship U.S.S. New York.\nPvt. Einar N. Fuglemsmo, formerly stationed at Camp Hood, Texas, has reported to Fort Riley, Kansas, after spending 12 days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. Fuglemsmo, 1218 Court Street.\nSgt. Chester J. Kudrle, whose wife, Helen, lives at 3108 McDonald Street, recently was awarded the Bronze Star medal for meritorious service in support of combat operations, while serving with the Fifth army in Italy.\nPvt. Doyle Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. G Stone, 1113 Hill Avenue, has been enrolled in an A.A.F. airplane mechanics training course at Keesler field, Biloxi, Mississippi. His wife lives with his parents.\nT. Sgt. James R. McCue, son of James R. McCue, 1301 Seventh Street, has received a medical discharge from the army hospital at Camp Carlson, Colorado. He has been in the army three years and was wounded twice in Germany for which he received the Purple Heart with an Oak Leaf Cluster and the Bronze Star. He also has the European Theater of operations ribbon with three Battle Stars and the Combat Infantryman Badge.\nS. Sgt. Raymond A. Hequist, 1316 26th Street, is a member of the 1132d engineer combat group now in Germany aiding in the military government of that occupied country. The group now is a part of the 15th army, in charge of German patrol border areas, construction and repair of roads, bridges and airfields, establishment of water supply depots for independent units, prisoner’s war camps and displaced persons centers. The 1132d arrived in France in February this year.\nLt. Donald D. Thatcher, 1716 Nebraska Street, is with the United States army’s transportation corps in the channel base section in France. The corps moved more than 1,000,000 tons of cargo monthly by rail, barge and motor and thousands of troops daily in supplying needs of the 12th army group in its drive against the Germans. These men now are engaged in redeploying troops and supplies from Europe to the China-Burma-India and Pacific theaters as well as directing the return of civilian personnel, troops and repatriated allied military personnel from forward areas to their home station.\nMarine Cpl. R. E. Paul, who recently returned after 27 months overseas and his younger brother, Milford, apprentice seaman, who arrived Sunday evening after completing boot training at the Great Lakes naval training station, are visiting in the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Paul, 4220 Central Avenue. A third brother, S. Sgt. Arthur Paul, is with the marines at Okinawa and a brother-in-law, Pvt. Leo Schmit, is a marine serving in the south Pacific.\nPvt. Joseph B. Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs J. B. Roberts, 1311 W. 18th Street, has been graduated from a training school at Chanute field, Illinois.\nWhile attending that army air force training command school he received instruction in power plant mechanics.\nMarlin L. Clark, was graduated recently from a course in signalman training at service schools at the Great Lakes, Illinois, naval training school, his wife, Bonnie, lives at Waukegan, Illinois.\nPfc. Robert W. Wyant, whose wife, Mildred, lives at 107 W. Third Street, is being processed at Camp Atlanta in northeastern France, as a member of the first European theater of operations armored division to be ordered to the Pacific. Pfc. Wyant served with the 13th armored division, popularly known as the Black Cat Division in the battle of the Ruhr pocket and in the drive through Bavaria into Austria. He will be given a furlough before the division begins its training for action in the pacific.\nJack A. Krone, 4210 Perry Creek Road, has been promoted to technician fifth grade.\nJames Richard Coughlin, fireman first class, is stationed at the motor torpedo boat squadron training Center at Melville, R. I., training before joining a P.T. squadron. The Sioux Cityan, a graduate of Trinity High School and formerly employed by a construction company, attended basic engineering school at Great Lakes, Illinois and refrigeration school at Syracuse, New York. His wife, the former Dorothy Jane Knowles, and three children, Patrick, Michael and Timothy are living on Morningside Avenue. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J.J. Coughlin, 2805 Myrtle Street. A brother, William, is a signalman in the navy.\nSgt. Neyron R. Pomeroy, son of Mr. and Mrs Ray Pomeroy, 1226 W. Fifth Street, recently was awarded the bronze star medal for meritorious service in maintaining the efficiency and operation of the army vehicles in his organization. Sgt. Pomeroy, a member of Headquarters battery, 546th antiaircraft artillery battalion, was cited for the period from July 14, 1944 to May 8, 1945, during which time he served in France, Belgium and Germany. As an auto parts clerk, Sgt. Pomeroy’s principal duty was securing a proper supply of spare parts and units for the maintenance of motor vehicles and he had been commended for his efforts in establishing a steady flow of supplies essential to the proper functioning and care of the 123 vehicles in the battalion. Prior to entering the service he was employed by Neisner Bros. Inc., Rochester, New York.\nPfc. Lloyd H. Hoff, whose wife, Ann, lives at 813 Douglas Street, has been awarded the Bronze Star medal for heroic action during the Seventh army drive in the Vosges Mountains last January. Pfc. Hoff, a rifleman with the 110th infantry by volunteering to act as a letter-bearer over an uncharted enemy mine field. While the wounded were being evacuated from the mined area, one of the litter-bearers stepped on a mine, the explosion tearing off both of his feet. Pfc. Hoff rushed to the wounded man and after giving him first aid, carried him to safety. Returning and making several more trips across the mine field, he carried out wounded under intense enemy artillery fire.\nLt. Darwin Thorton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thornton, 1901 W. First Street assisted Capt. T.B. Schwartz of Forrest Hills, New York, in leading a small detachment of the 84th medical battalion detailed to supervise a hospital at Ecksberg, near Muldorf, Germany. The patients of the hospital are under American care and gradually are recovering from the effects of Nazi brutality.\nSgt. Dale Harter, whose wife resides at 2401 S. Cornelia Street, is serving as a radioman in the signal corps with the 10th army on Okinawa, it was learned here. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.D. Harter, live at Bell, California.\nPfc. Francis B. Heilman, son of Clarence Heilman, 206 S. Rustin Street, recently was awarded the Bronze Star medal for “heroic achievement in connection with military operations against the enemy in Germany” while serving with the 290th infantry there.\nCpl. John W. Forrester, 1017 S. Glass Street, is serving with a transportation division in Antiverp, Belgium, which is aiding in the redeploying of troops and supplies for the European theater\nM. Sgt. William P. Mahrt, whose wife, Elizabeth, lives at 206 14th street, was with special troops of the 339th “Polar Bear” regiment in the day it discovered many famous German political prisoners and immense caches of gold currency and art works in the Dolomite Alps in Italy.\nCapt. David I. Caldwell, whose wife resides at 2237 Jones Street, is a member of the 474th fighter group of the ninth air force which recently was awarded the presidential unit citation. Capt. Coldwell has been overseas since February, 1944 and in addition to the presidential citation wears four battle participation stars.\nPfc. Dean C. Sluyter, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Sluyter, 4214 ½ Van Buren Avenue, recently joined the Ninth air force’s 416th bombardment group in France as a technical supply clerk. He has been overseas since March of this years.\nPfc. Edward Zenkovich, son of Mrs. Marie Zenkovich, 2611 Dodge Street, is serving at present with a cannon company, 395th infantry regiment of the 99th infantry division with the Third army in Germany. His decoration include the combat infantry badge and the E.T.O. ribbon with three battle stars.\nLt. (j.g.) Gerold E. Bammerlin, whose wife lives at 1508 Pierce Street, has returned to this country after flying 50 combat patrols as the pilot of a navy search plane operated from a base in the south Atlantic. He is the son of Edward H. Bammerlin, Burton, Nebraska.\nWarrant Officer Roy Payne, 2609 Myrtle Street and Stephen A. Carter, Jr. aviation radioman first class, 512 27th Street, have returned to this country after a tour of duty with the navy’s fleet wing 11, which operated patrol planes from an Atlantic base.\nHarvey Stowers, 19, seaman first class, son of Mr. and Mrs. John P. Stowers, 1704 George Street, has completed basic training at the submarine school, New London, Conn. A graduate of the Moorhead, Minnesota high school, he will be assigned to the underseas fighters. He has been in the navy since graduation.\nLiberated prisoners of the Germans, PFC Lawrence E. Shoop, 720 Morgan Street, PFC Gilbert Wallenburg, Ireton, Iowa are now at the army ground and service force redistribution station in Hot Springs, Arkansas for reassignment. Both were home on 60-day furloughs after arriving in the States in May. PFC Shoop, combat infantryman who wears the distinguished unit badge, was a prisoner for 73 days after serving seven months in Belgium and Germany. PFC Wallenburg, a prisoner for ?6 months after his capture in North Africa, wears two Bronze Battle Stars.\nPFC. Henry J. Holdenreid, with the Sixth division of marines on Okinawa has been promoted to that rank, according to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Holdenreid, 1501 South View terrace. A former pupil at Central High School, Pfc Holdenreid has been in the marines for more than a year and overseas for seven months. He recently was released from a hospital where he was treated for battle wounds.\nSgt. Michalsky, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Michalsky, 414 Lafayette Street, has been promoted to staff sergeant. His wife lives with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.E. Porter, 1615 Hamilton Street. S Sgt. Michalsky is a radio man with the Eighth air force and has been transferred from England to North Africa He has been overseas two years and has received a presidential citation and six service stars. S. Sgt. Michalsky has two brothers overseas, PFC Joe Michalsky with an infantry division in Italy and Tony Michalsky, gunner’s mate third class, in the south Pacific.\nMerle J. Burns, watertender third class, son of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Burns, 706 Morningside Avenue, served aboard the battle cruiser U.S.S. Guam during six months of combat from Okinawa on the fringes of Japan’s Island Sea. The Guam, the American version of the pocket battleship, cruised off Japanese shores for 61 days and during the Okinawa invasion she was a carrier escort\nSgt. Harlan L. Hoffman Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Harlan L. Hoffman of Omaha, has been awarded the combat infantryman badge. He was graduated from Central High School here in 1939.\nS. Sgt. Earl W. Lindgren, 1014 16th Street, was with the First Airborne Army Force which entered Berlin July 4 to assume control of the American sector there.\nS. Sgt. Phillip F. Jauron, son of Mrs. Alda R. Johnson, 720 Hornick Avenue has been awarded the Bronze Star. A member of the V corps in Czechoslovakia, S. Sgt Jauron was cited for meritorious service in military operations during the period from June 9, 1944, to May 8, 1945 in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany and Czechoslovakia. He served with the 648th medical clearing company.\nEmmett L. Keough, serving as assistant G-3 with the 11th armored division, has been promoted to major. He also has been awarded the Bronze Star for heroic conduct during the division’s attack from the Kyll River to the Rhine. Maj. Keough’s wife and daughter, Connie, reside at 2123 Pierce Street. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo H. Keough, live at 2004 Grandview Boulevard.\nPvt. Gene Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.C. Cook, Sergeant Bluff, has been graduated from the demolition school part of the parachute school, Fort Benning, Georgia.\nPfc. Albert D. Dallman, stationed in Prestwick, Scotland, with the European division of the transport command working in the servicing crew in the engineer action of operations, has been promoted to the rank of corporal. Cpl. Dallman, formerly employed by the navy as a truck driver, entered the service February 24, 1943 and was sent overseas after receiving basic training at a field in Texas. His mother is Mrs. J. J. Dallman of Sioux City and is wife, Margaret, lives at Prestwick.\nFranklin LeRoy Coon, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wilfred Coon, 12 W. Second Street, is receiving his naval indoctrination at the United States naval training Center, Great Lakes, Illinois.\nDave R. Nicklen, whose wife, Helen, lives at 721 Market Street, has been promoted to the rank of sergeant. He participated in the battle of central Europe with the 16th armored division.\nLt. (j.g.) James H. Alexander, Jr., and Lt (j.g.) George W. Brown, sons of Mrs. Pearl Alexander, 1619 W. Fifth Street and 182 other United States navy men who lost their lives while operating from a naval air station at Dunkeswell, England were honored by having their names permanently inscribed on a memorial dedicated at the air station by Fleet air wing 7.\nThomas E. Hanifan, ship-fitter third class, 2001 S. Newton Street and Joseph C. Orth, fireman first class, home address 2925 Beck Street are serving with a landing vehicle track repair unit at an advanced naval base on Saipan. Mrs. Orth and their daughter Sharon live with his mother at the Beck Street address. A brother, Glenn Orth, is a motor machinist’s mate in the navy\nCapt. Ray C. Beermann, former owner of a mortuary at South Sioux City who served as supply officer at Camp Somerset, a prisoner of war base at Westover, Maryland has been awarded a certificate of commendation for exceptionally meritorious performance beyond the call of duty, according to a communication from the camp. Capt. Beermann has been transferred to service command head-quarters and now is director of mortuary operations for the Third service command which includes Maryland, Pennsylvania and Virginia. He entered the army in October 1942 and after serving at posts in several states was assigned to Camp Somerset in June, 1944. He received his commission in 1935 and was a member of the officers reserve corps until called to active duty.\nRobert L. Beck, seaman first class, has arrived from the Great Lakes naval training station for a leave with his wife and son, Roger Lee, 1519 Helmer Street.\nM. Sgt. Richard H. Grubel, 3604 Fourth Avenue, soon will return to the United States with the veteran 459th bomb group, after serving in Italy with the 15th air force, according to an announcement from the commanding general. The veteran group will receive additional training and equipment before reassignment to the Pacific theater of war. During the 13 months service in Italy the 459th flew on 244 missions against strategic targets in German-held Europe.\nT. Sgt. Howard, whose wife resides at 2731 Prospect Street, is a member of the 142d infantry of the veteran 36th Texas division and recently was awarded the bronze arrowhead to wear on his European theater of operations ribbon. The award was for participation in the Salerno-Riviera invasion when he made the D-Day amphibious assault.\nPfc. Wayne L. Bocain, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Bocain, 223 South John Street is a member of the Second battalion, 143d infantry of the veteran 36th Texas division and has been awarded a bronze arrowhead to wear on his European theater of operations ribbon. It was awarded for participation in the Riviera invasion when he made the D-Day amphibious assault.\nTranscribed by Connie Swearingen, Mar 2019; updated Jul 2019","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1697463"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.524282693862915,"wiki_prob":0.524282693862915,"text":"No one likes jury duty. Well, some people probably do, but one hopes they are smart enough to keep it to themselves. At the same time, the right to a trial by jury is a great thing about the American justice system, and everyone should serve at least once and see how it all works. If you've ever been stuck in a back room arguing over the particulars of a case, you will never again wonder about some of the baffling verdicts passed down by civilian tribunals in high-profile trials. It's harder to armchair deliberate when you know how sentencing instructions and the literal wording of the law can affect the outcome of a seemingly open-and-shut debate.\nWhile juries I have served on have never been as articulate, or as heated, as the regular joes and uncommon men who populate the tiny room of 12 Angry Men, Reginald Rose's script captures the back-and-forth quibbling over legal minutia pretty well. Inspired by his own time on a jury, Rose first wrote 12 Angry Men as a teleplay broadcast live in 1955 (which is also included here), and then expanded the hour-long program into a full movie screenplay, which was directed by Sidney Lumet in 1957.\nThe movie begins after the trial is over. Outside of some short instructions from the judge and a lone shot of the accused, we have missed the proceedings. The camera travels the jury box, recording the faces of the jurors, before following them into a cramped room where they will be asked to stay until they can agree on a verdict. Most assume that the deliberation will be quick: the first vote is actually eleven for \"guilty.\" The lone hold-out is Juror #8 (Henry Fonda), whose mind isn't made up. Maybe the boy killed his father, maybe he didn't. Despite pressure from the others to bend, #8 stays true to his insistence that if they are going to send a 19-year-old kid to the electric chair, they should at least spend some time exploring the realms of reasonable doubt.\nSlowly, #8 works his way through the case. The testimony of the downstairs neighbor is questioned, then the uniqueness of the murder weapon, a switchblade knife. One by one, each juror is drawn into the discussion, and one by one they reveal something about who they are. #9 (Joseph Sweeney) is an observant old man, #5 (Jack Klugman) is from the same slums as the accused, and #11 (George Voskovic) is an immigrant who believes in America's sense of justice. On the stubborn side we have #3 (Lee J. Cobb), the father with an angry temper, and #4 (E.G. Marshall), the business man with the steady demeanor. There is also #7 (Jack Warden), who just wants to get out of there and go to a ballgame. And perhaps worst of all, the one that everyone else eventually turns against, is #10 (Ed Begley), a racist who believes the boy, who looked like he was maybe Puerto Rican, is a natural born liar, it's a byproduct of his skin color.\nAs the case disintegrates, personal feelings flare up, sides are taken, and threats are made. Rose has built a microcosm of American society, and also a sounding board for political ideas that were prudent to the American experience of the time. Civil rights, the vilification of unpopular or \"radical\" ideas, economic divides, the notion of might making right--these concepts are challenged just as the evidence is challenged. What would motivate a witness to lie? How much does an abused kid's background matter? What does it mean to be impartial and what constitutes reasonable doubt? For a locked room scenario, it's a surprisingly potent drama. Each man is given a rich background and each has an inner life. Nothing here is incidental. The writing is precise and dramatic and it's not afraid to be writing.\nFor his part, Sidney Lumet, who was transitioning out of television into this, his first feature film, keeps 12 Angry Men moving. Boris Kaufman's camera is agile and lively, moving through the room, capturing important expressions and gestures. The director and his cinematographer enact bold compositions, emphasizing the cramped space via contrasts of physical size. One man foregrounded may tower over the one in the background, but the power is often shifted: what the \"smaller\" man says weakens the \"bigger\" man. Live television had taught Lumet how to use a limited set to his advantage. If you think about it, it took TV to bridge the gap between stage and film, not just by putting together complicated one-time performances, but also by teaching a generation of new filmmakers to be economical and use confined spaces to their advantage. While the 1960s might have kicked down the walls of cinema and explored the open frontiers that new technologies allowed for, directors like Sidney Lumet and John Frankenheimer and others who first worked in l950s TV used restrictions to their advantage.\n12 Angry Men had a profound effect on legal procedurals to follow. The notion that a criminal trial could be the basis for exploring bigger ideas has been exploited in most recent memory by the legal dramas of David E. Kelley and the whole Law and Order franchise. Even if those shows did move the action back into the courtroom, they still owe something to what Reginald Rose and Sidney Lumet (and Frank Schaffner, who directed the 1955 broadcast) did here. The whole strata of society passes through the doors of any given justice building, and for true justice to hold sway, they all must be honored the same.\nFrank Schaffner's original 1955 broadcast version is thankfully included on this release, giving viewers a chance to witness the historic, Emmy-winning Studio One production. In some ways, this older version is somewhat superior. For one, the cast is not as well known, and having Robert Cummings (Hitchcock's Saboteur [review]) as Juror #8 instead of Henry Fonda makes the character more interesting. Fonda brings with him a certain moral authority, whereas Cummings' stuttering, unsure portrayal makes him less immediately convincing. Likewise, not showing the accused leaves that character up to our imagination, and a picture of him forms the more we learn. Lumet chose a scrawny, sympathetic looking kid that we make up our mind about right away. In general, the drama is more concise here. Having less time meant that Reginald Rose didn't have the opportunity to go off on as many personal tangents for each character, and one could argue that makes the dramaturgy less heavy handed. Both work for me, and I think in the spirit of this thing, we could make a case for either/or. (A 15-minute introduction by Ron Simon, from the Paley Centre for Media, adds further context.)\nMost exciting, as well, is the addition of another live television drama, this one pairing Reginald Rose with Sidney Lumet a year before 12 Angry Men. The teleplay Tragedy in a Temporary Town features another mob of men, but this one isn't brought together by the legal system. Rather, it's vigilantism. The show stars Lloyd Bridges and two men that would go on to work for Lumet in 12 Angry Men, Jack Warden and Edward Binns (Juror #6). Set in a worker's camp, the story revolves around a young girl getting grabbed and kissed in the darkness. Failing to listen to Bridges' protest, Warden forms a posse to hunt through the camp, dragging the traumatized girl around in hopes she'll find her attacker. They barge into every home, writing down the names of any male age fifteen and over, until they land on a suspect that they can accept. It's not about finding the right guy, but about venting their restless anger.\nRose touches on the idea of personal \"justice\" in 12 Angry Men. The workers here are like the jurors unleashed. If the men in the other film could have gotten out of the room and been allowed to do as they wished with the accused, they very well could have resorted to violence. Here the misguided actions of the lynch mob threatens the safety of the whole community rather than making it more secure. Ironically, the men in the posse are looking for a threat within, not realizing they are it. Bridges is forceful in the lead, though his moral equivocations don't quite match Warden's menacing bluster.\nPlease Note: The images used here are from promotional materials and are not taken from the Blu-ray edition under review.\nLabels: blu-ray, Frank Schaffner, sidney lumet","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line44880"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6817874908447266,"wiki_prob":0.6817874908447266,"text":"See more objects with the tag interior, domestic, communication, electronic, offices, black and white, contrast, coil, sleek, electronics, dials, rotation, handsets.\nThis was an Object of the Day.\nModel 500 Telephone\nThis is a telephone. It was designed by Henry Dreyfuss and manufactured by Western Electric Manufacturing Company and made for (as the client) Bell Telephone Laboratories and firm: Henry Dreyfuss Associates. It is dated Designed 1953, this example ca. 1980 and we acquired it in 2009. Its medium is molded plastic, metal, rubber. It is a part of the Product Design and Decorative Arts department.\nThe model 500 telephone was designed by American industrial designer, Henry Dreyfuss. Dreyfuss was among the first generation of American industrial design professionals. His career spanned nearly five decades and his designs ranged from the Big Ben alarm clock and Hoover vacuum cleaners to locomotives and airline interiors. What set Dreyfuss apart from many of his contemporaries was his interest in and contribution to the fields of ergonomics and anthropometrics (the study of human body measurements). His book, The Measure of Man (1960), featured two fictitious characters, Joe and Josephine, who represented the average-sized man and woman. The book contained detailed measurements of the human body on which designs could be based. Even before Dreyfuss began designing the model 500 telephone for Bell Telephone Laboratories (BTL), a longstanding client, he pursued a five-point guideline for creating good design: safety and utility, maintenance, cost, quality, and appearance.\nDreyfuss began consulting for BTL in 1930. Working with the company’s engineers, he sought simplicity and unity of form in their telephone equipment. This resulted in the model 302 (1937), the first Dreyfuss design produced by BTL. The balanced form of the model 302’s black phenolic plastic body and handset was seen as a significant improvement over the heavier, larger, and more awkward telephones previously in use.\nAs demand for telephone service increased after World War II, BTL determined the need for a new design that would be comfortable, unobtrusive, attractive to a broad range of customers, more durable, and easier to service. After years of research and testing, the model 500 telephone made its debut in 1949. Dreyfuss’s care in designing a user-based object is evident in the changes he made to several features. He modified the angular body into a softer sculptural form in a lighter, more durable plastic. Unlike the 302’s numbers and letters, which were on the porcelain-coated dial directly under the finger holes, the model 500 placed the numbers and letters in a ring outside the finger wheel; this increased legibility and led to fewer misdials. The new handset, known as the model G, was flatter than its predecessor, making it more comfortable to hold and allowing it to be cradled against the user’s shoulder, freeing the hands. This handset design is still used on pay phones as of 2009.\nIn 1953, BTL and Dreyfuss updated the model 500, producing it in several colors and replacing the black metal finger wheel with a lighter, clear plastic version that could complement a phone of any color. The 1953 model also did away with the long straight cord, replacing it with a coiled one—a feature used until the advent of the cordless phone. Deeming the model 500 a success by the mid-1950s, BTL added a wall-mounted variant to the series and, in 1963, introduced a touch-tone version. The model 500 became the standard desk-style phone in the United States, with over 93 million units produced for use in offices and homes between 1949 and the divestiture of AT&T (the Bell System) in 1984.\nDreyfuss was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1904. By 1923, he was apprenticing with Norman Bel Geddes, a theatrical designer and one of the founders of the newly-established field of industrial design. Dreyfuss soon became a consultant for Macy’s Department Store where he not only designed displays but showed a desire to collaborate with manufacturers on the design of their goods. In 1929, he opened his own office in New York; he later opened a second office in Pasadena, California. In 1965, he was elected the first president of the Industrial Design Society of America.\nCooper-Hewitt is the steward of the Dreyfuss archive. The model 500 is an important design in Dreyfuss’s prodigious output for its significance in American postwar industrial design. The museum also holds other examples of Dreyfuss’s telephone designs, including the model 302, the Princess (1959), and the Trimline (1965).\nThis object was featured in our Object of the Week series in a post titled Model 500 Telephone, Henry Dreyfuss.\nIt is credited Transfer from Exhibitions Department.\nRolodex Open Rotary Card File\nbent tubular metal, molded plastic, rubber, paper.\nGift of Rolodex Corporation.\nT-86 Round Thermostat\nmetal, molded plastic.\nGift of Honeywell Inc..\nPanton Stacking Side Chair\ninjection molded luran s thermoplastic.\nGift of Robert Blaich.\nOur curators have highlighted 11 objects that are related to this one. Here are three of them, selected at random:\n#426 Child's Chair\nbent enameled steel, woven wool upholstery.\nGift of Mel Byars.\nQwip 1200 Facsimile Transceiver And Acoustic Coupler\nmolded plastic, cast metal, foam, electronic components.\nGift of William W. Moore, II.\n1994-56-1-a/c\nPredicta Television\nmetal, glass, molded plastic.\nGift of Jan Staller in honor of Max Staller.\nH x W x D (not including cord): 12.3 x 21 x 22.7 cm (4 13/16 x 8 1/4 x 8 15/16 in.)\nIt has the following markings\nMolded in body under cradle, rear: in oval: \"BELL SYSTEM / MADE BY / Western Electric\"'; On underside of metal base plate: White paper label with \"500DM / 12-80\" printed in red. Off-white paper label with \"Property Of New York Tel. Co. / NOT FOR SALE\" printed in blue.\nModel 500 Telephone; Designed by Henry Dreyfuss (American, 1904–1972); USA; molded plastic, metal, rubber; H x W x D (not including cord): 12.3 x 21 x 22.7 cm (4 13/16 x 8 1/4 x 8 15/16 in.); Transfer from Exhibitions Department; 2009-50-1-a/c\nThis object was previously on display as a part of the exhibitions\tBob Greenberg Selects and Pixar: The Design of Story.\nShort URL http://cprhw.tt/o/2E1AD/\nAccession Number 2009-50-1-a/c\n{{cite web |url=https://www-4.collection.cooperhewitt.org/objects/18732761/ |title=Model 500 Telephone |author=Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum |accessdate=16 January 2022 |publisher=Smithsonian Institution}}","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line86669"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6559733152389526,"wiki_prob":0.34402668476104736,"text":"Château d'Aulnois\nChâteau d'Aulnois Photo - François BERNARDIN - Wikipedia - lic. under CC BY-SA 3.0\nLocation: Aulnois-sur-Seille, in the Moselle departement of France (Lorraine Region).\nNotes: Château d'Aulnois date of the eighteenth century and overlooks the Seille, in the heart of the village of Aulnois-sur-Seille. It is the subject of a classification as historical monuments since May 1963 and a registration in September 2013.Initially, this dependence of the Metz diocese was a medieval stronghold. It is found at the back of the castle, the towers of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries integrated into the castle rebuilt in the classical style.The task of rebuilding the castle in the eighteenth century, the architect Boffrand decides to use the natural terrace on the Seille that constitutes the site. The facade is designed in 1726. On that date the count of Armoises governor ducal children and owner of the castle, is created \"Marquis Aunoy\" by Duke Leopold, Duke of Lorraine. Subsequently, the castle is undergoing major damage during the First World War but will gradually rebuilt from 1920 and historical monument in 1926. In 1934, the Marist brothers bought the castle and installed a school and a boarding school. During World War II, it was occupied by the Hitler Youth and suffered further damage during the fighting of the Liberation. From 1946 to 1979, various campaigns work partially restore the castle was then abandoned. In 1993, the SIVOM between Seille and Nied castle gate to rehabilitate the buyer, with the support of Europe, the State and the General Council of Moselle (cost of rehabilitation: € 2,686,000). In 1999 came the first school year in the castle whose owner and manager is SIVU the Seille valley of nine rural communes. It now houses a public elementary school, called the school Armoises, more than 150 students and an association (rural home of Armoises) that manages the after-school and canteen on site and it offers numerous cultural and sports activities as well as various events.\nChâteau d'Aulnois Links:\nChâteau d'Aulnois On Wikipedia","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1790820"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9582030177116394,"wiki_prob":0.9582030177116394,"text":"LA County Redistricting: Map debate takes an…\nLA County Redistricting: Map debate takes an 11th-hour turn for San Fernando Valley\nBut what redistricting map works for the San Fernando Valley doesn't work for Pomona. And coastal communities are ramping up the noise.\nBy Ryan Carter | rcarter@scng.com | Daily News\nPUBLISHED: December 4, 2021 at 8:17 a.m. | UPDATED: December 4, 2021 at 8:18 a.m.\nSan Fernando Valley residents found new hope this week that their collective voices could be better heard at the county level after a new map emerged that would redraw political boundaries to keep the Valley “united” and potentially represented by a single supervisor grounded in the area.\nBut the proposal — arising in the waning weeks of the county’s marathon redistricting process — runs counter to hopes elsewhere across the vast region, in such places as Pomona.\nThe 14-member redistricting commission has not yet settled on a final map that would redraw political power for the next 10 years. But as it nears a Dec. 15 deadline, the angst is building as the potential winners and losers of the process speak louder on their preferences.\nL.A. City Councilman Paul Krekorian, who represents a swath of neighborhoods in the San Fernando Valley — himself fresh off a contentious redistricting of his own City Council — made a plea for a new proposed county-level map dubbed Map 78.\n“The Valley has for the last century had a distinctive identity, and today we have distinctive issues around public transportation planning, air quality, water quality, public health, housing — all issues that the Valley as a whole has common interests in, and yet we don’t have any guarantee that a resident of the Valley, despite having 2 million people living here, will have a representative on the Board of Supervisors or on the Metro board,” he said.\nProposed Map 78\nFor weeks, a sprinkling of San Fernando Valley advocates had been lobbying for at least baseline representation on a map they’d assumed would split the Valley.\nSome had all but given up, given the direction the commission appeared to be headed. The panel was even contemplating breaking off Sylmar into District 5, a prospect that concerned local residents because the community identifies itself with other northeast Valley communities currently in District 3.\nBut the new proposal keeps the Valley “whole,” essentially carving it out on its own district, roughly spanning from Calabasas and Malibu on its most western and southwestern flank to Burbank and Glendale in the east.\nCouncilmember Paul Krekorian (File photo by Hans Gutknecht, Los Angeles Daily News/SCNG)\nKrekorian was joined by a chorus of supporters for the new map — which would greatly increase the chances of a supervisor on the board being from the Valley.\nThe distinctions about where communities are on the final map are important for many communities in L.A. County. For years they have built up cultural, socioeconomic and political bonds with neighboring communities in the political battle for resources and services.\nIf Sylmar, for instance, went to District 5, rather than District 3 under a new map, local advocates and residents worry they would have to forge new bonds with a new supervisor.\nThe same kind of concern has sparked huge public input from Southeast L.A. and East L.A. residents, as well as those from the San Gabriel Valley, where in such places as Pomona, city officials and residents want to ensure the city is not lumped into a district it has no identification with.\nA redrawing map might work great for one community, but not as well for another in terms of voting power.\n“Map 78 might be good for the San Fernando Valley, but it screws Pomona,” said Henry Fung, a mapmaker who designed the original map F.\nUnder 78, for instance, Pomona would be moved into District 5, the county’s northernmost district, currently represented by Supervisor Kathryn Barger. But that’s exactly what many of its residents and leaders don’t want. They want to be in District 1, joined with other similar communities of interest that hug the 605 and 60 freeways, and which share common identities, resources and often pool together to fight together in the same political battles.\nMoreover, it could change the political dynamic for Barger herself.\nAnd therein lies the rub for the commission — which is required by law to make sure that roughly 2 million people populate each of the five supervisorial districts under a new map, as well as accounting for shifts in population growth, and ensuring that traditionally disenfranchised populations have a fair chance to elect a leader of their choosing. Moreover, this is the first time in the county’s history in which a citizens commission has done the redrawing — taking it out of the hands of members of the Board of Supervisors themselves.\nOn Wednesday night, during a mammoth public comment period, residents, elected leaders, non-profit leaders from the San Fernando Valley, East, South and Southeast L.A., the San Gabriel Valley and the South Bay all voiced distinct visions for what they say is the best version of what the redistricting map should look like in a region of 10 million plus.\nBut after four hours of public comment, the future was cloudy as the new proposal emerged, bolstering hopes of San Fernando Valley residents in gaining more political force. Supporters say the map also assuages concerns of other areas in the county, where concern was emerging about votes being diluted and communities split across districts.\nBut other proposed maps are on the table.\nAt issue for days have been three maps — and their offshoots. But the question of how various communities of interest in the county can achieve the most voting and political force has become intertwined with a conversation about race, the history of redlining in the county, and concerns about exclusion and inclusion of ethnic and socioeconomic attributes of populations based on shared historic, political, geographic and socioeconomic identities.\nAt the front of the table, the commission is considering a map that would join Southeast L.A. communities with South L.A. (Map B-2), another that would join Rancho Palos Verdes with Panorama City (Map F-1) and another that would stretch a historically Black district to the coast (Map G).\nMap G\nOn Wednesday night there was continued robust support from the San Gabriel Valley for a derivation of Fung’s map — F-1 — which would keep Pomona in District 1, currently held by Supervisor Hilda Solis.\nResidents and leaders in the Gateway City area showed support for Map G, also an offshoot of F. In both maps, communities such as Vernon, Huntington Park, Maywood South Gate and Downey are all kept together and two Latino-voting majority districts would be created, though for many the devils were in the details. F-1 also appeared to garner support — with requests for some tweaking — that would keep Asian-American and Black communities whole.\nMonique Bacon, a community member and also a member of The Coalition of 100 Black Women/Los Angeles Chapter, said during public comment that the proposal “keeps our African American communities together, providing us with a real voice to be able to elect a supervisor that will work in our best interest.”\nMap F-1\nMany have been wary of Map G, which stretches District 2 to coastal cities, a point that has raised concern among critics in a community that the district’s traditionally African-American voting force could be diluted with the force of Whiter coastal areas, including communities within the Rancho Palos Verdes Peninsula.\nBacon said if the commission went with G, she’d want to be assured that the city of Carson and Cal State Dominguez Hills are included in that district.\nThe proposed stretch of District 2 was made with the intent of acknowledging the legacy of 20th-century red-lining and racially restrictive covenants that for decades kept African-Americans from living closer to the coast — in effect, helping to shape the political dynamics of the current District 2, which includes Inglewood, Athens, Hawthorne, Culver City and Ladera Heights.\nEileen Hupp, president and CEO of the Palos Verdes Peninsula Chamber of Commerce, a longtime resident of the area, applauded B-2 because it kept seaside communities on the peninsula and others hugging the coast — including Redondo Beach, Manhattan Beach, Long Beach and Torrance — squarely in District 4.\n“It is extremely important to keep the Palos Verdes Peninsula aligned with the San Pedro community. Our history, our economy, our community organizations are inextricably linked and center on the fact that both the San Pedro community, and the Palos Verdes community are harbor communities. The impact of the ports is part of our development. Our communities have grown up together over 100-plus years,” she said.\nWho will represent you on the LA County Board of Supervisors? With new maps, answer getting closer\nQ&A: LA County redistricting is out of the hands of the supervisors. Here’s why that matters\nRedistricting: Panel pushes LA County boundaries closer to final map; some bemoan missing voices\nBut it was the same argument from just about every region of the county — that splitting communities long bonded together with shared identities would hurt them — from Southeast L.A.’s “SELA” neighborhoods to Thai Town, Koreatown and Little Tokyo to East L.A to Sylmar.\nCommissioners acknowledged that whatever the final outcome, not all will be pleased.\nWhat seems apparent is that there will be at least two Latino voting majority districts, based on the growth of that population reflected in Census 2020. The commission appears to want to look more closely at F-1, G and the new map, 78. Commission Co-Chair Carolyn Williams appeared to hint at a push to drop the B map from consideration, but it didn’t happen.\nThe commission next meets for a special meeting at 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 5, with the next public hearing at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 7.\nYou can find all proposed maps at https://redistricting-lacounty.hub.arcgis.com/.\nMeetings are posted at https://redistricting.lacounty.gov/.\nLA County Board of Supervisors\nRyan Carter | Reporter\nRyan Carter, a reporter and editor, is part of team covering COVID-19 in L.A. County and lead election and politics coverage in L.A. County.Ryan started his career writing obituaries at the Glendale News-Press, before working as assistant city editor for Times Community News (Division of the L.A. Times) and city editorfor the Glendale News-Press, San Bernardino Sun and L.A. Daily News. Ryan earned a BA degree in Political Science from UCLA and is working toward his Master's of Legal Studies at UCLA.\nrcarter@scng.com\nFollow Ryan Carter\t@ryinIE","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line106538"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7262536883354187,"wiki_prob":0.2737463116645813,"text":"Joint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports\nJoint Publications Research Service (JPRS) Reports is a collection of documents produced by JPRS, a unit of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), from 1957 – 1995. It contains English-language translations of foreign-language monographs, reports, journal and newspaper articles, and radio and television broadcasts from regions throughout the world with an emphasis on communist and developing countries. JPRS staffers prepared these translations for the use of U.S. government officials, various agencies, and the research and industrial communities. Reports cover socioeconomic, political, environmental, scientific, technical, and military issues and events.\nJPRS was established in March 1957 as part of the United States Department of Commerce's Office of Technical Services. Initially, the reports were primarily translations rather than analysis or commentary, with an emphasis on scientific and technical topics. Over time, that scope expanded to cover environmental concerns, world health issues, nuclear proliferation, economics, narcotics trafficking, and much more.\n1957-1995; some reports include translations of pre-1957 material.\nHistory: Global\nNewsBank","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1851524"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6990162134170532,"wiki_prob":0.6990162134170532,"text":"Kid Nichols\nCharles Augustus \"Kid\" Nichols (September 14, 1869 – April 11, 1953) was a Major League Baseball (MLB) pitcher who played for the Boston Beaneaters, St. Louis Cardinals and Philadelphia Phillies from 1890 to 1906. A switch hitter who threw right-handed, he was listed at 5 feet 10 inches (1.78 m) and 175 pounds (79 kg). He is a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame.\nNichols played minor league baseball for three teams until September 1889, when he signed for the Boston Beaneaters. After making his debut the following season and spending twelve seasons with the Beaneaters, Nichols spent a two-year sojourn in the minor leagues. He was dealt to the St. Louis Cardinals in 1904 and subsequently played for the Philadelphia Phillies, with whom he played his final game on May 18, 1906. He is most famous for being the youngest pitcher to join the 300 win club.\nNichols was born on September 14, 1869 in Madison, Wisconsin. His parents were Robert and Christina Nichols. His father had worked as a butcher and owned a grocery store with several locations in Madison. Robert had at least four children from a prior marriage to a woman named Sarah, who died of tuberculosis in 1859. Robert and Christina had several children together. Nichols's four-year-old sister Fannie died several years before Nichols was born; she accidentally set herself on fire while playing with matches.\nThis page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia -\thttps://wn.com/Kid_Nichols\nBaseball HP 0828: Kid Nichols\nsource: Baseball History Podcast\nEp. 147 – The Comedy Spot Kid with Dane Nichols\nsource: Gag On This...Podcast\n3 Things you should Never Do with Kids! with Heather Nichols\nsource: Questionable Conversations\nQuestionable Conversations ~ Dr. Glenna Rice MPT: 3 Things you should Never Do with Kids! with Heather Nichols\nRural Route Radio Oct 15, 2020 We Sow We Grow Natasha Nicholes is back describing that is about raising kids not just our food\nsource: Trent Loos Podcast\nNichole Bloom\nsource: The JV Club with Janet Varney\nsource: Harper Audio Presents\nNick Nichols\nsource: Playing Above The Line\nAlex Nicholls\nsource: It's All Cobblers To Me\nNichole Michelson\nsource: What Problem Do You Solve?\nJohn Nicholl\nsource: Little Miss Morfett Chats to Authors\nNichole Schoonover\nsource: Start Here Coaching Services Podcast\nGary Nichols\nsource: 30A Songwriter Radio\nChristin Nichols\nsource: Musik-Interviews\nRob Nichol\nsource: Kiwi Yarns\nBERNIE NICHOLLS\nsource: Gouche Live\nDanielle Nichole\nsource: Brad Cooney Podcast\nPeter Nichols\nsource: Desert Island Discs: Archive 2000-2005\nCrystal Nichols\nsource: CONVERSATIONS with RARE WOMAN\nNichols And Dimes\nsource: 100 Music","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line474442"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9545494318008423,"wiki_prob":0.9545494318008423,"text":"Momentum to regulate drug prices uncertain…\nMomentum to regulate drug prices uncertain after Prop 61 defeat, Republican victories\nRudy Cuellar, 66, and his daughter, Pearl, 36, joined a Sacramento rally to support Proposition 61 the day before voters rejected the measure. If the measure fails, Rudy Cuellar said on Monday, policymakers should “just do it again.”\nRepublican control of the White House and Congress erodes the possibility of federal action to control the price of prescription drugs, health policy experts say.\nInstead, policymaking to address the spiraling drug costs likely will be done on the state level. Yet the Election Day defeat of a California ballot measure to rein in drug prices may make local lawmakers less inclined to pursue that model of tamping down on drug prices, too.\n“The prospect for a broad measure at the federal level for doing something about pricing is probably zero,” said Dr. Walid Gellad associate professor of medicine and director of the Center for Pharmaceutical Policy and Prescribing at the University of Pittsburgh.\nAlthough President-elect Donald Trump has indicated support for giving Medicare the ability to negotiate drug prices, “what everyone thought was going to happen related to prescription drugs is just a lot less likely,” said Gellad.\nNearly 54 percent of Californians voted against Proposition 61, which would have pegged the state of California’s payments for prescription drugs to prices paid by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. The measure — which helped fuel a nationwide debate over ways to alleviate drug price “sticker shock” over EpiPens and other lifesaving medications — drew support in early polls, but lost traction in the days before the election.\nGellad says states may continue their push for more transparency in how drugmakers price their medications, especially when it comes to price increases.\nAbout 16 states considered some sort of proposal during the last legislative session to require manufacturers to disclose how they price their products or how much they spend on research and development, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Vermont’s proposal was signed by the governor this past June.\nNew Jersey and Virginia next year will renew consideration of drug price transparency legislation that had been in play this year but did not secure passage, said Dick Cauchi, the conference’s program director for health insurance, finance and pharmaceuticals.\nBut it’s too soon to tell whether other states where proposals stalled or were defeated will reintroduce drug price-related measures next year, he said.\n“Based on the increased level of legislative interest in this year’s sessions, it would not be surprising to see similar measures filed when all 50 state (legislatures) convene for 2017,” Cauchi said. “By early January, this landscape may be much clearer.”\nCalifornia state Assemblymember David Chiu, D-San Francisco, who supported Proposition 61 and wrote one of two failed bills to require more drug price transparency, said he’s considering whether to introduce new drug price legislation next year.\n“The issue will not go away until Californians and our country have some relief from skyrocketing drug prices,” said Chiu.\nHe said a range of groups have been approaching him since before the election to talk about what next year’s drug price policy proposal could look like.\n“Everything is on the table,” he said.\nProposition 61’s defeat wasn’t huge, “but it was enough,” said Ken Miller, associate director of the Rose Institute of State and Local Government at Claremont McKenna College.\nThe complex approach taken to drug price controls — linking them to VA prices — may have been a factor in its demise. And voters may have been won over by the organized and well-financed campaign to defeat it, Miller said.\n“Prop 61 was facing an enormous amount of negative attack ads on television,” said Miller. “The history is, if there is a huge amount of ‘no’ money, then typically the ballot measure fails.”\nThe drug industry had raised by far the most opposition funding — over $109 million dollars — to defeat the measure, according to California secretary of state records.\nFor 27-year-old Emily Taggart who voted early against the measure, Proposition 61 was just not the right time or policy to address prescription drug costs.\n“It sound[ed] like it would be awesome if it worked, but … there were a lot of variables that weren’t addressed,” said Taggart, a supermarket clerk in the Sacramento area. She said the measure didn’t seem to address the problem of pharmaceutical companies being able to “jack up” prices.\nA measure almost identical to the now-defeated California Drug Price Relief Act is on Ohio’s 2017 ballot. Local health care advocates in Ohio say they haven’t heard a lot about their state’s measure that was sponsored by the AIDS Healthcare Foundation based in Los Angeles.\n“I’m still uncertain whether the policy is good from the standpoint of whether it can be implemented,” said Steve Wagner, executive director of the Universal Health Care Action Network of Ohio, a consumer advocacy group.\nWagner says most of what he has heard about the measure has been from opponents.\nTaggart said she may support a different proposal to rein in prescription drug costs if one were brought before her again.\n“I’m sure [drug prices] will be on the ballot again,” Taggart said. “Once they think it through a little more.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line23509"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8082404732704163,"wiki_prob":0.8082404732704163,"text":"“Nowhere, except in Egypt or at Pompeii, is a prehistoric settlement to be found, the streets, huts and even domestic furniture of which are in such perfect preservation”\nProfessor V. Gordon Childe. Letter to The Orcadian newspaper. (1928)\nHouse One. Skara Brae. (Jim Richardson)\nBy Sigurd Towrie\nHailed the best-preserved Neolithic village in northern Europe, Skara Brae stands on the southern shore of the Bay of Skaill, in Orkney’s West Mainland – around 5½ miles, as the crow flies, to the north-west of the Ness of Brodgar complex\nIn the midst of an archaeology rich landscape, thousands of visitors flock annually to the site to view the consolidated remains of ten 5,000-year-old buildings.\nCocooned by sand for millennia, Skara Brae’s buildings, and their contents, are incredibly well-preserved. Not only are the walls still standing, and passageways roofed with their original stone slabs, but the interior fittings of each house give an unparalleled glimpse of life in Neolithic Orkney.\nDiscovery and excavation\n‘The Weem of Scara Brae’ (sic) — an undated photograph of the site but given the vegetative growth visible, it must have been taken some time after William Watt’s efforts to clear the site.\n(Picture courtesy of Orkney Library Photographic Archive).\nAround 1850 [1], a violent storm, together with an exceptionally high tide, undermined part of the dunes at “Skerrabrae” [2] to reveal [3] an artefact-filled “kitchen midden”[4]. Investigation by William Watt, resident of the nearby Skaill House, suggested “the existence of extensive buildings” [4]. Watt wasted no time before digging into these and, by February 1851, it was clear there was “a small ruinous chamber” within an “immense accumulation of ashes, several feet in thickness, plentifully mixed with shells and the horns and bones of deer and other animals” [5].\nBy 1868, four structures and had been revealed and a “vast hoard of primitive relics” gathered [6]. Although Watt’s work was carried out “with loving care and almost with his own hands” [7] it was excavation only in terms of the dictionary definition. Were it not for the Orcadian antiquarian George Petrie’s plans and records of the site, documentation would be non-existent [8].\nAfter Watt, the initial flurry of activity around Skara Brae waned and the site left to the elements for at least 45 years. It was revisited in 1913, when William Balfour Stewart’s “unmethodical excavations” [9] seem to have simply cleared out previously investigated areas.\nVere Gordon Childe (bottom left) pictured during his excavations at Skara Brae. The two women are now thought to have been students of Childe’s and part of a visiting group that included Margaret Simpson, Margaret Mitchell, Mary Kennedy and Dame Margaret Cole. (Picture courtesy of Orkney Library Photographic Archive)\nSkara Brae was then left until 1925, when another storm damaged some of the structures. A sea wall was constructed and it was decided that the building remains should also be consolidated. A side benefit of this was an excavation, which ran from 1927 until 1930 and led by Professor Vere Gordon Childe.\nChilde set to work “clearing out” the buildings [10] and “was reasonably successful” [11], in uncovering “an agglomeration of stone huts connected by covered passages and all partially buried in a huge midden heap” [12].\nChilde’s interpretation of the site saw him create an inaccurate, but tenacious, vision of Neolithic life that remains in some quarters today. Perhaps the most persistent element being the sudden and “hasty desertion” of the settlement in the face of an apocalyptic calamity.\nChilde originally thought Skara Brae represented an Iron Age settlement (early centuries AD) based on correlation be believed to exist between the carved stone balls found and Pictish symbol stones [13]. Some years later, when it became clear that the pottery was much earlier [14], Skara Brae was pushed back two millennia, firmly into the Neolithic.\nRadiocarbon dating in the early 1970s confirmed that the settlement dated from the late Neolithic, suggesting the site was inhabited between 3200BC and 2200BC.\nPlan of Skara Brae with the position of Clarke’s two excavation trenches in 1972-1973 marked.\n(Clarke, D.V. 1976. The Neolithic Village of Skara Brae, Orkney: 1972–1973 Excavations. An interim report. HMSO: Edinburgh.)\nEach house shares the same basic design – a large square room, with a central hearth, a “bed” on either side and a shelved “dresser” on the wall opposite the doorway.\nVisit the site today and you will see structures from two stages of the settlement’s history. All but two of these are from the later phase of activity.\nDresser in House One from the entrance. (Sigurd Towrie)\nSkara Brae followed the pattern since noted at other Orcadian Neolithic settlements – houses were built, inhabited, abandoned and rebuilt, frequently on the same site. Because of this, the early structures lie beneath the later constructions so can only be seen on the periphery of the excavated settlement (Houses Nine and Ten). These early houses were circular with the “beds” set into the walls at either side of the hearth. Excavation evidence suggests they were also freestanding and clad in turf jackets – as encountered at the Barnhouse Settlement.\nThe later houses followed the same basic design, but on a larger scale. The house shape changed slightly, becoming more rectangular with rounded internal corners. Also, the beds were no longer built into the wall but protruded into the main living area.\nToday, visitors often think, not helped by over a century of accounts suggesting the same, that Skara Brae was an underground village, linked by a series of short, roofed tunnels. This is not the case. The houses were not sunk into the ground but built on it and, over their lifetimes, became encased in domestic refuse, sand and other materials [15].\nInterior of House One, Skara Brae. (Sigurd Towrie)\nEach house was accessed through a low doorway, which had a stone slab door that could be closed, and secured, by a bar that fitted into holes in the door jambs.\nDespite the well-planned and executed drainage system serving the structures – including what may be internal toilets – Childe firmly believed the occupants lived in squalor, tolerating “a nauseating amount of filth on the hut floors” [10]. Behind his repeated references to the foetid living conditions was his incorrect belief that the settlement was abandoned, and the occupants fled, in the face of a catastrophe. To Childe, the condition of the buildings in 1928-30 was exactly as they had been left following his proposed Neolithic exodus.\nSkara Brae. (Hugo Anderson-Whymark)\nBecause nothing survived of the structures’ roofs, we must assume that they were made of a perishable, organic material. Perhaps whalebone, or driftwood, beams supported a roof of turf, skins, thatched seaweed or straw. Seaweed, weighed down with straw ropes attached to stones, remained a roofing material in Orkney into recent history.\nUntil the discovery of stone roofing “tiles” at the Ness of Brodgar, it was assumed all Neolithic constructions had organic roofs. In light of this, re-reading the early excavation reports offers an intriguing possibility – were Skara Brae’s houses stone roofed too?\nIn July 1861, James Farrer wrote a letter to The Orcadian newspaper in which he stated that all the chambers and passages “were filled with sand and stones fallen from the roof…”\nWhile this is far from definite evidence of roofing tiles, in 1931 Childe described House Seven at Skara Brae: “Scraps of bone and shells were lying scattered promiscuously all over the floor, sometimes masked by broken slates laid down like stepping stones over the morass” [9].\nHad Childe unwittingly stumbled across roofing tiles? Unfortunately, we will never know.\nThe date and extent of Skara Brae\n“Among those numerous remains of primitive dwellings of the early inhabitants of the Orkneys, which have been more or. less examined, a great mass of ruins on the shore of the bay of Skaill, in the parish of Sandwick, occupies a prominent place, and deserves particular notice.”\nGeorge Petrie. Notice of Ruins of Ancient Dwellings at Skara, Bay of Skaill, in the Parish of Sandwick, Orkney. (1867)\nIn 2017, a re-evaluation of Orcadian radiocarbon dates suggested that occupation at Skara Brae began around 2900BC but was abandoned a short time later and re-occupied between 2800-2700BC. The site was abandoned around 2500BC [16].\nPassageway. (Sigurd Towrie)\nThese results seem to indicate a clear hiatus at Skara Brae but does this actually represent abandonment? Are we seeing something else – buildings or areas perhaps going out of use? This highlights a problem with Skara Brae’s interpretation – the assumption that the consolidated remains represent the entirety of the settlement. As we will see, what visitors to the Neolithic village see now is probably a fraction of the original. As Brend et al. stressed in 2020, “the extent of a Neolithic settlement in Orkney is seldom, if ever, the same as the area excavated [17]”.\nSkara Brae has been said to have been a cluster of no more than ten to twelve houses, inhabited by a population of around 70 [18]. But the evidence now suggests that the village we see today was but one part of a more extensive settlement. As recently as 2009, David Clarke – who excavated Skara Brae in the 1970s – all but dismissed this possibility.\nConceding that any archaeological remains seaward of the village were long gone, he stressed that “archaeologists are fairly confident that landward, little, if anything remains to be discovered” [19]. Archaeological evidence suggests this is not the case. Not only do we have early activity on the outskirts of the consolidated village but a large eroding mound, 100 metres to the west, revealed at least two, if not three, major structural phases, separated by large deposits of windblown sand.\nSouth of Skara Brae, fieldwalking has identified a scatter of flint, bone and a stone tool identified as Neolithic [17]. Supporting the physical evidence, geophysical surveys strongly suggest the excavated village is but one part of a much larger settlement [17].\nA series of magnetic anomalies to the south and west of Skara Brae hint at a settlement that could be as much as five times the size of the known remains. Whether occupation extended to the north (i.e. seaward) and, if so, how far, is now impossible to tell. The fact that during the lifetime of Skara Brae the area occupied by the current bay was a mix of dry land, freshwater lochans and marsh, with encroaching sand and machair [20] makes a lost northern section very possible, if not probable.\nSkara Brae and the Bay of Skaill. (Sigurd Towrie)\nThe idea that Skara Brae was abandoned overnight in the face of a cataclysm that caused the inhabitants to flee is entirely incorrect. Unfortunately, it is still often presented as fact.\nAs we have seen, this suitably dramatic end was proposed by the archaeologist Gordon Childe after his excavations in the late 1920s. Like a northern Pompeii, it immediately caught the public’s imagination but is complete fiction. Instead, Skara Brae’s decline was probably much more complex and gradual.\nAlthough radiocarbon dating suggests an end around 2500BC, we must remember that this relates only to the excavated portion of the settlement. Because that section was probably just one part of a much larger settlement can we really say Skara Brae was abandoned? It may be that life went on at Skara Brae – but was focused in another area. Activity certainly continued around the Bay of Skaill throughout the Bronze and Iron Ages and beyond.\nThat said, evidence from across Orkney does point to a change in society around 2500BC [16] and with this it has been suggested that nucleated settlements, such as Skara Brae, went out of use [16] This, however, was certainly not an overnight phenomenon and may have occurred over a prolonged period of time.\nSkara Brae. (Sigurd Towrie)\nThe second element of the name Skara Brae is the Scots word brae, meaning slope, but which is often found in Orkney referring to mounds. The first element, however, has long been pondered and remains unclear. But as we have seen, Skara Brae is a relatively recent invention. The older version, Skerrabrae, suggests the first element may relate to the Old Norse sker, meaning reef, which is found today in the word skerry. It is perhaps no coincidence that a large, rocky skerry lies at the southern end of the Bay of Skaill, a little to the west of Skara Brae.\nThis possibility is strengthened when we look at the name given by Orcadian George Marwick in the late 1800s. Recounting a folktale centred on the Bay of Skaill, Marwick explains that “Skerow Brae” was used as a navigation aid by those at sea [21]. In this form, the presence of -ow suffix could represent the Old Norse haugr, meaning mound and which is often found in placenames as -howe, -how or -ow.\nIf we follow the sker avenue, Skerow is simply descriptive, meaning skerry mound.\nIn a retelling of the same folktale, Marwick give the navigational mound a different name – Skawhowe.\nSkaw is generally thought to derive from the Old Norse skagi, meaning headland or promontory, so we have promontory mound. The problem with this is that Skara Brae does not sit on a headland. While Marwick may be referring to a second, different navigation point, this seems unlikely as the instructions given for lining up the two points are the same. Instead, I wonder whether there was an error when Marwick’s handwritten article was transcribed for publication in The Orkney Herald in December 1891.\nInteractive 3D Model: House Seven, Skara Brae\nInteractive 3D Model: House One, Skara Brae\nInteractive 3D Models: Skara Brae artefacts\n[1] Every late 20th century account places the storm that revealed Skara Brae in 1850, but the earlier sources are less clear. Hugh Marwick placed it “in the year 1850, or immediately before…” (1929) while George Petrie was equally unclear: “About fifteen or sixteen years ago…” (1867). Depending on when Petrie wrote his paper, this places the storm between 1849 and 1851. What is without doubt is that by February 1851, Lieutenant Thomas had documented that there were archaeological remains on site.\n[2] Skara Brae is a modern corruption of Skerrabrae or Skerrabra – the names by which the site was known until at least the 1950s. Writing in 1928, the Orcadian scholar Hugh Marwick explained: “An elderly Sandwick man, who has lived in the neighbourhood all his days, informs me that he had always hear it referred to as ‘Styerrabrae’, i.e. Skerrabrae, with the local palatalising of ‘sk’ before a front vowel.”\n[3] The idea that Skara Brae was unknown until it was uncovered by the storm of 1850 is “a complete fiction”, according to Orcadian historian Dr Ernest Marwick. In an article in The Orcadian newspaper in 1967, Marwick said: “In his Observations made in a Tour of the islands of Orkney and Shetland in the year 1769, James Robertson wrote of the square catacombs in the Downs of Skail, and said that in one a skeleton was found with a sword in one hand and a Danish axe in the other.”\n[4] Marwick, H. (1929) Skerrabrae. In Proceedings of the Orkney Antiquarian Society, Volume VII (1928-1929), pp 17-26. The Orcadian: Kirkwall.\n[5] Thomas, F. W. L. (1851) XIII — Account of some of the Celtic Antiquities of Orkney, including the Stones of Stenness, Tumuli, Picts-houses, &c., with Plans, by FWL Thomas, RN, Corr. Mem. SA Scot., Lieutenant Commanding HM Surveying Vessel Woodlark. Archaeologia, 34(1), pp.88–136.\n[6] Petrie, G. (1867). Notice of Ruins of Ancient Dwellings at Skara, Bay of Skaill, in the Parish of Sandwick, Orkney, recently excavated. In Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (Vol. 7, pp. 201–219).\n[7] Old Lore Miscellany (1909).\n[8] It was solely due to Petrie’s plan that Gordon Childe, who excavated Skara Brae in the late 1920s, realised that House One had been “restored” by Watt.\n[9] Childe, V. G. (1931). Skara Brae: a Pictish village in Orkney. Kegan Paul: London.\n[10] Childe, V. G., Paterson, J. and Bryce, T. (1929). Provisional Report on the Excavations at Skara Brae, and on Finds from the 1927 and 1928 Campaigns. With a Report on Bones. In Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (Vol. 63, pp. 225–280).\n[11] Ritchie, A. (1995) Prehistoric Orkney. Batsford Ltd: London.\n[12] Childe, V. G. (1931). Skara Brae: a ‘Stone Age’ village in Orkney. Antiquity, 5(17), pp.47–59.\n[13] Childe, V. G. (1930) Operations at Skara Brae during 1929. In Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (Vol. 64, pp. 158–191).\n[14] Childe, V.G. and Grant, W. (1938). A Stone-Age settlement at the Braes of Rinyo, Rousay, Orkney (First Report). In Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (Vol. 73, pp. 6–31).\n[15] Shepherd, A.N. (2016). Skara Brae life studies: overlaying the embedded images. In Hunter, F. and Sheridan, A. (eds) Ancient lives: object, people and place in early Scotland. Essays for David V. Clarke on his 70th birthday. Sidestone Press: Leiden.\n[16] Bayliss, A., Marshall, P., Richards, C. and Whittle, A. (2017) Islands of History: The Late Neolithic timescape of Orkney. Antiquity, 91(359), pp. 1171–1188.\n[17] Brend, A., Card, N., Downes, J., Edmonds, M. and Moore, J. (2020) Landscapes Revealed: Geophysical Survey in the Heart of Neolithic Orkney World Heritage Area 2002-2011. Oxbow Books, Oxford.\n[18] Clarke, D. V. (2012) Skara Brae: Official Souvenir Guide. Historic Scotland: Edinburgh.\n[19] Clarke, D. and Maguire, P. (2009) Skara Brae: Northern Europe’s Best Preserved Neolithic Village: The Official Souvenir Guide. Historic Scotland: Edinburgh.\n[20] Leinert, A.C.D.L.V., Keen, D.H., Jones, R.L., Wells, J.M. and Smith, D.E. (2000) Mid‐Holocene environmental changes in the Bay of Skaill, Mainland Orkney, Scotland: an integrated geomorphological, sedimentological and stratigraphical study. Journal of Quaternary Science: Quaternary Research Association, 15(5), pp.509–528.\n[21] Muir, T. and Irvine, J. (eds) 2014. George Marwick: Yesnaby’s Master Storyteller. The Orcadian: Kirkwall.\nNext story Wednesday wildlife – down by the lochs\nPrevious story Online lecture – The Stonehenge Hidden Landscapes Project and the Durrington Walls Pits Circle\nA natural cursus? Water, walls and walking the Ness\nThe Bay of Skaill trail\nNess flanked by lochs in prehistory? Surveys suggest otherwise","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1300967"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5246003866195679,"wiki_prob":0.47539961338043213,"text":"2016 Holiday Gift Guide: Games\nPosted by Bullz-Eye Staff (12/09/2016 @ 9:00 am)\nThe holiday season is the video game industry’s busiest time of year, with publishers saving many of their marquee titles to release on the public like an avalanche of digital goodness. It can actually be quite overwhelming with so many different options to choose from, so we’ve done our best to put together a collection of what we feel are some of the year’s finest games.\nClick the links within the write-ups to purchase each product online, and for more gift ideas, check out the other categories in our Holiday Gift Guide.\nSet 25 years after Marcus Fenix defeated the Locust Horde once and for all, “Gears of War 4” finds Marcus’ son JD leading a group of ex-COG soldiers against a mysterious new threat. Though the game is pretty much business as usual for fans of the series, “Gears of War 4” does introduce a few changes that improve and shake up the overall gameplay. In addition to several new weapons (including our personal favorite, the Buzzkill, which shoots circular saws that can ricochet off walls), the emergence of extreme weather phenomena called Windflares affect combat with strong winds, flying debris and more. Story mode is also a lot more difficult thanks to A.I. enemies that pile on the pressure instead of sitting back and waiting for you to attack. Of course, while the single-player (or co-op) campaign serves as a nice refresher course for those who haven’t played “Gears of War” in awhile, online multiplayer is still the game’s bread and butter. All of the usual modes are here, along with newcomers like Dodgeball and Arms Race to ensure you don’t get bored. Though “Gears of War 4” isn’t as groundbreaking as the original, it’s an enjoyable franchise reboot that keeps everything that was great about the previous installments and builds on it.\nBatman: The Telltale Series\nTelltale Games has been on a real streak lately with high-profile titles like “The Walking Dead,” “The Wolf Among Us” and “Game of Thrones,” but the company’s latest episodic game features perhaps their biggest IP yet. Though it’s not as instantly captivating as some of the aforementioned titles, “Batman: The Telltale Series” delivers the tried and tested combo of choice-based dialogue, puzzle solving and quicktime action scenes that we’ve come to expect. The game doesn’t explore the World’s Greatest Detective angle quite as much as it should, but that’s largely because you spend more time playing as Bruce Wayne, digging into his family’s secret history after it’s revealed that his father may not have been the saint he appeared to be. With that said, the Batman sequences are a lot more fun, whether you’re devising a plan of attack, stringing together clues at a crime scene or battling one of his many iconic villains. As with most Telltale games, the storytelling is stronger than the gameplay, but fans of their click-and-point adventures (and Batman in general) will find plenty to enjoy.\nPosted in: Games, Stuff to Buy\nTags: 2016 holiday gift guide, gift guide, Holiday Gift Guide, video game gifts, video games\nKill Your Productivity with These Browser-Based Games\nOkay, we’re not actually suggesting you abandon work and play these awesome games, but they are still handy to have for whenever you have a few minutes to spare. Browser-based games can be played from any browser, including the one on your smartphone. They are great for some quick entertainment.\nTo make it even better, browser-based games today are so much better than they were a couple of years ago. To help you get started with enjoying a relaxing time or having some fun in between meetings, here are a few games you definitely should try.\nPosted in: Games, Lifestyle\nTags: online games\nUnsaved Progress: The failure of video game adaptations in film\nPosted by Rob Dean (06/06/2016 @ 9:00 am)\nIt should be a slam dunk – a known property with recognizable characters, an established story and plenty of excuse for spectacle. So why has it been so hard for Hollywood to successfully adapt a video game into a good film? Since 1993’s “Super Mario Bros.,” movie studios have tried to capitalize on the billions of dollars of success of video games by bringing them to the big screen. Yet time and again, what lands is a loud thud of a movie, boring to major audiences and befuddling to the devoted fanbase.\nDespite the constant critical and/or financial drubbings the films take upon release, producers continue to attempt to adapt video games into successful franchises. “The Angry Birds” movie opened well, but was generally despised by critics, and soon there will be movie versions of “World of Warcraft,” “Assassin’s Creed” and a revamping of “Tomb Raider” franchise. It makes sense why filmmakers and companies are chasing these properties, for all the reasons stated above, but why have they always been such terrible dreck with only occasional flashes of innovation?\nThe first issue is that video games are immersive properties. Gamers are actively participating in these adventures, instead of watching them unfold passively on the screen. That creates the first hurdle for these films to overcome: how do you create something engrossing enough that it wraps people up in the events and makes it feel like it’s happening to them? Even the best blockbusters struggle with this ability to get audiences to identify and empathize with what’s happening on screen, let alone those made simply for cash-in purposes. Therefore, in order to do justice to these video game properties, filmmakers are already facing an uphill climb.\nPosted in: Entertainment, Games, Movies\nTags: video game adaptations, video game movies\n“Quantum Break” is a flawed but enjoyable slice of hybrid entertainment\nWe don’t cover video games on this site as much as we used to, but it’s difficult to ignore a title like “Quantum Break,” which was originally teased during the reveal of the Xbox One back in 2013. That’s because it’s unlike anything you’ve ever played before – a uniquely immersive experience that’s one part video game, one part live-action TV series. But to fully understand how the merging of these two mediums works, you first need to know what the game is about.\nSet in a fictional Northeastern town that’s been overtaken by an enigmatic corporation known as Monarch Solutions, the story follows Jack Joyce (Shawn Ashmore), who returns home after years of trying to escape his past when he receives a cryptic message from his friend Paul Serene (Aiden Gillen) asking him to meet at Riverport University. It turns out that Paul has been secretly building a time machine, and with his investors threatening to pull the plug on the project, he needs Jack’s help to prove that it actually works. But when the experiment goes horribly wrong and causes a fracture in time, Jack and Paul are affected in different ways; Jack is granted the ability to manipulate time, while Paul can see into the future.\nForced to go on the run after he’s framed for the incident, Jack must team up with his physicist brother Will (Dominic Monaghan) and a Monarch security officer named Beth Wilder (Courtney Hope) to stop Paul – who has returned from the future a changed man – from exploiting the time fracture for his own personal gain. If that sounds incredibly ambiguous, that’s because saying any more would be wading into major spoiler territory.\nPosted in: Entertainment, Game Reviews, Games\nTags: Aiden Gillen, Quantum Break, Shawn Ashmore\nPosted by Jason Zingale (12/07/2015 @ 12:27 pm)\nThe holiday season is the video game industry’s busiest time of year, with publishers saving many of their marquee titles to release on the public like an avalanche of digital goodness. It can actually be quite overwhelming with so many different options to choose from, so we’ve done our best to put together a collection of what we feel are some of the year’s best titles, and ones that the gamer on your list will love.\nStar Wars: Battlefront\nIf you’ve ever wanted to know what it would be like to be a part of the “Star Wars” universe, Electronic Arts’ “Star Wars: Battlefront” lets you live out your ultimate fantasy by dropping you into the middle of the action in some of the most famous locations from the original trilogy. Whether assuming the role of a Rebel soldier or Stormtrooper fighting on the ground, an X-Wing or TIE pilot engaged in a massive dogfight in the skies, or as one of the many legacy characters like Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader, this is “Star Wars” fan service at its very best. Boasting gorgeous, photorealistic visuals and addictive gameplay, “Battlefront” is the most enjoyable “Star Wars” game since “Knights of the Old Republic.” Though the single player/co-op modes aren’t very exciting (they’re mostly just a place to hone your skills and waste a few hours with a friend), the online multiplayer is where the game really shines. There are nine modes to choose from – including favorites like Fighter Squadron, Heroes vs. Villains and Supremacy – with each one delivering a unique experience from the others. “Battlefront” is the “Star Wars” game that fans have been waiting for, and with more content planned for the future, it can only get better.\nHow do you make a great game even better? That’s the challenge put forth each year to EA Sports and their “FIFA” franchise, and every time, they respond in brilliant fashion. Though there aren’t any major changes to the gameplay, “FIFA 16” has implemented some small but important refinements to deliver the most authentic soccer simulation yet. On the field, defending has been given a complete facelift, including the ability to defend better as a unit with enhanced AI awareness, goalkeepers who make less mistakes, and improved tackling mechanics. The EA Sports team has also added something called Passing with Purpose that allows you to ping driven ground passes to teammates in tight spaces, as well as No Touch Dribbling, which gives you more creativity on the ball. Off the field, the changes are even bigger, headlined by the announcement that you can now play as one of 12 Women’s National Teams in a variety of game modes. Career Mode has also received two of the most requested features – pre-season tournaments and player training to increase stats – while Ultimate Team has added a new mode called FUT Draft where you build a team by picking each position from a five-player draw and then compete in challenges to win rewards. This is the most definitive edition of “FIFA” yet, and it’s an absolute must-have for any soccer fan.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1337930"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7259923219680786,"wiki_prob":0.7259923219680786,"text":"Katherine June Lilly\nKatherine June Lilly, 95, a devoted wife, loving mother, and pianist/organist, was called home to the Lord on January 4, 2022. She peacefully passed at home, to now join her beloved husband Dennis of 48 years, who went on ahead of her in 2001. Katy was born March 25, 1926, in Fairmont, WV, as a daughter of George and Iva Ginkel Donham. Her great grandfather was George Adams, former street commissioner of Fairmont, after which the main thoroughfare downtown, Adams Street, was named. She graduated high school from Saint Peters Catholic School, then on to West Virginia University in Morgantown to complete her Bachelor of Arts and Master’s degrees in Music, with a concentration in piano and organ. As a student at WVU, Katy met Dennis, who was also in the Music Master’s program in voice, and she served as his accompanist. They were married in November 1952 at Munsey Memorial United Methodist Church. After having lived in Johnson City, they moved to Amherst, MA, and College Park, MO, finally relocating back to Johnson City in 1967. Katy taught private piano lessons from home and served as an organist for a number of local area churches, which include First United Methodist Church in Johnson City, and United Methodist Church in Elizabethton. She served as organist and later as music director at Erwin Presbyterian Church, retiring after having served 33 years. In addition to her parents Katy was preceded in death by two daughters, Marjorie Harvey and Susanne Lilly James, brother, John Donham, and daughter in law, Kelly MacFarlane Lilly. Survivors include her three sons, David and wife Sandra (Rast) Lilly of Johnson City, Mike Lilly of Cartersville, GA, Jason and wife Jani (Ahmad) Lilly of McDonough, GA; grandchildren, Ryan and his wife, Katherine Derise and husband Matthew of Memphis; Zach Lilly of Pinehurst, NC, Madison Scott and husband Alex of Sanford, NC, Nick Lilly of Atlanta, GA, Devin Lilly of Dallas, TX, Garrett Lilly of Statesboro, GA, Eric Harvey of Jonesborough; great grandchildren, twins George and Zoey Derise; son-in-law, Rigby Harvey of Gray; sister, Eleanor Timms and husband Delmar, of Wheeling, WV; several nieces and nephews. The family will receive friends on Friday, January 14, 2022, from 6:00-8:00 P.M. at Appalachian Funeral Home. The private family graveside committal will be conducted Saturday, January 15, 2022 at 10:30 A.M. in Washington County Memory Gardens with Pastor Stan Webster, officiating. Katy will be laid to rest beside her husband Dennis. Pallbearers will be chosen from family. In-lieu-of flowers, donations can be made to the music fund at Erwin Presbyterian Church, 105 N. Elm Ave. Erwin, TN 37650.\nKatherine June Lilly, 95, a devoted wife, loving mother, and pianist/organist, was called home to the Lord on January 4, 2022. She peacefully passed at home, to now join her beloved husband Dennis of 48 years, who went on ahead of her in 2001.... View Obituary & Service Information\nThe family of Katherine June Lilly created this Life Tributes page to make it easy to share your memories.\nKatherine June Lilly, 95, a devoted wife, loving mother, and...\nSend flowers to the Lilly family.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1058634"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9554530382156372,"wiki_prob":0.9554530382156372,"text":"When former WWE Champion broke the fourth wall after match with Brock Lesnar\nBrock Lesnar vs Drew McIntyre at WrestleMania 36 has been etched into the memory of the fans for many reasons. One being, McIntyre’s bold move to break the fourth wall to address fans directly after his historic win in the first WrestleMania held with no crowd.\nWWE Superstars seldom go off script and it’s even rarer that they break the fourth wall. One of the most famous incidents of the fourth wall being broken in WWE is the ‘pipe bomb’ promo by CM Punk.\nIn March 2020, Drew McIntyre went off script and broke the fourth wall after becoming WWE Champion at WrestleMania 36.\nWrestleMania has always been an event that is filled with the cheers and boos of a large number of people in the crowd. However, Drew McIntyre’s crowning moment came at the peak of the COVID pandemic when WWE had to organize WrestleMania at the Performance Center with no crowds.\nThe Scottish Warrior took on Brock Lesnar for the WWE Championship. The Beast Incarnate proved to be no match for McIntyre as he was defeated in under 5 minutes. It was after the match that the new WWE Champion, Drew McIntyre, decided to do something out of the ordinary and broke the fourth wall to connect with the fans watching from home.\nStone Cold praised Drew McIntyre’s decision to break the fourth wall after beating Brock Lesnar\nWhen Drew McIntyre joined Steve Austin as a guest on Broken Skull Sessions, Austin said it was the ‘right call’ by McIntyre to break the fourth wall after defeating Brock Lesnar. The Scottish star revealed that he thought it would be edited out considering how unconventional it was but they decided to keep it.\n”I assumed it would be edited. They’ll take that out. I don’t care. This is what feels right, I wanted to say thank you to everyone but it’s weird, 90,00 people, same as the rumble… I would’ve lost my mind, jumping the crowd. But there was silence,” said McIntyre\nDrew McIntyre directly thanking the fans at home","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line438323"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6037955284118652,"wiki_prob":0.39620447158813477,"text":"York St John University fake diploma the Lazy Man’s Way\n2018-10-22 Lee, david England diplomas, Samples Leave a comment\nYork St John University fake diploma the Lazy Man’s Way. York St John University (originally established as York Diocesan College) is a public university located on a large urban campus in York, England. It achieved university status in 2006. York St John University fake diploma, fake certificate, fake degree, fake transcript. It is one of several higher education institutions which have religious foundations; others include Canterbury Christ Church University, York St John University fake diploma, fake certificate, fake degree, fake transcript, Liverpool Hope University, St. Mary’s University College, University of Chester, University of Chichester, University of Cumbria, University of Derby, University of Gloucestershire, University of Winchester, and Bishop Grosseteste University.\nAs of 2016/17, there were 5,940 students, reading a wide variety of subjects, in nine Schools: Art, Design & Computer Science; Education; Health Sciences; Humanities, Religion & Philosophy; Languages & Linguistics; Performance and Media Production; Psychological and Social Sciences; Sport; and York Business School. The university descends from two Anglican teacher training colleges, which were founded in York in 1841 (for men) and 1846 (for women). York St John University fake diploma, fake certificate, fake degree, fake transcript. In 1862, the women’s college relocated to Ripon. York St John University fake diploma, fake certificate, fake degree, fake transcript. Over the next century, the colleges gradually diversified their education programmes. The colleges, St John’s College and Ripon College, merged in 1974 to form the “College of Ripon and York St John”. In 1990 the combined institution formally became a college of the University of Leeds; this arrangement allowed it to award degrees in the name of the latter, while remaining in practice largely autonomous.\nfake certificatefake degreefake diplomafake diploma and transcriptfake transcriptYork St John University diplomaYork St John University fake diploma\nPrevious Post:Get Better University of York fake degree By Following 3 Simple Steps\nNext Post:New! Australian Catholic University fake degree Available Now","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1420412"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.628999650478363,"wiki_prob":0.628999650478363,"text":"RAGING SPEEDHORN To Tour U.S. With NILE\nRAGING SPEEDHORN have secured an opening slot on an American tour with NILE in early 2006. More details will be made public as they develop.\nIn other news, RAGING SPEEDHORN's video for the track \"How Much Can A Man Take\" will debut on the Fuse network's \"Metal Asylum\" program on Thursday, July 28. \"Metal Asylum\" airs Monday through Friday at 11:00 p.m. EST. The video is already in rotation on MTV2's \"Headbangers Ball\" and on Canada's MuchMusic channel.\nRAGING SPEEDHORN's latest album, \"How The Great Have Fallen\", was released in May via SPV Records. The CD, the group's first with ex-DEFENESTRATION axeman Jaye Thompson, was recorded at London's 2KHZ Studios (THE DARKNESS, THE WILDHEARTS) with producer Joe Barresi (LIMP BIZKIT, BUCKCHERRY, QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE, MONSTER MAGNET, KYUSS).","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line744456"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5778233408927917,"wiki_prob":0.5778233408927917,"text":"JFActivist\nADAPT Issues Call for Real Medicaid Reform, DC Rally to be Held Sept. 21st\nvia ADAPT (6.21.11):\nADAPT Calls on Washington and the States to Endorse Real Medicaid Reform that Protects the Civil Rights of Seniors and People with Disabilities\nJune 22nd is the anniversary of the landmark Supreme Court decision in Olmstead, which applied the integration mandate of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to long term services and supports. In that decision, the Supreme Court affirmed that people with disabilities have a civil right to live in the community in the most integrated setting. Twelve years later, members of Congress and state governments are trying to de-fund that right by cutting Medicaid and giving states “flexibility” to cut programs that assist people with disabilities and seniors to live in their own homes and communities.\nIn response to these harmful federal proposals, ADAPT is launching a campaign for real Medicaid reform that protects people’s liberty in every state of the country. Over the next few months, ADAPT and other disability organizations are mobilizing their members to visit their Congressional and state representatives and organize events in Washington DC and every state. “We need to remind these federal and state policy makers that de-funding Medicaid de-funds our freedom and that is not acceptable,” said Rahnee Patrick, ADAPT Organizer from Chicago.\nWhile Congressional Democrats have vowed to protect seniors and nursing facilities, their current proposals also cut vital home and community-based services that allow seniors and people with disabilities to stay in their own homes. “Congress and state governments need to recognize that the freedom of Americans with disabilities and seniors is a civil rights ‘entitlement’ that they shouldn’t eliminate or diminish,” said Bruce Darling, ADAPT Organizer from Rochester, NY.\nThe campaign will be highlighted with a rally in Washington DC on Capitol Hill, Wednesday September 21st. ADAPT and the other campaign organizers are urging disability, senior and civil rights organizations in every state to hold their own events this summer and immediately begin working to bring people with disabilities and older Americans to our nation’s capital in September. For more information on the rally, go to ADAPT’s website at www.adapt.org.\nADAPT continues to meet with Congressional representatives and identify ways to contain Medicaid spending that implement people’s right to live in the community and save taxpayer dollars at the same time. These proposals include:\nExpand the use of community-based services. Studies have demonstrated that by reducing the over-reliance on institutions and nursing facilities and shifting toward more cost-effective community-based services, states can contain Medicaid spending. Despite the growing body of evidence showing that community-based services are more cost effective, the federal government still allows states to continue their wasteful, institutionally-biased practices...\n>>>For the Full Press Release\nMobilize for Medicaid! Please use comments below to share how you are organizing in your area, strategy ideas, thoughts on effective organizing tactics, etc!\nJun 22, 2011 1:07:14 AM | Court Decisions, Current Affairs, Disability Community, Financial, Health Care, Housing, Judicial, Legislative, Long-term Services and Supports, Medicaid, Olmstead, Self-Advocacy, State News\nStudy Reveals National Average Rents Higher than SSI Payments Received by PWD\nvia the Arc of Illinois (6.20.11):\nNew Study Reveals that National Average Rents are Higher than Supplemental Security Income Payments Received by People with Disabilities\nVulnerable People with Disabilities Completely Priced Out of Nation's Housing Market\nWashington, D.C. -- The national average rent for a modestly priced one-bedroom apartment is more than the entire amount of Supplemental Security Income received by people with disabilities, according to a new study released today by the Consortium for Citizens with Disabilities Housing Task Force and the Technical Assistance Collaborative.\nThe study, titled Priced Out in 2010, reveals that as a national average, people with disabilities living on Supplemental Security Income (SSI) needed to pay 112 percent of their income to rent a modest one-bedroom unit priced at the fair market rent. Rents for smaller studio/efficiency apartments, were 99 percent of SSI..\nSSI is a federal program that provides income to people with significant and long term disabilities who are unable to work and have no other source of income and virtually no assets. According to Priced Out, in 2010, a single person SSI household received an average monthly SSI payment of $703 to cover all their basic needs, including housing.\nThis study makes it crystal clear why vulnerable people with disabilities become homeless or are unable to move out of high-cost institutional settings, said Ann OHara of the Technical Assistance Collaborative, who co-authored the study. As this study shows, a monthly income of only $703 is less than the rent for most apartments, particularly in higher cost housing markets...\n>>>For the Full Report...\nHave you struggled to make rent on SSI? Please share your experiences in the comments below.\nJun 21, 2011 11:07:04 AM | Current Affairs, Disability Community, Financial, Housing, Social Security\nIn IL: Settlement Gives 3,000 People with Developmental Disabilities Choice of Community-Based Housing\nvia the Chicago Tribune (6.15.11):\nDeal gives 3,000 developmentally disabled people choice of community-based housing\nSettlement gives state 6 years to complete plan\nby Lisa Black\nState officials will begin drawing up plans to move 3,000 people with developmental and intellectual disabilities into community-based housing of their choice, as directed under a federal settlement approved Wednesday that allows for a six-year timetable.\nThe governor's office praised the settlement, which will expand services to new residents on a 21,000-member waiting list — but officials offered no answers on how they expect to pay additional costs during Illinois' fiscal crunch.\n\"The final cost will be determined by how many people elect community-based care,\" said Januari Smith, spokeswoman for the Illinois Department of Healthcare and Family Services and the Department of Human Services, the defendants in the lawsuit.\n>>>For the Full Article...\nHow do you think IL residents with developmental disabilities will respond to having this option? Share your thoughts in comments below.\nJun 16, 2011 1:22:50 PM | Court Decisions, Current Affairs, Disability Community, Housing, Judicial, Long-term Services and Supports, Self-Advocacy, State News\nDo You Support Services in Truly Integrated Settings? Take Action Today!\nVia Luda Demikhovskaya (6.13.11):\nPush New Medicaid Rules Supporting Services in Truly Integrated Settings by:\nTODAY, Tuesday at 5pm!\nTAKE ACTION HERE!\nSupport Proposed Regulations for Medicaid Home- and Community-Based Waivers!\nJune 13, 2011 -- The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law urges you to support rules proposed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) that would help ensure scarce waiver dollars are used to support services in truly integrated settings -- not settings that are institutional in nature!\nUse the Bazelon Center's comments as a model, or tell CMS that you agree with our comments. Also, consider telling CMS to include the \"qualities of an institution\" list in the regulation -- not in the background; and that there is no reason to have separate rules for assisted-living facilities.\nSubmit Comments by Tuesday, June 14, 5 PM EST electronically via http://www.regulations.gov.\nFollow the instructions under the \"More Search Options\" tab.\nInclude reference code CMS-22296-P.\nYou can find the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking here.\nThe Proposed Rules:\nPermit states to serve individuals with different types of disabilities in one waiver.\nDefine \"home and community-based.\"\nInclude requirements for person-centered planning.\nIndicate that waiver services must not be provided in \"a building that is also a publicly or privately operated facility that provides inpatient institutional treatment or custodial care; in a building on the grounds of, or immediately adjacent to, a public institution; or a housing complex designed expressly around an individual's diagnosis or disability, as determined by the Secretary.\"\nAnd, among other things, indicate that waiver services must not be provided in a setting that \"has qualities of an institutional setting.\" CMS notes that such qualities may include regimented meal and sleep times, limitations on visitors, lack of privacy and other attributes that limit individuals' ability to engage freely in the community.\nJun 14, 2011 11:37:46 AM | ***ACTION ALERTS***, Court Decisions, Current Affairs, Disability Community, Financial, Housing, Judicial, Legislative, Long-term Services and Supports, Medicaid, Seclusion & Restraints, Self-Advocacy\n180,000 Housing Voucher Turnovers and Transitioning People Out of Institutions\nFrom Steve Gold's Information Bulletin (6.6.11):\nNationally, in 2010, about 9 percent of nearly 2 million Housing Choice Vouchers (a/k/a Section 8 vouchers) are \"turned over\" each year. In HUD parlance, these are classified as an\"attrition rate.\"\nPublic Housing Authorities throughout the country, therefore, have \"turned over\" Housing Choice Vouchers available to issue to people who have previously applied for vouchers but were placed on a \"waiting list.\"\nPlease be aware that some Housing Authorities may not be able to immediately reissue all vouchers as they turnover. PHAs must manage their program with the funding that is available, which may precludethem from immediately reissuing all vouchers upon turnover.\nAs you know, because there are long \"waiting lists\" for these vouchers, many advocates understandably are discouraged with the length of time people must wait until a voucher becomes available.\nHowever, it's very important to remember that these \"waiting lists\" do move nationally by about 9 percent a year. Some Housing Authorities had 20\n- 40 % turnover rate. (Please note turnover data was not available for about 25 \"Moving to Work\" Housing Authorities, many of which are the large Housing Authorities.)\nBut a 9% turnover rate means, nationally, there are at least (remember the big MTW authorities are not even included) about 180,000 vouchers potentially available to be issued to people who are on a waiting lists.\nIt's also important to remember that each Housing Authority may establish preferences for admission to their voucher program. If they do so, they must list the \"preferences\" for their vouchers in their Section 8 Administrative Plan, which is publicly available. \"Preferences\" mean exactly what you think. Some categories of people go to the top of the waiting list and others do not.\n\"Preferences\" are supposed to reflect housing \"needs\" in your community.\nIn Information Bulletin # 329 (4/4/2011), we summarized the national HUD report entitled \"Worst Case Housing Needs of People with Disabilities.\"\n>>>To see the HUD report and To Comment...\nThis Worst Case report does not include persons who are institutionalized in nursing homes, ICFs or Mental Institutions. Advocates know there are many people institutionalized solely because they cannot afford to pay for housing in the community. The nursing home is the Poorhouse of the 21st Century.\nWhat advocates should do:\nAdvocates for older and disabled Americans should use the HUD \"Worst Case\" report as a basis for establishing your local \"Worst Case Housing Needs of People with Disabilities\" in your specific county or city.\nObviously, you must include people who are institutionalized to show that persons in institutions are the Worst of the Worst Cases.\nYou can now approach your Housing Authorities, persuade them that institutionalized people must be give the highest Preference or at the least a certain number of new admissions each year that will be given preference.\nDemand that a certain number of Housing Voucher \"turn overs\"/ \"attrition rates\" be used to transition people out of these institutions.\nRemember, that annually Housing Authorities must write an Annual Plan which is then submitted as part of a Consolidated Plan. These are supposed to reflect housing needs.\nDoes your Housing Authority (including the 25 MTW authorities) give a \"preference\" for persons with disabilities who are in institutionalized because they cannot afford to live in the community? Does it even list these people as having a \"need.\"? Have you met with your Housing Authority officials to discuss revising their Voucher \"preferences\" so that people with disabilities in institutions become a high preference?\nHave you discussed potentially use these Vouchers so that people with disabilities could leave the institution?\nWhat about discussing this option with your State Money Follows the Person officials? With your Medicaid officials? With your Governor's office which wants desperately to save general revenue funds?\n-Steve Gold, The Disability Odyssey continues\nJun 7, 2011 11:07:47 AM | Current Affairs, Disability Community, Disability Culture, Financial, Housing, Long-term Services and Supports, State News\nA System in Disarray: Mistreatment and Mismanagement at NY Institutions for People with Developmental Disabilities\nvia the NY Times (6.5.11):\nA Disabled Boy’s Death, and a System in Disarray\nby Danny Hakim\n...On a February afternoon in 2007, Jonathan, a skinny, autistic 13-year-old, was asphyxiated, slowly crushed to death in the back seat of a van by a state employee who had worked nearly 200 hours without a day off over 15 days. The employee, a ninth-grade dropout with a criminal conviction for selling marijuana, had been on duty during at least one previous episode of alleged abuse involving Jonathan...\nIn the front seat of the van, the driver, another state worker at Oswald D. Heck Developmental Center, watched through the rear-view mirror but said little. He had been fired from four different private providers of services to the developmentally disabled before the state hired him to care for the same vulnerable population.\nO. D. Heck is one of nine large institutions in New York that house the developmentally disabled, those with cerebral palsy, autism, Down syndrome and other conditions.\nThese institutions spend two and a half times as much money, per resident, as the thousands of smaller group homes that care for far more of the 135,000 developmentally disabled New Yorkers receiving services.\nBut the institutions are hardly a model: Those who run them have tolerated physical and psychological abuse, knowingly hired unqualified workers, ignored complaints by whistle-blowers and failed to credibly investigate cases of abuse and neglect, according to a review by The New York Times of thousands of state records and court documents, along with interviews of current and former employees...\nHow can recorded accounts of these institutions' mistreatment of residents and irresponsible management of funding be used to advocate for quality living situations for people with developmental disabilities? Please share your thoughts in comments below.\nJun 6, 2011 2:54:17 PM | Abuse, Americans with Disabilities Act, Bullying, Careers, Court Decisions, Crimes Against People with Disabilities, Current Affairs, Disability Community, Disability Culture, Disability History, Disability Statistics, Disability Stereotypes, Discrimination, Education, Emergency Preparedness, Employment, Financial, Health Care, Housing, jobs, Legislative, Long-term Services and Supports, Medicaid, Medicare, Public Attitudes, Research, Seclusion & Restraints, Self-Advocacy, Seniors, Social Security, State News, Transportation, Youth with Disabilities\nNational Ranking of Disability Services Released: Where Does Your State Stand?\nvia DisabilityScoop.com (4.28.11):\nVermont Tops National Ranking Of Disability Services\nVermont offers the best Medicaid services for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities while Mississippi provides the worst, according to an annual ranking released Thursday.\nThe 50-state analysis from United Cerebral Palsy compares services offered across the country, giving preference to states where more individuals are served in the community as opposed to institutions.\nVermont, Arizona, Michigan, New Hampshire and California fare best in the ranking. Meanwhile, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi round out the bottom of the list. (Find out where your state stands >>)...\n>>>For the Full Article\nHow do you feel this study relates to your personal experiences in your own state? Please share your thoughts in comments below.\nJun 6, 2011 11:37:21 AM | Americans with Disabilities Act, Current Affairs, Disability Community, Disability Culture, Disability History, Disability Statistics, Education, Employment, Financial, Health Care, Housing, jobs, Leadership Development, Legislative, Long-term Services and Supports, Medicaid, Medicare, Public Attitudes, Research, Seclusion & Restraints, Self-Advocacy, Seniors, Social Security, State News, Youth with Disabilities\nWhite House Monthly Disability Briefing\nvia AAPD (5.26.11):\nU.S. Departments of Transportation, Education and Labor Report Progress in Disability Rights Advocacy\nBy Jenifer Simpson, Government Affairs, AAPD\nOn Thursday May 27, 2011 AAPD participated again in the monthly disability outreach call that is hosted by Kareem Dale, Special Assistant to the President for Disability Policy. This briefing focused on recent efforts and some updates by the U.S. Departments of Transportation (DOT), Education (DOE) and Labor (DOL) on steps they are taking to implement and enforce non-discrimination of people with disabilities.\nThe U.S. Secretary of Transportation, Ray LaHood, provided an update of his department’s various efforts to ensure accessible transportation, stating that accessibility is “One of our highest priorities at DOT,” and noted the importance of accessible transportation to employment, shopping and other activities. He also stated that “All people have physical limitations and all can expect disabilities as they get older.”\nTravel: He said DOT will be celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the Air Carriers Access Act (ACAA) in the fall with an event. He mentioned the ADA regulations issued in 2010 that ensure that boats and ships don't discriminate, that is, vessel operators cannot charge extra for accessibility related services, cannot require someone to have an attendant and must have knowledgeable people available with information about accessibility and to resolve concerns of people with disabilities. He also said DOT was working with the U.S. Access Board on several rulemakings for construction guidelines for passenger vessels and on accessible public rights of way, such as streets, sidewalks and intersections. He said that they were also working to finalize regulations on new and altered rail stations so people with disabilities can have access.\nAirplanes and Airports: LaHood said DOT would issue Notices of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRMs) soon. One will focus on airport and airline accessibility such as check-in areas, kiosks, airline websites, accessibility of in-flight entertainment, toilets on single-aisle planes, and service animals for psychiatric support. Another NPRM will focus on airport services such as service animal relief areas, captioning of waiting area TVs, and lifts used for getting on planes.\nEnforcement: LaHood reported on DOT efforts to conduct better ACAA enforcement noting settlements with air carriers last year and civil penalties ranging from$125,000 to over $2 million, the largest ever assessed by DOT for a non safety-related violation.\nRusslynn Ali, the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights at the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) then spoke about the Office of Civil Rights division (OCR) at DOE and made an announcement about accessible technology in education.\nEnforcement: She said that OCR has twelve regional offices around the nation that enforce Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and Title II of the ADA. She said these offices field complaints from everyone and urged call listeners to contact these regional offices. She said that “Secretary Duncan wants to work proactively with schools, colleges and universities to ensure non-discrimination” and “to help with compliance on front end.” She said they have conducted nineteen compliance reviews over past the past two years, leading to improving education opportunities for many students with disabilities.\nAccessible Technology: In follow-up guidance that DOE sent in June 2010 to college and university presidents on accessible E-book readers and other technology, Assistant Secretary Ali has now sent a new guidance letter on technology for students with disabilities. This “Dear Colleague” letter was sent to elementary and secondary schools, institutions of higher education, school boards, school superintendents and others on May 26, 2011. Ali said the new guidance “makes it clear that any emerging technologies, especially E-book readers, needed to be fully accessible” or other accommodations to disability “made in a timely way.” She said that the guidance includes an FAQ and other material and suggestions for teachers and others be as proactive and responsive as possible. Letters and Guidance are below.\nPatricia Shiu, the Director of the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs (OFCCP) at the U.S. Department of Labor then spoke. She said OFCCP “is totally committed to full employment of people with disabilities, to have access to good jobs and to retain those jobs.” She noted that her office is one thirty of federal agencies that enforces civil rights and is “on the front lines for those who seek work and who are at work.” She said that “OFCCP was born in civil rights era.” She said that “those who contract and subcontract with the federal government must not discriminate in employment,” adding that “taxpayer dollars should never be used to discriminate.”\nShe said that one in four Americans works for a company with a federal contract, which is about 200,000 companies who receive over $700 million dollars annually. She said “enforcement actions should have positive ripple effect,” and her office has “a legal and moral responsibility to the public trust we hold.” She added that “being a federal contractor is a privilege, not a right, and they must abide by the law.”\nNew Regulations: Shiu said they were in the process of reforming the current OFCCP regulations. Last July 2010 they began the process with an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM) on Section 503 non-discrimination requirements in the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. With receipt of comments from the ANPRM they have drafted a Proposed Rule on affirmative action and non-discrimination obligations of federal contractors and their subcontractors, sent to OMB on May 24, 2011, and which is under interagency review before it will be released for further public comments.\nMs. Shiu spoke about herself briefly, saying she had been a civil rights attorney for over 26 years, representing immigrants, people for whom English is a second language, garment workers, African American factory workers and people with disabilities. She said that “work is not about a paycheck but also about respect and self worth and financial security.” She added that “Workers want to be valued and want to work.” She also reiterated the Administration’s commitment to hire 100,000 people with disabilities over the next five years and that DOL is working on that.\nHousing Lawsuit: Following these federal department updates, Kareem Dale provided some updates such as on the recent filing of a suit by US DOJ against the owners, developers, designers and construction company for nine multi-family housing buildings in Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee. These complexes comprise over 2,000 apartments and the investigation is looking at accessibility of the apartments and access to the leasing offices among other issues.\nAccessible Money: Kareem Dale then mentioned the recent release by the U.S. Bureau of Engraving of a free downloadable app called “Eye Note.” This can be used by blind people on I-phones to read the denomination of money. Dale noted how “Technology when accessible, gives access” and send he uses the app himself.\nPresidential Citizen’s Medal: Dale said that the White House was still receiving nominations for the 2011 Presidential Citizens Medal, and that the close date was May 31 and encouraged listeners of the call to visit the website, see who has been nominated or to submit a nomination.\nFurther information from the briefing:--\nDOJ Housing Discrimination Press Release, at http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2011/May/11-ag-646.html\nEducation Department materials:\nTo read the Dear Colleague Letter to elementary and secondary schools, see http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-201105-ese.html.\nTo read the Dear Colleague Letter to institutions of higher education, see http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-201105-pse.html.\nThe FAQ is available at http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/dcl-ebook-faq-201105.html. To read the June 29, 2010 letter, see http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-20100629.html .\nFederal Contract Compliance: DOL-OFCCP, more information at http://www.dol.gov/ofccp/\nAir Travel: DOT-ACAA, more information at http://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/publications/disabled.htm\nPresidential Citizens Medal: To nominate someone, go to the website at http://www.whitehouse.gov/citizensmedal\nHow do you feel about the steps DOL, DOT, and DOE are taking to implement and enforce non-discrimination of people with disabilities? Please share your thoughts in comments below.\nJun 3, 2011 9:04:20 AM | AAPD, Abuse, Americans with Disabilities Act, Careers, Court Decisions, Crimes Against People with Disabilities, Current Affairs, Disability Community, Disability Culture, Disability History, Disability Statistics, Disability Stereotypes, Discrimination, Education, Employment, Financial, Housing, jobs, Judicial, Leadership Development, Legislative, Long-term Services and Supports, Public Attitudes, Research, Seclusion & Restraints, Self-Advocacy, Technology / Telecommunications, Web/Tech\nAction Alert -- Tell U.S. Congress \"Don't Slash Medicaid!\"\nFrom AAPD (6.2.11):\nTell U.S. Congress: “Don't Slash Medicaid!”\nContact your Representatives and Senators to advocate against more proposals to slash funding for Medicaid.\nIt is critically important that Congress be made aware of our strong opposition to large cuts in the federal funding for Medicaid. These cuts are under serious consideration in on-going discussions in a current legislative package. The discussion involves linking an increase in the total amount of debt the federal government can incur with cuts in annual federal spending. The deadline for this legislative package is now set at August 3. This is the date on which the federal government believes it will be unable to pay existing debt if the debt ceiling is not increased. Our voices must be heard before then!\nBackground: There is a consensus that a failure to increase the debt ceiling by August 3 would have catastrophic consequences for the United States and global economies. At the same time, it is believed that it will not be possible to pass legislation to raise the debt ceiling without accompanying legislation to reduce the annual federal budget deficit.\nIn discussions about reducing federal spending, Medicaid is a natural target. In fiscal 2011, Medicaid cost $275 billion, about 7.6% of all federal spending. The cost will increase significantly over the next decade due to an aging population and increases in medical costs. The pressure to cut Medicaid will intensify because it will be difficult to make substantial cuts in the other large entitlement programs, Social Security and Medicare, because they have larger constituencies than Medicaid.\nProposals: There are a number of pending concepts for reducing Medicaid, and it may not be clear until close to August 3 which proposals will be seriously considered. In these circumstances the best approach for supporters of Medicaid is to make every Member of Congress (and the Administration) aware of our strong opposition to any proposals which would make major cuts. Our opposition needs to be expressed early and often.\nRyan Plan: The most prominent proposal is the Ryan plan that passed the House in May. The Ryan plan would reduce Medicaid funding by about $772 billion (about 35%) over the next decade compared to a status quo program. It would be left to the states to limit their programs to deal with reduced federal support. They are likely to curtail the services they cover and limit eligibility. The Ryan plan is unlikely to be accepted by the Senate.\nOther proposals: These are generally less specific than Ryan’s plan. Most would also lead to major cuts and consequential changes at the state level. These include proposals to limit all federal spending to a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), or to impose this type of limit on all health care programs, or all entitlement programs. It would be difficult to meet these limits without major cuts in Medicaid.\nSuggested Disability Talking Points:\nMedicaid is critical for the health care of 8 million people with disabilities.\nMedicaid pays for wheelchairs and prosthetic devices for people with disabilities such as spinal chord injury, cerebral palsy and other disabilities.\nMedicaid pays for prescription drugs for persons with mental illnesses and epilepsy and other medical conditions.\nMedicaid pays for programs to enable people with intellectual disabilities to live and work in the community.\nMedicaid’s Early and Periodic Screening Diagnosis & Treatment program helps identify children’s disabilities early and gets them the care they need.\nPending proposals for “block grants” and “global spending caps” would undermine these important programs by reducing funding for Medicaid. They would deny health and long term care to millions of vulnerable Americans.\nThe Ryan block grant plan would reduce funding over the next 10 years by $772 billion (35%) compared to continuation of the status quo. Global spending cap proposals would also lead to substantial reductions in Medicaid funding.\nReduced federal funding would compel the states -- that have serious financial problems of their own -- to sharply restrict enrollment, eligibility and benefits for the populations they now serve. These changes could impact many of the current waivers that support community-based living for people with disabilities. The changes could have a disproportionate impact on people with disabilities who rely on Medicaid to enhance their ability to live and work in their communities and to avoid costly and unnecessary institutionalizations.\nTen Advocacy Steps\nWrite or e-mail your Representatives and Senators today.\nCall your two U.S. Senators and U.S. House Representative in their local state offices to set up a time to meet when they are home next. Under the current schedule:\nU.S. House Members are expected to be in their districts June 4-12, June 25-July 5, and July 16-24. Make an appointment today!\nTo determine who is your U.S. Congressional Representative, please go to the official site at https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml\nTo find out your U.S. Congressional Representative’s local address and phone numbers, go to http://www.house.gov/\nSenators are scheduled for a recess July 2-10. To find your U.S. Senator, go to http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm\nThis list includes their Senate address and phone numbers. If you can only get a meeting with a staff person, do that too.\nIf you or someone you know with a disability benefits from Medicaid directly, be sure to mention that at the meeting.\nBe sure to write a letter (send snail mail) using the Talking Points above; organize a “Save Medicaid for Us” Letter Writing event.\nGo to Members’ websites and write them Emails or fill out the online form and let your opinion be heard. Organize an “Email to Save Medicaid” party.\nIf Members hold Town Meetings, show up, sit at the front and make the points above. If you have facts and figures about your state Medicaid program, be sure to mention that at the meeting. Tell ‘em what the cuts would really mean to you! Remember, personal stories stick in Members’ minds.\nBe sure to state that you are a “registered voter” in any letter or at any Town Meeting.\nIf you are not a registered voter, go to your state election website at http://tinyurl.com/29x7g5a and register today!\nIf you see letters to the editor or op eds or TV news items decrying wasteful Medicaid spending, be sure to respond quickly using the Talking Points above.\nLet AAPD know what you hear or learn in your meetings, via email to Policy@aapd.com We can take your information – without your name -- with us when we meet any Congressional Members or Administration officials.\nJun 2, 2011 5:29:08 PM | ***ACTION ALERTS***, AAPD, Court Decisions, Current Affairs, Disability Community, Disability Culture, Disability History, Disability Statistics, Discrimination, Financial, Health Care, Housing, Judicial, Legislative, Long-term Services and Supports, Medicaid, Medicare, Public Attitudes, Research, Seclusion & Restraints, Self-Advocacy, Seniors, Social Security, State News, Technology / Telecommunications, Youth with Disabilities\nJudge Rotenberg School Founder Steps Down After Indictment\nFrom Disability Rights International (5.26.11):\nDirector of Massachusetts \"Shock School\" Resigns After Being Indicted on Criminal Charges\nDear Supporters,\nToday, we can celebrate a small victory. The director of the Judge Rotenberg Center (JRC) of Massachusetts, which uses electric shocks to punish children and young adults with disabilities, has resigned in the face of criminal charges. Disability Rights International documented the use of electric shock and long-term restraints at this facility in our report Torture not Treatment published last year.\nMatthew Israel, founder and director of JRC, was charged with misleading a grand jury and destroying evidence in relation to an incident in 2007 in which a prank phone call to the center from a person posing as an employee led to two children with disabilities being given dozens of electrical shocks for absolutely no reason. One of these children was restrained and given 77 shocks over three hours.\nYesterday, Israel accepted a court settlement which requires him to resign as director, and sentences him to five years of probation...\n>>> For More from DRI\nMore Coverage Below\nvia The Washington Examiner (5.25.11):\nCourt indicts founder of Mass. special-education school\nvia NPR (5.26.11):\nFounder Forced To Leave Controversial Special Needs School\nvia the Canton Patch (5.26.11):\nJudge Rotenberg Center's Founder Responds to Indictment, Allegations\nvia The Boston Globe (5.25.11):\nRotenberg founder set to face charges\nMatthew Israel's tactics have been condemned as barbaric and savage by many top medical and mental health professionals.\nBy Patricia Wen and Brian McGrory\nThe founder of the controversial Judge Rotenberg Educational Center is scheduled to face criminal charges in Dedham today arising from a night in 2007 when two special needs teenagers at the center were wrongfully administered dozens of electrical shocks, according to the father of one of the victims and another person with knowledge about the case.\nIn a deal reached with the state attorney general's office, Matthew Israel, 77, is expected to be spared prison time in return for stepping down from the Canton-based center that he founded 40 years ago and accepting a five-year probationary term, said Charles Dumas, the father of one of the two victims in the 2007 case who said he spoke yesterday with prosecutors. As part of the agreement, the school's day-to-day activities will also be overseen by a court-approved monitor...\nThe Rotenberg Center consistently receives state approval to continuing operating, despite administering skin-shock treatments to students as a disciplinary measure. How can this story be used to advocate against the use of seclusion and restraints? Share your thoughts in comments below.\nMay 26, 2011 2:41:06 PM | Abuse, Court Decisions, Crimes Against People with Disabilities, Disability Community, Education, Housing, Judicial, Long-term Services and Supports, Seclusion & Restraints, State News, Youth with Disabilities\nJFA Moderator\nFrankie Mastrangelo is the moderator for both the Justice For All (JFA) national email listerv as well as for the JFActivist blog. She is also an organizer for the American Association of People with Disabilities in Washington, D.C.\nTwitter | AAPD\nLoren Spotts: Planning for Emergencies From the Archives of h... | more »\nOn Police Protection for Wheelchair Users\nhardwood flooring los angeles: well, this is very heartwarming...Im having thi... | more »\nOn A Thanksgiving Message from Sarah Peterson, Former JFA Moderator\nuterine fibroid treatment: im a first time mum with not exactly a lot of g... | more »\nOn A Guide for Supporting Vital Services at Upcoming HHS Meetings","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1835611"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7351686954498291,"wiki_prob":0.2648313045501709,"text":"Cameron Kent\nCameron Kent is a journalist and writer from Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He has published five novels: The Road to Devotion, When the Ravens Die, Make Me Disappear, The Sea is Silent, and Mayor Molly. His screenwriting credits include four films which have aired on NBC, HBO, Lifetime, and at the American Film Institute.\nAs a reporter and news anchor for WXII-12 News in Winston-Salem, Kent was nominated for 14 Emmy Awards, and won an Emmy for his reporting on the Pentagon after 9/11. In 2018 he was inducted into the North Carolina Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame.\nHe is originally from Alexandria, Virginia, and a graduate of Wake Forest University. His entire family is very active with Habitat for Humanity.\nWelcome to Virginia New Release\nChristmas Musical by Cameron Kent\n4 m, 2 w\nIt’s Christmas Eve, and the interstate in Virginia has closed due to major snowstorms. Frank, a brash billionaire businessman, and his secretary Kristine – who’s not the “sharpest bulb on the tree” – are forced to seek shelter in a highway rest area. They are soon joined by Tom, a hitchhiking wannabe country music singer, and Mary Beth, a young, very pregnant widow. Of course, Charlie, the rest area janitor, is stuck there even though he just wants to get home to dinner.\nBut this ...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1784508"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5626519322395325,"wiki_prob":0.5626519322395325,"text":"Zachary Gordon\nPurple Rain: A Memorial to Prince\n2016 continues to be a year highlighted by loss in the arts community. The morning of April 21, beloved Minneapolis artist and music superstar Prince Rogers Nelson was found dead in his home and recording...\nRemembering the Starman: a memorial to David Bowie\nDavid Bowie died last Sunday of cancer at age 69, two days after the release of his final studio album, “Blackstar.” After an 18-month battle with cancer which reportedly started in his liver, Bowie “died...\nChanges: sudden and not so new\nMany students come to Brandeis with a vague idea of what they want out of their time as an undergraduate, or even what they want out of their career after graduation, but many more come...\nBrandeis community comes together to interpret 1963 painting\nAs part of the Rose Art Museum’s “Close Looking Series,” Brandeis Fine Arts lecturer Scott Patrick Wiener hosted a discussion on James Rosenquist’s 1963 painting, “Two 1959 People” on Wednesday, Dec. 2. The painting was...\nPCC screens “Perks” for Mental Illness Awareness Week\nThe Psychological Counseling Center, in partnership with Brandeis Students for Disability Activism and Active Minds Brandeis, held a screening of the critically acclaimed film, “Perks of Being a Wallflower,” Friday, Oct. 9. The screening was...\nThis week in singles\nLast Friday, elusive and exceptional singer Sia released the first single from her upcoming album “This Is Acting.” According to Stereogum.com, the album will be composed of songs written for other artists or from other...\nMusicians step into the lamplight\nEvery Brandeis student recognizes “The Light of Reason” sculpture. It serves as a landmark on campus, and the gathering place for our first welcome as Brandeisians, but after that it often gets overlooked by much...\nPrince’s “HITNRUN: phase one” a hit?\nOn Monday, Sept. 7, veteran performance artist Prince released his 38th studio album, titled “HITnRUN phase one.” The album itself was only announced a month and a half ago and is still available, though only...\nIt’s one big improvisation\nAs Brandeis students, we have access to a plethora of classes and no shortage of fields to study. Because of this, we are encouraged to take courses outside our major and minor tracks, but a...\nBigger, louder, more teeth\nIn 1993, we were first introduced to the little theme park in the Caribbean where you can buy over-priced souvenirs and get eaten alive by a 65-million-year-old dinosaur with teeth the size of your forearm....","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1705006"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9656208753585815,"wiki_prob":0.9656208753585815,"text":"Lyle, John McIntosh\nLYLE, John McIntosh (1872-1945)\n(biography in preparation)\nThe following list of Lyle's principal executed works is based on source material noted below and on the comprehensive list of commissions compiled by Geoffrey Hunt and printed in his exhibition catalogue entitled John M. Lyle - Towards a Canadian Architecture, 1982. A supplementary list can be found in the recent monograph on Lyle written by Glenn McArthur entitled A Progressive Traditionalist: John M. Lyle Architect, 2009, 203-07.\nBANKS IN TORONTO\nIMPERIAL BANK, Bloor Street West at Lansdowne Avenue, 1907 (Toronto b.p. 6463, 1 March 1907; dwgs. at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Archives, Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Queen Street East at Lee Avenue, 1911 (Toronto b.p. 25099, 30 Jan. 1911; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Bloor Street West at Dovercourt Road, 1911 (Toronto b.p. 25107, 31 Jan. 1911; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Bloor Street East at Sherbourne Street, 1911 (Toronto b.p. 31443, 8 Nov. 1911; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, St. Clair Avenue West at Vaughan Road, 1911 (Toronto b.p. 25104, 31 Jan 1911)\nBANK OF OTTAWA, Broadview Avenue at Gerrard Street East, 1911 (Toronto b.p. 26410, 20 April 1911; Const., v, May 1912, 90-1, illus.; dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nBANK OF OTTAWA, Queen Street East at Pape Avenue, 1912 (Toronto b.p. 36850, 23 Aug. 1912; dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, St. Clair Avenue West at Dufferin Street, 1912 (Toronto b.p. 35844, 6 July 1912; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nBANK OF OTTAWA, Danforth Avenue at Logan Avenue, 1913 (C.R., xxvii, 23 April 1913, 67)\nSTERLING BANK, Church Street at Dundas Street East, 1913 (Toronto b.p. 4082, 12 May 1913; C.R., xxvii, 23 July 1913, 74)\nDOMINION BANK, Roncesvalles Avenue at Howard Park Avenue, 1914 (Toronto b.p. 11497, 12 May 1914; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Danforth Avenue at Logan Avenue, 1914 (Toronto b.p. 12589, 19 June 1914; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Dundas Street West at McCaul Street, 1914; demol. (Toronto b.p. 13208, 13 July 1914)\nBANK OF TORONTO, Dundas Street West at Ossington Avenue, 1918 (Const., xi, April 1918, 116, illus.; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Dundas Street West at Medland Street, 1918 (dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Dupont Street at Christie Street, 1920 (Toronto b.p. 28745, 1 March 1920; Const., xv, May 1922, 146-49, illus.)\nBANK OF TORONTO, St. Clair Avenue West at Christie Street, 1920 (Toronto b.p. 30756, 6 May 1920; Const., xv, May 1922, 146-49, illus.)\nBANK OF NOVA SCOTIA, New Toronto, Lake Shore Road at Sixth Street, 1920 (dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, New Toronto, Lake Shore Boulevard West at Ninth Street, 1920 (C.R., xxxiv, 12 May 1920, 55)\nDOMINION BANK, Dufferin Street at Lappin Avenue, 1921 (Toronto b.p. 37801, 1 April 1921; Const., xv, May 1922, 146-49, illus.)\nDOMINION BANK, Bloor Street West at Runnymede Road, 1921 (Toronto b.p. 41624, 19 July 1921; Const., xv, May 1922, 146-49, illus.)\nDOMINION BANK, Yonge Street at Eglinton Avenue East., 1922 (Toronto b.p. 54108, 7 Sept. 1922)\nBANK OF TORONTO, College Street near Dovercourt Road, 1922 (Const., xv, May 1922, 146-49, illus.)\nDOMINION BANK, Dundas Street West at Runnymede Road, 1924 (Toronto b.p. 73839, 28 Aug. 1924)\nDOMINION BANK, Davenport Road at Laughton Avenue, 1927 (Toronto b.p. 97344, 7 April 1927)\nDOMINION BANK, Long Branch, Lakeshore Boulevard West, 1928 (R.A.I.C. Journal, xiv, Sept. 1937, 176-78, illus. & descrip.; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nDOMINION BANK, Scarborough, Danforth Avenue at Danforth Road, 1928 (C.R., xlii, 11 April 1928, 57)\nDOMINION BANK, Yonge Street at Gerrard Street West, 1929-30 (Telegram [Toronto], 23 Sept. 1930, 13, illus. & descrip.; Const., xxiv, Feb. 1931, 47-8, 50-52, illus. & descrip.; R.A.I.C. Journal, ix, March 1932, 67, illus.; xiv, Sept. 1937, 178-79, illus. & descrip.; W. Dendy & W. Kilbourn, Toronto Observed, 1986, 224-25, illus. & descrip.)\nDOMINION BANK, Davenport Road at Dovercourt Road, Toronto, 1929 (Toronto b.p. B5263, 15 March 1929)\nDOMINION BANK, Yonge Street at Marlborough Avenue, 1929 (Toronto b.p. B8043, 5 June 1929; R.A.I.C. Journal, xiv, Sept. 1937, 176-77, illus.)\nDOMINION BANK, Yonge Street at Lawrence Avenue West, 1929 (Toronto b.p. 12437, 9 Nov. 1929; R.A.I.C. Journal, xiv, Sept. 1937, 176, 178, illus. & descrip.)\nDOMINION BANK, Avenue Road at Davenport Road, 1931 (Toronto b.p. 22665, 2 April 1931; R.A.I.C. Journal, ix, March 1932, 68, illus.)\nDOMINION BANK, Old Forest Hill Road at Eglinton Avenue West, 1933 (Toronto Dominion Bank Archives, correspondence)\nBANKS OUTSIDE TORONTO\nWINDSOR, N.S., Bank of Nova Scotia, 1908 (dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nCORNWALL, ONT., Sterling Bank, c. 1910 (G. Hunt, 134)\nPALMERSTON, ONT., Sterling Bank, c. 1910 (G. Hunt, l34)\nWATFORD, ONT., Sterling Bank, c. 1910 (G. Hunt, 134)\nPORT DALHOUSIE, ONT., Sterling Bank, c. 1910 (G. Hunt, 134)\nHAMILTON, ONT., Imperial Bank, James Street South, 1910-11; demol. 1961 (C.R., xxiv, 16 Nov. 1910, 28, t.c.)\nPETROLIA, ONT., Metropolitan Bank, 1911 (dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nST. CATHARINES, ONT., Sterling Bank, St. Paul Street, 1912 (C.R., xxvi, 27 March 1912, 72; St. Catharines Daily Standard, 31 Dec. 1912, 1, descrip.)\nOSHAWA, ONT., Dominion Bank, 1917 (C.R., xxxi, 11 April 1917, 43, t.c.)\nPRESTON, ONT., Bank of Toronto, 1919 (C.R., xxxiii, 23 July 1919, 43, t.c.)\nMEAFORD, ONT., Bank of Toronto, 1919 (dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nORILLIA, ONT., Dominion Bank, 1919 (C.R., xxxiii, 8 Oct. 1919, 46, t.c.)\nST. ANDREWS, N.B., Bank of Nova Scotia, Water Street at King Street, 1920 (J. Leroux & T. Holownia, St. Andrews Architecture 1604-1966, 2010, Item 17, illus.)\ndwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nOTTAWA, ONT., Bank of Nova Scotia, Sparks Street, 1923-24 (Ottawa Journal, 16 Feb. 1925, 10 and 16, illus. & descrip.; Const., xviii, March 1925, 70-75, 86, illus. & descrip.; C.R., xxxix, 8 April 1925, 350, illus. & descrip.; Architectural Forum [New York], xlviii, June 1928, 809-10, illus.; H. Kalman, History of Canadian Architecture, 1994, 754-5, illus. & descrip.; dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nTIMMINS, ONT., Dominion Bank, 1923 (C.R., xxxviii, 13 Feb. 1924, 65, illus. in advert.)\nHUNTSVILLE, ONT, Dominion Bank, 1925 (dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\n(with D.J. Spence) MONTREAL, QUE., Dominion Bank, Bleury Street at Ste. Catherine Street West, 1927-28 (R.A.I.C. Journal, vi, March 1929, 84, illus.; xiv, Sept. 1937, 179-80, illus. & descrip.)\nGRAVENHURST, ONT., Dominion Bank, 1928 (C.R., xlii, 21 March 1928, 68, t.c.; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nHAMILTON, ONT., Dominion Bank, Barton Street East at Kenilworth Avenue North, 1929 (C.R., xliii, 2 January 1929, 46; dwgs. at Toronto Dominion Bank, Premises Div., Toronto)\nCALGARY, ALTA., Bank of Nova Scotia, Eighth Avenue West, 1929 (R.A.I.C. Journal, viii, March 1931, 80; xiv, Sept. 1937, 179-80, illus.; Calgary Herald, 23 Jan 1930, 22, illus. & descrip.; H. Kalman, History of Canadian Architecture, 1994, 755-6, illus. & descrip.; Tim Morawetz, Art Deco Architecture Across Canada, 2017, 17-19, illus. & descrip; dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nOSHAWA, ONT., Central Canada Loan & Savings Co., Simcoe Street North, 1929 (R.A.I.C. Journal, viii, March 1931, 80, 85, illus. & descrip.)\n(with Andrew R. Cobb) HALIFAX, N.S., Bank of Nova Scotia, Head Office Building, Hollis Street at Prince Street, 1930-31 (R.A.I.C. Journal, ix, Jan. 1932, 2, 5-13, illus. & descrip.; March 1932, 66, 68, illus.; Halifax Herald, 3 Aug. 1931, 8; 4 Aug. 1931, 6, illus. & descrip.; Money Matters-A Critical Look at Bank Architecture, 1990, 169-71, 219-21, illus.; Tim Morawetz, Art Deco Architecture Across Canada, 2017, 21-23, illus. & descrip.; dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\nWINGHAM, ONT., Dominion Bank, 1933 (G. Hunt, 140)\nSUDBURY, ONT., Dominion Bank, Durham Street South, 1937 (G. Hunt, 141)\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., Bank of Nova Scotia, Charlotte Street, 1939 (C.R., lii, 19 April 1939, 45; dwgs. at Bank of Nova Scotia Archives, Toronto)\n(works in Toronto unless noted)\nHAMILTON, ONT., \"Gateside\", a residence for William Hendrie Jr., Aberdeen Avenue at Ravenscliffe Avenue, 1905 (Spectator [Hamilton], 4 Aug. 1905; inf. Robert Hamilton, Hamilton, Ont.)\nBEDFORD ROAD, at Elgin Avenue, for Alexander Bruce, 1906 (Toronto b.p. 4356, 22 June 1906)\nBEAUMONT ROAD, near the Glen Road Bridge, for George Robinson (Toronto b.p. 5046, 25 Aug. 1906; Const., iii, July 1910, 79, illus.)\nAVONDALE ROAD, residence for the architect, 1908 (Const., iv, Nov. 1911, 66-68, illus. & descrip.; C.H.G., x, Sept. 1933, 14-15, illus.; xvi, May 1939, 38-39, illus.)\nJARVIS STREET, at Wellesley Street East, residence of Sir William Mulock, new sunroom and conservatory, 1909 (Toronto b.p. 16128, 29 June 1909; Const., v, Dec. 1911, 60-63, illus.)\nST. CLAIR AVENUE WEST, near Deer Park Crescent, for Hugh S. Steven, 1910 (Const., iii, July 1910, 80)\nWELLS HILL ROAD, at Walmer Road, for John Bayne MacLean, 1911 (Const., iv, Nov. 1911, 52-56, illus.; Toronto Society of Architects Exhibit Catalogue, 1912, 135, illus.; Architectural Conservancy of Ontario, 80 for 80: Celebrating 80 Years of the A.C.O., 2013, 162-63, illus. & descrip.)\nNANTON AVENUE, at Elm Avenue, for W.R. Johnston, 1911 (Const., v, Dec. 1911, 60-63, illus.)\nCARLAW AVENUE, at Wroxeter Avenue, for George Oakley, 1912 (dwgs. at Building Records Div., City of Toronto)\nROSEDALE ROAD, near Arundel Road, for John L. Coulson, 1913 (Toronto b.p. 5073, 14 June 1913; R.A.I.C. Journal, v, July 1928, 258, illus.; OA, Kertland Coll., 485)\nGLENROSE AVENUE, for John B. Hutchins, 1921 (OA, Kertland Coll., 99)\nCLUNY AVENUE, at Rosedale Road, for G. Temple McMurrich, 1921 (OA, Kertland Coll., 101)\nROSEDALE ROAD, at Cluny Avenue, for Ernest G. West, 1922 (Toronto b.p. 47870, 30 March 1922)\nFOREST HILL ROAD, for Clarence A. Bogert, 1923 (C.R., xxxvii, 9 May 1923, 53; R.A.I.C. Journal, ii, July-Aug. 1925, xvii, illus. in advert; iv, May 1927, 168-69, 173, illus.; v, July 1928, 267, illus.)\nANCASTER, ONT., 'Wynnstay', for F.F. Dalley, 1925 (R.A.I.C. Journal, iv, May 1927, 168, 170, illus.; C.H.G., viii, Feb. 1931, 22-27, illus.)\nHIGHLAND AVENUE, for Dr. D. King Smith, 1926 (Toronto b.p. 87064, 20 Feb. 1926; R.A.I.C. Journal, iv, Sept. 1927, xvii, illus. in advert.; ix, Nov. 1932, 252, illus.)\nFRYBROOK ROAD, for Mrs. R.J. Christie, 1927 (R.A.I.C. Journal, ix, April 1932, 102-03, illus.; June 1932, 139-40, illus.; C.H.G., xi, Aug-Sept. 1934, 35-37, illus.)\nTEDDINGTON PARK AVENUE, for Frederick W. Cowan, 1929 (Toronto b.p. 9223, 17 July 1929; C.H.G., ix, Feb. 1932, 32-33, illus.; R.A.I.C. Journal, xiii, June 1936, x, illus. in advert.)\nORILLIA, ONT., for W. Robert Johnston, 1929 (C.H.G., viii, Feb. 1931, 36-37, illus.; R.A.I.C. Journal, xi, Oct. 1934, 149, illus.)\nNORTH YORK, ONT, 'Annandale', for Col. Herbert A. Bruce, Bayview Avenue, 1931 (Toronoto Star, 13 March 1931, 33, descrip.)\nKINGSTON, JAMAICA, residence for the Local Manager of the Bank of Nova Scotia, 1932 (G. Hunt, 140)\nOSHAWA, ONT., 'Parkwood', for Col. Robert S. McLaughlin, new garden and reflecting pool, 1935 (C.H.G., xiii, Oct-Nov. 1936, 30-38, illus. & descrip.; R.A.I.C. Journal, xvi, March 1939, 63, illus.)\nINSTITUTIONAL & ECCLESIASTICAL\nHAMILTON, ONT., Central Presbyterian Church, Caroline Street South at Charlton Street West, 1907-08 (C.A..B., xx, May 1907, 103; The Presbyterian [Toronto] 27 May 1909, 649-51, illus. & descrip.; Toronto Society of Architects Exhibit Catalogue, 1909, 44, illus.)\n(with Carrere & Hastings) ROYAL ALEXANDRA THEATRE, King Street West near Simcoe Street, 1906 (Telegram [Toronto], 5 June 1906, 5; C.R., xvii, 20 June 1906, 14; C.A.B., xx, Oct. 1907, 165, illus.; Const., i, Nov. 1907, 37-43, illus. & descrip.)\nCHELTENHAM, ONT., Presbyterian Church, 1908 (The Presbyterian [Toronto], 27 Feb. 1908, 264, illus. & descrip.)\nNEWMARKET, ONT., Pickering College, 1909; burned 1981; restored (C.R., xxiii, 6 Jan. 1909, 21; OA, Quaker Society Coll., MS 303, Reel 52)\nGUELPH, ONT., Provincial Penitentiary & Prison Farm, 1910-11 (C.R., xxiii, 29 Dec. 1909, 22; Guelph Evening Mercury, 25 Sept. 1911, 1, 4-5, descrip.)\nGRAVENHURST, ONT., Presbyterian Church, 1910 (C.R., xxiv, 22 June 1910, 24, t.c.)\nROBINS LTD., Victoria Street at Richmond Street, office building (now the Engineer's Club), 1912 (Toronto b.p. 34354, 28 May 1912)\nSTOCK EXCHANGE, Bay Street near King Street West, 1912-13; demol. 1934 (C.R., xxvi, 17 Jan 1912, 68; Globe [Toronto], 10 Sept. 1913, 9, illus. & descrip.; C.R., xxviii, 18 Feb. 1914, 211-12, illus. & descrip.)\nROYAL CANADIAN YACHT CLUB, Centre Island, addition to the Clubhouse and new verandahs, 1912 (C.R., xxvi, 24 Jan 1912, 64)\nCONSERVATORY OF MUSIC, University Avenue at College Street, auditorium and practice rooms, 1914; demol. 1965 (Toronto b.p. 12495, 15 June 1914)\nPEARSON HALL FOR BLIND SOLDIERS, Beverley Street at Baldwin Street, an addition to the George Brown mansion, 1920 (Toronto b.p. 28250, 6 Jan. 1920)\nRUNNYMEDE PUBLIC LIBRARY, Bloor Street West at Glendonwynne Road, 1929-30 (C.R., xliii, 30 Jan. 1929, 101, illus. & descrip.; R.A.I.C. Journal, vii, Jan. 1930, 29, illus.; Dec. 1930, 430-37, illus. & descrip.; Const., xxiii, Sept. 1930, 285-6, 295-6, illus. & descrip.; Tim Morawetz, Art Deco Architecture Across Canada, 2017, 84, illus. & descrip.)\n(with Mathers & Haldenby), WHITNEY HALL, UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO, Women's Residence, St. George Street at Hoskin Avenue, 1930-31 (Toronto Star, 4 July 1930, 29, descrip.; Const., xxiii, June 1930, 192; xxiv, Oct. 1931, 308-18, illus. & descrip.; R.A.I.C. Journal, viii, Dec. 1931, 412, illus.)\nWELLINGTON STREET WEST, at Windsor Street, stable buildings for Dominion Transport Co., 1906 (Toronto b.p. 5893, 9 Nov. 1906)\nHYDRO ELECTRIC POWER COMMISSION, transformer stations at Kitchener, Guelph, London, Niagara, Dundas and Toronto, c. 1910 (G. Hunt, 134)\nDUNDAS STREET EAST, at River Street, factory for the Adam Beck Cigar Box Manufacturing Co., 1912 (Toronto b.p. 92, 7 Oct. 1912)\nMACLEAN PUBLISHING CO., University Avenue at Edward Street, office building, 1913-14; demol.; (Toronto b.p. 8445, 6 Dec. 1913)\nBLOOR STREET WEST, near Bedford Road, office building for the architect, 1914; altered 1986 (dwgs. at Buildings Records Div., City of Toronto)\nCANADIAN AEROPLANES LTD., Dufferin Street at Lappin Avenue, factory, assemby plant, shops, garage, and sheds, 1917 (Toronto b.p.10634, 25 Jan 1917; Const., xii, Jan. 1919, 2-8, illus. & descrip.)\nDUNDAS STREET EAST, near River Street, tannery for Harry B. Johnston & Co., 1919 (Toronto b.p. 24870, 31 July 1919)\nOMEMEE, ONT., Empress Tannery, additions, 1920 (C.R., xxxiv, 31 March 1920, 62, t.c.)\nTHORNTON-SMITH CO., retail store, Yonge Street at Elm Street, 1921 (Const., xv, May 1922, 150, illus.; Architectural Record [New York], lii, Aug. 1922, 114, illus.)\nPEARL STREET, east of Simcoe Street, Stationery Warehouse and garage for the Bank of Nova Scotia, 1928; demol. (Toronto b.p. A5526, 20 Feb. 1928)\nEATON STORE, Yonge Street at Queen Street West, interiors alterations, new entrance, penthouse and stairs, 1936; demol. 1972 (Toronto b.p. 47725, 3 Feb. 1936; R.A.I.C. Journal, xvi, Feb. 1939, 38)\nPETERBOROUGH, ONT., Canadian General Electric Co., Park Street, addition to factory, 1940, 1941 (C.R. liii, 10 Jan. 1940, 28, t.c.; liv, 19 March 1941, 32)\nSTANDARD BRANDS LTD., Fraser Avenue at Liberty Street, warehouse & garage, 1942 (Toronto b.p. 74832, 17 March 1942)\nCOBALT, ONT., railway station for the Temiskaming & Northern Railway Co., 1909 (Evening Journal [Ottawa], 23 Aug. 1909, 4, descrip.; C.R., xxiii, 25 Aug. 1909, 22)\nMATHESON, ONT., railway station for the Temiskaming & Northern Railway Co., 1910 (C.R., xxiv, 13 April 1910, 31, t.c.)\nCOCHRANE, ONT., Union Station, for the Temiskaming & Northern Railway Co., 1909-10 (Evening Journal [Ottawa], 23 Aug. 1909, 4, descrip.; Const., iii, Sept. 1910, 51)\n(with Ross & MacDonald and Hugh G. Jones) UNION STATION, Front Street West at Bay Street, 1914-21; opened 1927 (Const., vii, May 1914, 199-202, illus. & descrip.; Canadian Railway & Marine World, xvii, June 1914, 262-64, illus. & descrip.; xxx, Oct. 1927, 567-76, illus. & descrip.; Architectural Review [London], xxxvii, April 1915, 79-81, illus. & descrip.; Railway Age [New York], lxxxiii, 24 Dec. 1927, 1243-50, illus. & descrip.; R. Bebout, The Open Gate-Toronto Union Station, 1972, 66-96, illus. & descrip.)\nKINGSTON, ONT., Memorial Arch for the Royal Military College, 1921-24 (Const., xiv, March 1921, 93, illus.; xviii, June 1925, 176, illus.; Architectural Forum [New York], xliv, Feb. 1926, 89-92, illus. & descrip.; R.A.I.C. Journal, iv, April 1927, 120)\n(with D.E. Kertland) DOWLING AVENUE, at Lakeshore Boulevard West, clubhouse for the Argonaut Rowing Club, 1922 (Const., xv, May 1922, 139-41, illus.)\nHAMILTON, ONT., Memorial Fountain, Gage Park, Main Street East, 1926 (Const., xxii, Jan. 1929, 17-18, illus.; R.A.I.C. Journal, vi, March 1929, 101, 108, illus.)\nWOODBINE RACE TRACK, Queen Street East at Kingston Road, new Paddock, Director's Building, and Members Grandstand for the Ontario Jockey Club, 1927-28 (C.R., xlii, 20 June 1928, 657-62, illus. & descrip.; Const., xxi, Sept. 1928, 296-303, illus. & descrip.)\nHAMILTON, ONT., High Level Bridge, York Boulevard over Coote's Paradise, 1930-32 (R.A.I.C. Journal, v, April 1928, 140-45, illus. & descrip.; x, Dec. 1933, 199, critique by Eric Arthur, 203; rebuttal by John Lyle, xi, Feb. 1934, 31; Const., xxv, July 1932, 167-68, illus. & descrip.; C.R., xlvi, 7 Sept. 1932, 1000-08, illus. & descrip.; Canadian Engineer, lxiii, 5 July 1932, 5-9, 33-4, illus. & descrip.; Mark Osbaldeston, Unbuilt Hamilton, 2016, 161-62, illus. & descrip.; Tim Morawetz, Art Deco Architecture Across Canada, 2017, 234, illus. & descrip.; dwgs. at the Royal Botanical Gardens Office, Hamilton)\nPROVIDENCE, R.I., Armoury, 1897. Lyle collaborated with the New York office of Howard & Cauldwell in preparing the drawings for this Beaux Arts design (Architectural Review [Boston], iv, 1 Nov. 1897, illus. plates)\nPHILADELPHIA, PENN., Philadelphia Soldier's Monument, Logan Square, 1902. The Buffalo architect George Cary, with John M. Lyle \"draftsman\" was one of 53 architects who prepared designs in this national competition. They received the 5th Prize of $200 for their scheme (New York Times, 26 March 1902, 1, list of finalists; Monumental News [Chicago], xiv, May 1902, 283, descrip of competition). Cary & Lyle later exhibited their drawings in New York in 1904 (Item 503 in the Catalogue of the 19th Annual Exhibition of The Architectural League of New York, 1904, 20, list; 47, list). The competition was won by Lord & Hewlett of New York (inf. Robert Hamilton, Hamilton, Ont.)\nWASHINGTON, D.C., Freedman's Hospital, 1904. There were 22 American architectural firms who submitted designs in this national competition, including the prominent Buffalo, N.Y. architect George Cary who joined with John M. Lyle, architect who was living and working in Buffalo at this time. They were one of 10 finalists, and received a prize of $200 for their effort (Evening Star [Washington], 22 Dec. 1904, 14, illlus. & descrip. of competition; inf. Robert Hamilton, Hamilton, Ont.). The winner was Bruce Price of New York, who teamed up with John Russell Pope, also of New York.\nHAMILTON, ONT., The Hamilton Club, Main Street East at James Street, rebuilding of the original 1882 building, with new facade, 1906. Lyle was one of three architects invited to submit plans for major additions and rebuilding of the existing structure. Although he won the competition, his proposal proved to be too costly, and his scheme was set aside (Mark Osbaldeston, Unbuilt Hamilton, 2016, 104-05, illus. & descrip.)\nOTTAWA, ONT., Departmental & Justice Buildings, Major's Hill Park, 1907. From thirty submissions Lyle placed sixth with a design 'in the domestic Tudor Gothic style, well massed and dignified, but somewhat cold, heavy and plain in treatment' (C.A.B., xx, Sept, 1907, 184; Architectural League of America, The Architectural Annual 1907, illus. plates). The competition was won by E. & W.S. Maxwell, but their scheme was never built.\nHAMILTON, ONT., Public Library, 1910. Lyle submitted a classically inspired Beaux Arts design with a central rotunda for which he received the Second Prize (Const., iii, Sept. 1910, 52, illus.; Mark Osbaldeston, Unbuilt Hamilton, 2016, 106-10, illus. & descrip.). Walter Pavey was declared winner, but the commission later went to A.W. Peene\nHALIFAX, N.S., National Memorial, 1910. Lyle received Third Prize for his design (Const., iii, Aug. 1910, 46, illus.). The firm of Sharp & Brown were declared winners.\nTORONTO, ONT., Bank of Toronto, King St. West at Bay Street, 1910. Lyle's reserved design was unusually modest for this highly visible site (Const., iii, Sept. 1910, 50, illus.). His scheme was no match for the winning proposal submitted by his former employers Carrere & Hastings of New York.\nTORONTO, ONT., Knox College, University of Toronto, St. George Street, 1911. The scheme by Lyle was surprisingly uninspired, drawing heavily on the motifs and forms used in University College to the northeast (Const., iv, Feb. 1911, 56-8, illus. & descrip.). Chapman & McGiffen were awarded First Premium.\nTORONTO, ONT., Government House, a residence for the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, Chorley Park, 1911. Lyle received 3rd Prize for his entry in this invited competition (Const., iv, May 1911, 55-9, illus. & descrip.). The commission was awarded to George W. King, but was not built to his design.\nTORONTO, ONT., Masonic Temple, Spadina Road, 1914. Lyle was awarded 2nd Prize of $750 for his design (Const., vii, May 1914, 186-90, illus. & descrip.). Harry P. Knowles of New York won the competition, but his scheme was not built and the site relocated to Yonge Street at Davenport Road in 1919.\nOTTAWA, ONT., New Departmental & Courts Buildings, Wellington Street, west of Parliament Hill, 1914. Just seven years after he had submitted a proposal for new government buildings in Major's Hill Park to the east, Lyle submitted a breathtaking and visionary Edwardian scheme for this complex (Charles C. Hill, edit., Artists, Architects & Artisans - Canadian Art 1890-1918, 2013, 242, illus. & descrip.). More than 60 competitors from Commonwealth countries sent in drawings for this complex. Once again the federal government shelved the entire project. The original drawing by Lyle is now held at the CCA, Montreal (CCA DR 1986-0446)\nCHICAGO, ILL., Chicago Tribune Tower, 1922. Four Canadians submitted designs in this internationally significant competition. The scheme by Lyle was disappointingly unadventurous (The International Competition for a New Administration Building for the Chicago Tribune, 1923, Plate 180; Const., xvi, Feb. 1923, 61-2, illus.). It could not compare with progressive designs by luminaries such Walter Gropius, Eliel Saarinen, Bruno Taut and others. The competition was won by Hood & Howells of New York.\nOTTAWA, ONT., Dominion Coin Competition, 1936. As an articulate advocate of Canadian motif in contemporary design Lyle suggested that new coinage should incorporate stylized images of flora and fauna from the Canadian landscape (R.A.I.C. Journal, xiv, Dec. 1937, 262, illus.).","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1423011"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9228942394256592,"wiki_prob":0.9228942394256592,"text":"23,700 security staff for Olympics\nPublished: 4:30 PM January 2, 2012\nMore than 13,500 military personnel will be used to provide security during the London 2012 Olympic Games.\nThe Army, the Royal Air Force and the Royal Navy are expected to provide service personnel who will make up an estimated 23,700 security staff which the Department for Culture, Media and Sport thinks will be needed to police the Olympic Games. It is more than double the original 10,000 estimate.\nMinisters have also revealed that the security budget has gone up from �282 million to �553 million.\nDefence Secretary Philip Hammond said although the Games would present the “biggest security challenge” for decades, the military deployment had become routine since the 1996 Atlanta Olympics.\nSnipers in helicopters, based on HMS Ocean in the Thames, near Greenwich, are expected to patrol the skies over the capital during the Games when Typhoon fighter jets will be based at RAF Northolt in London.\nThe MoD will also provide specialist support for civilian authorities with special forces, bomb disposal capability and military search capabilities and specialist sniffer dogs.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1153594"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7423965930938721,"wiki_prob":0.25760340690612793,"text":"Postgraduate Scholarships in Canada: Jeanne Sauvé Foundation Leadership Program\nThe Jeanne Sauvé Foundation is pleased to announce that it is currently accepting applications for the Jeanne Sauvé Public Leadership Program. The Jeanne Sauvé Public Leadership\nProgram is a unique fellowship opportunity:\nYear one consists in a full-time intensive residential phase in Montreal for a group of a dozen select Fellows.\nYear two is a part-time field phase tailored to each individual Fellow’s activities in their respective communities and countries.\nResidential Phase - Full Time\nTwelve emerging public leaders from Canada and around the world who share a passion for strengthening culturally diverse societies live together in a beautifully restored historic home in the heart of Montreal, Quebec, Canada.\nFellows collectively design and undertake a facilitated project that culminates in a series of public engagement activities addressing the challenge of strengthening culturally diverse societies through public leadership.\nWhile in residence, Fellows benefit from:\nInteraction with a thriving network of public leaders\nAccess to resources (including the auditing of courses) at McGill University, our program’s academic home, and at Concordia University, our academic partner\nTailored leadership development programming with a focus on the skills necessary for public leadership\nPersonal coaching in support of participants’ leadership development\nGuidance from academic and professional mentors at the top of their fields\nThe time, space and liberty to pursue individual initiatives in a supportive environment\nFree accommodation at Jeanne Sauvé House.\nA stipend to cover basic costs of living in Montreal\nThe residential phase of the Jeanne Sauvé Public Leadership Program represents a full-time (40 hours per week) commitment.\nOn average, about half of participants’ time (20 hours per week) is devoted to the common program, including time spent working on the collective project. Their remaining time is devoted to individual pursuits and personal reflection in a supportive, semi-structured environment.\nField Phase - Part Time\nFellows continue on their individual public leadership journeys – either in their home countries or elsewhere, and either through continued work or study. During this phase, participants:\nReceive ongoing support from Sauvé mentors, partners, personal coaches and the Jeanne Sauvé Foundation;\nContinue to exchange with their fellow program participants on a regular basis\nReport consistently to the Foundation.\nHave access to the Fellows’ Collaboration Fund\nThe field phase of the Jeanne Sauvé Public Leadership Program requires a commitment of about 8 hours per month.\nParticipation happens remotely, via phone, Skype, or Email, as participants may be living anywhere in the world. Fellows who wish to collaborate more extensively are encouraged to do so during this phase. At the conclusion of the Field Phase of the program, participants are expected to return to Montreal for the program’s Concluding Session.\nOver about a week, participants formally report to the Jeanne Sauvé Foundation and to one another on how they have applied – and plan to apply – what they learned through the program.\nThis Concluding Session overlaps with the arrival of a new cohort of program participants, allowing Jeanne Sauvé Fellows from two distinct cohorts to begin to collaborate and exchange.\nGlobal Fellowship\nAfter completing the program, participants continue to exchange, learn, and take action as part of a growing network of Jeanne Sauvé Fellows.\nThis global community of public leaders collaborates across cultures, countries, disciplines and sectors to address issues of global significance.\nFor more information on the Jeanne Suave Foundation, Follow link to visit the Website.\nTo apply, follow this Link to access the Application Page","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1735867"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7502983212471008,"wiki_prob":0.7502983212471008,"text":"The director of the CIA secretly helped produce Hollywood's biggest movie about the Osama bin Laden raid\nNext 'The Visit' is not a return to form for M. Night Shyamalan\nPrevious Here's how director M. Night Shyamalan was able to make his new thriller 'The Visit' in just 30 days with only $5 million\n\"Zero Dark Thirty\" has always been controversial. The movie depicted the CIA's hunt for Osama bin Laden and the eventual Navy SEAL raid that killed him.\nEven before it was released in December 2012, the movie had kicked off a firestorm among both politicians and citizens.\nContaining details and narratives that weren't included in previous news reports about the May 2, 2011 raid, \"Zero Dark Thirty\" also raised questions about the CIA's involvement in the making of the movie.\nDeclassified documents from 2013 revealed the CIA did indeed work with Mark Boal, the movie's screenwriter, on the script. Boal vetted CIA members for feedback and made changes accordingly, such as removing a scene where an agent drunkenly fires his AK-47 into the air. He also made Maya, the movie's main character, less involved in torture scenes.\nNot only did the CIA provide privileged information to Boal, but Leon Panetta, the Director of the CIA under President Obama from 2009 to 2011, personally offered to help Boal with obtaining information from the CIA while writing a screenplay and gave him classified information about the bin Laden raid, according to new documents obtained by Vice.\nKathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal made \"Zero Dark Thirty\" with the goodwill and cultural capital that came out of making \"The Hurt Locker\" in 2009.\nBoal's next project after \"The Hurt Locker\" was supposed to be called \"Tora Bora\". It was intended to be about the US's failure to capture Osama bin Laden. That was before bin Laden was caught and killed.\nHe then changed tack and starting writing the script that eventually became \"Zero Dark Thirty.\" For research, he could rely on Panetta, who offered Bigelow and Boal help with the creation of \"Tora Bora,\" according to the documents obtained by Vice.\nDays after the bin Laden raid, Boal met with officials in the CIA and other counterterrorist units to discuss ethical violations by CIA officers involved in the raid. Panetta, Bigelow, and Boal had all met earlier — the three sat at the same table at the 2010 Washington Correspondents' Association. Panetta had first met Bigelow earlier that year at another dinner in Washington.\nOn June 24, 2011, long before the Oscars, the CIA held an awards ceremony of its own — honoring the people who were involved in the hunt to find bin Laden. The organization invited Boal as well, though an internal inspection by the CIA found conflicting information about whether or not Panetta himself approved of the invitation. Panetta gave a speech at the dinner, part of which was classified. Though Boal has no classification status, he was at the ceremony and was therefore exposed to the classified information.\nThroughout Boal and Bigelow's research for \"Zero Dark Thirty\", they met with CIA officials to gather information to maintain accuracy about the events, characters, and atmosphere of the film. They frequently treated officials to meals and drinks totaling more than $1,000 and also purchased gifts for some of them.\nFollowing the release of \"Zero Dark Thirty\", the CIA changed its procedures for interacting with the entertainment industry. It issues new procedures to insure the protection of classified information and created a new centralized record-keeping system for requests from the industry.\nThe ethical violations Boal and Panetta talked about shortly after the raid can be traced to the depiction of torture in the film. Many politicians and pundits interpret the film as an implicit depiction of torture because it was successfully used to find information that led to bin Laden's capture. The day \"Zero Dark Thirty\" was released, Dianne Feinstein, the chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, penned a sharp letter addressed at Sony, the movie's producer, accusing them of misrepresenting the CIA's use of torture.\n\"As you know, the film graphically depicts CIA officers repeatedly torturing detainees and then credits these detainees with providing critical lead information on the courier that led to...Bin Laden,\" Feinstein wrote. \"The use of torture in the fight against terrorism did severe damage to America’s values and standing that cannot be justified or expunged ... You have a social and moral obligation to get the facts right.\"\nFeinstein has a long, complicated relationship with the CIA; she dogged them for years until they finally released a truncated and partially censored version of their torture report, recounting in detail their use of torture in the post-9/11 Bush era, last year. The report also says that torture had nothing to do with the finding of Osama bin Laden.\nThe Senate Intelligence Committee also launched an investigation in January 2013 into contacts between the CIA and the makers of \"Zero Dark Thirty\", but dropped it a month and a half later.\nPeter King, then the chair of the House Committee on Homeland Security (he is still a member of it), also criticized the movie for its depiction of torture and launched a separate inquiry about the possibility of leaked classified information from the CIA to Boal. King is still demanding a public accounting from the Obama administration on the subject, according to Vice.\nSEE ALSO: A US senator walked out of 'Zero Dark Thirty' after 15 minutes because it was so 'false'\nNOW WATCH: Here's why the new 'Star Wars' movie might stink\n//artworks839.rssing.com/chan-22990196/article7.html\n//badsender80.rssing.com/chan-71396393/index-page1.html\n//mejores11360.rssing.com/chan-4420083/index-page1.html\n//despondent74.rssing.com/chan-4419635/index-latest.php\n//aviator555.rssing.com/chan-49378665/index-latest.php\n//abenteuerspielplatz10.rssing.com/chan-49378819/article6.html\n//niall83.rssing.com/chan-22990483/index-page1.html\n//friar280.rssing.com/chan-22990043/index-page1.html\n//shirleesz3.rssing.com/chan-49378800/article29.html\n//crossing1287.rssing.com/chan-4419830/index-latest.php\n//metzger328.rssing.com/chan-55048071/index-latest.php\n//layer1738.rssing.com/chan-49378162/article3.html\n//samia103.rssing.com/chan-33442758/index-page1.html\n//cuotas82.rssing.com/chan-16252357/index-latest.php","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line741291"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7653484344482422,"wiki_prob":0.7653484344482422,"text":"ProMax Sold to Private Equity Firm\nApril 26, 2018 • by AE eMagazine • Bookmark +\nDAVENPORT, Iowa — Two weeks ago, John Palmer, who founded ProMax in 1994 as a special finance solutions provider, posted the following message: “I want to let all my friends and associates in the auto industry know that, after 23 amazing and wonderful years, I have sold ProMax.”\nToday, SNH Capital Partners, a San Diego, Calif.-based private firm, announced that it has acquired the automotive software provider. Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed\n“We are extremely pleased to invest in ProMax, a dynamic market leader with a 20-year history of consistent product innovation. We are excited to gain the experience and capabilities of the valuable team in Davenport, including Darian Miller, chief technology officer, and Shane Born, chief operating officer,” said SNH CEO and Managing Director Jevin Sackett. “SNH has a significant track record of providing strategic and operational expertise to its portfolio companies. We look forward to working with ProMax’s management to both continue and augment its customer value proposition of excellent service and innovation over the long-term.”\nPalmer, who expanded ProMax’s product line into desking, CRM, finance menus, inventory management, reporting, and submission of credit applications in 1998, was not mentioned in the private equity firm’s press release. As for SNH, the addition of ProMax adds to its portfolio of automotive solutions companies, which includes data, credit, compliance, and fraud solutions provider National Credit Center.\nThe private equity firm describes itself as dedicated to acquiring companies in the lower middle-market. Its portfolio of companies includes providers of information, technology, and other business services to the automotive, financial services, human capital management, and energy sectors.\n“I want to thank all the fantastic people that I have had the privilege of working with these last 23 years,” Palmer wrote in his LinkedIn post. “You are the reason we were so successful for such a long time! I look forward to the future, new opportunities, and challenges!”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1699707"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7199965119361877,"wiki_prob":0.7199965119361877,"text":"Asteroid “Time Capsules” May Help Explain How Life Started on Earth\nNicolas Hud, director of the NSF-NASA Center for Chemical Evolution at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Hud was a panelist at a press briefing “Asteroids for Research, Discovery, and Commerce” at the 2018 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). (Credit: Fitrah Hamid, Georgia Tech)\nDownload ImageMore photos\nPosted February 17, 2018 • Atlanta, GA\nIn popular culture, asteroids play the role of apocalyptic threat, get blamed for wiping out the dinosaurs – and offer an extraterrestrial source for mineral mining.\nBut for researcher Nicholas Hud, asteroids play an entirely different role: that of time capsules showing what molecules originally existed in our solar system. Having that information gives scientists the starting point they need to reconstruct the complex pathway that got life started on Earth.\nDirector of the NSF-NASA Center for Chemical Evolution at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Hud says finding molecules in asteroids provides the strongest evidence that such compounds were present on the Earth before life formed. Knowing what molecules were present helps establish the initial conditions that led to the formation of amino acids and related compounds that, in turn, came together to form peptides, small protein-like molecules that may have kicked off life on this planet.\n“We can look to the asteroids to help us understand what chemistry is possible in the universe,” said Hud. “It’s important for us to study materials from asteroids and meteorites, the smaller versions of asteroids that fall to Earth, to test the validity of our models for how molecules in them could have helped give rise to life. We also need to catalog the molecules from asteroids and meteorites because there might be compounds there that we had not even considered important for starting life.”\nHud was a panelist at a press briefing “Asteroids for Research, Discovery, and Commerce” February 17 at the 2018 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Austin, Texas.\nNASA scientists have been analyzing compounds found in asteroids and meteorites for decades, and their work provides a solid understanding for what might have been present when the Earth itself was formed, Hud says.\n“If you model a prebiotic chemical reaction in the laboratory, scientists can argue about whether or not you had the right starting materials,” said Hud. “Detection of a molecule in an asteroid or meteorite is about the only evidence everyone will accept for that molecule being prebiotic. It’s something we can really lean on.”\nThe Miller-Urey experiment, conducted in 1952 to simulate conditions believed to have existed on the early Earth, produced more than 20 different amino acids, organic compounds that are the building blocks for peptides. The experiment was kicked off by sparks inside a flask containing water, methane, ammonia and hydrogen, all materials believed to have existed in the atmosphere when the Earth was very young.\nSince the Miller-Urey experiment, scientists have demonstrated the feasibility of other chemical pathways to amino acids and compounds necessary for life. In Hud’s laboratory, for instance, researchers used cycles of alternating wet and dry conditions to create complex organic molecules over time. Under such conditions, amino acids and hydroxy acids, compounds that differ chemically by just a single atom, could have formed short peptides that led to the formation of larger and more complex molecules – ultimately exhibiting properties that we now associate with biological molecules.\n“We now have a really good way to synthesize peptides with amino acids and hydroxy acids working together that could have been common on the early Earth,” he said. “Even today, hydroxy acids are found with amino acids in living organisms – and in some meteorite samples that have been examined.”\nHud believes there are many possible ways that the molecules of life could have formed. Life could have gotten started with molecules that are less sophisticated and less efficient than what we see today. Like life itself, these molecules could have evolved over time.\n“What we find is that these compounds can form molecules that look a lot like modern peptides, except in the backbone that is holding the units together,” said Hud. “The overall structure can be very similar and would be easier to make, though it doesn’t have the ability to fold into as complex structures as modern proteins. There is a tradeoff between the simplicity of forming these molecules and how close these molecules are to those found in contemporary life.”\nGeologists believe the Earth was very different billions of years ago. Instead of continents, there were islands protruding from the oceans. Even the sun was different, producing less light but more cosmic rays – which could have helped power the protein-forming chemical reactions.\n“The islands could have been potential incubators for life, with molecules raining down from the atmosphere,” Hud said. “We think the key process that would have allowed these molecules to go to the next stage is a wet-dry cycling like what we are doing in the lab. That would have been perfect for an island out in the ocean.”\nRather than a single spark of life, the molecules could have evolved slowly over time in gradual progression that may have taken place at different rates in different locations, perhaps simultaneously. Different components of cells, for example, may have developed separately where conditions favored them before they ultimately came together.\n“There is something very special about peptides, nucleic acids, polysaccharides and lipids and their ability to work together to do something they couldn’t have done separately,” he said. “And there could have been any number of chemical processes on the early Earth that never led to life.”\nKnowing what conditions were like on the early Earth therefore gives scientists a stronger foundation for hypothesizing what could have taken place, and could offer hints to other pathways that may not have been considered yet.\n“There are probably a lot more clues in the asteroids about what molecules were really there,” said Hud. “We may not even know what we should be looking for in these asteroids, but by looking at what molecules we find, we can ask different and more questions about how they could have helped get life started.”\nAtlanta, Georgia 30332-0181 USA\nMedia Relations Contact: John Toon (404-894-6986) (jtoon@gatech.edu).\nEmail: jtoon@gatech.edu","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1686177"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7366902828216553,"wiki_prob":0.2633097171783447,"text":"All About Asbestos\nOne of the most overlooked and misunderstood hazards in a home is asbestos. There are six types of asbestos with chrysotile being by far the most common in homes, making up about 95% of all asbestos in residential properties. However, all types of asbestos are known health and safety hazards.\nCanada banned the use of Asbestos except for extremely rare uses in 2018. The good news is that in home construction it is rare to find asbestos in residential properties built after 1986. The bad news is that asbestos can be literally anywhere in a home (especially homes built between approximately 1940-1960) and there is no way for an inspector or homeowner to confirm the presence of asbestos visually. There are, however, certain clues that strongly indicate to the home inspector the possibility of asbestos in older homes, including:\n9” X 9” Resilient (Vinyl) Floor Tile\nPipe Insulation, particularly with white tape.\nPopcorn Ceilings\nVermiculite (Zonolite) Insulation, as pictured.\nWhile this sounds very scary, the truth is that asbestos-containing products by themselves pose little to no danger: the issue comes when it is in a friable state, or in other words can be crumbled into small pieces. This can release microscopic fibres into the air that can potentially lead to an aggressive and deadly form of cancer known as Mesothelioma.\nIn many cases, especially when discussing flooring tiles or insulation, the best way to reduce the risk is to leave it alone while in others (such as in drywall) the best solution is to hire an abatement contractor to evaluate and remove asbestos, especially before renovation activities.\nIf there is one takeaway, the dramatic shots on TV of workers taking a sledgehammer to a wall is an extremely dangerous practice for many reasons (and those are topics for future posts) and can easily spread asbestos fibres in the air. Remember, there is no way to visually confirm asbestos without a professional laboratory and it is always best to assume a house built before 1986 has asbestos until proven otherwise.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line594691"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6768879890441895,"wiki_prob":0.32311201095581055,"text":"Custom-Writing > New Power Stations\nNew Power Stations\nThe increased demand of energy throughout the world has necessitated the use of available sources of energy effectively, as well as development of other renewable energy sources. The increase in population has increased demand of goods produced, which has in turn led to the development of diverse industries which produce goods to meet the existing demand. These industries consume a lot of power which depletes the energy resources we have.\nIt is therefore necessary to diversify the use of energy resources, as well as reduce energy use in order to ensure that the current and future generations have adequate energy resources (Armstrong and Blundell 2007: 62-69). Currently, there are many measures which have been taken to reduce the energy being consumed, and these include the manufacture of products which conserve energy. These range from energy saving bulbs to hybrid cars, and they are designed to use less energy.\nHowever, since it is impossible to completely reduce the use of energy to zero, it is important to seek alternative sources to supplement the current ones. In setting the criteria for alternative energy sources, it is important to diversify the sources as much as possible, in order to prevent over-reliance on one source (Laughton et. al. 1999: 5-12). It is important to analyse the options available before selecting a suitable criteria. Solar energy. This is energy collected directly from the sun through the use of solar panels which are mounted on walls or roofs of buildings.\nIt can also be used to generate electricity through use of a photovoltaic cell. In the UK, the average power generated through use of solar energy is 4000 kj for each metre square, but if only a quarter of the population in Britain had solar panels, over 30% of annual demand of energy would be met. Its advantage is that it is non polluting, renewable and requires little maintenance. Geothermal energy. This is energy collected from the earth’s crust. There are certain places where tectonic plates meet and geysers, hot springs and volcanoes exist.\nThere are limited geothermal sources in the UK, and one is located in Southampton, where water is pumped almost two kilometres below the ground. This energy source is renewable, has low pollution and has low maintenance costs. Its weakness is that it is only available in certain areas and not others. Wind energy. Wind energy is a very useful energy source and it is collected through windmills and used for a variety of uses. It can be used to pump water or power windmills, though in the modern world it is also used to generate electricity through turbines.\nUK has one of the best access to wind energy due to its location on the edge of the Atlantic. It is freely available, non-polluting and convenient, since a 20-wind-turbine can satisfy the power demands of a small town (Nagle 2002: 110-117). Wave energy. This is a source of energy which is harnessed from waves, and can be used to drive turbines which generate electricity. It can either use artificial waves created by man, or sea waves from the sea. It is similarly non-polluting, and is currently used in Scotland.\nIt has a weakness of unreliability in case waves are not sufficiently high (Ison et. al. 2002: 200-206). Hydro electric power. This is power which is generated from turbines which are placed in rivers and dams. The turbines rotate and generate electricity and they require fast flowing water. This necessitates the creation of dams which act as reservoirs and direct water to the turbine. Its advantage is that it is cheap to maintain once built, and its weakness is that it might destroy habitat and is expensive to construct (Houghton 2001: 220-231).\nBiomass. This is an energy source from animal waste and plant remains. The animal waste contains gases which can be burned to generate electricity. Plant materials such as hay or wood can also be burned to generate electricity (Smith 2005: 25-30). Its advantage is that it is renewable, though it has weakness such as environmental pollution through release of carbon dioxide which leads to green house effects. Selection criteria. In selection of the proportion of energy sources which Britain should use, it is important to analyze a few factors.\nThe first factor is the current use of renewable energy, and this is as follows; bio-fuels (79. 8%), solar (0. 4%,) wind (2. 9%) and hydro electricity (16. 3%). Another factor to consider is the pollution to the environment from the energy resources. Energy sources which pollute the environment should be discouraged, while those which do not should be encouraged (Hester et. al. 2003: 102-108). The cost of installing and maintaining the energy resources should also be analysed, and these costs should be kept as low as possible.\nThey should also match the economic ability of the country. Finally, the practicability and availability of the energy resource should be carefully analysed in order to find out if the resource is available and viable in the circumstances. Recommended proportion of renewable resources. After careful analysis of the energy resources in UK and following the selection criteria, I would recommend the reduction of the use of bio-fuels to about 5% of the total energy demand. This is attributed to the pollution which is associated with this form of energy use.\nThe use of hydro electric power and wave energy should be increased to 10% and 5% respectively since they are environmentally friendly and cheap to maintain. The use of solar energy should also be increased to about 5% of the total energy supply, since this is a very cheap and available resource which can be used in farmlands. Geothermal power should constitute 5% of the power demands since it is has a limitation on availability. Wind power is environmentally friendly, cheap and readily available and should take a proportion of 10% of energy use.\nThe total energy use from renewable resources would be 40%, and the 60% would be consumed by ‘others’, which are non-renewable energy sources. This will help to conserve available resources for the benefit of the current and future generations. Bibliography. Armstrong, F. A. , Blundell, F. 2007. Energy… Beyond Oil. London: Oxford University Press. Hester, R. E. , Royal Society of Chemistry (Great Britain), Harrison, R. M. 2003. Sustainability and Environmental Impact of Renewable Energy Sources. UK: Royal Society of Chemistry. Houghton, J. T. 2001.\nGlobal warming: the complete briefing. London: Cambridge University Press. Ison, S. , Peake, S. , Wall, S. 2002. Environmental Issues and Policies: Issues and Policies. New York: Financial Times Prentice Hall. Laughton, M. A. , Watt Committee on Energy, Watt Committee on Energy, Working Group on Renewable Energy Sources. 1999. Renewable Energy Sources: Watt Committee: report number 22. UK: Taylor & Francis. Nagle, G. 2002. Development and Underdevelopment. UK: Nelson Thornes. Smith, P. F. 2005. Architecture in a Climate of Change: A Guide to Sustainable Design. London: Elsevier.\nJobs & Global Warming\nTesting the Performance of a Solar Energy Collector","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line34655"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.911987841129303,"wiki_prob":0.911987841129303,"text":"Terrified policeman carried 70 metres along a Cambridge street on top of speeding car\nOfficer lucky not to be badly injured\nAndre George\nA terrified policeman was carried 70 metres along a Cambridge street on top of a car after being driven at by a drug dealer.\nThe dramatic arrest happened on November 3 last year after Andre George, 27, was spotted dealing drugs from a vehicle by two plain clothed police officers in Adam and Eve Street.\nThe officers approached George and identified themselves. George then drove off, knocking Sergeant Paul Street onto the bonnet and travelling approximately 70 metres with the officer on the vehicle.\nSergeant Street was uninjured and managed to arrest George when the vehicle stopped.\nPolice officer driven at in Cambridge - man to appear at city's crown court\nGeorge, of Crome Road in London, pleaded guilty to being concerned with the supply of a Class A drug and assault with intent to resist arrest.\nOn Friday (February 17), at Peterborough Crown Court, he was sentenced to three years and six months for the first charge and seven months for the second, to run consecutively.\nScam beggars travelling to Cambridge by car hunted by police\nDetective Constable James Weston, who investigated the incident, said: “It is remarkable that Sergeant Street avoided injury in an incident that could have been a lot worse. George clearly had no regard for the safety of others and was determined to avoid arrest.\n“I hope this sentence sends a clear message that drug dealing will not be tolerated in Cambridge.”\nSergeant Street said: “This was an extremely unpleasant experience which highlights the dangers that police officers face on a day to day basis.\n\"It is hard to explain just how frightening it was being on the bonnet of a vehicle travelling at speed, but it was by pure luck that nobody was seriously injured as a result of this incident.\n\"I think the sentence reflects the violent nature of this crime. Cambridgeshire Constabulary’s officers are working extremely hard to keep the residents of Cambridge safe from these types of individuals, and will continue to do so.”\nMan in 70s dies following head-on collision on A505\nCambridgeshire Constabulary","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line776273"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.661026656627655,"wiki_prob":0.33897334337234497,"text":"\"Doing Scrum our own way\"\nLast post 02:48 pm March 27, 2019\nby Matt Riordan\nMatt Riordan\n06:03 pm March 25, 2019\nLooking for a little direction, here.\nI am curious to know how someone has successfully handled the \"We do Scrum, but we make it so that it works for us.\"? This seems to be the most common thing that I hear from every organization that I have come into contact with. Most of these organizations are new to Scrum and much of this direction towards Scrum comes from leadership.\nCouple examples I've come across:\nNot doing reviews in each Sprint, rather waiting for a monthly review (2 week sprints)\n\"Scrum-fall\" 1st Sprint = Requirements gathering, 2nd Sprint = Design, 3rd = Development, etc.\nStopping all development work to fix \"fire drills\" and effectively changing the cadence of the teams Sprint\n\"The Scrum Guide changes all the time, so therefore we only adapt SOME of the practices in it.\"\nAdvice I have given to these organizations is to have the teams do it \"by the book\" for a couple of Sprints and then Inspect and Adapt on how they can improve themselves, but meeting a TON of resistance. Any input, other resources, or different forum posts anyone can link me to would be greatly appreciated.\ntl;dr - Organization says they want to implement Scrum, but only choose some of the events to practice or blatantly disregard Scrum Guide. Any tips on how to guide conversations to getting teams and organizations back to basics?\n04:02 am March 26, 2019\nIs it understood that Scrum is not being applied at all unless it is implemented in its entirety, and that the associated benefits are unlikely to accrue?\nChanging the Scrum Framework “to suit the organization” avoids dealing with issues that would be exposed to scrutiny. What is being concealed here, and why? Are teams delivering valuable “Done” increments at least once every Sprint, for example, and are those increments being released into production?\nNikolaos Friligkos\nOrganisations are allowed to implement anything they want. However, if Scrum is not applied in its entirety, then please don't call it Scrum.\nAndrew McKenzie\ntl;dr - not all deviations are created equally; you've got to dig deeper and have ongoing conversations to understand what the \"real\" problems are and how to solve them.\nI'm sure we've all seen this \"custom Scrum\" thinking at one point or another (or many ...).\nI don't know that it's possible to solve this problem overnight, but here are some thoughts that occur to me and that may be helpful to you:\nBuild relationships and be honest.\nIt may sound obvious, but this is a primary example of where one needs to build relationships to gain influence and establish trust over time. Coming into an organization and taking on a posture of Scrum referee (however correct one may be) will of course push people away, especially if the habits are entrenched in the organization and now they're being told they're \"doing it wrong.\"\nThat said, it's important to be honest, especially around the most egregious deviations. If people are using language like \"design sprint,\" \"test sprint,\" \"release sprint,\" etc., it's fair to respond by saying, \"It sounds like you're still doing waterfall, but just throwing in some Scrum terms here and there. Why do you think that is?\" Or \"I know a lot of organizations try to 'customize' Scrum by doing it the way you are. Do you think that approach ever results in increased agility or value?\"\nYou may also need to have some heart-to-heart conversations with your leadership. \"You brought me here to help you deliver value using Scrum, but as a professional Scrum Master I feel it's my duty to report some organizational obstacles that will make it difficult for me to do that.\" And then once you've said your piece, give it back to them: \"So, how do you want me to proceed?\" Basically, state your point of view while trying to turn the issues you see into shared problems.\nProbe the origins of the deviations.\nBe Socratic. Before pushing back on deviations, ask why the organization found itself doing something a certain way, how long it has done things that way, whose idea it was (and where are they now?), and what benefits it has achieved by doing things in that way.\nIf you ask the right questions, the underlying problems may even become self-evident to those standing up for the deviations and resisting change. Often, if you ask the right questions, they may admit that there was no underlying rationale for these deviations in the first place except, \"It was just a lot easier ...\" or \"Our release management team said we had to do it this way ...\" and so forth. This can help you better localize the root cause of what's going on.\nNot all deviations are created equally. Be especially wary of vaguely defined or inconsistently followed deviations.\nIn rare cases, you may find a semi-decent reason for a deviation. (I'm not endorsing deviations; just saying that they aren't all created equally!) For example, if your organization has a separate test team for legal/regulatory reasons, that's at least a better justification than \"Because we've always done it this way!\" And, more importantly, your response and the path forward would look very different in each case.\nI think it's critically important to understand if the deviations are at least clearly defined and consistently followed, or if, instead, the teams are simply deviating haphazardly whenever following the Guide is inconvenient/difficult. The former may be a case of faulty but well-intentioned reasoning and implementation, but the latter is plain old excuse-making and shows a deeper lack of discipline/leadership/inspiration. I see both commonly, but they are completely different scenarios which call for drastically different responses.\nBe empirical, and stick to a very simple test.\nIf the organization is actively empirical, or open-minded, then there's plenty of hope. In that case, your recommendation of \"let's try it by the book for a while\" (great approach) makes a lot of sense. If the organization resists this, then you have to probe deeper on that point. What does the organization fear about being empirical? How does it make decisions if doesn't want to use evidence? Etc.\nThe ultimate question I would try to answer, and then repeat the same question to organization leadership, is this: is the organization able to consistently deliver valuable, working software on a regular basis of approximately one month?\nIf the answer is yes across the board, then you're in the realm of optimization, and there is less to worry about. Can we get our sprints down to a month? To two weeks? Can we ensure our designers are part of the Development Team? Etc. I wouldn't worry about deviations in this context.\nIf the answer is no but everyone agrees that the goal is yes, then you've pointed out the organization's problem head on and you can then point out why the deviations are getting in the way and why Scrum is the solution.\nHowever, you may find that the real answer is no but that leadership will tell you that yes, the organization is delivering software at this rate. In that case, solving the problem probably starts with addressing the lack of transparency, perhaps complacency at some levels, and so forth.\nFinally, if (as you will sometimes find), the answer is no and the organization says that that's fine because working software in thirty days or less is not a reasonable/valuable goal anyway, then you're in the realm of an organization which wanted to do \"Scrum\" or \"Agile\" because it was trendy but without a true understanding of the value proposition, the trade-offs, the change required, and so on.\nOnce again, asking the right questions, listening to the answers, and digging deeper to understand the root causes is your best bet to solving these issues.\nThis is very helpful, thank you!","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1486070"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7934672832489014,"wiki_prob":0.7934672832489014,"text":"A Florida teacher has been arrested for having sex with her 15-year-old student. She is also eight months pregnant.\nDoral Police arrested a teacher at John I. Smith K-8 Center, 41-year-old Hairy Calvi, on Friday for having sex with her 15-year-old student.\nAnd it was all caught on video.\nInvestigators had been aware of the inappropriate relationship since March 2021 after students reported to school staff that the victim was sharing a video on his phone with other students showing himself and Calvi having sexual intercourse.\nThey also found photos of Calvi and the victim nude together smoking marijuana.\nIn total, Calvi is charged with lewd and lascivious battery, offenses against students by authority figures, child neglect, possession of a firearm on school property, and contributing to the delinquency of a child, Miami-Dade jail records showed.\nAccording to detectives, Calvi worked as the victim’s teacher.\nAfter learning of the situation, police obtained permission from the victim’s mother to search through his phone and discovered photos of him naked with Calvi. Detectives said they also recovered text messages between the two expressing their love for one another.\nIt’s not clear why investigators took so long to arrest Calvi.\n“When we spoke to him, he denied being a victim,” Doral police spokesman Rey Valdes told NBC Miami.\n“He flat out told us he was not raped. But I want to point out under Florida law [that] a minor cannot give consent.”\n“She knew how to explain stuff really well, it’s just . . . I can’t believe that,” student Luigi Lopresti told WSVN.\nOn March 7, at around 3 a.m., Doral Police initiated a traffic stop on Calvi, who was driving under the influence, according to her arrest report.\nThey discovered two other minors inside the vehicle, along with the victim.\nThe group had been celebrating a birthday party at a banquet hall.\nInvestigators said none of the children’s parents knew they were with Calvi.\n“When I heard from my friends, I was in shock, and I was like, ‘Oh wow,’ and I told my friends, and they were all so shocked,” another student explained.\n“We just – it was kind of like a shock, the entire thing. She was very nice, and it’s kind of crazy.”\nParents who later learned about the incident were also shocked.\n“It’s mindblowing because you’re expecting the school to let you know that something like that is going on,” said Julio Alfonso.\n“You’re not expecting that kind of treatment to your child,” another parent said.\nOfficials for Miami-Dade Public Schools confirmed that Calvi had not been working at the school since March after the allegations were brought to light.\nHowever, her employment was reassigned to an alternate location.\nCalvi is the most recent of numerous Miami-Dade County Public Schools teachers to be arrested for similar crimes, including teachers most recently at Renaissance Middle School and Hialeah Middle School.\nCalvi worked with the MDCPS school system for 20 years and had no history of disciplinary actions, according to MDCPS officials.\nPolice confirmed she is eight months pregnant.\nCalvi’s firearm charge stems from an October 8 traffic stop.\nAfter conducting the stop, police found a loaded Glock 43 9 mm, loaded with a round in the chamber, inside of her vehicle.\nCalvi told police the gun is always in her vehicle and belonged to her husband.\nShe had been working at the Miami-Dade Schools Northeast Transportation center when she brought the gun onto the property of MDCPS, according to the police report.\nNOTHING NEW UNDER SUPERINTENDENT ALBERTO CARVALHO\nLast week, a federal jury awarded the victim of an MDCPS high school teacher $6 million for raping her inside of his classroom.\n“You took advantage that I was a lost girl,” the victim read in a statement.\n“I quickly remind myself the only reality here is that you abused me, and it was premeditated.”\nAfter the verdict, Miami-Dade Schools Superintendent Alberto Carvalho posted a photo of himself to Instagram celebrating with CBS Miami journalist Jim Berry.\nAlberto Carvalho celebrates with CBS Miami journalist after jury awards $6 million to vctim raped by MDCPS high school teacher.\nCritics say Carvalho’s cozy relationships with local journalists and law enforcement officials could be the reason he still has a job as the MDCPS superintendent.\nCarvalho oversees school police at all MDCPS school grounds.\nIn 2017, a Florida jury awarded $49.3 million to a former high-school student who was raped by her former geometry teacher in his classroom, according to Daily Mail.\nThe same year, 2017, Miami-Dade Police arrested Bernardo Osorio, a decorated math teacher at Cutler Bay Senior High, for sexually abusing an underage student, according to the Miami New Times.\nYesterday, True Homestead published an eerily similar story about Brittiny Murray-Lopez, a Hialeah Middle School teacher who was arrested for having sex with her former student who was 14 at the time of the incident.\nIn fact, True Homestead has covered numerous stories detailing similar abuses by teachers working under Superintendent Alberto Carvalho.\nRead them below.\nhttps://truehomestead.com/2021/10/08/south-florida-middle-school-teacher-arrested-for-having-sex-w-14-year-old/\nhttps://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5091521/Teacher-pay-former-student-49-3-million.html\nOne thought on “Pregnant Florida Teacher Arrested for Sex with 15-Year-Old Student on Video”\nMiami Superintendent Orders Training to Stop More Teachers from Raping Students - True Homestead says:\n[…] of those teachers arrested last week was 41-year-old Hairy […]","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line323085"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9816110134124756,"wiki_prob":0.9816110134124756,"text":"Home / India News / Former PM Manmohan Singh’s health condition improving\nFormer PM Manmohan Singh’s health condition improving\n“His condition is better and progressing well. He is responding to treatment and that is a good sign. He is being taken care of by a team of specialists,” said a senior staff member from the hospital, on condition of anonymity\nFormer prime minister Manmohan Singh. (PTI)\nUpdated on Oct 16, 2021 02:33 AM IST\nByHT Correspondent, Hindustan Times, New Delhi\nThe condition of former Prime minister Manmohan Singh, who is undergoing treatment at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) here, is stable, and he is recovering well, said people familiar with the development on Friday.\n“His condition is better and progressing well. He is responding to treatment and that is a good sign. He is being taken care of by a team of specialists,” said a senior staff member from the hospital, on condition of anonymity.\nThe 89-year-old was on Wednesday evening admitted to New Delhi’s AIIMS after complains of fever, weakness and general uneasiness.\nHe was admitted into the hospital to be evaluated for high-grade fever.\nThe former prime minister is admitted in a private ward of hospital’s Cardiothoracic and Neurosciences Centre under the care of a team of specialists led by Dr Nitish Naik. Dr Naik is a professor in the department of cardiology, and has been former PM’s personal physician for many years now.\nOn Thursday, political leaders across spectrum sent their best wishes for his speedy recovery. Union health minister Mansukh Mandaviya and senior Congress leader Rahul Gandhi visited the former PM in the hospital.\nSingh has a history of cardiac ailments, and even underwent a revision heart bypass surgery at AIIMS in 2009.\nEarlier in April this year, Singh was admitted to the hospital’s trauma centre (functioning as Covid care centre) after he tested positive for the cCoronavirus disease (Covid-19). Singh is also a member of the Rajya Sabha.\nFamily objects to photographers’ presence\nManmohan Singh’s daughter Daman Singh in a statement on Friday said that her mother, Gursharan Kaur had objected to the presence of a photographer when Mandaviya paid a visit to Singh in AIIMS but it was ignored. Photographs of Mandaviya in Manmohan’s cabin have surfaced on social media.\n“My father is being treated for Dengue at AIIMS. His condition is stable but his immunity is low. We have restricted visitors due to the risk of infection. It was nice of the Health Minister to visit and express his concern. However, my parents were in no state to be photographed at the time,” the statement said.\nThe statement further said that her mother Gursharan Kaur had objected to the presence of a photographer when the minister paid a visit to Singh in AIIMS but her objection was ignored.\nThe Congress also demanded an apology from the Union health minister over the issue after Daman Singh’s objection.\n“Everything is a ‘Photo Op’ for BJP. Shame on Health Minister, who made a visit to meet Former PM in AIIMS, a ugly ‘PR Stunt’ This is..Negation of every ethical norm, Breach of EX PM’s privacy, Insult of established tradition, Reflects absence of basic decency. Apologise Now!” said Congress chief spokesperson Randeep Surjewala in a tweet.\nMandaviya wasn’t immediately available for a comment. There was no clarification from the health ministry but government officials said that the minister went to meet Singh out of his sense of responsibility.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line886107"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9534803032875061,"wiki_prob":0.9534803032875061,"text":"City of Vancouver has shown national leadership on reconciliation\nFormer Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson showed leadership on reconciliation by the issue on the national agenda at the local level through the Big City Mayors' Caucus of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities\nKevin Griffin\nRobert Joseph is a hereditary chief of the Gwawaenuk First Nation near Alert Bay and a co-founder of Reconciliation Canada. Photo by Handout /PNG\nNumerous steps by the City of Vancouver have provided leadership in promoting reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people across the country, according to the co-founder of Reconciliation Canada .\nChief Robert Joseph attributed the city’s “real leadership role in this area” to the personal interests of former mayor Gregor Robertson.\nHe cited Robertson’s position as chair of the Big City Mayors’ Caucus of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities as being critically important in helping to put the issue on the national agenda.\n“As the chair of the big city mayors, he had a lot of influence on national gatherings of municipalities,” said Joseph, Reconciliation Canada’s ambassador .\n“It wasn’t long before other cities all across the country, big and small, were working hard at determining what reconciliation meant for them. The leadership of the City of Vancouver was really important.”\nOne of the most recent reconciliation initiatives in Vancouver was the creation by the park board of an Indigenous artist residency program in Stanley Park. A Frame Activation: Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-waututh Cultural Residency at Second Beach is designed to be an Indigenous space on unceded, traditional territory.\nChrystal Sparrow, a Musqueam artist, is the first artist named to the residency. In coming years, the residency will rotate among the three First Nations with traditional links to the land on which Vancouver is located.\nOther reconciliation steps in Vancouver have included hiring a new manager of Aboriginal relations, renaming the north plaza at the Vancouver Art Gallery with two Indigenous names, hiring an Indigenous liaison in the engineering department and hiring a reconciliation planner at the park board.\n“Since the Year of Reconciliation in 2013, Vancouver has developed into the world’s first City of Reconciliation,” a city report says .\nAsked about the city’s claim of being a world leader in reconciliation, Joseph said: “I don’t know to what degree the claim is accurate, but I’ve been really impressed with the City of Vancouver.”\nJoseph said he believes municipalities across the country which historically have had the least to do with Aboriginal people have responded better to reconciliation than the provincial and federal governments.\n“They’re very interested now because they recognize that many exist where their Aboriginal neighbours are,” he said from Alert Bay. “They see the importance of growing a good relationship between each another.”\nJoseph is one of the last speakers of Kwak’wala, the language of the Kwakwaka’wakw whose traditional territory is located at the northern end of Vancouver Island and the adjoining mainland. He’s a hereditary chief of the Gwawaenuk First Nations .\nJoseph attributes the support from big cities to the affect on people of hearing stories told at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission about the abuse experienced by Aboriginal students in Indian residential schools. The hearings, spread over almost four years, ended in 2014.\n“Suddenly, people who hadn’t known very much about Aboriginals discovered in shock and dismay that our society had treated Aboriginal people very badly,” he said.\n“I think it created a conscious shift in the minds of a lot of people who live in big cities.”\nAn estimated 150,000 Aboriginal children were forced to attend residential schools. The Truth and Reconciliation Commission describes reconciliation as a collective effort to revitalize the relationship between Indigenous people and Canadian society.\nJoseph, who was an honorary witness at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, said while he’s encouraged by the social recognition of reconciliation by cities such as Vancouver, other more systemic challenges such as changing legislation and combatting intolerance is happening at a slower pace.\n“One of the things I like to tell people when I talk to gatherings that while we’re all waiting for the big home run reconciliation initiatives, I suspect it will be the tiny little steps we take here and there that will be a key to all the transformation that we’re seeking,” he said.\n“There won’t always be cameras or news reporters there, but people in their neighbourhoods will look at each other eye to eye and change opinions of each other and respect our differences and diversity. I suspect that’s where reconciliation will take us.”\nkevingriffin@postmedia.com\nIs there more to this story? We’d like to hear from you about this or any other stories you think we should know about. Email vantips@postmedia.com.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line639903"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9630649089813232,"wiki_prob":0.9630649089813232,"text":"Obama more popular on foreign policy issues\nBy CHB\nNews, White House\nPresident Barack Obama (AP/Evan Vucci)\nPresident Barack Obama’s approval ratings for handling foreign policy issues generally top his ratings for most domestic issues, including the economy and health care, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll. But the poll also suggests a majority of Americans want the president to pull troops out of Afghanistan faster than he’s doing, and many are skeptical about a tentative nuclear deal with Iran.\nThe poll found that 57 percent now say going to war in Afghanistan after the 2001 terror attacks was probably the “wrong thing to do.” And 53 percent say the pace of the planned withdrawal is too slow, 34 percent said the pace was just about right and 10 percent said it was too fast. All combat troops are scheduled to leave by the end of 2014.\nMeanwhile, six in 10 Americans approve of the preliminary deal between Iran and six global powers to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions. But that support is soft and many doubt it will lead to concrete results.\nEven though he garners more disapproval than approval on the handling of Afghanistan and Iran, Obama generally gets better ratings on foreign policy than on domestic issues.\nNearly half (49 percent) approve of his handling of U.S. relations with other countries while 50 percent disapprove. In contrast, just 40 percent approve of his handling of the economy, while 59 percent disapprove. And on health care, the approval rating stands at 39 percent, with 61 percent disapproving. His overall job approval is at 42 percent, with 58 disapproving.\nThe slightly higher ratings on foreign policy generally make sense, suggested Philip Salathe, 70, of Indianapolis, who participated in the poll.\nSalathe said Obama in 2008 ran against Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who during the campaign joked about dropping bombs on Iran. “I figure we could fix the economy if it gets ruined and we can repeal any bad laws that get passed,” Salathe said, but a military confrontation with Iran or other foreign policy crisis could have more disastrous consequences.\nSalathe approves of the job Obama is doing overall but still thinks things are headed in the wrong direction. “We’re not doing anything about the major problems facing humanity. Basically, we have a number of disparate goals that are at odds with each other,” such as protecting the environment while promoting growth and urban development. He said Obama is the first Democrat he’s voted for as president. He said he tends to favor Republicans.\nJust 16 percent of those polled said they expected the situation in Afghanistan to “get better” over the next year; 32 percent said they expected it to “get worse” while about half said they expected the situation to “stay about the same.”\nJennifer Reese, 28, of Burnsville, Minn., considers herself a Democrat and says she voted for Obama. But she questions whether he’s the cause for the economy getting better.\n“I think the economy is getting better, but I don’t think it’s necessarily because of what Obama’s doing,” she said. “That’s the way things work. When things go down so far, then they’re going to go back up.”\nShe said she also believes both parties could do an equally good job protecting the country and that the pace of allied troop withdrawal from Afghanistan is “about right.” She favors a continued presence of allied troops in the country to train and assist Afghan troops. “My family was in the military. My father was over there for a while and he says they’re doing good things.”\nAs for negotiations with Iran on curbing its nuclear program, Reese says she is pleased Iran is at the bargaining table. “Let’s negotiate this, see what we can do,” she said.\nThe poll showed Americans broadly approve of a tentative deal to curb Iran’s nuclear program. Fifty-nine percent approved, 38 percent disapproved.\nBut that support was tentative, with more than 4 in 10 (44 percent) also saying it’s unlikely the agreement will keep Iran from seeking to build its own nuclear weapon. Just 11 percent think that outcome is extremely or very likely.\nMark Dabney, 54, of Cartersville, Ga., who describes himself as a political independent who supports the tea party movement, disapproves of Obama’s performance on both domestic and foreign policy fronts.\nAs for Iraq and Afghanistan, “I just believe that we shouldn’t go meddling in other countries’ internal affairs,” he said.\nThe AP-GfK poll was conducted Dec. 5-9 using KnowledgePanel, GfK’s probability-based online panel. For results based on all 1,367 adults, the margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.\nKnowledgePanel is designed to be representative of the U.S. population. Respondents were first selected randomly using phone or mail survey methods, and later, completed this survey online. People selected for KnowledgePanel who didn’t otherwise have Internet access were provided with access at no cost.\nAssociated Press Director of Polling Jennifer Agiesta and AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report.\nAP-GfK poll: http://www.ap.gfkpoll.com\nFollow Tom Raum on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/tomraum\nCopyright © 2013 Capitol Hill Blue\nCopyright © 2013 The Associated Press All Rights Reserved.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1376849"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8023427128791809,"wiki_prob":0.8023427128791809,"text":"Some of the following are more historically accurate than others, but I suppose it’s more about entertainment than authenticity. I include affiliate links to Amazon in my reviews and other posts. Those links will take the reader to Amazon.com and I do receive a small percentage of each purchase. Before you buy, do check to make sure you are buying the dvd that works for your part of the world (PAL, NTSC, etc) in order to avoid disappointment.\n1612 (2011): starring Pyotr Kislov, Artur Smolyaninov, Michal Zebrowski.\nA Field in England (2013): starring Julian Barratt.\nA Little Chaos (2015): Starring Kate Winslet, Alan Rickman, Matthias Schoenaerts. Read the SCL Review.\nAdmiral: Command and Conquer (2015): starring Charles Dance, Rutger Hauer.\nAgainst All Flags (1952): starring Errol Flynn and Maureen O’Hara.\nAngelique (1964): starring Michele Mercier, Jean Rochefort, Robert Hossein.\nAngelique (2013): starring Nora Arnezeder, Gérard Lanvin, Tomer Sisley.\nBathory: Countess of Blood (2011): starring Anna Friel and Hans Matheson.\nBattle of Vienna (2012): starring F. Murray Abraham, Enrico Lo Verso, Alicja Bachleda.\nBlack Corsair, The (1976): starring Mel Ferrer and Kabir Bedi.\nBlack Field (2009): starring Sofia Georgovassili, Hristos Passalis, Despina Bebedelli.\nBy the Sword Divided (1983): starring Julian Glover.\nCaptain Alatriste: The Spanish Musketeer (2006): starring Viggo Mortensen.\nCaptain Blood (1935): starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Haviland.\nCaravaggio (1986): starring Nigel Terry, Sean Bean, Tilda Swinton, Mark Tildesley, Michael Gough.\nCharles II: The Power and the Passion starring Rufus Sewell\nCountess, The (2009): starring Julie Delpy and William Hurt.\nCromwell (1970): starring Richard Harris and Alec Guinness.\nThe Crucible (1996): starring Daniel Day Lewis and Winona Ryder.\nCyrano de Bergerac (1990): starring Gérard Depardieu, Vincent Perez, Anne Brochet.\nDay of Wrath (1943): starring Thorkild Roose, Lisbeth Movin, Sigrid Neiiendam.\nD’Artagnan’s Daughter (1994): starring Sophie Marceau.\nThe Devils (1971): starring Vanessa Redgrave and Oliver Reed.\nThe Devil’s Whore (2008): starring Andrea Riseborough, Michael Fassbender. Read the SCL review.\nThe Draughtsman’s Contract (1982): starring Anthony Higgins.\nDon Juan (1998): starring Emmanuelle Béart and Penélope Cruz.\nDon Quixote (2001): starring John Lithgow and Amelia Warner.\nEl Greco (2007): starring Nick Ashdon.\nThe First Churchills (1967) starring John Neville.\nForever Amber (1947): starring Linda Darnell and Cornel Wilde.\nThe Four Musketeers (1974): starring Richard Chamberlain, Oliver Reed.\nFrenchman’s Creek (1944): starring Joan Fontaine and Basil Rathbone.\nFrenchman’s Creek (1998): starring Tara Fitzgerald.\nGirl With A Pearl Earring (2003): Scarlett Johansson, Colin Firth, Tom Wilkinson, Cillian Murphy.\nThe Great Fire (2014): starring Andrew Buchan, Jack Huston, Rose Leslie, and Charles Dance.\nGunpowder, Treason and Plot (2004): Robert Carlyle, Michael Fassbender, Clemence Poesy.\nHarakiri (1962): starring Tatsuya Nakadai.\nHara-Kiri – Death of a Samarai: starring Koji Yakusho.\nHenry Purcell – England, My England (1995): starring Simon Callow and Michael Ball.\nI, Worst of All (1990): starring Assumpta Serna, Dominique Sanda, Héctor Alterio.\nKing’s Whore, The (1990): starring Timothy Dalton, Valeria Golino. Read the SCL review.\nL’allée du Roi: starring Dominique Blanc, Didier Sandre.\nLa Femme Musketeer (2004): starring Natassja Kinski and Michael York.\nLe Bossu (1997): starring Daniel Auteuil, Fabrice Luchini, Vincent Perez.\nLe Roi Danse (2000): starring Benoît Magimel and Boris Terral.\nLorna Doone (1976): starring Emily Richards.\nLorna Doone (1992): starring Sean Bean, Clive Owen, and Polly Walker.\nLorna Doone (2000): starring Amelia Warner, Aiden Gillen.\nMan of La Mancha (1972): starring Peter O’Toole and Sophia Loren.\nMarquise (1997): starring Sophie Marceau.\nMoliere (2007): starring Romain Duris, Laura Morante, and Fabrice Luchini.\nMorgan, The Pirate (1960).\nMother Joan of the Angels (1961): starring Lucyna Winnicka.\nMusketeers, The (2014): starring Luke Pasqualino, Tom Burke, Santiago Cabrera, Howard Charles, Peter Capaldi.\nNew Worlds (2014): starring Jamie Dornan and Jeremy Northam.\nNightwatching (2007): starring Martin Freeman and Jodhi May.\nPilgrim’s Progress (1978): starring Peter Thomas, Liam Neeson.\nPirates of Tortuga (1961): starring Ken Scott.\nPlymouth Adventure (1952): starring Spencer Tracy, Gene Tierney.\nPocahontas (1996): featuring voices by Irene Bedard, Mel Gibson, Christian Bale.\nPocahontas II: Journey to a New World (2001).\nQueen Christina (1933): starring Greta Garbo, John Gilbert.\nRembrandt (1936): starring Charles Laughton.\nRestoration (1995): starring Robert Downey Jr, Sam Neill, Meg Ryan.\nRise of Louis XIV, The (1966).\nSalem (2014-): starring Tamzin Merchant.\nThe Scarlet Blade (1963): starring Oliver Reed.\nScarlet Letter, The (1994): starring Gary Oldman and Demi Moore.\nSerpent’s Kiss, The (1997): starring Ewan McGregor, Greta Scaachi, Richard E. Grant.\nShogun (1980): starring Richard Chamberlain.\nStage Beauty (2004): starring Claire Danes, Billy Crudup, Rupert Everett, and Hugh Bonneville.\nThe Iron Mask (1928): starring Douglas Fairbanks.\nThe Lady and the Highwayman (1989): starring Hugh Grant, Emma Samms, Oliver Reed. Read the SCL review.\nThe Libertine (2004): starring Johnny Depp, John Malkovich, Samantha Morton, & Rosamund Pike.\nThe Man in the Iron Mask (1998): starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Jeremy Irons, John Malkovich.\nThe Man in the Iron Mask (1976): starring Richard Chamberlain and Jenny Agutter.\nThe Moonraker (1958): starring George Baker, Sylvia Syms, Marius Goring.\nThe Musketeer (2001): starring Justin Chambers, Catherine Deneuve, Mena Suvari.\nThe New World (2005): starring Colin Farrell, Q’orianka Kilcher, Christopher Plummer.\nThe Three Musketeers (1939): starring Don Ameche.\nThe Three Musketeers (1948): starring Gene Kelly, Lana Turner, and Angela Lansbury.\nThe Three Musketeers (1973): starring Richard Chamberlain, Raquel Welch, Oliver Reed.\nThe Three Musketeers (1993): starring Kiefer Sutherland, Tim Curry, and Chris O’Donnell.\nThe Three Musketeers (2011): starring Logan Lerman, Orlando Bloom, Matthew MacFadyen.\nThree Musketeers (1966): starring Brian Blessed and Jeremy Brett.\nTo Kill a King (2003): starring Dougray Scott, Tim Roth, Rupert Everett.\nTous les Matins du Monde (1991): starring Guillaume Depardieu, Anne Brochet.\nVatel (2000): starring Uma Thurman, Gerard Depardieu, and Julian Sands.\nWinstanley (1976): starring Miles Halliwell, Jerome Willis, Terry Higgins.\nWicked Lady, The (1945): starring Margaret Lockwood and James Mason.\nWitchfinder General (1968): starring Vincent Price.\n17th-century plays and operas\nCadmus & Hermione, tragédie lyrique de Lully et Quinault (2008). Le Poème Harmonique.\nIl Sant’ Alessio by Stefano Landi (2008): Philippe Jaroussky, Max Emanuel Cencic, Damien Guillon, Xavier Sabata, William Christie.\nL’Incoronazione Di Poppea by Monteverdi (2012): William Christie/Philippe Jaroussky/Danielle De Niese/Anna Bonitatibus/Max Emanuel Cencic/Les Arts Florissants.\nLe Bourgeois Gentilhomme (2011). Comédie Ballet de Molière. Musique de Jean-Baptiste Lully / Le Poème Harmonique, dir. Vincent Dumestre\nDocumentaries/History programmes\nBrother Against Brother: The English Civil War (2007)\nDiscover the Great Masters of Art – Caravaggio (2011)\nThe English Civil War – A People Divided (2002)\nVermeer and Music\nVersailles, le Reve d’un Roi\nStill from the beautiful film “Moliere.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line23387"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5523408055305481,"wiki_prob":0.4476591944694519,"text":"GEO TV’s latest production Aye Musht-e-Khaak has only been on the air for few weeks, yet it has already established itself as one of the most popular and well-liked drama series on television.Exquisitely penned down by Maha Malik, the drama chronicles the journey of two entirely different people as they explore the topics of faith, love, and deception.\nThe drama is an amazing directorial masterpiece of Aehsun Talish and under the dynamic creator’s duo Abdullah Kadwani and Asad Qureshi, 7th Sky Entertainment has reunited the fan-favorite combination of Feroze Khan and Sana Javed for the third time.\nFans are going gaga over their jori and here we jot down 5 reasons why we love Dua and Mustajab.\n1. Mustajab’s Go-Getter Attitude:\nMustajab is a nice young man who believes in planning and has a reasonable attitude on life. His lack of faith in his fate, as well as his can-do attitude, set him apart from his peers.\n2. Dua is an Independent Girl:\nDua is a sweet young lady who believes in fate and predestination. Her strong ideals and values help her to be confident and resolute in her life choices.\n3. Amazing On-Screen Chemistry\nBoth Dua and Mustajab complement each other well. Despite their opposite personalities; they look like that cute couple together who you want to see in real life around too.\n4. Hidden Love\nDespite all the differences between them, With Mustajab’s stubborn and agitating nature and Dua’s firm persona; they both have underlying feelings for each other, and unintentionally care for each other. For instance, Dua manages to cover Mustajab’s anger in front of others. Mustajab ate street food just for the sake of Dua.\n5. Accepting the flaws of each other\nAlthough Dua and Mustajab are poles apart in terms of personalities, but the best thing about them in this drama is, they accept each other’s flaws whole-heartedly.\nAll in all, Dua and Mustajab characters are so real that you can easily relate them into real life characters around. We couldn’t wait for next week episode to be on-aired.\nDOBARA EP 12: AFFAN IS GIVING MEHRUNISSA A TOUGH TIME\nDrama serial Dobara is getting interesting with every passing episode as it brings one twist after another. The drama has a refreshing story that highlights some important issues that young widows face when they start thinking about getting remarrying....","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line404387"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5099527835845947,"wiki_prob":0.5099527835845947,"text":"News & Production Director/ Weekend On-Air\nContact Rob Langer\nAbout Rob Langer\nRadio... it's in my blood! As long as I can remember, I wanted to work in radio. Growing up in New York, I would listen to all of the famous \"disc jockeys\" (if you are under 25, ask your parents what a disc jockey is!). I was fortunate to break into the business, working at the number 1 station on Long Island (WALK-FM) as their overnight announcer (even hosting an all request show at 2 am!). In 1990, I became their traffic reporter. My family and I moved to Atlanta in 2000, where I continued to report on traffic conditions for radio (including here with Paige when we were J93.3) and TV (11Alive).\nGod was preparing me for a more significant role in this ministry. Ther were a couple of opportunities for me to work here, but it wasn't the right time. The door finally opened in 2010, when I began doing weekends on the air. Then, in October of 2011, God blessed me with the opportunity to join The JOY FM in a full-time capacity. Now, I have the pleasure of working with three remarkable people, Dave, Bill, and Carmen, producing The Morning Cruise weekdays on The JOY FM. Plus, I am part of the news team with Jules.\nServing in the community is also an important part of my faith journey. I currently serve as worship leader at Unity Baptist Church in Newnan, and will lead music ocassionally at Peachtree City SDA Church in Sharpsburg .\nFamily: wife Nancy, daughters Emma, and Maddie\nFavorite Bible Verse - Don’t let any evil talk come out of your mouths. Say only what will help to build others up and meet their needs. Then what you say will help those who listen.- Ephesians 4:29 (NIRV)\nFavorite Christian Artists - Matt Maher, Matthew West, Amy Grant, Needtobreathe, Josh Wilson, Rend Collective, Pat Barrett, Elevation Worship... and the list goes on... I love them all!\nOther musical likes - Barry Manilow, Michael Buble, Billy Joel, Johnny Mathis, Al Jarreau, music from the 50's and 60's\nTeams - Huge Atlanta United fan, but because of my New York roots, I still proudly support the Mets (will root for the Yankees, too!), Jets (support the Giants as well- need to keep my wife happy...), Islanders. Favorite college football team- Notre Dame,\nFavorite foods - Pizza (New York style, of course!), lasagna (especially Nancy’s lasagna!), spinach and artichoke dip, coffee (not technically a food, yet part of my food groups!)\nFavorite TV Shows - Fraiser, M*A*S*H*, The Odd Couple, The West Wing, The Honeymooners, Emergency, Quincy (love the old shows). Love the home shows on DIY and HGTV (but don't ask me to lift a hammer or saw...)\nFavorite Books (other than the Bible) - \"Comeback\" and \"When You Can't Comeback\" (both by Dave Dravecky), \"Fair Ball\" by Bob Costas\nFavorite Movies - \"Pride of The Yankees\" (yes, unusual for a Mets' fan, but I love Lou Gehrig's story), \"Mr. Holland's Opus\", \"The Four Seasons,\" \"The Odd Couple,\" \"The Lego Batman Movie.\"\nAlways wanted to be a game show host!\nJerry Williams and I worked together on Long Island!\nWore ties and carried a briefcase in high school and college (ask Nancy about that!)\nHad the lead in Godspell in my senior year in high school (the best role anyone could play!)\nSurvived an emergency landing while flying over Long Island reporting on the traffic! Landed on a high school football field and hit a fence! (Missed the field goal... wide left)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line927585"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8233569860458374,"wiki_prob":0.8233569860458374,"text":"Tag: S.RES.26\nUnited States Government’s Reactions to U.S.-Cuba Reconciliation\nAfter looking at international and Cuban reactions to the December 17th announcement of U.S.-Cuba reconciliation, we now examine the reactions by the U.S. Government’s Executive Branch and Congress. A subsequent post will look at the reactions of the American people.\nI. Executive Branch.\nLed by President Barack Obama, the Executive Branch engaged in 18 months of secret negotiations with Cuba that resulted in the December 17th announcement of an accord between the two countries involving immediate release of certain prisoners, promised liberalization of U.S. regulations regarding U.S. exports to the island and U.S. citizens travel to Cuba, promised U.S. review of its designation of Cuba as a “State Sponsor of Terrorism” and further negotiations for reestablishment of normal diplomatic relations and for resolution of a long list of issues or disputes.\nThe U.S. Department of State immediately commenced review of the “terrorism’ designation and the Treasury and Commerce Departments in January announced the new and more liberal regulations regarding exports and travel.\nThe U.S., represented by Assistant Secretary of State Roberta Jacobson, participated in the first round of further negotiations with Cuba in Havana in January, and the second round will be this month in Washington, D.C.\nIn addition, as we will see in the discussion of reactions in the U.S. House of Representatives, bills have been introduced to end the U.S. embargo of the island.\nIn short, the U.S. is doing everything it can to further the progress toward normalization of relations and reconciliation of the two countries.\nII. U.S. Congress\nThe following analysis of the positions of senators and representatives on reconciliation obviously is incomplete since I was not able to conduct exhaustive research on all 100 senators and all 435 representatives. I also used my judgment to assign pending bills as favoring or opposing reconciliation and assumed, absent specific information to the contrary, that being a sponsor or cosponsor of a bill in one category would preclude that individual’s voting for some or all of the bills in the other category. Moreover, the named individual legislators may change their minds if and when any of these measures reach the chambers’ floors for votes. I earnestly entreat readers to provide comments with other information to correct or supplement this analysis.\nA. U.S. Senate\nOf the 100 Senators, 25 so far appear to support reconciliation while 27 do not. The other 48 Senators apparently have not yet taken positions on this major issue.\n1. Favoring reconciliation\nAs of February 10, I was surprised to discover that the Senate does not have a bill to abolish the U.S. embargo of Cuba. Minnesota’s Senator Amy Klobuchar clearly has stated her intent to offer and support such a bill, but has not done so to date because she believes that the Senate first should vote on confirmation of an ambassador to Cuba, who has not yet been nominated by the President. Moreover, Cuba’s President Castro has made noises that abolishing the embargo should come before restoration of normal diplomatic relations. As a result, Klobuchar’s legislative strategy may have to be revised.\nIn any event, as of February 10, the Senate had only two measures on its agenda that are at least tangentially favorable to the recent U.S.-Cuba accord.\nThe first is S.299 (Freedom to Travel to Cuba Act of 2015) offered by Senator Jeff Flake (Rep., AZ) with 13 cosponsors [1] It was referred to the Foreign Relations Committee.\nThe other is a proposed resolution (S.RES.26: Commending Pope Francis for his leadership in helping to secure the release of Alan Gross and for working with the Governments of the United States and Cuba to achieve a more positive relationship). It was offered by Senator Richard Durbin (Dem., IL) with 10 cosponsors, four of whom were not cosponsors of S.299 [2] The proposed resolution was referred to the Foreign Relations Committee.\nIn addition to these 18 senators, the following seven (for a total of 25) can also be regarded as supporters of reconciliation based upon statements on their official websites or other comments or actions mentioned in the press: Tammy Baldwin (Dem., WI), Chris Coons (Dem., DE), Al Franken (Dem., MN), Chris Murphy (Dem., CT), Rand Paul (Rep., KY), Pat Roberts (Rep., KS) and Harry Reid (Dem., NV).\nThus, at least 25 Senators are on record apparently supporting reconciliation with Cuba\n2. Opposing reconciliation\nAs of February 10, the Senate had on its agenda one substantive bill relating to Cuba that can be seen as indirectly opposed to reconciliation.\nS.165 (Detaining Terrorists To Protect America Act of 2015) would extend and enhance prohibitions and limitations with respect to the transfer or release of individuals detained at the U.S. Naval Station, Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.This bill was referred to the Armed Services Committee. It was offered by Senator Kelly Ayotte (Rep., NH) with 26 Republican cosponsors [3] One of the cosponsors, however, is Senator Jerry Moran, who was a cosponsor of S.299 and who spoke in favor of ending the embargo at the launch of the United States Agricultural Coalition for Cuba. Thus, I believe that only 25 of these cosponsors can be counted in the anti-reconciliation camp.\nAt least one other Senator belongs in this camp. Senator Robert Menendez (Dem., NJ), who is a Cuban-American, is vehemently opposed to reconciliation as are the other two Cuban-American Senators–Ted Cruz (Rep., TX) and Marco Rubio (Rep., FL), both of whom are cosponsors of S.165.\nThus, at least 27 Senators are on record apparently opposing reconciliation.\nB. U.S. House of Representatives\nThere are at least 43 representatives favoring reconciliation while 52 do not. That leaves the other 340 representatives not accounted for.\nAs of February 10, the House had eight pending bills favorable to reconciliation with Cuba.\nThe following three seek to end the U.S. embargo of Cuba.\nThe leading one seems to be H.R.403 (Free Trade with Cuba Act) that was introduced by Representative Charles Rangel (Dem., NY) with 27 Democratic cosponsors [4] It has been referred for consideration to the House Foreign Affairs and six other committees.[5] The bill would end the embargo, and its section 2 would have Congress find that “Cuba is no longer a threat to the [U.S.] or Western Hemisphere;” the U.S. ” is using economic, cultural, academic, and scientific engagement to support its policy of promoting democratic and human rights reforms [in other Communist regimes];” and the U.S. “can best support democratic change in Cuba by promoting trade and commerce, travel, communications, and cultural, academic, and scientific exchanges.”\nThe other two similar bills to end the embargo are H.R.274 (United States-Cuba Normalization Act, 2015) by Rep. Bobby Rush (Dem., IL) without any cosponsors, and H.R.735 (To lift the trade embargo on Cuba, and for other purposes) by Rep. Jose Serrano (Dem., NY) with Rep. Rangel as a cosponsor, both of whom are on the record as supporters of of H.R.403. These bills too were referred to the same seven committees for consideration.\nRep. Rangel on February 2nd also introduced H.R.635 (Promoting American Agricultural and Medical Exports to Cuba Act of 2015) to facilitate the export of U.S. agricultural products to Cuba, to remove impediments to the export to Cuba of medical devices and medicines, to allow travel to Cuba by U.S. legal residents, to establish an agricultural export promotion program with respect to Cuba. With 25 of the same Democratic cosponsors, the bill was referred to the Foreign Affairs and four other committees.\nThere are two bills to expand U.S. residents ability to travel to Cuba. Rep. Rangel on February 2nd introduced H.R.634 (Export Freedom to Cuba Act of 2015) with 25 of the same Democratic cosponsors of H.R.403 plus John Garamendi (Dem., CA) and Mark Pocan (Dem., WI). It has provisions for freedom to travel to Cuba for U.S. citizens and legal residents.It was referred to the Foreign Affairs Committee. A similar bill to expand U.S. citizens travel to Cuba (H.R.664: Freedom to Travel to Cuba Act of 2015) was offered on February 2nd by Rep. Mark Sanford (Rep., SC) with 12 cosponsors.[6] It also was referred to the Foreign Affairs Committee.\nA more limited travel bill was introduced by Representative Jose Serrano (Dem., NY). It is H.R.738: To waive certain prohibitions with respect to nationals of Cuba coming to the United States to play organized professional baseball. Its sole cosponsor is Representative Rangel and was referred to the Foreign Affairs Committee.\nOn January 27th Minnesota’s Representative Betty McCollum introduced H.R.570 (Stop Wasting Taxpayer Money on Cuba Broadcasting Act) to stop Radio Marti and Television Marti broadcasts to Cuba. McCollum was a cosponsor of H.R.403 while HR. 570 has no cosponsors. It was referred to the Foreign Affairs and Judiciary Committees.\nI am proud to say that all five Democratic Representatives from Minnesota by offering or cosponsoring bills appear to be in favor of this reconciliation. In addition, two of Minnesota’s three Republican Representatives have made statements indicating at least receptivity to favoring the reconciliation, and this analysis counts them as undecided. [7]\nOur newest Representative Tom Emmer said, “By all accounts the Cuban people are worse off today than when [the embargo] started. So clearly that’s not working. And I’m supportive of engaging in diplomacy, starting to re-engage in diplomatic relations with Cuba, to begin that process to hopefully someday getting to normalize that relationship. But it’s two separate things. One, it’s diplomacy, and down the road is normalization.” In addition, as a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Emmer focused on three issues in questioning Administration witnesses: reparations for Cubans who have been persecuted by the Castro regime, payments for U.S. interests that lost property to the regime and safe harbor of U.S. fugitives within Cuba. Emmer also said or suggested if certain conditions are met he could support ending the embargo.\nAnother Minnesota Republican Representative, Rep. Erik Paulsen, said, “We should be looking at opportunities to open up trade between the United States and Cuba so we can export more American goods and services. However, the President should have engaged Congress before making concessions to the Cuban government.” (Id.) It may also be significant that his district includes the headquarters of Cargill Incorporated, the leader of the United States Agricultural Coalition for Cuba\nThus, there are at least 40 Representatives who appear to be in favor of this reconciliation with differing levels of commitment.\nThere are two pending bills, both relating to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba that can be seen as opposing reconciliation, as of February 10.\nThe first is H.R.654 (Naval Station Guantanamo Bay Protection Act). It was introduced by David Jolly (Rep., FL) with 36 Republican cosponsors, none of whom is from Minnesota. [8] It was referred to the Foreign Affairs Committee.\nThe other bill (H.R.401: Detaining Terrorists to Protect America Act of 2015) which would prohibit the release or transfer of certain Guantanamo Bay detainees and the construction or modification of any other facility to house such detainees. It was offered by Representative Jackie Walkorski (Rep., IN) with 29 Republican cosponsors, of whom 17 were not cosponsors of H.R.654. [9] It was referred to the Armed Services Committee.\nAccordingly there are at least 54 Representatives on the record against reconciliation. Three of them are Cuban-Americans (Carlos Curbello, Mario Diaz–Balart and Ileana Ros-Lehtinen) with the latter two being the most vocal in their persistent criticism of reconciliation. Another Cuban-American Representative (Albio Sires (Dem., NJ)) has not been an author or cosponsor of any of these bills, but his website includes a rejection of the President’s decisions to seek reconciliation with Cuba. [10]\nAs a supporter of reconciliation, I am anxious that this year both houses of Congress abolish the embargo and support other measures to promote that reconciliation. Therefore, I urge all supporters to say thank you to those legislators who already are on our side, to identify the “undecided” legislators and seek to persuade them to become supporters and to inform our fellow citizens of the important issues in this controversy and to seek to persuade them to be supporters.\n[1] The 13 cosponsors of S.299 are the following: John Boozman (Rep., AR), Barbara Boxer (Dem, CA), Thomas Carper (Dem., DE), Susan Collins (Rep., ME), Richard Durbin (Dem., IL) ), Michael Enzi (Rep., WY), Amy Klobuchar (Dem., MN), Patrick Leahy (Dem., VT), Jerry Moran (Rep., KS), Jack Reed (Dem., RI), Debbie Stabenow (Dem., MI), Tom Udall (Dem., NM) and Sheldon Whitehouse (Dem., RI). Senator Moran also spoke in favor of ending the embargo at the launch of the United States Agricultural Coalition for Cuba.\n[2] The four cosponsors of S.RES.26 who were not cosponsors of S.299 are the following: Sherrod Brown (Dem., OH), Benjamin Cardin (Dem., MD), Tim Kaine (Dem., VA) and Barbara Mikulski (Dem., MD).\n[3] The 26 Republican cosponsors of S.165 are the following: John Barrasso (WY), Roy Blunt (MO), John Boozman (AR), Richard Burr (NC). John Cornyn (TX), Tom Cotton (AR), Ted Cruz (TX), Joni Ernst (IA), Deb Fischer (NE), Lindsey Graham (SC), Orrin Hatch (UT), James Inhofe (OK), Johnny Isakson (GA), Ron Johnson (WI), Mark Kirk (IL), James Lankford (OK), Mike Lee ((UT), John McCain (AZ), Jerry Moran (KS), Pat Roberts (KS), Mike Rounds (SD), Jeff Sessions (AL), Dan Sullivan (AK), Thom Tillis (NC), Pat Toomey (PA) and Roger Wicker (MS).\n[4] The 27 Democratic Representative cosponsors of H.R.403 are Karen Bass (CA), William Clay (Mo), Steve Cohen (TN), John Conyers, Jr. (MI), Keith Ellison (MN), Sam Farr (CA), Chaka Fattah (PA), Raul Griaiva (AZ), Jared Huffman (CA), Sheila Jackson Lee (TX), Eddie Johnson (TX), Henry Johnson (GA), Barbara Lee (CA), Betty McCollum (MN), Jim McDermott (WA), Gregory Meeks (NY), Gwen Moore (WI), Rick Nolan (MN), Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC), Collin Peterson (MN), Jared Polis (CO), Janice Schakowsky (IL), Bennie Thompson (MS), Tim Walz (MN) and Maxine Waters (CA).\n[5] A prior post listed the members of the seven House committees that have jurisdiction over different portions of the three bills to end the embargo.\n[6] The 12 cosponsors of H.R.664 are Kathy Astor (Rep., FL), Jason Chaffetz (Rep., UT), Kevin Cramer (Rep., ND), Rosa DeLauro (Rep., CT), Sam Farr (Dem., CA), Barbara Lee (Dem., CA), Thomas Massie (Rep., KY), James McGovern (Dem., MA), Charles Rangel (Dem., NY), Chris Van Hollen, (Rep., MD), Nydia Velazquez (Dem., NY) and Peter Welch (Dem, VT).) Of this group, eight were not sponsors or cosponsors of H.R.403 (Chaffetz, Cramer, DeLauro, Massie, McGovern, Van Hollen, Velazquez and Welch). Cramer also announced his support for ending the embargo at the launch of the U.S. Agricultural Coalition for Cuba.\n[7] Henry, Emmer on Cuba embargo: ‘Clearly that’s not working, MINNPOST (Feb. 6, 2015). The third Minnesota Republican Representative, John Kline, appeared to be less receptive to ending the embargo. He said he’s “not confident the Administration will follow through on its promises to hold the Castro dictatorship regime accountable, and I’m concerned about revisiting relations with Cuba until all Cubans enjoy a free democracy.”\n[8] The 36 Republican cosponsors of H.R.654 are Gus Bilirakis (FL), Michael Burgess (TX), Bradley Byrne (AL), Jason Chaffetz (UT), Mike Coffman (CO), Carlos Curbello (FL), Rodney Davis (IL), Ron DeSantis (FL), Mario Diaz-Balert (FL), Bill Flores (TX), Trent Franks (AZ), Louie Gohmert (TX), Trey Gowdy (TN), Andy Harris (MD), Richard Hudson (NC), Duncan Hunter (CA), Darrell Issa (CA), Bill Johnson (OH), Jeff Miller (FL), Alexander Mooney (WV), Richard Nugent (FL), Gary Palmer (AL), Robert Pittenger (NC), Bill Posey (FL), Reid Ribble (WI), Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (FL), Keith Rothfus (PA), Matt Salmon (AZ), Austin Scott (GA), Marlin Stutzman (IN), Jackie Walorski (IN), Randy Weber (TX), Roger Williams (TX), Joe Wilson (SC), Ted Yoho (FL) and Ryan Zinke (MT). Diaz-Balert and Ros-Lehtinen are Cuban-Americans who have been and are most vocal in their criticism of reconciliation. Rodney Davis, however, spoke in favor of ending the embargo at the launch of the United States Agricultural Coalition for Cuba and should not be viewed as completely hostile to reconciliation.\n[9] The 29 Republican cosponsors of H.R.401 are Andy Barr (KY), Susan Brooks (IN), Bradley Byrne (AL), Mike Coffman (CO), Paul Cook (CA), Ander Crenshaw (FL), Trent Franks (AZ), Andy Harris (MD), Jaime Herrera Beutier (WA), Duncan Hunter (CA), Darrell Issa (CA). Sam Johnson (TX), Doug Lamborn (CO), Robert Latta (OH), Luke Messer (IN), Mick Mulvaney (IN), Richard Nugent (FL), Steven Pearce (NM), Robert Pittenger (NC), Ted Poe (TX), Mike Pompeo (KS), Todd Rokita (IN), Aaron Schock (IL), Austin Scott (GA), Christopher Smith (NJ), Brad Wenstrup (OH), Joe Wilson (SC), Robert Wittman (VA) and Ryan Zinke (MT). Of these cosponsors, 16 (Barr, Brooks, Herrera, Sam Johnson, Lamborn, Latta, Messer, Mulvaney, Pearce, Poe, Pompeo, Rokita, Schock, Smith, Wenstrup and Wittman) were not cosponsors of H.R.654.\n[10] Hook, Exile Haunts Cuba-American Lawmakers, W.S.J. (Dec. 20-21, 2014).\nPosted on February 11, 2015 February 18, 2015 Categories History, Law, Other countries, PoliticsTags Al Franken, Albio Sires, Amy Klobuchar, Carlos Curbello, Chjarles Rangel, Chris Coons, Chris Murphy, Cuba, David Jolly, Erik Paulsen, Guantanamo Bay Cuba, H.R. 274, H.R. 403, H.R. 570, H.R. 635, H.R.401, H.R.634, H.R.654, H.R.664, H.R.735, H.r.738, Harry Reid, Jackie Walkorski, Jose Serrano, Kelly Ayotte, Marco Rubio, Mark Sanford, Pat Robertson, President Barack Obama, President Raul Castro, Radio Marti, Rand Paul, reconciliation, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart., Representative Betty McCollum, Representative Bobby Rush, Roberta S. Jacobson, S.165, S.299, S.RES.26, Senator Jeff Flake, Senator Jerry Moran, Senator Richard Durbin, Senator Robert Menendez, Tammy Baldwin, Ted Cruz, Television Marti, Tom Emmer, U.S. designation of Cuba as \"State Sponsor of Terrorism\", U.S. embargo of Cuba, U.S. exports to Cuba, U.S. House of Representatives, U.S. regulations, U.S. Senate, U.S. travel to Cuba, United States of American (USA)4 Comments on United States Government’s Reactions to U.S.-Cuba Reconciliation","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1506197"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5288470387458801,"wiki_prob":0.5288470387458801,"text":"Heterosexual privilege\nBy Erin Hortle\n24.Feb.17\nI recently became engaged and what’s surprised me the most, in and amongst the chaos of emotions I’ve experienced since the ‘engagement moment’, is how profoundly sad I feel about it. This is best encapsulated in the moment when I told my family. My father was so happy for my partner and I that tears glazed his eyes. But my own vision wobbled because I felt sad for my brother, sitting across the table from me, grinning selflessly as he toasted my happiness and future – a happiness and future that the state denies him. The realisation of precisely what an engagement means and what it feels like brought with it a true awareness for me of what is being denied to others.\nFor me, marriage equality has always been more of a political than personal issue. This, despite the fact I have several close friends in non-heterosexual relationships. But perhaps this was the root of the problem: I’d approached the inequality intellectually and whenever I needed to personalise it, I always did so by way of my discriminated-against friends. I was that self-righteous heterosexual: I care because I have gay friends. I thought I was empathising but, as I can now recognise, I was doing a rubbish job of it. I was approaching the issue abstractly and impersonally because I hadn’t yet imagined how marriage could be personal for me, and thus relatedly, hadn’t imagined precisely how personal the lack is for others. My empathy was hollow – politically nuanced and well intentioned, but hollow. It became a personal issue when my partner and I were bushwalking and he fashioned me a button-grass ring and we both nearly cried because of how shockingly new and intense everything was in that moment.\nMarriage is an institution many heterosexuals take for granted, as an idealised and attainable white-wedding dream, as an easy excuse for a loved-up party, or merely as a convenient way to formally mark an intention to commit. According to the ABS, 113,595 couples asked each other the marriage question in 2015; averaged out, this works out to be 311 couples every day of the year. Perhaps more. Probably, there were some that never made it to their chosen alter because their relationship fell apart or because they decided that actually, marriage wasn’t for them. And really, that’s the crux of it. When contemplating a life together, heterosexuals enjoy the privilege of choosing to marry or not.\nThis was the privilege my partner and I were exercising the day that we got engaged. We decided we would get married just as other people in heterosexual relationships choose not to, and the state doesn’t really care either way. It only cares that gay people do not. ‘They’ are free to not marry, and be happy with that choice. As Senator Abetz so kindly reminded the nation last year, Dolce and Gabbana are gay and they don’t want to get married. As so many conservatives rationalise, ‘they’ can choose to spend the rest of their lives with their loved ones, ‘they’ don’t have to get married to do that. But this option, even when characterised by nothing but love and commitment, is always negatively restricted – necessarily decided, if only in small part, in reference to what the state disallows.\nThe day my partner and I got engaged, traipsing through the south-west of Tasmania, all I could think was that, not only would the words we said have been different if he were a woman or I a man, the emotional atmosphere would have also been different. Our moment wouldn’t have been characterised by unchecked optimism and nervous euphoria, or at least, not wholly; it would have been marred, in part, by an awareness of an inequality, and an inequality that has a violent history and present. Take, for example, the context of Tasmania, where homosexuality was not decriminalised until 1997.\nIn 1994 the United Nations Human Rights Committee condemned Tasmanian laws, sparking a national debate as to whether or not the federal government had the power to override discriminatory state statutes. Jump forward to the twenty-first century and the opposite is occurring: the government has been pressuring states and territories to conform to its image of marriage as an exclusively heterosexual institution. When, in 2013, the ACT passed an act legalising same-sex marriage, the Commonwealth, headed by freshly minted PM Tony Abbott, appealed against the legislation in the High Court. The Court decided that the ACT’s Marriage Equality Act was inconsistent with the federal Marriage Act, stating in its summary of judgements: ‘The Court held that the Federal Parliament has power under the Australian Constitution to legislate with respect to same-sex marriage, and that under the Constitution and federal law as it now stands, whether same-sex marriage should be provided for by law is a matter for the Federal Parliament.’ The thirty-one couples who wedded in the brief period same-sex marriage was legal in the ACT subsequently had their marriage nullified.\nThis judgement was facilitated, in no small part, by John Howard’s Marriage Amendment Bill of 2004, which included, for the first time, a definition of marriage as the ‘voluntarily entered-into union of a man and woman to the exclusion of all others’. Howard’s agenda in amending the Marriage Act was blatant; in a press conference held at the time, he told reporters: ‘We’ve decided to insert this into the Marriage Act to make it very plain that that is our view of marriage and to also make it very plain that the definition of a marriage is something that should rest in the hands, ultimately, of the parliament of the nation.’\nMy partner and I were privileged because in the moment when we murmured our love to one another and contemplated whether or not we should celebrate that love with marriage, the spectres of John Howard, Tony Abbott, Eric Abetz, Cory Bernardi –whose newly formed Conservative Party is, in large part, devoted to opposing marriage equality – and the rest of their posse were nowhere in sight. There was no-one lurking in the wings, hissing: no, you can’t have what we have because your love is worth less than ours. We were free to make a choice. We were privileged to be able to enjoy the aftermath of that moment: to tell our families, to witness their joy. What we were exercising was both sides of heterosexual privilege: the privilege to be able to love the person you love and to have that love recognised, to have that ‘engagement moment’, which brings with it a mix of anxiety, joy, contentment and, most of all, optimism. It’s a right that is possessively guarded and granted only to a select group.\nSince becoming engaged, I’ve realised that marriage equality isn’t just about non-heterosexual marriages; it’s about all marriages, which is, of course, a concern that drives the conservative campaign. They worry about what gay marriage will do to the institution of marriage. For me, the persisting inequality is tarnishing it right now. It’s only a matter of time until marriage equality is realised. Public support is swelling every day and rumour has it the Turnbull Government is now contemplating a free vote on the issue in parliament – this was one of the reasons Bernardi decided to defect. Many politicians are married; I only hope that, if allowed a free vote, they think back to the moment they made that decision, they remember how they felt, and they realise that they have the power to allow thousands of their constituents to experience that same euphoric nervousness, that same optimism unchecked. Should the government press ahead with their plans for a plebiscite, I hope that the millions of Australian heterosexuals are able to do the same. Whether married or not, I hope that Australian heterosexuals are able to understand the depth of their privilege, and help to dismantle its exclusivity for the sake of those systematically discriminated against, and for the sake of all marriages.\nErin Hortle is a writer of fiction and creative nonfiction. Recently, her work has been published in Kill Your Darlings and Island. She is partway through a Creative Writing PhD at the University of Tasmania.\nMore by Erin Hortle\nFrom Hannah on 26 February 2017 at 10.19 am\nAnother thing that comes with heterosexual privledge is the idea that plebiscite is a good thing. This could, and most likely will, backlash on the LGBTQI community.\nIf Howard’s government could so easily amend the marriage act and if it “…should rest in the hands, ultimately, of the parliament of the nation” Why is it that our present government is not capable of doing the same?\nA plebiscite will encourage homophobic groups to protest against marriage equality and create anti-equality propaganda. Some may argue that everyone has the right to their opinion. But, if these group’s discriminatory ideas reach just one fragile LGBTQI teenager or even adult, and they take their life, that is one life too many. All because Australia’s government is, somehow, incapable of making the right decision for Australia and for humanity.\nIt is a hetrosexual privilege to have the right to vote on a marriage law that does not effect their community. It’s our government’s responsibility to set the standard for our country and choose marriage equality.\nFrom Lauren on 28 February 2017 at 2.47 pm\nThanks for this piece. My male partner and I got engaged in November, but are not going to get married as a political statement until the legislation changes and gay people can also access this privilege. I’m not suggesting you and your partner should necessarily do this, but if you feel strongly about the issue it’s a position worth considering.\nFrom Cynthia on 3 March 2017 at 3.30 pm\nRe: Lauren. But you are still making a choice, in this case, not to get married. By taking this stance all you are doing is showcasing (publicising, flaunting) your CHOICE. Can’t you see that as a slap in the face of those who don’t have any choice, one way or the other? I can’t see how it helps. Isn’t it that we all want everyone to be able to do what makes them happy with their partner, to want for them to get married. So get married. Be happy. That’s what we all want for you and for those who as yet cannot get married but we hope someday will, isn’t it?\nFrom Lauren Sanders on 5 March 2017 at 9.29 am\nFor us, the decision is absolutely not about flaunting choice at all. It’s one of solidarity and protest and, to that end, we are writing to politicians to urge them to support changes to current legislation preventing marriage equality (which we hope will indeed help the cause). I am also a bisexual woman so feel uncomfortable accessing a privilege available to me only because my current partner happens to be a man. It is more important to us to fight for equality and if that means never getting married than we accept that. It doesn’t make us any less happy in our relationship and we look forward to celebrating it when all people can.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line59026"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5187512040138245,"wiki_prob":0.48124879598617554,"text":"Doctor Who The First Question\nPosted bytimewarrior1 December 1, 2020 November 22, 2020 Posted inAce Sophie Aldred, Dalek, Doctor Who, Tardis, The Time Warriors, The Time Warriors VenomTags:colin baker, matt smith, patrick troughton, sylvester mccoy, tom baker\nBy Owen Quinn author o the Time Warriors and Zombie Blues\nIt’s been fifty years coming! Tonight we may or may not discover the Doctor’s name and his greatest secret but did you know it’s been done before? Owen looks back twenty five years to the seventh Doctor’s battle with Nazis, Cybermen and the Lady Peinforte, a witch that knows his greatest secret, the secret that must never be told, Doctor Who?\nIt is the question that has been asked from the very first episode. Even then, the Doctor didn’t know or at least seemed not to. Ian Chesterton calls him Doctor Foreman and the Doctor mutters to himself, ‘Eh? Doctor Who?’. Whilst we learned that he was a Time Lord from Gallifrey who had stolen a magic box who was on the run from his own people, it seemed that was it. Now the question has become legend and is the first question, the oldest question in the universe and one that must never be answered. The answer terrifies the Silence who never want it revealed, so the Doctor must die before he reaches the Fields of Trenzalore where the question will be asked at the fall of the eleventh.\nIt seems a relatively new concept to most viewers but the question was tackled before. During the seventh Doctor’s era at the time of the 25th anniversary, Silver Nemesis saw the introduction of one Lady Peinforte played by Fiona Walker, a sorceress from the 17th century (see video below). It was revealed that she knew the Doctor’s secret and who he really was. In a battle that saw the Cybermen, Peinforte and Nazis race to possess the Nemesis, an ancient weapon of mass destruction from Gallifrey, the Doctor was almost revealed as he came face to face with the witch. She had previously encountered the second Doctor in an unseen adventure in which, somehow, she learned who he was. When they came face to face at the climax of the story, the question was asked: “Doctor Who? Have you never wondered where he came from, who he is?” Ace (Sophie Aldred) replies, “Nobody knows who the Doctor is.” Peinforte grins and answers slyly: “Except me.”\nAll of this was part of the Andrew Cartmel grand plan to reintroduce mystery to the character. We all thought we knew who the Doctor was, but did we really? As the old saying goes, you never really know anyone for sure and here it seemed the Doctor had a secret history. In the novelization of Remembrance of the Daleks, we saw flashbacks to Gallifrey when Omega and Rassilon gained the power of time travel for the Time Lords. Official history always said that these two were responsible but a third person was introduced. Known only as the Other, he was a shadowy figure that ensured that the event took place and when we later discover that the first Doctor had actually arrived on Earth to leave the Hand of Omega, another super weapon, for the Daleks to find, everything we knew went out the window.\nIt was indicated that the Doctor was in fact the Other and may at some point become this character from the dawn of Time Lord history itself. Other theories included that the Doctor had somehow become part of this character in an unseen adventure, almost a host of sorts, possibly at the moment of one of his regenerations Could it be his life as a wandering traveller was merely his way of blowing off steam as the momentous events that shaped the future of the Time Lord race faded into the background? Was he the Other who had somehow become immortal and survived from that day,assuming a new identity to cover some secret?\nWe know from the Three Doctors that Omega had become trapped in an anti-matter universe when he was presumed dead and that Borusa is alive and well in the Tomb of Rassilon at the heart of the Death Zone in the Five Doctors. So why couldn’t the Other have survived too, getting the best deal of the three; the chance to live a life travelling the universe. Could the reason he left Gallifrey be because he was a relic from another time and couldn’t live the life other Time Lords did? Had he in fact changed his own past to lay traps for the Daleks by getting his first incarnation to drop the Hand of Omega in 1963 for the Daleks to avert the Time War itself? If so, then the Doctor’s first meeting with the Daleks has to be seen in a whole new light.\nUp to Remembrance of the Daleks, we thought the Doctor and Susan were just killing time in the 20th century in an Unearthly Child but twenty five years later we discover the Doctor had been there to set the Dalek trap and yet he gave no indication he knew what the Daleks were in the second story ever. Could it be the Tardis took them to Skaro on their second trip because the Doctor, having set his trap, had to ensure his meeting with the Daleks began properly? Which means he did have control over the Tardis after all so this does play into the Other theory. He knew of the Cybermen in the Tenth Planet yet we had never seen him meet them before and they became his second target for mass extermination in the 25th anniversary season in Silver Nemesis.\nThe seventh Doctor reveals a second weapon from Gallifrey, the living statue called Nemesis that is a massive bomb. It knows who he is and again we never saw how he came to get her on television. Lady Peinforte wants the Nemesis and at some point she briefly had it because it told her the Doctor’s secret. The Cybermen also want the statue as do a group of neo Nazis seeking to restore the Reich. It all comes to a climax in an abandoned hangar where Ace is about to be killed if the Doctor doesn’t hand over the Nemesis to the silver giants. They have already killed the last of the Nazis so it’s down to a battle between Peinforte and the Cybermen with the Doctor caught in the middle. Peinforte threatens to reveal all if he doesn’t hand it over to her. However the Doctor doesn’t seem that worried when he gives the power of the Nemesis to the Cybermen. Losing her prize, Peinforte grows angry when she continues: “I shall tell them of Gallifrey, of the Old Time, the Time of Chaos.”. The Cybermen reply that the secrets of the Time Lords mean nothing to them and Peinforte has lost her bargaining chip. Even at the end when Ace asks him directly “Doctor, who are you?” he smiles and puts his fingers to his lips. Now we know that the grand plan would have gone nowhere as you could never reveal the true story of the character. But it worked so well at the time. That second when Peinforte says those delicious words, ‘Doctor Who?’ viewers were on the edge of their seats. Not bad for an era that was generally slammed at the time but is now rightly regarded as containing many classics and the blueprint for the Russell T Davies era.\nIt was also here we learned that at some point a ginger-haired Doctor would become Merlin in another dimension, something that came as a surprise to him. So we know at some point the Doctor will get his wish and become ginger. Indeed, even now the eleventh Doctor is surprised to learn that his name causes such fear in the universe and when he arrives on Trenzalore, no lies can be told and the truth will come out. But why? What is it? Can a name bring down creation itself? In fact could there be more to the Time War than we were first told? The Doctor wiped out two empires in one go, so what is he really capable of? Armies have turned and run away at the mention of his name and he is known as the Oncoming Storm to the Daleks, when they had a memory of him, that is. What is it about the Doctor that is so terrible that the universe itself will hold its breath when the question is asked?\nMcCoy’s era reinvented the Doctor and gave us something to think about. A friend we thought we knew, now has a secret past which he can never speak of. A dangerous past that is too horrible to reveal. For Lady Peinforte, it was a bargaining chip that she was sure would make the Doctor cower in fear and do whatever she wanted him to. To the Cybermen,it meant nothing, but to us on this day, in this place, the Doctor is going to fall. In the Rings of Akhaten, he faces down the sun monster by revealing he knows things, terrible things that can never be said and maybe, just maybe, we are about to have some of those answered. Now, as we know the question will be asked, the first question, the question that must never be answered is about to fall…\nDoctor Who, indeed?\nTime Warriors talk to Alien Nation’s Eric Pierpoint\nHeroes of Doctor Who: Adric","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line712433"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5409107804298401,"wiki_prob":0.4590892195701599,"text":"Why should computational neuroscientists care about the distribution of prime numbers?\nSep 18, 2021 • Aidan Rocke\nMotivation:\nHow could a reasonable scientist make sense of the astonishing developments in number theory over the course of millenia(dating back to Euclid and Eratosthenes) without a precise application in mind? What more, how did number theory singularly avoid developing into a baroque construct; the tragic fate of all pure sciences that aren’t moulded by practical applications? Yet, if not for these developments secure communications and modern cryptography in general would be non-existent. It is as if the best musicians in history developed the fundamentals of jazz music without a particular audience in mind. Each generation of mathematicians passing down their craft in number theory to the next with a consistency and originality unmatched by any other branch of science.\nThe objective of this article is precisely to propose a reasonable explanation.\nThe distribution of primes and information-theoretic mechanisms of human cognition:\nFrom the Prime Number Theorem, we may infer that the number of primes less than \\(N\\) is given by:\n\\begin{equation} \\pi(N) \\sim \\frac{N}{\\ln N} \\end{equation}\nWhat makes the density of primes interesting for an information-theorist is that the typical frequency with which a large integer \\(N\\) is prime is inversely proportional to the information gained from observing that integer \\(K_U(N)\\) multiplied by the constant \\(\\frac{\\frac{d}{dN} 2^N}{2^N} = \\ln 2\\):\n\\begin{equation} K_U(N) \\sim \\log_2(N) \\sim \\frac{1}{\\ln 2} \\cdot \\Big(\\frac{\\pi(N)}{N} \\Big)\t^{-1} \\sim \\frac{\\ln N}{\\ln 2} \\end{equation}\nwhere \\(\\ln N\\) corresponds to the average information gained from identifying a unique object distributed uniformly among \\(N\\) possible locations.\nIn addition, information theory and information-theoretic formulations of human cognition such as the Free Energy Principle provide us with an ideal vantage-point to clarify the nature of Godfrey Hardy’s remarkable insight:\nA science is said to be useful if its development tends to accentuate the existing inequalities in the distribution of wealth, or more directly promotes the destruction of human life. The theory of prime numbers satisfies no such criteria. Those who pursue it will, if they are wise, make no attempt to justify their interest in a subject so trivial and so remote, and will console themselves with the thought that the greatest mathematicians of all ages have found in it a mysterious attraction impossible to resist.-Godfrey Hardy\nThe second half of this quote is crucial as it appears that we may use information-theory to address part of the mystery Hardy refers to. The information-theoretic arguments presented thus far suggest that to a large extent the human brain is an instrument for data compression besides being a movement co-processor. The implicit argument here is that good mathematicians maximise expected surprise(i.e. information gained).\nBesides telling us something profound about the human mind, might this also reveal something important about the distribution of primes? It might, if we first make the reasonable conjecture that all of physics may be simulated by a Universal Quantum Computer. In light of this hypothesis, it is worth considering that a number of reasonable theories of Quantum measurement are not observer-independent. This includes the Wigner-Von Neumann formulation of the measurement problem as well as the Many-World formulation of the measurement problem.\nDeeper investigations in these complementary directions may reveal a direct correspondence between information-theoretic mechanisms of human cognition and the distribution of prime numbers.\nJ. Hadamard, Sur la distribution des z´eros de la fonction ζ(s) et ses cons´equences arithm´etiques, Bull. Soc. Math. France 24 (1896), 199–220; reprinted in Oeuvres de Jacques Hadamard, C.N.R.S., Paris, 1968, vol 1, 189–210.\nAidan Rocke (https://mathoverflow.net/users/56328/aidan-rocke), information-theoretic derivation of the prime number theorem, URL (version: 2021-02-20): https://mathoverflow.net/q/384109\nLance Fortnow. Kolmogorov Complexity. 2000.\nJohn A. Wheeler, 1990, “Information, physics, quantum: The search for links” in W. Zurek (ed.) Complexity, Entropy, and the Physics of Information. Redwood City, CA: Addison-Wesley.\nKarl Friston. The free-energy principle: a rough guide to the brain? Cell Press. 2009.\nHugh Everett Theory of the Universal Wavefunction, Thesis, Princeton University, (1956, 1973), pp 1–140","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line554496"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7053807973861694,"wiki_prob":0.29461920261383057,"text":"Executive Spotlight: Mark Testoni, SAP National Security Services President\nin Executive Spotlight\nAdmin May 29, 2012, 2:54 pm\nMark Testoni\nU.S. national security agencies and critical infrastructure companies have a new name to know for information technology, as SAP Government Support and Services and its Sybase Federal unit have completed an operational realignment and are now doing business as SAP National Security Services.\nMark Testoni is president of SAP NS2 and recently caught up with ExecutiveBiz about the new business he leads, market opportunities and trends in the field.\nExecutiveBiz: What advantages will operating under one roof provide you? What obstacles will you need to overcome to successfully merge operations?\nMark Testoni: SAP has been in the defense and intelligence business for a long time, but historically did not have a huge presence. In the mid-2000s, SAP created a separate unit called SAP Government Support and Services to serve the specialized information assurance needs of certain government customers. In 2008, SAP acquired BusinessObjects to expand our footprint in the analytics space, and in 2011, SAP acquired Sybase, a big data management player.\nAs we went through the vetting process for the Sybase acquisition, specifically looking at implications on defense and intelligence, we discovered that they had a significant business in intelligence in highly classified programs. So we had to change SAP Government Support and Services from a Special Security Arrangement company into a fully independent proxy company to support that business. It took us from a $15 million business in this arena to about a $130 million business overnight.\nI was brought in to meld the two businesses into one software company supporting this market. Now as SAP National Security Services, we have a full complement of capabilities“”data management, business applications, business intelligence and analytics, cloud and mobility solutions“”plus a 100 percent U.S.-staffed and located team to serve our customers. We think the combination is very powerful. SAP NS2 is a fast-growing player in the marketplace, a real alternative to business as usual, with a $17 billion-annual-revenue company standing behind us.\nExecutiveBiz: Were there any challenges you had to overcome to successfully merge those operations to what they are today?\nMark Testoni: The biggest challenge is just trying to get everybody on the same page, and we're probably 90 percent of the way there. There are always some internal procedures and systems that are different, but the biggest challenge is always about change management. We've also aligned our efforts with the SAP teams who handle other defense and civilian accounts, and that has created a substantial force multiplier in the marketplace for SAP.\nWhen I arrived last year, my first priority was to try to align our focus, and that's what we've been doing the last six to nine months, in addition to bringing on more talent. I find this extremely exciting. Given the market situation, there is not a better time to be rolling out this message and this company, because our customers are looking for new models to reduce costs and drive innovation more quickly.\nExecutiveBiz: How has SAP's data analytic strategy evolved since 2010, and how will your company continue to innovate as demand for analytics increases?\nMark Testoni: Although business process transformation is still our core strength, the management of information is becoming paramount. There are two facts driving this trend. One is that in the last two or three years, we've doubled the total amount of information ever created by man, and we know the growth will continue to be exponential. And we are just scratching the tip of the iceberg on all the data created by social media. This is the big data challenge that we hear so much about in business and government.\nSAP is now a far broader transformational company, from improving business processes to helping organizations analyze and act on information. The evolution of cloud computing is also a huge focus for SAP and allows us to deliver these capabilities more rapidly to our customers.\nWe're also focusing heavily on data management and analytics. We rolled out a new product in the last 18 months called SAP HANA, which fuses hardware, memory and software together to increase the speed and volume of information that can be managed and turned into actionable information. Some of our largest corporate customers are taking advantage of this and getting almost real-time information on all aspects of their business.\nToday, we are working with the federal government on a significant number of big data management projects. In fact, some of the largest and most complex databases in the world run on SAP.\nExecutiveBiz: Is the goal of organic versus acquired growth changing in the lean budget environment, and where are growth opportunities?\nMark Testoni: If we look at the overall government piece of pie, it's going to continue to get smaller. The US has nearly doubled our debt and deficits over the last five years. We're going to see that reflected in budgets in years to come. There are only two ways to grow in that environment: one is to acquire other businesses, and the other is to take more market share. Either way, those who bring innovation to market rapidly, at low cost, will be the ones who succeed. Beyond our own initiatives, a major component of our growth will come from other great companies extending new innovations on our platform.\nWhen it comes to NS2, we think that there are new ways to offer capabilities to the government. We see our opportunity in offering high-end data management and business transformational capabilities in different ways, perhaps through alternative acquisition models that make it easier for the government to innovate and cost them less money. There's going to be a big market for that. The convergence of the volumes of information, the demands for faster analysis of it, and the budget cuts will put pressure on companies to do business with the government in ways we haven't ever done before.\nExecutiveBiz: What next-generation technologies do you see that will deliver significant cost savings to the U.S. public and enable more productivity in the public sector?\nMark Testoni: The biggest challenge for government today, similar to the private sector, is the dollars. Investing in long-term projects that cost a lot of money for less-defined outcomes is no longer the norm. Managing and analyzing information as it happens with fewer hardware resources“”that's going to be huge. The ability to assimilate that information from many places and sources is critical as well.\nIf you go back 10 years, companies would say, “Come on to our platform and get all the information into one place, and then you can get all this great analytics.“ This is not so feasible anymore, when new data sources are being created all the time. Those who can integrate, pull together and access and manage data rapidly and turn it into actionable information at lower cost are going to be the successful players, and I'm excited about where we are in that space.\nExecutiveBiz: How do you think the IT needs of the military will change with the drawdown of combat forces and with changes in global military policy?\nMark Testoni: I was in the military in the “˜70s, and we worried about having enough tanks to stop our adversary from rolling across Europe. Today, we worry about networks and our ability to sustain command-and-control as we face threats we couldn’t conceive of 35 years ago. We have to be able to move our troops in the field rapidly, and that depends on information and communications.\nWe're also going to have to provide great protection for our networks and leverage equipment to do things that humans used to do. Controlling and securing the information network is going to be the driving factor in a much smaller, much more agile military. Against this backdrop, the military must rapidly leverage commercially available solutions to support this environment. This creates many opportunities for our company and others moving forward.\nExecutiveBiz: How does the company decide which technologies to adapt for the public sector?\nMark Testoni: Business problems in the private and public sectors are often the same. The US government has as large an information-management problem as any company in the world. The way they acquire technology often isn't as nimble, but that's going to change. I believe we're at an inflection point inside government, and we're actually going to see some dramatic changes over the next decade. I guarantee you that SAP NS2 will be an organization that actually helps alter the way the government acquires and pays for the management of information and business processes.\nLockheed Submits Proposal For AF Aircrew Training System\nGeneral Atomics to Modernize Italy’s MQ-9 Fleet\nBooz Allen Expanding Tech, Cyber Services to Kuwait\nHP Names 30-Year IT Vet George Kadifa Software Group EVP","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1026966"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6880343556404114,"wiki_prob":0.6880343556404114,"text":"Home Uncategorized The top three favourites to win the Champions League this season\nThe top three favourites to win the Champions League this season\nChris Darwen\nThe 2020-21 Champions League is now well underway, and after three matches there are already signs of who the favourites might be to win the competition when the final rolls around. Istanbul will play host to the showpiece match this year, having been the original venue for the 2019-20 final before the coronavirus pandemic meant the final stages of the tournament were all played out in Lisbon.\nAll the usual suspects are among the favourites in the UEFA Champions League odds, and with the group stage already providing some top-drawer entertainment, we could be set for a mouth-watering edition of the Champions League. Here, we run through the top three teams who are fancied to win the competition according to the latest odds.\nIt’s no surprise that defending champions Bayern Munich are the top favourites to lift the trophy again. Last season, the German champions were by far and away the best team in Europe, and this was evident in their 8-2 humiliation of Spanish giants Barcelona in the quarter-finals. In Robert Lewandowski, they have one of the best finishers in the world, and will take some stopping on the road to Istanbul.\nThey already showed signal of their intent in the opening game of this season’s Champions League, when they thrashed Atlético Madrid 4-0 in Munich to kick-start their group stage campaign. The match was proof that although Bayern enjoyed the immense satisfaction of winning their sixth European Cup last season, there is still a desire for even more success.\nWith every passing season, it seems as though Manchester City are tipped as one of the top contenders to win the Champions League, but each year they fail to live up to expectations. It is the one disappointment of Pep Guardiola’s hugely successful reign as Manchester City manager – that he hasn’t been able to land the club’s first Champions League title.\nThis season, there will be even greater pressure on City to avenge their defeat to Lyon in last season’s quarter-finals. They’ve got off to a winning start in their group stage campaign, defeating Porto and Marseille to take maximum points. But while City usually breeze through their group, it’s the knockout stages where they often come unstuck. They have only reached the semi-finals on one occasion, which is poor from a club that spend such large amounts. It will be Guardiola’s chief quest to put that right this season.\nJürgen Klopp’s Liverpool will be on a mission to regain their Champions League crown this season. The 2019 champions have begun the group stage well by beating Ajax, Midtjylland and Atalanta setting themselves up well to qualify for the knockout stages if they can continue their good form in the competition.\nThe Reds’ journey to winning the competition in the 2018-19 season was a memorable one, and set the tone for the club’s Premier League title success in the following campaign. Now the quest has begun to turn those moments of success into a real Anfield dynasty, and further success in the Champions League would cement this Liverpool team’s place in the pantheon of greats.\nPrevious articlePer Mertesacker considers himself to have been a panic buy\nNext articleArsenal players ‘angry’ with Mikel Arteta\nFounder and Editor-In-Cheif of the Ronnie Dog Media Group and therefore WATA, follow me on Twitter.\nWhy Arsenal is Underperforming in the Premier League?\nArsenal at Anfield – More of the same or signs of progress?\nZech Medley: The solution to our defensive woes?\nTactical Analysis: Arsenal Women’s perfect setup in 6-0 win over Reading...\nMatch Analysis October 23, 2018\nCardiff City 2-3 Arsenal: Alexandre Lacazette proves he should start\nMatch Analysis September 3, 2018\nForget Ramsey: Arsenal have a ready-made replacement in young Joe Willock\nPlayer Analysis August 15, 2019\nTactical analysis: How did Arsenal improve in the second half to...\nMatch Analysis October 2, 2018\nU-23 Manager Bould impressed with Mari’s debut match\nColumnist February 17, 2020","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line928104"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6804916858673096,"wiki_prob":0.31950831413269043,"text":"(en) Libertarian Initiative of Thessaloniki: Open assembly against the upcoming anti-labor bill [machine translation]\nDate Sat, 15 May 2021 09:59:23 +0300\nOn Monday, May 10, at 5.30 pm in STHE we call for the creation of an open assembly for the organization of counter-information excursions and actions against the forthcoming unemployment bill. ---- A bill, which after 10 years of capitalist crisis, the greatest burdens of which were lifted on the backs of the working class and the lower social strata with reductions in wages and pensions, increases in retirement limits, increase in the cost of living, introduction of flexible working relationships, privatizations and mass unemployment comes to: ---- Essentially abolish the 8 o'clock leaving the door open for 10 hours of work, to more than double and formalize the unpaid overtime and the Sunday work for more sectors. An essential point and core of thought of the bill, is the consolidation of the individual negotiation for the schedule between employer and employee. There are no classes except individuals and so no collective bargaining / contract will come in front of the individual agreements of bosses and workers who \"as equals\" will discuss and decide whether and how much the latter will work for needs and profits. of the first.\n-To give the final blow to the trade union freedoms, with ND taking the baton from SYRIZA by perfecting the digital file of the unions and the establishment of electronic voting, something that in combination with the order of the previous government is required to double the number of employees. , essentially abolishes it as a means of claiming and fighting the workers. At the same time, it is stipulated that at least 40% of the employees of companies and institutions whose operation is considered critical for society as a whole must work even in the event of a strike.\nEmployers are also given the opportunity to invoke psychological or physical violence during the strike guarding, which automatically leads to dismissal and criminal prosecution, while the strike will be deemed illegal and the company will be able to claim compensation.\nAt the same time, through the assembly, the aim is to highlight the lack of protection measures in the workplace that cost the health and lives of many employees. This concerns both the pandemic during which no measures have been taken in factories, shopping malls, schools with workers moving to and from work stacked on buses, but also the wider working conditions intensified with the capitalists they are constantly putting their profits from our lives higher on the scales.\nThe need to rally the base against this bill is imperative, it comes in as the main tip, but it stands for us as another touch, perhaps the final one, in the frame of the cycle of the current history we are experiencing.\nA new cycle of intensification of the capitalist crisis accelerated by the pandemic, a cycle of even more massive unemployment and poverty, a cycle of even more violent restructuring of labor relations, a cycle of intensive privatizations, a cycle where within a year of quarantine bills have passed billions to prepare the country for war and repression; A cycle where immigrants live in a perpetual hell from the borders to the detention centers and are not given the opportunity to work, to be educated,\nThe struggle against wage labor, the struggle against the state and capitalist organization of society itself, the struggle for a transition to a world without oppression and exploitation, presupposes and dialectically links with the struggle we must give as part of the working class, as part of the oppressed, through the unions but also through political and social formations, against the specific bill.\nAgainst the bureaucratic and contractual logics that led the working class and society to the degeneration of both the unions and the mass struggles of 2010-2012, with the first stop the interventions next week in the context of the nationwide campaign and in order to create a group who will be able to stand in the small and big events of the coming weeks by opening the issue in neighborhoods and workplaces, we invite to an open meeting on Monday 10 May at 17.30 in STH.\nAnarchist Group of Pyranthos\nPueblo Anarchist Collectivity\nLibertarian Initiative of Thessaloniki\nOccupation Terra Incognita\nThessaloniki Counterattack (group of anarchists and communists)\nhttps://libertasalonica.wordpress.com/2021/05/11/\nPrev by Date: (ca) cgt catalunya: Concentración contra la explotación que mata: CIDAC culpable de la muerte de Xavi\nNext by Date: (en) Ireland, Derry Anarchists - about us","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line438460"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6837837100028992,"wiki_prob":0.31621628999710083,"text":"Coronavirus Update Preventive Measures\nWith the upcoming Olympic Games in Tokyo, coaches and swimmers are very concerned about the Coronavirus spread in Asia, and rightfully so. An upper respiratory infection caused by this virus can not only take a swimmer out of competition, but it can also be life-threatening.\nWhile the total numbers of Coronavirus infection cases in China have been reported at 15,000, no one knows the true numbers. As of March 4, we no longer know the exact numbers of confirmed cases of Coronavirus infection diagnosed in the United States, according to the Center for Disease Control. Cases are being reported on a state-by-state basis. The virus does spread from human to human contact, so some schools are closing temporarily. We won’t know the outcome of this virus for some time, but the World Health Organization has already declared it as a Global Emergency.\nAs a physician, here are five recommendations I offer as preventive measures for Coronavirus or other viral illnesses.\nDo not travel to China, South Korea, Iran, Japan, Hong Kong and Italy in the near future (or other parts of Asia). Avoid contact as much as possible with other humans with upper respiratory infections. Wash hands after coming into contact with any ill human beings. Stay warm, well-hydrated, well-nourished and avoid sleep deprivation. Take Platinum Immune Support (two capsules) daily as a preventive measure Platinum Immune Support contains Bovine Colostrum.\nColostrum is the early-formed breast milk than contains a very high percentage of protein and antibodies, which have strong antiviral and antibacterial properties. Bovine means it comes from cows (not humans) but has been shown to contain similar quantities of antibodies as human Colostrum. Colostrum has not been listed as a banned substance by WADA. Anecdotally, we have a very positive experience using Platinum Immune Support. We sent 17 Race Club swimmers to Beijing for the Olympic Games in 2008. All were taking Platinum Immune Support daily and none of our Race Club swimmers got sick.\nWhenever I feel a viral illness coming on, I immediately take two capsules of Platinum Immune Support. Typically, by the next morning, the viral infection is completely eradicated. It seems to be much more effective than taking Vitamin C, Echinacea or any other products known for cold or flu prevention.\nFor all of our Race Club members, to help avoid getting ill near major competition, we recommend taking two capsules of the Platinum Immune Support daily from 6 weeks out of the championship meet. Then continue taking the supplement through the competition. After the competition, we recommend going off of the supplement until 6 weeks before the next big meet. It can be taken at any age. However, it seems to work better if the swimmer does not continue taking it all of the time.\nAs we get through the winter flu season, try taking Platinum Immune Support, stay healthy and swim fast!\nCategories: Lane 1, Lane 2, Lane 3, Lane 4","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line258319"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9476776719093323,"wiki_prob":0.9476776719093323,"text":"ISIS Militants Execute British Aid Worker David Haines: Video\nPosted: Sep 13, 2014 / 10:23 AM PDT / Updated: Sep 13, 2014 / 07:24 PM PDT\nBritish aid worker David Haines has been executed by ISIS militants, according to a video posted Saturday to a website associated with the group, making him the third Western captive to be killed by the Islamist extremist group in recent weeks.\nA video released on Saturday, Sept. 13, 2014, shows an ISIS militant executing British aid worker David Haines.\nThe ISIS video post showing Haines’ beheading called his execution “a message to the allies of America.”\nIt is produced very similarly to the videos that showed the executions of American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, the last of which included Haines and the threat that he’d be killed next.\nThe new video pictures a masked ISIS militant placing his hand on another captive, whom he identified as Alan Henning, a British citizen.\nIn a tweet, British Prime Minister David Cameron called “the murder of David Haines” an “act of pure evil.”\nCameron added, “We will do everything in our power to hunt down these murderers and ensure they face justice, however long it takes.”\nHaines offers brief scripted comments on the video, as does the man who kills him.\nDirecting his remarks at Britain, the executioner — who sounds like the man who killed Foley and Sotloff — says, “Your evil alliance with America, which continues to strike the Muslims of Iraq and most recently bombed the Haditha dam, will only accelerate your destruction and claim the role of the obedient lap dog.\n“Cameron will only drag you and your people into another bloody and unwinnable war.”\nRetired Lt. Col. Rick Francona — an Air Force veteran intelligence officer and CNN military analyst — surmised that if ISIS planned to dissuade Britain for teaming up with the United States, the group will be disappointed.\n“ISIS has just guaranteed British cooperation with the Americans on all phases of what we’re going to be doing,” Francona said. “… I think this is now a Western fight; it’s not just a U.S. fight.”\nBrother: Haines ‘just another bloke’ who lived to help others\nNews of the gruesome killing came the same day that the 44-year-old Haines’ family released a brief message to his captors through the British foreign office.\nIn it, the family says, “We have sent messages to you to which we have not received a reply. We are asking those holding David to make contact with us.”\nHaines’ face became known to the world in the ISIS video, released September 2, in which he looks forward and kneels as a masked ISIS militant stands behind him.\nThe militant says in that video, “We take this opportunity to warn those governments who’ve entered this evil alliance of America against the Islamic State to back off and leave our people alone.”\nBritish officials said after the video’s release that they had sent troops to try to rescue an unidentified British citizen “some time ago,” but failed. They released no other details.\nMike Haines, in a statement early Sunday, through the British Foreign Office, noted that his brother leaves behind two children and his wife Dragana. He described his brother as “just another bloke” whose “childhood was centered around our family” and who was “brought up to know right from wrong.”\nDavid Haines worked for the Royal Mail, then joined the Royal Air Force. He later worked with the United Nations in the Balkans, where “he helped whoever needed help, regardless of race, creed or religion,” according to his brother.\n“During this time, David began to decide that humanitarian work was the field he wanted to work in,” Mike Haines said. “… David was most alive and enthusiastic in his humanitarian roles.”\nAfter working for ScotRail, David Haines went on to get a job as a logistics and security manager for the Paris-based humanitarian Agency for Technical Cooperation and Development.\nHe was abducted in March 2013 near a refugee camp in Atmeh, Syria, where he was working to arrange for the delivery of humanitarian aid to people staying at the camp. He had previously worked on aid operations for victims of conflict in the Balkans, African and other parts of the Middle East, according to an ACTED spokesman.\n“His joy and anticipation for the work he (did) in Syria is, for myself and family, the most important element of this whole sad affair,” Mike Haines said. “He was and is loved by all his family and will be missed terribly.”\nObama: U.S. ‘stands shoulder-to-shoulder’ with Britain\nAnother hostage has been publicly killed by ISIS. Another one’s life has been threatened. And fighters for ISIS — which calls itself the Islamic State, in a nod to its efforts to establish a vast caliphate in the Middle East under its strict version of Sharia law — are continuing to kill innocent civilians in Iraq and Syria.\nThe threat from ISIS has been brewing for some time. Having begun a decade ago as al Qaeda in Iraq — only to be disowned earlier this year by al Qaeda, the group behind the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, for its heavy-handed tactics — ISIS has taken advantage of instability in Syria and Iraq to become one of the most prominent and feared groups in the Middle East.\nISIS, which is also known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant or ISIL, managed to become one of the most successful rebel groups working to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. It also rampaged through much of Iraq, thwarting seemingly overmatched Iraqi troops and massacring those who did not subscribe to its extreme version of Islam.\nIt wasn’t until last month — albeit before Foley’s killing — that the American military jumped into the fray.\n“It’s a bit like trying to predict an earthquake: You can see pressure building up on the fault lines but not knowing when it’s going to materialize (or how) quickly it can disintegrate,” Rep. Adam Schiff, a California Democrat, said Saturday night. “Those things are very hard to predict.”\nPartnering with the Iraqi military and Kurdish fighters, U.S. warplanes have been striking ISIS targets in Iraq regularly since August 8.\nEarlier this week, President Barack Obama announced that U.S. airstrikes would go after the extremist group in Syria, and perhaps beyond.\n“We will hunt down terrorists who threaten our country, wherever they are,” said Obama, who insisted American troops wouldn’t fight “on foreign soil,” though they will play support roles. “That means I will not hesitate to take action against ISIL in Syria, as well as Iraq. This is a core principle of my presidency: if you threaten America, you will find no safe haven.”\nThe President vowed the United States won’t do it alone. To this end, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was in Egypt on Saturday seeking that country’s help in the fight against ISIS.\nBritain is one country, at least, that has stepped up — even before Haines’ killing.\nThat includes providing “urgent military support” at the Iraqi government’s request, including heavy machine guns, body armor and nearly half a million rounds of ammunition to Kurdish fighters known as the Peshmerga.\nThe scale of that support, though, could ramp up now with one Briton executed and Henning’s life in limbo.\nTo this end, 10 Downing Street announced early Sunday that Cameron will convene an emergency meeting of his top security officials to discuss what Britain will do next.\nObama released a statement late Saturday after what he called Haines’ “barbaric murder,” offering his support for the aid worker’s family and his native Britain.\n“The United States stands shoulder-to-shoulder tonight with our close friend and ally in grief and resolve,” the President said.\n“We will work with the United Kingdom and a broad coalition of nations from the region and around the world to bring the perpetrators of this outrageous act to justice, and to degrade and destroy this threat to the people of our countries, the region and the world.”\nThe murder of David Haines is an act of pure evil. My heart goes out to his family who have shown extraordinary courage and fortitude.\n— David Cameron (@David_Cameron) September 13, 2014\nWe will do everything in our power to hunt down these murderers and ensure they face justice, however long it takes.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line938430"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9656147360801697,"wiki_prob":0.9656147360801697,"text":"Sports stars of future rise to their awards\nNewcastle's reputation for developing and supporting top-class sporting talent will be further enhanced at a glittering awards ceremony on Monday.\nFourteen of the city's Rising Stars are due to be honoured at Sport Newcastle's 25th anniversary dinner as the Civic Centre plays host to an array of local and national sporting celebrities.\nAlthough the coveted Sports Personality of the Year forms the centrepiece of next week's event, the dinner has always placed a strong emphasis on those taking first steps towards acclaim.\nPrevious recipients of Rising Stars awards have included Olympic triple jump gold medallist Jonathan Edwards and Newcastle United's highly-rated England Under-21 international Shola Ameobi.\nIn keeping with past dinners, Monday's guest list reads like a Who's Who of emerging sporting talent representing a diverse range of events. Over the next two days we look at all 14 winners, with first reports and pictures from the Sport Newcastle dinner to follow on Tuesday.\nMICHAELA HUNTER\nTHE 14-year-old judo enthusiast attends Walbottle High School and is a key member of the Newburn club. Michaela won 12 medals in 2001, including six golds, and has represented Great Britain. She clinched gold for her country in Holland last year and her coaches predict even greater success in the future.\nIAN GRAHAM\nWESTERHOPE Tae Kwon Do Club produced this 17-year-old master of one of the world's fastest growing martial arts. Ian achieved Black Belt 1st Dan in 1999 and has dominated the British junior scene since 1996. In five years the Walbottle Campus student clinched successive British 13-18 age group championships and was crowned Under-18 World Champion in Detroit last year.\nCHARIS YOUNGER\nBASKETBALL is Britain's fastest growing youth sport and Charis is one of the country's most exciting emerging talents. The 13-year-old is a regular in the Tyne and Wear Cadette (Under-16) side and claimed a silver during her time with England's Under-14 squad last year. The Central Newcastle High School pupil will represent her country at Under-14 and Under-16 level in 2002.\nNEWCASTLE KBS Diamonds won the Premier League title last summer and Rob was a first-team regular as the city's speedway club enjoyed long-awaited success at Brough Park. Rob made his debut as a professional on his 16th birthday and has never looked back since - at 17 he is one of the country's most highly-rated riders.\nKELLY FROGGATT\nNEWBURN Judo Club coach Joe Laws has consistently produced top-class teenage competitors and Kelly is the latest in a long line of future stars. With three international golds under her belt - and a further 21 medals from domestic competition - few 14-year-olds can hope to match her incredible success.\nHARRY GRIGG\nDAME Allan's Boys School is fast forging a reputation as one of the region's weight-lifting powerhouses under the expert guidance of Liam Friel.\nHarry is the cream of the Fenham school's crop and the dedicated power lifter broke four British records in November 2001 in the Under-18 125kg category.\nSARAH COOK\nTHE Apollo Club is home to a number of rising trampolining stars. Kelly claimed first place in last June's National Qualifiers but broke her arm in two places later that month. With two metal plates inserted, the 16-year-old Kenton School pupil bounced back to take silver at the 2001 National Championships.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1133231"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9880615472793579,"wiki_prob":0.9880615472793579,"text":"The Heart-Wrenching Death Of Ed Asner\nMichael Tullberg/Getty Images\nBy Richard Milner/Updated: Aug. 29, 2021 8:24 pm EST\nBeloved TV actor Ed Asner died on August 29, 2021 at the age of 91 (via Deadline). Asner's official Twitter account posted a heartfelt statement about the much-loved icon's death. \"We are sorry to say that our beloved patriarch passed away this morning peacefully. Words cannot express the sadness we feel. With a kiss on your head — Goodnight dad. We love you.\"\nTributes began to pour in almost immediately. \"Oh Ed Asner Rest In Peace and power friend. what a truly good and honorable human you were .gratitude for all you did for the screen Actors Guild, when it was a true Union bless you,\" tweeted Rosanna Arquette.\nHolly Robinson Peete wrote, \"Oh this hurts. Rest In Peace Ed. Not only an iconic award winning actor but a humanitarian and someone who I worked closely with to support #Autism families. Just crushing. #EdAsner.\"\nEd Asner was a prolific actor\nAsner came into the public spotlight through his stint as the gravely-voiced, yet teddy bear-like newspaper editor Lou Grant on \"The Mary Tyler Moore Show\" (1970-1977). He was so well-loved in this role that his character received its own spin-off series, \"Lou Grant\" (1977-1982), in total garnering Asner seven Emmys and five Golden Globes, per IMDb. After that, as Biography tells us, Asner worked in a number of roles in television as he turned to voice work, which culminated in his beloved turn as Carl Fredricksen, the elderly man who carried his house into the sky using balloons in Pixar's \"Up\" (2009). He was also president of the Screen Actor's Guild (SAG) from 1981-1985, per SAG AFTRA.\n\"Lou Grant,\" his character's self-titled television show, had a serious bend and tackled social issues such as gun control and child abuse. Sadly, Asner speculates, this led to the show's cancellation and adversely affected his career, per Deseret News. Asner said, \"Well, you have to make a choice. If you want to get in trouble, then you'll open your mouth. But there's only so much you can do. And if you think you can do greater good by your acting, then stay that way.\"\nTheater actor, veteran, and lifelong activist\nElla Hovsepian/Getty Images\nYitzhak Edward Asner was born in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1929, to a Russian, orthodox Jewish family, as the Jewish Virtual Library says, and was raised just over the state line in Kansas City, Kansas (via Kansaspedia). Asner showed an interest in acting during his time at the University of Chicago, per Biography, and once he finished serving in the U.S. Army's Signal Corps in the 1950s, moved to New York City to pursue a career in theater. In his own words, as he said in a 2016 interview with Variety, he \"arrived in September, and by December... was doing that one-night show at the Phoenix.\" He also starred in Brecht's renowned play, \"The Threepenny Opera,\" as well as Chekhov's \"Ivanov.\" The transition to working in front of a live studio audience for \"The Mary Tyler Moore Show,\" therefore, presented for him none of the problems it did his co-stars.\nAsner, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America who developed his \"worker first\" ethics while employed at a General Motor's factory in his 20s, has received a lot of blowback for his activism over the years. In 1982, he sought to raise funds for medical aid for rebels against El Salvador's military-led government, as NNDB says, and this is when sponsors pulled out of \"Lou Grant.\" He also sought a retrial for Black Panther member Mumia Abu-Jamal, a pardon for Native American activist Leonard Peltier, and helped fund Michael Moore's first film, \"Roger & Me\" (1989). Asner was so vocal, in fact, that some dubbed him \"Lou Rant.\"\nVoice actor, poker fan, and supporter of neurodivergent individuals\nAlbert L. Ortega/Getty Images\nOf course, younger readers will recognize Asner's gruff voice from Pixar's \"Up\" (2009). Asner, who in a 2021 interview on YouTube said he \"still cries at 'Up',\" described on Syfy Wire how he saw himself in \"Up's\" protagonist, 78-year old widower Carl Fredricksen. Pixar called up Asner, specifically, and said they wanted to make a film \"not about a toy, not about a car, not about a bug or a rat, but about a cranky 78-year-old man with a dream,\" to which Asner replied, \"Sounds like me.\" Asner had also done voice work in the TV shows \"Spider-Man,\" \"Batman: The Animated Series,\" \"Gargoyles,\" and \"Freakazoid,\" as well as Bioware's classic \"Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic\" video game.\nAt age 90, as he said on Fabiosa, Asner advised \"working, reading, and being with people that can excite you\" to stay healthy and happy. He continued, \"I can't reach beyond my head, but if I can scratch my head, I can still work.\" Asner was also a huge fan of poker, and, as PR Newswire shows, kicked off numerous celebrity charity poker events such as the annual \"Ed Asner & Friends Celebrity Poker Tournament,\" the proceeds of which went to The Ed Asner Family Center (TEAFC). As their website says, they support neurodivergent individuals and their families. Asner himself, as he stated on Variety, was autistic.\nAsner is survived by his four children from two marriages.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line940589"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6570041179656982,"wiki_prob":0.6570041179656982,"text":"United States Senator Lindsey Graham\nVisiting D.C.\nPresidential Greetings\nOp-Eds/Columns\nCo-Sponsored Bills\nVisiting South Carolina\nLindsey's Kid Page\nSenate Facts\nE-mail Senator Graham\nMyrtle Beach Area Chamber Backs Export-Import (Ex-Im) Bank Reauthorization\nTate Zeigler (202-224-5972) or Kevin Bishop (864-250-1417)\nWASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) today welcomed the support of the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce for reauthorization of the Export-Import (Ex-Im) Bank.\n“I encourage you to support the reauthorization of Ex-Im promptly and provide it with the adequate credit levels to meet the needs of U.S. exporters,” said Brad Dean, President and CEO of the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce in a letter to Graham. “Failure to reauthorize Ex-Im will create an unfair disadvantage for American companies, ultimately causing American jobs to move overseas. We cannot afford to not reauthorize Ex-Im.”\nThe Export-Import Bank was established in 1934 and since Ex-Im was last reauthorized in 2006, the bank has returned $3.4 billion to the U.S. Treasury above and beyond the costs of its operations.\n“I truly appreciate Brad Dean and the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce for their support of the reauthorization of the Export-Import (Ex-Im) Bank,” said Graham, who has been leading Republican efforts in the Senate to reauthorize the bank as its charter expires May 31.\nThe South Carolina House of Representatives unanimously passed a resolution calling on Congress to reauthorize Ex-Im and encouraging the congressional delegation to vote in support. The South Carolina Senate overwhelmingly passed the resolution, 32-2.\nGraham noted that both small and large businesses in South Carolina have benefitted from Ex-Im. One of the most prominent statewide examples is The Boeing Company which opened the 787 Dreamliner production facility in North Charleston. The facility employs more than 6,000 people in South Carolina and is responsible for thousands of associated jobs.\nIn a letter sent to Graham, Jim McNerney, President and CEO of Boeing, noted that eight out of every ten Boeing 787 Dreamliners now built in South Carolina are expected to be purchased by international customers who are eligible for and routinely seek export credit support from Ex-Im Bank. Without Ex-Im, many of these customers would purchase from Airbus, which is made in Europe and backed by multiple European export credit agencies.\n“The reauthorization of Ex-Im will directly benefit South Carolina’s job creation efforts and manufacturing industries,” said Graham. “It is imperative we continue to grow our ability to export goods made in South Carolina around the world.”\n“I wish we didn’t need an Ex-Im bank,” said Graham. “But other countries have far more aggressive financing regimes in place. The United States cannot and should not unilaterally disarm. However, it is my goal to do more than reauthorize Ex-Im, we should also work to improve its operations. I look forward to working with my Senate colleagues to achieve both goals of reauthorization and improvement of Ex-Im.”\n“Last year, exports from South Carolina increased by 21 percent,” continued Graham. “We need to continue on that path, creating jobs and putting South Carolinians back to work. If Congress does not reauthorize Ex-Im, it will have a devastating impact to both our state and national economy.”\nClick here to view the letter from the Myrtle Beach Chamber of Commerce.\nSouth Carolina Economic Leaders Strongly Support Reauthorization of Export-Import (Ex-Im) Bank\n“Eight out of every ten Boeing 787 Dreamliners now built in South Carolina are expected to be purchased by international customers who are eligible for and regularly seek export credit support from Ex-Im. Without this support, many of our customers would choose to purchase airplanes from Airbus, made in Europe, built by European labor, sold with the aggressive backing of multiple European export credit agencies. ..Jobs in South Carolina are at risk without an extended and robust reauthorization for Ex-Im.”\nW. James McNerney, Jr.\nChairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer\n“Exports are particularly important to the South Carolina economy. If our manufacturing base is to grow, we must continue to expand our ability to export goods from South Carolina facilities. Given the key role the Bank plays in facilitating sales, failure to reauthorize it would be devastating to existing industry and to those we hope to create in the future.”\nLewis F. Gossett\nSouth Carolina Manufacturers Alliance\n“The Bank performs an important function for U.S. companies seeking markets for U.S. made products. The Bank provides credit insurance and export-financing products that fill gaps in trade financing and does not compete with private sector lenders.”\nW. David Hastings\nMount Vernon Mills\n“First, this issue is of critical importance to Boeing South Carolina and their ability to successfully compete with global aircraft manufacturers. Second, the Charleston Metro Chamber of Commerce recently re-established the World Trade Center Charleston. More than 80 percent of Ex-Im’s transactions support small businesses. The World Trade Center Charleston’s goal is to help our region’s small business community to help them expand by selling their products and services on the global marketplace. The Ex-Im is a vitally needed tool to help in expanding local businesses in our region.”\nBryan Derreberry\nCharleston Metro Chamber of Commerce\n“Over the last five years, Ex-Im has assisted more than 47 South Carolina companies from around the state export their products and services throughout the world. Ex-Im plays an important role in supporting South Carolina jobs and exports. …Support for the Ex-Im Bank means support for S.C. exports and S.C. jobs.”\nF. Ben Haskew\nGreenville Chamber of Commerce\n“Last year alone, the Ex-Im supported more than $40 billion in U.S. exports that helped create or sustain 290,000 U.S. jobs at more than 3,600 companies. The Ex-Im is also self-sustaining. In the years since Ex-Im was last authorized in 2006, the bank has returned $3.4 billion to the U.S. Treasury above and beyond the cost of its operation.”\nOtis Rawl\nSouth Carolina Chamber of Commerce\nShare This: https://www.lgraham.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/2012/3/post-547cf6f2-802a-23ad-4883-4781d7fc0cb9\nSenate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism\nSelect an Office Location Washington D.C. Upstate Midlands Pee Dee Lowcountry Piedmont Golden Corner\nGolden Corner\n290 Russell Senate Office Building\nUpstate Office\n130 South Main Street, 7th Floor\n508 Hampton Street, Suite 202\nPee Dee Office\nMcMillan Federal Building\n401 West Evans Street, Suite 111\nFlorence, SC 29501\nLowcountry Office\n530 Johnnie Dodds Boulevard, Suite 202\nPiedmont Office\nGolden Corner Office\n124 Exchange Street, Suite A\nGraham Discusses Democrats' Reckless Tax-and-Spend Spree and More\nGraham Talks Latest News on Cuba and More","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line115984"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5423539280891418,"wiki_prob":0.5423539280891418,"text":"Roblog\nHome About Me Topics Newsletter Books\nCreating creative organisations\nEfforts to foster creativity in organisations often focus on superficial factors. But what does it mean to create a culture that really produces, filters, and implements new ideas?\nMost organisations want to be more creative. Apart from its cultural cachet, creativity is seen as a useful way of coping with the increasing pace of change in an ever-more complex world. But most explorations of how to create creative organisations focus on either the superficial (keep your desk tidy!) or the cargo-culted (adopt your favourite design studio’s five-step process!). Is there anything to be learned from the underlying, ever-relevant dynamics of creativity itself?\nThe psychologist Donald T. Campbell, writing in 1960, suggested a model of how creative ideas spread. Inspired by Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection, Campbell proposed three phases in which new ideas and concepts were developed and took root:\nThe variation phase, in which new ideas are generated\nThe selection phase, in which those ideas are put to the test – the weak ones rejected, the strong ones selected\nThe retention phase, in which selected ideas are absorbed by others and integrated into their work\nIn the messy real world, these phases are not a perfectly demarcated linear process. They’re constantly shifting and overlapping. Quirks of organisations’ cultures, staff, and processes lead to strengths and weaknesses in some areas more than others, too. For example, an organisation might have no trouble coming up with new ideas, producing a constant stream of variations, but then struggle to back the right horse or put ideas into practice. Another might have fantastic collaboration and knowledge-sharing, but struggle to diverge from their existing processes and be bound by inertia.\nWhat does it look like to be effective in all three of these phases? Can individuals optimise their environments for one or all of them? Can organisations create an environment in which all three flourish?\nThe variation phase\nThe first crucial phase in the creative process is the variation phase, in which new ideas are suggested. “Variations” are departures from the status quo: changes, new ideas, new processes, new ways of doing things. Without variations, there can be no creativity. Indeed, creativity is often mistakenly thought to involve this stage alone, so focused are we on the “idea generation” aspects of it.\nVariations can be intentional variations, the deliberate result of conscious action, or blind variations that are accidental or even unknown.\nBlind variations occur constantly and without effort: they’re the inevitable side effect of people going about their daily business, making the occasional mistake and bringing their own idiosyncrasies to their work. In particular, a large source of blind variations is the hiring of new people into an organisation, who bring with them different perspectives and different ways of doing things. These variations can be stamped out or they can be nurtured, but it’s nearly impossible to stop them happening in the first place.\nAnother hugely important source of blind variations is the actions of competitors and forces outside the organisation. These behaviours change the situation within the organisation in ways that are unclear, unconscious, and unplanned; they force people to react to and contend with a new reality.\nIntentional variations, on the other hand, are controlled to a great extent by the prevailing culture. Intentional variations occur when people in an organisation are:\nempowered – encouraged to take courses of action that they think are appropriate, instead of always following the same processes and having their actions controlled by others\nencouraged to fail – not punished for deviations that don’t succeed, but rather encouraged to learn and move on\nexplicitly encouraged to innovate – whether as part of their everyday job description, role, and responsibilities or as part of a formal programme of innovation\nIt’s possible to see these qualities through a single lens: variations flourish in cultures that deliberately dismantle the pressure to conform. Wherever there are humans, there are behavioural norms and a collective pressure to adhere to them. This dynamic exists in all kinds of organisations, but is often strongest in organisations with generally strong cultures – something that’s ordinarily considered a virtue. Businesses strive to have a definite sense of “our way of doing things”, to project a clear idea of their culture to the outside world, to attract employees to a specific way of thinking and set of values – but all of these positive traits also encourage conformity. It’s exactly this pressure from the group to conform, and desire on the part of individuals to conform, that acts to suppress variations. And so organisations that want to be creative must fight against it.\nHaving a healthy culture of variation is apparent in a number of ways: when employees challenge those further up the hierarchy, bringing forward new ideas and new processes; when processes evolve with changing circumstance, rather than being set in stone, and so don’t break quite so often; when new products or services emerge without prompting or forcing, bubbling up regularly rather than as the result of some sporadic, conscious, top-down innovation programme.\nThe selection phase\nAs we’ve seen, blind variation occurs constantly, whether we like it or not. Intentional variation can occur frequently too, especially in healthy organisational cultures that empower individuals and nurture healthy non-conformity. But what happens to those variations once they materialise? Which ones stick, and which ones fade away?\nThe clearest and most fundamental selection process comes from what the organisation chooses to explicitly and publicly prioritise and incentivise. The overall strategy set by the leaders of the business creates a cascading set of selection criteria that filters throughout the rest of the organisation.\nWhat happens, though, when that selection criteria is wrong? One particularly common way for selection to become unmoored from reality is the so-called competency trap:\n“The causes of competency traps are perhaps best understood by considering the two, sometimes opposing, forces that drive a company forward: the ‘exploitation’ of their existing products, and ‘exploration’ of future opportunities. Each will require its own resources and investments… A competency trap occurs when the exploitation arm comes to dominate the company’s workings so that it is no longer structurally ambidextrous.”\nThis dynamic is the cause of Clayton Christensen’s “Innovator’s Dilemma”, in which a business that listens to customers, uses data, and maximises their margins ends up blindsided by the disruption of a competitor precisely because they were “doing everything right”. This happens because the business’s selection criteria are wrong: they’re selecting for things that look like successes they’ve had in the past, and rejecting things that diverge from that proven pathway to success. That’s a sure-fire way to ignore a promising trend, a new technology, or an underserved customer segment.\nA healthy culture of selection is open-minded, freed from the power dynamics of the wider business, and entertains ideas that challenge the status quo. It aligns its internal criteria for selection with the fundamental, environmental criteria of the market, the consumer, and the real world in general. It fights the gravitational pull of “exploitation” and consciously incentivises the easy-to-ignore “exploration” arm.\nThat means nurturing unconventional innovation and R&D projects, even ones that threaten the business’s cash cows. It means erasing problematic power hierarchies, where institutional power goes to those with past successes – rather than those with future potential. It means exposing ideas to real criteria as soon as possible – the criteria of the customer and the market, rather than internal opinion.\nThe retention phase\nThe final phase is perhaps the most important: how effectively are the variations that occur and are selected for incorporated into the behaviours of the organisation? Are the ideas actually implemented, or do they remain mere ideas? Are they built upon and evolved? Is there a feedback loop of further development and collaboration?\nIn the process of generating variations, conformity is, as we’ve seen, an obstacle. It can introduce a reluctance to deviate from the standard operating procedure. But a strong culture and a closely woven social fabric is essential for retaining and developing ideas further.\nSo many businesses take this social fabric too far. They have great, collaborative cultures and teams that work fantastically together. As a result, they have much latent potential in the retention phase, but tend to under-perform in the generation of variations – their collaborative culture produces conformity.\nOthers are the opposite. They’re constantly generating variations, but lack an effective culture to retain and develop them. Sometimes this happens because of a lack of sticking power: the ideas that they generate are flashes in the pan, here today and gone tomorrow. This often happens when a small number of people are disproportionately responsible for generating variations, but the wider culture is either unreceptive to them, unequipped to deal with them, or so focused on the day-to-day that they ignore them.\nAt other times, it’s because of an organisational inability to shift from a divergent mode of thinking – coming up with new variations – into an implementation mode. Ideas continue to be questioned indefinitely; decisions are never made, because new variations are always offered. A united front is never presented, and the team never works together to implement their ideas.\nIt’s rare, then, to find organisations that excel at all three phases of creative ideation and implementation. The main reason for that is that they are in some respects directly incompatible. The behaviours that encourage variation – divergent thinking, a disrespect for authority and conventional wisdom – can become obstacles to selection and retention. The behaviours that enhance retention – collaboration and knowledge-sharing – tend to encourage group-think and conformity, and thereby reduce the quantity of variations.\nThe ideal answer is to create a multi-modal organisation: one capable of thinking and behaving in different modes at different times. That means creating not just an extraordinarily flexible organisation, but one that has a level of self-awareness and perspective that’s rare to find – able to determine what situation it’s in and adopt different behaviours accordingly. But that’s not as easy as it sounds, and perhaps represents a far-off target more than a roadmap for change.\nLooking at technology businesses, Simon Wardley has described such multi-modal organisations with his “Pioneers, Settlers, and Town Planners” model of aptitudes:\nThe three aptitudes of Pioneers, Settlers, and Town Planners.\n(Image: Simon Wardley, CC BY-SA 4.0)\nPioneers are those who excel at variation, who are totally unconstrained by the status quo and who come up with ideas that fail more often than they succeed. Settlers are fantastic at selection, choosing which of the pioneers’ crazy ideas to develop further. And Town Planners are brilliant at seeding new ideas into the broadest possible culture, smoothing out any rough edges and accelerating the pace of change to an industrial scale.\nOrganisations that fail at one of the three phases of the creative process often do so because they fail to recruit or fail to recognise people across these three aptitudes. Their internal culture is only capable of functioning in a single mode; every problem is treated as one to be solved by the mode of thinking that the organisation finds most comfortable, whether that’s coming up with endless new ideas or vigorously doubling-down on the ones they have. Finding ways to incorporate other aptitudes and other ways of behaving into your culture might just be the key to unlocking the creative process.\nD. T. Campbell. “Blind variation and selective retention in creative thought as in other knowledge processes” . Psychological Review 67:380-40067:380-400, November 1960\nDean Keith Simonton. “Creative thought as blind-variation and selective-retention: Combinatorial models of exceptional creativity” . Physics of Life Reviews 7:2:156–179, June 2010\n“Evolutionary Epistemology” . Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, January 2020\nHoward E. Aldrich and Martin Ruef. “Organisations Evolving” . SAGE Publications, 2006\nSeth Kaplan, Luke Brooks-Shesler, Eden B. King and Steve Zaccaro. “Thinking inside the box: how conformity promotes creativity and innovation” . “Creativity in Groups”, pp. 229–266. Emerald Books, 2009\nDavid Robson. “How to avoid the ‘competency trap’” . BBC Worklife, June 2020\nClayton Christensen. “The Innovator’s Dilemma” . Harvard Business Review Press, 2016.\nSimon Wardley. “On Pioneers, Settlers, Town Planners and Theft” . March 2015\nIf you enjoyed this, then you might like…\nCommunal creativity\nInformal, loosely coupled groups of people often produce a prolific burst of good ideas, changing the worlds of science, art, and music. But why is that? What conditions are necessary for this super-creativity to emerge, and when has it happened in the past?\nA newsletter you might like…\nOnce a week I mail out a new article and some useful links to interested and interesting subscribers. No spam, ever, I promise.\n© 2003– Rob Miller. I’m a strategist, techie, and marketer from London, where I’m Chief Strategist at big fish®. Find out more…\nText Processing with Ruby\nRSS feed (What’s an RSS feed?)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line240956"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6968333125114441,"wiki_prob":0.3031666874885559,"text":"I. Complexity of Rate Scale\nII. Surcharge on Property Income\nIII. Shape of Rate Scale\nIV. Frequency of Adjustment\nV. Income-Averaging\nChapter 14: Appendix A: Tax Payable Under Alternative Systems: 1974-75 Rates\n35. Chapter 24: Appendix C: Situs of Assets\n24.C1. The common law has various technical rules for determining the situs of an item of property. These rules are based largely on considerations of convenience. Some Australian taxing legislation has relied exclusively on the common law rules: the present Estate Duty Assessment Act, for example, contains no rules as to the situs of assets. Other Australian taxing legislation has modified the common law rules to some extent by introducing rules applying in particular situations: section 13 of the Gift Duty Assessment Act contains a number of rules of this sort.\n24.C2. In the Committee's view the common law rules are not always appropriate in this context: in certain areas, including speciality debts and interests in trust estates, they have been used in the past to avoid tax. The modifications to the common law rules in the Gift Duty Assessment Act are inadequate in some instances and go too far in others. For example, the Act ignores the problem of determining the situs of a trust estate, yet treats shares in a company incorporated outside Australia as being situated in this country if the shares are listed on a branch register of a company in Australia. Shares in a company incorporated in Australia should be taxable under Australian law irrespective of where the register on which the shares are listed is kept, since the company is substantially dependent on Australian law for its existence and continuance. For the same reason, shares in a company incorporated outside Australia should not be treated as being situated in this country even where they are listed on a register in Australia. In the case of a trust estate, the common law rules, which depend on how far the administration of the trust estate has proceeded, should not be followed. An interest in a trust estate, fully administered or otherwise, ought to be treated as situated in Australia only in so far as any of the assets of the trust estate are, on the relevant date, situated in Australia. In determining the extent of the Australian assets, those liabilities of the trust estate not charged against particular assets should be apportioned over all the assets. The Committee can see no justification for imposing a tax on an asset merely because one or more of the trustees reside in Australia or for making the liability for tax depend on whether or not a trust estate has been fully administered.\n24.C3. The rules contained in Article III of the estate duty convention between the United States and Australia provide a reasonable balance. The Committee therefore proposes the following rules, based on that convention:\n(a) Immovable property (held otherwise than by way of security) should be deemed to be situated at the place where the land concerned is located.\n(b) Tangible movable property (held otherwise than by way of security and other than property for which specific provision is made) and bank or currency notes and other forms of currency recognised as legal tender at the place of issue should be deemed to be situated at the place where that property or currency is located, or, if in transitu, at the place of destination.\n(c) Debts (including bonds other than those referred to in (d), bills of exchange and promissory notes, whether negotiable or not), secured or unsecured and whether under seal or not, excluding the forms of indebtedness for which specific provision is made elsewhere in these recommendations, should be deemed to be situated at the place where the debtor is resident. However, if\nthe debtor, at the time when the debt is to be valued, has an established place of business in the country in which the owner of the debt was domiciled and the debts were incurred in carrying on the business of that establishment, the debts so incurred should be deemed to be situated in that country.\n(d) Bonds, stocks, debentures, and other debts being securities, issued by any government, municipality or public authority should be deemed to be situated at the place where that government, municipality or public authority is located.\n(e) Bank accounts should be deemed to be situated at the place where the bank or branch thereof, at which the account was kept, is located.\n(f) Moneys, payable under a policy of insurance or under an annuity contract, whether under seal or not, should be deemed to be situated where the policy or annuity contract provides that the moneys are payable; or, if the policy or annuity contract does not provide where the moneys are payable:\n(i) at the place of incorporation, in the case of a company; or\n(ii) at the place of residence of the person by whom the moneys are payable, in any other case.\n(g) A partnership should be deemed to be situated at the place where the business of the partnership is carried on, but only to the extent of the partnership business at that place.\n(h) Ships and aircraft and shares thereof should be deemed to be situated at the place of registration of the ship or aircraft.\n(i) Goodwill as a trade, business or professional asset should be deemed to be situated at the place where the trade, business or profession to which it pertains is carried on.\n(j) Patents, trade-marks and designs should be deemed to be situated at the place where they are registered.\n(k) Copyright, franchises, and rights or licences to use any copyrighted material, patent, trade-mark or design should be deemed to be situated at the place where the rights arising therefrom are exercisable.\n(l) Rights or causes of action ex delicto surviving for the benefit of an estate of a deceased person should be deemed to be situated at the place where such rights or causes of action arose.\n(m) Judgment debts should be deemed to be situated at the place where the judgment is obtained.\n(n) Shares in a company should be deemed to be situated at the place where the company is incorporated.\n(o) An interest in a trust estate, whether fully administered or otherwise, should be deemed to be situated in Australia only in so far as any of the trust assets are situated in Australia; provided that the liabilities of the trust estate which are not charged against any particular asset may, if the trustee so elects, be apportioned between the Australian and ex-Australian assets on the basis of their respective values but, if the trustee does not so elect, shall be treated as being charged against the ex-Australian assets.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line595253"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9053926467895508,"wiki_prob":0.9053926467895508,"text":"Dozens urge Wisconsin Sen. Ron Johnson to support Merrick Garland vote\nMILWAUKEE — Dozens of people are urging U.S. Sen. Ron Johnson to support confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland.\nThe rally Monday, March 21st inside Milwaukee's City Hall was among about 50 scheduled around the nation with the theme \"Do your job!\" — which participants chanted several times.\nSpeakers came from several liberal groups, including those supporting immigrants' rights and criminal justice reform.\nPresident Barack Obama recommended Garland to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia, but Republicans have said they won't hold a hearing or vote in an election year.\nSpeakers at the rally said it's the Senate's constitutional duty to vote.\nJohnson's spokesman said he was traveling and not available for comment. Johnson has said he's willing to meet with Garland, but notes he isn't in charge of the confirmation process.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line800105"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6475714445114136,"wiki_prob":0.3524285554885864,"text":"ACE team’s TytoCare partnership in running for top technology award\nBRADFORD Teaching Hospitals has made it to the finals of the Health Tech Newspaper Awards 2020, which celebrate great technology, partnerships, teams and innovations making a difference in healthcare.\nOur Trust has been nominated for the Most Promising Pilot Award as we are the first provider in the UK to partner with TytoCare, the healthcare industry’s first all-in-one, handheld, modular device and AI-powered telehealth platform which provides remote, real-time and on-demand examinations for children and young people.\nThe device enables comprehensive and clinical grade physical exams of the heart, lungs, skin, ears and throat, and measures body temperature and heart rate, to enable remote assessment and management of patients.\nThe project is spearheaded by our outstanding Ambulatory Care Experience (ACE) team, which brings care to unwell children from the comfort of their own home, preventing unnecessary admissions.\nThe partnership between Tyto Care and ACE brings together two healthcare leaders and marks another milestone in the Trust’s journey of digital innovation.\nLet’s keep everything crossed that we will be winners at the finals on October 22!\nFor more information about the ACE team’s partnership with TytoCare, see: https://www.bradfordhospitals.nhs.uk/2019/12/18/tytocare-and-bradford-hospitals-to-join-forces-in-nhs-first/","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1398139"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6503491401672363,"wiki_prob":0.34965085983276367,"text":"We are making on-device AI ubiquitous\n[Editor's Note: This blog post was updated and can be found here: 2020: We are making on-device AI ubiquitous]\nWe envision a world where devices, machines, automobiles, and things are much more intelligent, simplifying and enriching our daily lives. They will be able to perceive, reason, and take intuitive actions based on awareness of the situation, improving just about any experience and solving problems that to this point we’ve either left to the user, or to more conventional algorithms.\nArtificial intelligence (AI) is the technology driving this revolution. You may have heard this vision or may think that AI is really about big data and the cloud, and yet Qualcomm’s solutions already have the power, thermal, and processing efficiency to run powerful AI algorithms on the actual device — which brings several advantages.\nAI is a pervasive trend that is rapidly accelerating thanks to vast amounts of data and progress in both algorithms and the processing capacity of modern devices. New technology can seem to appear out of nowhere, but oftentimes researchers and engineers have been toiling over it for many years before the timing is right and key progress is made.\nAt Qualcomm, we have a culture of innovation. We take pride in researching and developing fundamental technologies that will change the world at scale. AI is no different. We started fundamental research more than 10 years ago, and our current products now support many AI use cases, such as computer vision, natural language processing, and malware detection — both for smartphones and autos — and we are researching broader topics, such as AI for wireless connectivity, power management, and photography.\nWe have a deep machine learning heritage\nWe have a long history of investing in machine learning. In 2007, we started exploring spiking neuron approaches to machine learning for computer vision and motion control applications. We then expanded the scope of the research to look not just at biologically inspired approaches but artificial neural networks — primarily deep learning, which is a sub-category of machine learning. Time and time again, we saw deep learning-based networks demonstrating state-of-the-art results in pattern-matching tasks. A notable example was in 2012 when AlexNet won the prestigious ImageNet Challenge using deep learning techniques rather than traditional hand-crafted computer vision. We’ve also had our own success at the ImageNet Challenge using deep learning techniques, placing as a top-3 performer in challenges for object localization, object detection, and scene classification.\nWe have also expanded our own research and collaborated with the external AI community into other promising areas and applications of machine learning, like recurrent neural networks, object tracking, natural language processing, and handwriting recognition. In September 2014, we opened Qualcomm Research Netherlands in Amsterdam, a hotbed for machine learning research, and have continued to work closely with Ph.D. students working on forward-thinking ideas through our Qualcomm Innovation Fellowship program. In September 2015, we established a joint research lab with the University of Amsterdam (QUVA) focused on advancing the state-of-the-art in machine learning techniques for mobile computer vision. We further deepened our relationship with Amsterdam’s AI scene by acquiring Scyfer, a leading AI company in Amsterdam. Max Welling, a Scyfer founder, is a renowned professor at the University of Amsterdam, where he has focused on machine learning, computational statistics, and fundamental AI research. Scyfer focuses on applying a wide range of machine learning approaches to real-world problems. The Scyfer team will join Qualcomm Research’s machine learning group.\nSuperior power and performance for on-device machine learning\nTo make our vision of intelligent devices possible, we also knew that the machine learning-based solutions would need to run on the device — whether a smartphone, car, robot, drone, machine, or other thing. Running the AI algorithms — also known as inference — on the device versus in the cloud has various benefits such as immediate response, enhanced reliability, increased privacy, and efficient use of network bandwidth.\nThe cloud remains of course very important and will complement on-device processing. The cloud is necessary for pooling of big data and training (currently) that results in many of the AI inference algorithms that run on the device. However, in many cases, inference running entirely in the cloud will have issues for real-time applications that are latency-sensitive and mission-critical like autonomous driving. Such applications cannot afford the roundtrip time or rely on critical functions to operate when in variable wireless coverage. Further, on-device inference is inherently more private.\nWe are not limiting ourselves to only running inference on the device. We also research training AI on the device for targeted use cases such as gesture recognition, continuous authentication, personalized user interfaces, and precise mapping for autonomous driving — in a synergistic cooperation with the cloud. In fact, we have a unique ability to explore future architectures which can benefit from high-speed connectivity and high-performance local processing, resulting in the best overall system performance.\nRunning efficient on-device AI requires heterogeneous computing\nFor over a decade, Qualcomm has been focused on efficient processing of diverse compute workloads within the power, thermal, and size constraints of mobile devices. Qualcomm Snapdragon Mobile Platforms have been the SoC of choice for the highest performance mobile devices. AI workloads present another challenge in this regard. By running various machine learning tasks on the appropriate compute engines — such as the CPU, GPU, and DSP — already in our SoC, we offer the most efficient solution. A key example is the Qualcomm Hexagon DSP, which was originally designed for other vector math-intensive workloads but is being further enhanced to address AI workloads. In fact, the Hexagon DSP with Qualcomm Hexagon Vector eXtensions on Snapdragon 835 has been shown to offer a 25X improvement in energy efficiency and an 8X improvement in performance when compared against running the same workloads (GoogleNet Inception Network) on the Qualcomm Kryo CPU.\nThe diversity in architecture is essential and you can’t rely on just one type of engine for all workloads. We will continue to evolve our existing engines for machine learning workloads to maintain our lead in maximum performance per watt. Leveraging our research into emerging neural networks, we are well positioned to extend our heterogeneous computing capabilities to address future AI workloads with a focus on maximum performance per watt. In fact, we envisioned dedicated hardware for running AI efficiently back in 2012.\nWe are democratizing AI at scale\nMaking heterogeneous computing easy for developers is hard. It is not enough just to have great hardware. To bridge that gap, we have introduced the Snapdragon Neural Processing Engine (NPE) Software Developer Kit (SDK). This features an accelerated runtime for on-device execution of convolutional neural networks (CNN) and recurrent neural networks (RNN) — which are great for tasks like image recognition and natural language processing, respectively — on the appropriate Snapdragon engines, like the Kryo CPU, Qualcomm Adreno GPU, and Hexagon DSP. The same developer API provides access to each of our engines so developers can easily switch their AI tasks from one to another seamlessly.\nThe Neural Processing Engine also supports common deep learning model frameworks, such as Caffe/Caffe2 and TensorFlow. The SDK is a lightweight, flexible platform designed to deliver optimal performance and power consumption by leveraging Snapdragon technology. The SDK is designed to enable developers and OEMs in a broad range of industries, from health care to security, to run their own proprietary neural network models on portable devices. As an example, at this year’s F8 conference, Facebook and Qualcomm Technologies announced a collaboration to support the optimization of Caffe2, Facebook’s open source deep learning framework, and the NPE framework.\nContinued research to expand our AI scope and bring increased efficiency\nWe are in the early days of machine learning journey and deep learning is just one of many machine learning technologies that has the potential to transform computing.\nTo pursue even more sophisticated applications, we continue to advance on multiple fronts:\nSpecialized hardware architectures: A continued focus on low-power hardware, whether enhanced, specialized, or custom, to handle these machine learning workloads\nAdvances in neural network approaches: Research related to training with semi-supervised approaches, unsupervised approaches like generative adversarial networks (GANs), distributed learning, and privacy protecting approaches\nNetwork optimization for on-device applications: Research related to compression, inter-layer optimizations, optimizations for sparsity, and other techniques to take better advantage of memory and space/time complexity\nThe opportunities for always-on, intelligent devices that do all or most of their thinking on the device are enormous, and we look forward to advancing state-of-the-art machine learning through both research and productization. Today, the Qualcomm Artificial Intelligence Platform provides highly responsive, highly secure, and intuitive user experiences through efficient on-device machine learning. The future holds much more promise.\nStay tuned for future blog posts about our neural processing architecture research and applications of machine learning, such as enhanced connectivity, power management, and better photography. If you are excited about solving big problems with cutting-edge technology and improving the lives of billions of people, we’d like to hear from you.\nSign up for our newsletter to receive the latest information about mobile computing.\nQualcomm Adreno, Qualcomm Hexagon, Qualcomm Kryo and Qualcomm Snapdragon are products of Qualcomm Technologies, Inc. Qualcomm Research is a division of Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.\nArtificial IntelligenceMachine LearningResearchHeterogeneous ComputingCognitive TechnologiesSnapdragon\nMatt Grob\nExecutive Vice President, Technology Qualcomm Technologies, Inc.\nDevelopers: Exploring AIMET’s post-training quantization methods\nHugging Face partners with Qualcomm Technologies to enable transformers for Qualcomm Cloud AI 100 [video]\nResident Evil 4 out now on Quest 2 – powered by innovations from Snapdragon XR2 5G Platform","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1541807"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6279619932174683,"wiki_prob":0.6279619932174683,"text":"Two killers get life sentences\nJames Alexander\nWillie Wilson Jr.\nCleveland – A pair of killers who fatally shot a 19-year-old mother as she lay in bed with her two-year-old child have each been sentenced to life in prison, Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy J. McGinty announced.\nA jury on February 12 convicted Willie Wilson Jr., 20, and James Alexander, 18, of Aggravated Murder, Murder, Attempted Murder, Aggravated Burglary, Felonious Assault and Kidnapping. Wilson was also found guilty by Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Judge Peter J. Corrigan on one count of Having Weapons Under Disability.\nToday, Judge Corrigan sentenced both men to spend life in prison. The judge ordered that they will first be eligible for parole after 56 years behind bars.\nEvidence at trial proved that on April 14, 2015, Wilson and Alexander broke into an apartment on East 99th Street in Cleveland and shot a 17-year-old male victim who was asleep on the floor. They then went to the rear of the apartment and shot Miyazhane Vance while she was asleep in bed with her two-year-old child. Her one-year-old baby was in a crib next to the bed.\nAfter the killers left, a third adult in the apartment, who was not hurt, called 911.\nMs. Vance was transported to MetroHealth Medical Center where she died from nine gunshot wounds. Her brother, the 17-year-old victim, was also taken to MetroHealth where he was treated for critical injuries and remained in the hospital and rehab for nearly two months. Neither of Ms. Vance’s children was injured.\n“These defendants have absolutely no regard for human life,” said Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Anna Faraglia, who represented the State of Ohio along with Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys Brian Kraft and Kelly Mason. “They showed that by their actions on April 14 of last year and again today by the smiles on their faces during the sentencing hearing.”\nContact: Joseph Frolik, Director of Communications and Public Policy. Phone: 216.443.7488 or 216.640.6186. Email: jfrolik@prosecutor.cuyahogacounty.us","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1584401"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.625453770160675,"wiki_prob":0.37454622983932495,"text":"Stillfront explores the conditions for conducting a directed share issue\nINSIDE INFORMATION: Stillfront Group AB (publ) (“Stillfront” or “Company”) has appointed Carnegie Investment Bank AB (publ) as Sole Global Coordinator and Joint Bookrunner, and Swedbank AB (publ) and Nordea Bank Abp, filial i Sverige as Joint Bookrunners (jointly, the “Managers”), to explore the conditions for conducting directed share issues in the total amount of up to 3,424,129 shares (the “Share Issues”) through an accelerated bookbuilding procedure, (the “Bookbuilding”). The Share Issues are intended to be directed towards Swedish and international institutional investors and be carried out based on the authorisation granted by the extraordinary general meeting of shareholders held on 10 December 2019 and subject to the subsequent approval by the general meeting of shareholders of the Company.\nShare Issues\nThe price of the shares in the Share Issues will be determined through the Bookbuilding procedure, which will begin today on 21 January 2020 following markets close and end before the commencement of trading on Nasdaq First North Premier Growth Market on 22 January 2020. The board of directors can at any time choose to cancel the Bookbuilding, close earlier or later and refrain from executing the Share Issue, in part or in full.\nThe Share Issues are, among other things, subject to a resolution by the board of directors of Stillfront to issue new shares, in part within the limit of Stillfront’s existing authorisation to issue shares from the Extraordinary General Meeting held on 10 December 2019 and in part subject to the approval of the Extraordinary General Meeting and a directed share issue to Laureus Capital GmbH, one of the shareholders of the Company, which is subject to the approval of the Extraordinary General Meeting, following the close of the Bookbuilding.\nAs previously announced a notice to an extraordinary general meeting will be published to resolve upon a set off share issue being part of the acquisition of Storm8, Inc. Provided that the board of directors resolve upon the Share Issues, such notice to the extraordinary general meeting will also include a proposal to approve the board of directors’ decision regarding the part of the Share Issues not resolved by the board of directors based on the authorization from the extraordinary general meeting dated 10 December 2019. A notice is expected to be published in connection to the announcement of the outcome of the Bookbuilding. The Company’s principal owner, Laureus Capital GmbH, which holds approximately 15.9 percent of the shares and votes in the Company, has committed itself to vote at the extraordinary general meeting in favour of the board of directors’ decision to issue new shares which requires the extraordinary general meeting’s approval.\nThe reasons for the deviation from the shareholders’ preferential rights are mainly to diversify the shareholder base among Swedish and international institutional investors and at the same time raise capital in a time efficient manner. The purpose of the Share Issues is to finance the acquisition of Storm8, Inc and to provide the Company with additional equity capital in a quick and efficient manner in order to further strengthen Stillfront’s future financial flexibility in line with the Company´s communicated financial targets.\nIn connection with the Share Issues, the Company has undertaken, with customary exceptions, not to issue additional shares for a period of 90 calendar days after the settlement date.\nThe Share Issues are intended to be carried out both based on the existing authorization granted to the board of directors on 10 December 2019 and subject to a subsequent approval of the extraordinary general meeting since the Company intends to use the proceeds of the Share Issues both to finance the acquisition of Storm8, Inc and to raise additional funds to the Company.\nThe Company’s board of directors and management have entered into customary lock-up undertakings of 90 days from settlement of the Bookbuilding in respect of the board of directors and 180 days from settlement of the Bookbuilding in respect of the management.\nCarnegie Investment Bank AB (publ) has been appointed Sole Global Coordinator and Joint Bookrunner and Swedbank AB (publ) and Nordea Bank Abp, filial i Sverige have been appointed Joint Bookrunners. DLA Piper acts as legal counsel to the Company and Baker McKenzie acts as legal counsel to the Managers in connection with the Share Issue.\nJörgen Larsson, CEO, Stillfront Group\nE-mail: jorgen@stillfront.com\nAndreas Uddman, CFO, Stillfront Group\nE-mail: andreas@stillfront.com\nThis information is information that Stillfront Group AB (publ) is obliged to make public pursuant to the EU Market Abuse Regulation. The information was submitted for publication, through the agency of the contact persons set out above, at 19:20 CET on 21 January 2020.\nAbout Stillfront\nStillfront is a global group of gaming studios and a market leader in the free-to-play online games genre. Our diverse and exciting games portfolio has two common themes; loyal users and long lifecycle games. Organic growth and carefully selected and executed acquisitions embody our growth strategy and our 650 co-workers thrive in an organization that engenders the spirit of entrepreneurship. Our main markets are the US, Germany, MENA, France and UK. We are headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden and the company, is listed on Nasdaq First North Premier.\nFor further information, please visit: stillfront.com\nCertified Adviser:\nFNCA, Phone: +46 8 528 00 399 E-mail: info@fnca.se\nThe release, announcement or distribution of this press release may, in certain jurisdictions, be subject to restrictions. The recipients of this press release in such jurisdictions, in which this press release has been released, announced or distributed, should inform themselves of and follow such restrictions. The recipient of this press release is responsible for using this press release, and the information contained herein, in accordance with applicable rules in each jurisdiction. This press release does not constitute an offer, or a solicitation of any offer, to buy or subscribe for any securities in Stillfront in any jurisdiction, neither from Stillfront nor from someone else.\nThis press release does not identify or suggest, or purport to identify or suggest, the risks (direct or indirect) that may be associated with an investment in the new shares. Any investment decision in connection with the Share Issues must be made on the basis of all publicly available information relating to the Company and the Company’s shares. Such information has not been independently verified by the Managers. The information contained in this press release is for background purposes only and does not purport to be full or complete. No reliance may be placed for any purpose on the information contained in this press release or its accuracy or completeness. The Managers are acting for the Company in connection with the transaction and no one else and will not be responsible to anyone other than the Company for providing the protections afforded to its clients nor for giving advice in relation to the transaction or any other matter referred to herein.\nThis press release does not constitute a recommendation concerning any investor’s option with respect to the Share Issue. Each investor or prospective investor should conduct his, her or its own investigation, analysis and evaluation of the business and data described in this press release and publicly available information. The price and value of securities can go down as well as up. Past performance is not a guide to future performance.\nThis press release does not constitute or form part of an offer or solicitation to purchase or subscribe for securities in the United States. The securities referred to herein may not be sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration under the US Securities Act of 1933 (the “Securities Act”), as amended, and may not be offered or sold within the United States absent registration or an applicable exemption from, or in a transaction not subject to, the registration requirements of the Securities Act. There is no intention to register any securities referred to herein in the United States or to make a public offering of the securities in the United States. The information in this press release may not be announced, published, copied, reproduced or distributed, directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, within or into, Australia, Canada , Japan, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Singapore, South Africa, Switzerland, the United States or in any other jurisdiction where such announcement, publication or distribution of the information would not comply with applicable laws and regulations or where such actions are subject to legal restrictions or would require additional registration or other measures than what is required under Swedish law. Actions taken in violation of this instruction may constitute a crime against applicable securities laws and regulations.\nThis announcement is not a prospectus for the purposes of Regulation (EU) 2017/1129 (the “Prospectus Regulation”) and has not been approved by any regulatory authority in any jurisdiction. Stillfront has not authorized any offer to the public of shares or rights in any member state of the EEA and no prospectus has been or will be prepared in connection with the Share Issue. In any EEA Member State, this communication is only addressed to and is only directed at qualified investors in that Member State within the meaning of the Prospectus Regulation.\nIn the United Kingdom, this press release and any other materials in relation to the securities described herein is only being distributed to, and is only directed at, and any investment or investment activity to which this document relates is available only to, and will be engaged in only with, “qualified investors” who are (i) persons having professional experience in matters relating to investments who fall within the definition of “investment professionals” in Article 19(5) of the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 (Financial Promotion) Order 2005 (the “Order”); or (ii) high net worth entities falling within Article 49(2)(a) to (d) of the Order (all such persons together being referred to as “relevant persons”). In the United Kingdom, any investment or investment activity to which this communication relates is available only to, and will be engaged in only with, relevant persons. Persons who are not relevant persons should not take any action on the basis of this press release and should not act or rely on it.\nInformation to distributors\nSolely for the purposes of the product governance requirements contained within: (a) EU Directive 2014/65/EU on markets in financial instruments, as amended (“MiFID II”); (b) Articles 9 and 10 of Commission Delegated Directive (EU) 2017/593 supplementing MiFID II; and (c) local implementing measures (together, the “MiFID II Product Governance Requirements”), and disclaiming all and any liability, whether arising in tort, contract or otherwise, which any “manufacturer” (for the purposes of the MiFID II Product Governance Requirements) may otherwise have with respect thereto, the shares in Stillfront have been subject to a product approval process, which has determined that such shares are: (i) compatible with an end target market of retail investors and investors who meet the criteria of professional clients and eligible counterparties, each as defined in MiFID II; and (ii) eligible for distribution through all distribution channels as are permitted by MiFID II (the “Target Market Assessment”). Notwithstanding the Target Market Assessment, distributors should note that: the price of the shares in Stillfront may decline and investors could lose all or part of their investment; the shares in Stillfront offer no guaranteed income and no capital protection; and an investment in the shares in Stillfront is compatible only with investors who do not need a guaranteed income or capital protection, who (either alone or in conjunction with an appropriate financial or other adviser) are capable of evaluating the merits and risks of such an investment and who have sufficient resources to be able to bear any losses that may result therefrom. The Target Market Assessment is without prejudice to the requirements of any contractual, legal or regulatory selling restrictions in relation to the Share Issue.\nFor the avoidance of doubt, the Target Market Assessment does not constitute: (a) an assessment of suitability or appropriateness for the purposes of MiFID II; or (b) a recommendation to any investor or group of investors to invest in, or purchase, or take any other action whatsoever with respect to the shares in Stillfront.\nEach distributor is responsible for undertaking its own target market assessment in respect of the shares in Stillfront and determining appropriate distribution channels.\nPress release launch share issue\nEnglish January 21, 2020\nRegulatory press release Published:","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1436199"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7211689949035645,"wiki_prob":0.7211689949035645,"text":"Director Biography – Laura O’Grady (UNDETECTABLE)\nLaura O’Grady likes to keep busy. From national broadcasters to documentaries that have been screened around the world, Laura O’Grady has produced, coordinated, written or directed hundreds of hours of content. She has received many Canadian Screen Award nominations, provincial awards, and has had 2 films debut at the Hot Docs Film Festival. 2021 marks the release of the documentary Undetectable a project three years in the making.\nThree years ago I met a young man who had never heard of AIDS, or the crisis of the 1980s. I was stunned that the history had been so easily lost, and that the remarkable scientific achievements that have transformed an HIV diagnosis from a death sentence to a manageable chronic condition are not widely known, let alone celebrated. Thanks to the work of countless scientists and frontline workers, we now have the tools to end HIV/AIDS in our lifetime. Treatment as Prevention and U=U are proven strategies that can end this global pandemic. To achieve this vital final step, stigma and prejudice, which was rooted into the earliest reports of GRID (HIV), must be eradicated.\nShort Film: UNDETECTABLE, 42min., Canada, Documentary\nShort Film: REMEMBERING MARTY CHERNOFF, 27min., Documentary","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line851054"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9906628131866455,"wiki_prob":0.9906628131866455,"text":"Judge allows video release in Black man's shooting death\nAttorney Ben Crump speaks during a rally for Jason Walker at Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022, in Fayetteville, N.C. Jason Walker, 37, was shot and killed on Saturday by an off-duty deputy with the Cumberland County Sheriff's Office. (Andrew Craft/The Fayetteville Observer via AP) Associated Press\nFILE - Pandora Harrington, right, cries as she holds a sign with an image of Jason Walker during a demonstration in front of the Fayetteville Police Department, Jan. 9, 2022, in Fayetteville, N.C. A judge has granted a North Carolina police chief's request to release body camera video recorded moments after last Saturday's fatal shooting of Walker by an off-duty sheriff's deputy. The Fayetteville Observer reports that Senior Resident Superior Court Judge Jim Ammons issued his ruling Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022, two days after Fayetteville Police Chief Gina Hawkins filed the request. (Andrew Craft/The Fayetteville Observer via AP, File) Associated Press\nAnthony Walker speaks at a rally at Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022, in Fayetteville, N.C. Jason Walker, 37, was shot and killed on Saturday by an off-duty deputy with the Cumberland County Sheriff's Office. (Andrew Craft/The Fayetteville Observer via AP) Associated Press\nA family member gets emotional during a rally for Jason Walker at Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022, in Fayetteville, N.C. Jason Walker, 37, was shot and killed on Saturday by an off-duty deputy with the Cumberland County Sheriff's Office. (Andrew Craft/The Fayetteville Observer via AP) Associated Press\nJanice Walker, mother of Jason Walker speaks at a rally at Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church on Thursday, Jan. 13, 2022, in Fayetteville, N.C. Jason Walker, 37, was shot and killed on Saturday by an off-duty deputy with the Cumberland County Sheriff's Office. (Andrew Craft/The Fayetteville Observer via AP) Associated Press\nUpdated 1/14/2022 9:12 AM\nFAYETTEVILLE, N.C. -- A judge on Thursday granted a request from the police chief of a North Carolina city to release body camera video recorded in the aftermath of the shooting death of a Black man by an off-duty sheriff's deputy.\nFayetteville Police Chief Gina Hawkins filed the petition with the courts on Tuesday. She wanted to publicly release footage that she says will show exchanges between Fayetteville police officers and three witnesses at the scene of last Saturday's fatal shooting of Jason Walker by off-duty Cumberland County Sheriff's Office Lt. Jeffrey Hash, The Fayetteville Observer reported. Hawkins told the newspaper that the video would likely be released next week after redactions are made.\nTwo witnesses have made comments on social media, released a video and spoken at a demonstration, creating 'œsignificant public attention,'� according to the petition.\nSenior Resident Superior Court Judge Jim Ammons told the newspaper that he approved the release 'œin the interest of justice.'�\nUnder a North Carolina law passed in 2016, body and dash camera footage is not public record. Anyone can ask a court to order its release, however.\nFayetteville police said Monday that a preliminary investigation determined that Walker, 37, 'œran into traffic and jumped on a moving vehicle.'� Hash shot Walker and then called 911, police said. Walker was pronounced dead at the scene.\nBen Crump, the civil rights attorney who represented the family of George Floyd and has been retained by the Walker family, told a rally at a Fayetteville church that Walker was the single father of a 14-year-old son.\n'œThere are a lot of reasons why Black children have to grow up without their fathers,'� Crump said. 'œBut this reason is unacceptable. This is unacceptable that we have to tell that young boy that his father was shot unnecessarily, unjustifiably and unconstitutionally by somebody who was supposed to protect and serve him.'�\nFloyd, a Black man, was killed in 2020 by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, who pressed his knee against Floyd's neck for more than nine minutes as Floyd said he couldn't breathe and eventually went limp. Chauvin was sentenced to 22 1/2 years in prison on murder and manslaughter charges.\nWalker's family attended the rally, as did Floyd's brother, Philonise, and a nephew.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1268578"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7183007001876831,"wiki_prob":0.2816992998123169,"text":"Freddy H Hassler\nApril 2, 1964 - March 16, 2014\nPOTTSBORO- Freddy H. Hassler, 49, of Pottsboro passed away on Sunday, March 16, 2014 at his home. He was born on April 2, 1964 in Riverton, Wyoming to Herschel and Dorthy Thompson Hassler. He worked as a machinist. Freddy married Kimberly C. Stacy on May 4, 2012 in Sherman, TX. Survivors include his wife, Kimberly C. Hassler of Pottsboro; sons, Mark Cygyarowicz of Connecticut, Stephen Cygyarowicz and Gregory Cygyarowicz, both of Pittsburg, PA.; daughters, Heather Cygyarowicz and Samantha Cygyarowicz, both of Pittsburg, PA.; brothers Johnny Hassler of Pottsboro and Jim Hassler of Denison; sisters, Cheryl Hassler and Virginia Hassler, both of Marlow, OK.; and 8 grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents. A private memorial service will be held at a later date. Condolences may be registered to www.johnsonmoorefuneralhome.net Arrangements are under the direction of Johnson-Moore Funeral Home.\nPOTTSBORO- Freddy H. Hassler, 49, of Pottsboro passed away on Sunday, March 16, 2014 at his home. He was born on April 2, 1964 in Riverton, Wyoming to Herschel and Dorthy Thompson Hassler. He worked as a machinist. Freddy married Kimberly C.... View Obituary & Service Information\nThe family of Freddy H Hassler created this Life Tributes page to make it easy to share your memories.\nPOTTSBORO-\nFreddy H. Hassler, 49, of Pottsboro passed away on...\nSend flowers to the Hassler family.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1464735"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6830816864967346,"wiki_prob":0.6830816864967346,"text":"Kamal Nath\nDate of Birth: 18 November 1946\nPolitical Party: 18 November 1946\nOccupation: Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh\nResidence: Khalasi Lines, McRobertganj, Kanpur\nEducation: Bachelor of Commerce from St. Xavier's College of the University of Calcutta.\nKamal Nath was born on November 18, 1946 in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh. He studied at The Doon School and graduated with B.Com. from the St. Xavier’s College, University of Calcutta. He got married to Alka Nath on January 27, 1973.\nKamal Nath, an Indian politician from the Congress party, is the Ex Minister of Urban Development. Kamal Nath is one of the longest serving and senior most members of Lok Sabha; the lower house of India’s bicameral Parliament.He represents the Chhindwara constituency of Madhya Pradesh. He is a leader of the Indian National Congress (INC).Kamalnath was elected as the president of Madhya Pradesh Congress Committee in May, 2018to lead the party in upcoming assembly election of that year to be held in November-December 2018.\nNath was first elected to the 7th Lok Sabha in 1980.He was re-elected to the 8th Lok Sabha in 1985, the 9th Lok Sabha in 1989, and the 10th Lok Sabha in 1991. He was inducted into the Union Council of Ministers as Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Environment and Forests in June 1991. From 1995 to 1996 he served as Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) of Textiles.\nNath was elected to the 12th Lok Sabha in 1998 and the 13th Lok Sabha in 1999. From 2001 to 2004, he was the General Secretary of the Indian National Congress (INC). He was re-elected to the 14th Lok Sabha in the 2004 elections and served as Union Cabinet Minister of Commerce and Industry from 2004 to 2009.\nOn 16 May 2009 he again won the elections from his constituency for the 15th Lok Sabha and re-entered the Cabinet, this time as Union Minister of Road Transport and Highways. In 2011, as a result of a cabinet reshuffle, Nath replaced Jaipal Reddy to take on the role of Minister of Urban Development.\nIn October 2012 Nath was confirmed to the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs in addition to his current role as Minister of Urban Development.\nIn late 2012 Nath replaced Pranab Mukherjee to help the United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government win a crucial debate on foreign direct investment in India (FDI).Nath also replaced Minister of Rural Development Jairam Ramesh as an ex officio member of the Planning Commission in December 2012.\nFrom 4 June to 5 June 2014 Kamal Nath was the only member to have taken the official oath as a member of the newly-elected 16th Lok Sabha, and was made the Pro Tem Speaker. The first day of the Lok Sabha, on which the Pro Tem Speaker normally administers the oath to all other elected members, was interrupted by the death of Union Cabinet Minister of Rural Development Gopinath Munde. The House was adjourned after paying tribute to Munde and observing a two-minute silence. Since no other elected member had taken the oath that day, they were not officially members of parliament.[citation needed]\nOn 13th December 2018, Kamal Nath was elected as the Chief Minister of Madhya Pradesh after the INC emerged as the single largest party with 114 seats.\n“All of the 4 lakh vacancies as on 1 April 2019 in the Central Government, Central Public Sector Enterprises, Judiciary and Parliament will be filled before the end of March 2020. Congress will request State Governments to fill all vacancies, estimated at 20 lakhs, in the 2 sectors and in local bodies.”\nNYAY\n“Poorest 20% of families to be guaranteed a cash transfer of Rs. 72,000 a year each; money to be transferred to the account of a woman of the family; estimated cost will be <1% of GDP in Year 1 and <2% of GDP in Year 2 and thereafter.\n“Congress promises to enact the Direct Taxes Code in the first year of government; review and replace the current GST laws with the GST 2.0 regime based on a single, moderate, standard rate of tax; abolish the e-way bill.”\n“Will scrap the opaque Electoral Bond Scheme that was designed to favor the ruling party; set up a National Election Fund to which any person may make a contribution; promise that 50% of EVMs will be matched against VVPATs.”\nLaws, rules and regulations\n“Congress promises to decriminalize defamation and sedition; amend laws that allow detention without trial; pass Prevention of Torture Act; amend ASFPA; institute comprehensive prison reforms.”\n“Will enforce anti-corruption laws without discrimination; will investigate several deals entered into by the BJP Government in the last 5 years and, in particular, the Rafale deal.”\n“Will scrap Niti Aayog and constitute a Planning Commission with re-defined responsibilities.”\nAgriculture and farm labour\n“Congress promises to waive the outstanding farm loans: introduce a separate ‘Kisan Budget’; re-design the BJP government’s failed FasalBima Yojana (Crop Insurance Scheme); double the funding in 5 years for teaching, R&D, agriculture-related pure sciences and applied science and technology in the agricultural sector; restore the original Land Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013 and the Forest Rights Act.”\n“Congress promises to launch MGNREGA 3.0, which will increase the guaranteed days of employment up to 150 days; connect all villages and habitations with a population of 250 with a road under the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana; pass the Right to Homestead Act to provide a homestead for every household that does not own a home or own land.”\n“Will provide for reservation of 33% of seats in the Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assemblies. Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 to be enforced effectively; repeal any provision of law that prohibits night shifts for women; comprehensive review of the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplaces Act, 2013; establish a separate investigative agency to investigate heinous crimes against women and children.”\n“Congress promises to achieve the target of 3% of GDP by 2020-21 and remain under that limit; achieve a savings level of 40% of GDP and a Gross Capital Formation level of 35% of GDP; bring every Fortune 500 company to set up a business in India; withdraw Angel Tax.\n“Congress promises to increase the share of India’s manufacturing sector from the current level of 16%of GDP to 25% within a period of 5 years and to make India a manufacturing hub for the world.”\nPublic infrastructure and urban policy\n“Congress promises to modernize all outdated railway infrastructure; formulate a comprehensive policy on Urbanization; Right to Housing for the urban poor and protection from arbitrary eviction; introduce a new model of governance for towns and cities through a directly elected mayor with a fixed term of 5 years, an elected Council and a separate administrative structure for each urban body.”\n“Will ensure defense spending is increased to meet requirements of the Armed Forces; evolve suitable policies to address data security, cyber security, financial security, communication security; rapidly expand domestic capacity to manufacture defense and security equipment.\n“Congress promises to establish a National Council on Foreign Policy; re-double the efforts to win for permanent membership India in the UNSC and the Nuclear Suppliers Group; significantly increase the size of the Foreign Service.”\n2006: Honorary Doctorate given by Jabalpur’s Rani Durgavati University.\n2007: Entitled as the FDI Personality of the Year by the FDI magazine and the Financial Times Business.\n2008: Honored with the title “Business Reformer of the Year” by The Economic Times.\n2011: The richest cabinet minister in India, possessing assets worth INR 2.73 billion.\nIn November 2012, he received the “ABLF Statesman Award” at the Asian Business Leadership Forum Awards 2012.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1527586"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7645153999328613,"wiki_prob":0.7645153999328613,"text":"Categories: Charles Smith, Media, Politicians, Sen. Ribicoff, Washington area life\nThe Charles E. Smith family built the giant Crystal City complex near Ronald Reagan National Airport and donated hundreds of millions to good causes, most of them probably in and near Washington.\nNames from the family went on the Charles E. Smith Athletic Center at George Washington University, the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland, American University’s Kogod School of Business and the Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School. Charles Smith’s grandson, David Bruce Smith, paid tribute to him in a folksy and readable little book called Conversations with Papa Charlie.\nSo what happened when, on the Washingtonian Magazine’s 45th anniversary, the October 2010 issue listed 45 Who Shaped Washingtonian (subtitled “From 1965 to 2010, these people helped make our region what it is today”)?\nWell, the magazine saw fit to mention worthy but minor celebrities like Maya Lin, who, as a 21-year-old Yalie, designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. Not a word appeared, however, about the Charles E. Smith family despite praise for other developers. Granted, family businesses merged years ago with large, out-of-town real estate conglomerates, lowering the Smiths’ profile. But the Washingtonian was looking back over the past 45 years. The Smiths if nothing else have been to D.C.-area Jewish philanthropies what Colonel Sanders was to Kentucky Fried Chicken.\nDuring the four and a half decades, not all the news about the Smiths was positive. Crystal City exacerbated Northern Virginia’s overdevelopment, further befouling the air in our lungs and clogging our highways despite the Metro. And for the Connecticut newspapers, I myself disclosed Sen. Abraham Ribicoff’s secret and illegal stake in a CIA-occupied building that the Smiths rented to the feds. Among the lease’s co-signers was none other than Robert H. Smith, the family member most responsible for Crystal City. No quid pro quo claimed here—this is one for historians to untangle, just like the blame for the collapse of a Smith building at Skyline Plaza where 14 workers died.\nBut without doubt the Smiths were among the most generous of local philanthropists, maybe the most generous; and, objectively, with Crystal City offices alone housing perhaps 60,000 office workers, should the Washingtonian have printed a Smithless list of present and past movers and shakers?\nIn Robert Smith’s obituary and a follow-up editorial, the Washington Post skipped over the negatives and made him out to be a flawless god. The Washingtonian sinned in the opposite direction and failed to recognize the Smiths and their ubiquitous good works. My guess is that the magazine’s omission of the Smiths was an innocent oversight by Denise Kersten Wills, a features editor who apparently has lived most of her life outside the Washington area. As a fellow, fallible journalist, I can well understand what might have happened. Still, as a D.C.-area history buff, I can’t help but look beyond the ironies and see at least an accidental injustice to the Smiths here. Hundreds of millions and not a syllable? Although the headline read “45” rather than “top 45,” I’d hope that commonsense would prevail. Perhaps Ms. Wills can append a clarification to the online version of the list and maybe even write a very brief item for the printed magazine. I’ll shoot her an e-mail.\nUpdate, 9 p.m.: I did send a message via Facebook but have not yet received a reply.\nUpdate, 8:56 a.m., Oct. 29: I notice that the Washington Post obit, source of the several hundred million figure, doesn’t specifically say that the contributions were for the D.C. region. So I’ve inserted “probably” in the first paragraph, based, among other things, on the fact that Robert Smith gave almost $100 million just to the University of Maryland.\nTags:Abraham Ribcoff, Arlene R. Kogod, Charles E. Smith Athletic Center, Charles E. Smith family, Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School, Conversations with Papa Charlie, Crystal City, D.C., D.C. metropolitan area, David Bruce Smith, DC area, Kogod School of Business, Robert H. Smith School of Business, Robert P. Kogod, University of Maryland, Washingtonian, Washingtonian Magazine","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line46829"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9039617776870728,"wiki_prob":0.9039617776870728,"text":"Moody's May Downgrade Xerox On Plan To Split In Two\nBy Ciara Linnane MarketWatch Pulse\nMoody's Investors Service on Friday placed Xerox Corp.'s Baa2 senior unsecured debt rating on review for a possible downgrade, and said the decision to split in two will create smaller companies with less business diversity and profitability than the current one. The move comes after Xerox said it will create an $11 billion document technology company and a $7 billion business process outsourcing company by the end of 2016. \"Xerox has not announced capitalization plans for DT or the BPO units post-spinoff, nor how much of its $1.4 billion in cash will be allocated between the two companies,\" Moody's acknowledged in a statement. It said its review will focus on the post-split capital structure, liquidity profile, shareholder return policies, future strategy, competitive positioning and growth prospects for each business. It will also evaluate the impact of the $2.4 billion in cost cuts the company plans over the next three years. Moody's Baa2 rating is just two notches above speculative, or junk status. Xerox shares were up 5.3% in early trade, but have fallen 28% in the last 12 months, while the S&P 500 has lost 5%.\nCopyright © 2016 MarketWatch, Inc.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1822711"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6544688940048218,"wiki_prob":0.3455311059951782,"text":"Tracing the impact of proposals from participatory processes: methodological challenges and substantive lessons\nFont, J., Pasadas del Amo, S. and Smith, G. 2016. Tracing the impact of proposals from participatory processes: methodological challenges and substantive lessons. Journal of Public Deliberation. 12 (1), p. Article 3.\nFont, J., Pasadas del Amo, S. and Smith, G.\nJournal of Public Deliberation\n12 (1), p. Article 3\nBerkeley Electronic Press\nTracing the Impact of Proposals from Participatory Processes.pdf\nWeb address (URL)\nhttp://www.publicdeliberation.net/jpd/vol12/iss1/art3/\nDeliberative democracy and the climate crisis\nWillis, R., Curato, N. and Smith, G. 2022. Deliberative democracy and the climate crisis. WIRES Climate Change. Advanced online publication. https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.759\nExpertise and Participatory Governance: The Incorporation of Expert Knowledge in Local Participatory Processes\nRico Motos, Carlos, Font, Joan, Bherer, Laurence and Smith, Graham 2021. Expertise and Participatory Governance: The Incorporation of Expert Knowledge in Local Participatory Processes. Journal of Deliberative Democracy. 17 (2). https://doi.org/10.16997/jdd.971\nTesting the input-process-output model of public participation\nGalais, C., Fernandez Martinez, J., Font, J. and Smith, G. 2021. Testing the input-process-output model of public participation. European Journal of Political Research. 60 (4), pp. 807-828. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12427\nEuropean Citizens Assembly: Bring Citizens into EU Decision Making\nSmith, G. 2021. European Citizens Assembly: Bring Citizens into EU Decision Making. in: Alemanno, A. and Organ, J. (ed.) Citizen Participation in Democratic Europe: What Next for the EU? ECPR Press.\nCan democracy safeguard the future?\nSmith, G. 2021. Can democracy safeguard the future? Cambridge Polity Press.\nIntroducing the Journal of Deliberative Democracy\nCurato, N., Bachtiger, A., Strandberg, K and Smith, G. 2020. Introducing the Journal of Deliberative Democracy. Journal of Deliberative Democracy. 16 (1), pp. 1-3. https://doi.org/10.16997/jdd.405\nEnhancing the legitimacy of offices for future generations: the case for public participation\nSmith, G. 2020. Enhancing the legitimacy of offices for future generations: the case for public participation. Political Studies. 68 (4), pp. 996-1013. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032321719885100\nDesigning Democratic Innovations as Deliberative Systems: The Ambitious Case of NHS Citizen\nDean, R., Boswell, J. and Smith, G. 2020. Designing Democratic Innovations as Deliberative Systems: The Ambitious Case of NHS Citizen . Political Studies. 68 (3), pp. 689-709. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032321719866002\nStudying Cherrypicking: Substantive and Methodological Reflections\nFont, J. and Smith, G. 2019. Studying Cherrypicking: Substantive and Methodological Reflections. Constitution Making and Deliberative Democracy Cost Action.\nReflections on the theory and practice of democratic innovations\nSmith, G. 2019. Reflections on the theory and practice of democratic innovations. in: Elstub, S. and Escobar, O. (ed.) Handbook of Democratic Innovation and Governance Cheltenham Edward Elgar. pp. 572-581\nDesign Matters : CBNRM and Democratic Innovation\nSmith, G. 2019. Design Matters : CBNRM and Democratic Innovation. Washington DC World Bank.\nReflecting on Fifty Years of Democratic Theory: Carole Pateman in Conversation with Graham Smith\nPateman, C. and Smith, G. 2019. Reflecting on Fifty Years of Democratic Theory: Carole Pateman in Conversation with Graham Smith. Democratic Theory. 6 (2), p. 111–120. https://doi.org/10.3167/dt.2019.060210\nCollective Interview on the History of Town Meetings\nBryan, F., Keith, W., Kloppenberg, J., Mansbridge, J., Morrell, M and Smith, G. 2019. Collective Interview on the History of Town Meetings. Journal of Public Deliberation. 15 (2), p. Article 8 Article 8.\nDomestic thermal upgrades, community action and energy saving: a three-year experimental study of prosperous households\nBardsely, N., Buchs, M., James, P., Papafragkou, A., Rushby, T., Saunders, C., Smith, G., Wallbridge . R. and Woodman, N. 2019. Domestic thermal upgrades, community action and energy saving: a three-year experimental study of prosperous households. Energy Policy. 127, pp. 475-485. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enpol.2018.11.036\nThe effects of economic crises on participatory democracy\nAlarcon, P., Galais, C., Font, J. and Smith, G. 2019. The effects of economic crises on participatory democracy. Policy & Politics. 47 (2), pp. 265-286. https://doi.org/10.1332/030557318X15407316045688\nThe Lessons for Democratic Innovations\nSmith, G. 2019. The Lessons for Democratic Innovations. in: Tam, Henry (ed.) Whose Government Is It? Policy Press. pp. 91-108\nSortition, Rotation and Mandate: Conditions for Political Equality and Deliberative Reasoning\nOwen, D. and Smith, G. 2019. Sortition, Rotation and Mandate: Conditions for Political Equality and Deliberative Reasoning. in: Gastil, John and Wright, Erik Olin (ed.) Legislature by Lot: An Alternative Design for Deliberative Governance London Verso.\nChallenges of inequality to democracy\nBellamy, R., Merkel, W., Bhargava, R., Bidadanure, J., Christiano, T., Felt, U., Hay, C., Lamboy, L., Pogrebinschi, T., Smith, G., Talshir, G., Urbinati, N. and Verloo, M. 2018. Challenges of inequality to democracy. in: IPSP (ed.) Rethinking society for the 21st Century: report of the international panel on social progress. Vol. II: Political regulation, governance, and societal transformations Cambridge Cambridge University Press. pp. 563-596\nWhat kind of Brexit do voters want? Lessons from the Citizens’ Assembly on Brexit\nRenwick, A., Allan, S., Jennings, W., McKee, R., Russell, M. and Smith, G. 2018. What kind of Brexit do voters want? Lessons from the Citizens’ Assembly on Brexit. The Political Quarterly. 89 (4), pp. 649-658. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-923X.12523\nThe institutionalization of deliberative democracy: democratic innovations and the deliberative system\nSmith, G. 2018. The institutionalization of deliberative democracy: democratic innovations and the deliberative system. Journal of Zhejiang University (Humanities and Social Sciences). 4 (2), pp. 5-18 5-.\nOwen, D. and Smith, G. 2018. Sortition, Rotation and Mandate: Conditions for Political Equality and Deliberative Reasoning. Politics and Society. 46 (3), pp. 419-434. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032329218789892\nMini-publics and deliberative democracy\nSetälä, M. and Smith, G. 2018. Mini-publics and deliberative democracy. in: Bächtiger, A., Dryzek, J., Mansbridge, J. and Warren, M.E. (ed.) The Oxford Handbook of Deliberative Democracy Oxford Oxford University Press.\nCherry-picking participation: explaining the fate of proposals from participatory processes\nFont, J., Smith, G., Galais, C. and Alarcón, P. 2018. Cherry-picking participation: explaining the fate of proposals from participatory processes . European Journal of Political Research. 57 (3), pp. 615-636. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12248\nSustainable Prosperity and Democracy: A Research Agenda\nHammond, M. and Smith, G. 2017. Sustainable Prosperity and Democracy: A Research Agenda. Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity.\nA Considered Public Voice on Brexit: The Report of the Citizens' Assembly on Brexit\nRenwick, A., Allan, S., Jennings, W., McKee, R, Russell, M. and Smith, G. 2017. A Considered Public Voice on Brexit: The Report of the Citizens' Assembly on Brexit. London The Constitution Unit, University College London.\nProcesos participativos y crisis: ¿participación como respuesta a la crisis o participación recortada por la crisis?\nFont, J., Alarcón, P., Galais, C. and Smith, G. 2017. Procesos participativos y crisis: ¿participación como respuesta a la crisis o participación recortada por la crisis? Mélanges de la Casa de Velázquez.. 47 (2), pp. 151-166.\nConcevoir la démocratie pour le long terme: innovation institutionnelle et changement climatique\nSmith, G. 2017. Concevoir la démocratie pour le long terme: innovation institutionnelle et changement climatique. lapenseeeecologique.com. 1 (1).\nTesting Assumptions in Deliberative Democratic Design: A Preliminary Assessment of the Efficacy of the Participedia Data Archive as an Analytic Tool\nGastil J., Richards Jr, R.C., Ryan, M. and Smith, G. 2017. Testing Assumptions in Deliberative Democratic Design: A Preliminary Assessment of the Efficacy of the Participedia Data Archive as an Analytic Tool. Journal of Public Deliberation. 13 (2), p. Article 1 Article 1.\nCitizen participation and changing governance: cases of devolution in England\nProsser, B., Renwick, A., Giovanni, A., Sandford, M., Flinders, M., Jennings, W., Spada, G., Smith, G., Stoker, G. and Ghose, K. 2017. Citizen participation and changing governance: cases of devolution in England. Politics and Policy. 45 (2), pp. 251-269. https://doi.org/10.1332/030557317X14895974141213\nQu’apporte l’étude des town meetings à la quête d’une démocratie plus participative et délibérative?\nBryan, F.W., Keith, W.W., Kloppenberg, J.T., Mansbridge, J.J., Morrell, M.E. and Smith, G. 2016. Qu’apporte l’étude des town meetings à la quête d’une démocratie plus participative et délibérative? Participations. Revue de sciences sociales sur la démocratie et la citoyenneté. 15 (2), pp. 203-220. https://doi.org/10.3917/parti.015.0203\nDemocracy Matters: Lessons from the 2015 Citizens' Assemblies on English Devolution\nFlinders, M., Ghose, K., Jennings, W., Molloy, E., Prosser, B., Renwick, A., Smith, G. and Spada, P. 2016. Democracy Matters: Lessons from the 2015 Citizens' Assemblies on English Devolution. Democracy Matters.\nIdentifying and explaining framing strategies of low carbon lifestyle movement organisations\nBuchs, M., Wallbridge, R., Saunders, C., Smith, G. and Bardsley, N. 2015. Identifying and explaining framing strategies of low carbon lifestyle movement organisations. Global Environmental Change. 35 (Nov), p. 2015. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.09.009\nThe Potential of Participedia as a Crowdsourcing Tool for Comparative Analysis of Democratic Innovations\nSmith, G., Gastil, John and Richards Jr, R.C. 2015. The Potential of Participedia as a Crowdsourcing Tool for Comparative Analysis of Democratic Innovations. Policy and Internet. 7 (2), p. 243–262. https://doi.org/10.1002/poi3.93\nSurvey Article: Deliberation, Democracy, and the Systemic Turn\nOwen, D. and Smith, G. 2015. Survey Article: Deliberation, Democracy, and the Systemic Turn. Journal of Political Philosophy. 23 (2), p. 213–234. https://doi.org/10.1111/jopp.12054\n‘It helped me sort of face the end of the world’: the role of emotions for third sector climate change engagement initiatives\nBuchs, M., Hinton, E. and Smith, G. 2015. ‘It helped me sort of face the end of the world’: the role of emotions for third sector climate change engagement initiatives. Environmental Values. 24 (5), pp. 621-640. https://doi.org/10.3197/096327115X14384223590177\nDefining Mini-Publics\nRyan, M. and Smith, G. 2014. Defining Mini-Publics. in: Kimmo Grönlund André Bächtiger Maija Setälä (ed.) Deliberative Mini-Publics: Involving Citizens in the Democratic Process Colchester ECPR Press. pp. 9-26\nBeyond the activist ghetto: a deductive blockmodelling approach to understanding the relationship between contact with environmental organisations and public attitudes and behaviour\nSaunders, C., Buchs, M., Papafragkou, A., Wallbridge, R. and Smith, G. 2014. Beyond the activist ghetto: a deductive blockmodelling approach to understanding the relationship between contact with environmental organisations and public attitudes and behaviour. Social Movement Studies: Journal of Social, Cultural and Political Protest. 13 (1), pp. 158-177. https://doi.org/10.1080/14742837.2013.832623\nEnds, means, beginnings: environmental technocracy, ecological deliberation or embodied disagreement\nMachin, A. and Smith, G. 2014. Ends, means, beginnings: environmental technocracy, ecological deliberation or embodied disagreement. Ethical Perspectives. 21 (1), pp. 47 -72. https://doi.org/10.2143/EP.21.1.3017286\nTaking political engagement online: an experimental analysis of asynchronous discussion forums\nSmith, G., John, P. and Sturgis, P. 2013. Taking political engagement online: an experimental analysis of asynchronous discussion forums. Political Studies. 61 (4), pp. 709-730. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.2012.00989.x\nMapping the environmental third sector in England: a distinctive field of activity?\nClifford, D., Geyne-Rajme, F., Smith, G., Edwards, R., Buchs, M. and Saunders, C. 2013. Mapping the environmental third sector in England: a distinctive field of activity? Voluntary Sector Review. 4 (2), pp. 241-264. https://doi.org/10.1332/204080513X668584\nDesigning democratic innovations at the European level: lessons from the experiments\nSmith, G. 2013. Designing democratic innovations at the European level: lessons from the experiments. in: Kies, R. and Nanz, P. (ed.) Is Europe listening to us? Successes and failures of EU citizen consultations Ashgate. pp. 201-216\nEnvironmental management systems and the third sector: exploring weak adoption in the UK\nEdwards, R., Smith, G. and Buchs, M. 2013. Environmental management systems and the third sector: exploring weak adoption in the UK. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy. 31 (1), pp. 119-133. https://doi.org/10.1068/c11123\nTowards a comparative analysis of democratic innovations: lessons from a small-n fsQCA of participatory budgeting\nRyan, M. and Smith, G. 2012. Towards a comparative analysis of democratic innovations: lessons from a small-n fsQCA of participatory budgeting. Revista Internacional de Sociología (RiS). 70 (Extra2), pp. 89-120.\nAssociative democracy and the social economy: exploring the regulatory challenge\nSmith, G. and Teasdale, S. 2012. Associative democracy and the social economy: exploring the regulatory challenge. Economy and Society. 41 (2), pp. 151-176. https://doi.org/10.1080/03085147.2012.661627\nLegislating for a big society? The case of the public services (social enterprise and social value) bill in England\nTeasdale, S., Alcock, P. and Smith, G. 2012. Legislating for a big society? The case of the public services (social enterprise and social value) bill in England. Public Money and Management. 32 (3), pp. 201-208. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540962.2012.676277\nMachiavellian democratic innovations: McCormick’s people’s tribunate\nSmith, G. and Owen, D. 2012. Machiavellian democratic innovations: McCormick’s people’s tribunate. The Good Society. 20 (2), pp. 203-215. https://doi.org/10.1353/gso.2011.0015\nThe European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI): a new institution for empowering Europe’s citizens?\nSmith, G. 2012. The European Citizens’ Initiative (ECI): a new institution for empowering Europe’s citizens? in: Dougan, M., Shuibhne, N.N. and Spaventa, E. (ed.) Empowerment and disempowerment of the European citizen Oxford Hart.\nDeliberative democracy and mini-publics\nSmith, G. 2012. Deliberative democracy and mini-publics. in: Geissel, B. and Newton, K. (ed.) Evaluating democratic innovations: curing the democratic malaise? London Routledge. pp. 90-111\nNavigating the perfect storm: research stategies for socialecological systems in a rapidly evolving world\nDearing, J.A., Bullock, S., Contanza, R., Dawson, T.P., Edwards, M.E., Poppy, G.M. and Smith, G. 2012. Navigating the perfect storm: research stategies for socialecological systems in a rapidly evolving world. Environmental Management. 49 (4), pp. 767-775. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00267-012-9833-6\nOrganizing deliberation: the perspectives of professional participation practitioners in Britain and Germany\nCooper, E. and Smith, G. 2012. Organizing deliberation: the perspectives of professional participation practitioners in Britain and Germany. Journal of Public Deliberation. 8 (1), p. Article 3.\nPolitics and the environment: from theory to practice. 3rd edition\nConnelly, J., Smith, G., Benson, D. and Saunders, C. 2012. Politics and the environment: from theory to practice. 3rd edition. London Routledge.\nSurvey article: Democratic innovations: bringing theory and practice into dialogue\nSmith, G. 2011. Survey article: Democratic innovations: bringing theory and practice into dialogue. Philosophy Compass. 6 (12), pp. 895-901. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-9991.2011.00448.x\nEkonomia społeczna, przedsiębiorstwospołeczne i teoria d emokracji stowarzyszeniowej\nSmith, G. and Teasdale, S. 2011. Ekonomia społeczna, przedsiębiorstwospołeczne i teoria d emokracji stowarzyszeniowej. Ekonomia Spoteczna. 2 (3), pp. 121-137.\nPutting democracy into welfare provision\nSmith, G. 2011. Putting democracy into welfare provision. in: Westall, A. (ed.) Revisiting associative democracy London Lawrence & Wishart.\nNudge nudge, think think: experimenting with ways to change civic behaviour\nJohn, P., Cotterill, S., Richardson, L., Moseley, A., Smith, G., Stoker, G. and Wales, C. 2011. Nudge nudge, think think: experimenting with ways to change civic behaviour. London Bloomsbury Academic.\nProspects for citizenship\nStoker, G., Armstrong, C., Banya, M., Mason, A., McGee, D., McGrew, T., Owen, D., Saunders, C. and Smith, G. 2010. Prospects for citizenship. London Bloomsbury Academic.\nRevitalising politics through democratic innovation?\nSmith, G. 2009. Revitalising politics through democratic innovation? Representation. 45 (3), pp. 259-264. https://doi.org/10.1080/00344890903129475\nDemocratic innovations: designing institutions for citizen participation\nSmith, G. 2009. Democratic innovations: designing institutions for citizen participation. Cambridge Cambridge University Press.\nDeliberativna demokracija i javnosti u malom (deliberative democracy and mini-publics)\nSmith, G. 2009. Deliberativna demokracija i javnosti u malom (deliberative democracy and mini-publics). Croatian Political Science Review. 3/4, pp. 27-58.\nEmpowering communities to influence local decision making: systematic review of the evidence\nPratchett, L., Durose, C., Lowndes, V., Smith, G., Stoker, G. and Wales, C. 2009. Empowering communities to influence local decision making: systematic review of the evidence. London Department for Communities and Local Government.\nNudge nudge, think think: two strategies for changing civic behaviour\nJohn, P., Smith, G. and Stoker, G. 2009. Nudge nudge, think think: two strategies for changing civic behaviour. Political Quarterly. 80 (3), pp. 361-370. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-923X.2009.02001.x\nTeaching citizenship in higher education\nSmith, G., Ottewill, R., Jubb, E., Sperling, E. and Wyman, M. 2008. Teaching citizenship in higher education. European Political Science. 7, pp. 135-143. https://doi.org/10.1057/eps.2008.8\nThe theory and practice of group representation: reflections on the governance of race equality in Birmingham\nSmith, G. and Stephenson, S. 2005. The theory and practice of group representation: reflections on the governance of race equality in Birmingham. Public Administration. 83 (2), pp. 323-343. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0033-3298.2005.00452.x\nGreen citizenship and the social economy\nSmith, G. 2005. Green citizenship and the social economy. Environmental Politics. 14 (2), pp. 273-289. https://doi.org/10.1080/09644010500055175\nDemocratic deliberation and environmental policy: opportunities and barriers in Britain\nSmith, G. 2005. Democratic deliberation and environmental policy: opportunities and barriers in Britain. in: Paehlke, R. and Torgerson, D. (ed.) Managing leviathan: environmental politics and the administrative state Ontario Broadview.\nBeyond the ballot: 57 democratic innovations from around the world\nSmith, G. 2005. Beyond the ballot: 57 democratic innovations from around the world. The Power Inquiry.\nBuilding social capital in city politics: scope and limitations at the inter-organisational level\nSmith, G., Maloney, W. and Stoker, G. 2004. Building social capital in city politics: scope and limitations at the inter-organisational level. Political Studies. 52 (3), pp. 508-530. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.2004.00493.x\nVoluntary organisations and the generation of social capital\nStoker, G., Smith, G., Maloney, W. and Young, S. 2004. Voluntary organisations and the generation of social capital. in: Boddy, M. and Parkinson, M. (ed.) City matters: competitiveness, cohesion and urban governance Bristol Policy Press. pp. 389-406\nLiberal democracy and the shaping of environmentally enlightened citizens\nSmith, G. 2004. Liberal democracy and the shaping of environmentally enlightened citizens. in: Levy, Y. and Wissenburg, M. (ed.) Liberal democracy and environmentalism: the end of environmentalism? London Routledge. pp. 139-152\nHow can the weaknesses of deliberative decision making be overcome?\nSmith, G. 2004. How can the weaknesses of deliberative decision making be overcome? in: Blowers, A. (ed.) Deliberative democracy and decision making for radioactive waste: a report for the HM Government-sponsored Commission on Radioactive Waste Management (CoRWM) Commission on Radioactive Waste Management (CoRWM).\nDeliberative democracy and the environment\nSmith, G. 2003. Deliberative democracy and the environment. London Routledge.\nPolitics and the environment: from theory to practice. 2nd edition\nSmith, G. and Connelly, J. 2002. Politics and the environment: from theory to practice. 2nd edition. London Routledge.\nTaking deliberation seriously: institutional design and green politics\nSmith, G. 2001. Taking deliberation seriously: institutional design and green politics. Environmental Politics. 10 (3), pp. 72-93. https://doi.org/10.1080/714000562\nSocial capital and the city\nMaloney, W., Smith, G. and Stoker, G. 2001. Social capital and the city. in: Edwards, B., Foley, M.W. and Diani, M. (ed.) Beyond Tocqueville: civil society and the social capital debate in comparative perspective University of New England Press. pp. 83-98\nSocial capital and urban governance: adding a more contextualized ‘top-down’ perspective\nMaloney, W., Smith, G. and Stoker, G. 2000. Social capital and urban governance: adding a more contextualized ‘top-down’ perspective. Political Studies. 48 (4), pp. 802-820. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9248.00284\nCitizens' juries and deliberative democracy\nSmith, G. and Wales, C. 2000. Citizens' juries and deliberative democracy. Political Studies. 48 (1), pp. 51-65. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9248.00250\nToward deliberative institutions\nSmith, G. 2000. Toward deliberative institutions. in: Saward, M. (ed.) Democratic innovation: deliberation, representation and association London Routledge. pp. 29-39\nThe theory and practice of citizens’ juries\nSmith, G. and Wales, C. 1999. The theory and practice of citizens’ juries. Policy and Politics. 27 (3), pp. 295-308. https://doi.org/10.1332/030557399782453118\nPolitics and the envronment: from theory to practice\nSmith, G. and Connelly, J. 1999. Politics and the envronment: from theory to practice. London Routledge.\nPermalink - https://westminsterresearch.westminster.ac.uk/item/9wxqz/tracing-the-impact-of-proposals-from-participatory-processes-methodological-challenges-and-substantive-lessons","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line177835"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5983270406723022,"wiki_prob":0.5983270406723022,"text":"Trump spends MLK Jr. Day golfing\nJeff J Mitchell\n
AYR, SCOTLAND - JULY 30: Republican Presidential Candidate Donald Trump drives a golf buggy during his visits to his Scottish golf course Turnberry on July 30, 2015 in Ayr, Scotland. Donald Trump answered questions from the media at a press conference held in his hotel. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
\nPresident Donald Trump appears poised to ignore his own calls for Americans to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day with \"acts of civic work and community service.\"\nTrump is not scheduled to partake in any service projects on the federal holiday he and every other US president have designated as a \"day of service\" since 1994. Instead, he arrived Monday morning at his golf club in West Palm Beach, Florida. The only event on the public schedule released daily by the White House is the flight that will take him back to Washington in the afternoon.\nTrump's noticeably blank public schedule Monday comes as he continued to beat back accusations of racism for referring to countries in Africa as \"s---hole countries\" and rejecting immigration from the African continent and Haiti in favor of immigrants from Norway during a meeting with lawmakers. His reported comments were confirmed by both a Republican senator and Democratic senator present, but Trump has denied making the disparaging remarks.\nTrump rejected the criticism on Sunday night, telling reporters that he is the \"least racist person you have ever interviewed.\"\nTrump's proclamation\nTrump marked the holiday celebrating the civil rights icon at the White House Friday where he signed the federal holiday proclamation in a ceremony alongside King's nephew, a dozen of his black political supporters and staffers, and Housing and Urban Development Secretary Ben Carson, the most-senior black member of his Cabinet. Carson was scheduled to attend a reception at a historic fire station in Atlanta alongside King's niece, Alveda King.\nTrump praised King's role in the civil rights movement before encouraging \"all Americans to observe this day with acts of civic work and community service in honor of Dr. King's extraordinary life -- and it was extraordinary indeed -- and his great legacy.\"\nThere was no indication Monday morning that Trump would heed that call. A White House spokeswoman did not return a request for comment on whether Trump had any impromptu plans to take part in a community service project. The first lady's office also did not return a request for comment asking whether Melania Trump had any such plans.\nThe White House on Monday did release a video message in which Trump marked the federal holiday and extolled King's legacy and Trump retweeted the video.\nThe first lady marked the day in a tweet Monday morning: \"Today we honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. & his service to this great country. I am honored to be First Lady of a nation that continually strives for equality & justice for all.\"\nPresident Ronald Reagan signed a bill into law in 1983 making Martin Luther King Jr. Day a federal holiday and the holiday was first observed in 1986.\nUS presidents have typically observed the holiday publicly, making remarks or attending events honoring the day. Each president since Reagan has signed a proclamation declaring Martin Luther King Jr. day a federal holiday, and in 1994 the holiday was rededicated in an act of Congress as a \"day of service.\"\nThe last three presidents have often taken part in service projects to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day. In 2001, President Bill Clinton joined AmeriCorps members to help repair and paint a senior center in Washington. In 2007, President George W. Bush joined volunteers at a local high school who were sending postcards to victims of Hurricane Katrina. For the last Martin Luther King Jr. Day of his presidency, President Barack Obama helped students at a local elementary school build planters and plant vegetables for an \"MLK Garden\" at the school.\nThe projects were just some that the three presidents took part in to mark the holiday during their times in office.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line85116"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5122867822647095,"wiki_prob":0.5122867822647095,"text":"Health First Europe welcomes Elisabeth Morin-Chartier as a new MEP Supporter\nNew MEP Supporter, / 19 December 2013\nHealth First Europe is happy to welcome Elisabeth Morin-Chartier as a new MEP Supporter. Mrs Elisabeth Morin-Chartier serves as the Vice-Chair of the Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality and is a Member of the Committee on Employment and Social Affairs. She is also a Member of the Delegation for Relations with United States.\nPrior to joining the European Parliament in 2007, she was a founder of the branch of the National Centre for Distance Learning (CNED) at the Parc du Futuroscope, where she was Head and Director of the CNED (1988) and Director-General of the CNED (1988). She served as Inspector-General in the National Education and Research Administration for the South-Eastern France Group – the regional education authorities of Lyons, Grenoble, Aix-Marseilles, Nice and Corsica (2001-2010). She has been awarded the titles of Knight of the Legion of Honour (2000), Officer of the National Order of Merit (2007) and Commander of the Order of Academic Palms (2005).\nMrs.Morin-Chartier is genuinely involved in ensuring patients’ safety at the European level. She actively supports the strengthening of national coordination on healthcare system and she proposed a joint Motion for a Resolution on HIV/AIDS: early diagnosis and early care (2008).\nHealth First Europe is delighted to welcome MEP Morin-Chartier as a Supporter and looks forward to our future collaboration.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1086163"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5824530720710754,"wiki_prob":0.41754692792892456,"text":"The renewable energy sector has seen strong and fairly consistent FDI since 2007, according to figures from greenfield investment monitor fDi Markets. It says in 2019, investment flows into the sector witnessed an all-time high, however, with renewable energy companies undertaking a total 516 projects abroad – 38% more than the previous year. This spree amounted to $92.1bn of spending, a new record for greenfield FDI in the market.\nThese figures are not unexpected. Investor appetite for green energy projects has never been higher and far outstrips supply, not least as many new geographies are opening up their markets, says Dario Traum, head of policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at BloombergNEF.\n“This is because clean energy projects typically offer at least some level of revenue certainty through power purchasing agreements or government support schemes. This makes most clean energy projects a low-risk asset with a yield that is close to, but still higher than, interest rates in OECD countries,” he adds.\nSolar flares\nThe lion’s share of crossborder investment in renewable energy in 2019 went to solar energy, accounting for a little over 50% of all projects, according to fDi Markets. It says foreign investment in the sub-sector has grown almost exponentially since 2004, since solar technology has moved extremely fast in recent decades. Meanwhile, wind energy – the second top destination for foreign investment in 2019 – has seen more stable and linear FDI over the years. Another clear trend relates to biomass and hydroelectric power, both of which have seen decreasing flows of foreign investment over the past two decades.\nIn terms of the leading destinations for FDI in renewables, 2019 saw some novel results. For the first time, Latin America was the world's second most attractive destination for foreign investment in renewables, behind Europe, both in terms of capital expenditure and number of projects, thereby disrupting what has been for many years a competition between Asia-Pacific and Europe, according to fDi Markets. Within Latin America, Brazil, Chile and Mexico stand out. All three are among the world’s top five destinations for foreign investment in renewables, in terms of project numbers since January 2018, alongside Spain and the US.\n“The increased focus on environmental, social and corporate governance-compliant investment of large investors, combined with corporate sustainability pledges and continued cost reduction for clean energy technologies, is supporting activity around the globe, in particular in the secondary market,” says Mr Traum. “From an FDI in emerging markets perspective, Latin America has led the way in this trend. Conducive policies in countries such as Mexico, Brazil or Chile created a large pipeline of projects with regulated revenues paid out in US dollars, backed by a government guarantee.”\nEmerging opportunities\nAs a result, renewable energy infrastructure assets represent a low-risk investment in emerging economies, compared with many other forms of exposure. For example, in 2018 Italy’s Enel Green Power sold 1.8 gigawatts of green energy facilities to Canadian pension fund CDPQ for $1.35bn.\n“Energy sector investors are looking to replicate these successes in more geographies, such as sub-Saharan Africa, where cheap solar energy and policy support are opening up new opportunities,” says Mr Traum.\nLike Latin America, Africa also saw unprecedented foreign investment in renewables in 2019, according to fDi Markets. The majority of foreign investment to the two regions, and the world for that matter, came from European companies.\nIs the party over?\nIt looks likely, however, that the coronavirus outbreak will halt the FDI boom in renewables, and the global transition to green energy more generally. Though the decline in business, consumer and industrial activity has created a short-term drop in greenhouse gas emissions, Covid-19 seems to bring bad news for the environment.\nWith much of the world under lockdown, many prospective or half-complete renewable energy projects face logistical and financial challenges, especially if they are foreign investments. BloombergNEF recently downgraded its forecast for the solar and battery markets in 2020, which is set to see the first fall in global solar power growth since the 1980s.\nSimilarly, Norway’s Rystad Energy recently suggested the global expansion of wind and solar power plants could be “wiped out” for at least a year, as construction time frames feel the impact of government restrictions on movement, and foreign exchange markets contract around the world.\nSome projects in the procurement phase will face a huge increase in capital costs, and therefore have to pause, as currencies take a hit from Covid-19. Those most impacted by all of this are emerging markets in Asia, Latin America, the Middle East and India, where the bulk of solar growth had been expected this year, according to Rystad Energy.\nCheap carbon\nThe coronavirus pandemic is also making renewable energy less competitive against fossil fuel alternatives, which are usually more expensive. In most economies that have implemented concerted lockdowns, electricity demand has declined by about 15%, largely as a result of factories and businesses halting operations, said Fatih Birol, executive director of the International Energy Association, in a recent blog post.\nWeaker demand has meant cheaper electricity, thereby pushing down the price of traditional energy sources. The EU Emissions Trading System shows that carbon prices have dropped from bout $30 per ton in mid-2019, to about $16 in March 2020. This puts fossil fuels on an increasingly level playing field with renewables, decreasing demand for the latter. The historic and ongoing drop in oil prices is exacerbating this situation.\nOn top of this, as billions of dollars from the world’s largest energy oil companies are wiped out by the oil collapse, even more of their spending will likely be directed towards the protection of existing oil and gas investments, rather than to renewables.\nSome analysts, however, are more concerned about the direction of government policies, since attention risks being diverted away from clean energy to more immediate concerns. In March, Mr Birol publicly urged governments around the world to invest in renewables as part of their coronavirus stimulus plans, thereby bringing “the twin benefits of stimulating economies and accelerating clean energy transitions”.\nFor example, with oil prices so low, governments have an opportunity to withdraw fossil-fuel subsidies – which account for $5000bn of spending a year, globally – and redirect them into green energy development. Whether countries and companies will consider the long-term health of the environment in their response to a short-term pandemic remains to be seen, however.\nThis article first appeared in the April-June edition of fDi Magazine. The full digital version of the magazine is available here.\nTraditional energy\nGreen switch shores up gas investment\nCDC and DPW join forces to boost African trade","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line859426"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7211149334907532,"wiki_prob":0.7211149334907532,"text":"MARCH/APRIL • 2018 •VOLUME 48 NO. 5\nSchool Leader, NJSBA’s quarterly magazine, focuses on trends and issues of interest to boards of education and their top administrators.\nSchool Leader Resources\nAbout School Leader\nThere is a vast difference in student achievement scores within and among school districts across America. The reasons for these differences are many — and…\nArts Ed Now for Every Student in Every School\nMarch marks “Arts in Our Schools Month,” the annual celebration and showcase for our students in dance, music, theatre and visual art. For New Jersey…\nSchool Nursing Moves into the Future\nSchool nursing in the United States was born in New York City. In the early 1900s, the practice of school health in the city consisted…\nPlant Seeds, Grow Learners\nThe idea of school gardening is not new. But as people are increasingly aware of the benefits of gardening and growing food, school gardens have…\nA Flu Primer\nThe flu, or influenza-like illness (ILI), has been reported in all regions of the state, and has taken the lives of at least two New…\nWellness Lessons\nAt Barack Obama Elementary School in Asbury Park, a group of students began one recent school day in the front office, where they stood at…\nPresident's Message: Not Again….\nOn the day of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, I felt sadness and rage and a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach.…\nExecutive Word: One of Our Most Critical Jobs as Educators\n“Every New Jersey student will have the tools to be successful in pursuit of their chosen life goals in a safe, healthy, caring environment.” NJSBA…\nELFNJ Spotlight: Investors Bank Believes Arts Education Matters\n“The award for outstanding achievement in performance…” Is this the Tony Awards? No. But one of the students accepting one of these awards may receive…\nNJSBA At Your Service: Is Your District Taking Advantage of NJSBA’s Policy Resources and Services?\nA school board’s policy manual has many functions. In a broad sense, it describes how the school board wants the district to function. The policy…\nLegally Speaking: Amicus Curious\nAn integral part of NJSBA’s advocacy on behalf of its members is its participation as amicus curiae, or “friend of the court,” before the federal…\nPolicy Update: Seeing Clearly through the Fog\nAs a parent, I can’t help but get angry when I see vaping shops popping up all over the place. Advertising flavors like “Gummi Bear,”…\nHead of the Class: The Transformation of Beverly City\nWalking the halls of the Beverly City School, you can sense the optimism of the teachers, staff, and students. It is obvious this is a…\nNew Jersey high school sports at a glance infographic.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line74344"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6793533563613892,"wiki_prob":0.32064664363861084,"text":"Danish Water Forum (DWF) Inaugurated its base in Gujarat\nGrundfos Pumps India Pvt Ltd\nAHMEDABAD, India, March 26, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --\nThe First-of-its-kind Initiative Partnered by Grundfos Pumps India Pvt Ltd\nThe Danish Water Forum (DWF) Operational Base was inaugurated in the campus of Gujarat Water Supply & Sewerage Board on 22nd March, 2013 to mark the celebration of \"World Water Day\". The operational base was inaugurated by Honorable Minister (Water Supply), Babubhai Bokhiriya in the presence of Mr. Freddy Svane, Ambassador of Denmark to India. This is significant as one of the major Scandinavian Water Organization has chosen Gujarat as its base for the first time in India.\nMinister Babubhai Bokhiriya appreciating the water grid network said, \"Government of Gujarat is committed to provide clean and potable drinking water to the entire state. The number of fluoride affected habitations has reduced from 4187 to just 40 during last few years due to establishment of Gujarat State Wide drinking water Grid network\".\nMr. Freddy Svane, Ambassador of Denmark to India said that Gujarat was chosen due to the successful creation of unparalleled State Wide Water Grid that is the biggest of its kind in the world and highlighted the water expertise, knowledge, competence and high standard of Danish Water Forum, making it a perfect organization to serve and strengthen the water distribution systems in Gujarat.\nMr. Ranganath, MD, Grundfos Pumps India Pvt ltd, an organization associated with this project feels that this initiative will encourage water technology companies to attempt new innovative approaches across all the water management sectors in Gujarat.\nThis initiative was in fulfillment of the MoU signed by Government of Gujarat in the recently concluded Vibrant Gujarat Global Investment Summit, in presence of Chief Minister of the state, Mr. Narendra Modi.\nAbout Danish Water Forum:\nThe Danish Water Forum is a research based network aiming at highlighting and promoting water expertise and knowledge and facilitating concerted actions, with an objective to strengthen the water sector, nationally and internationally by promotion of easy access to knowledge and competence on water handling and management, thereby strengthening the quality and competitiveness of the water sector. For more information, please visit http://www.danishwaterforum.dk/index.html.\nAbout Grundfos Pumps India Pvt ltd:\nGrundfos Pumps India Pvt. Ltd., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Grundfos Holdings was established on March 13, 1998. Grundfos India is responsible for sales of Grundfos products in India, Bangladesh, Bhutan and Maldives. Currently, Grundfos India has manpower of over 200 and operates with about 150 Distributors and Dealers with 13 offices across India. Grundfos India provides pumps and pumping solutions for various applications - heating and hot water service systems, cooling and air-conditioning systems, industrial applications, pressure boosting and liquid transfer, groundwater supply, domestic water supply, sewage and wastewater, dosing, chlorination systems, disinfection systems and pumps running on renewable energy. For more information, visit http://www.grundfos.in/\nPrimary Media Contact: Rohini A.V, rohini@prhub.com, 91-9986499342\nSecondary Media Contact: Meenakshi, meenakshi@prhub.com, 91-8050022664\nSOURCE Grundfos Pumps India Pvt Ltd","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line973299"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8052331805229187,"wiki_prob":0.8052331805229187,"text":"Cal Thomas: Chuck Schumer's hypocrisy\nSummary: The Schumer initiative is a power grab. The left, which now controls the Democratic Party, wants to federalize elections, removing from states their right to decide how they wish to conduct their election procedures. Democrats are framing this as a civil rights and \"fairness\" issue, but it is not difficult to see what their true goal is: the creation of an electoral system that will allow them a permanent majority at the federal level.\nCal Thomas Commentary\nBy Cal Thomas\nHypocrisy and lies from politicians are so rampant in Washington that hardly anyone pays them much attention anymore. Perhaps that is why our cynicism about so many things political deepens and distrust of our institutions is pervasive.\nA co-conspirator in all of this is Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), who has set the middle of the month as his target for changing the filibuster rule that requires 60 votes to pass most legislation. That Schumer has opposed what he now proposes is well-documented for anyone taking the time to do even minimal research, which most of the major media appears unwilling to do.\nIn 2005, Schumer claimed that eliminating the filibuster would turn the country \"into a banana republic, where if you don't get your way, you change the rules. Are we gonna let them (presumably he meant Republicans)? It will be doomsday for Democracy if we do.\" Well, then, has \"doomsday\" arrived and is Schumer its captain?\nIn 2017, Schumer said if you can't get 60 votes \"you shouldn't change the rules.\" Does anyone seriously think that if Democrats were the minority party, which they likely will be after the next election, that he would still favor elimination of the filibuster?\nAt the same time, during confirmation hearings for Neil Gorsuch to become an associate justice on the Supreme Court, Schumer said of then Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, \"He's bound and determined to change the rules and trample on Senate tradition\" to get a conservative nominee approved.\nAs the conservative Federalist Society correctly notes: \"Our system leaves the details of the election administration to individual states. Those details include the specifics of election day rules such as the time for opening and closing polling places, absentee ballot procedures (including emergency absentee balloting), early voting, registering to vote, and the regulation and prosecution of election irregularities and election crimes.\"\nSchumer reminds me of a quote from the late Groucho Marx: \"Those are my principles and if you don't like them, well I have others.\"\nThe Schumer initiative is a power grab. The left, which now controls the Democratic Party, wants to federalize elections, removing from states their right to decide how they wish to conduct their election procedures. Democrats are framing this as a civil rights and \"fairness\" issue, but it is not difficult to see what their true goal is: the creation of an electoral system that will allow them a permanent majority at the federal level.\nAlready Democrats have succeeded in a number of areas, including extended voting hours and ballot drop boxes. The bill backed by Schumer would eliminate the voter identification requirement and allow ballots that arrive after Election Day to be counted, among other changes. This can only deepen the public's distrust of election outcomes. If we think it's bad now with the large number of people who continue to believe, without evidence, that the 2020 election was \"stolen\" from Donald Trump, wait until this monster is passed. It will only divide us further if that's possible.\nFortunately, there are some Democrats, such as Senators Joe Manchin (WV) and Krysten Sinema (AZ) who have stated their support for continuing the 60-vote requirement. One hopes, as with their opposition to President Biden's massive social spending bill, that they will stick to their principles.\nA Wall Street Journal editorial got to the heart of Schumer's hypocrisy and his attempt to link the disingenuously labeled \"Voting Rights Act\" to last year's Capitol riot. The editorial concluded that \"is like comparing criminal justice progressives to those who attacked police and property at Black Lives Matter protests last year. His aim is not to protect democracy, but to blow up Senate rules for partisan gain.\"\nCal Thomas can be reached at cthomas@wctrib.com.\nIt is not simply an era of COVID-19 that is troubling, but the era of distrust of authority that it has brought, not only among the \"crazies\" who reject science but also among the rest of us, who can't figure out exactly what we are supposed to do when there is a faint pink line on an unreliable test.\nBy Susan Estrich\nFroma Harrop commentary: Not getting vaccinated can be child abuse\nSummary: The vaccinated majority is rapidly losing interest in the fate of the unvaccinated -- and that's putting it diplomatically. The latter may be irresponsible, ignorant, selfish, mentally unbalanced or any combination of the above. We just feel sorry for the innocents around them.\nBy FROMA HARROP\nFroma Harrop: Smart progressives should love Elon Musk\nSummary: It is Wall Street that rewarded Musk for accelerating the changeover to electric vehicles. (Tesla also has a thriving solar panel business.) If helping save the planet let Musk edge out Amazon's Jeff Bezos as the world's richest person, well, where's the problem?","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line170470"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6156362295150757,"wiki_prob":0.3843637704849243,"text":"Scots scientists make stem cell breakthrough\nBy admin January 18, 2013 Stem Cell Treatment\nCustom byline text:\nHelen Puttick Health Correspondent\nThe Edinburgh University team discovered the bacteria, which cause leprosy, convert cells in the nerve system so they become like stem cells.\nThese cells are known as the building blocks of life and are seen as the key to finding cures for a range of conditions from motor neurone disease to spinal cord injuries, which are currently irreversible.\nIt is hoped scientists will be able to use leprosy bacteria to grow stem cells, which have the ability to turn into any other type of cell needed by the body. These could then be transplanted into patients to repair damage.\nDr Rob Buckle, head of regenerative medicine at the Medical Research Council, has described the research as \"groundbreaking\".\nHe said: \"This discovery is important not just for our understanding and treatment of bacterial disease but for the rapidly progressing field of regenerative medicine.\n\"In future, this knowledge may help scientists to improve the safety and utility of lab-produced pluripotent stem cells and help drive the development of new regenerative therapies for a range of human diseases, which are currently impossible to treat.\"\nLonger-term he is hopeful the insight will lead to a new way of creating stem cell therapies. The cells can be harvested from embryos but this raises ethical issues and Mr Rambukkana said there was also a danger of embryonic stem cells developing into tumours. The leprosy cells do not carry this risk.\nMr Rambukkana said: \"This (research) is very intriguing as it is the first time we have seen that functional adult tissue cells can be reprogrammed into stem cells by natural bacterial infection, which also does not carry the risk of creating tumorous cells.\nVisit link:\nBacteria's hidden skill could pave way for stem cell treatments\nDrug targets hard-to-reach leukemia stem cells responsible for relapses","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line93572"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9501254558563232,"wiki_prob":0.9501254558563232,"text":"news, latest-news, Shoalhaven District Hospital, Nowra, South Nowra, State Government, redevelopment\nPlanning for the $434 million Shoalhaven District Hospital redevelopment continues but there is no actual time frame on when the work will start. Premier Gladys Berejiklian, South Coast MP Shelley Hancock and Kiama MP Gareth Ward announced the redevelopment in November last year but according to Health Infrastructure, the project is still in the planning stage. When asked about a time frame for work to start, Health Infrastructure would only say it will be in \"this term of government\". \"It is still in the planning stage and will start in this term of government,\" the spokesperson said. \"There will be clearer timeframes once the planning is further progressed. \"A clinical services plan is being developed to confirm the range of health care services the new hospital will provide and the size of the facility.\" But the government has already announced the redevelopment will include expanded elective surgery; more surgical, acute medical and aged care beds; expanded maternity services; more operating theatres; increased capacity in the Emergency Department; and expansion of outpatient and ambulatory care zones. Read more: \"Detailed analysis will be undertaken and site options developed to inform the optimal solution for the redevelopment to best service the needs of the broader community,\" the spokesperson said. \"Valuable community and stakeholder engagement will be undertaken during this period to ensure that the analysis is comprehensive. \"Planning such a large development takes a long time to ensure we have opportunities to comprehensively consult with staff and the community.\" But at this stage no concept drawings or design ideas are available. Strange as masterplan concepts for the site were released in June-July last year and showed possible layouts for the precinct. Meanwhile, parking at Shoalhaven Hospital is also set to be enhanced with a new $11.8 million multi car park project, including a new ground level car park, nearing completion. Earlier this year longtime Nowra resident Bill Hancock called on the government to scrap the upgrade plans and build a totally new facility on a greenfield site south of Nowra, closer to the city's major growth and older population areas. In response to South Coast MP Shelley Hancock's survey into the Future of Shoalhaven District Hospital Mr Hancock, who lives adjacent to the ever growing facility, produced a 20-page document proposing a greenfield site on the corner of the Princes Highway/Forest and BTU roads south of Nowra. Mr Hancock said his plan backs up research in the Emergency Medicine Journal that 80 per cent of population should live within a 20-minute drive or a 20 kilometre radius of a hospital. \"Research shows that mortality rates for people living less than 10km away from a hospital is decidedly lower than those between 10-20km and further than 20km,\" he said. \"A 20km radius around the current hospital does not take in the growing areas of Vincentia and the Bay and Basin and only parts of Huskisson. \"A relocation to South of Nowra would certainly achieve that goal.\" As for the cost, he says when you consider the proposed Shoalhaven Hospital upgrade is worth $434 million, add in the almost $12 million for the new multi-level car park, it wasn't far short of the estimated $500 million to build the new Tweed Hospital on a greenfield site.\n/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/TimAB2MTHanvQWPwhBc6mp/212cd714-b728-4197-a56e-3c609a794cf9.jpg/r0_62_2304_1364_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg\nNovember 28 2019 - 9:25AM\nNo start date for proposed $434m Shoalhaven Hospital redevelopment\nRobert Crawford\nPlanning is still underway for the $434 million upgrade of the Shoalhaven District Hospital.\nPlanning for the $434 million Shoalhaven District Hospital redevelopment continues but there is no actual time frame on when the work will start.\nPremier Gladys Berejiklian, South Coast MP Shelley Hancock and Kiama MP Gareth Ward announced the redevelopment in November last year but according to Health Infrastructure, the project is still in the planning stage.\nWhen asked about a time frame for work to start, Health Infrastructure would only say it will be in \"this term of government\".\n\"It is still in the planning stage and will start in this term of government,\" the spokesperson said.\n\"There will be clearer timeframes once the planning is further progressed.\n\"A clinical services plan is being developed to confirm the range of health care services the new hospital will provide and the size of the facility.\"\nBut the government has already announced the redevelopment will include expanded elective surgery; more surgical, acute medical and aged care beds; expanded maternity services; more operating theatres; increased capacity in the Emergency Department; and expansion of outpatient and ambulatory care zones.\nCops to show zero tolerance to arsonists\nPrinces Highway traffic chaos could have easily been averted\nHealth Infrastructure's explainer on how to build a hospital.\n\"Detailed analysis will be undertaken and site options developed to inform the optimal solution for the redevelopment to best service the needs of the broader community,\" the spokesperson said.\nAn artists impression of what Shoalhaven District Hospital might look like under the proposed master plan relaesed in June 2018.\nThe Shoalhaven District Hospital proposed master plan relaesed in June 2018.\n\"Valuable community and stakeholder engagement will be undertaken during this period to ensure that the analysis is comprehensive.\n\"Planning such a large development takes a long time to ensure we have opportunities to comprehensively consult with staff and the community.\"\nBut at this stage no concept drawings or design ideas are available.\nStrange as masterplan concepts for the site were released in June-July last year and showed possible layouts for the precinct.\nMeanwhile, parking at Shoalhaven Hospital is also set to be enhanced with a new $11.8 million multi car park project, including a new ground level car park, nearing completion.\nThe $11.8m multi-level car park at Shoalhaven Hospital is nearing completion.\nEarlier this year longtime Nowra resident Bill Hancock called on the government to scrap the upgrade plans and build a totally new facility on a greenfield site south of Nowra, closer to the city's major growth and older population areas.\nIn response to South Coast MP Shelley Hancock's survey into the Future of Shoalhaven District Hospital Mr Hancock, who lives adjacent to the ever growing facility, produced a 20-page document proposing a greenfield site on the corner of the Princes Highway/Forest and BTU roads south of Nowra.\nMr Hancock said his plan backs up research in the Emergency Medicine Journal that 80 per cent of population should live within a 20-minute drive or a 20 kilometre radius of a hospital.\n\"Research shows that mortality rates for people living less than 10km away from a hospital is decidedly lower than those between 10-20km and further than 20km,\" he said.\n\"A 20km radius around the current hospital does not take in the growing areas of Vincentia and the Bay and Basin and only parts of Huskisson.\n\"A relocation to South of Nowra would certainly achieve that goal.\"\nAs for the cost, he says when you consider the proposed Shoalhaven Hospital upgrade is worth $434 million, add in the almost $12 million for the new multi-level car park, it wasn't far short of the estimated $500 million to build the new Tweed Hospital on a greenfield site.\nDiscuss \"$434m Shoalhaven Hospital redevelopment still in early planning stages\"","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line917573"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.544842004776001,"wiki_prob":0.544842004776001,"text":"Los Lobos announces live shows in Big Sur, Santa Cruz\nUpdated: 4:22 PM PDT Apr 28, 2021\nJosh Copitch\nFILE - In this Sept. 16, 2015, file photo, the group Los Lobos, from left, David Hidalgo, Louie Perez, Steve Berlin, Conrad Lozano and Cesar Rosas arrive at the Americana Music Honors and Awards show in Nashville, Tenn. The band is being considered for induction next year in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. (AP Photo/Mark Zaleski, File)\nSOURCE: Mark Zaleski\nThe rock band Los Lobos will be performing three live shows on the Central Coast at the end of May. As the state continues to open back up, bands are starting to tour again with outdoor shows in California. Los Lobos, known for their cover of the song La Bamba, will play in Santa Cruz on May 27 and in Big Sur on May 29. The Santa Cruz show will be held on the pool deck at the Dream Inn and in Big Sur they will play outdoors at Loma Vista Gardens. To see more tour dates, click here.\nPACIFIC GROVE, Calif. —\nThe rock band Los Lobos will be performing three live shows on the Central Coast at the end of May.\nAs the state continues to open back up, bands are starting to tour again with outdoor shows in California.\nLos Lobos, known for their cover of the song La Bamba, will play in Santa Cruz on May 27 and in Big Sur on May 29.\nThe Santa Cruz show will be held on the pool deck at the Dream Inn and in Big Sur they will play outdoors at Loma Vista Gardens.\nTo see more tour dates, click here.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line590104"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7925216555595398,"wiki_prob":0.7925216555595398,"text":"Read Next 'SNL': Joe Biden Blames COVID Surge on Spider-Man in Cold Open\nSeptember 29, 2018 3:16PM ET\nHear the Chemical Brothers’ Searing New Dancefloor Odyssey ‘Free Yourself’\nEnglish duo shares first new music since 2016\nJon Blistein\nJon Blistein's Most Recent Stories\nSasami’s Heavy Metal for Soft Souls\nJack White Wanders Around a Purgatorial American Legion in ‘Love Is Selfish’ Video\nNicki Minaj No Longer Facing Harassment Lawsuit Filed by Husband’s Rape Accuser\nThe Chemical Brothers unveiled a searing new track, \"Free Yourself,\" marking their first new music in two years.\nRMV/REX/Shutterstock\nThe Chemical Brothers unveiled a breathless new dance track, “Free Yourself,” marking their first new song since 2016.\n“Free Yourself” is centered around a vocal refrain that’s chopped in various ways, but always conveys a clear message: “Free yourself, free me, dance.” The production supports the command, as the Chemical Brothers craft a euphoric, multi-faceted odyssey of blistering synths and deep grooves.\nThe Chemical Brothers started performing “Free Yourself” during festival appearances this summer, and the track marks their first piece of new music since their 2016 single, “C-h-e-m-i-c-a-l.” In June, the group shared a cover of Tim Buckley’s “I Never Asked to Be Your Mountain,” which featured regular collaborator Beth Orton.\nThe Chemical Brothers’ last album, Born In the Echoes, arrived in 2015. The record features collaborations with Beck, St. Vincent, Q-Tip, Cate Le Bon, Colin Stetson and more. Last year, the group shared a virtual reality video for their track with St. Vincent, “Under Neon Lights.”\nIn This Article: The Chemical Brothers","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1068363"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7296953201293945,"wiki_prob":0.27030467987060547,"text":"Wondermondo 🢖 World 🢖 Wonders of Africa 🢖 Wonders of Ethiopia\nWonders of Ethiopia\nThe unique Harenna Forest. / Roberto Marchegiani, Flickr / CC BY-NC-ND 2.0\nEthiopia is a very interesting country with rich cultural and natural heritage. The most amazing wonders of Ethiopia are:\nRock-cut churches. Christianity was established in Ethiopia in the 4th century and since then it has inspired a distinct cultural tradition. Monolithic churches, hewn in live rock and adorned with garish frescoes, form a part of this unique cultural tradition. By far the best known monolithic churches are located in Lalibela, but there many more rock-cut churches in the mountains of Ethiopia.\nAncient stelae and megalithic standing stones. True wonders of the world are stelae of Axum – these monolithic stone obelisks were up to 33 meters high and 520 tonnes heavy. Obelisks were erected in the first centuries AD, but the tradition of the erection of stones goes further in the past. There are thousands of standing stones in diverse locations of Ethiopia, including the southern jungle. The best known are Tiya Stelae – standing stones adorned with mysterious signs and figures and erected in unknown times by unknown people.\nMap with the described wonders of Ethiopia\nTop 25 wonders of Ethiopia\nDallol hot springs and geysers\nOne of the visually most outstanding places on Earth, the hot springs have a high salt concentration that has shaped terraces and other formations of very bright, unusual colors. Among the hot springs, there is also a salt geyser – possibly the only one in the world.\nErta Ale\nOne of the most active volcanos in the world, with a constant lava lake (sometimes two lakes) in the crater, known since 1906. None of the other known lava lakes in the world have such a long lifetime.\nBlue Nile Falls – Tis Abay\nEnormous waterfall, 37 – 45 m high, up to 400 m wide. Now part of the water is used by hydropower plant.\nSof Omar Caves\nOromiya\nThe longest known cave in Ethiopia, 15.1 km long. A sacred site. The cave can be walked through.\nJinbar Falls\nJin Bahir stream falls into a giant, 800 m deep abyss in Simien Mountains. Falls are starting from deep canyon – thus their height is less than the depth of abyss but nevertheless – more than 500 m.\nLake Afrera\nUnusual, slightly acidic, hypersaline lake 102 m below the sea level. Two endemic species of fish live in the lake. Parts of the lake are covered with a salt layer, there are observed “attacks” of the lake when the salt layer is suddenly raised like a big wave.\nAllalobed geysers and hot springs\nGroup of beautiful hot springs and up to 6 m high (sometimes even 30 m), very active geyser.\nBiological wonders\nHarenna Forest\nUnique montane forest, little-explored but as far is it known – one of the most biodiverse areas in the region. Receives more rain than most areas around as it is located on an enormous southwest-facing slope. Contains natural groves of high-quality coffee.\nGara Muleta cloud forest\nMountain cloud forest island amidst deserts and semi-deserts. One of the most biodiverse places in Ethiopia with 361 species of plants. 45 plants are endemic to Ethiopia. Rich fauna with numerous species of monkeys and other animals. Especially species-rich is the southern side of the mountain.\nArchaeological wonders\nTiya Stelae\nSouthern Nations, Nationalities and People’s Region\nA row of 36 standing stones – megaliths. 32 stones are adorned with enigmatic symbols. Most likely here is located burial complex. Age of this ancient Ethiopian culture is not known. There are known some 160 more megalithic sites in Soddo region.\nAxum Northern Stelae Park\nHundreds of enormous steles. These monuments were made of single stones and were made around the 4th century AD. Stelae mark the burials of emperors and nobles. The tallest – Obelisk of Axum – is 24 m high. The tallest stele in the past was 33 m tall.\nTutu Fela megalithic stelae\nEnormous megalithic monument with more than 1200 upright stones, marking ancient burials. Many standing stones are formed in phallic forms and adorned with stone carvings.\nTomb of King Bazen\nPurported tomb of legendary emperor Zäbe’esi Bazén who reigned at the time of Christ. An amazing monolithic structure that has been hewn in solid rock. 16 steps lead down into a hall with four burial chambers.\nNefas Mawcha\nOne of the largest megalithic structures in the world – a dolmen that is 17 x 7 x 1.5 m large and weighs some 360 tons. It served as a roof to an underground complex of tombs.\nArchitecture wonders of Ethiopia\nLalibela churches\n11 monolithic Christian churches hewn underground from the cliff in the 13th century.\nDebre Damo\nThis monastery from the 6th century is accessible only by rope up a vertical cliff. Here is located the oldest Christian church in Ethiopia (around the 6th century AD), where as construction materials are used obelisks of Axum state.\nAbuna Yemata Guh\nThis small and beautiful rock-cut church was made in the 13th century. The church is adorned with beautiful frescoes. One should ascend over a 200 m abyss to enter the church.\nAdadi Maryam\nA complex of approximately 600 – 700 years old, rock-hewn churches. These are the southernmost ancient Christian rock-cut churches. If compared with churches in Lalibela, these churches are roughly made.\nFortress – town of the emperor of Ethiopia, built in the 17th century. Now it is in ruins but nevertheless looks very impressive. The architecture of the complex is a unique fusion of Nubian, Arab and Baroque styles. Includes Fasilides Castle and other buildings.\nAmba Geshen\nIsolated, flat-topped mountain surrounded by vertical, high man-made walls. This mountain was used as a prison in the past – here were exiled and left male heirs of Ethiopian Emperors.\nHarar Jugol\nA historical center of the once important commercial city, enclosed in a fortification wall. Harar Jugol contains a huge amount of historical architecture including 110 mosques. The city flourished in the 16th century.\nAxum Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion\nThe most important church of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, a site where Ethiopian emperors were crowned. The first church was built here around the 4th century AD, the current one – in 1665. According to Ethiopian tradition, this church holds the original Ark of the Covenant.\nDebre Tsion Church\nMountaintop church, built in the 13th century. Church is hewn in the rock, adorned with beautiful frescoes.\nTana Qirqos\nLegendary island – there are stories that Ark of the Covenant was hidden on this island for a while – from 400 BC to 400 AD. Then it was moved to Axum.\nUra Kidane Mehret\nThis beautiful church was constructed in the 16th century. Decorated with numerous murals from the 18th – 19th century.\nEthiopia (Bradt Travel Guide)\nThe bestselling guide to Ethiopia in recent years, this fully updated seventh edition of Philip Briggs’ acclaimed guide reveals an ancient country that continues to surpass all expectations: from the ancient Judaic cultures of the fertile highlands to the Animist people of the South Omo Valley, from the Afroalpine moorland of the Bale Mountains National Park to the thundering Blue Nile Falls.\nHeld at a Distance: A Rediscovery of Ethiopia\nThis powerful book gives readers a chance to experience Ethiopia through the personal experience of a writer who is both Ethiopian and American. It takes readers beyond headlines and stereotypes to a deeper understanding of the country. This is an absorbing account of the author’s return trip to Ethiopia as an adult, having left the country in exile with her family at age 11.\nTagged Areas","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line50194"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8657599687576294,"wiki_prob":0.8657599687576294,"text":"Parachinar: The Silent Massacre\nAli Jawad | 15.04.2009 11:34 | Repression | Terror War | World\nSurprisingly, at a time when the “civilized” world is on a so-called offensive against “terror”, coverage of the sorrow-filled plight of Parachinaris within western media has been periodical at best. The reasons for this are unclear. May be it is because Parachinar, fatefully, does not sit over barrels of oil; or perhaps our probing of the historical context behind these massacres will lead us to discover that Parachinar is yet another piece of anecdotal evidence of the much disregarded “blowback” stemming from the Soviet era.\nTucked away between soaring snowy-peaks and deep gorges in the fragile north-western region of Pakistan is the tiny town of Parachinar.\nZulfiqar Ali Bhutto, one of the more charismatic leaders in the history of this troubled nation, is said to have called it Pakistan’s own “Switzerland”. Humbled by towering snow-tipped mountains and covered by endless fruit orchards, Parachinar’s natural charm is breathtaking. Its narrative for the last two years however, has been anything but reflective of the serene beauty of its surroundings.\nStrangled by recurring sieges laid on the town, and a plight concealed from the consciences of the outside world by a silent media, the lives of Parachinaris have been a tale of untold suffering. Since early 2007, violence has gripped the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), which holds Parachinar, and the surrounding North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) leading to the deaths of hundreds. Even more have been left homeless and without means of sustenance with homes and local businesses regularly torched down just because their owners happen to fall under the wrong “sect”. Despite the periodical nature of sectarian violence in these regions, the unrelenting wave of the recent outbreak has been by far the bloodiest in recent memory.\nTensions began in April 2007 when a procession of Shias came under fire from fanatical Wahhabis who view Shia Muslims as heretics. What followed on from that initial attack however, has been a systematic attempt to wipe out Parachinar of its’ Shia presence. Shias represent a majority of the population in Parachinar constituting over fifty-percent (50%) of the population. They also have a considerable presence in neighbouring towns in the north-west of the country with a strong and historic Hazara presence further north of the FATA.\nDuring the rule of General Zia-ul-Haq, the Kurram Agency (which hosts the town of Parachinar) came under increased focus for its strategic location as it provided the shortest route from within Pakistan to the Afghan capital, Kabul. Jutting out into Afghanistan almost like an island peninsula, it was famously nicknamed the “Parrot’s Beak” by US forces during the Soviet-Afghan War and was regularly used as a launching-pad by American-backed \"jihadists\" to strike out at the Soviets. As a result of this strategic importance, towns in the FATA region were flooded by inflows of Wahhabist and Salafist anti-Soviet “jihadists” well-known for their hatred towards Shias.\nFollowing on from the early and comparably minimal killings unleashed in April, armed Wahhabi groups have since caved in on the local Shias of Parachinar from all sides. The Shia residents of Parachinar have repeatedly claimed that Wahhabi elements from Afghanistan have joined in the attacks against the town’s Shias, but these cries have been met by deaf ears in Islamabad’s Pakistani central government.\nAn all-out attack against the Shias of Parachinar has been underway for a long time now; even Sunni locals seen to be “friendly” towards Shias have not been spared in this maelstrom of killing. Gruesome images of beheaded and mutilated bodies, with arms and legs chopped off from corpses, have surfaced on the Internet since the outbreak of violence. Such showings of utter barbarity are not altogether unique. The collective massacres of Hazara Shias in next door Afghanistan - more notably in Mazari Sharif in 1998 where during a 48-hour period over 8,000 Hazaras were mercilessly slaughtered - evoke similar images of ruthlessness. By the end of the killing spree then, corpses littered the streets of the city after express orders were given out by the Taliban government for the dead to be left unburied.\nEerily reminiscent of massacres conducted against Afghan Shias in the recent past, Riaz Ali Toori, a villager from Parachinar, protested in a letter to a Pakistani daily:\n“Today Parachinar is burning: daily bodies of more than five beheaded persons reach Parachinar. The situation of Parachinar is getting worse day by day and so is the life of all people living there. It’s a matter of great sorrow and shock that Pakistan, in spite of bringing Fata into the mainstream of the country, has been pushed into fighting a continuous war and facing terror.” (Letters to the Editor, The Dawn, April 08 2008)\nIn July of 2008, the New York Times ran a piece highlighting the rise of “sectarian conflict” in Parachinar. By then, the town had already been subject to a siege that had spanned for months; food and medical supplies had been in severe shortage after the main Thal-Peshawar highway leading to the town was blocked off by armed groups. The New York Times article carried the story of Asif Hussain, a Sunni driver, in a relief convoy headed for Parachinar; the convoy was ambushed, and its drivers taken captive. Asif Hussain was let off after convincing his captors that he was Sunni, the other eight drivers were not as lucky. (Power Rising Taliban Besiege Pakistani Shiites, New York Times, July 26 2008)\nToday, the violence has spread out over a larger radius extending all the way through to the southern tips of the NWFP. Attacks on Shias in Hangu, Chakwal and as far south as Deira Ismail Khan have become a thing of the norm. Late in August of last year, a suicide bomber detonated himself inside the DI Khan hospital killing thirty-two Shia followers who had come to claim the remains of one of their leaders slain earlier in the day.\nAs recently as last week, another suicide bomber struck a Shia mosque in Chakwal instantly killing thirty and leaving hundreds more injured. The systematic targeting of followers of the Shia sect in various regions of Pakistan, more specifically in the north-west of the country, amounts to nothing other than a project of ethnic cleansing. According to a reputed scholar of the phenomenon of ethnic cleansing, Drazen Petrovic, he defines it as such:\n“ethnic cleansing is a well-defined policy of a particular group of persons to systematically eliminate another group from a given territory on the basis of religious, ethnic or national origin. Such a policy involves violence and is very often connected with military operations. It is to be achieved by all means, from discrimination to extermination …”\nThe above definition provides an almost perfect fit to the present situation on the ground in Parachinar. If international silence continues as it has over the last two years, the same story will have repeated across many towns in the FATA and NWFP.\nThat the Pakistani government holds principal blame for its failure to restrain the killings is indisputable and goes without mention. Wider global apathy to an ongoing project of ethnic cleansing however, is certainly not comprehensible and deserves a great deal of mention.\nParachinar deserves better. And the people of Parachinar certainly deserve better. The least we can do is speak out and urge our leaders to press the Pakistani government to bring an immediate end to these massacres. Then, and only then perhaps, can it be said that we have extended a hand to the forgotten victims of Parachinar.\nAli Jawad\ne-mail: jawad.ali313@hotmail.com\nHomepage: http://www.aimislam.com\nWho Benefits? — Little John\nEnd the Killing — Muhammad\nReply to Muhammad — Little John\nBetween Anarchism and Reality — Ali Jawad\nReply To Ali Jawad — Little John","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line49810"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.529572069644928,"wiki_prob":0.470427930355072,"text":"Tinie Tempah Home\nTinie Tempah On Why He's Supporting Tinchy Stryder On 'I'm A Celebrity'\n19 November 2014, 09:31 | Updated: 19 November 2014, 14:51\nTinie reckons it is Tinchy's time to \"really shine.\"\nTinie Tempah has revealed that he thinks it was a good move for Tinchy Stryder to go on 'I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out Of Here,' revealing that it is \"a chance from him to really shine.\"\nTalking to Kojo and Jade on Capital XTRA In The Morning, Tinie said that people often associate celebrities going into the jungle with meaning that their career is over, but it doesn't need to be that way for Tinchy.\n\"He's a respectable young man and I just feel like his music has been good but I don't think we've ever been able to see his personality\" Tinie said. \"As a young man who represents himself well it's nice for us to be able to watch him every day.\"\n\"For a lot of young people of his demographic, or who listen to his music, or are in to urban music, they can see somebody in that environment conducting themselves properly, which I know he will do.\"\nAs he stopped by the studio Tinie also spoke openly about backing 2014's Anti-Bullying Week, sharing a story or two from his school days.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line616443"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8306868076324463,"wiki_prob":0.8306868076324463,"text":"In Memory of TahiaEdward Said\nVol. 21 No. 21 · 28 October 1999\nIn Memory of Tahia\nThe first and only time I saw her dance on the stage was in 1950 at Badia’s Casino, in Giza, just below where the Sheraton stands today. A few days later, I saw her at a vegetable stand in Zamalek, as provocative and beautiful as she had been a few nights before, except this time she was wearing a smart lavender suit and high heels. She looked me straight in the eye but my 14-year-old flustered stare wilted under what seemed to me her brazen scrutiny, and I turned away. I told my older cousin’s wife Aida with shamefaced disappointment about my lacklustre performance with the great woman. ‘You should have winked at her,’ Aida said dismissively, as if such a thing were even imaginable. Tahia Carioca was the most stunning and long-lived of the Arab world’s Eastern dancers (belly-dancers, as they are called today). Her career lasted sixty years, from her first days as a dancer at Badia’s Opera Square Casino in the early Thirties, through the rule of King Farouk, of Gamal Abdel Nasser, Anwar al Sadat and Hosni Mubarak. Each of them, except, I think, Mubarak, imprisoned her at least once for various, mostly political offences. She also acted in hundreds of films and dozens of plays, took part in demonstrations, was a voluble, not to say aggressive member of the actors’ syndicate, and in her last years had become a pious (though outspoken) Muslim known to all her friends and admirers as ‘al-Hagga’. Aged 79, she died of a heart attack in a Cairo hospital on 20 September.\nAbout ten years ago I made a special pilgrimage to Cairo to meet and interview her, having in the meantime seen dozens of her films and one of her plays, the appallingly bad Yohya l’Wafd, written by her then husband and much younger co-star, Fayez Halawa. He was an opportunist, she later told me, who robbed her of all her money, pictures, films and memorabilia. Robed in the black gown and headscarf of a devout Muslim woman, she radiated die verve and wit that had informed all her performances as a dancer, actress, public personality. I wrote about her in the London Review of Books: her extraordinary dancing career, her power as a cultural symbol throughout the Arab world. Egypt was the capital of that world when it came to such matters as pleasure and the arts of desire and sociability, and Tahia was its representative.\nMost Eastern Arabs would, I believe, concede that the dour Syrians and Jordanians, the quickwitted Lebanese, the rough-hewn Gulf Arabs and the ever-so-serious Iraqis have never stood a chance beside the I entertainers, clowns, singers and dancers that Egypt and its people have provided for the past several centuries. Palestinians or Iraqis may level damaging political accusations at Egypt’s governments, but they never fail to acknowledge the country’s charm and the pleasures of its clipped, lilting dialect. In all that Tahia stood quite alone, and not altogether despite her flaws and often puzzling waywardness. A leftwing radical in some things, she was a time-server and opportunist in others; she made a late return to Islam but she also admitted to 14 husbands (there may have been a few more) and had a carefully cultivated reputation for debauchery.\nThe only other entertainer in the Arab world on her level was Um Kulthum, the great Koranic reciter and romantic singer, whose Thursday-evening broadcasts from a Cairo theatre were transmitted everywhere between Morocco and Oman. Having been fed a diet of her music at far too young an age, I found her songs insufferable. But for those who like and believe in such cultural typing, her long, languorous, repetitive lines, slow tempi, strangely dragging rhythms, ponderous monophony and eerily lachrymose or devotional lyrics stood for something quintessentially Arab and Muslim which I never quite came to terms with.\nTahia, by comparison, is barely known – except among belly-dancers, all of whom today seem to be non-Arab, and who regard her as their major inspiration. Belly-dancing is in many ways the opposite of ballet, its Western equivalent. Ballet is all about elevation and lightness; Eastern dancing, as Tahia practised it, shows the dancer planting herself more and more solidly in the earth, digging into it almost, scarcely moving, certainly never expressing anything like the nimble semblance of weightlessness that a great ballet dancer conveys. Tahia’s dancing suggested (vertically) a sequence of horizontal pleasures, but also paradoxically communicated an elusiveness and a kind of grace that cannot be pinned down on a flat surface. She performed within an Arab and Islamic setting but was constantly in tension with it. She belonged to the tradition of the alema, the learned woman who is also a courtesan, an extremely literate woman who is lithe and profligate with her physical charms. One never felt her to be part of an ensemble – as in kathak dancing, say – but always as a solitary, somewhat perilous figure moving to attract and at the same time repel men and women.\nAnother thing about her that strikes me now that she has died is how untidy and shiftless her life seems to have been. I suppose this is true of performers in general, who really exist before us for the brief time they are on stage and then disappear. Audio-recordings and film have given a kind of permanence to displays of great virtuosity, but mechanical reproduction can never have the edge and excitement of what is intended to happen only once. Glenn Gould spent the last 16 years of his life trying to disprove this, to the extent even of pretending that a listener equipped with a super-refined amplifier could ‘creatively’ participate in the recorded performance. The idea of play-back, on hi-fi or VCR, is supposed to compensate for the rarity and perishability of live artistic energy, and no doubt all of Tahia’s films are available on video. But what about her thousands of other performances, the ones that weren’t recorded – plays, nightclubs, ceremonies; what about her uncountable appearances at soirées, dinners, I all-night sessions with fellow actors and actresses?\nIt is probably too much to say of her that she was a subversive figure, but I think that her meandering, careless way with her relationships with men, her art, her profligacy as an actress who seemed to have nothing left of her scripts, her contracts (if she had any to begin with), her stills, costumes, and the rest, all suggest how far away she always was from anything that resembled domesticity, or ordinary commercial or bourgeois life, or even comfort of the kind so many of her peers seem to have cared about. A decade ago, when I spent the afternoon at her nondescript apartment, she seemed to me a great Nanaesque figure who had indulged and then dismissed her appetites, and could sit back, enjoy a coffee and smoke with a perfect stranger, reminiscing, making up stories, reciting set-pieces (‘when I danced, I felt I was entering the temple of art,’ she said with a great deal of mock-seriousness), relaxing but still evasive.\nTahia’s life and death – despite the proliferating videos, the retrospectives of her films, the memorial occasions when she will be eulogised – symbolise the enormous amount of life in that part of the world which goes unrecorded and unpreserved. None of the Arab countries I know has proper state archives, public record offices or official libraries any more than any of them has a decent control over their monuments or antiquities, the history of their cities or individual works of architecture – mosques, palaces, schools. What I have is a sense of a sprawling, teeming history off the page, out of sight and hearing, beyond reach, largely unrecoverable. Our history is mostly written by foreigners – visiting scholars, intelligence agents – while we rely on personal and disorganised collective memory, gossip almost, and the embrace of a family or knowable community to carry us forward in time. The great thing about Tahia was that her sensuality, or rather the flicker of it that I recall, was so unneurotic, so attuned to an audience whose gaze in all its raw or, in the case of dance connoisseurs, refined lust, was as transient and unthreatening as she was. Enjoyment for now; then, nothing.\nEdward Said, who died in 2003, first contributed to the LRB in 1981.\nThoughts on Late Style\nA Road Map to Where? The Future of the Middle East\nThe Academy of Lagado: The US Administration’s misguided war\nMore by Edward Said","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line184516"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7258957624435425,"wiki_prob":0.2741042375564575,"text":"Difference and Inequality\nStory: Class\nUnderstanding class\nColonial society – the rich\nColonial society – the working class\nA middle-class society? – material differences, 1890 to 1970\nA middle-class society? – class consciousness, 1890 to 1970\nA new society, 1980s onwards\nNew groupings\nThe Duke of York at Longbeach, 1927\nDuring their royal tour of 1927, the Duke and Duchess of York (later King George VI and the Queen Mother), stayed at Longbeach, the South Canterbury home of the Griggs. The homestead was originally built by John Grigg, who purchased land in 1864 and at one time owned 32,000 acres between the Ashburton and Hinds rivers. By 1927 much of the land had been sold, but the genteel way of life continued and pursuits such as horse riding and hunting were still followed. The duke and duchess's daughter, Queen Elizabeth II, also stayed at Longbeach during the royal tour of 1953–54.\nReference: 1/4-019094-G\n1890 maritime strike\nUrban occupational structure, 1926\nJock Phillips, 'Class - A middle-class society? – material differences, 1890 to 1970', Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, http://www.TeAra.govt.nz/en/photograph/29726/the-duke-of-york-at-longbeach-1927 (accessed 29 January 2022)\nStory by Jock Phillips, published 5 May 2011, reviewed & revised 22 May 2018","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1864110"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7164462208747864,"wiki_prob":0.7164462208747864,"text":"Home Art NYPD Proposes Stricter Regulations on Press Credentials\nNYPD Proposes Stricter Regulations on Press Credentials\nNYPD officers at a Black Lives Matter protest in New York in May 2020 (photo by the author for Hyperallergic)\nAt a time of increased scrutiny over the actions of police forces across the country, fueled by protests of historic proportions, the New York Police Department (NYPD) has proposed new regulations that would expand the authority of officers to seize the press credentials of journalists and bar them from crossing police lines to cover news stories.\nReleased on Wednesday last week, July 15, a proposed amendment to the existing rules on press credentials states that “a press credential is subject to a summary suspension or revocation if the credential holder abuses their privileges or engages in conduct that endangers public safety.”\nThe new regulations list a number of offenses that could strip journalists of police-issued press credentials in New York City: being arrested for a violation or a crime; “failure to comply with a lawful order of a police officer”; “intentional interference or attempt to interfere with the performance of a police officer’s official function”; “misusing or misrepresenting the press credential while not acting in a news gathering capacity”; unauthorized transfer of the credentials to another individual; and “other conduct that endangers public safety or interferes with legitimate law enforcement needs.”\nThe new set of rules empowers NYPD officers to seize the press credentials on the spot. Journalists who are denied their credentials would be able to appeal the decision and request a hearing in writing within 20 days from the date of the denial.\nThe new regulations were received with widespread criticism from news organizations and nonprofits that advocate for freedom of the press.\nIn a statement last week, PEN America called the new rules “an attack on free press.”\n“The New York Police Department’s new proposal is a blatant effort to weaken our free press,” PEN America’s director of US free expression programs, Nora Benavidez, said in a statement. She continued:\nIt would grant extreme latitude for officers to revoke reporters’ credentials if they determine a journalist has interfered with ‘legitimate law enforcement needs.’ This kind of unbridled police discretion begs the question: Whose interests are furthered by restricting the press’s ability to document law enforcement conduct? Certainly not the public.\nIn an opinion article, the New York Times’s editorial board wrote, “The timing of the changes, in the works for years, sends a message that police officials are trying to hinder an important check on their conduct.”\n“The new rules themselves are an affront to both good government and common sense,” the board added. “As proposed, they are too broad and clear the way for the department to act capriciously in retaliation against the press.”\nHowever, there are those who argue that the new regulations are an improvement on the current rules. In an opinion piece for the Gothamist, reporter and photojournalist JB Nicholas, who says he was denied NYPD press credentials in 2015, wrote that critics of the new rules “do not understand is that the current system is far worse, and that these hard-fought-over and carefully crafted rules will act as a meaningful check on the NYPD’s power to censor journalists.”\nAccording to Nicholas, under the current system, journalists who were denied their credentials are not told the reason for the denial and face an opaque repeal process.\n“[Journalists] are not told what they need to prove to win at the hearing and obtain the return of the credential,” he wrote. “The law fails to state who has the burden of proof and what the burden of proof is. Journalists are not permitted to see or challenge the evidence against them.”\nA public hearing on the proposed regulations will be held on August 18.\nPrevious articleNikita Gale Is Thinking About the Politics of Sound and Music\nNext articleUP Government Releases Guidelines For Home Isolation For Corona Patient\nFor Turkish Women Artists and Advocates, #challengeaccepted Is About More Than Just Selfies\nDavid Wojnarowicz’s Little-known “Stoned” Drawings\nA Beirut Gallery Owner Speaks About the Devastation of the Explosion\nDelhi mother son duo make Masks For The Poor for free named initiative Pick...\nRajasthan Political Crisis: Sonia gandhis quick action on Sachin Pilot issue – सचिन पायलट...\nMadhya Pradesh: Farmers also started online Satyagraha in Siwani – किसानों ने भी शुरू...\nBusiness idea millions can be earned from black pepper business know every aspect of...\nadmin - December 15, 2021","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line380736"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7215191721916199,"wiki_prob":0.2784808278083801,"text":"Via Rod Dreher, excerpts from a Jonathan Haidt column itself summarizing a study attempting to explain the \"microagression\" culture on many college campuses. From Haidt:\nI just read the most extraordinary paper by two sociologists — Bradley Campbell and Jason Manning — explaining why concerns about microaggressions have erupted on many American college campuses in just the past few years. In brief: We’re beginning a second transition of moral cultures. The first major transition happened in the 18th and 19th centuries when most Western societies moved away from cultures of honor (where people must earn honor and must therefore avenge insults on their own) to cultures of dignity in which people are assumed to have dignity and don’t need to earn it. They foreswear violence, turn to courts or administrative bodies to respond to major transgressions, and for minor transgressions they either ignore them or attempt to resolve them by social means. There’s no more dueling.\nCampbell and Manning describe how this culture of dignity is now giving way to a new culture of victimhood in which people are encouraged to respond to even the slightest unintentional offense, as in an honor culture. But they must not obtain redress on their own; they must appeal for help to powerful others or administrative bodies, to whom they must make the case that they have been victimized. It is the very presence of such administrative bodies, within a culture that is highly egalitarian and diverse (i.e., many college campuses) that gives rise to intense efforts to identify oneself as a fragile and aggrieved victim. ....\nFrom the study (as quoted by Haidt. I have removed references.):\nThis is the great tragedy: the culture of victimization rewards people for taking on a personal identity as one who is damaged, weak, and aggrieved. This is a recipe for failure — and constant litigation — after students graduate from college and attempt to enter the workforce. ....\nThe prevailing culture in the modern West is one whose moral code is nearly the exact opposite of that of an honor culture. Rather than honor, a status based primarily on public opinion, people are said to have dignity, a kind of inherent worth that cannot be alienated by others. Dignity exists independently of what others think, so a culture of dignity is one in which public reputation is less important. Insults might provoke offense, but they no longer have the same importance as a way of establishing or destroying a reputation for bravery. It is even commendable to have “thick skin” that allows one to shrug off slights and even serious insults, and in a dignity-based society parents might teach children some version of “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me” – an idea that would be alien in a culture of honor. People are to avoid insulting others, too, whether intentionally or not, and in general an ethic of self-restraint prevails. ....\nMicroaggression complaints have characteristics that put them at odds with both honor and dignity cultures. Honorable people are sensitive to insult, and so they would understand that microaggressions, even if unintentional, are severe offenses that demand a serious response. But honor cultures value unilateral aggression and disparage appeals for help. Public complaints that advertise or even exaggerate one’s own victimization and need for sympathy would be anathema to a person of honor – tantamount to showing that one had no honor at all.\nMembers of a dignity culture, on the other hand, would see no shame in appealing to third parties, but they would not approve of such appeals for minor and merely verbal offenses. Instead they would likely counsel either confronting the offender directly to discuss the issue, or better yet, ignoring the remarks altogether.\nA culture of victimhood is one characterized by concern with status and sensitivity to slight combined with a heavy reliance on third parties. People are intolerant of insults, even if unintentional, and react by bringing them to the attention of authorities or to the public at large. Domination is the main form of deviance, and victimization a way of attracting sympathy, so rather than emphasize either their strength or inner worth, the aggrieved emphasize their oppression and social marginalization. … Under such conditions complaint to third parties has supplanted both toleration and negotiation. People increasingly demand help from others, and advertise their oppression as evidence that they deserve respect and assistance. Thus we might call this moral culture a culture of victimhood because the moral status of the victim, at its nadir in honor cultures, has risen to new heights. .... [more]\nDonald Trump, Social Justice Warrior?\nMilton House\nArriving this morning in the mail: Milton (Images of America) by Doug Welch and the Milton Historical Society. I suspect anyone who has ever lived in Milton would enjoy it. I grew up there. The book begins with a brief history of the city and then there are five sections of captioned pictures: 1. Milton House, 2. Village of Milton, 3. Milton Junction, 4. Working Rails, and 5. Milton College.\nSo far I've only looked at the Milton House section. My parents took me to the pageant held when the museum first opened in 1955 and there are pictures of that pageant. In high school I volunteered Sundays as a guide in the museum and spent at least one summer, probably in 1962, as a paid guide (The wage was, I think, $1.25 an hour). On Sundays one guide didn't take a group through the entire tour - it was divided into sections with a different guide for each section. Prof \"Si\" Inglis always had the basement. The summer I worked there I recall going next door on hot days to Earl Young's Standard Station to buy pop out of the cooler in his front room. In my memory every day was hot that summer although cooler in the museum, especially in the basement and the tunnel. The regular staff at the museum included these folks. The caption is the one from the book.\nDuring the early years of its operation, the Milton House was a seasonal museum offering tours from May through September each year. It was not until the completions of the 2006 expansion that the museum could be opened year round. Pictured here at the opening of the 1960 tour season are museum curators Rev John and Emily Randolph.\nI believe \"FitzRandolph\" is correct, although \"Fitz Randolph\" may be right. (Note: I gather from a descendent that, for this generation, \"Randolph\" is correct, although both the previous and subsequent generations used \"FitzRandolph.\")\nI anticipate enjoying the remaining sections of the book just as much as this one.\nI believe the book can be purchased from the Milton Historical Society. An Amazon link for the book is here.\nLabels: Books, SDB History\n\"On the third day he rose\"\nIn \"The Day of Jesus' Resurrection According to Matthew,\" Paul Manuel takes up the question of the chronology of Easter. His conclusions:\n.... Buried on Friday, before the Sabbath had begun, when did Jesus rise from the dead? The most common belief is that he rose early Sunday morning, but that does not seem to agree with his prediction of spending \"three days and three nights\" (72 hours?) in the grave. An examination of the different statements about the time of the resurrection, though, reveals considerable variation, forcing the reader to view them either as a host of contradictions or as simple approximations referring to parts of a three-day period. ....\nHow are we to understand such disparate statements about the time of Jesus' resurrection? These are all approximate references and, therefore, not contradictory. Their purpose is to direct attention to the third day, which is when Jesus rose from the dead. If there is any uncertainty which day of the week that momentous event occurred, Luke resolves the matter, for he identifies \"the third day\" with \"the first day of the week\" (i.e., Sunday). ....\nThe chronological markers in the gospel accounts enable modern readers to establish the day of Jesus' crucifixion and the day of his resurrection. According to those markers, Jesus died on Friday, the preparation day for the weekly Sabbath, and he rose on the third day, which was Sunday, the first day of the week. [more]\nThe argument, with end notes, is here.\nReposted.\nThe sun that warms and lights us.\nAlleluia! (Martin Luther, 1524)\nA Holy Saturday kind of faith\nFrom \"Sitting, Waiting, and Hoping in the Tomb of Jesus: How the anguished uncertainty of Holy Saturday gives shape to our faith,\" by A.J. Swoboda:\n.... Martin Luther said himself that Saturday was the day that God himself lay cold in the grave. Friday was death, Sunday was hope, but Saturday was that seemingly ignored middle day between them when God occupied a dirty grave in a little garden outside Jerusalem. Saturday is about waiting, about uncertainty, about not knowing what’ll happen. ....\nSo much of Christian faith is Saturday faith. ....\nA medieval theologian, Anselm, once described the kind of faith that comes with Saturday—fides quaerens intellectum: “faith seeking understanding.” By that, he meant that faith isn’t something that arises after moments of understanding. Rather, faith is something that you cling to when understanding and reason lay dead. We don’t believe once we understand it—we believe in order to understand it. Saturday’s like that: offering a day of waiting, a day of ambiguity, a day when God is sovereign even if our ideas and theologies and expectations about him are not. It is the day that our ignorance is our witness and our proclamation. Truth is, our intellect will always be one step behind in our love of God. We don’t love God once we understand him; we love God in order to understand him. ....\nAt times, we are all like the two disciples on their way to Emmaus who were really close to Jesus but didn’t always know it. In Luke 24, two disciples walked away from Jerusalem, where they’d just seen their Lord and Master die on the cross. Leaving, dejected, upset, hopeless, and broken, to find the next stage in their lives and careers. Unbeknownst to them, Jesus had been resurrected and was actually walking alongside them on their way to Emmaus. The hope of Sunday hadn’t dawned on them yet. The Gospels tell us that, on their way to Emmaus, the disciples were “downcast.”\nThat experience is the kind of experience Saturday is all about. .... [more]\nA. J. Swoboda is a pastor in Portland, Oregon. This is from his A Glorious Dark: Finding Hope in the Tension between Belief and Experience, excerpted in Christianity Today.\nSitting, Waiting, and Hoping in the Tomb of Jesus | Christianity Today\n\"In Thee is all my trust\"\nOh Lord in Thee is all my trust.\nGive ear unto my woeful cries.\nRefuse me not, that am unjust,\nBut bowing down Thy heav'nly eyes,\nBehold how I do still lament\nMy sins wherein I do offend.\nO Lord, for them shall I be shent,\nSith Thee to please I do intend? Haste Thee, O Lord, haste Thee, I say,\nTo pour on me Thy gifts of grace\nThat when this life must flit away\nIn Heav'n with Thee I may have place\nWhere Thou dost reign eternally\nWith God which once did down Thee send,\nWhere angels sing continually.\nTo Thee be praise, world without end.\nNo, no, not so! Thy will is bent\nTo deal with sinners in Thine ire:\nBut when in heart they shall repent\nThou grant'st with speed their just desire.\nTo Thee therefore still shall I cry,\nTo wash away my sinful crime.\nThy blood, O Lord, is not yet dry,\nBut that it may help me in time.\nThomas Tallis, \"Oh Lord In Thee Is All My Trust,\" 1565\nTallis: Oh Lord In Thee Is All My Trust - YouTube\nLabels: Grace and Salvation, Musical Performance\nHere is an excerpt from that article, \"On the Physical Death of Jesus Christ\" by William D. Edwards, Wesley J. Gabel, and Floyd E. Hosmer. The original article is substantially longer and detailed, with diagrams and ample citation. Our Lord's manner of execution was like that suffered by a great many others in the Roman world:\n…. It was customary for the condemned man to carry his own cross from the flogging post to the site of crucifixion outside the city walls. He was usually naked, unless this was prohibited by local customs. Since the weight of the entire cross was probably well over 300 lb (136 kg), only the crossbar was carried. The patibulum, weighing 75 to 125 lb. (34 to 57 kg), was placed across the nape of the victim’s neck and balanced along both shoulders. Usually, the outstretched arms then were tied to the crossbar. The processional to the site of crucifixion was led by a complete Roman military guard, headed by a centurion. One of the soldiers carried a sign (titulus) on which the condemned man’s name and crime were displayed. Later, the titulus would be attached to the top of the cross. The Roman guard would not leave the victim until they were sure of his death. Outside the city walls was permanently located the heavy upright wooden stipes, on which the patibulum would be secured. In the case of the Tau cross, this was accomplished by means of a mortise and tenon joint, with or without reinforcement by ropes. To prolong the crucifixion process, a horizontal wooden block or plank, serving as a crude seat (sedile or sedulum), often was attached midway down the stipes. Only very rarely, and probably later than the time of Christ, was an additional block (suppedaneum) employed for transfixion of the feet.\nNext, the feet were fixed to the cross, either by nails or ropes. Ossuary findings and the Shroud of Turin suggest that nailing was the preferred Roman practice. Although the feet could be fixed to the sides of the stipes or to a wooden footrest (suppedaneum), they usually were nailed directly to the front of the stipes. To accomplish this, flexion of the knees may have been quite prominent, and the bent legs may have been rotated laterally.\nWhen the nailing was completed, the titulus was attached to the cross, by nails or cords, just above the victim’s head. The soldiers and the civilian crowd often taunted and jeered the condemned man, and the soldiers customarily divided up his clothes among themselves. The length of survival generally ranged from three or four hours to three or four days and appears to have been inversely related to the severity of the scourging. However, even if the scourging had been relatively mild, the Roman soldiers could hasten death by breaking the legs below the knees (crurifragium or skelokopia). …. [the article pdf]\nIt was now about the sixth hour, and there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour, while the sun’s light failed. And the curtain of the temple was torn in two. Then Jesus, calling out with a loud voice, said, “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit!” And having said this he breathed his last. [Luke 23:44-46, ESV]\nDorothy L. Sayers on at least part of the meaning:\nFor whatever reason God chose to make man as he is — limited and suffering and subject to sorrows and death — he had the honesty and courage to take his own medicine. Whatever game he is playing with his creation, he has kept his own rules and played fair. He can exact nothing from man that he has not exacted from himself. He has himself gone through the whole human experience, from the trivial irritations of family life and the cramping restrictions of hard work and lack of money to the worst horrors of pain and humiliation, defeat, despair, and death. When he was a man, he played the man. He was born in poverty and died in disgrace and thought it well worthwhile. (The Man Born to be King, Dorothy L. Sayers)\nAnd suffered far, far, move than we do or ever will.\n(I have posted this material previously on Good Fridays.)\nThe Inklings: Good Friday, Between Two Worlds: On the Physical Death of Jesus\nLabels: Dorothy L. Sayers, Lent and Easter\n\"A new commandment I give to you...\"\nVarious Christian denominations place greater or lesser emphasis on what is known as the Christian Year. I grew up in one that emphasized only Christmas and Easter, and observed Lent only because the local ministers' council cooperated in a Lenten series of services. Kevin DeYoung helpfully defines Maundy Thursday for people like me:\n.... If you've never heard the term, it's not Monday-Thursday (which always confused me as a kid), but Maundy Thursday, as in Mandatum Thursday. Mandatum is the Latin word for \"command\" or \"mandate\", and the day is called Maundy Thursday because on the night before his death Jesus gave his disciples a new command. \"A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another: just as I have loved you, you also are to love one another\" (John 13:34).\nAt first it seems strange that Christ would call this a new command. After all, the Old Testament instructed God's people to love their neighbors and Christ himself summarized the law as love for God and love for others. So what's new about love? What makes the command new is that because of Jesus' passion there is a new standard, a new examplar of love.\nThere was never any love like the dying love of Jesus. It is tender and sweet (John 13:33). It serves (John 13:2-17). It loves even unto death (John 13:1). Jesus had nothing to gain from us by loving us. There was nothing in us to draw us to him. But he loved us still, while we were yet sinners. .... [more]\nDeYoung, Restless, and Reformed: Maundy Thursday\nLabels: Christian Year, Kevin DeYoung, Lent and Easter\n“Intransigent historical claims”\nFrom \"Easter is not a Question Mark\" by George Weigel at First Things\n.... The grittiness of Lent, and the “intransigent historical claims” without which Easter makes no sense at all, should remind us that Christianity does not rest on myths or “narratives,” but on radically changed human lives whose effect on their times are historical fact. Within two and a half centuries, what began as a ragtag gang of nobodies from the civilizational outback had so transformed the Mediterranean world that the most powerful man in that world, the Roman emperor Constantine, joined the winning side. How did that happen?\nIt didn’t happen because of better myth-making. It happened because those first Christians met a young rabbi who promised that, should they believe in him, each of them would become “ a spring of water welling up to eternal life” [John 4:14]. Then came what seemed complete catastrophe: his crucifixion. But they met that teacher again as the Risen Lord Jesus Christ, and were infused by his Spirit. And after that, they didn’t sit around in the “presence of the question mark; rather, they told the truth of what they had “seen and heard” [cf. 1 John 1:1].\nAnd thereby changed the world.\nMore about those \"intransigent historical claims\": \"Is There a Witness to the Resurrection? Yes!\" by William Lane Craig and Sean McDowell.\nIf the bones of Jesus were found, then Christianity would be false. Paul said, “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is worthless; you are still in your sins.” (1 Corinthians 15:17, NASB) Some religions may make untestable claims about reality, but Christianity makes claims about real events in history that can be tested. Let’s put it to the test! .... [more]\nEaster is not a Question Mark | George Weigel | First Things, \"Is There a Witness to the Resurrection? Yes!\"\n\"Almost everything of Lewis is edifying and a pleasure to read.\"\nFrom an interview with George Marsden about his new book C.S. Lewis’s “Mere Christianity”: A Biography:\nOne of the most remarkable aspects of the life of this book is that, even though it was not originally designed to be a single book, it had maintained its vitality far better than most other books of its time. Remarkably, it has sold quite a bit better in the twenty-first century than it did in Lewis’s day, when it already sold well. It has sold over three and a half million copies in English alone. So one major question I try to answer in my book is: what accounts for its unusual lasting vitality? It helps that Lewis always looked for timeless truths, as the idea of “Mere Christianity” (or the beliefs that almost all Christians have shared through the ages) illustrates. So the book is less dated than most books. Also Lewis was a brilliant communicator. He listened to how ordinary people talked and then translated his views into language they could understand. And even though he uses lots of arguments he always puts these in imaginative contexts that make them come alive. So he uses many more vivid analogies and metaphors than do most non-fiction writers. And he acts as a friendly companion and guide on a journey that he himself has taken from unbelief to belief. At the same time he does not draw attention to himself but leads the reader to see the challenging beauty of the core Christian message. .... [more]\nAn Interview with George Marsden on His New Biography of C.S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity | TGC\nLabels: Apologetics, Books, C.S. Lewis, Church History, Inklings\nWhen I can read my title clear to mansions in the skies,\nI bid farewell to every fear, and wipe my weeping eyes.\nAnd wipe my weeping eyes, and wipe my weeping eyes\nShould earth against my soul engage, and hellish darts be hurled,\nThen I can smile at Satan’s rage, and face a frowning world.\nAnd face a frowning world, and face a frowning world,\nLabels: Hymns, Ralph Vaughan Williams, Worship\nThis day in 1751 was the birthday of James Madison (1751-1836), President, political philosopher, statesman, friend of liberty, \"Father of the Constitution.\"\nWherever the real power in a Government lies, there is the danger of oppression. In our Governments, the real power lies in the majority of the Community, and the invasion of private rights is chiefly to be apprehended, not from the acts of Government contrary to the sense of its constituents, but from acts in which the Government is the mere instrument of the major number of the constituents. – Letter to Thomas Jefferson (1788)\nWe hold it for a fundamental and undeniable truth, “that Religion or the duty which we owe to our Creator and the Manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence.” The Religion then of every man must be left to the conviction and conscience of every man; and it is the right of every man to exercise it as these may dictate. This right is in its nature an unalienable right. It is unalienable; because the opinions of men, depending only on the evidence contemplated by their own minds, cannot follow the dictates of other men: It is unalienable also; because what is here a right towards men, is a duty towards the Creator. It is the duty of every man to render to the Creator such homage, and such only, as he believes to be acceptable to him. This duty is precedent both in order of time and degree of obligation, to the claims of Civil Society. Before any man can be considered as a member of Civil Society, he must be considered as a subject of the Governor of the Universe.... – Memorial and Remonstrance Against Religious Assessments (1785)\nIf men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary. In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself. – Federalist Paper No. 51 (1788)\nI live in a city named after Madison and, for twenty-two years, taught at James Madison Memorial High School.\nLabels: Political Thought, Religion and Politics, Religious Liberty\nMoral failure\nYesterday I was surprised to find the current Forbes magazine in my mailbox: the \"30th Annual Almanac of Wealth.\" I have never subscribed to the magazine, am not wealthy, nor am I unusually interested in those who are, so its appearance was something of a mystery. Perhaps it was a premium unnoticed by me when I bought something online. Nevertheless I almost immediately found something interesting in a Steve Forbes column: a book review titled \"Why They Stuck With Hitler.\" The book is The German War: A Nation Under Arms, 1939–-1945 . Forbes writes that the book \"brilliantly and with impressive nuance and texture deals with the astounding questions of how the most educated and cultured nation on earth could unloose such a murderous, barbarous and genocidal war and why most Germans—Nazis and non-Nazis alike—closed ranks around Hitler, even when it became clear the war was going to end disastrously.\" And \"This is an extremely interesting and disheartening tale of a civilized people's descent into barbarism.\" From the review, the German Church:\n.... A prominent Protestant, Bishop Wurm of Wurttemberg, faintheartedly protested the Nazi regime's policy of murdering \"deformed\" infants and the mentally ill by administering poisonous drugs or starving them to death, while Catholic Bishop Galen of Münster initially courageously and publicly condemned the practice. The death toll from this alone was well over 200,000. Yet Galen vigorously supported the invasion of the \"Jewish Bolshevik\" Soviet Union and refused any aid to Jews, even to those who had years before converted to Christianity, while Wurm privately wrote letters to the Reich in support of those converts. As this book makes clear, both the Protestant and the Catholic churches were guilty of moral failure.\nA number of German soldiers and officials were uneasy or outright horrified by what was happening, but most did nothing about it. ....\nMost German civilians were aware of the mass killing of the Jews and other atrocities through letters and photos sent to them by husbands, sons, brothers and friends, and from conversations when these men came home on leave.\nGoebbels was a master at making the home front complicit in what was happening, first by noting Hitler's January 1939 \"prophecy\" that if the Jews launched another European war they would perish, and then letting events speak for themselves—the deportation of German Jews and the auctioning off of their property, along with what people learned from news sent by their relatives fighting on the Eastern Front. ....\nLabels: Books, Religion and Politics\n\"A tangible sense of dread\"\nTonight at 7:00 (CDT) Lifetime will have a new BBC TV dramatization of Agatha Christie's most successful book — \"the best selling crime novel of all time\" — originally published here as Ten Little Indians (1939) and soon thereafter as And Then There Were None.\nI have a DVD of a 1945 film version of the story that I enjoy but this one may be even better. Both Channel Guide's list of the cast (including Aidan Turner, Toby Stephens, Charles Dance, Sam Neill, and Miranda Richardson), and a review at The Weekly Standard, \"Isle of Retribution,\" persuade me to watch. From the review:\n.... With twists and turns and double bluffs, it's a completely engrossing mystery. Ten people are invited to a party on an island. Ferried across the storm-tossed waves, they climb one by one to the mansion on the hill, establishing character by brief snippets of conversation. The bluff general. The effete dandy. The religious spinster. Fast-forward to dinner, and it becomes apparent that no one knows their host personally. Odd. But no matter, at least the food's good.\nWhen the first guest drops dead, there is a tendency to think they really should have seen this coming: After all, a tangible sense of dread permeates the island. The shadowed halls, the tempestuous sea and stormy sky, the ghosts of guilt haunting the victims—it all builds to a nerve-wracking, claustrophobic atmosphere. After the second death, the characters start to piece it together. ....\nAgatha Christie has an unfair reputation as a cozy novelist. In fact, she was very realistic about human frailty. Her stories bring violence to the center of ordinary life and show even the most respectable of people committing unspeakable crimes. Many adaptations of And Then There Were None attempt to soften its essential tragedy, offering up a happy, crowd-pleasing ending. This one, by focusing on the cost of death, on the weight of taking human life, may be more true to Dame Agatha's spirit than any campy Miss Marple flick and yet more moral than the brutal pulp fiction served up daily on our screens.\nIsle of Retribution | The Weekly Standard Isle of Retribution | The Weekly Standard\n\"The cloud clear'd away\"\nFrom a newly discovered letter from William Wilberforce to a 14 year old girl:\n.... A Traveller on an open Common in such a Storm of Hail & Rain as we had this Morning would find his spirits cheered by seeing on the distant horizon, the Cloud clear'd away and the Sky looking sunny and cheerful. So you, I doubt not, can view the Sunshine gilding Your future prospect. And yours my dear Girl is a Sun which will never go down, but will get brighter & brighter with a Warmth & brilliance, of which now you can have no conception. I dare say you know & like Cowper. He, you know, speaks of \"a Vault unsullied with a Cloud.\" Now therefore accustom yourself to think \"the Scene around me is gloomy and darksome, but a friendly and, that a divine Hand of a kind and loving Saviour, is leading me on the Way He sees best for me, & in His own good time He will bring me into the Light.\nAs I know He is Truth itself, he cannot deceive me & He has promised to be a Shepherd full of kindness as well as Care to the Lambs of His flock. He would not let me suffer pain if He were not persuaded it would be for my benefit and I will therefore receive all and submit to it all He orders for me, as that which is sure to be more than made up to me. So that if more I have to bear now, the more I shall have to rejoice hereafter. ....\nThe post at Quaerentia explains how the letter was found and explains why Wilberforce would emphasize such matters when writing to a young girl.\nQuaerentia :: A Sky Unsullied by Clouds: William Wilberforce gives hope to a 14 year old girl in pain\nLabels: Health and Wealth, William Cowper\n\"The flattery of knaves\"\nVia Power Line, a very good — and always relevant — passage from Burke:\nMen are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put moral chains upon their own appetites, — in proportion as their love of justice is above their rapacity, — in proportion as their soundness and sobriety of understanding is above their vanity and presumption, — in proportion as they are more disposed to listen to the counsels of the wise and good, in preference to the flattery of knaves. Society cannot exist, unless a controlling power upon will and appetite be placed somewhere; and the less of it there is within, the more there must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things, that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge their fetters. (Edmund Burke, Letter to a Member of the National Assembly, May 1791)\nAnd another quotation from the same source:\nA word from Edmund Burke | Power Line, Those who have been once intoxicated with power, and have derived any kind of emolument from it, even though but for...\nLabels: Edmund Burke, Political Thought, Religion and Politics\nAbraham Lincoln was inaugurated on March 4th, 1861:\n.... In your hand, my fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail you. You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You have no oath in Heaven to destroy the government, while I shall have the most solemn one to preserve, protect, and defend it… We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave, to every living heart and hearthstone, all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better angels of our nature.\nLabels: Lincoln\n\"Not things of the same kind\"\nIn the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. John 1:1-3 “And [we believe] in one Lord Jesus Christ,\nthe only-begotten Son of God, begotten of His Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father….” Nicene Creed\nONE OF THE CREEDS says that Christ is the Son of God \"begotten, not created\"; and it adds \"begotten by his Father before all worlds.\" Will you please get it quite clear that this has nothing to do with the fact that when Christ was born on earth as a man, that man was the son of a virgin? We are not now thinking about the Virgin Birth. We are thinking about something that happened before nature was created at all, before time began. \"Before all worlds\" Christ is begotten, not created. What does it mean?\nWe don't use the words begetting or begotten much in modern English, but everyone still knows what they mean. To beget is to become the father of: to create is to make. And the difference is this. When you beget, you beget something of the same kind as yourself. A man begets human babies, a beaver begets little beavers, and a bird begets eggs which turn into little birds. But when you make, you make something of a different kind from yourself. A bird makes a nest, a beaver builds a dam, a man makes a wireless set—or he may make something more like himself than a wireless set: say, a statue. If he is a clever enough carver, he may make a statue which is very like a man indeed. But, of course, it is not a real man; it only looks like one. It cannot breathe or think. It is not alive.\nNow that is the first thing to get clear. What God begets is God; just as what man begets is man. What God creates is not God; just as what man makes is not man. That is why men are not Sons of God in the sense that Christ is... They may be like God in certain ways, but they are not things of the same kind. ....\nC.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity\nLabels: Belief, C.S. Lewis, Inklings, Theology\n“Push back against the age as hard as it pushes against you. What people don’t realize is how much religion costs. They think faith is a big electric blanket, when of course it is the cross.”\nFlannery O’Connor, The Habit of Being: The Letters of Flannery O’Connor\nQuotes by Flannery O’Connor | Quotes\nE.C. Bentley\nOnce upon a time I collected early editions of detective novels that historians of the genre considered important. I bought E.C. Bentley's Trent's Last Case (1913) from a British bookseller sometime in the '70s. Bentley was perhaps G.K. Chesterton's closest friend and succeeded GKC as President of the Detection Club even though this was the only detective novel he had written. Bentley later wrote a prequel and a number of short stories featuring Trent. Today the Facebook G.K. Chesterton site linked to \"Trent’s Last Case by E. C. Bentley: First Among Mysteries?\" from which:\nMy copy\n.... But that one mystery, that single contribution to the genre of detective fiction, was hailed by Chesterton, Christie, and Sayers as, perhaps, the single best mystery story ever written. High praise indeed. Though Bentley’s first mystery, it featured the last mystery of his detective. And though President Bentley swore that he would defend the principle of detectives detecting crimes using the wits bestowed upon them by their creators, his own Trent’s Last Case could be seen as breaking that rule. For throughout the twists and turns of its scintillating plot, the impotence, instead of the omnipotence, of human reason is revealed. ....\nTrent’s Last Case is not a mystery story that exposes the mystery maker as much as it exposes the mystery story itself. The book is a romping and riveting and rhetorical parody leading to the Golden Age of detective literature. Trent is not the keen amateur who sidesteps and blindsides the dunderheaded professionals. He pursues criminals not out of a brooding sense of justice, but because he finds it an engaging lark. Trent is a man that has a brain in his head, but he also has a heart as big as his head. By turning the world of detective fiction upside down with Trent’s Last Case, E.C. Bentley was one of the first mystery authors to place an innovative importance on duping readers through a series of false conclusions and multiple solutions, rather than bedazzling them with gymnastics of reason that hit the truth with unerring precision. [more]\nBentley may have been been just as well known for the Clerihew:\nA clerihew is a whimsical, four-line biographical poem invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley. The first line is the name of the poem's subject, usually a famous person put in an absurd light.\nThe art of Biography\nIs different from Geography.\nGeography is about maps,\nBut Biography is about chaps.\nSir Humphrey Davy\nAbominated gravy.\nHe lived in the odium\nOf having discovered sodium. more\nTrent’s Last Case by E. C. Bentley: First Among Mysteries? - Crisis Magazine, Edmund Clerihew Bentley Poems - Famous poet at allpoetry\nLabels: Books, Dorothy L. Sayers, Fiction, G.K. Chesterton, Mysteries and Thrillers\nStepping through a door\nFrom First Things: \"When Toward Evening, Light....\" by Gary Whitby:\nWhat is death but stepping through a door,\nthen onto summer lawns, with fathers waiting\nor mothers chiding, “Why were you so late?”\n—the clouds around their feet a billowed flooring\nof golden cumulus reflecting more\nof them than moon could manage, fallen sensate\ninto star-thronged eyes by a garden gate\nwhen they were young.\nAnd now that greeny roar\nis gone. Now this: the tree, the swing, your dad\nfull-bellied still, your mother’s soaring smile\na wing; your brother racing from the house\nand shouting “It’s my turn,” no longer sad\nabout his death.\nAnd for a little while,\nor ever, love is all that time allows.\nPerhaps, ...or something better.\nWhen Toward Evening, Light.... by Gary Whitby | Articles | First Things\nOn St. David's Day\nEvery American knows that St Patrick's Day comes in March. Far fewer are aware of St David's Day (March 1), the national day of Wales. Both my father and mother had ancestors who were Welsh and — although I've only been to Wales twice — that ancestry has provided me with a certain unearned pride that grows the more I learn about the land. Today, on his blog, Sean Curnyn posts about the new release of a 1957 recording \"Music from the Welsh Mines\" by the Rhos Male Voice Choir. That site has links to various places where the music can be purchased. I've just ordered a copy but, since it will come from the UK, I won't have it by this weekend. Part of Curnyn's persuasive description:\n.... Below is embedded a YouTube clip that has some samples from the old recording, but its availability should not deter anyone from buying the new release which is substantially cleaned-up and enhanced in terms of sound quality. ....\nThe clip...below features this Rhos Male Voice Choir singing the very poignant Welsh national anthem, “Mae Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau” (“Land of my Fathers”) followed by two liturgical hymns, “Ave Verum” and “Laudamus.” The fourth and final tune in the clip is “Myfanwy,” an old Welsh ballad of lost love, which, whenever I hear a fine rendition—as this one most certainly is—I am quite willing to declare is simply the most devastating song ever composed, in any language, by any human, anywhere. ....\nEvery track on the album is astounding in its way, including another Welsh love lament titled “Ar Doriad Dydd” (“On the break of day”), the exceedingly haunting rendition of the Welsh hymn “Tydi a Roddaist” (“O Lord, who gave the dawn its glow”), and about as affecting a musical performance of the 23rd Psalm (in English) as one need ever hear during one’s life on this old earth. ....\nI will fly the Red Dragon on March 1st and I will probably watch A Run for Your Money (1949) , one of my favorite movies involving the Welsh: a comedy, with Welsh singing and harp playing, and a very young Alec Guiness. Part of Wikipedia's plot summary:\nTwo Welsh coal miners from Hafoduwchbenceubwllymarchogcoch, David 'Dai Number 9' Jones (Donald Houston) and Thomas 'Twm' Jones (Meredith Edwards), win a contest run by the Echo newspaper.... The prize is 100 pounds each, plus the best seats for an important rugby union match between Wales and England at Twickenham. For the naive Welshmen, this is their first trip to England.\nThey are supposed to be met at Paddington station by Whimple (Alec Guinness), a gardening columnist on the paper, but they miss each other. ....\nAnd I may watch Zulu , too, if only to hear them sing \"Men of Harlech.\"\nRoyal Regiment of Wales' Band singing \"Men of Harlech\"\nMusic from the Welsh Mines – Rhos Male Voice Choir | The Cinch Review\n\"Almost everything of Lewis is edifying and a plea...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line459248"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8162410259246826,"wiki_prob":0.8162410259246826,"text":"Vision of Ave Maria University Endures the Recession\nPosted on May 7, 2009 September 16, 2020 by Marton Varo\nMarton Varo chips away at a bas relief sculpture of The Annunciation at the Ave Maria University campus.\nBy MITCH STACY The Associated Press\nIMMOKALEE – Near the magnificent new church on the Ave Maria University campus, sculptor Marton Varo chips away at 80 tons of the best white marble money can buy, direct from the same Italian quarry where Michelangelo used to get his.\nThe $3 million, 35-foot-tall bas-relief sculpture depicts The Annunciation, when the angel Gabriel tells the Virgin Mary she will bear the son of God. The work will someday adorn the facade of the 10-story Ave Maria Oratory, around which a modern campus and college town have materialized in quick time on the edge of the Florida Everglades.\nThe recession has a stranglehold on much of southwest Florida, but billionaire Thomas Monaghan’s vision for the 1,100-seat church and the Roman Catholic school he created continues to take shape, even if construction is not progressing as quickly as he had hoped.\nThe 72-year-old founder of the Domino’s Pizza chain had hoped to have a gym built for the basketball team by now. He and the town’s developer also expected to see more than the 300 or so houses and condos that have gone up, and more restaurants and stores open in the town center surrounding the towering church.\nAnd plans to erect one of the largest freestanding crucifixes in the world — 65 feet tall, with a 40-foot body of Christ — on the church grounds had to be put on hold.\n“Our timing has been terrible,” Monaghan said during an interview in his office in the university library, a copper-roofed structure in the classic Frank Lloyd Wright style he favors. “But we’re pretty well-heeled, so we’re able to absorb it, and we just cut back.”\nConsidering these were far-flung fields of tomatoes and sod just three years ago, there has been great progress. Monaghan, who holds the title of university chancellor, figures he has put more than $400 million of his pizza fortune into developing what he likes to call a “spiritual military academy” amid a new town steeped in conservative Catholic teaching and symbolism.\nMonaghan made headlines before the first shovel of dirt was turned, saying that stores in Ave Maria would be prohibited from selling contraceptives and pornography, and the cable TV system would not carry adult movies. He backed off after civil rights advocates raised a stink, but says he hopes those things will remain unavailable here.\nA large classroom building, library, three residence halls and student union with dining hall accommodate 697 students this year, up from 367 when the doors opened in fall 2007. School officials say enrollment could top 900 this fall.\nAnother large dorm is under construction on the 11/2-square-mile campus, and in the next few years the gym and another student union/classroom building will go up. An arts center, administration building and auditorium are all on the drawing board. An affiliated law school scheduled to open in Naples this fall eventually will relocate to the campus.\nThe effects of the sagging economy are evident, though, in the vacant lots and unfinished streets around the campus, where about 1,000 residents have moved into houses whose starting prices have dipped to the low $100,000s. And plenty of storefronts are empty in the quiet, Italian-inspired town center.\nBut a trendy coffee house called The Bean is open. So is a smoothie bar, jewelry store, bike shop, florist, medical clinic and dentist’s office.\nAnd a sure sign of civilization in Florida — a Publix grocery store — is under construction a block away on Pope John Paul II Boulevard.\nThe church, which grew out of a design Monaghan sketched out on a restaurant tablecloth during dinner with friends, has become a minor tourist attraction, competing with the glitzy Seminole Indian casino 15 minutes away in Immokalee.\nMonaghan and developer Barron Collier Cos., which donated the land for the campus to persuade him to build here, still believe Ave Maria will grow in the next two decades to fulfill initial expectations: 5,500 students living in a bustling town of 25,000 residents.\n“I don’t have any concerns at all about where we are,” says Blake Gable, the project manager for Barron Collier. “Everything that we did here was taking a look at this community where it sits 50 years from now, not today.”\nAfter Monaghan made his fortune as a pioneer in the pizza delivery business, he shed Domino’s to dedicate his life to Catholic philanthropy. In 1998, he founded tiny Ave Maria College in Ypsilanti, Mich. When local planners rejected his proposal for a campus on his Domino’s Farms property in Ann Arbor, he looked to Florida.\nHe zeroed in on the Naples area because it was, before the economy collapsed, the fastest-growing region and Florida was one of the fastest-growing states in the South, where there were few existing Catholic colleges.\n“I thought it would be the easiest place in the country to attract students from all over the country,” says Monaghan, who lives part time in a campus dorm. “And that seems to have worked out. We started out last year with students from all 50 states, as small as we were.”\nMonaghan proudly notes that a dozen men from last year’s group moved on to study at seminaries.\nStudents talk up the fairly easy access to the Naples and Fort Myers metro areas, and extracurricular offerings from rugby clubs to outreach in the migrant worker community of Immokalee. One campus group organizes sidewalk demonstrations at an abortion clinic.\nAve Maria Foundation for the Arts Announced\nSculpture to Adorn University","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line464261"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9662134051322937,"wiki_prob":0.9662134051322937,"text":"Feeling unwelcome, Amazon ditches plans for New York hub\nAmazon.com Inc abruptly scrapped plans to build a major outpost in New York that could have created 25,000 jobs, blaming opposition from local leaders upset by the nearly $3 billion in incentives promised by state and city politicians.\nAmazon said it would not conduct a new headquarters search and would focus on growing at other existing and planned offices - Reuters\nThe company said on Thursday it did not see consistently “positive, collaborative” relationships with state and local officials. Opponents of the project feared congestion and higher rents in the Long Island City neighborhood of Queens, and objected to handing billions in incentives to a company run by Jeff Bezos, the world’s richest man.\nState Senator Michael Gianaris, who represents Queens and was a vocal critic of the deal, told a news conference on Thursday that the Amazon subsidies were unnecessary.\n“This was a shakedown, pure and simple,” he said.\nAmazon’s sudden pullout from New York City prompted finger pointing by Mayor Bill de Blasio and New York state Governor Andrew Cuomo, the politicians who crafted the deal. Cuomo angrily blamed the loss on local politicians while de Blasio blamed Amazon.\nCuomo said in a statement that a small group of politicians had “put their own narrow political interests” above those of New Yorkers.\nThe year-long search for its so-called HQ2 culminated in Amazon picking Northern Virginia and New York after hundreds of municipalities, from Newark, N.J. to Indianapolis competed for the coveted tax-dollars and high-wage jobs the project promised.\nAmazon said it would not conduct a new headquarters search and would focus on growing at other existing and planned offices. The company already has more than 5,000 employees in New York City and plans to continue to hire there, Amazon said on Thursday.\nA Siena College Poll conducted earlier this month found 56 percent of registered voters in New York supported the Amazon deal, while 36 percent opposed it.\nCITY SHAKEDOWN?\nSome New Yorkers mounted protests after the deal was announced, angered by the $2.8 billion in incentives promised to Amazon and fearing further gentrification in a neighborhood once favored by artists looking for cheap studio space.\nU.S. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a critic of the project and a self-described democratic socialist whose district spans parts of Queens and the Bronx, cheered the reversal by the world’s third most valuable public company.\n“Anything is possible: today was the day a group of dedicated, everyday New Yorkers & their neighbors defeated Amazon’s corporate greed, its worker exploitation, and the power of the richest man in the world,” she wrote on Twitter.\nPeople briefed on the decision said Amazon had made the decision early on Thursday amid rising concerns about the small vocal minority. The people said Amazon will not shift any of the planned jobs to Tennessee where an operations hub is planned or Virginia, but plans to grow its existing network of locations.\nAmazon had not acquired land for the project, making it easy to scrap its plans, a person briefed on the matter told Reuters on Friday.\nLOST OPPORTUNITY?\nIn a statement, de Blasio blamed Amazon for failing to address local criticism.\n“We gave Amazon the opportunity to be a good neighbor and do business in the greatest city in the world,” he said. “Instead of working with the community, Amazon threw away that opportunity.”\nSome long-time residents in Long Island City, which sits across the East River from midtown Manhattan’s skyscrapers, feared being forced out by rising rents and untenable pressure on already overburdened subway and sewage systems. High-rise towers have sprouted across the neighborhood in recent years.\n“This is a stunning development, with Amazon essentially giving in to vocal critics,” said Mark Hamrick, a senior economic analyst at Bankrate.com. The about-turn could spook other companies thinking about expanding in New York, he added.\nAlphabet Inc’s Google has avoided competitions between cities for offices, and its growing presence in lower Manhattan has met with little serious blowback.\nGoogle said in December it plans to invest more than $1 billion on a new campus in New York to double its current headcount of more than 7,000 people.\n“I think the (Amazon) PR event turned out to be a mistake,” said Jason Benowitz, senior portfolio manager at the Roosevelt Investment Group, who owns Amazon shares.\nShares of Amazon fell 1 percent.\n‘REALLY GOOD POKER PLAYERS’\nHours before the announcement, Amazon officials in New York betrayed no knowledge of the deal’s cancellation when they met with local community members on Thursday morning, said Kenny Greenberg, a neon artist and member of Long Island City’s community board.\n“Either they are really good poker players or they were not aware,” Greenberg said of the Amazon representatives. “There was no hint of this at all.”\nThe meeting with Amazon officials had been held to answer concerns from the community about labor conditions for Amazon’s warehouse and delivery workers and the company’s opposition to labor unions.\nU.S. Representative Carolyn Maloney, a Democrat whose district includes the proposed site, lamented the loss of jobs and new revenues.\n“This is not the Valentine that NY needed,” she wrote, adding that she had been ready to push for changes to the deal to address local concerns.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1696585"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.687216579914093,"wiki_prob":0.312783420085907,"text":"Comments (36 comments)\nNational graduation rates released\nby John Martin, CNN\n(CNN) - The U.S. Department of Education (USDOE) released a report of state high school graduation rates, which for the first time includes apples-to-apples comparisons among most states. Each state used to determine its own graduation rate; now states are moving toward a common method of measurement.\nAs Schools of Thought reported earlier, graduation rates for some states have dropped not because students are failing more often, but because the math has changed. The USDOE points this out in a press release on its website: \"While 26 states reported lower graduation rates and 24 states reported unchanged or increased rates under the new metric, these changes should not be viewed as measures of progress but rather as a more accurate snapshot.\" The new data is based on a \"four year cohort graduation rate,\" which also accounts for students who drop out or do not earn a regular high school diploma.\nRead \"The new graduation rates\" for an explanation of these metrics.\nIn the video, Brooke Baldwin examines the states with the highest and lowest gradation rates. Across the United States, the range of state graduation rates is between Nevada's 62% and Iowa's 88%. The District of Columbia's rate is lower than that of any state, at 59%. Some states, including Kentucky and Idaho, are not using the new method and were not included in the data released by USDOE.\nLooking at the data itself another picture emerges – a gap between whites and blacks still exists, but an even wider gap persists between general graduation rates and the graduation rates of children with disabilities and limited English proficiency students. For these subgroups, graduation rates in many states are below 50%, and sometimes even below 30%.\nPosted by John Martin - CNN\nFiled under: Graduation • High school • Policy • video\nMy View: The lesson in Newark\nby Sydney Morris and Evan Stone, Special to CNN\nSydney Morris\nEditor’s note: Sydney Morris and Evan Stone are co-founders and co-CEOs of Educators 4 Excellence (E4E), a teacher-led organization that seeks to ensure that teachers’ voices are meaningfully included in the policy decisions that affect their classrooms and careers.\nSchool and union leaders in the nation’s largest school districts who are waging epic battles over teacher evaluation, compensation and the future of the teaching profession could learn a lesson from their colleagues in Newark, New Jersey. That’s where the city’s 3,300 teachers recently ratified a groundbreaking new contract that provides them unprecedented support and compensation.\nThe issues on the table in this negotiation were similar to those being debated in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and elsewhere: How should teachers be evaluated? Who should evaluate them? How should the district use the evaluations to hire and promote educators and dismiss those who underperform? How should teachers be paid and how much?\nBut instead of the paralysis that has marked those other negotiations, Newark leaders were able to rationally discuss these points without the bluster and polarization we’ve seen elsewhere. They found a way to blend their demands in a way that will truly elevate the teaching profession. The two sides agreed to:\n• A comprehensive evaluation system based on multiple measures including student growth, observations and peer reviews. Teachers will receive one of four rankings from highly effective to ineffective. Superintendent Cami Anderson was vocal about the need for more effective evaluation, while NTU President Joe Del Grosso won peer reviews as a way to give the voices of teachers more weight in their colleagues’ ratings.\nFiled under: Issues • Teachers • Voices","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line952569"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7166534066200256,"wiki_prob":0.28334659337997437,"text":"I was naked, and you gave me clothing. I was sick, and you cared for me. I was in prison, and you visited me.’…“And the King will say, ‘I tell you the truth, when you did it to one of the least of these my brothers and sisters, you were doing it to me!’” Matthew 25:36, 40\nThe United States has the largest prison population in the world and also the highest incarceration rate. The American criminal justice system holds almost 2.3 million people across the federal, state and local levels. Over 540,000 of these prisoners have not yet been convicted or sentenced. While the United States accounts for about 4 percent of the world’s population, it has more than a third of the estimated number of people serving life sentences.\nMany of the CityServe HUBs have strategic partnerships with national recognized prison ministries and chaplain training programs. Churches are also engaging families who have an incarcerated loved one. Contact your HUB to discover how you and your congregation can minister to the prisons near you.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line404849"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9605293273925781,"wiki_prob":0.9605293273925781,"text":"North Korea fires presumed short-range missiles into the sea\nPublish- March 02, 2020, 03:31 PM\nAP/UNB - AP/UNB\nUpdate- March 02, 2020, 03:35 PM\nIn this file photo provided on Feb. 29, 2020 by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, inspects the military drill of units of the Korean People's Army, with soldiers shown wearing face masks.Photo:Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP\nNorth Korea fired two presumed short-range ballistic missiles into its eastern sea on Monday, South Korean officials said, resuming weapons demonstrations after a months-long hiatus that may have been forced by the coronavirus crisis in Asia.\nThe launches came two days after North Korea's state media said leader Kim Jong Un supervised an artillery drill aimed at testing the combat readiness of units in front-line and eastern areas.\nSouth Korea's Joint Chiefs of Staff said the projectiles were fired from an area near the coastal town of Wonsan and flew about 240 kilometers (149 miles) northeast on an apogee of about 35 kilometers (22 miles). It said the South Korean and U.S. militaries were jointly analyzing the launches. JCS officials later told reporters that the weapons were presumed to be short-range ballistic missiles.\nNorth Korea likely tested one of its new road-mobile, solid-fuel missile systems or a developmental \"super large\" multiple rocket launcher it repeatedly demonstrated last year, said Kim Dong-yub, an analyst from Seoul's Institute for Far Eastern Studies. Experts say such weapons can potentially overwhelm missile defense systems and expand the North's ability to strike targets in South Korea and Japan, including U.S. bases there.\nKim Jong Un had entered the new year vowing to bolster his nuclear deterrent in the face of \"gangster-like\" U.S. sanctions and pressure, using a key ruling party meeting in late December to warn of \"shocking\" action over stalled nuclear negotiations with the Trump administration.\nHe also said North Korea would soon reveal a new \"strategic weapon\" and insisted the country was no longer \"unilaterally bound\" to a self-imposed suspension on the testing of nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missiles. But Kim did not explicitly lift the moratorium or give any clear indication that such tests were impending and seemed to leave the door open for eventual negotiations.\nSouth Korea's presidential office said National Security Director Chung Eui-yong discussed the launches with the South's defense minister and spy chief, and that the officials expressed \"strong concern\" over the North's resumption of testing activity, which could raise military tensions.\nJapan said that it had not detected any projectile landing in its territory or its exclusive economic zone, and that no sea vessels or aircraft had been damaged.\n\"The repeated firings of ballistic missiles by North Korea is a serious problem for the international community including Japan, and the government will continue to gather and analyze information, and monitor the situation to protect the lives and property of the people,\" the Defense Ministry's statement said.\nThe recent lull in North Korea's launches had experts wondering whether the North was holding back its weapons displays while it was fighting the coronavirus, which state media has described as a matter of \"national existence.\" Some analysts speculated that the North cut back training and other activities involving large gatherings of soldiers to reduce the possibility of the virus spreading within its military.\nKim's latest show of force is apparently aimed at boosting military morale, strengthening internal unity and showing that his country is doing fine despite outside worries of how the North would contend with an outbreak.\nNorth Korea in previous years has intensified testing activity in response to springtime military exercises between South Korea and the United States that it has described as invasion rehearsals. But the allies announced last week that they were postponing their annual drills due to concern about the coronavirus outbreak in South Korea, with soldiers from both countries being infected.\nThe launches were the latest setback for dovish South Korean President Moon Jae-in, who despite the North's indifference has repeatedly pleaded for reviving inter-Korean engagement. In a speech on Sunday marking the 101st anniversary of a major uprising against Japanese colonial rule, Moon called for cooperation between the two Koreas to fight infectious diseases amid the COVID-19 outbreak in Asia.\nAmid the deadlock in larger nuclear negotiations with the Trump administration, Kim has suspended virtually all cooperation with South Korea in the past months while demanding that Seoul defy U.S.-led international sanctions and restart inter-Korean economic projects that would jolt the North's broken economy.\nNorth Korea has yet to confirm any COVID-19 cases, although state media have hinted that an uncertain number of people have been quarantined after exhibiting symptoms. North Korea has shut down nearly all cross-border traffic, banned tourists, intensified screening at entry points and mobilized tens of thousands of health workers to monitor residents and isolate those with symptoms. South Korea last month withdrew dozens of officials from an inter-Korean liaison office in Kaesong after North Korea insisted on closing it until the epidemic is controlled.\nKim and President Donald Trump have met three times since embarking on their high-stakes nuclear diplomacy in 2018, but negotiations have faltered since their second summit in February last year in Vietnam, where the Americans rejected North Korean demands for major sanctions relief in exchange for a partial surrender of its nuclear capability.\nFollowing the collapse in Hanoi, the North ended a 17-month pause in ballistic activity and conducted at least 13 rounds of weapons launches last year, using the standstill in talks to expand its military capabilities.\nThose weapons included road-mobile, solid-fuel missiles designed to beat missile defense systems and a developmental midrange missile that could eventually be launched from submarines, potentially strengthening the North's ability to strike targets in South Korea and Japan, including U.S. bases there.\nIn December, the North said it conducted two \"crucial\" tests at a long-range rocket facility that would strengthen its nuclear deterrent, prompting speculation that it's developing a new ICBM or preparing a satellite launch that would further advanced its long-range missile technology.\nshort-range missile\nSouth Korea's presidential office\nNorth Korean leader Kim Jong Un\nSouth Korea trashes concerns over Kim Jong Un's health\nState media: Kim has plans to stabilize N. Korean economy\nSouth Korea: Kim did not have surgery amid lingering rumors\nKim Jong Un appears in public amid health rumors\nNorth Korea fires missiles into sea, criticized by South\nN Korea says Trump's letter offers anti-virus cooperation","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1299613"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8798115253448486,"wiki_prob":0.8798115253448486,"text":"Leeds Bradford Airport director Hallwood quits\nOne of the top bosses at Leeds Bradford Airport has unexpectedly quit after nine years in charge.\nUpdated Wednesday, 21st June 2017, 3:19 pm\nTony Hallwood\nTony Hallwood confirmed this afternoon that he will be stepping down from his role as Aviation Development Director at the end of the month.\nHe said: “I will be moving back to my family in Manchester and I am looking forward to taking an active role in my wife’s growing business – Marketing Profile\n“I am immensely proud of my achievements at LBA in driving record passenger growth from 2.6 to 3.6m and delivering a string of major route development successes for the Leeds City Region and Yorkshire.\n“Securing new based capacity from Ryanair and Monarch, the reintroduction of BA and Aer Lingus alongside Jet2.com’s and Flybe’s growth has helped ensure the continued success of LBA.\n“During my time at the airport I have also enjoyed developing and strengthening relationships through my PR role across the media and regional stakeholders.\n“I would like to thank you personally for your support during my time at LBA and I look forward to keeping in touch with you. My personal contact details are given below.\n“In the meantime, I look forward to seeing the ongoing success of LBA under David Laws’ leadership and I wish the airport team ‘all the best’ for the future.”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line369739"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6268534064292908,"wiki_prob":0.6268534064292908,"text":"Teenagers invited to design tomorrow's airliners\nSchool pupils are being urged to use their creativity to design innovative and environmentally-friendly passenger aircraft for the year 2050.\nThe School of Engineering Sciences at the University of Southampton is joining forces with major aviation companies and organizations to stage a web-based competition this spring with prizes for the best designs. It is called Future Flight - Greener by Design.\nThe contest will be launched on Friday 8 April at Fly! The London Air Show where visitors will be able to pilot futuristic airliners for themselves on a flight simulator at the Horizon Simulation stand (Hanger 28A). Finalists will be invited to a 'fly-off' to decide the winners after the closing date of 30 June. They will present their designs to aviation experts and fly them in the new flight simulator at the INTECH Science Centre near Winchester.\nParents and teachers are invited to take part alongside the 11-16 year olds and compete for prizes too.\nDr Kenji Takeda from the University of Southampton commented: \"The future of 21st century air travel lies in airliners that are clean, quiet and efficient. Our aim is to inspire youngsters, engaging them in the exciting science, engineering and technology that is helping to build a sustainable future for us all.\"\nLord Sainsbury, Science and Innovation Minister added: \"Future Flight - Greener by Design is an exciting opportunity for today's young people, the future leaders of science, to let their imaginations and creative flair flow in a hands-on and interactive way.\n\"By actively encouraging young people to explore emerging technologies like e-science and web technology, the Government is committed to developing the next generation of science leaders and ensuring the UK remains at the forefront of science and technology in the future. I am looking forward to seeing the results of this year's competition.\"\nFuture Flight - Greener by Design is funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council and organized by the University of Southampton's School of Engineering Sciences.\nMore information about the contest, including current and future air transport and the environmental issues, careers advice and free posters, and wallpapers to download is available on www.futureflight.org The web portal is built using next-generation web technology being developed at the University of Southampton under the DTI e-Science programme.\nSupporting organizations include: Airbus, BAE SYSTEMS, INTECH, Microsoft, AMD, BAA, the Engineering and Technology Board, the Greener by Design Consortium, the Royal Aeronautical Society, Society of British Aerospace Companies, Horizon Simulation and AVSIM.COM.\nFuture Flight - Greener by Design will also be present at the Royal Aeronautical Society's Aerospace 2005 industry conference on 12th -14th April.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line372781"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9614374041557312,"wiki_prob":0.9614374041557312,"text":"Chris Hemsworth Expertly Trolls Brother Liam In Hilarious Instagram Post News\nTerrorism charge, Detroit area schools closed News\nCops Seek New Attempted Murder Charges Against Chad And Lori Vallow Daybell News\nSen. Tom Cotton: Biden is in denial about what his policies have done to America News\nGlobal Rivalries Are Miring the Clean Energy Revolution News\nManslaughter trial of L.A. County sheriff’s deputy in jurors’ hands News\nMan arrested after chase on I-5 ends in Lakewood standoff News\nThanksgiving holiday travel weather forecast is improving News\nCarrie Meek, pioneering Black former congresswoman, has died : NPR\nPosted on November 29, 2021 By Edgar Hyek No Comments on Carrie Meek, pioneering Black former congresswoman, has died : NPR\nInformation about Carrie Meek, pioneering Black former congresswoman, has died : NPR\nBreaking Story – Carrie Meek, pioneering Black former congresswoman, has died : NPR\nRep. Carrie Meek, D-Fla., pictured here speaking during services at Mt. Tabor Missionary Baptist Church in Miami, in 2002.\nWilfredo Lee/AP\nFORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Carrie Meek, the grandchild of a slave and a sharecropper’s daughter who became one of the first Black Floridians elected to Congress since Reconstruction, died Sunday. She was 95.\nMeek died at her home in Miami after a long illness, family spokesperson Adam Sharon said in a statement. The family did not specify a cause of death.\nMeek started her congressional career at an age when many people begin retirement. She was 66 when she easily won the 1992 Democratic congressional primary in her Miami-Dade County district. No Republican opposed her in the general election.\nAlcee Hastings and Corrine Brown joined Meek in January 1993 as the first Black Floridians to serve in Congress since 1876 as the state’s districts had been redrawn by the federal courts in accordance with the 1965 Voting Rights Act.\nOn her first day in Congress, Meek reflected that while her grandmother, a slave on a Georgia farm, could never have dreamed of such an accomplishment, her parents told her that anything was possible.\n“They always said the day would come when we would be recognized for our character,” she told The Associated Press in an interview that day.\nIn Congress, Meek championed affirmative action, economic opportunities for the poor and efforts to bolster democracy in and ease immigration restrictions on Haiti, the birthplace of many of her constituents.\nShe also was known for her liberal opinions, folksy yet powerful oratory and colorful Republican bashing.\n“The last Republican that did something for me was Abraham Lincoln,” she told the state delegation to the 1996 Democratic Convention in Chicago.\nMeek joined her son Kendrick, a former state trooper and state senator, in a 2000 sit-in at then-Florida Gov. Jeb Bush’s office to protest an end to affirmative action policies. She had long argued in favor of such policies, since earning her master’s degree from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor in 1948. At the time, Blacks were not admitted to graduate schools in Florida.\nMeek decided not to seek a sixth term in 2002. Her son Kendrick succeeded in winning her heavily Democratic district, a seat he held for four terms before an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate in 2010.\nAfter leaving Congress, Carrie Meek returned to Miami and created a foundation to work on education and housing issues. She was also criticized for some of her business dealings.\nShe lobbied for a biotech park that was planned for Miami’s impoverished Liberty City neighborhood but never materialized. County authorities eventually started a criminal investigation, and the park’s developer was arrested in October 2009 on charges that he stole nearly $1 million from the project.\nCongressional records showed that Meek was paid while her son sought millions of federal dollars for the project. Meek said she was paid as a consultant, and both mother and son denied their efforts were linked.\nBefore entering politics, Meek worked as a teacher and administrator at Miami-Dade College.\nShe was elected to the Florida House in 1978, succeeding pioneer Black legislator Gwen Cherry, who had been killed in an auto accident. She became one of the first African Americans and the first Black woman to serve in the Florida Senate since the 1800s.\nCarrie Pittman was born to Willie and Carrie Pittman in Tallahassee on April 29, 1926, and was the youngest of 12 children. Her father worked in nearby fields as a sharecropper and her mother took in laundry from white families.\nShe graduated from Florida A&M University in 1946 with a degree in biology and physical education. The university named its building for Black history archives in her honor in 2007. She was a member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority.\nShe accepted a position at Bethune Cookman College as an instructor and became the institution’s first female basketball coach. In 1958, she returned to Florida A&M as an instructor in health and physical education. She held that position until 1961.\nMeek continued her teaching career at Miami Dade Community College as the first Black professor, associate dean, and assistant to the Vice President from 1961 to 1979.\nThen, she began her trailblazing political career, representing Florida’s 17th Congressional District as a Democratic Florida State House Representative.\nIn Congress, Meek was a member of the powerful Appropriations Committee and worked to secure $100 million in aid to rebuild Dade County as the area recovered from Hurricane Andrew.\nShe retired in 2002 and shifted her focus to the Carrie Meek Foundation, which she founded in November 2001, to provide the Miami-Dade community with much-needed resources, opportunities, and jobs. Meek spearheaded the Foundation’s daily operations until 2015 when she stepped down due to declining health.\nMeek is survived by her children Lucia Davis-Raiford, Sheila Davis Kinui and Kendrick B. Meek, seven grandchildren, five great-grandchildren and multiple nieces and nephews.\nFuneral arrangements are pending.\nThe Latest News on Carrie Meek, pioneering Black former congresswoman, has died : NPR\nPrevious Post: Redshirt freshman quarterback Jack Miller announces transfer from Ohio State football\nNext Post: Beverly Hills police investigate antisemitic fliers at homes\nOpinion | Democrats Don’t Understand Asian American Voters News\nGunfire at Atlanta Airport Was ‘Accidental Discharge,’ Officials Say News\nWhat Did the US-China Summit Achieve? News\nBiden is the ‘common denominator’ in mounting crises: Rep. Biggs News\nJussie Smollett gets testy under cross-examination about messages with alleged attacker News\nMacao detains Suncity boss after over illegal gambling News\nCNN Fires Chris Cuomo Over Role in Andrew Cuomo’s Scandal News\nGrab your camera and help science! King tides are crashing onto California beaches : NPR News\nLee Elder, Who Broke a Golf Color Barrier, Dies at 87 News\nJussie Smollett trial: Key moments since he reported Chicago attack News\nThe Human Cost Of Being Denied An Abortion News\nQueen Elizabeth only picks up the phone for these two people, royal expert says News\nLeBron James posts cryptic tweet while sidelined due to league’s COVID protocols News","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1634372"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7098400592803955,"wiki_prob":0.2901599407196045,"text":"Using Today's Technology to Secure a Campus\nDirector of Safety and Security, Wylie ISD\nFormer Commander Over Homeland Security, Crime Prevention and Training, Southern Methodist University\nBrian Kelly has taken command of security at Wylie ISD, but also has wide ranging experiences while serving at SMU. He will address issues at the K-12 level, and how he solved numerous scenarios while at the university level, including preparing Ford Stadium for security, and how to protect crowds whether it be at a graduation ceremony, or a basketball game. You will learn from his experiences what will work, and how best to implement security and safety on your campus.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line819731"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7459203004837036,"wiki_prob":0.2540796995162964,"text":"Mechanistic Toxicology\nThe editors and readers of the journal Molecular Carcinogenesis could argue that the shift to mechanistic toxicology proposed in Marcia Clemmitt's recent article in The Scientist (Feb. 17, 1992, page 1) has already occurred. For the past five years, Molecular Carcinogenesis has been reporting the growth of, and changes in, all fields of carcinogenesis, including toxicology. The need for a journal that emphasized the causative mechanisms of cancer at the molecular level became apparent in 1987\nThomas Slaga\nThe editors and readers of the journal Molecular Carcinogenesis could argue that the shift to mechanistic toxicology proposed in Marcia Clemmitt's recent article in The Scientist (Feb. 17, 1992, page 1) has already occurred. For the past five years, Molecular Carcinogenesis has been reporting the growth of, and changes in, all fields of carcinogenesis, including toxicology.\nThe need for a journal that emphasized the causative mechanisms of cancer at the molecular level became apparent in 1987, when the burgeoning field of molecular biology made it possible to examine carcinogenesis at a more intimate level. In conjunction with the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center and Wiley-Liss Inc. of New York, we started Molecular Carcinogenesis as a peer-reviewed forum for work on the molecular mechanisms of carcinogenesis.\nAdvances in molecular biology have enabled us to move from what University of Maryland pathology professor Ellen Silbergeld referred to in the article...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line604412"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7310451865196228,"wiki_prob":0.7310451865196228,"text":"Tag: half-staff\nRepublicans in Wisconsin and Missouri disrespect the American flag\nOn June 14, 1777, exactly two years to the day of the founding of what is now known as U.S. Army, the Second Continental Congress officially adopted the first version of the national flag of the United States of America. In 1916, then-President Woodrow Wilson issued a proclamation declaring June 14 to be Flag Day.\nSadly, some politicians have used Flag Day to disgrace the American flag.\nFirst off, Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, a Republican, sent out a Flag Day tweet featuring a 48-star flag, which hasn’t been in official use since July 3, 1959:\n.@ScottWalker deletes image of 48-star flag shortly after he tweets it to celebrate Flag Day pic.twitter.com/0fxhyARgCC\n— Scott Bauer (@sbauerAP) June 14, 2016\nThe U.S. flag has officially featured 50 stars since July 4, 1960, the first Independence Day since Hawaii became the most recent state to join the Union.\nEven more disgraceful, in my opinion, was a decision by two of the three members of the Republican-controlled Cole County, Missouri commission to not lower the U.S. flag on county grounds to half-mast, as ordered by the president to commemorate the terrorist attack on the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida. Cole County, Missouri includes Jefferson City, which is Missouri’s state capital:\nFollowing this weekend’s shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando, President Obama ordered that, “as a mark of respect for the victims,” the United States flag be flown at half-staff “upon all public buildings and grounds” through the end of the day Thursday. Officials in Cole County, Missouri decided this didn’t apply to them.\nThe three-member commission that governs the county voted 2-1 against lowering the flag. “We (the commission) still have control over how the flags are displayed,” Commissioner Jeff Hoelscher (R) told the Jefferson City News Tribune. “Lowering it too much takes away from the honor. I feel for these victims and for their families, but I don’t feel this was a time for the flag to be lowered.”\nCommissioner Kris Scheperle (R) similarly suggested that the Orlando shooting just doesn’t rise to the occasion. “I want to honor those who have served our country,” he said, “but we can’t lower it for every event like this that occurs. I do feel for those who were gunned down, but I don’t think it warrants lowering the flag.”\nAfter public outcry, the Cole County commissioners decided to reverse their original decision and obey the president’s orders to lower the U.S. flag to half-staff after all.\nWhile America celebrates our national flag, Republicans are busy disgracing our flag.\nTuesday, June 14, 2016 Tuesday, June 14, 2016\n48-star flag\ncounty commission\nincorrect flag\nJeff Hoelscher\nJefferson County MO\nJefferson County MO Commission\nKris Scherpele\nlowering the flag\nMO-Local\nOrlando attack\nOrlando shooting\npresidential order\nPulse Orlando\nPulse shooting\nterrorist attack\nWI-Gov\nWisconsin Governor\nwrong flag","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line63982"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6867368817329407,"wiki_prob":0.3132631182670593,"text":"Intellectual Property Issues in Citizen Science\nWritten by Teresa Scassa\nI am just back from the inaugural conference of the newly formed Citizen Science Association. If there were any doubt about the explosion of interest in citizen science, this conference, with its packed agenda and 600 registered attendees would lay it to rest.\nCitizen science is a term whose definitional boundaries are constantly being expanded. It is sometimes also called public participatory scientific research, and broadly interpreted it could reach so far as to include open innovation. Like many other forms of collaborative and co-creative engagement, citizen science involves harnessing the labour or ingenuity of the crowd with a view to advancing scientific knowledge. Iconic citizen science projects range from eBird (involving the public in reporting and recording bird sightings), GalaxyZoo (engaging the public in classifying distant galaxies) and Nature’s Notebook (which asks the public to help track seasonal changes). Citizen science projects also stray into the biomedical realm and can cross commercial/non-commercial lines. PatientsLikeMe offers a forum for individuals to share information about their illnesses or medical conditions with researchers and with others with the same affliction. 23andMe provides individuals with information about their DNA (which participants contribute), and SNPedia provides individuals with resources to help them in interpreting their own DNA. But in addition to these more well-known projects, are thousands of others, on large and small scales across a range of scientific fields, and engaging different sectors of the public in a very broad range of activities and for a similarly broad spectrum of objectives.\nMy own interest in citizen science relates to the legal and ethical issues it raises. Not surprisingly, there are significant privacy issues that may be raised by various citizen science projects – and not just those in the biomedical sphere. There may also be interesting liability issues – what responsibility is engaged by researchers who invite volunteers to hike treacherous mountain trails to find and record data about elusive plant or animal species? Currently, my work is on intellectual property issues. Timed to coincide with the inaugural CitSci 2015 conference was the release of a paper I co-authored with Haewon Chung on intellectual property issues as between researchers and participants in citizen science. This paper was commissioned by the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars Commons Lab, and we are continuing to expand our work in this area with the support of the Wilson Center.\nOur paper invites participants and researchers to think about intellectual property in the context of citizen science, in large part because IP issues are so fundamental to the ability of researchers, participants, and downstream users to ultimately access, use and/or disseminate research results. Relationships between researchers and participants are not the only ones of importance in citizen science – we will expand beyond these in our future work. But these relationships are nonetheless fundamentally important in citizen science. To the extent that intellectual property law is about both the relationship of authors to their works and about the relationship of authors and others in relation to those works, these issues should be part of the design of citizen science projects.\nOur paper, which is meant primarily for an audience of citizen science participants and researchers, develops a typology of citizen science projects from an IP point of view. We group citizen science projects into 4 broad categories defined by the type of contribution expected of participants. In some cases the nature and degree of participation makes it unlikely that participants will have any IP claims in their contributions to the project; in other cases, participants are regularly invited to contribute materials in which they may hold rights. We suggest that researchers think about these issues before launching their project with a view to avoiding complications later on, when they try to publish their research, decide to make their data fully open online, or make other dissemination plans. In some cases, the level of involvement of participants in problem-solving or data manipulation may also raise issues about their contribution to an invention that the researchers eventually seek to patent.\nIdentifying the IP issues is a first step – addressing them is also important. There are many different ways (from assignment of right to licensing) in which the IP rights of contributors can be addressed. Some solutions may be more appropriate than others, depending upon the ultimate goals of the project. In choosing a solution, researchers and project designers should think of the big picture: what do they need to do with their research output? Are there ethical obligations to open citizen science data, or to share back with the participant community? Do they have particular commitments to funders or to their institutions? Even if research data is made open, are there reasons to place restrictions on how the data is used by downstream users? These are important issues which have both a legal and an ethical dimension. They are part of our ongoing work in this area.\nPublished in Copyright Law\nTeresa Scassa\nLatest from Teresa Scassa\nOntario publishes Beta princiles for the ethical use of AI in the public sector\nProvinces Issue Orders Requiring Clearview AI to Comply with Data Protection Laws - But Then What?\nAI in Canadian Healthcare - Bias and Discrimination (New Paper)\nA First Step Along the Path to a Right to Be Forgotten in Canada?\nOntario White Paper Seeks Input on a Private Sector Data Protection Law\nRelated items (by tag)\nBill C-86 proposes positive changes for Official Marks regime: Comments to the Standing Senate Committee on Banking, Trade and Commerce,\nArtist sued in Canada for copyright infringement for AI-related art project\nControlling Data: Competition, Privacy and Copyright Issues Raised by Real Estate Data\nCrown copyright alive and well in new decision from the Ontario Court of Appeal\nData collection and free speech - an important issue for a data-driven society","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1217887"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6436154842376709,"wiki_prob":0.6436154842376709,"text":"21 Best Things to Do in Phnom Penh\nWhat is Phnom Penh Most Famous For?\nPhnom Penh offers plenty of things to see and do – you'll often be surprised when making a stop in the Cambodian capital heading to or from Siem Reap’s Angkor Wat. Those who don’t make a stop off in Phnom Penh will often miss out on so many interesting historical, cultural and environmental attractions in the city.\nIt’s not all about the Khmer Rouge or Cambodia’s tragic past either. Khmer-era temples, wildlife sanctuaries, theatrical performances and museums are all easily accessible and tours are reasonably priced. Enjoy our personally researched guide to the best attractions in Phnom Penh.\nRoyal Palace and Silver Pagoda\nGood for:\nThe Royal Palace and Silver Pagoda are set adjacent to each other, spanning 174,870 square meters of breathtaking Khmer architecture and lush greenery. Though the king of Cambodia still occasionally resides in The Royal Palace (if the blue royal flag is flying, the king is in residence), visitors can explore several buildings within the palace grounds from US$6.50 and guided tours are available from around US$10.\nLocated in Sisowath Quay, highlights at the Royal Palace include the Throne Hall and Moonlight Pavilion. Meanwhile, entrance to the Silver Pagoda is free of charge, where you can visit the Emerald Buddha, which dates back to the 17th century and is adorned with Baccarat crystals.\nLocation: Samdech Sothearos Boulevard (between 184th Street and 240th Street), Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nOpen: Monday–Thursday and Saturday from 8 am to 5 pm, Fridays from 8 am to 6 pm, Sundays from 8 am to 5.30 pm\nNational Museum of Cambodia\nThe National Museum of Cambodia is where you can find the cultural side of Cambodian history that dates back to the 4th century. The museum is housed within an impressive red sandstone structure and inaugurated in 1920 as the Musée Albert Sarraut during the French colonial period. It stands out as a fine illustration of traditional Khmer architecture.\nThere are over 14,000 interesting exhibits, arranged according to prehistoric, pre-Angkor, Angkor, and post-Angkor eras, each of which comprises bronze and wooden sculptures, ceramic items, ethnographic items and stone articles. Check out spectacular exhibits such as the 6th-century, 8-armed statue of Lord Vishnu.\nLocation: Preah Ang Eng Street 13, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nOpen: Daily from 8 am to 5 pm\nphoto by Mohd Fazlin Mohd Effendy Ooi (CC BY 2.0) modified\nPhnom Penh Royal Palace and Silver Pagoda\n17 Best Nightlife in Phnom Penh\nMekong Island (Koh Dach)\nCambodian Living Arts – Apsara and Traditional Khmer Dance\nCambodian Living Arts is a non-profit organization that hosts Apsara and traditional Khmer dance performances at the National Museum of Cambodia. Tickets are priced from US$15 and shows are held on Mondays, Wednesdays and weekends from 7pm onwards. The organization preserves traditional Khmer dance that dates back to the 18th century but was almost lost under the Khmer Rouge regime.\nCambodian Living Arts revived the art by gathering surviving master artists to train and pass on their knowledge to younger generations. The troupe comprises live singers and musicians in traditional Khmer costumes, performing eight classical dances of ethnic minorities from all over Cambodia.\nLocation: Blvd Samdach, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nOpen: Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday from 7 pm onwards\nphoto by Jakub Hałun (CC BY-SA 4.0) modified\nCentral Market (Phsar Thmey)\nCentral Market (Phsar Thmey) caters to just about any traveler, whether you’re a shopping enthusiast who wants to gauge your haggling skills, a tourist interested to be a part of a bustling crowd, or simply keen to explore, and photograph, Phnom Penh’s unique architectural designs.\nDesigned by French architects Jean Desbois and Wladimir Kandaouroff, this indoor market was the largest of its kind in Asia when it was constructed in 1937. You can find a wide assortment of goods in Central Market (Phsar Thmey), from men and women’s clothing, jewelry, flowers and shoes to gemstones, local handicrafts and fresh produce.\nLocation: Street 130, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nChildren Park Koh Pich Amusement Park\nChildren Park Koh Pich is an amusement park at the South Sisowath Quay in Phnom Penh. It can get quite packed and offers colorful ways to have fun, including a rollercoaster, a roller skating area with a big wavy floor section and lots of booths where punters try to burst balloons with darts.\nIt is, of course, nowhere near as extravagant as Disneyland, but this is a great place for people-watching, especially watching the locals enjoying life with friends and family – a reminder to outsiders that there is now much more to Cambodia than the grim history of the Killing Fields.\nLocation: Koh Pich St, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nGolf in Phnom Penh\nGolf in Cambodia is relatively new and the number of golf courses is limited. The first club to open in Cambodia, in 1996, was the 18-hole course at the Cambodia Golf & Country Club. On the outskirts of Phnom Penh, about 33 km west of the city center, it is set among 120 acres, and also has a clubhouse, swimming pools, tennis courts, convention facilities and villas.\nAnother golf course near Phnom Penh is the Royal Cambodia Phnom Penh Golf Club. To get there, take Route 4 towards Sihanoukville and keep an eye out for a big sign for the club about 14 km from the city.\nIndependence Monument is an iconic landmark that’s set in the heart Phnom Penh City Center. Locally known as Vimean Ekareach, it signifies Cambodia’s liberation from the French who have colonized the nation between 1863 and 1953.\nAs a result, vibrant celebrations of national festivities such as Independence Day (November 9th) and Constitution Day (September 24th) are held here. On most days, the best time to visit is at night as that’s when Independence Monument and its surroundings are illuminated by blue, red and white floodlights.\nLocation: Sangkat Boeng Keng Kang Ti Muoy, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nMekong Island (Koh Dach) near Phnom Penh\nMekong Island is where to head to if you wish to take a break from the hustle and bustle of Phnom Penh and venture into a world of peace and tranquillity. The island is about 15 km north of the city center. Bounded by views of rice paddies, vegetable farms and fruit orchards, Mekong Island not only serves as a venue for an enjoyable day trip or picnic but also enables you to experience the country’s authentic culture at its best.\nThis island occupies an area of about 10 hectares of land and is one of the prominent centres of traditional handicrafts in Cambodia, with artisans engaged in silk weaving, pottery, woodcarving and dyeing in its villages. One of the best ways to get there by cruise boat from Sisowath Quay in Phnom Penh (usually a 2.5-hour round trip). You can also rental a tuk-tuk from the city to the Japanese Bridge, from where you can continue your journey to the island by ferry.\nLocation: Koh Dach, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nOudongk\nOudongk is a town at the foot of the hill of the same name approximately 40 km north from Phnom Penh. The destination offers an escape to the rural countryside with the hilltop overlooking vast plains.\nThis site is also famous for cultural patrimonies and used to serve as a capital city between the years 1618 and 1866.\nLocation: Oudongk, Cambodia\nPhnom Tamao Zoo near Phnom Penh\nTake a tour to Phnom Tamao Zoo and Wildlife Rescue Center (PTWRC) – the country’s largest zoo and wildlife sanctuary that is located about a 45-minute drive outside town. Opened in 2000, it is more a wildlife rescue center than a zoo, serving as a safe refuge to rare and endangered animals rescued from the clutches of poachers, traffickers and illegal wildlife traders.\nThe wildlife center's residents now include over a thousand animals plus hundreds of exotic birds and reptiles. Managed by the Ministry of Agriculture’s Forestry Department with support from WildAid and Free the Bears Fund, the zoo occupies about 1,200 hectares land out of a 2,500-hectare forest protected area of Phnom Tamao that enjoys picturesque surroundings comprising mountains and ancient temples such as Phnom Tamao Temple and Thmor Dos Temple.\nLocation: National Road No 2, Tro Pang Sap Village, Tro Pang Sap Commune, Ba Ti District, Takeo Province, Cambodia\nFrizz Cooking Class\nFrizz Restaurant is a great place to learn about Khmer cuisine, including its history that goes back a long way. In more recent times, the cuisine of Cambodia has been influenced by nearby countries as well as by the French.\nBut go back 1,000 years to when the Khmer Empire ruled over most of Southeast Asia and, some historians argue, the food in the subject countries was itself influenced by Khmer cuisine. Get a hands-on experience of cooking authentic Khmer dishes to learn more about the ingredients from local experts.\nLocation: #67 Oknha Chhun St. (240), Phnom Penh 12207, Cambodia\nOpen: Daily from 10 am to 10 pm\nphoto by Marcin Konsek (CC BY-SA 4.0) modified\nSisowath Quay in Phnom Penh\nSisowath Quay is one of Phnom Penh's most bustling areas, with a row of boutiques, bars, cafes, restaurants and luxury hotels lining its length. The boulevard spans about 3 km long, at the intersection of the Tonle Sap and Mekong rivers.\nSisowath Quay's cool and relaxing atmosphere lets you enjoy a delightful getaway, and serves as a central meeting point of almost all roads that lead to the city’s key attractions.\nLocation: Sisowath Quay, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nphoto by Ken Marshall (CC BY 2.0) modified\nSovannaphum Arts Association & Art Gallery\nPhnom Penh is not as active as Siem Reap when it comes to Khmer performing arts. Even so, you can find some of the performing arts schools in the city are open to the public during the day, allowing you the opportunity to observe dancers in training.\nAmong these, a must-see is the Sovannaphum Arts Association & Art Gallery on 111 Street 360 (corner of Street 105). Started in 1994 by a group of students from the Royal University of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh, the association has a theatre where traditional cultural shows are staged every Friday and Saturday night at 7.30 pm.\nShows include shadow puppet theatre, classical Apsara dancing, and folk and mask dances. On sale at the gallery at the theatre are shadow puppets made from leather, musical instruments and more. Another fine theatre to visit is the Chatomuk Theatre at Sisowath Quay.\nLocation: 166 St 99, Phnom Penh 12307, Cambodia\nphoto by Michael Gunther (CC BY-SA 4.0) modified\nTa Prohm Temple at Tonle Bati\nTa Phrom Temple at Tonle Bati dates back to the late 12th century, featuring well-preserved stone carvings and bas-reliefs of Hindu mythology – this temple is similar in style to Angkor Wat in Siem Reap. Accessible within an hour’s drive from Phnom Penh City Center in the Takeo Province, there’s an entrance fee of US$3 to visit the temple, making it affordable and convenient option for travelers who are staying in the capital of Cambodia.\nOther attractions in Tonle Bati include Yey Peo Temple (located 200 meters north of Ta Phrom Temple) and Tonle Bati Lake, a popular picnic spot among locals. Great for unwinding after visiting the temples, you can also rent huts and hammocks at relatively low prices.\nLocation: Tonle Bati, Cambodia\nphoto by Colin W (CC BY-SA 3.0) modified\nThe Killing Fields, also known as Choeung Ek Memorial, is a bone-chilling reminder of Cambodia’s tragic history. About 17 km south of Phnom Penh City, it is one of the many killing fields or execution and burial grounds used by the Khmer Rouge regime during its rule of the country from 1975 to 1979.\nMass graves were discovered after the Khmer Rouge fled the city, leading to the construction of a Buddhist memorial for over 15,000 victims in The Killing Fields. Half-day tours to this memorial and S-21 Prison feature informative audio guides in many languages as well as testimony from survivors and guards of the regime.\nLocation: Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nOpen: Daily from 7.30 am to 5.30 pm\nTuol Sleng Genocide Museum (S-21 Prison)\nTuol Sleng Genocide Museum was formerly Tuol Svay Pray High School before it was turned into an interrogation, torture and execution center by the Khmer Rouge regime. Also known as S-21 Prison, an estimated 17,000 Cambodians entered this notorious venue. Only 7 managed to survive until the end of the regime.\nMost rooms have been left in the state they were found in January 1979, including classrooms divided into tiny cells. An essential stop while visiting Phnom Penh, Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum also displays 6,000 haunting portraits of its prisoners for travelers to understand the recent tragic Cambodian history. It's an intense experience touring the old prison and will no doubt give you plenty of food for thought.\nLocation: St 113, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nWat Langka\nWat Langka, nearby Phnom Penh’s Independence Monument, is one of the 5 pagodas founded by Ponhea Yat in 1442. This colorful shrine was established as a library of Buddhist scriptures as well as a meeting place for Cambodian and Sri Lankan monks, but it was also used as a storehouse during the Khmer Rouge’s regime.\nUnlike most Buddhist temples in Cambodia, the stupas here are kept in a great condition and entrance to the temple is free of charge. Every Sunday at 8.30am, you can participate in Wat Langka’s meditation sessions which are supervised by English-speaking monks.\nLocation: Street 282 (Samdach Louis Em), Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nWat Ounalom\nWat Ounalom offers visitors an in-depth look into the spiritual teachings, philosophies and history of Buddhism in Cambodia. The most prominent and oldest of 5 pagodas in the country, Wat Ounalom is the center of Cambodian Buddhism and serves as the abode of the Patriarch of the Mahanikai School of Buddhism.\nBuilt in 1443 to enshrine an eyebrow hair (ounalom) of Lord Buddha, the shrine housed over 500 monks and the Buddhist Institute’s library that held over 30,000 titles in its collection before they were wiped out by the Khmer Rouge regime. The displayed Buddha’s eyebrow miraculously survived, making it the main draw among travelers from all over the world. A 10-minute walk from The Royal Palace, entrance to Wat Ounalom is free of charge.\nLocation: 172 Ly Yoat Lay Street, Phnom Penh, Cambodia\nWat Phnom\nWat Phnom is a temple that sits on a hill to the north of Phnom Penh. The temple was restored and reconstructed through several years, namely in 1434, 1806, 1894 and 1926.\nWat Phnom is a symbol of the Cambodian capital city and is regularly visited by local devotees who either come for prayers, bring small offerings, or participate in meditation.\nCambodian Country Club Equestrian Center\nCambodian Country Club Equestrian Center, which opened in 2003, is in the Northbridge International School. An international-standard riding school and club, it offers riding and riding lessons for adults and children of all abilities and all ages from 5 years old and up. The center also stages showjumping events, exhibitions and a riding camp for kids.\nLocation: 2004 Street, Group 6, Sangkat Toeuk Thla, Khan Sen Sok, Phnom Penh 12101, Cambodia\nFrench Institute Cambodia\nInstitut Francais du Cambodge or French Institute Cambodia can be a great place to watch French films, apart from the several big-screen movie theaters in town which mostly show films in the Khmer language. Head down to Street 184 for the Institute's French Cultural Center Movie theater. This shows French films, most of them with English subtitles.\nLocation: 218 Keo Chea, Phnom Penh 12211, Cambodia\nOpen: Monday–Saturday from 8 am to 9 pm (closed on Sundays)\nPenny Wong | Compulsive Traveler\nThis article includes opinions of the Go Guides editorial team. Hotels.com compensates authors for their writing appearing on this site; such compensation may include travel and other costs.\nEnter a destination or property name\nAge at check in:\nARTillery Café Phnom Penh\n3 Best Nightclubs in Phnom Penh\nWat Ounalom in Phnom Penh\n16 Best Restaurants in Phnom Penh\n20 Best Shopping Experiences in Phnom Penh\nChoose one of the following to unlock Secret Prices and pay less on select properties.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1705839"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6883506774902344,"wiki_prob":0.3116493225097656,"text":"Accenture reiterates the need for gender balance in the South African workplace\nConsistent with the sentiment across the global business environment, a senior diversity executive at Accenture Africa has emphasised the importance of gender balance and an environment of equality in the overall capacity of South African organisations to innovate and develop.\nThe question of gender equality in the workplace is one that has been increasingly debated in South Africa, although the country boasts a number of women in senior business positions. Nevertheless, reports have demonstrated that women in the country face a glass ceiling when it comes to their professional career.\nA number of sectors in the country have pledged their commitment to improving the scenario around gender balance in the workplace, particularly as a number of reports released in recent years have suggested that having a greater gender balance is a boon for productivity and organisational growth.\nGlobal management consultancy Accenture is the latest firm to have made this claim in the context of businesses in South Africa and across the broader region of Africa. The firm has based its claims on a study conducted amongst nearly 20,000 executives across the globe, 700 of which are in South Africa.\nPredictably, the biggest priority amongst South African businesses in the near future is to foster a culture of innovation. Businesses in the country have been struggling with sluggish growth in recent times, and captains of the business environment have urged that innovation is the way out of this scenario. Gender equality is crucial to this goal.\nAs explained by Ntombi Mhangwani, Head of the Women’s Forum and Director for Integrated Marketing and Communications at Accenture Africa, “In South Africa, we have a competitive environment. The corporate race is on to innovate and find skilled specialist workers. Recruiting more women for a balanced workforce makes sense.”\n“The survey’s findings have particular relevance in our country, where the debate about the role of women, their place in business, politics and other spheres is ongoing. High profile women – including those outside business – like sportswoman Caster Semenya who is fighting for her fundamental rights, have become role models for a new generation of women wanting to use their talents fully. Being given the opportunity to contribute skills and participate in driving innovative practices within companies should be seen as part of women’s broader objectives,” she added.\nDiversity news\nMore Diversity\nPwC representatives discuss gender balance as women's month kicks off Women’s month is officially underway in South Africa, sparking discussions once again surrounding the status of women in the country’s workplace and economy.\nAccenture to support an event promoting gender equality in SA Accenture is among a number of high profile firms that will organise the Voices of Change event in South Africa this August, which is being set up to encourage leaders in the country’s business envir\nEY supports engineering training programme for women in South Africa Big Four accounting and advisory firm EY is continuing its work towards making the South African business environment more equitable.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1414858"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9183155298233032,"wiki_prob":0.9183155298233032,"text":"Pat Summerall: 'Wade Phillips Was An Excuse For The Players'\nBy Ed Valentine@Valentine_Ed Updated Nov 13, 2010, 9:33am EST\nShare All sharing options for: Pat Summerall: 'Wade Phillips Was An Excuse For The Players'\nPat Summerall has written a book about playing for legendary coaches Tom Landry and Vince Lombardi.\nLegendary broadcaster and former New York Giants placekicker Pat Summerall has a pretty strong opinion on the decision this week by Dallas Cowboys' owner Jerry Jones to fire head coach Wade Phillips and promote Jason Garrett.\n\"Under Phillips, and I like Wade, he's a very, very nice man and he's a good friend of mine, but they were starting to lose interest,\" Summerall said.\n\"Cowboys magic as you know has been world wide, not just city wide. They were starting to lose that, and I think Jerry Jones sensed that, sensed that he was losing the fans as well as the team and he made a change to Jason Garrett, who I like so far.\"\nI had a chance Friday to speak with Summerall, who is now 80, as part of his promotional tour for his new book 'GIANTS: What I Learned About Life from Vince Lombardi and Tom Landry.'\nAs an end and placekicker, Summerall turns out to have been the only Giants player directly coached by both legendary figures. Throw in Summerall's long broadcasting career, which began in 1962, and the fact that he lives in Dallas, and he is uniquely positioned to offer an opinion on the situation with the 1-7 Cowboys. As of now, Summerall has been impressed by Garrett.\n\"He sounds like he's all business, and Wade Phillips was not all business. Wade Phillips was an excuse for the players who performed poorly, he always had an excuse for them,\" Summerall said. \"That's maybe a good approach for some teachers, but not for Jason Garrett and not for the people that I wrote the book about.\"\nLombardi, of course, was the fiery, no-nonsense tough guy who went on to build the Green Bay Packer dynasty and became the coach against whom all NFL coaches are inevitably judged. Landry was the quiet, dignified teacher who became a Hall of Fame coach while building Dallas into a perennial power.\n\"Both had one thing in common, that they were very prepared. Neither one of them ever went into a meeting without intense preparation. I tried to use that in the broadcasting world when I became a television announcer,\" Summerall said. \"You never can over-prepare.\n\"Both were so confident of what they were teaching and so sure that their way was the best way, they were great teachers. Totally different methods, but they were both intensely prepared and very confident in what they were trying to teach you.\"\nFor 22 seasons, beginning in 1981, Summerall was paired in the broadcast booth with another coach, John Madden. They became a legendary combination in their own right.\n\"John had such great respect for the game and such knowledge of the game that he reminded me of sitting down in one of Lombardi's meetings or one of Landry's meetings,\" Summerall said. \"John had such a great passion for the game.\n\"I think that's an important thing that made both of them effective, both Landry and Lombardi and John Madden, too. He (Madden) had such respect for what he was talking about and also such a passion for presenting it in a manner that most people could understand.\"\nIn a recent article for The Washington Post, I wrote that this is shaping up to be the worst season in the history of the Cowboy franchise. I asked Summerall if that was overly dramatic, and he said \"No, I don't think it is at all.\"\nHe then proceeded to point a finger directly at Jones for the mess the Cowboys are in.\n\"Jerry thinks that his approach and his knowledge of the game is such that he doesn't need a go-between, that he could probably coach the team himself -- he thinks. That's not necessarily true,\" Summerall said. \"I think he does need a go-between and I think he made a good choice in picking Jason Garrett to take over.\"\nNOTE: I have to mention that, on a personal level, spending a few minutes on the phone with Summerall Friday afternoon was a thrill for me. He still has that unmistakable voice, the voice I basically grew up with as a football fan. I never want to lose perspective on just how cool it is to spend a few minutes talking with people like him, and I thoroughly enjoyed it.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1229419"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8270434737205505,"wiki_prob":0.8270434737205505,"text":"← John Vincent\nStephen Minor’s Children – Unionist Slave Owners →\nStephen Minor – Last Spanish Governor of Natchez\nPosted on January 24, 2013 by markeminer\nStephen “Don Esteban” Minor (1760 – 1815) was just a second cousin of our Miner line, but his story is too unique not to include. Pardon the length, but as Frances Hunter says, this period of early American history is a delightful rabbit hole of heroes and scoundrels — often embodied in the same individuals.\nStephen’s rise from a backwoods Pennsylvania, teenaged sole survivor of an ambush to Governor, first president of the Bank of Mississippi (1797-1815) and wealthy Natchez planter is remarkable. I think his connection to the rich and powerful was Oliver Pollock, though I haven’t seen this link written anywhere.\nMy next post covers Stephen’s children and grandchildren who owned hundreds of slaves yet many remained loyal to the Union and one offered emancipation in exchange for recognition of the Confederacy by England and France.\nFamous and infamous characters in Stephen’s life include:\nBernardo de Gálvez, Governor of Louisiana\nOliver Pollock, Inventor of $ (dollar sign) and financier of the Western theater of the Revolution\nManuel Gayoso de Lemos, Minor’s mentor and Governor of Natchez and Louisiana\nMarshall Alejandro O’Reilly, “Wild Geese” mercenary from Ireland\nJames Wilkinson Scoundrel, American General and Spanish double agent, (See the Spanish Conspiracy by Frances Hunter. I wonder if Stephen Minor assisted his mentor Manuel Gayoso in his undercover work. Maybe he led the 300 Natchez militiamen deployed to New Orleans in 1793 to help defend the port against “the Jacobin menace.” ) Later, Minor was a friend of James Wilkinson who asked him to protect a trunk of manuscripts from his enemies in 1814.\nAaron Burr endeavored to persuade Governor Minor to co-operate with him in his nefarious plot , against the Federal Government.\nPhilip Nolan, Horse Trader, Freebooter, and “the man without a country” After Nolan was killed by the Spanish on a filibustering expedition to Tejas, Minor adopted his son Philip Jr.\nDueled with George Poindexter, Quick tempered Federalist hater, congressman and later US Senator from Mississippi\nMinor helped Andrew Ellicott survey the Mississippi Territory/Florida border. Ellicott mapped much of the west, planned DC and taught Meriwether Lewis.\nAmong the noted men who were entertained at Minor’s Concord Plantation were General Anthony Wayne, General Lafayette, Jefferson Davis, Aaron Burr and Winthrop Sargent, the first territorial governor of the Mississippi Territory,\nThe Yellow Duchess, Stephen’s wife\nStephen Minor was born 8 Feb 1760 Greene County, Pennsylvania on the Monongahela River near the border with Virginia. Present day West Virginia University in Morgantown is about 12 miles away from Stephen’s birthplace. His great grandparents were our ancestors William MINER and Francis BURCHAM. His grandparents were Stephen Minor and Athaliah Updyke. His parents were Capt. William Minor and Frances Ellen Phillips. (See William MINER‘s page for their stories)\nStephen Minor Portrait – By William Edward West (1809)\nStephen first ventured to New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1779. He first married Martha Ellis 1790 in Louisiana. After Martha died, he married Katherine Lintot 4 Aug 1792 in Natchez, Adams, Mississippi. Stephen died 29 Nov 1815 in Natchez, Mississippi and is buried at Concord, the historic residence of the early Spanish governors at Natchez, Mississippi.\nMartha Ellis was born 1760 in Natchez, Natchitoches, Louisiana She was the daughter of Colonel John Ellis of White Cliffs, located south of Natchez on the Mississippi River. There were apparently no children from this union. Martha died before 1791\nKatherine Lintot was born 4 Aug 1770 in Carlisle, Cumberland, Pennsylvania. Her parents were Bernard Lintot (1740 – 1804) and Katherine Trotter (1744 – 1804). Bernard . Bernard Lintot is reputed to have studied at the Inner Temple, London. He was a Wall Street trader who became the commissary at Manchac. She was known as the “Yellow Duchess” because of her reputed fondness for all things golden. Katherine died 9 Jul 1844 in Natchez, Adams, Mississippi\nChild of Stephen and Martha: for her story, see my post Stephen Minor’s Children – Decadent Unionists\nName Born Married Departed\n1. Mary Minor 4 Jul 1787 Natchez, Adams, Mississippi William Kenner\n19 Nov 1801 5 Oct 1814 Oakland Plantation, Louisiana\nChildren of Stephen and Katherine: (for their story, see my post Stephen Minor’s Children – Decadent Unionists\n2. Martha Minor ~1793\nNatches, Adams, Mississippi Bef. 1795\nNatches, Adams, Mississippi\n3. Frances Minor 27 Mar 1795 Natchez, Adams, Mississippi Henry Chotard\n27 May 1819 Adams, Mississippi 10 May 1864 Natchez, Adams, Mississippi\n4. Katherine Lintot Minor 24 Jun 1799 Natchez, Adams, Mississippi James Wilkins\n11 Apr 1823 Adams, Mississippi 5 Jan 1849 or 9 Jul 1844 Natchez, MS\n5. Stephen Minor ~1803\nNatchez, Adams, Mississippi Charlotte Walker? 29 Nov 1815 Natchez, MS or\n6. William John Minor 27 Jan 1808 Natchez, Adams, Mississippi Rebecca Ann Gustine\n7 Aug 1829 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 18 Sep 1869 Southdown Plantation,, Houma, Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana\nCaravan Survivor\nAbout 1779 before Stephen was twenty years old, he traveled to Spanish New Orleans to procure military supplies for the Continental Army. Once the goods were packed on mules, Minor and his men headed up the western bank of the Mississippi in a caravan in route to the Ohio Valley. Along the way, Minor fell ill and was at times so consumed with fever and chills that the caravan was forced to moved forward during the day while Minor followed their trail at his own sluggish pace, often catching up with the group at its encampment at night.\nOne day as Minor laid back shivering with a high fever, the caravan was overtaken by bandits deep in the heart of Indian country in present day Arkansas, their goods stolen and the men murdered. Minor found the grisly crime scene hours later, his life having been spared due to his illness. Alone in the vast wilderness, the 20-year-old stumbled back into New Orleans with news of the disaster.About that time, Spain had joined the Americans in the fight against the British. Minor, always enterprising, learned Spanish and French as he determined his next move.\nThe Taking of British West Florida\nMinor joined the royal Spanish army being assembled by the Governor of Louisiana, Bernardo de Gálvez, for attacks on English Manchac (Fort Butte) and Baton Rouge (1779).\nYoung Stephen Minor caught the eye of Bernardo de Gálvez (1746 – 1786) 5th Governor of Spanish Louisiana , 61st Viceroy of New Spain. Galveston, Texas is named for him\nSpain officially entered the American Revolutionary War on May 8, 1779, with a formal declaration of war by King Charles III. This declaration was followed by another on July 8 that authorized his colonial subjects to engage in hostilities against the British. When Bernardo de Gálvez, the colonial Governor of Spanish Louisiana received word of this on July 21, he immediately began to secretly plan offensive operations. Gálvez, who had been planning for the possibility of war since April, intercepted communications from the British at Pensacola indicating that the British were planning a surprise attack on New Orleans; he decided to launch his own attack first. To that end, he concealed from the public his receipt of the second proclamation.\nFort Bute was located on Bayou Manchac, about 115 miles up the Mississippi River from New Orleans, on the far western border of British West Florida. Lt. Col. Alexander Dickson was charged with the defense of the Baton Rouge district, which included Fort Bute, Baton Rouge, and Fort Panmure (modern Natchez, Louisiana). The British had begun sending larger numbers of troops to the area following George Rogers Clark‘s capture of Vincennes, which had exposed the weak British defenses in the area. At Dickson’s disposal in August 1779 were 400 regulars, including companies from the 16th and 60th Regiments and a recently-arrived company o fgrenadiers from the German state of Waldeck, and about 150 Loyalist militia.\nFort Bute was an older stockade fort built in 1766. It was in such disrepair that Dickson judged it to be indefensible. When Dickson received word of Spanish movements, he withdrew most of his forces to Baton Rouge and Panmure, leaving a small garrison of 20 Waldeckers under Captain von Haake behind.\nGálvez originally planned to march from New Orleans on August 20. However, a hurricane on August 18 swept over New Orleans, sinking most of his fleet and destroying provisions. Undeterred, Gálvez rallied the support of the colony and on August 27 set out by land toward Baton Rouge, using as an explanation for the movement the need to defend Spanish Louisiana from an expected British attack. The force departing New Orleans consisted of 520 regulars, of whom about two-thirds were recent recruits, 60 militiamen, 80 free blacks and mulattoes, and ten American volunteers, including Stephen Minor, headed by Oliver Pollock.\nPollock used his fortune to finance American operations in the west, and the successful Illinois campaign of General George Rogers Clark in Illinois 1778. Stephen Minor’s uncle, Col. John Minor built Clark’s flotilla of vessels on the Monongahela River. I’ve never seen it written anywhere, but its more than likely that Pollock’s introduction of Minor to the Spanish leadership was a key factor in Stephen’s rise and family fortune.\nOliver Pollock (1737-1823) was a merchant and financier of the Revolutionary War, of which he has long been considered a historically undervalued figure. He is often attributed with the creation of the US Dollar sign in 1778.\nOliver Pollock (1737-1823)\nOliver Pollock came to North America in 1760. A native of Ireland, he arrived in Philadelphia and settled in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. At age 25, Pollock began a career as a merchant in the West Indies. With his headquarters in Havana, Cuba, he traded mainly with the Spanish. In Cuba, he established a relationship with Governor-General Alejandro O’Reilly Like Pollock, O’Reilly was from Ireland, but left his native land to fight in foreign armies, serving in both the Austrian and Spanish military. O’Reilly married into the family of the Spanish governor of Cuba, and quickly rose in influence in the region. In 1769, he was sent to Louisiana to put down a rebellion by French Creoles, a task he completed with flying colors.\nFollowing his friend to New Orleans, Pollock worked there as a merchant and was given free trade status within the city because of his relationship with O’Reilly. As a result, he because a very successful businessman, particularly in dealing with flour, which was a highly sought-after commodity. To help the colonists, Pollock sold the flour at half price, no doubt endearing him to the populace.\nWith his growing wealth, Pollock gained political influence. In 1777, he was appointed as the commercial agent of the United States government in New Orleans, essentially making him the representative of the colonies. Utilizing his enormous wealth, Pollock financed American military operations west of the Mississippi, including George Rogers Clark’s campaign in Illinois in 1778. That same year, he borrowed $70,000 from the Spanish governor of Louisiana and served as his aide-de-camp during a campaign against the British. Throughout Louisiana, Alabama and Florida, the Spanish defeated the British, culminating with the Siege of Pensacola in 1781. Pollock, through his diplomatic skills, helped gain the surrender of Fort Panmure by the British in Natchez.\nIn 1779 he borrowed $70,000 from Spanish Louisiana’s Governor Bernardo de Gálvez, but the financial needs of the country at the time left him in a loss. Pollock served as Gálvez’s aide-de-camp during the Spanish campaign against the British that began with the Spanish declaration of war in June 1779. Gálvez and the Spanish troops swept through Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida, defeating the British with the Capture of Fort Bute and campaigning through the victorious Siege of Pensacola in 1781. Pollock’s diplomacy assisted in the surrender of Fort Panmure at Natchez, Mississippi\nAs they marched upriver, the force grew by another 600 men, from Indians to Acadians. At its peak, the force numbered over 1,400, but this number was reduced due the hardships of the march by several hundred before they reached Fort Bute.\nWhen the force neared Fort Bute on September 6, Gálvez informed them of the Spanish war declaration and the true purpose of their mission, eliciting cheers from the men. At dawn the next day, they attacked the fort, and after a brief skirmish in which one German was killed, most of the garrison surrendered. The six who escaped capture made their way to Baton Rouge to notify Dickson.\nAfter several days’ rest, Gálvez advanced on Baton Rouge, only 15 miles from Fort Bute. When Gálvez arrived at Baton Rouge on Sep 12, he found a well-fortified town garrisoned by over 400 regular army troops and 150 militia under the overall command of Lt. Col. Alexander Dickson.\nGálvez first sent a detachment of men further up the river to break communications between Baton Rouge and British sites further upriver. Before the fort he was unable to directly advance his own artillery, so Gálvez ordered a feint to the north through a wooded area, sending a detachment of his poorly-trained militia to create disturbances in the forest. The British turned and unleashed massed volleys at this body, but the Spanish forces, shielded by substantial foliage, suffered only three casualties. While this went on, Gálvez dug siege trenches and established secure gunpits within musket range of the fort. He placed his artillery pieces there, opening fire on the fort on Sep 21.\nThe British endured three hours of shelling before Dickson offered to surrender. Gálvez demanded and was granted terms that included the capitulation of the 80 regular infantry at Fort Panmure (modern Natchez, Mississippi), a well-fortified position that would have been difficult for Gálvez to take militarily. Dickson surrendered 375 regular troops the next day; Gálvez had Dickson’s militia disarmed and sent home. Gálvez then sent a detachment of 50 men to take control of Panmure. He also dismissed his own militia companies, left a sizable garrison at Baton Rouge, and returned to New Orleans with about 50 men.\nIn 1780 Spanish Gen. Bernardo de Gálvez amassed an army to take on the British in West Florida. Stephen joined the Spanish army and participated in a military expedition against Fort Charlotte, located near Mobile in British West Florida., which resulted in a resounding Spanish victory. At Mobile, according to historian Benjamin L.C. Wailes, Minor caught the eye of Gen. Galvez who was impressed with Minor’s bravery and heroism as well as his “remarkable skill with the rifle.”Minor was in Spanish service for most of his adult life. He became a major of the Spanish army.\nIn 1763, the Treaty of Paris was signed, ending the French and Indian War. The treaty ceded Mobile and the surrounding territory to Great Britain, and it was made a part of the expanded British West Florida colony. The British changed the name of Fort Condé to Fort Charlotte.\nBritish West Florida in 1767\nThe British were eager not to lose any useful inhabitants and promised religious tolerance to the French colonists, ultimately 112 French Mobilians remained in the colony. The first permanent Jewish presence in Mobile began in 1763 as a result of the new religious tolerance.\nWhile the British were dealing with their rebellious colonists along the Atlantic coast, the Spanish entered the war as an ally of France in 1779. They took the opportunity to order Bernardo de Galvez, Governor of Louisiana, on an expedition east to retake Florida. He captured Mobile during the Battle of Fort Charlotte in 1780, as part of this campaign. The Spanish wished to eliminate any British threat to their Louisiana colony, which they had received from France in the same 1763 Treaty of Paris.\nOn Jan 11, 1780, a fleet of twelve ships carrying 754 men, a mix of Spanish regulars and militia sailed from New Orleans, reaching the mouth of the Mississippi on Jan 18. They were joined on January 20 by the American ship West Florida, under the command of Captain William Pickles and with a crew of 58.\nOn Feb 20, reinforcements arrived from Havana, bringing the force to about 1,200 men. By Feb 25, the Spanish had landed their army on the shores of the Dog River, about 10 miles from Fort Charlotte. They were informed by a deserter that the fort was garrisoned by 300 men.\nOn Mar 1, Gálvez sent a letter to Durnford offering to accept his surrender, which was politely rejected. Gálvez began setting up gun batteries around the fort the next day. Durnford wrote to General John Campbell at Pensacola requesting reinforcements. On March 5 and 6, most of the Pensacola garrison left on a march toward Mobile. Delayed by difficult river crossings, this force was unable to assist the Fort Charlotte garrison.\nOn Mar 13, the walls of Fort Charlotte were breached, and Durnford capitulated the next day, surrendering his garrison. The fall of Fort Charlotte drove the British from the western reaches of West Florida and reduced the British military presence in West Florida to its capital, Pensacola.\n4/5 scale replica of Fort Conde in downtown Mobile – Note the row of cannon\nEmboldened by the destruction of a Gálvez-led expedition against Pensacola by a hurricane in the fall of 1780, Campbell decided to attempt the recapture of Mobile. In the Battle of Mobile, a British attack on Jan 7 1781 against a Spanish outpost on the east side of Mobile Bay was repulsed, and the German leader of the expedition was killed.\nCaptain Johann von Hanxleden’s expedition of 700 men arrived near the outpost late on Jan 6, and made a dawn attack the next morning. Forty of the Spaniards made a dash for a boat anchored nearby, but the British cut many of them down with a musket volley. Choctaw warriors from the expedition then followed the Spaniards into the water to collect scalps. The remaining Spanish coolly opened fire on the British, killing Hanxleden and nineteen others. The British troops then disengaged and retreated\nMinor also participated in the conquest of Pensacola (1781) by later in the year Spanish Field Marshal Gálvez completing the Spanish conquest of West Florida.\nThese actions were condoned by the revolting American colonies, partially evidenced by the presence of Oliver Pollack, representative of the American Continental Congress, and due to the fact that Mobile and West Florida, for the most part, remained loyal to the British Crown. The fort was renamed Fortaleza Carlota, with the Spanish holding Mobile as a part of Spanish West Florida until 1813, when it was seized by United States General James Wilkinson during the War of 1812.\nStephen Minor and Manuel Gayoso de Lemos\nIn return for his military services under Galvez, Minor was accorded the rank of Captain and granted the land on which the city of Natchez was built. In 1781, Galvez appointed Minor adjutant of the military post at Natchez commanded by Gayoso de Lemos.\nMinor received a commission as a captain in the Spanish army, and he served as the adjutant of Fort Panmure at Natchez. During this time, Minor also assisted Spanish governor Manuel Gayoso de Lemos in various administrative duties. He also provided the Anglo-American settlers and Natchez Indians of the district liaison with the Spanish officials, who often referred to him as “Don Esteban.”\nManuel Luis Gayoso de Lemos Amorín y Magallanes (1747 – 1799) was born in Oporto, Portugal to Spanish consul Manuel Luis Gayoso de Lemos y Sarmiento and Theresa Angélica de Amorín y Magallanes, he received his education in London, where his parents were living. He was said to have the accent and manners of the British.\nManuel Gayoso de Lemos, Governor of Natchez\nAt age 23 Manuel Gayoso de Lemos joined the military, the Spanish Lisbon Regiment as a cadet (1771) and was commissioned ensign the following year. The Lisbon Regiment had been reassigned from Havana to New Orleans since the Spanish entry under Field Marshal Alejandro O’Reilly in 1769. (Like many so-called “Wild Geese” of his generation, O’Reilly left Ireland to serve in foreign,Catholic armies.)\nThroughout his life Gayoso de Lemos retained his military rank and he was a brigadier at the time of his death. Don Manuel Gayoso de Lemos married three times. His first marriage was to Theresa Margarita Hopman y Pereira of Lisbon, with whom he had two children. In 1792 he married Elizabeth Watts of Philadelphia and Louisiana; she died three months later. He then married Elizabeth’s sister, Margaret Cyrilla Watts, with whom he had one son.\nOn Nov 3, 1787, Manuel Gayoso de Lemos assumed military and civil command of the fort and the newly organized District of Natchez (West Florida), having been appointed district governor by Governor-General Esteban Rodríguez Miró, governor of Louisiana and West Florida. On his arrival, Gayoso de Lemos established an informal cabildo (council) of landed planters which was formalized in 1792. Most of the council were of non-Spanish origin having come down from the Ohio River Valley settlements (especially Kentucky).\nFrom The Sins of Manuel Gayoso – “Natchez was a rough, lawless frontier settlement when Gayoso arrived in 1789. There were about twenty houses, most of them rough framed affairs, sparsely furnished. Kentuckians and other westerners descended the Mississippi with flatboats of goods to sell, unloaded their cargoes, then raised hell in the taverns. Often they stole a horse to get back home, via the Natchez Trace. Stolen goods frequently changed hands in the taverns for the price of a few drinks. Counterfeiting was big business, and slaves were common targets for thievery. Gayoso himself was ripped off by an American traveler to whom he extended hospitality, losing two slaves, a shotgun, carbine, bridles, and two saddles. (The thief was caught and returned for trial.)\nGayoso sought to lower the high rate of homicide in his frontier district by banning knives and pistols, but outlaws with a penchant for stabbing circumvented the law by fashioning effective stilettos of hardened wood. As governor, Gayoso was the chief magistrate and possessed the power to adjudicate disputes and arrange settlements. In Natchez Saturday was court day, and Gayoso spent virtually the entire day hearing complaints of various types and rendering his decisions. He was as tough on miscreants as his authority allowed, petitioning Miró unsuccessfully for the funds to build a jail. Gayoso had considerable power over the church in his district. Because the governors were considered the Spanish King’s representatives the new world, they had the power to create new bishoprics, dioceses, parishes, and other church posts. Gayoso was tolerant of various religious sects in Natchez, but he didn’t take any guff off the priests and didn’t hesitate to let them know who was boss.\nMiró left the governorship of Louisiana in 1791 and returned to Spain. Gayoso had hoped to replace him, but was disappointed when Francisco Luis Hector de Carondelet was appointed in his place. Despite initial reason for tension, the two men seemed to have had an effective working relationship. When Carondelet arrived in 1791, he was appalled at the state of Spain’s defenses on the lower Mississippi. Together, Gayoso and Carondelet set about a long-term program to beef up Spain’s military defenses. At Gayoso’s urging, Carondelet created the Squadron of the Mississippi, which came to include six galleys, four galiots, one bombardier, and six cannon launches. In 1795, the crew members numbered over 300. The larger galleys boasted an 18-pounder cannon and eight to ten swivel guns. They were used for reconnaissance expeditions up and down the Mississippi.\nGayoso also recommended to Carondelet construction of additional forts in the Mississippi Valley. They beefed up defenses in Nogales, Natchez, New Orleans, and Baton Rouge. Gayoso beat the Americans to Chickasaw Bluffs through painstaking negotiations with the Chickasaws, who finally consented to let Spain build a small military post there. Gayoso was supported by a majority of the ships in the Spanish squadron when he established a new military post at Chickasaw Bluffs in 1795.\nThe new fortifications aside, Gayoso believed that the primary defense of Louisiana lay not in expensive permanent forts, but in the willingness of Natchez settlers to defend their homes and plantations. Louisiana had a regular battalion of infantry—at least on paper (in fact, the battalion was never at full strength despite recruiting efforts in Mexico and emptying out all the jails in the Spanish empire). Gayoso persuaded Carondelet to organize a real militia, though Carondelet was mistrustful of the French settlers in Natchez and was reluctant to give them too much leeway. Gayoso persevered, and by the fall of 1793, he had organized two companies of infantry, two of cavalry, and one of artillery for Natchez.”\nGayoso de Lemos continued to encourage American settlement on Spanish soil, especially by Catholics, notably the Irish and the Scots, and those who brought significant property. He moved the administrative part of the town of Natchez from the waterfront up onto the bluffs. One of the most troubling aspects during his civil administration was confusion in the land titles, with a number of inconsistent land grants. Unfortunately, Rodríguez Miró’s successor, Governor-General Carondelet was not amenable to rectifying the problem.\nWhile in Natchez, Gayoso de Lemos used Americans freebooters, notably General James Wilkinson and Philip Nolan to help limit the growth of the United States. Also to this end, Gayoso de Lemos entered into alliances with the local Indian tribes and signed formal treaties with them in 1792, 1793, and 1795. Under his direction the Spanish fortified the Mississippi at Nogales (later Walnut Hills, then later changed to Vicksburg) and Chickasaw Bluffs (later Memphis). He was instrumental in acquiring the information from James Wilkinson concerning the proposed US attack on New Orleans in 1793 by General George Rogers Clark.\nSeveral years after the death of his wife, Elizabeth, Gayoso began courting the younger sister of his second wife, Margaret Cyrilla Watts. However, the road to matrimony was far from smooth. When Gayoso sailed north to New Madrid in 1795 (where he happened to run into young William Clark), ugly rumors circulated to the effect that he was keeping a mistress there, had built a house for her, and intended to marry her. Governor Carondelet heard the rumors and was disturbed enough to write to Gayoso, reminding him that it was common knowledge that he had “lived as a husband” to Margaret Watts in Natchez and that if he didn’t behave himself, he was going to get in trouble with the Bishop of New Orleans.\nGayoso finally requested a royal license to marry Margaret in early 1796. Carondelet forwarded the paperwork through the captain-general of Cuba to the secretary of war. Official permission was not forthcoming until March 1797, by which time Margaret was noticeably pregnant. Concerned about their status, Gayoso asked Carondelet to grant interim permission, which he declined to do.\nOn July 14, 1797, Margaret gave birth to a healthy son, whom they named Fernando. When the Gayosos went to New Orleans later that year, an interesting religious ceremony took place, in which the Bishop baptized young Fernando and married his parents.\nUnder the terms of Pinckney’s Treaty promulgated in 1796, Spain agreed to relinquish the Natchez District to the United States. Thus Gayoso de Lemos oversaw the gradual Spanish withdrawal from the east-side of the middle Mississippi. In March 1797 the fort at Nogales was decommissioned with the troops and stores being moved to St. Louis.\nGayoso de Lemos succeeded Carondelet as Governor-General of Louisiana and West Florida on Aug 5, 1797 and Minor briefly served as acting governor until the Spanish evacuated Natchez prior to April of 1798, when the Mississippi Territory was created by the United States Congress.\nGayoso died of yellow fever in Louisiana in 1799. Unkind gossips claimed that hard drinking with a visiting American general who was associated with several scandals and controversies — James Wilkinson—was a contributing factor.\nWilkinson served in the Continental Army, ,but was twice compelled to resign. He was twice the Commanding General of the United States Army, appointed first Governor of the Louisiana Territory in 1805, and commanded two unsuccessful campaigns in the St. Lawrence theater during the War of 1812. After his death, he was discovered to have been a paid agent of the Spanish Crown. Traitor extraordinaire James Wilkinson should be better known. I’m pretty well versed in American history and today is the first I’ve heard of him..\n(See the Spanish Conspiracy by Frances Hunter. I wonder if Stephen Minor assisted his mentor Manuel Gayoso in his undercover work. Maybe he led the 300 Natchez militiamen deployed to New Orleans in 1793 to help defend the port against “the Jacobin menace.” )\nMississippi Territory (1798 – 1817)\nMinor was next appointed as one of the Spanish commissioners responsible for establishing the boundary between Florida and the United States during 1798 and 1799, running the lines between Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana. He was in command of the Spanish forces in Vidalia, Louisiana, across the river from Natchez, when the United States acquired this territory with the Louisiana Purchase in 1803. Minor was also a Spanish boundary commissioner for Louisiana during 1804 and 1805.\nOwning plantations on Sandy and Second creeks in Adams County, Minor initially produced indigo and tobacco. Following the example of Governor Gayoso, he began planting cotton around 1795, and by 1797, just one of his plantations was yielding twenty-five hundred bales of cotton annually. Minor also owned forty thousand acres of land east of the Pearl River in Louisiana.\nStephen Minor purchased Concord, the former residence and plantation of Governor Gayoso, after the latter departed Natchez.\nOver fifty years later, in its December 1850 session, the US Supreme Court affirmed the validity of Minor’s title to Concordia. At issue was whether Gayoso gave Concordia to his second wife Margarett Watts to use as she pleased or whether Gayosa’s infant son Fernando should have inherited. Also at issue was how the 1802 contract between the United States and Georgia and the 1803 Congressional Act regulating land grants south of Tennessee should be applied to this case. You can read the arguments and the decision here.\nStephen Minor Portrait – By Edith Flisher, ca. 1900-1905 — A copy of William Edward West’s 1809 painting, with a transformation of a blue coat into this red\nSome Interesting Events in Stephen’s Timeline\nIn 1788, Stephen Minor sold 300 acres to the Spanish government which included the bluff property. Manuel Gayoso de Lemos “drew a line from Front Street, facing the bluffs, and forbade the granting of lots west of it.”\nNatchez Bluff Park\nFrom 1804 to 1806, Congress was involved in a dispute over the bluff property involving 30 acres, which was eventually provided the Town of Natchez. In 1804 the (Natchez) Common Council fell into legal controversy with the aristocrat-controlled Board of Trustees of Jefferson College in Washington over the college’s claim to the public square and the commons in Natchez. In 1803 the United States Congress granted the college, for revenue purposes, two lots in Natchez and thirty acres of federal property in the city, with the tracts to be picked by the governor. Despite loud cries of protest from the Natchez officials, Gov. C.C. Claiborne chose two lots on the public square, and Cato West, acting governor of the Mississippi Territory in 1803, picked as the thirty-acre site the city commons on the bluff…The issue was not settled until 1816 when the city ‘won permanent and clear title to the tracts’.\nAt noon Thursday, May 11, 1797, [Concordia Sentinel by Stanley Nelson] Englishman Francis Baily, the 21-year-old son of a London banker, arrived in Natchez on a flatboat loaded with flour. This was a tense time in Natchez country history — the Spanish flag was flying over Fort Panmure (Rosalie) and the American flag flying over Liberty Hill a few hundred yards to the north where the House on Ellicott Hill sits today. A treaty had transferred possession of Natchez to the Americans, but the Spanish had yet to leave town, causing great tension. Much excitement was also in the air over cotton, a crop which was transforming the economic fortunes of the region, triggered by the invention of Eli Whitney’s saw gin.”There is a great deal of cotton raised in this district,” Baily wrote in his journal, which was later published in a book. “There are several jennies erected…in order to extricate the seed from the cotton.” On the bank of the Mississippi River at Natchez, Baily observed one gin owned by Stephen Minor and his partner that was “worked by two horses, which will give 500 lbs. of clear cotton in a day.”\nNot long after inspecting Minor’s gin on the river bank, Bailey prepared to take off for New Orleans. When the owners of the flatboat that transported Baily to Natchez sold their flour, the owner and crew headed back home through the wilderness along what became known as the Natchez Trace.\nBailey found a ride south on another flatboat, owned by a Mr. Douglass, “laden with cotton” bought at Natchez. Baily said the cotton was loaded into bags weighing about 200 pounds each and that the flatboat held an estimated 250 bags, about 25 tons. Douglass charged farmers and merchants an average of $1.50 per bag of cotton, garnering him a fee of about $375 for the entire shipment.\nThe flatboat was the only really serviceable type of river craft, for it would go where there was water enough for a muskrat to swim in, would glide unscathed over the concealed snag or, thrusting its corner into the soft mud of some protruding bank, swing around and go on as well stern first as before. The flatboat was the sum of human ingenuity applied to river navigation. Even (keeled) barges were proving failures and passing into disuse, as the cost of poling them upstream was greater than any profit to be reaped from the voyage.\n1800-1810 – When Natchez lawyer, judge, Congressman and finally Senator George Poindexter, a man often embroiled in controversy, challenged Minor to a duel in the early 1800s for some alleged slight, Natchez citizens thought he was insane. One friend advised Poindexter to back off, noting, “You must look to him (Minor). Whatever Major Minor states, upon his honor, you, and every other gentleman, are bound to accept.”\nPoindexter was involved in two other shootings. When former U.S. Vice President Aaron Burr was arrested in 1807 for the alleged Burr conspiracy, Poindexter conducted the prosecution until Burr’s escape from custody. Poindexter’s outspoken opposition to the Federalist Party resulted in criticisms from merchant Abijah Hunt, possibly the richest man in Mississippi Territory.\nGeorge Poindexter – US Senator from Mississippi – was bi-polar and a binge drinker. Quick tempered, Poindexter often clashed with adversaries and often challenged others to duels.\nWhen Hunt criticized him, Poindexter challenged Hunt to a duel and the quick moving affair ended up on the dueling grounds of Concordia on the plantation known as Palo Alto, located about a mile north of the Post of Concord (Vidalia) and owned by Stephen Minor of Natchez. Poindexter killed Hunt resulting in controversy and unsubstantiated claims that accused Poindexter of firing prematurely.\nIn 1834 when he was President pro tempore of the Senate, Poindexter had his Washington, D.C. home painted by Richard Lawrence. Lawrence, a deranged man, thought he was the ruler of England and the United States and that Andrew Jackson was a usurper. In Jan 1835 Lawrence shot at Jackson with two pistols while the President was attending a memorial service for a Congressman at the House of Representatives. It was the first attempt to assassinate a President. Jackson accused various political enemies as being behind Lawrence. Among them was Poindexter, who denied any connection except for the painting. But the accusations followed Poindexter back to Mississippi. He was unsuccessful for a second term.\nThe Yellow Duchess\nAnother Yellow Duchess\nStephen Minor’s wife Katherine Lintot was known as “The Yellow Duchess” . She is buried under the massive tomb to the left and her husband is buried next to her under the “table top” tombstone. She was known as the “Yellow Duchess” because of her fondness for the color yellow. Everything she owned was yellow. Including her clothes, carriage and furniture. She even had a flower garden full of yellow roses. She insisted that her horses be Palominos, and her slaves mulatto. Being of Spanish Royalty she had very great wealth and it is said she was buried with much of her gold. Therefore a massive structure was placed over her grave to prevent grave robbery. But no, she did not die of Yellow Fever – a disease that took many lives in Natchez.\nKatherine is buried under the massive tomb to the left and Stephen is buried next to her under the “table top” tombstone.It is said that the Yellow Dutchess was buried with much of her gold and this massive structure was placed to prevent grave robbery. – Natchez City Cemetery\nPhilip Nolan Jr.\nKatherine’s sister Fanny, married Philip Nolan, Sr. (wiki), who lost hits life while on an illegal horse hunting expedition at the site of present-day Waco, Texas, in 1797. His infant son, Philip, Jr., was reared by Stephen Minor. Philip Nolan, Jr., apparently lived out his life using the surname of his Uncle Stephen Minor. It was Philip, Jr., who built Linwood Plantation (circa 1840 to 1939) near Ashland (1841- ), the plantation home of Stephen’s grandson Duncan F. Kenner in Ascension Parish, Louisiana.\nPhilip Nolan (1771 Belfast, Ireland– 21 Mar 1801 Hill County) was a horse-trader and freebooter in Natchez, on the Mississippi River, and the Spanish province of Tejas (Aka Texas).\nHe is not to be confused with the fictional Philip Nolan of “The Man Without a Country” by Edward Everett Hale whose background was only loosely based on the real Philip Nolan’s exploits. Hale had intended to make his fictional character Philip Nolan’s brother, but, misremembering the real Nolan’s name as “Nathaniel”, named his character “Philip” (the apostles Philip and Nathaniel being frequently mentioned together in the New Testament). In editions printed after Hale discovered his mistake, the word “brother” was therefore changed to “cousin”, and Hale wrote The Real Philip Nolan by way of atonement.\nAt the age of fifteen, Nolan went to work for the Kentucky and Louisiana entrepreneur James Wilkinson as his business secretary and bookkeeper (1788–1791). He handled much of Wilkinson’s New Orleans trade and became conversant in Spanish. During this time, he became acquainted with Manuel Luis Gayoso the district governor for Natchez.\nIn 1791, using the influence of Wilkinson, Nolan obtained a trading passport from the Spanish governor of Louisiana and West Florida, Esteban Rodríguez Miró. He left Wilkinson’s employ and set out to trade with the Indian tribes across the Mississippi. This trade was not legitimate, but was perhaps winked at by the Spanish authorities. The passport was void in Texas, and his goods were confiscated by Spanish authorities. Nonetheless, and after living with the Indians for two years, Nolan returned to New Orleans with fifty horses.\nHe made a second trip to Texas in 1794-1795, with a passport from the Louisiana governor. He made acquaintance with Texas Governor Manuel Muñoz and the commandant general of the Provincias Internas, Pedro de Nava. It was on this trip that he met his first wife. This time he brought back 250 horses.\nIn 1796, Nolan worked for Andrew Ellicott, boundary commissioner for the United States who was mapping up the Missouri River. [Stephen Minor had previously worked with Ellicott mapping the border between Florida and the Mississippi Territory. ] Governor Gayoso de Lemos was not pleased when Nolan arrived at Natchez accompanied by the surveying party.\nBut Nolan managed to patch things up, at least with Governor Carondelet in New Orleans, and obtained a third passport to enter Texas, despite the fact that trade directly between Louisiana and Texas was still officially prohibited by Spain. Gayoso de Lemos was not fooled. He wrote directly to the viceroy of Mexico, warning him against foreigners (such as Nolan) who were stirring up the Texas Indians against Spanish rule.\nIn the summer of 1797, Nolan left on his third trip to Texas with a wagon train of trade goods, which he successfully brought to La Villa de San Fernando de Béxar, Spanish Texas (now San Antonio, the seat of Bexar County), where he insinuated himself in Spanish Texas society and married. Commandant General Pedro de Nava was ordered by the viceroy not to deal with Nolan, but Governor Muñoz defended Nolan and provided him with safe conduct out of Texas. Nolan left his wife and daughter in Texas and came back to Natchez in the autumn of 1799 with more than 1,200 horses.\nNolan is sometimes credited with being the first to map Texas for the American frontiersmen, but his map has never been found. Nonetheless, his observations were passed on to Wilkinson, who used them to produce his map of the Texas-Louisiana frontier in 1804.\nPhilip Nolan was married twice, first to Maria Gertrudis Dolores Quiñones, with whom he had a daughter, Maria Josefa Nolan, born August 20, 1798, in what is now San Antonio. Philip was separated from Maria by, at least, July 1800. He also married the former Frances “Fanny” Lintot, the daughter of Bernard Lintot, a prominent Natchez citizen, on December 19, 1799. Frances bore him a son Philip Nolan, Jr., in July 1801, after he had left on his fourth and final trip to Texas.\nNolan was unable to obtain any more passports from the Spanish authorities. He conceived or borrowed a scheme to go illegally into Texas and perhaps other Mexican provinces. There is considerable dispute about the exact nature of this filibustering expedition; some claim that he promised his men that they would seize riches and land and create a kingdom for themselves. Nonetheless, he convinced some thirty frontiersmen that the expedition would make them rich. They crossed the border in October 1800 and headed north of Nacogdoches to capture wild mustangs. The Spanish soon heard of their activities, and Pedro de Nava ordered their arrest.\nOn March 21, 1801, a Spanish force of 120 men under the command of Lieutenant M. Múzquiz left Nacogdoches in pursuit of Nolan, whom they encountered entrenched and unwilling to surrender just upstream from where the current Nolan River flows into the larger Brazos (now in Hill County, Texas). Several of Nolan’s men surrendered immediately to the Spanish and after Nolan was killed, the remainder yielded. Nolan’s ears were cut off as evidence for Spain that he was dead. The first-hand account of the expedition, capture and subsequent imprisonment is contained in the Memoirs of Ellis P. Bean, who was second in command of the expedition. Also see this account of the Adventures of Philip Nolan and Ellis P. Bean from a history of Texas.\nConcord in Ruins\nConcord was first the residence of Stephen Minor’s friend, the first Spanish Governor, Don Manuel Gayoso de Lemos, who built the house in 1794. Gayoso filled his mansion with ornate furniture imported from Spain and Santo Domingo, spent wildly and entertained lavishly. A friend described Gayoso during this time as “of high stature, and stoutly built,” and added, “he was fond of horses, of good cheer and madeira.” He owned matched bay horses, and a black and a roan. In 1799, he ordered a special “elastic jacket, which is very convenient apparel for a corpulent person to ride on horse back.”\nTo his beautiful home, Gayoso brought his second wife, an American beauty named Elizabeth Watts, in April 1792. Unfortunately, Elizabeth contracted a fever and died within three months of their marriage. A curious legend sprang up that the grief-stricken governor kept his dead wife in a tub filled with embalming fluid on the second story of Concord.\nGayoso’s mansion, “Concord,” was the social and political center of Natchez. A lady who remembered the mansion as a young girl gave this description:\nThe very first sight of the house, seen through a long vista of noble trees, as you enter the gate, forms a splendid picture. About half way from the gate is a large pond surrounded by gnarled old cedars, after which the road branches into two, on each side of an extensive sloping lawn, and the end of the delightful drive brings us to the house itself.\nBuilt of brick with walls fully two feet thick, there is an air of massiveness and solidity about this grand old house that gives promise of centuries of useful existence before it shall succumb to the leveling hand of time.\nOn the ground floor a broad gallery paved with brick completely circles the house, and lofty pillars reaching to the roof support another broad gallery upon which all the second story rooms open. These pillars are about four feet in diameter, made of brick covered with mortar, which gives them the appearance of stone. Two winding flights of stairs, one on each side of the entrance, made of the purest white marble, lead from the ground to the upper gallery, where they meet in a solid slab of snow white marble about six feet wide and ten feet long … A vestibule paved with alternate squares of black and white marble, after the houses of Pompeii, leads through the richly carved front door into a broad hall extending the full length of the house.\nAfter Gayoso de Lemos became Governor-General of Louisiana, he sold the house to Stephen Minor, who took over his former post. The Minor family moved after the Civil War and the home fell into a long period of deterioration. It burned in 1901, just as new owners made plans to refurbish it\nConcord Natchez burned in 1901. This postcard contains the only known photo\nThe original house resembled Ellicott’s Hill, with a front gallery under the main roof. Later in the 1810s, under the ownership of Steven Minor, the distinctive classical portico and side galleries were added, possibly designed by Levi Weeks, the architect of Auburn (1812), a Natchez mansion thought to be the first use of the classical orders in the form of “white columns” we’ve all come to associate with the antebellum South. Many early authors assumed Concord’s portico was original and thus ascribed a level of sophistication to the Spanish period that really came later in the American period.\nThe Mississippian created his own architecture; his slave labor was unskilled, his models no more than pictures or memories; his real pattern was the Spanish. The result was the fusion of styles found at Natchez, predominantly Georgian in character, with columns and pediments relieved by the sloping roofs and galleries that broke across the classic fronts. In Concord, the former home of the Spanish governors at Natchez, which burned in 1901, this fusion probably reached its finest expression. The great columns that gave distinction to the building sprang from the earth itself. The lower story was extended to the face of the upper verandah, whose slender balustrade and smaller piazza posts were deeply recessed under the eaves of the light roof. The effect was Spanish West Indian as much as Greek.\nPlan of Concord 1 – Mississippi Dept. of Archives and History Catalog\nMississippi State Archives\nPlan of Concord 2\nNevertheless, the house was important both architecturally and historically, and was seen as such before it burned, as you can see below.\nFirst Mansion Built in the State\nGives Way to the Fire\nERECTED BY GRAND PRE IN 1789\nMarble Mantels and Cornices from\nSpain–Nothing Left but\na Memory\nConcord Ruins 1940\nAnother grand old ante-bellum mansion, one of the many that have made this section famous, lies in ruins, a victim of the fire fiend. The mansion in question is the historic old “Concord,” built by the Spanish Governor, Carlos de Grand Pre, in 1789, who was commandant here from 1786 to 1792.\nIt was then known as “Grand Pre.” In 1792 Don Manuel Gayosa de Lemos succeeded Governor Grand Pre and he changed the name of the mansion to “Concord.” In 1798 Stephen Minor succeeded Governor Gayosa and occupied “Concord.” The mansion remained as the property of the Minors until some years ago when it was sold to Dr. Stephen Kelly, president of the Fifth National bank of New York, but formerly of this city.\nAs fate would have it, Dr. Kelly’s son arrived in Natchez day before yesterday on his bridal tour and is now occupying “Melrose,” another old ante-bellum mansion of the Kelly estate.\nConcord is in a large grove and was built of brick with a large wide gallery extending around the four sides. A double stone staircase leads from the grand driveway to the second floor. The mantels were of marble quarried in Spain and brought here for Grand Pre.\nOne of the historical incidents mentioned in connection with Concord is the story that in the old library at “Concord” Aaron Burr endeavored to persuade Governor Minor to co-operate with him in his nefarious plot against the Federal Government.\nAfter Burr left the Vice-Presidency at the end of his term in 1805, he journeyed into what was then the West, areas west of the Allegheny Mountains, particularly the Ohio River Valley and the lands acquired in the Louisiana Purchase drumming up support for his plans. Burr had leased 40,000 acres of land (known as the Bastrop Tract) along the Ouachita River, in what is now Louisiana, from the Spanish government.\nAaron Burr (1756 – 1836)\nHis most important contact was General James Wilkinson, Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Army at New Orleans and Governor of the Louisiana Territory. Others included Harman Blennerhassett, who offered the use of his private island for training and outfitting Burr’s expedition. Wilkinson was later proved to be a bad choice.\nBurr saw war with Spain as a distinct possibility. In case of a war declaration, Andrew Jackson stood ready to help Burr, who would be in position to immediately join in. Burr’s expedition of about eighty men carried modest arms for hunting, and no materiel was ever revealed, even when Blennerhassett Island was seized by Ohio militia. His “conspiracy”, he always avowed, was that if he settled there with a large group of (armed) “farmers” and war broke out, he would have an army with which to fight and claim land for himself, thus recouping his fortunes. However, the 1819 Adams-Onís Treaty secured Florida for the United States without a fight, and war in Texas didn’t occur until 1836, the year of Burr’s death.\nAfter a near-incident with Spanish forces at Natchitoches, Wilkinson decided he could best serve his conflicting interests by betraying Burr’s plans to President Jefferson and to his Spanish paymasters. Jefferson issued an order for Burr’s arrest, declaring him a traitor even before an indictment. Burr read this in a newspaper in the Territory of Orleans on Jan 10, 1807. Jefferson’s warrant put Federal agents on his trail. He turned himself in to the Federal authorities twice. Two judges found his actions legal and released him. Jefferson’s warrant, however, followed Burr, who then fled toward Spanish Florida; he was intercepted at Wakefield, in Mississippi Territory (now in the state of Alabama) on Feb 19 1807, and confined to Fort Stoddert after being arrested on charges of treason.\nBurr’s secret correspondence with Anthony Merry and the Marquis of Casa Yrujo, the British and Spanish ministers at Washington, was eventually revealed. It had been to secure money and to conceal his real designs, which were to help Mexico to overthrow Spanish power in the Southwest, and to found a dynasty in what would have become former Mexican territory. This was a misdemeanor, based on the Neutrality Act of 1794 passed to block filibuster expeditions like those questionable enterprises of George Rogers Clark and William Blount. Jefferson, however, sought the highest charges against Burr.\nIn 1807, on a charge of treason, Burr was brought to trial before the United States Circuit Court at Richmond, Virginia. His defense lawyers included Edmund Randolph, John Wickham and Luther Martin. Burr was arraigned four times for treason before a grand jury indicted him. This was surprising since the only physical evidence presented to the Grand Jury was Wilkinson’s so-called letter from Burr which proposed the idea of stealing land in the Louisiana Purchase. During the Jury’s examination it was discovered that the letter was written in Wilkinson’s own handwriting – a “copy,” he said, because he had “lost” the original. The Grand Jury threw the letter out, and the news made a laughingstock of the General for the rest of the proceedings. The trial, presided over by Chief Justice of the United States John Marshall, began on August 3.\nArticle 3, Section 3 of the United States Constitution requires that treason either be admitted in open court, or proved by an overt act witnessed by two people. Since no two witnesses came forward, Burr was acquitted on September 1, in spite of the full force of the Jefferson administration’s political influence thrown against him. Immediately afterward, he was tried on a more appropriate misdemeanor charge, but was again acquitted.\nConcord Natchez prior to 1901\nAmong the noted men who have been entertained at “Concord” were General Anthony Wayne, General Lafayette, Jefferson Davis, Aaron Burr and Winthrop Sargent, the first territorial governor of the Mississippi Territory,\nMississippi Territory ~~ Winthrop Sargent ~Issue of 1948\nThe entertainments at Concord were the most famous and lavish ever given in this section, even in the days when regal splendor was the order at all the social divertissements of the upper ten.\nOf late years the place has been occupied by Mr. Herman Stier, a well known and prosperous meat butcher.\nA few months ago “Concord” was the scene of a magnificent “country ball” given by the Duke and Duchess of Manchester. It was a reminder of the old time social festivals at “Concord” and was largely attended. It was a brilliant affair and made a suitable fluis to the social chapter in the history of “Concord.”\nIt was just after the town clocks struck the hour of 12 yesterday afternoon that the alarm was turned in. Though “Concord” was a mile beyond city limits the volunteer department hastened to respond. The firemen performed heroic work, but they were dependent upon a few cisterns for their water supply, which was very poor indeed. The old mansion was doomed.\nThe firemen assisted by numerous citizens directed their first efforts to saving the furniture in the building and succeeded in their endeavors.\nSeveral of the rich marble mantels that were brought from Spain to add their splendid beauty to the magnificence of “Concord” were taken out before the roof caved in, but some were broken and will be of little use, save as mementoes of the famous mansion.\nAfter the fire had played its part the relic hunters picked up small pieces of blackened stone broken from the cornices, also a product of Spanish stone quarries.\nThe value of the building was beyond estimate. In historic interest its value was beyond price, as its was easily the most famous of all antebellum mansions.\nIt was insured for $2500 through the Metcalfe Insurance Agency and $2500 through Major John Rawle’s insurance agency, making a total of $5000.\nFor their story, see my post Stephen Minor’s Children – Decadent Unionists\nhttp://trees.ancestry.com/owt/person.aspx?pid=6634379\nMinor Family Papers – Mississippi Dept of Archives and Records\nhttp://for-natchez.org/history.html\nhttp://misspreservation.com/2010/05/04/lost-mississippi-concord-natchez-1789-1901/\nhttp://www.concordiasentinel.com/news.php?id=4701\nhttp://www.natchezcitycemetery.com/custom/webpage.cfm?content=Gallery&id=8\nWilliam J. Minor and Family Papers -LSU Library\nhttp://franceshunter.wordpress.com/2010/03/31/the-sins-of-manuel-gayoso/\nThis entry was posted in Artistic Representation, Historical Site, Immigrant - North America, Line - Miner, Pioneer, Public Office, Storied, Veteran. Bookmark the permalink.\n11 Responses to Stephen Minor – Last Spanish Governor of Natchez\nPingback: Lt. William Miner | Miner Descent\nEllis Grist says:\nI do not recall being related…\nJeany Minor says:\nYou definitely said it right because your family name obviously suggested it.\nPingback: Steven Minor’s Children – Decadent Unionists | Miner Descent\nPingback: Stephen Minor’s Children – Decadent Unionists | Miner Descent\nPingback: Stephen Minor’s Children – Unionist Planters | Miner Descent\nFrances Hunter says:\nAmazingly thorough post! Great history here. This period of early American history is a delightful rabbit hole of heroes and scoundrels — often embodied in the same individuals. I really enjoyed your blog!\nPhyllis Minor Kenner Tully says:\nI thought that you might be interested in a few tidbits of information handed down from my side of the family descended through Mary Minor. I don’t know if any are valid. Stephen Minor was married 3 times to Anna Bingaman, Martha Ellis, and Katherine Linot. Mary Minor was the daughter of Martha Ellis and was said to have had a twin sister who died in infancy. Mary was married at such an early age to William Kenner that it has been theorized that Katherine might have wanted her step daughter out of the house. Mary had her first of 6 children at 14 and was dead by age 28. William was left with a very young family and did not remarry. It is thought that some of the children were sent to Natchez to be “taken in” for extended periods by family there. William was in the transporting business, had met Mary through his business with Stephen, and would have been able to get to Natchez on one of his boats to visit them.\nmarkeminer says:\nHi Phyllis,\nThanks for sharing Mary’s story. I included on https://minerdescent.com/2013/01/25/stephen-minor-children-unionist-slave-owners/ These Minors are my cousins, not my direct ancestors, but I found their story of moving from the North to the South very interesting. I stayed in Kenner once when I visited New Orleans. My only other Southern ancestors were Scotch/Irish who followed their minister from Northern Ireland to South Carolina, fought in the Revolution and then a generation later followed another minister to Ohio.\ng9commodity says:\nDear Mark,\nI am working on a research project and have been trying to track down the location of the William Edward West portrait of Stephen Minor. Any information you could give me would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!\nWilliam Holman","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1715792"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.625380277633667,"wiki_prob":0.374619722366333,"text":"Ultimate Privacy\nThere are many privacy guides out there. But almost all of them have flaws.\nThe New Oil, for example, criticizes proprietary software, then goes on to recommend it for a VOIP number.\nThere's PrivacyTools, who says that Firefox respects your privacy, only to then go on and ask you to adjust the settings.\nAnd GoFOSS Today does basically the same thing, claiming that Firefox is a \"safe and private browser\", before going on to list all the things you have to do to harden it.\nThough, one thing they all have in common is that they all provide you a reason to stay private.\nOver the last 16 months, as I've debated this issue around the world, every single time somebody has said to me, \"I don't really worry about invasions of privacy because I don't have anything to hide.\" I always say the same thing to them. I get out a pen, I write down my email address. I say, \"Here's my email address. What I want you to do when you get home is email me the passwords to all of your email accounts, not just the nice, respectable work one in your name, but all of them, because I want to be able to just troll through what it is you're doing online, read what I want to read and publish whatever I find interesting. After all, if you're not a bad person, if you're doing nothing wrong, you should have nothing to hide.\" Not a single person has taken me up on that offer. (Gleen Greenwald, Why privacy matters)\nBig Tech excels at turning users into a product. Private data is a key ingredient to their business model, which is usually build around \"free\" services, lock-in, tracking and ad targeting. Google and Facebook have been most successful at this game. And while Apple, Amazon and Microsoft have not (entirely) built their business around spying, they are far from being on the side of privacy. In fact, they hugely benefit from doing business with data brokers and privacy offenders. All five companies — often called the \"Big Five\" or \"Big Tech\" — regularly face allegations or are condemned for tax avoidance, antitrust concerns, erosion of ethical standards, reported labor abuses, and so on. (Don Atoms, How Big Tech became a global economic force)\n[T]echnology has its bad side too. In the current world, it is controlled by organizations who do not have our best interests in mind. They will not hesitate to use technology's great power against us. Spying on, and analyzing, our communication; control of the information we receive; emotional manipulation; modification of behavior - those are just a few things technology is being used for these days. All that with more coverage, accuracy, effectiveness and with less human effort. If this \"progress\" is not stopped, we will end up in a prison that we wouldn't find in our worst nightmares. (Dig Deeper, Technological Slavery)\nIt may sound paranoid, but it's actually proven that entire companies exist simply to collect your data and build profiles on you, and in their minds the ends will always justify the means. Often they collect data in ways that range from questionable to blatantly illegal, collecting information that no one would knowingly consent to. This massive trove of data is regularly abused. For example, in 2019 the Egyptian government tracked opponents and activists through phone apps, the the Moroccan government spied on the phones of human rights defenders, and the Chinese government hacked Asian telecommunications companies to spy on the Uighur, a minority Muslim ethnic group living in China. (Nate Bartram, The New Oil)\nUltimately, saying that you don't care about privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different from saying you don't care about freedom of speech because you have nothing to say. Or that you don't care about freedom of the press because you don't like to read. Or that you don't care about freedom of religion because you don't believe in God. Or that you don't care about the freedom to peacably assemble because you're a lazy, antisocial agoraphobe. (Edward Snowden, Permanent Record)\nMy goal is to provide a guide that is consistent, and recommends software that is private, secure, anonymous, free (as in freedom), and low cost. Some software may not meet all of these qualities, in which case I will provide a disclaimer. This is because we live in an imperfect society. This guide is not perfect, and it is almost certainly not a panacea. Anyone claiming that their guide will make you completely undetectable is lying to you. I am saying this now to prevent any contradictions in the future.\nNext Page: Definitions","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1655307"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5708044171333313,"wiki_prob":0.5708044171333313,"text":"Women of the wild west come to blazing life in Lesley Poling-Kempes' extraordinary Ladies of the Canyons: A League of Extraordinary Women and Their Adventures in the American Southwest.\nFirst, are the rave reviews:\n“Considered spinsters back East, both Curtis and Stanley married younger men out West. Curtis wed Paul Burlin, a promising painter (her Greenwich Village mother disapproved of his Jewishness); Stanley eloped with a cowboy. It would be nice to freeze-frame here, with everyone getting what they wanted, freedom and fulfillment and happiness. But time rides on, some must leave the desert forever, and fortunes are lost . . . Poling-Kempes has done an admirable job scouring archives for these women, who have been largely left out of the historical record of the West. It's a kind of prequel to our common history of the Southwest, peopled by women with long skirts and cinched waists in the desert heat, riding cowboy style, trying to do right by the land they all loved.” Carolyn Kellogg, Los Angeles Times\n“Part Willa Cather, part Thelma and Louise here is a story of heroines, of mischief-makers and epic-builders told by a writer who knows and loves the grand landscapes on which these larger-than-life women left their indelible mark.” Hampton Sides (In the Kingdom of Ice; Blood and Thunder)\nLadies of the Canyon is an astonishing look into lives lived well, with courage and a sense of destiny, too. Lesley is the recipient of the 2014 Willa Literary Award for Contemporary Fiction for her novel Bone Horses. She is also the author of Canyon of Remembering, Valley of Shining Stone: The Story of Abiquiu, The Harvey Girls: Women who Opened the west, Ghost Ranch, and is the winner of the 2005 Independent PUblisher Book Awards for Georgia O'Keefee & New Mexico\nI'm honored to host author Lesley Poling-Kempes here. Thank you Lesley!\nHow did you come up with the idea for this book?\nI began to think about this book more than ten years ago. I was writing and researching a book about Ghost Ranch. Everyone knows that Ghost Ranch was the beloved home of American painter Georgia O’Keeffe. What no one knew was that Ghost Ranch was created, even named, by a woman from Boston, Carol Bishop Stanley, a fifty-something-year-old divorcee who in 1931 bravely moved into a dilapidated homestead in a remote New Mexico canyon once inhabited by outlaws. The challenges she faced as a single woman in the outback of the Colorado Plateau are impossible to overstate. Without Stanley’s bold choice to build a guest ranch on the high desert north of Abiquiu, O’Keeffe’s life and work at Ghost Ranch would never have happened. I was curious about this educated woman from Boston who had gone missing in history.\nStanley actually arrived in the Southwest in 1915. Her story began on the tiny island of Nahant in Massachusetts Bay in the 1870s and expanded across the United States and to Europe in the stories of her extraordinary group of women friends who came into the American Southwest in the first decades of the 20th century. My book grew to be the story of four remarkable women – Natalie Curtis of Greenwich Village, Alice Klauber of San Diego, Mary Cabot Wheelwright of Beacon Hill Boston, and Carol Stanley. Each of them, and their circle of friends, left lasting legacies in the American West. They would never have referred to themselves as emancipated “New Women” but in fact, their lives blazed a trail for generations of women and men to follow.\nNatalie Curtis left her family’s home on Washington Square in 1903 and with her brother moved to California. A classically educated and accomplished concert pianist, after traveling through Indian Country Natalie’s self–appointed task became the recording and preserving of Native American music. President Theodore Roosevelt sanctioned Natalie’s work and made her an unofficial advisor regarding Indian affairs. Roosevelt wrote an introduction to Curtis’s “The Indians’ Book” published in 1907. Their friendship lasted two decades and included a horseback expedition rendezvous at the Hopi Snake Dance (reminiscent of a Zane Grey novel) at the pueblo of Walpi in the summer of 1913.\nBoston Brahmin Mary Cabot Wheelwright came to the Southwest in her 40s after her parents died and found her life’s purpose. Wheelwright won the trust of the great Navajo medicine man Hostiin Klah and spent a decade recording his vast knowledge of Navajo chants, stories and sacred rituals. Their collection became the foundation of the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian in Santa Fe.\nCalifornia native Alice Klauber came to Santa Fe with Curtis and Stanley in 1916. A painter who traveled Europe with Robert Henri and William Merritt Chase, Klauber was childhood friends with Gertrude Stein and frequented Stein and her brother Leo’s salon in Paris before World War One. Klauber introduced European and American modern art to Southern California when she and Henri curated the opening exhibition at Balboa Park in 1915.\nWhat surprised you most in the course of your research?\nI was surprised that these adventurous, creative, boundary-pushing women who had contributed so much to the art and music communities of the American West, who had introduced Anglo America to Native America, who had forged their way into the frontier of the modern age, could be so unknown. Forgotten. Of course, women in their time – 1900 until the 1930s – did not seek nor expect recognition for their accomplishments beyond the home. I really oughtn’t to have been surprised. Only headliners like O’Keeffe and Mabel Dodge Luhan have name recognition in the Southwest. O’Keeffe and Luhan believed they were special – and they were – and they made sure everyone else knew they were special, too.\nThe women in my book did not think of themselves as extraordinary although they likely would have admitted to a restless curiosity about the world and themselves that was not befitting of a proper Victorian woman. Each had to create a new image of themselves as a woman in the exotic landscape of the American West. As I wrote in the book’s prologue, theirs is the story of New Women stepping bravely into the New World, of Anglo America waking up to Native America, of inconspicuous success and ambitious failure.\n“I just plain love these women. I want to go riding with them; I want to learn from them; I want to sit under the stars with them for just one night - please? There were misadventures, hardships and tragedies in their lives, but I won't be the spoiler here. Read the book to find out about the poker game, the alcoholism, the accident. But you also will learn about the hard work these women put into their new lives and the respect they shared for this wide-open world and its people.” Laura Tolley, Houston Chronicle\nLaura Tolley’s comments are echoed by women – and men – at every reading and book event I have done this fall. The true life victories and defeats of these ladies of the canyons seem to resonate in our times, perhaps because we as a society still lack stories of strong resilient women, and seek role models from the past to affirm our own journeys toward creative and person independenc\nPosted by Caroline at 4:47 PM\nwelcome to my obsessive world\nTransformation. Mystery. Madness. The whole nature...\nR. D. Vincent talks about being a Pulpwood Queens ...\nStory Structure for the Novel: Or, Why I love John...\nJames Lough and Alex Stein talk about the incredib...\nWomen of the wild west come to blazing life in Les...\nTattoo as tribute: Susan Salluce explores the rela...\nJeff Lyons and Stephen David Brooks talk about JAC...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1244354"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6851754784584045,"wiki_prob":0.31482452154159546,"text":"The Hobbit, or, There and Back Again\nTolkienGuide is a Blackwell's affiliate\nCollector's Marketplace >> JRRT wanted to burn his manuscripts?\nBy Olwe\nJRRT wanted to burn his manuscripts?\n2021/7/5 22:11:09 (GMT) Greenwich Mean Time, London, Dublin, Lisbon, Casablanca, Monrovia\nPlease accept my apologies if this has been talked about before on the forums but I have not found anything except a few letters by George Sayer as a topic - and yes, it is a local news piece but:\nWhile George Sayer may not be a name that many have heard of, he is an incredibly important figure in the Tolkien world – without him, we might never have been able to enjoy the Lord of the Rings. He was a great friend of Tolkien’s and not only did he often host the great man but is credited with convincing a desolate Tolkien not to burn the Lord of the Rings manuscripts when he was struggling to find a publisher – needless to say, the world owes a great debt to George Sayer.\nThe Hobbit noted in that auction popped up recently in my regular news search so I stumbled over this; it went for about 4k at the time.\nAnd yes, the whole 'recording Tolkien' thing is the connection I usually have when I hear the name George Sayer ...\nI have yet to find a reliable source on Tolkien wanting to burn anything - except those pages of the Book of Mazarbul, of course\nSource: An Unexpected Journey: ‘The Hobbit’ Comes to Auction\nAelfwine\nSounds to me like someone has conflated Walter Hooper with George Sayer, and appropriated the former's story about rescuing Lewis's papers from a bonfire.\nAelfwine wrote:\nThat sounds fairly plausible. Walter Hooper was a controversial character, and I don't really believe in the manuscripts being saved from the fire story, though I doubt we will ever know the truth of that tale).\nFindegil\n2021/7/6 1:56:16 (GMT) Greenwich Mean Time, London, Dublin, Lisbon, Casablanca, Monrovia\nThe Sayer story could have been conflated with Hooper’s, or the seller might have made an imaginative leap from Sayer’s memory that Tolkien was depressed at not being able to publish The Lord of the Rings to the idea that he wanted to burn the manuscripts, which Sayer never said. In fact, Sayer's recollection of Tolkien’s \"depression\", and his claim to have caused The Lord of the Rings to be published by suggesting in August 1952 that Tolkien take it to Rayner Unwin, were false memories. Tolkien had been in touch with Rayner about The Lord of the Rings since November 1951, and when Sayer invited Tolkien to stay with him the next summer, Tolkien told him that Allen & Unwin were now clamoring to reconsider The Lord of the Rings. He was concerned to retrieve a typescript of the work from Sayer, to whom he had lent it, but was no longer worried about its publication, and certainly was not thinking of destroying it. When Sayer wrote of Tolkien’s August 1952 visit in the liner notes to the Caedmon Tolkien recordings of 1975 and in his address to the Tolkien Centenary Conference in 1992, he seems not to have reviewed letters Tolkien had sent him in 1952 and which still existed. We read them at Christie’s London when they came up for sale, and knew at once that Sayer’s account was wrong. The auctioneer’s description adds error to error.\nWayne & Christina\nJul 6, 2021 (edited)\nEdited by Trotter on 2021/7/6 4:25:32\nOlwe wrote:\nThis is the auction that was mentioned in the article https://live.adampartridge.co.uk/m/lot ... %3Dtolkien%26xclosed%3Dno\nDon't think we discussed this item prior to the auction.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1433242"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6142799854278564,"wiki_prob":0.38572001457214355,"text":"Lagos | Nigeria\nMrs. Abosede Adebiyi Julius\nMrs. Abosede Adebiyi a B.Sc. (Hons.) Agric Econs. MBA, M.Sc. (General Management), PhD FME (Business Administration), an Associate Professor in the Department of Business Administration, Faculty of Administration and Management Sciences, Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, with more than 30 years of teaching and research experience with over forty-four (44) publications in local and international journals.\nLondon | United Kingdom\nDr Alistair A. Rayatchi\nDr. Alistair a Senior Consultant & Trainer, Qualified Accountant/ trainer from the U.K and Australia with over 15 Years combined experience in Auditing, IT Auditing, IT Security, Internal Auditing, Internal Control, Risk management and Taxation for Financial Services/ Energy (Oil and Gas) sector. Alistair has experience of working with major Auditing firms (Big 4), including work for KPMG, Ernst & Young, Deloitte and PWC, Crown Agents (U.K, Nigeria), Several Central and Private Banks in Africa and major International Energy and Oil companies.\nMr Biodun Adedipe\nBiodun Adedipe is the founder of B. Adedipe Associates Limited (a firm of management and financial consultants) i founded in February 1993 but commenced operations in March 1994 and he has been its Chief Consultant till date.He has a B.Sc. Economics (First Class), Ph.D. Economics (Specialized in Corporate Finance)\nMr Bode Shogo\nBode is an accomplished Human Resources and General Management practitioner with over 35 years of professional experience in public and private sectors of the economy\nAbeokuta | Nigeria\nDr. Lemmy Omololu Omoyinmi\nDr. Lemmy is currently the Business Director of EMPRETEC-UNCTAD Nigeria and the Africa Regional Trainer for the International Trade Centre (ITC), an initiative of UN, Geneva.\nHe holds higher degrees in Business Administration and Finance from the University of Ibadan.\nConnect with entrepreneurs, build your network, make great business.\nCopyright © 2022 HRM Consultants Intl.\nPowered by HRM Consultants Intl.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line96961"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.55836021900177,"wiki_prob":0.44163978099823,"text":"Art Crighton 1917 – 2013\nPosted by Byron Christopher July 17, 2013\nA Canadian bomber pilot imprisoned at Stalag Luft III — site of the famous ‘Great Escape’ during World War II — has died. Art Crighton was 96.\nHe crossed over on Sunday, 14th of July 2013 at the Kipnes Centre for Veterans in Northeast Edmonton.\nIn April 1942, Flight Lieutenant Crighton was at the controls of a two-engine Wellington bomber over Nazi-occupied Holland, en route to targets in the northern German port of Hamburg.\nThe plane had a full bomb load and a crew of six.\nAnti-aircraft knocked out an engine, and that was that end of that bombing run. When Crighton realized he no longer had control of his aircraft, he gave the order to bail.\nEveryone got out — except his good friend, Dick Hower, the rear-gunner. For some reason, Hower didn’t hear the order to get out. His body was found in the wreckage.\nVickers Wellington Bomber [image courtesy of Wikipedia]\nArt Crighton landed safely in a tree, climbed down and buried his parachute. But it wasn’t long before he was spotted, taken prisoner and put on a train to Stalag Luft III, near the [then] Polish town of Sagan, 160 kilometres southeast of Berlin.\nThe POW camp was the size of a small city, holding about 10,000 prisoners in several compounds. The Nazis considered Stalag Luft III to be escape-proof. Towards the end of the war, they discovered it wasn’t.\nCrighton — who says he had “music in his blood” — played the trumpet and eventually formed an orchestra at the camp. He went on to become leader of its 40-piece band.\nIn an interview I did with Crighton in March 2012, he pointed out that the Germans didn’t mind the POW’s getting involved in musical and theatre productions because it helped take their mind off escaping.\nCanadians in The Great Escape\nThe interview was for a book by Ted Barris called The Great Escape: A Canadian Story. The book, by Thomas Allen Publishers, was released in the fall of 2013.\nBarris’ book can be ordered by clicking on this link: http://www.amazon.ca/The-Great-Escape-Canadian-Story/dp/1771022728\nPrisoners’ Quarters at Stalag Luft III [image courtesy of historyonthenet.com]\nIn March 1944 — after months of work digging a tunnel in the direction of woods outside the prison fence — 76 men did make it out. However, the plan was for 200 to escape.\nTurns out, the tunnel was about ten feet short of the trees … and prisoner #77, climbing out of a hole in the ground, was spotted by guards. The gig was up. Shots were fired and all hell broke loose.\nPart of the tunnel dug by prisoners at Stalag Luft III [image courtesy of historyonthenet.com]\nOnly three Airmen ever made it to freedom.\nThe rest were captured. Fifty were then executed on Hitler’s orders. Urns containing their ashes were brought to the camp where a funeral service was held. Art Crighton played the Last Post.\nThe mass break-out from Stalag Luft III was the subject of a 1963 Hollywood movie called The Great Escape. The flick featured many big-name stars including Steve McQueen, Charles Bronson, James Garner, James Coburn and Richard Attenborough.\nCrighton vividly recalled the night of the escape, and how the camp was abuzz that “tonight was the night.”\nMore of his recollections of life at the camp and how things came down that evening can be found in Barris’ book.\nCrighton taught music at the University of Alberta from 1949 until 1982. He continued to fly small aircraft long past his retirement.\nFormer POWs: Gordie King and Art Crighton at Crighton’s home in West Edmonton. [Photo taken by author in March 2012]\nGordie King\nGordie King of Edmonton — another Canadian pilot who had been imprisoned at Stalag Luft III — was saddened by Crighton’s death. He said the man was well-liked by prisoners because his music had given them much joy. The man who lived for music had given thousands of POWs a different kind of escape.\nIt was odd to see that Crighton and King saw so differently the famous breakout, now more than 75 years ago. Crighton was of the opinion it shouldn’t have happened. He thought it was a dumb idea, and perhaps it was. Hard to tell.\nCrighton felt the POWs should have waited out their time at the camp and enjoyed life as best they could because, he said, in 1944 the Germans knew the war was a lost cause … and it was just a matter of time before they’d be going home.\nCrighton also objected to POWs using wooden planks from the theatre for their escape tunnels since they had given their word that the wood would only be used to build the theatre. Crighton felt the Allied prisoners broke their promise, and that wasn’t right.\nIt was clear that while the two men had worn the same uniform, they had much different interests. Crighton poked fun at King for spending so much time in the camp playing soccer, instead of getting involved in music, plays and the like.\nListening to this, at the other end of a dining room table in Crighton’s home, was King who smiled and jostled in his chair, mimicking his days as a young soccer player.\nGordie King is the father of famed Canadian curler Kathy King. I’d interviewed Gordie in 2012 at his daughter’s home in south Edmonton. The man showed me a small plastic bag containing some soil. “Put your hand in here,” he said, holding the bag open. And so I did. “That’s from the escape tunnel,” he announced. It was obvious the Great Escape was also one of the greatest moments in King’s long life.\nIn the famous movie, Gordie King is the POW operating the air pump 30 feet down. I asked King if he said anything to the men who passed by him on their way out. “See you in London,” he said. They eventually got a post-card from one of the prisoners who had made it safely to London.\nWhen I finished with the interview at Art Crighton’s house, Crighton and Gordie King were sitting in the living room, Gordie on the couch and Art in a chair beside him.\nI shook hands with the two former POW’s and left, but not before reaching up to touch a model of an old bomber suspended by strings from the ceiling. “That’s our old Wellington,” Crighton announced. King smiled and nodded.\nKing died in July 2020. He too spent his final days at the Kipnes Centre for Veterans, according to an August 4 2020 story by Nick Lees in the Edmonton Journal.\nOn 15 July 2016, the Edmonton Journal had news that several city streets would be named in Gordie King’s honour in Keswick, a new housing area being developed in the Windermere subdivision in southwest Edmonton.\nhttp://edmontonjournal.com/news/local-news/city-names-several-roads-portion-of-keswick-neighbourhood-after-second-world-war-vet-gordon-king\nArt Crighton was buried on the 23rd of July 2013. It was his wish there would be no funeral service. However, there was a “viewing.” About two dozen people showed up.\nCrighton did not have any children.\nAuthor Ted Barris\nBarris, an acclaimed broadcaster and journalist, has written close to 20 books, many about Canada’s involvement in wars. He is currently a Professor of Journalism at Centennial College in Toronto.\nMore than a quarter of a century ago, I worked with Ted when he was a newsreader at CBC Radio in Edmonton. Ted was professional and thoughtful, and that comes through in the books he has authored. They include Behind the Glory, Deadlock in Korea, Victory at Vimy, Breaking the Silence, Days of Glory and Juno.\nYou and I stroll through a graveyard of long-forgotten soldiers and we see faded names on old tombstones. Barris, because of his compassion and love of country, gets to know these dead men and women. He hears their stories, feels their pain … and he gives them a voice.\nTed Barris’ website:\ntedbarris.com\nAside from the Edmonton Journal [which ran a paid obituary announcement], I’m not aware of any Canadian media outlet — save for this blog and author Ted Barris — that paid any attention to the death of former Stalag Luft III prisoner Art Crighton.\nIt makes me wonder how many Vets whose passing goes virtually unnoticed.\nPosted in: World War Two, WW2 Prison CampTagged: Art Crighton, Arthur Crighton, Dick Hower, Gordie King, Kathy King, Kipnes Centre for Veterans, Nazi, Poland, POW, prison camp, Sagan, Stalag Luft III, Steve McQueen, Ted Barris, The Great Escape, Vickers Wellington bomber, World War IIPermalink7 Comments\n7 thoughts on “Art Crighton 1917 – 2013”\nAnother hero from the “greatest generation.” The world needs more Art Crightons.\nThanks for taking time in your busy life to record Art’s story, Byron. I’m indebted to you for that, my friend.\nWe are far too blasé about a history that required real people making real sacrifices when the world needed them most. You’ve ensured Art and those like him won’t be forgotten.\nI applaud people like yourself and Mr. Barris who acknowledge and remind us of the sacrifices made by people like Art Crighton. Too many young people, I’m sure, have no idea what these people have done for them. How could we as Canadians have allowed our schools to let this happen? Keep up the good work, it is appreciated.\nIt is amazing how much Canadians contributed to the WW II, especially in aviation. ‘Wop’ May and Roy Brown taking down the Red Barron … and the Great Escape. With the Municipal Airport closing, there should be a huge celebration commemorating men like this. It would be nice to put up a memorial for all the brave men and women (the 99ers) who flew out of there and served their country. I know Edmonton City Council is trying to shut it down quietly, but it deserves a good send-off.\nWonderful story and info. My Uncle, Arthur Hampson, was a rear-gunner during the war and was also shot down … on his 21st Birthday — Christmas Day!!!! Didn’t live to tell his tale.\nI will make sure my Grandkids read ALL this. Thanks so much.\nI was four when the war started. Lived in Runcorn, Cheshire, England.\nMy birth father, Harvey Neil Fraser, was navigating in a plane which was reconnoitering over the English Channel during the early part of WWII. They hit the side of a German ship, were picked up, and sent to Stalag Luft III.\nWhile the men were escaping through the tunnel, Harvey was playing the clarinet in the orchestra, conducted by Art Crighton!\nBen van Drogenbroek says:\nDear Catherine, I have been interested in Stalag Luft 3 for over 35 years. I have met and spoken to many ex.-p.o.w.’s. Arthur B. Crighton became one of my friends.\nI have some photographs taken of the orchestra, I’m sure your birth father is on them.\nMy e-mail address is b_v_drogenbroek@hotmail.com\nWarm greetings, Ben van Drogenbroek\n← Censored!\nCrime, Punishment … Salvation? →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line66829"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9036216139793396,"wiki_prob":0.9036216139793396,"text":"Mirror photographer who captured iconic image in aftermath of 1952 train disaster dies aged 84\nExpress and Star editor Keith Harrison to step down and leave Midlands publisher after 25 years\nFire brigade starts charging media for images of incidents\nBy Michael Leidig Twitter\nA major city’s fire brigade has raised eyebrows by charging the media for permission to publish its photographs of incidents.\nThe unusual decision to impose a fee for pictures taken by firefighters was made by the fire service in the city of Munich, Germany.\nIt came to light after the Munich Fire Brigade was called upon to rescue a kitten which had gotten stuck in the engine compartment of a car.\nDuring the rescue operation, a firefighter took pictures of his colleagues freeing the unfortunate cat (which has made a complete recovery).\nInstead of making the pictures freely accessible for the media – common procedure by emergency services the world over – the MFB decided to levy a charge per picture for each media outlet that wanted to use them.\nIn a press release, the brigade said: “We would like to point out that the publication of our photos in print media is subject to a charge.\n“The image fee is €25.00 (£21.80) per published image.”\nWhen it was challenged over the unusual move, the MFB replied that the charge was needed to cover the costs incurred in the process.\nA spokesperson said: “We make the charge because there is effort involved in making the pictures available to the press and this needs to be paid for.”\nBritish fire brigades have warned the decision by their German colleagues could curtail the free flow of information.\nA London Fire Brigade spokesperson said: “I’ve never heard of this before and we certainly have no plans to charge the press for the usage of our photographs.\n“All pictures which we post, mostly via our social media accounts, are available to the media free of charge.\n“We own the copyright, as in most cases they were taken by fire officers and we make them available with a request that the fire service be credited.\n“We certainly don’t have any plans to charge because we need the media to cover incidents.\n“A big part of what we do is fighting fires in which the bravery of those involved should be highlighted, but also promoting safe practices is also a big part of what we do and for this we also need to work with the press, and not make money out of them.”\n1 thought on “Fire brigade starts charging media for images of incidents”\nMartin Benbow says:\nWhat does the cat say","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1870532"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6380002498626709,"wiki_prob":0.3619997501373291,"text":"AMT Issues Business Update For First Quarter 2009\nAMSTERDAM, May 19 /PRNewswire/ -- Amsterdam Molecular Therapeutics (Euronext: AMT), a leader in the field of human gene therapy, today issues it's business update for the first quarter of 2009, summarizing material events that took place during the quarter and providing an update on the cash position.\nQ1 2009 material events:\n- Preparation of preregistration clinical trial with Glybera(TM) in Canada - Data indicating that Glybera lowers pancreatitis incidence significantly - Good progress in research and development for other pipeline projects - CEO Dr. Ronald Lorijn stepped down\nFollowing the preparation of the trial in the first quarter of 2009, AMT announced on May 7, 2009, the treatment of the first patient in a preregistration clinical trial with Glybera. This gene therapy product targets lipoprotein lipase deficiency (LPLD) a seriously debilitating and potentially lethal disease.The randomized controlled trial has been designed to gather additional data on the effects of Glybera on lipid metabolism and the mechanisms underlying the prevention of pancreatitis attacks. The trial is being performed under a Clinical Trial Application approved by Health Canada.\nThe new clinical trial builds on positive data obtained from two previous clinical trials in which a total of 22 LPLD patients were treated. In the same quarter AMT presented new data on Glybera at the Phacilitate Cell Gene Therapy Forum. These data indicate that a single treatment with Glybera results in a long-term, statistically significant and clinically important reduction in the incidence of acute pancreatitis in LPLD patients. The longest follow-up of individual patients is well over three years, and the cumulative follow-up of all patients is more than 45 years. The therapy was well tolerated and no drug-related severe adverse events or unexpected side-effects have been observed.\nAMT will include the data from the new trial in the Marketing Authorization Application for Glybera. The submission of the dossier to the European Medicines Agency is planned for the second half of 2009.\nDuring the quarter, AMT made good progress on its other projects such as the application of Glybera for Hyperlipoproteinemia and NASH, AMT - 060 for Hemophilia B and AMT - 090 for Parkinson's disease.\nEffective February 1, 2009, AMT's Chief Executive Officer Dr. Ronald Lorijn retired for personal reasons. Prof. Sander van Deventer, AMT's chief scientific officer and co-founder of the company, is the ad-interim chief executive officer while the Supervisory Board is in the process a recruiting a new CEO. Sander van Deventer has in-depth knowledge of gene-therapy and of the biotechnology business.\nCash position\nAMT's cash position at March 31, 2009 amounts to EUR29,288,000 compared to EUR34,150,000 at December 31, 2009. The cash outflow in the quarter of EUR4,862,000 mainly represented operational cash flow and it is in line with the guidance for the year.\nAbout Amsterdam Molecular Therapeutics\nAMT has a unique gene therapy platform that to date appears to circumvent many if not all of the obstacles that have prevented gene therapy from becoming a mainstay of clinical medicine. Using adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors as the delivery vehicle of choice for therapeutic genes, the company has been able to design and validate what is probably the first stable and scalable AAV production platform. As such, AMT's proprietary platform holds tremendous promise for thousands of rare (orphan) diseases, especially those that are caused by one faulty gene. Currently, AMT has a product pipeline with nine products at different stages of development.\nCertain statements in this press release are forward-looking statements including those that refer to management's plans and expectations for future operations, prospects and financial condition. Words such as strategy, expects, plans, anticipates, believes, will, continues, estimates, intends, projects, goals, targets and other words of similar meaning are intended to identify such forward-looking statements. Such statements are based on the current expectations of the management of Amsterdam Molecular Therapeutics only. Undue reliance should not be placed on these statements because, by their nature, they are subject to known and unknown risks and can be affected by factors that are beyond the control of AMT. Actual results could differ materially from current expectations due to a number of factors and uncertainties affecting AMT's business, including, but not limited to, the timely commencement and success of AMT's clinical trials and research endeavors, delays in receiving U.S. Food and Drug Administration or other regulatory approvals (i.e. EMEA, Health Canada), market acceptance of AMT's products, effectiveness of AMT's marketing and sales efforts, development of competing therapies and/or technologies, the terms of any future strategic alliances, the need for additional capital, the inability to obtain, or meet, conditions imposed for required governmental and regulatory approvals and consents. AMT expressly disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements except as required by law. For a more detailed description of the risk factors and uncertainties affecting AMT, refer to the prospectus of AMT's initial public offering on June 20, 2007, and AMT's public announcements made from time to time.\nFor Information: André Verwei, CFO, Tel +31(0)20-5667394, a.verwei@amtbiopharma.com\nAMT Provides Business Update For The Third Quarter 2009\nAMT Starts Preregistration Trial For Glybera(TM)\nAMT Announces Management Changes In Light Of Refocused Strategy\nAMT Provides Business Update For The First Quarter 2010\nAMT Intends To Incorporate Additional Data To Its Marketing Authorization Dossier For Glybera(R)","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line449949"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6729322075843811,"wiki_prob":0.3270677924156189,"text":"How To Find The Position Of The Maximum\n=MATCH(MAX(B3:B10),B3:B10,0)\nDownload Example File\nGeneric Formula\n=MATCH(MAX(Range),Range,0)\nRange – This the range of values in which you would like to find the relative position of the maximum value.\nThis formula will return the relative position of the maximum value in a given range of numerical values. The formula will work for any one dimensional vertical or horizontal range. If the range contains multiple maximums, then the formula will return the position of the top most or left most maximum.\nThis formula uses the MAX function to first find the value of the maximum within the given range, then it uses the MATCH function to find the relative position of this maximum within the range.\nIn our example MAX(Range) returns the value 9 since 9 is the maximum value in the range of values {1;0;8;6;9;7;9;6}.\nMATCH(9,Range,0) looks for a 9 in the Range and will return the position of the first 9 it finds. The 0 in the formula is a predefined Excel parameter that tells the MATCH function to find an exact match in the Range. In our example MATCH(9,{1;0;8;6;9;7;9;6},0) returns the value 5 since the first 9 in {1;0;8;6;9;7;9;6} is in the 5th position.\nHow To Conditionally Concatenate A Range\nThis formula will conditionally concatenate a range based on a criteria in another range.\nHow To Solve a Quadratic Equation\nThese formulas will give the solutions to a quadratic equation.\nHow To Select A Random Item From A List\nThis formula will return a random selection from a given list with each item in the list having an equal probability of being selected.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1379998"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6308991312980652,"wiki_prob":0.3691008687019348,"text":"#StopAsianHate, Part II: An Open Letter to the Students of Vermont Commons School\nYesterday we learned of what appears to be another attack against an Asian American. More specifically, Vilma Kari, a New Yorker of Filipino descent, was viciously attacked–apparently without reason–in broad daylight, sworn at and told by her assailant, “You don’t belong here.” The New York Times reports that in all of 2020, there were 28 anti-Asian hate crimes in New York City. Already in 2021, however, the NYPD reports 33 such attacks.\nSuch an act is, and should be, utterly stunning. It should stop us in our tracks. But so should those words. You don’t belong here. I think one would feel those kicks for months to come, while those words would remain seared into the brain for all one’s days. If I don’t belong here, but I am here, then what am I? Rather, what am I to do? Perhaps more importantly, what are you going to do about me, with me, to me?\nThe question of who belongs and who does not haunts our human society. Structuralist theorist Ferdinand de Saussure posited that humans organize our understanding of our world through language-based binary oppositions. Good/evil. Hot/cold. Dark/light. Further theorists expanded on this by suggesting a code of sub-binary oppositions that help flesh out binaries through further pairings of opposed meanings, and so on and so on. Post-structuralist thinker Jacques Derrida pushed this notion further in the way one term of the binary opposition dominates, governs, or controls the dynamic between the two. Good dominates evil (we hope) or, in unfortunate circumstances, evil dominates good.\nSo the question, in the case of yesterday’s attack, is what is the binary opposite of belong? Interestingly, there are nearly, or perhaps no, functional antonyms for the word belong. Seriously. Spend a little time looking it up in your dictionary, thesaurus, or online. English doesn’t have a clean, single word antonym that actually captures the directly opposite meaning of “to belong.” English seems to indicate that one either “belongs” or one simply doesn’t exist. That, to me, is why the language of yesterday’s attacker is so stunning. To utter that Ms. Vilma Kari does not belong is to place Ms. Kari in the category of non-existence, to suggest that where she might belong isn’t a consideration.\nSometimes I hear people use the phrase beyond the pale, an idiom in English that means, variously, outside the bounds or limits of good judgment, behavior, or understanding. If someone does something that’s described as beyond the pale, it generally means that the action is outside of what a reasonable person operating with reasonable judgement would be expected to do. While the notion of the pale–in this usage–has shown up in other points in history, it comes to us in the English language from 17th-Century Ireland, in which–during the English occupation there–a line was drawn just outside Dublin which separated off the rest of the island from the city. Dublin was where the English felt they had controlled and civilized society according to their own standards, and outside of Dublin was beyond the Pale, where ignorance, barbarity, and inhumanity reigned, where a lack of judgement or acceptable behavior was to be expected, and where what happened was, in short, beyond understanding. Ireland was England’s first colony, where the English tried out the various methods they would later employ to colonize much of the world, starting with forcing the Irish to cease use of the Irish Language and instead only speak or write English thereafter.\nBelonging apparently doesn’t just mean that one is in the right place, but also that one is as one should be: one bears the qualities, habits of mind and action, judgement, and attitudes appropriate to that place. Not belonging–so unspeakable that we literally don’t have a word for it–also means that you lack those qualities, habits, etc.\nTwo urgent questions pose themselves. First, who gets to decide who belongs and who doesn’t? That is to say, who gets to determine what qualities, habits of mind, judgement, attitude, appearance, identity, status, etc. are right or wrong for a place? And if we haven’t actually anointed anyone with that power, from when does it emerge such that someone in New York City believes they have a right to assert it and inflict in on another, physically and verbally, at random? Or in Washington, D.C.? Or San Francisco? Or Burlington? Does it emerge from us collectively? Do we as a society act as bequeathers of belonging or its ambiguous opposite? If so, that’s both daunting and empowering. Daunting, because it’s much easier to go after one person: it’s easier to say that attack was just about the person who kicked Ms. Kari. Just about the person who murdered eight people in Atlanta on March 16th. Just about the indicted police office who forced his knee into George Floyd’s neck.\nWe can just blame it on them, but if we want to be both honest, self-critical, and empowering, we likely need to recognize that the ideology of the phrase you don’t belong here is something we collectively learn, maintain, and reproduce. That stinks, but it also means that if we’ve done it, we have the power to undo it.\nHow? That’s the second urgent question. How do we undo a society’s worth of casting each other as either “in” or as non-existent? This week is a sacred one in several of the world’s faiths: Pesach in Judaism, Holy Week in Christianity, Holi in Hinduism. Whether you are a religious or spiritual person or not, I do hope you do, or will at some point, consider yourself a person of philosophy. A person who considers meaning and your place in it. I find many of the worlds great philosophers overlap with faith or belief. And in considering our answer to how we combat a systemic, societal habit of saying to others that they don’t belong, the Dalai Lama comes to mind. For Tibetan Buddhists, the Dalai Lama is both spiritual and political leader and the literally physical incarnation of divine compassion. When asked how to be the most compassionate person possible, he said simply, “Reduce suffering in the world.”\nIf we even at a young age begin drawing lines between ourselves and others, creating binaries of opposition that put some of us in and some of us out (or beyond), we need to look at that action–at the moment we did that–and ask ourselves whether we added to someone else’s suffering or reduced it. With each of our interactions with another person, we need to consider if what and how we acted made them feel better or worse, helped or harmed them, set them up for a better or worse future. If we want to be compassionate, we need to think of others in each of our actions and seek to act in ways that both improve their lives and reduce their suffering, sometimes even if it means it comes at a bit of a cost to us. I have a difficult time imaging real-life circumstances where telling someone they don’t belong is a compassionate act. Our school and our society aim explicitly in our language, mission, and practice to be entities of anti-bias, not the least of which is anti-racialism and anti-racism. To do so we must wrestle with the implicit power dynamics in words such as belong, inclusion, membership, appropriate, right, fitting, behave, understandable, words that seem innocuous or even positive but by their usage can assert power, draw lines, and increase suffering or even flat-out erase or make invisible (which is not quite the same thing).\nMaybe the one thing we can try to do is reduce the suffering of others through compassionate consideration of their value and humanity in all we do together. I think that’s our charge right now, what these times are calling us to do. I think it starts in small, everyday interactions with everyone around us. If we’ve built these problematic attitudes as a society, it’s been through the repetition of small everyday interactions over time. And so we can certainly unbuild those attitudes and replace them. Let’s do this work together, with each other, in our school. Let’s make compassion a trademark of our school, the expression of our guiding principle of social justice. We can change the world. You can change the world.\nDr. Dexter P. Mahaffey, Head of School","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1768604"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6610063314437866,"wiki_prob":0.6610063314437866,"text":"The Age of Adaline\nStarring: Blake Lively, Michiel Huisman, Harrison Ford, Ellen Burstyn, Kathy Baker, Amanda Crew and Anthony Ingruber\nDistributor: Entertainment in Video\nEBR5250\nHaving miraculously remained 29 years old for almost eight decades, Adaline Bowman has lived a solitary existence, never allowing herself to get close to anyone who might reveal her secret. But a chance encounter with charismatic philanthropist Ellis Jones reignites her passion for life and romance. When a weekend with his parents threatens to expose the truth, Adaline makes a decision that will change her life forever...\nWARNING - CONTAINS SPOILERS!\nThe Age of Adaline is a romantic tale with a hint of sci-fi and a smidgen of fairytale thrown in for good measure. The film stars Blake Lively as an average woman who was born in San Francisco at the turn of the 20th Century. One night she is involved in an accident that sees her car spin off the road and into a freezing river. She dies and then is brought back to life by a freak bolt of lightening. Several years pass and slowly she realises that she is not aging at all.\nThe main narrative takes place in modern day San Francisco as Adaline, currently going under the name of Jenny, is in the process of preparing to alter her identity and move once again - an act she has had to do every 10 years so that people don't ask awkward questions about why she isn't aging.\nApart from her daughter, who obviously knows everything, she has one other weakness an old friend who is blind, and so doesn't notice that Adaline has aged. She attends a New Years Eve party, with her friend, which is where she catches sight of Ellis. There eyes meet briefly. Later, as she is going home, before midnight, Ellis catches up to Adaline in the lift in an attempt to ask her out on a date. For years Adaline has led a solitary life, unable to let anyone in because doing so would mean sharing her secret as well as eventually watching them grow old and die. But Ellis pursues her and Adaline can't help but fall for his charms.\nEventually the two do start dating and Ellis asks her to attend his parents wedding anniversary. But little does Adaline realise that this will open up memories from 50 years previously.\nIt's hard to review The Age of Adaline without giving away too much of the plot. It really is a movie you need to go to blind, without knowing anything, if you're to get the most out of it.\nI was surprised to read a lot of the movie reviews at the time of the film's theatrical release. It received very mixed reviews. Personally I found it to be a beautiful, touching breath of fresh air in the current climate of movie reboots and superhero films (although, if you were being picky, you could argue that Adaline does has a super power). It explores so many facets of the human condition and raises questions of whether living forever is a blessing or a curse.\nThe movie includes a narration that pops up at the beginning and end. Some may argue that it's pointless and detracts from the movie; that it's holding the audiences hand a little too much - bringing even the stupidest viewer up to speed on what is going on. Personally, I thought that it added an extra element to the fairytale slant of the movie and worked rather neatly to bookend the story.\nAnother element I found to be integral was Rob Simonsen's beautiful soundtrack. Again, it helps to add a fairytale feeling, as well as providing a huge boost to some of the film's more emotional scenes.\nEvery visual aspect of the movie is also a feast for the eyes. From the various looks for the different time periods, to the painstakingly researched costumes, you can tell that all those concerned where deeply involved with what they were crafting. This was far more than just a job for them.\nThe acting is flawless but I was totally blown away by the appearance of Anthony Ingruber, who looks and sounds incredibly like a young Harrison Ford.\nOf course, you have to overlook the odd awkward plot point (like how uncomfortable it must be for Ellis to realise that he's sleeping with a woman that his dad had a passionate affair with decades previously) but if you just ignore that then you'll enjoy the film immensely.\nExtras include A Love Story for the Ages (29 min, 36 sec making of feature. One of the highlights was in the segment where cast and crew are asked about whether they would like to live forever. Harrison Ford replies, deadpan: \"I already have\"); Style Throughout the Ages (18 min, 13 sec which details almost every visual aspect of the movie, including clothes, hair, film styles and camera lens); Discovering Young Harrison Ford: Anthony Ingruber, an Online Sensation (8 min, 13 sec look at how the production discovered Ingruber, who had uploaded some clips of himself on YouTube impersonating Harrison Ford's performance of Han Solo in Star Wars); 2 x Deleted Scenes (Flemming Gets Lost (2 min, 05 sec) and Gas Leak (2 min, 20 sec).\nIt's a beautiful and very emotional movie, which is well worth spending a night in watching.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1249318"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.739006757736206,"wiki_prob":0.739006757736206,"text":"Man in hospice care dies during Marshall Fire\nby: Alex Rose, Evan Kruegel\nSUPERIOR, Colo. (KDVR) — A life was lost during the course of the Marshall Fire, which forced tens of thousands to evacuate their homes in Boulder County.\nGonzalo “Chalo” Quesada died Friday morning, following hospitalization after being rushed from his burning home in Superior, according to his family. He was 58 years old.\nLive updates: Families beginning to return to site of Marshall Fire\nHis family tells FOX31 Quesada had multiple complicated health issues that devolved into dementia, Alzheimer’s and aphasia. He lost verbal and motor skills a decade ago. He was homebound at the time of the fire, and doctors only gave him weeks to live prior to the inferno.\nAccording to his family, Quesada’s wife and sister were able to get an ambulance to their home in the Sagamore neighborhood, before the Marshall Fire destroyed the entire block.\nHe was rushed to Avista Adventist hospital to be treated for smoke inhalation. Within minutes of Quesada’s arrival, the hospital was placed under evacuation orders. His family then moved Quesada to hospice care in Denver.\n“They got him cleaned up and he was resting comfortably,” says his wife Michelle Quesada. “But his breathing was very erratic, and we knew he wasn’t going to make it through the night, the trauma from his body being jostled around and the smoke inhalation was really, really bad.”\nHow to help those impacted by the Marshall Fire\nThe hospice center told the family Quesada passed due to a combination of his illness, smoke inhalation and physical trauma from the evacuations.\n“It’s really unfortunate that he was in the latter stages of his illness, and this was the way he was going to go out,” says Michelle.\nQuesada, a former software engineer with IBM, is survived by his wife and three children. A GoFundMe has been set up to support the family, which is also dealing with the total loss of their home.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1800620"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7074026465415955,"wiki_prob":0.7074026465415955,"text":"Annie Saunders & Wild Up\nOctober 12, 2020—January 25, 2021\nTheater maker Annie Saunders collaborates with theater/pop/new music band Wild Up and composer Emma O’Halloran on a new work called Rest. The work engages an audience with simple guidance on how to interact with each other and the performance space. Overall, Rest interrogates sensory overwhelm, sensory deprivation, hallucinations and the nature of consciousness. The audience experience is inspired by the idea that our perception of reality depends on agreements and disagreements with other people.\nLight and sound are central to the staging of Rest. These elements help to sculpt a performance environment that includes moments of near-silence, music, and field recordings from a diverse set of conversations. Materials include conversations with consciousness experts, people sharing their early sense memories, and reflections on our relationships to our smartphones. The work provides a visceral opportunity to feel and consider what ‘rest’ means to us in the modern world.\nThe artistic collaborators are in residence this fall to develop an EMPAC-commissioned online iteration of Rest. The commission will provide the artists an opportunity to explore their archive of material. The outcome is unknown, but the process of building and experiencing this online work will provide a look inside immersive, multidisciplinary theatrical practices.\nAll current EMPAC residencies are being hosted remotely with support from EMPAC curatorial, administrative, and production staff and resources. While no artists are on site in Troy, our staff is continuing to collaborate with artists toward the development of new works.\nMain Image: Courtesy the artist. Photo: Johnathon Potter.\nRemote Residency\nAnnie Saunders\nWildup\nAshley Ferro-Murray\nIn 2020–21 Rest is in residence at Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA.\nMonday, January 25, 2021 at 8PM\nEMPAC Fall 2020 presentations, residencies, and commissions are made possible by Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, with additional support from the National Endowment for the Arts; New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature; the Australian Government through the Australia Council for the Arts; and Vlaamse Gemeenschap, department of Culture, Youth, and Media. Additional project support by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts; New Music USA; CCS Bard; Creative Capital; the Graham Foundation; and the National Culture and Arts Foundation, Taiwan.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line362974"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9482429623603821,"wiki_prob":0.9482429623603821,"text":"Adams County building bought after more than two years of vacancy\nEric Blum\nAfter being vacant for more than two years, the former Schindler Elevator Plant at 1200 Biglerville Road in Cumberland Township will once again house a business.\nLogistics Resource, based in Northumberland County, bought the building July 14 and will soon start getting the building in shape for tenants, said Robin Fitzpatrick, president of the Adams County Economic Development Corporation.\nThe company \"was very open and aggressive about purchasing the building,\" Fitzpatrick said. \"They have the infrastructure in place in central Pennsylvania to be a great fit.\"\nLogistics Resource provides a 48-state trucking service and owns and operates storage facilities, according to the company's website.\n\"Over the past decade, (Logistics Resource) has developed a noteworthy reputation for buying and remediating brownfield properties,\" Jeff Stroehmann, vice president of operations for the company, said in an email. \"This has lead to the creation of hundreds of well-paying jobs.\"\nOne person happy to see the building purchased is Adams County commissioner Marty Qually, who thinks this won't be the last big company the county sees come to the area.\n\"I didn't have an integral part in the sale, but once I was aware of this project, I was all for it,\" Qually said. \"There was a lot of great communication all around for this project.\"\nOfficials from Schindler Elevator did not immediately respond to a request for comment.\nLogistics Resource, which also has facilities in Harrisburg and Mechanicsburg, has no timetable has set for when tenants will move into the property, Stroehmann said.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1783869"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5849307775497437,"wiki_prob":0.41506922245025635,"text":"Got wood? Building industry faces perfect storm\nGeneral Legal, Litigation and Dispute Resolution\nThe Australian Government claims that the economic recovery plan is on track to bounce back. Despite the government’s assistance to create more jobs, provide tax cuts, and invest in infrastructure, the building industry is facing the perfect storm with construction sites being shut down due to COVID-19 lockdown directives, scarce building supplies, and unprecedented demand, explains Attwood Marshall Lawyers Commercial Litigation Senior Associate and NSW Law Society Accredited Specialist in Dispute Resolution, Charles Lethbridge.\nWe’re not alone in our building and renovating boom. With travel on hold, record-low interest rates, and government incentives to build or renovate, it is reported that other countries around the world, including New Zealand, England, and the USA, are also experiencing the same demand that our construction industry is facing in Australia.\nThe Australian Government successfully boosted residential development in 2020 by enticing homeowners to renovate or build with the HomeBuilder Scheme. Fast-forward to 2021, and construction companies are struggling to get their hands on supplies to try to keep up with Australia’s building boom.\nWait times for just about every trade have blown out excessively, in some cases years, as global supply chain disruptions cause material shortages which have impacted many people’s plans to renovate or build their home and caused a headache for builders who are trying to keep customers happy and plan for future work.\nThe building and renovating boom\nThe HomeBuilder Scheme, in addition to state-specific building bonuses, was released by the Government to support confidence in the residential construction sector and incentivize consumers to proceed with construction that may have been delayed due to uncertainty as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.\nApplications for the HomeBuilder Scheme closed on Wednesday 14 April 2021. The largest number of applications were completed by Victorians who submitted 35,169 applications, followed by Queensland’s 26,293 applications and New South Wales’ 23,175 applications as of 9th April 2021.\nWith unprecedented demand for building materials and supply issues, it has created a challenge for the building and construction industry and their customers.\nIn 2019-2020, it was estimated that a single-story home would take six to eight months to build from slab to completion. To complete the same project today, it is estimated that it would likely take 12 to 16 months, if not longer.\nA double story home, which would have previously taken anywhere from 10 to 12 months, is now estimated to take 14 to 20 months to complete.\nGlobal supply shortages\nTrying to schedule a build, without certainty around when building materials will be available, is just the first challenge set for builders. Sub-contractors are also in demand, and with international travel off the cards and interstate travel restricted, there may not be enough workers to get the project completed.\nTimber processing mills are under pressure trying to keep up with demand as a global timber shortage sets back the industry. Usually, one fifth of construction timber is imported. In the USA, the price for timber has risen by 400% from a year ago. As a result of the increase, international traders have been sending all their material to the United States, leaving other countries short.\nAustralia’s domestic timber production has increased by 17%, but despite this increase the industry is still unable to keep up with demand.\nIn addition to supply shortages, shipping costs are also a factor, with significantly high fees to ship materials as a result of the Suez Canal blockage which took place earlier this year. The Suez Canal accounts for around 15 per cent of global shipping traffic. In March 2021, the Canal was blocked for six days. It is estimated that approximately 50 ships per day travel through the Canal.\nThrough no fault of their own, builders are being lugged with thousands of dollars added to the cost of their work, which they are often wearing and not passing on to the customer.\nManaging conflict and resolving residential building disputes\nFor customers that were ahead of the curve and were planning to build or renovate prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, many would have received quotes and set timelines that are now redundant. There are many disappointed homeowners now in for a nasty surprise as costs soar by at least 10-30% in 2021, and building timeframes are almost impossible to estimate.\nWith demand outweighing supply, suppliers have had to increase the cost of building materials, including timber, bricks, steel, cabinetry, and everything in between.\nWith the added consequences of supply issues with manufacturing slowing down in many factories worldwide due to COVID-19 restrictions and lockdowns, production is at its slowest.\nSome builders are reporting up to 3 price increases from one supplier in the space of 4 months. As you can imagine, this would have a roll-on effect to the quotes builders are providing upfront to customers who are trying to scope their work. Unfortunately, supplier prices are out of the control of builders.\nEmotions can be running high for clients who are eagerly awaiting the completion of their home. With a rental crisis gripping the country, this is bad news, with many people unable to extend their current leases, or locate short term accommodation at a reasonable price to accommodate them whilst they await the completion of their build or renovation. This means clients are at a loss and are left with no other option than to put more pressure on builders to fast-track their build or renovation. It’s a matter of riding it out as best as possible. But this means also negotiating with stressed out clients who want nothing more than to fast-track their build.\nAlthough most customers are generally understanding of the current situation and impact COVID-19 has had on the industry, builders are the ones stuck between a rock and a hard place trying to navigate as best they can and deliver projects at a reasonable cost and timeframe.\nAttwood Marshall Lawyers – alternative dispute resolution experts to help you keep construction on track\nWith so many variables that could impact the cost, schedule, and outcome of a build project, it is important to manage customer expectations throughout the process.\nAs construction work progresses minor fluctuations are common, but significant misunderstandings can occur over variations, especially when variations are not communicated effectively. We are seeing more and more disputes arise around the agreed date for project completion and rising costs, particularly in the current climate where building materials are so difficult to secure, and trades are hard to lock down.\nThen there are the usual disputes that can arise over quality of workmanship.\nThese issues contribute to arguments over payments, including delayed or withheld payments. These issues can be sensitive and difficult to resolve once work is underway.\nThe goal should be to resolve any disputes at the earliest opportunity so that you can avoid any further delays and get on with the task at hand. In most cases, building and construction disputes can be settled through alternative dispute resolution mechanisms, without resorting to litigation, which can be extremely costly and stressful.\nIt is our intent to help builders and their clients resolve disputes quickly and effectively so that everyone can move forward and achieve the most satisfactory outcome for all involved.\nBy addressing any issues at the earliest opportunity, we can help you navigate what options are available and advise on the best way to resolve your matter.\nFor advice on building disputes, contact our Commercial Litigation Department Manager, Amanda Heather, on direct line 07 5506 8245, email aheather@attwoodmarshall.com.au or free call 1800 621 071 at any time.\nBusiness Interruption Insurance Decided\nCharles Lethbridge","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line521234"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6563847064971924,"wiki_prob":0.3436152935028076,"text":"HomeMoore College ArticlesBill Salier appointed Consultant in the GAFCON Theological Educators’ Network\nBill Salier appointed Consultant in the GAFCON Theological Educators’ Network\nFebruary 9, 2021 by Moore College\nThe Moore College Centre for Global Mission seeks to serve Christian churches and other organisations around the world in the propagation of the gospel through the provision of faithful theological education resources. In pursuing this mission, the Centre has forged a number of significant partnerships, such as those with MOCLAM, African Enterprise and numerous others in Asia, Africa and the subcontinent. The Centre is pleased to announce a further partnership with GAFCON, a movement of confessing Anglicans seeking to promote gospel faithfulness throughout the Anglican Communion.\nMoore College has been heavily involved with GAFCON from its beginnings. We have been determined to stand with other faithful Anglicans around the world, many of whom have suffered significant loss for teaching and living in accordance with the teaching of Scripture. A number of the College faculty have played important roles in the movement and attended each of the three GAFCON Conferences (Jerusalem 2008, Nairobi 2013, Jerusalem 2018). Partnership with GAFCON is not something new to us.\nIt is critical for the future health of the churches that theological education across the globe prepares men and women to be workers who “have no need to be ashamed, rightly handling the word of truth”. Developing relationships and sharing resources is a way of strengthening theological colleges around the world, many of whom are under intense pressure to adjust their teaching programs to fit in with a liberal revisionist agenda. GAFCON has set up a network of theological educators to establish and nurture international partnerships between Anglican theological colleges.\nLater this year, the Rev Dr Bill Salier will commence as Consultant in the GAFCON Theological Educators’ Network. Dr Salier’s extensive experience in theological education, and his gifts as a scholar and teacher, make him ideal for this role. His responsibility will be undertaken under the umbrella of CGM, as a vital component of the centre’s interest in the advance of faithful gospel ministry throughout the world.\nDr Salier commented, “I am excited by this opportunity to consult with theological educators in the GAFCON network, and I am grateful to Moore College and the CGM for providing an ideal platform of support. I am looking forward to seeing how the Lord will use this role to further his purposes.”\n“Bill Salier’s appointment to the Gafcon Theological Education Network through a cooperative venture with Moore College’s Centre for Global Mission is a great step forward. Together we will continue to work to see bible-based training available to Gospel Workers around the world.”\nBishop Malcolm Richards, Director, Centre for Global Mission, Moore Theological College\n“Bill Salier is an ideal person to take on the role of consultant. He has large experience, deep learning and a personal warmth which enables people to talk with him easily. I am grateful to the Lord for his willingness to take on this role.”\nBishop Peter Jensen, Director of the GAFCON Theological Educators’ Network\nRead more . . .\nFiled Under: Moore College Articles Tagged With: announcement, CGM, GAFCON, staff, theological education","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line944709"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6019364595413208,"wiki_prob":0.6019364595413208,"text":"http://www.gadgetspeak.com/review/Match_Gems_Fantasy_Mosaics_45_-_Amusemen-891737.html\nFinding Robby\nPublished June 26, 2021 Author mfereday\nChildren can find it easy to get lost especially when surrounded by attractions. Can you help re-unite a grandma with her missing grandson?\nPenguins do seem to appreciate mosaics. I am not referring to the artistic designs produced by the Roman Empire of many centuries ago but those that form the basis of Match Gems nonogram puzzle offerings featuring members of a penguin family. In this case the penguins are Mrs Penrose who, when taking her grandson Robby, on a trip to an amusement park, manages to loose the youngster. Her resulting search for the boy is covered by the game Fantasy Mosaics 45 - Amusement Park.\nFor those who are not familiar with the nonogram form of game play, I should explain that this is a way of creating colourful mosaics using a series of numeric clues. You start off with an empty grid made up of columns and rows. Running across the top and down the left side of the grid are a collection of single and groups of numbers. Depending upon the image or mosaic to be created, the grid will be made up of levels with each one being used for a particular colour with the numeric clues changing colour to suit the level.\nSee also: Games\nUsing the numeric clues you can designate whether a similar number of cells can be filled in with the appropriate colour. When more than a single number is allocated to a row or column then you must leave at least one blank cell between the group of cells that are coloured. As each level is completed there will be an automatic switch to another level or you can select to switch whenever you wish.\nProfiles can be created so that the progress of different players can be recorded. You can also adjust the volume level used by background music and sound effects. Other options are available to play the game in full screen mode and select from three levels of difficulty, namely Casual, Advanced and Zen. Different amounts of help are available with these difficulty levels.\nThe game is spread over twenty chapters, each containing five different nonogram which need to be completed. Cells are selected for being coloured in with a left mouse click with a right mouse click being used to produce a blank cell. Arranged to the right of the grid being completed is a panel made up of the colours making up the mosaic. Also featured in this panel are rechargeable power-ups that can be used to identify a single cell or a group of cells plus offer a hint and show how many mistakes have been made.\nOnce all the levels of the grid have been completed, then they will automatically combine themselves to show the created mosaic. I must admit that it was only at this point that I could recognise the image just created. You will be shown an award screen displaying the mosaic plus the number of mistakes made, if any, the hints used and the time taken for that grid.\nWhen the five grids of a chapter have been completed, you will be taken on a detour to the Park grounds and a new attraction will be added to this area. In some cases the attraction will contain a puzzle, such as a Hidden Object scene or fitting shapes so that they fill an area. Other attractions include a rocket ship, astronaut, caravan, horse, roundabout and a Big Wheel. The Park area can be accessed from the game's main title screen at any time.\nFantasy Mosaics 45 - Amusement Park is not going to keep you playing for late night sessions. Instead it can provide an occasional diversion when you have a few spare moments to kill. I did feel that more could have been made of the park amusement feature especially with regards to eye-catching animation. The game is available for downloading from Gamehouse.com where it is priced at $9.99. System specifications call for a 1.6 GHz processor with 1024MB of RAM and 139MB of hard disk space running Windows 7 and later.\nFantasy Mosaics 45 - Amusement Park | GameHouse","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1368000"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8906111717224121,"wiki_prob":0.8906111717224121,"text":"Home > Blog > Education, Princeton University, Rudresh Mahanthappa > Princeton Names Rudresh Mahanthappa Director of Jazz\nPrinceton Names Rudresh Mahanthappa Director of Jazz\nSaxophonist-composer will begin appointment in the fall\nUpdated April 25, 2019 – By Carolina Worrell\nRudresh Mahanthappa has been named Director of Jazz at Princeton University\nPrinceton University’s Department of Music has named saxophonist and composer Rudresh Mahanthappa Director of Jazz. Mahanthappa, who comes to Princeton with an extensive jazz background and a voice “intent on transcending cultural divides by hybridizing progressive jazz and non-Western musical traditions,” according to a press release, will begin his appointment as the Anthony H. P. Lee ’79 Senior Lecturer in Jazz Studies at the start of the fall term. He will succeed Dr. Anthony D. J. Branker, founder of the Program in Jazz Studies.\nRecently, Mahanthappa’s Bird Calls was named Album of the Year in the 2015 NPR Music Jazz Critics Poll. Additionally, that same year Mahanthappa joined the United States Fellows, the latest in a series of honors including a Guggenheim Fellowship, two New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowships and the highly coveted Doris Duke Performing Artist Award.\nOriginally Published June 20, 2016\nPrinceton University’s Department of Music...\nJazz at Lincoln Center Announces Inaugural Jack Rudin Jazz Championship\nJazz at Lincoln Center has announced the launch of its inaugural Jack Rudin Jazz Championship, a two-day invitational competition featuring ensembles from 10 university jazz programs in the United States. It will take place Jan. 18-19 at Frederick P. Rose Hall in Manhattan. The competition is named after one of JALC’s most generous supporters, a … Read More “Jazz at Lincoln Center Announces Inaugural Jack Rudin Jazz Championship”\nUCLA Names Arturo O’Farrill Global Jazz Studies Professor\nArturo O’Farrill, a six-time Grammy-winning pianist, composer and music educator, has been appointed professor of global jazz studies and music at the UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music. He will focus on performance and composition and on redefining the perimeters of Latin jazz in the position. School officials said O’Farrill was chosen in part due … Read More “UCLA Names Arturo O’Farrill Global Jazz Studies Professor”\nAmbrose Akinmusire Honors W.E.B. Du Bois at Princeton University\nAcclaimed trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire—whose recent album, Origami Harvest, was a critical success—will perform at Princeton University on Nov. 17 in the world premiere of a new suite, Slightly Left of Sorrow’s Song, commissioned in honor of the 150th anniversary of W.E.B. Du Bois’ birth. Akinmusire, 36, will play with Princeton’s Small Group I—under the leadership of Jazz at Princeton director … Read More “Ambrose Akinmusire Honors W.E.B. Du Bois at Princeton University”\nPurchase College Celebrates 25 Years of Jazz Studies\nThe Purchase College Conservatory of Music, part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system, will celebrate the 25th anniversary of its Jazz Studies program by presenting several concerts in Westchester County (north of New York City) and NYC itself, featuring students and faculty from the program. The performance-driven curriculum, according to a press … Read More “Purchase College Celebrates 25 Years of Jazz Studies”","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line232694"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.706669270992279,"wiki_prob":0.29333072900772095,"text":"Paternal influences on ethical decision making\nWrite 18 page essay on the topic Paternal Influences on Ethical Decision Making of Senior Leaders in the Health Care Industry.m, International Olympic Committee, Enron, Tyco, Qwest Communications International, Duke Energy, Bristol-Myers Squibb, etc, as well as the sex scandal in the Catholic church, have resulted in a loss of confidence in the management and leadership of these large corporations and institutions. As a consequence,investors have become unnerved and the jolts have shaken international markets. No wonder that a CBS poll taken in the fall of 2002 finds that 79% of respondents believe questionable business practices are widespread and only fewer than one third thinks that CEOs are honest (Wallington, 2003).These companies have all come to the time light for the wrong reasons. As a result, the role of the CEO in ethical dilemmas has come under increased scrutiny. While ethical lapses occur at all the levels of organizations, senior executives who fail to set high ethical standards and live by them are senior leaders in organizations assume the responsibility to display high ethical and moral values in their conduct both within the organization and outside. However, many instances have come to where they discard this significant aspect subjected to scrutiny and held accountable for the consequences of unethical practices, damaging the interests of employees, shareholders and the society at large. CEOs and other senior leaders such as members of Boards of Directors are expected to provide role models and help develop and entrench the ethical belief system for all members of the organization. However, when these leaders fail in their commitment to stand up to the ethical responsibilities, the negative impact of their ethical transgressions will remain long after the leader has been punished.Instances of unethical conduct by senior leaders, which entail serious repercussions, have prompted the need to identify background factors, socialization practices, or early childhood experiences that may account for such behavior in adulthood. Thus, an interest has developed in","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line458367"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6338396072387695,"wiki_prob":0.6338396072387695,"text":"What does Ballarat mean?\nHere's a list of possible definitions for the term Ballarat:\nBallarat is a city located on the Yarrowee River and lower western plains of the Great Dividing Range in the state of Victoria, Australia, approximately 105 kilometres west-north-west of the state capital; Melbourne. With an estimated urban area population of just over 94,000 people, Ballarat is the third most populous urban area in the state. One of the Australia's most populated inland settlements, it is the most populous in the state and fifth in the country. People from Ballarat are referred to as Ballaratians The City of Ballarat local government area encompasses both the Greater Ballarat urban area and outlying towns with an area of 740 square kilometres and has an estimated population of almost 100,000. Ballarat is its most populous urban centre, seat of local government and administrative centre. It was named by Scottish squatter Archibald Yuille who established the first settlement—his sheep run called Ballaarat—in 1837, with the name derived from local Wathaurong Aboriginal words for the area, balla arat, thought to mean \"resting place\". The present spelling was officially adopted by the City of Ballarat in 1996. It is one of the most significant Victorian era boomtowns in Australia. Just months after Victoria was granted separation from New South Wales, the Victorian gold rush transformed Ballarat from a small sheep station to a major settlement. Gold was discovered at Poverty Point on 18 August 1851 and news quickly spread of rich alluvial fields where gold could easily be extracted. Within months, approximately 20,000 migrants had rushed the district. Several Australian mining innovations were made at the Ballarat diggings including the first use of a Chilean mill in 1851 and the first use of a mine cage in 1861. Unlike many other gold rush boom towns, the Ballarat fields experienced sustained high gold yields for decades.\nThe numerical value of Ballarat in Chaldean Numerology is: 8\nThe numerical value of Ballarat in Pythagorean Numerology is: 4\n© Definitions.net","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line141168"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9228236079216003,"wiki_prob":0.9228236079216003,"text":"The Murderers Are Among Us (1946)\nSat 23 Jul 2016 12pm\nTo celebrate the 70th anniversary of the founding of the DEFA (Deutsche Film-AG) Studio in East Germany, the Goethe-Institut New Zealand presents in its Winter Film Series at the Auckland Art Gallery a film programme highlighting different themes and genres that were important to the DEFA. 70 years onwards the films give a glimpse into the diversity of film production in East Germany and offer a rare insight into the life, thinking and being of people behind the wall.\nThe Murderers Are Among Us (Die Mörder Sind Unter Uns)\n1945: Berlin – a town in ruins. The photographer Susanne Wallner (Hildegard Knef) returns to her former apartment after three years in a concentration camp. She finds the apartment occupied by Dr. Mertens (Ernst Wilhelm Borchert), a surgeon who is haunted by his experiences during the war. Susanne and Mertens have to share the apartment. Despite their differences a friendship forms. When Mertens encounters Brückner (Arno Paulsen), the former commander of his battalion who was responsible for the execution of more than 100 civilians during the war, and is now a successful industrialist, he wants to take justice into his own hands. But Susanne is able to convince him that the war criminal must be tried in court.\nShot in the ruins of Berlin just a year after WWII, The Murderers Are Among Us, was the first film made in Germany after the war and has since become a classic antifascist and rubble film. Wolfgang Staudte's achievement was that he took on the country's recent history and its effect on the present as a subject at the time. The film is a classic example of the 'antifascist' tradition in DEFA cinema. It reflects the early DEFA Studio's aim to be close to reality, critical and socialist in its films. The film's film noir style successfully blends German expressionism with striking neorealism.\nDirected by Wolfgang Staudte, 1946. Run time 87 mins. German with English subtitles\nSat 23 Jul 2016\nAuditorium, lower ground level","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line381678"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9560434222221375,"wiki_prob":0.9560434222221375,"text":"8 Detroit Lions to watch vs. Cleveland Browns\nAllen Park — Here are eight players we’ll be watching closely during the Detroit Lions’ preseason finale against the Cleveland Browns at Ford Field on Thursday (7 p.m., Fox 2, WJR 760).\nTight end Michael Roberts\nTwo months ago, Roberts was making all kinds of catches during OTAs and looked like a legitimate candidate for a breakout season. His momentum carried into the start of training camp, but seemed to be derailed by a minor injury that sidelined him a few days earlier this month. Now, with two catches in three games, he’s on the roster bubble, which once seemed inconceivable.\nLinebacker Eli Harold\nThe Lions’ newest acquisition, Harold is an athletic edge rusher who has yet to get on track as a professional. It doesn’t help that he's had three different head coaches, coordinators and position coaches his first three seasons. The Lions have four weeks to decide whether keeping Harold around is worth the conditional seventh-round pick the team paid to acquire him from the 49ers.\nMore: Eli Harold ready to be 'all hands on deck' for Lions\nRunning back Kerryon Johnson\nJohnson has had a small role the past two weeks, but with the starters expected to see their playing time kept to a minimum, it’s an opportunity for the entertaining rookie rusher to put on a show in a three-down role in front of the home crowd. Cleveland’s run defense ranks 26th during the preseason.\nLinebacker Miles Killebrew\nKillebrew has played fewer than 40 preseason snaps since switching to linebacker, making three tackles and recovering a fumble, but still showing a propensity for getting beat in coverage. It’s been difficult to get a grasp on where he stands heading into roster decisions, so a longer look at how he performs at his new position could be key.\nQuarterback Jake Rudock\nBy all appearances, Rudock has been jumped on the depth chart by Matt Cassel. The third-year passer out of Michigan has been accurate this preseason, leading a trio of touchdown drives, but most of his throws have been of the check-down variety and the majority of the yardage has come against prevent defenses. It would be nice to see some downfield accuracy in the finale.\nWide receiver Brandon Powell\nPowell has been one of the most pleasant surprises of the preseason. He’s leading the team in receiving and chipped in an 80-yard punt return touchdown in last week’s come-from-behind victory over the Bucs. He’s in a tough spot, because his skill set has obvious overlaps with Jamal Agnew and Golden Tate, but with another strong showing, the Lions might have no choice but to keep Powell heading into the season.\nDefensive end Cam Johnson\nThe 28-year-old edge defender has bounced around the league since being drafted in 2012. He wasn’t on a roster last season, and spent part of training camp this year nursing an injury, but the playing time has picked up in recent weeks. He has good size and a well-rounded skill set that puts him in play for the final defensive line roster spot.\nOffensive lineman Leo Koloamatangi\nAn undrafted rookie last season, Koloamatangi has continued to fly under the radar despite a solid offseason. He appears to have added some weight to his frame and has allowed just two pressures on more than 80 pass-blocking snaps, while also earning an above-average run-blocking grade from Pro Football Focus. He might be practice squad bound, but he's a player you could see earn a promotion as an injury fill-in later in the year.\njdrogers@detroitnews.com\ntwitter.com/justin_rogers","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line839167"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7597813606262207,"wiki_prob":0.7597813606262207,"text":"Issue #3 - December 2016\nOur unsung heroes\nThis month’s unsung heroes are Shropshire Council’s Fostering team, who have been working tirelessly during the transfer of children from France, arranging their relocation in the UK.\nIn the last 12 months the number of unaccompanied asylum-seeking children in Shropshire has increased from three to at least 14. These have come from lorry drops in Shropshire being discovered by the police, and planned moves from Kent – where there are approximately 2,000 asylum seekers.\nAs the refugee crisis worsens, Shropshire Council has agreed to find homes for 42 unaccompanied children and young people. The closure of the so-called ‘Jungle’ in Calais around six weeks ago has resulted in a sudden influx of asylum seekers being moved around rapidly. This has presented a huge logistical challenge, and placed a great deal of pressure on the system. Our Foster Care and Supported Lodgings teams have been braced and ready to respond at short notice.\nTwo staff recently travelled to Solihull to collect a child refugee and delivered them to a foster family. After a three hour flight delay due to bad weather, followed by further delays at Heathrow, the child arrived at Solihull reporting centre at 9:45pm. A lengthy process of welfare interviews were then conducted before Julie Brown (social worker) and Paula Jones (support worker) could take the youngster to their foster placement in Shropshire at 1.30am, while the foster carers’ supervising social worker Charmain Lewis and duty co-ordinators Bev Roberts and Anna Phillips kept the carers engaged and supported.\nKaren Bradshaw, director of children’s services, said:\n“I really do think that this scenario has demonstrated the commitment that our staff have for their work and for children. They are great ambassadors for the public sector and Shropshire Council. In addition to the frontline social workers, we have a wider team working flat out behind the scenes to make this work, and I would like to extend my personal thanks to all involved.”\nAndrew Pready-James, senior social worker and supported lodgings lead, said:\n“The whole team have gone above and beyond the call of duty in what has been a very chaotic time. However, none of this would be possible without the incredible support of our foster carers and supported lodgings providers.”\nAfter a harrowing journey getting to Shropshire, it's vital that these children and young people are placed in safe and loving homes where they can have the time, space and support to begin to rebuild their lives. On arriving in Shropshire, children aged 15 and under are placed in foster care, and supported lodgings are provided for 16 and 17 year olds.\nAndrew continued:\n“Our carers tell us it’s generally a delight to provide a safe home for an asylum-seeking child. The trauma they've faced has made them tough, but they're also unfailingly polite and grateful for the kindness shown to them. Most are very keen to prosper and succeed in life; and a stable, happy environment allows them the possibility of schooling, learning English and making friends.”\nAs part of the council’s commitment to help unaccompanied asylum-seeking children, we now have an urgent need to recruit foster carers and those who can offer supported board and lodgings. If you think this could be you, visit shropshirefostering.co.uk for information on fostering, or for an informal discussion about providing supported lodgings contact Andrew Pready-James on 01743 250100.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line100246"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5128442049026489,"wiki_prob":0.5128442049026489,"text":"A Q&A with Matt Barnes: Former NBA Player Turned Cannabis Advocate\nEdibles Recipe: Cannabis-Infused Frozen Key Lime Pies\nFederal Charges for Flying with Cannabis? LAX’s ‘Scare Signs’ a New Low\nPHOTOS Showtime\nThe NBA vet talks cannabis use in the league, pushing Biden on the ’94 crime bill, and being a cannabis advocate and father.\nGracie Malley\nAfter 14 seasons and nine different teams, professional basketball player Matt Barnes won his first-ever championship with the 2017 Golden State Warriors. Months later, he announced his retirement. The following 4/20, a Washington Post article with the headline “‘All my best games I was medicated’: Matt Barnes on his game-day use of marijuana” is published. In it, Barnes speaks candidly about his cannabis use while in the NBA – one of the first instances of him openly sharing his story with the goal of normalizing cannabis in professional sports.\nBarnes has since become one of the leading voices of professional athletes calling for the end of penalties for cannabis use while being an active player. Over the past few years, he’s planted roots in the cannabis industry by investing in his hometown of Sacramento through a dispensary called Seven Leaves. He also serves as a senior advisor to Eaze’s minority-focused cannabis business incubator, Momentum.\nAs we closed in on 2020, Matt joined us from his home in Los Angeles for a Zoom call where he shared his journey as a professional athlete and cannabis advocate, along with his hope for reform under new government leadership.\nCannabis Now: How have you and your family been holding up during the pandemic?\nMatt Barnes: Since I was 18, this is the first time I’ve gotten to sit down. I went to UCLA in 1998, and ever since, I’ve been traveling the world to play basketball. Fortunately, I was able to play 15 years, but then I retired and went right into media. I’m working for ESPN and Showtime, traveling all around the country. Though it’s unfortunate circumstances, the pandemic has allowed me to finally sit my ass home. I do my podcast from home, I do ESPN from home, and I get to spend more time with my kids. I’m a single father of three; my twins just turned twelve, my youngest guy [turned] two on December 7. I’m getting to stay home and do the day-to-day things that I retired to do, that I hadn’t been able to do before. We’ve been blessed.\nCN: You have an incredible podcast, All the Smoke, where you and fellow retired NBA player Stephen Jackson interview professional athletes and coaches. Given the name of the podcast, how often would you say cannabis comes up? Are there any memorable guests who stand out when it comes to their cannabis use?\nWe’ve interviewed guys who are still playing that were a little hesitant talking about it, but you know, we do stuff off the camera. One person who comes to mind is The Godfather for my generation: Snoop. It’s been great to talk to him about the plant and seeing his evolution. He came in as someone that was focusing on just getting high, and I’ve been talking to him more about explaining to the world why [he] uses [cannabis]. That’s been my goal when I talk to my colleagues or former athletes about cannabis – I always encourage people to tell their stories.\nJust like the next person, I enjoy getting high, but there’s a lot of benefits from it, and I think that’s important when pushing forward a message of nationwide legalization – to erase the old stigmas of the high component and explain the beneficial uses of cannabis. It’s been a fun journey post-career, kind of being a shield for the guys in the league. I’m one of a handful of people that current [NBA] players look to for questions when it comes to using cannabis or not.\nCN: What was your path to becoming this cannabis guru for professional athletes?\nI was a product of the ’80s. My parents were functioning drug addicts. I saw a lot of different stuff when I was younger, and I remember one of the things I enjoyed smelling at a young age was cannabis. My parents also smoked cigarettes, and I used to hate the smell of those, but there was a different smell when my dad would light that weed up at the end of the day.\nAt the age of 14, I tried it. My first experience was terrible; I got a headache and passed out. But I wasn’t a quitter – I jumped right back on the horse and have been using it religiously for the past 26 years. Through high school, UCLA, my entire professional career, it’s been there for me…It’s always mellowed me out, made me more levelheaded, helped with sleep, stress, and the anti-inflammatory components help a lot as well. I played 15 years, I won a championship, and I think my story will help erase that stigma of people thinking it’s a gateway drug.\nCN: Can you talk a little bit about the drug testing in the NBA and what that was like for you when you were in the league?\nIn the NBA, they give you three strikes for drugs in general. I don’t think cannabis should be called a drug anymore, but it’s still called a drug in the NBA. I had 2.75 strikes in about 15 years. I got caught twice. If you think you’re going to fail, you are allowed to call the drug program and admit yourself willingly. I did that twice even though they are supposed to allow it once. The third strike is suspension for five days, which is a lot of money missed, and it becomes public record. Luckily, I avoided that in my career.\nSomething interesting in going through the drug program a few times was talking to the guys who run it about how many players were in for cannabis alone. There are over 400 players in the NBA, and at the time I was in [the program], there were over 200 players in just for weed. It’s ridiculous ‘cause the league says they want what’s best for the players, but they’re pumping us full of opioids that are gonna mask one problem and cause another. Then they want to suspend us, fine us and maybe cost us our jobs over consuming cannabis. That’s why myself, Al Harrington and some other athletes are pushing the needle on the NBA. We understand how beneficial this plant is.\nIf [the league] would do their research, which they are doing now, they’ll find they can use [cannabis] to prolong athlete’s careers. Normally the NBA is at the forefront of all issues, but we’re actually last right now when it comes to the use of cannabis or CBD. Hockey, major league baseball and even the NFL are kind of rewriting their policies when it comes to this, but I think we’ll be catching up shortly.\nCN: You have said that you used cannabis while playing in the NBA. Did you use it for stress relief, for physical ailments or both?\nAt the beginning, it was psychological. I started [using cannabis] at 14 or 15 years old, and I had a really tough childhood – a lot of violence, drugs and abuse. Cannabis allowed me to escape, to focus, to sleep at night peacefully. So, in the beginning, it was more psychological. As I got older, my body was getting beat up with playing in the NBA, so I needed the relief component as well.\nI risked a lot smoking it throughout my career, but there was no other outlet for me. People often don’t understand how mental this game is. If you’re fortunate enough to make it in the NBA, you’re a one percenter. Then the mental approach of the game kicks in – it’s really a mental space and a mental game. Cannabis always helped me control the mental side, and this is why I’m a huge advocate.\nCN: Kind of like your NBA career, it’s hard to keep track of all the things you’ve accomplished while working in the cannabis industry – there have been so many! Can you give us a run-down of some favorite projects/ventures?\nMB: My first thing is advocacy. The second I retired, I started speaking [about cannabis]. I was able to executive produce a piece for Bleacher Report called B/R x 4/20, and it was the first time you ever saw retired NBA and NFL players smoking cannabis on television, telling the world why [they] used it. I was kind of worried about how the world was gonna take to professional athletes on TV smoking weed, but it was nothing but positivity. That paved the way for me to freely speak for it.\nI teamed up with UCLA for a little bit to work on their cannabis research program. I’m a part owner of Seven Leaves, which is a cannabis company in my hometown of Sacramento. We’re growing under 3,000 lights right now and really making a splash in the space. I teamed up with Eaze and have an advisory role on their Momentum Program, helping get into the social equity space and allowing people of color to have an equal opportunity. If you look at the numbers, there are only about 3 percent people of color in the cannabis space, which is terrible in my opinion. I’m proud to say I’m really helping push this movement forward.\nCN: How do you feel about the equity programs that are in place now. Do you think that they’re effective at all, or do they still have a long way to go?\nMB: It’s a lot to handle. Starting them was the right thing to do, but starting and actually finishing are two different things. I think there’s plenty that needs to be learned in the process. You are giving people who have never run or owned a business the opportunity to compete in a very competitive market. That’s why I think a lot of the minority [business owners] don’t last – because our people don’t have expertise in running businesses overall. I think there should be programs that allow [people of color] to be part of [the industry] but also educate them, which I think is a huge part of anyone’s success. The Momentum Program through Eaze is educating [people], and there’s a handful of other programs out there that are teaching people the ropes, so when they get in a position to secure licensing and try to go vertical in their business, they’re fully equipped.\nCN: If you could pick one thing to change about the cannabis industry right now, what would it be?\nMB: Just equal footing for minorities. That’s it. Like I’ve said, I think we were affected most by [the War on Drugs] but are still last in line. We missed prohibition, we missed the Gold Rush, and we can’t miss this Green Rush. That is my goal coming into this space – to continue to educate people, create opportunities and jobs and situations for people of color to excel in. We’ve been directly affected by this the most – losing our dads, our brothers, our sisters, our aunts, uncles, grandparents either to death or jail because of this plant. We need our reparations for this.\nCN: This past year, with the Black Lives Matter movement breaking through to the mainstream, we saw many companies worldwide making statements in support of Black lives like never before. Were you observing the cannabis industry’s response, and do you think they handled it well compared to other industries?\nMB: I think it’s important for all industries to do something. Now we’ve pulled back the blanket of how nasty this country has been at times and still can be. I think businesses want to align themselves with our people and in our communities, but I think what is important – and a lot of businesses miss the boat with this – is they’re trying to fix stuff in our communities with nobody from our communities guiding them. That’s why I think it’s important for myself to be a part of this movement.\nFor example, if you have no idea what my community is like, or what Compton is like, or the Chicago ghettos, how can you effectively help? Sometimes money is thrown at the biggest name or the biggest corporation, and they may not actually be doing the best work for those communities. It takes a little bit of due diligence; these companies need to be doing their homework.\nCN: We saw a video of you bringing that sentiment to the national stage when you were pushing Biden about the controversial 1994 crime bill*. What was that moment like, and how did you feel about his response?\nMB: The moment was surreal. I wasn’t gung-ho about Biden and Harris because with both of their track records, they’ve done a lot of damage in our communities. But I got the opportunity to go out there and talk to him and meet him, speak for him at a rally and go to some voting polls. He wanted minorities to vote for him, and the first thing that people are going to bring up is the crime bill. Hearing him break down the crime bill, describing the parts that he was against while understanding that he couldn’t get everything that he wanted, he went with what was presented after there was pushback – because we needed something at that time. I’m not saying the crime bill was the answer, but we needed something. The government put guns and drugs in the hood in the early ‘80s. I was just excited at the opportunity to get to talk to [Biden], and I really felt like we helped him get in office. Now our job is to hold him and Kamala Harris accountable.\n*The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, now known as the 1994 crime bill, gave billions in funding to state prisons and police while disenfranchising people of color.\nCN: Do you think decriminalization and adult-legalization will continue to be led by the states, or will the Biden-Harris administration bring about federal cannabis laws?\nMB: I’m hoping state-by-state [cannabis legislation] continues, but it would be great to get a federal overhaul and just legalize it. Once we figure out a sweet point for taxation, this is going to be a huge revenue maker for all these states. Cannabis is the one thing that brings everyone together. I feel like if everyone smoked weed, the world would be a better place overall, and that’s no bullsh*t. Hopefully this plant can not only bring financial stability to states across the country, but also bring people together.\nCN: Since you are a father and family man, as well as a cannabis advocate, have you had any talks about the plant with your kids?\nMB: You know, we had that conversation when [my twins] were…about nine maybe? I never smoke in front of my kids, but one night I put them to sleep and went out to smoke a joint by the pool. I guess one of the boys had looked through their window and saw me smoking because they came down the next morning and said, “Dad, if you smoke cigarettes, your lungs are gonna turn black!” So, I kept it real and said, “You know how Daddy plays basketball and his back, knees and ankles hurt? When they give me medicine [for the pain], it gives me an upset stomach. And when I smoke a joint, it makes all my pain go away and helps me sleep.” One of the twins was like, “Oh, okay. Well, Dad my ankle hurts. When can I smoke?” I was like, “Oh sh*t.” [Laughs]\nCN: This is for the weed nerds out there. Can you tell us what strains you’ve been into lately?\nMB: I’ve been really into our homegrown strains. We have a Blue Slush at Seven Leaves that I’m really enjoying. Vovo and Bon Bons [are strains] from our facility that I’m also really enjoying. If you are in California and get a chance, check those out. Hopefully with our expansion, we can start getting them all over the country.\nI don’t smoke as much anymore because I’m really busy, and I’m a father of three, but I still do have my two or three joints a day. I wake and bake; I’ll get a mid-day joint; and I’ll have one to put me to sleep, so I’m across the board as far as hybrids, sativas and indicas. It’s just kind of a way of life. Smoking has always been there for me, and it’ll always be there for me. I will continue to advocate for it, and hopefully help change some regulations in professional sports and even some laws.\nThe NBA halted their cannabis testing program when the 2019-2020 season resumed in order to avoid unnecessary contact due to COVID-19 concerns. This policy has continued throughout the 2020-2021 season. The NBA has not made a formal statement or confirmed if they will discontinue testing or penalize players for cannabis use.\nThis interview has been edited for length and clarity.\nRelated Topics:Cannabis, Cannabis and sports, Drug testing, Eaze, issue 41, Los Angeles, Matt Barnes, NBA, Seven Leaves\nMore in Culture\nBy Chris Roberts January 11, 2022\nTerrible pay, high turnover, and no training standards: the person selling you your weed deserves better.\nBy Nikki Lastreto January 6, 2022\nKeeping a close eye on your cannabis after harvest is critical to ensuring optimum quality by...\nBy Ricardo Baca January 1, 2022\nThe post-prohibition, consumption-friendly cannabis celebration is on!\nHow to Smoke a Joint Like a Cannabis Connoisseur\nRotini Tech: How To Use Dried Pasta As a Crutch\nMeet 4 MILLION Cannabis Fans →","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line362164"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.619753897190094,"wiki_prob":0.619753897190094,"text":"Public involvement and partnerships\nTechnical Notification on Health Canada's Proposal to Enable the Use of Dimethyl Dicarbonate as a Preservative in Wine and in Unstandardized Water-Based Non-alcoholic Beverages\nInformation and Notification Document on Health Canada's Proposal to Enable the Use of Dimethyl Dicarbonate as a Preservative in Wine and in Unstandardized Water-Based Non-Alcoholic Beverages\nNotice to the reader:\nThe online consultation is now closed.\nAs a result of this process, a modification was made to the List of Permitted Preservatives to enable the use of dimethyl dicarbonate as a preservative in wine and in unstandardized water-based non-alcoholic beverages on May 22, 2013. The proposed use of this food additive in Canada as described is now enabled.\nFor more information on this initiative, please contact the Bureau of Chemical Safety's Chemical Health Hazard Assessment Division at bcs-bipc@hc-sc.gc.ca.\n(PDF Version - 382 K)\nHealth Canada received a food additive submission seeking approval for the use of dimethyl dicarbonate (DMDC) as a preservative at a maximum level of use of 250 parts per million (ppm) in various unstandardized water-based non-alcoholic beverages and at a maximum level of use of 200 ppm in wine. Unstandardized water-based non-alcoholic beverages includes such products as ready-to-drink teas, fruit-flavoured sport drinks, energy drinks, and carbonated flavoured soft drinks.\nThe results of Health Canada's evaluation of the available scientific data support the safety and efficacy of DMDC when used as requested. Therefore, it is the intention of Health Canada to amend Part 3 of the List of Permitted Preservatives by adding the following entry to the list:\nProposed Amendment to Part 3 of the List of Permitted Preservatives\nPermitted in or Upon\nMaximum Level of Use and Other Conditions\nDimethyl dicarbonate (1) Unstandardized water-based non-alcoholic beverages (1) 250 ppm\n(2) Wine (2) 200 ppm\nHealth Canada's Food Directorate has completed a pre-market safety and efficacy assessment of DMDC used as described above. The assessment considered microbiological, toxicological, and technical aspects of the proposal.\nAlthough the growth of all microorganisms would not be controlled by this chemical, for example certain types of heat- and baro-resistant ascospores of heat-resistant moulds, Health Canada's Food Directorate has concluded that the data provided demonstrate the efficacy of DMDC against yeast, some types of fermentative spoilage bacteria such as Lactobacillus, and moulds, including heat-resistant fungi that could survive pasteurization treatment. In addition, when DMDC is used in wine, the amount of any added sulphite (which is already permitted in wine as an antimicrobial preservative) can be reduced, since the synergistic effect of sulfites and DMDC against bacteria and yeast has been demonstrated in wines of different acidity.\nDMDC exerts its technical effect immediately after addition to the beverage or wine by inactivating microbial enzymes, but it is hydrolyzed to methanol and carbon dioxide after several hours. Therefore, since there is no dietary exposure to DMDC, potential exposure to substances formed from the hydrolysis of DMDC was considered. Scientists within Health Canada's Food Directorate utilized Canadian food intake figures and took into consideration other potential dietary sources of these substances to develop its exposure assessment. It was determined that the low level of exposure to these hydrolysis products as a result of the use of DMDC would not be of toxicological concern.\nHealth Canada's Food Directorate also reviewed the potential exposure to an impurity in DMDC and possible reaction products that could form when DMDC is used in beverages. No toxicological concern was identified for the very low levels of these substances that might be present in beverages from the use of DMDC as a preservative.\nBased on the results of the safety assessment, Health Canada's Food Directorate scientists consider that the data demonstrate the safety in use of DMDC under the requested conditions of use, that is, 250 ppm in unstandardized water-based non-alcoholic beverages and 200 ppm in wine. The Department is therefore proposing to enable the use of DMDC as described in the above table.\nOther Relevant Information:\nGiven that one of the proposed areas of use is wine, for which there is a compositional standard (section B.02.100 [S], Division 2 of the Food and Drug Regulations), a targeted consultation on the acceptability of the proposal was carried out with the Canadian Vintners Association (CVA). The CVA found no objections to the proposed use of DMDC in wine among its membership.\nThe proposed use of DMDC is consistent with the international Codex General Standard for Food Additives, which includes entries for the use of DMDC in \"water-based flavoured drinks\", including \"sport,\" \"energy,\" or \"electrolyte\" drinks and \"particulated drinks\" to a maximum of 250 mg/kg; and in \"grape wines\" to a maximum level of 200 mg/kg.\nFor additional information or to submit comments related to this proposal, please contact:\nBureau of Chemical Safety\n251 Sir Frederick Banting Driveway\nTunney's Pasture, PL: 2203B\nOttawa, Ontario K1A 0L2\nE-mail to: bcs-bipc@hc-sc.gc.ca\nWhen communicating by e-mail, please use the words \"dimethyl dicarbonate\" in the subject box of your e-mail. Health Canada is able to consider information received by December 23, 2012 at 11:59 p.m. EDT, 60 days from date of this posting.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line988424"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6659883856773376,"wiki_prob":0.6659883856773376,"text":"zenpolitics\tin Books, democracy, Europe, government, Literature, Media, Poetry, Politics, Travel, USA\t Feb 26, 2021 Feb 26, 2021 998 Words\nPoetry and politics out of San Francisco\nFerlinghetti and Hirschman, and remembering also the Turkish writer, Ahmet Altan\nBack in the 1950s and 60s people were living on the edge, as they are now, in Covid times. The threat of nuclear war was ever-present. And by the 60s many of us were engaged in a fully-fledged protest movement. But we could be out there, talking, drinking, smoking, demonstrating. And a whole lot more.\nI’ve been reading two San Francisco poets, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Jack Hirschman. Back in 1953 Ferlinghetti founded the City Lights Bookstore, and in 1956 he published Allen Ginsberg’s Howl, and after he was prosecuted famously won a court case asserting the right of free speech under the First Amendment. Some forty years later, in 1998, he was named the first San Francisco Poet Laureate. Hirschman, in 2006, was the fourth.\nI had a Hirschman book on order… this was last Monday. The following day there arrived an email from a friend over in the States with a PS – had I seen the news, Ferlinghetti had just died. Aged 101. I’m sad, really sad, he’s gone. Amazed he was still alive.\nRemember Howl? OK, you don’t remember. We weren’t alive or we were too young. But it’s a manifesto for anarchy, of a very 1950s and 60s kind. Not the destructive anarchy of the New Right of our own time. It’s the dream anarchy that the world will somehow set itself right. It’s just that ‘America’ is getting in the way. Ginsberg celebrates ‘the best minds of his generation’, they’re ‘angel-headed hipsters … who poverty and tatters and hollowed-eyed and high sat up smoking in the supernatural darkness of cold-water flats floating across the tops of cities contemplating jazz’. It’s political – but it doesn’t have a prospectus. It just wants you to know that it scorns the whole crazy moneyed apparatus of society.\nFerlinghetti also had the anarchist instinct but he was a practical guy. Founded the bookstore, published Howl, won that court case. But he also knew how to hit home: his is a ‘concrete continent/ spaced with bland billboards/ illustrating imbecile illusions of happiness’. (A Coney Island of the Mind, 1958) Come 2007 he was more relaxed, the gentrification of San Francisco a big issue. But he was still campaigning for ‘poems that say something supremely original and supremely important, which everyone aches to hear, poetry that cries out to be heard, poetry that’s news’. Maybe the mass media might just print it, if it was ‘a new kind of news’. Though maybe ‘poets would still be ignored by our dominant culture, because they’re saying what our materialist, technophiliac world doesn’t want to hear’.\nHe was also asking that big question – what exactly what is a poet? He’s like an acrobat ‘on a high wire of his own making/ … a little charliechaplin man/ who may or may not catch/her fair eternal form’ when she comes swinging toward him. That’s from ‘A Coney Island’. His ‘Challenges to Young Poets’ from forty years later keeps it simple: ‘Write short poems in the voice of birds.’\nHirschman was something else, a Street not a Beat poet, a radical communist. (His book, ‘All That’s Left’, arrived yesterday.) ‘It was the Street poets who united with common causes…’ He celebrated SF’s Cafe Trieste, where you’d find ‘local radiances like Lawrence Ferlinghetti’, and ‘the older Beats and Baby Beats and the commies, the surrealists, the anarchists, the socialists, the jazzmen, the urban screwballs, the walk-in weirdos’. From another age he remembered ‘Federico, who would die for poetry’ – Lorca was a hero. ‘The sinking house of the setting sun’ was how he characterised New Orleans after Katrina. And, remembering the Virginia Tech massacre of thirty-two people, he wrote, ‘and now you know what a market/in old Baghdad feels like.’.\nBy contrast, the latter-day Ferlinghetti could be whimsical, a poet to smile and relax with in poems such as the ‘Green Street Mortuary Marching Band’. But he was still the same man. ‘To the Oracle at Delphi’ talks of America as a ‘new Empire … with its electronic highways/carrying its corporate monoculture/round the world’. (San Francisco Poems, 2001)\nHirschman never let up – hasn’t I’m sure to this day. You may or may not appreciate his encomium on Fidel Castro. But in the case of Mumia (Mumia Abu-Jamal) he drills his message home. Black Panther background, sentenced to death for murder in 1981, commuted in 2001, still in jail, many still arguing his case and his cause. Mumia has studied, taken a degree, written books, and inspired, all from jail. Hirschman imagines his final victory – ‘your victory will be the priceless uplifting of the human spirit’.\nHe refers to Mumia as the ‘Nazim Hikmet/of the American grain, that Turkish poet who/spent 26 years in prison…. No amount of bars/or shackles can chain/the revolutionary impulse/of the human heart’.\nMumia’s case still divides America, along party lines, Right and Left. I am, over in the UK, in no position to comment on the rights and wrongs of his conviction. But the reference to Nazim Hikmet does strike home.\nIn our own time, as some of us are planning holidays in Turkey, we have the extraordinary and vicious incarceration of Turkish journalists and writers (and teachers and lawyers and many others) under the Erdogan regime. One is the writer Ahmet Altan, arrested in 2016, then released and re-arrested the same day. Now serving a life sentence. In his book (smuggled as extracts from jail), ‘Never will I see the world again’, he writes:\n‘Never again would I be able to kiss the woman I love, embrace my kids, meet with my friends…I would not be able to listen to a violin concerto or to go on a trip or browse in bookstores or buy bread from a bakery or gaze at the sea…’\nIt’s a long paragraph. And it hit me hard.\n'I Will Never See The World Again'\nConey Island of the Mind\nFerlinghetti\nJack Hirschman\nSan Francisco's Poet Laureate\nGetting yourself noticed\nA year-long foreign-policy review has come to this …","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1362559"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9766137599945068,"wiki_prob":0.9766137599945068,"text":"BritainMay 7th 2005 edition\nBagehot\nTogether again (for now)\nA four-week break from the office helped Tony and Gordon rediscover what they had lost. Will it last?\nTONY BLAIR may have the most famous (and most irritating) grin in British politics, but during this election campaign, it is the image of the supposedly dour, often sullen chancellor wreathed in smiles that will stick in the memory.\nIt is not quite true, as some have suggested, that Gordon Brown has been the dominant figure of the campaign—that, for both good and ill, has been Mr Blair. What is not in doubt is that Mr Brown has emerged from the campaign politically stronger than ever before. Moreover, he has done so not at Mr Blair's expense, but by giving the prime minister the kind of unstinting support that has often been lacking during the past eight years.\nGiven their recent history, the transformation in the Blair-Brown relationship during the past four weeks has been remarkable. On the eve of the campaign, there was still uncertainty as to what role Mr Brown would play. He had been infuriated by Mr Blair's decision to stay in the job for a few more years, by the resurrection of an old enemy, Alan Milburn, to take charge of Labour's re-election strategy and by rumours that he would be forced to move to the Foreign Office. But the notion that he would be a peripheral, sulky figure during the campaign was always implausible. For all their differences, Mr Brown and Mr Blair both wanted Labour to get the largest majority possible.\nYet their willingness, once Labour's focus groups had revealed that pictures of them together provoked much greater enthusiasm than when they were on their own, to turn themselves into an unprecedented election double act was unexpected. For both men, it involved swallowing resentment and pride. For Mr Blair, it was an admission that he had been so tarnished by Iraq that Labour's chances of a third term might be jeopardised if he were the lone figurehead of the campaign. For Mr Brown, it was an acceptance that his own fate remained inextricably tied to that of Mr Blair. So determined are they both to hold on to power that what might seem impossible to normal people was, to them, fairly easy.\nWhat followed initially provoked guffaws from political reporters who had spent years covering their feuds. A party political broadcast directed by Anthony Minghella—a syrupy portrait of a political marriage in which they gazed into each other's eyes and chuckled over memories of old spats—seemed to invite ridicule. But only days later came the launch of Labour's manifesto at which Mr Brown talked enthusiastically about the part that private providers could play in offering choice in publicly funded health care. Even hardened cynics were taken aback.\nFrom that point onwards, the two men were hardly ever seen out of each other's company, rushing to Birmingham to share the pain of the wretched Rover workers, pumping the flesh to get the vote out in marginal constituencies, and appearing in countless photo opportunities and press conferences. When, at the end of last week, the attorney-general's advice on the legality of the war was leaked to newspapers and journalists scented blood, the chancellor interposed his body between Mr Blair and the media pack. The prime minister, said Mr Brown, had not only behaved entirely properly in the run-up to war, but he would have done exactly the same thing. Turning up to be interviewed by Sir David Frost last Sunday, Mr Blair said chirpily: “I'm on my own this morning.”\nIt isn't just the ruthless professionalism of a couple of seasoned politicians. There's more to it than that. The body language has become increasingly relaxed; their tributes to each other are no longer paid through gritted teeth. Thrown together by necessity during the campaign, they started talking to each other in a way they had not for more than a decade and rediscovered, to their surprise, something close to mutual admiration. What nobody knows, including them, is whether their rapprochement will survive after May 6th.\nA test for Mr Brown\nHopes that it may rest on two assumptions. The first is that Mr Brown no longer wants to cast himself as the drag anchor on public-service reform. That may be because his old opposition was driven less by ideology than by the need to find differences with his former friend. It may also be because policies he was once sceptical about are beginning to work: the English NHS, for instance, is performing better than the unreformed versions in Scotland and Wales. Mr Brown's allies maintain that it is nonsense to suggest he has been anti-reform: what irked the chancellor was the self-consciously confrontational way in which Mr Blair set about it. Mr Brown, they say, is happy with both the distinctly New Labour manifesto and the departmental five-year plans that preceded it.\nThe second assumption is that Mr Brown is reconciled to allowing Mr Blair to carry on for another three years, should he wish to do so, without staging a repeat of the kind of power play that he and his followers mounted about a year ago. In the past few weeks, Mr Blair has as good as anointed Mr Brown as his chosen successor; it is also quite possible that he will quit sooner, especially if the government holds and loses a referendum on the European constitution. For his part, Mr Brown would like nothing better than a smooth transition that would remove the risk of the bitterness that still poisons the Tory party 15 years after Margaret Thatcher was forced out as leader.\nIt could, however, just as easily turn sour. Mr Brown's self-styled supporters, many of them restless and disaffected, some of them fundamentally hostile to New Labour, have caused plenty of trouble in the past between the prime minister and the chancellor and yearn to see the back of Mr Blair. The future, not just for the Blair-Brown relationship, but also for Labour's ability to win power, may well depend on how determined Mr Brown is to rein them in.\nThis article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline \"Together again (for now)\"\nMore from Britain\nBoris Johnson’s career of rule-breaking runs into crisis\nBritain’s energy crisis\nExpensive energy is baked into Britain’s future\nChoosing to look away\nOmicron and the logic of testing\nMatch and dispatch\nNon-religious celebrants are leading more of England’s funerals\nWhat did you expect from Boris Johnson?\nFrom smashing the political status quo to partying during lockdown\nIt’s not cheap being green\nBritain ponders an end to free lateral-flow tests. America is just starting\nThey could soon get the right to marry people, too\nThe prime minister, in his own way, is Britain’s most honest politician","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line345679"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9022508859634399,"wiki_prob":0.9022508859634399,"text":"Entertaitment\nCreated: 19 August 2018\nAuthor:Bishal Giri\nAuthor's Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.\nLeBron Raymone James (born December 30, 1984) is an American basketball player with the Los Angeles Lakers who garnered the first national attention as the top high school basketball player in the country. He became a four-time NBA MVP with his athleticism and vision. LeBron James became an immediate star after skipping college to join the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers. After leading the Miami Heat to titles in 2012 and 2013, James returned to Cleveland and won a third championship with Cleveland in 2016.\nChildhood and Early Life\nBorn in Akron, Ohio, in 1984, James is the single child of Gloria James. Gloria struggled to provide for James during his childhood. His father, Anthony McClelland, has an extensive criminal record and was not involved in their life. When James was about five years old, he and his mother moved seven times in a year. Life was often a struggle for the family, as they moved from apartment to apartment in the seedier neighborhoods of Akron while Gloria struggled to find steady work. For a couple of years during elementary school, James lived with a foster family. Regardless of any troubles they may have had, however, James and his mother have a close and strong relationship.\nJames played high school basketball for St. Vincent–St. Mary High School in his hometown of Akron, Ohio. He joined the Cleveland Cavaliers in 2003 as the first overall draft pick. James quickly emerged as a league star and concluded his first season by winning the NBA Rookie of the Year Award. However, after falling short of the expectations set by the media, fans, and himself, James departed Cleveland in 2010 as a free agent to sign with the Miami Heat.\nOn January 1, 2012, Lebron James proposed to his high school sweetheart, Savannah Brinson and married in a private ceremony with about 200 guests in San Diego on September 14, 2013. James and Brinson have two sons and one daughter together. In October 2004, James welcomed his first son LeBron Jr. On June 14, 2007, Brinson gave birth to their second son, Bryce Maximus James. Their third child, daughter Zhuri James, was born on October 22, 2014.\nStanding 6 feet 8 inches and weighing 250 pounds, James can play forward and power as well as other three positions. His athletic and versatile playing style has drawn comparisons to Hall of Famers Oscar Robertson, Magic Johnson, and Michael Jordan. James's career averages are 27.2 points, 7.4 rebounds, 7.2 assists, and 1.6 steals per game.\nNet Worth and Salary\nAccording to Forbes magazine, LeBron James’ net worth was $275 million.\nJames made his Olympic debut at the 2004 Summer Games in Athens, Greece and won, bronze medals after defeating Lithuania. In the summer of 2008, James traveled to Beijing, China, to play with the likes of Bryant, Jason Kidd and Dwyane Wade on the U.S. Olympic basketball team. The team brought home the gold after defeating Spain in the final round .James competed at his third Olympic Games in 2012, at the Summer Olympics in London. The U.S. basketball team took the gold medal — James' second consecutive Olympic gold.\nJames has worked to help others through his charity works, establishing the LeBron James Family Foundation in 2004, along his mother Gloria, where he help out children and single-parent families in need. Among its various programs, the organization builds playgrounds in economically disadvantaged areas.\nAchievements and Honors\nJames' NBA accomplishments include four NBA Most Valuable Player Awards, three NBA Finals MVP Awards, two Olympic gold medals, three All-Star Game MVP awards, and an NBA scoring title. He is the all-time NBA playoffs scoring leader and has amassed fourteen NBA All-Star Game appearances, twelve All-NBA First Team designations, and five All-Defensive First Team honors.\nVisit The Saint Leonard Health and Research Foundation\nWhen Was the Fire Station(Engine Co.18) of Newark, NJ created?\nCopyright Reserved @Gentleman Gentlemen ™\nDesigned By RadioManTech, Inc.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1095312"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.656406819820404,"wiki_prob":0.656406819820404,"text":"Man convicted after shootout with Manatee sheriff's deputies\nMANATEE COUNTY — A man was found guilty of attempted manslaughter after he fired multiple shots at deputies, saying he thought he was shooting at burglars.\nAccording to the office of Ed Brodsky, state attorney for the 12th Judicial Circuit, a jury convicted Mark Davis, 37, on Thursday in the Feb. 6, 2017, incident.\nOn that date, Davis called 911 and reported that shots had been fired. When Manatee County Sheriff's Office deputies arrived at his home in the 3600 block of 29th St. E. and attempted to make contact with Davis at the front door, he fired about 25 shots at them through his bedroom window. Deputies returned fire, and Davis was later arrested. No one was injured.\nAt his trial, Davis testified that he believed he was shooting at burglars. Prosecutors said there was no evidence at the scene or on his surveillance video to support that belief.\nSentencing will take place at a later date. Davis faces a maximum sentence of 45 years in prison.","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1481436"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5521095991134644,"wiki_prob":0.44789040088653564,"text":"Uncommitted Senior Showcase – Pre-registration FINAL DAY (VIDEO)\nrecruit757 has offered this event for years and it is your best shot at a late scholarship offer by Andy Hilton, recruit757 I’ve seen it happen. Year after year. High school seniors who have almost given up on realizing their dream of playing college football have seen that dream reignited at the recruit757 Uncommitted Senior…\n2018 All-757 Freshman/Sophomore Teams\nAll-757 Freshman/Sophomore POY: Lake Taylor RB Malik Newton and Princess Anne DB Tony Grimes (Photos: Lance Hinton and Mary Ann Magnant/recruit757) The All-757 Freshman/Sophomore teams give you the names you’ll cheer for in the years to come by Andy Hilton, recruit757 There’s one thing about high school football; every year is a rebuilding year in…\nPrincess Anne downs Lake Taylor, 57-47 (VIDEO)\n757 Basketball, Ultimate RecruitBy Andy Hilton December 29, 2018 Leave a comment\nThe semifinal of the Boo Williams Christmas Classic sees Princess Anne prevail by Andy Hilton, recruit757 Like a prize fight, the game between Lake Taylor and Princess Anne was the title match. Both squads came in undefeated and rarely challenged. Both came out having been challenged, but the VHSL Class 5 defending State Champion Lady…\nMarshall offers Life Christian WR Joe Johnson\n757 Football, 804 Football, Ultimate RecruitBy Andy Hilton December 29, 2018 Leave a comment\nLCA WR/CB Joe Johnson (Photo: Andy Hilton/recruit757) Life Christian WR Joe Johnson, III secures offer from Marshall University by Brandon Mitchell, recruit804 Prior to the start of the summer, Joe Johnson, III was left with a decision to make. His choices were to either stay at Hermitage and continue to develop under newly hired Derrick…\nPrime Time in Girls Hoops: Lake Taylor vs. Princess Anne\n757 Basketball, 804 Basketball, NoVa BasketballBy Andy Hilton December 28, 2018 Leave a comment\nLake Taylor guard JaNaiya Quinerly (photo: Antowyne Shaw/recruit757) Class 5 Powerhouse Princess Anne meets Class 4 Force Lake Taylor Friday Night by Andy Hilton, recruit757 The weather is cooling off… really, it’s supposed to… and the basketball season is heating up. Why not a ready for prime time match up early in the season? Hampton’s…\n2018 All-757 Junior Teams\nrecruit757 Junior Players of the Year, KeAndre Lambert of Maury and Nehki Meredith of Bishop Sullivan (Photos: Andy Hilton and Mary Ann Magnant/recruit757) Here are the players that will absolutely be the talent to watch in the 2019 season by Andy Hilton, recruit757 It’s time for the next man up. We’ve honored the best of…\n2018 All-757 Teams\nAll-757 Players of the Year: Lake Taylor RB Malik Newton and Cox DB Tayvion Robinson (Photos: Andy Hilton/recruit757) Malik Newton and Tayvion Robinson headline the All-757 teams Editor’s note: our recruit757 All-Region selections encompass the entire 757 region and the 62 high schools that play high school football in the region. When a player is…\n2018 All-NoVA Teams\nNoVa Football, NoVArecruit, Ultimate RecruitBy Andy Hilton December 25, 2018 Leave a comment\nDevyn Ford and Tyquan Brown, two of our recruitNoVA Players of the Year (Photos: Andy Hilton/recruitNoVA) Talent rich Northern Virginia is broadly represented in the 2018 All-NoVA teams Editor’s note: our recruitNoVA All-Region selections encompass the entire Northern Virginia region and the 83 high schools that play high school football in the region. When a…\nAll-804 Offensive Players of the Year: Brendon Clark of Manchester and D’Vonte Waller of Highland Springs (Photos: Joe Barnes/recruit804) D’Vonte Waller, Brendon Clark and Brandon Smith headline the All-804 teams Editor’s note: our recruit804 All-Region selections encompass the entire 804 region and the 58 high schools that play high school football. When a player is…\nAll-757 Game won by the PD/BRD (VIDEO)\nThe Peninsula edges the Southside in the All-757 Classic by Andy Hilton, recruit757 Senior athletes from around the region played their last game of High School Football at Powhatan Field in the annual 757 Football Classic. “This is always fun. It’s all about pride. Pride in the Southside, pride in the Peninsula and pride in…\n23456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220\n2262272282292302312322332342352362372382392402412422432442452462472482492502512522532542552562572582592602612622632642652662672682692702712722732742752762772782792802812822832842852862872882892902912922932942952962972982993003013023033043053063073083093103113123133143153163173183193203213223233243253263273283293303313323333343353363373383393403413423433443453463473483493503513523533543553563573583593603613623633643653663673683693703713723733743753763773783793803813823833843853863873883893903913923933943953963973983994004014024034044054064074084094104114124134144154164174184194204214224234244254264274284294304314324334344354364374384394404414424434444454464474484494504514524534544554564574584594604614624634644654664674684694704714724734744754764774784794804814824834844854864874884894904914924934944954964974984995005015025035045055065075085095105115125135145155165175185195205215225235245255265275285295305315325335345355365375385395405415425435445455465475485495505515525535545555565575585595605615625635645655665675685695705715725735745755765775785795805815825835845855865875885895905915925935945955965975985996006016026036046056066076086096106116126136146156166176186196206216226236246256266276286296306316326336346356366376386396406416426436446456466476486496506516526536546556566576586596606616626636646656666676686696706716726736746756766776786796806816826836846856866876886896906916926936946956966976986997007017027037047057067077087097107117127137147157167177187197207217227237247257267277287297307317327337347357367377387397407417427437447457467477487497507517527537547557567577587597607617627637647657667677687697707717727737747757767777787797807817827837847857867877887897907917927937947957967977987998008018028038048058068078088098108118128138148158168178188198208218228238248258268278288298308318328338348358368378388398408418428438448458468478488498508518528538548558568578588598608618628638648658668678688698708718728738748758768778788798808818828838848858868878888898908918928938948958968978988999009019029039049059069079089099109119129139149159169179189199209219229239249259269279289299309319329339349359369379389399409419429439449459469479489499509519529539549559569579589599609619629639649659669679689699709719729739749759769779789799809819829839849859869879889899909919929939949959969979989991,0001,0011,0021,0031,0041,0051,0061,0071,0081,0091,0101,0111,0121,0131,0141,0151,0161,0171,0181,0191,0201,0211,0221,0231,0241,0251,0261,0271,0281,0291,0301,0311,0321,0331,0341,0351,0361,0371,0381,0391,0401,0411,0421,0431,0441,0451,0461,0471,0481,0491,0501,0511,0521,0531,0541,0551,0561,0571,0581,0591,0601,0611,0621,0631,0641,0651,0661,0671,0681,0691,0701,0711,0721,0731,0741,0751,0761,0771,0781,0791,0801,081\nAntonio Jackson - ATH\nSchool:Benedictine c/o 2024","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1673356"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6347572207450867,"wiki_prob":0.36524277925491333,"text":"The Pixel Hunt\nStudio de production de jeux du réel\nInua, a Story in Ice and Time\nBury me, my Love\nPosted on 26 April 2013 13 September 2018 by ThePixelHunt\nIntroducing the “Choose Your Own Adventure News Item”\nLast summer, I was delighted to be a columnist for #Antibuzz, a radio show about the internet, held by French public radio France Inter. Today, #Antibuzz is back, not as a radio broadcast but as a website, and I’ve been asked to talk once a month about new online storytelling formats. Well, this is great for at least two reasons : those questions are of the highest interest to me, and I already wrote a column last July about Anna Anthropy’s great Rise of the videogame Zinesters, and DIY videogames in general. I therefore decided to write my first digital #Antibuzz piece on another videogames related topic – in my opinion, they are a bottomless source of inspiration for anyone thinking about non-linear narratives and storytelling.\nWhat subject are videogames suited to tackle? They tend to get obsessed by war, they sometimes talk about strange italian plumbers… But are they fit to discuss, criticize, describe, explain or make fun of reality? Apparently not, at least not for Apple. In the past few months/years, the Cupertino brand indeed has banned from the App Store’s virtual shelves several games whose common ground was to hold a point of view on the real world.\nBut this article’s purpose isn’t to tell you my column’s story – if you’re interested, you can go and browse it – it’s written in French, though. What I’m going to do here is explain how I tried to give it an original form. In fact, this piece itself is a newsgame, or to be more specific, a “Choose Your Own Narrative Chronicle”. I thought this form was particularly suited to the topic of Apple banning newsgames, but I can think of a lot of other journalistic topics that would benefit from such an editorial device.\nAs I wrote that column, my goal was twofold:\nIntroduce the reader to the four cases of Apple censorship that I had listed, while avoiding to write a classic text that would turn into a quite indigestible juxtaposition of examples.\nTry to write a piece of news that is “interactive”, i.e, that is structured around a discussion rather than a discourse.\nI am indeed convinced that the second point sums up the internet’s true comparative advantage. For the first time in the history of the press, journalists are truly able to leave a little room to their readers. We can adapt the way we tell them news stories, taking their interests, their questions and their priorities into consideration. This track deserves to be explored. Of course, such news pieces are more demanding for the readers, since it requires them to be active, rather than to “passively” read/watch/listen to a classic, linear journalistic discourse. But it also is potentially more immersive, more intense, more attention-grabbing. Compare this to an university course: which is the one you’d enjoy the most, the one in which you’ll have to participate or the boring, endless lecture?\nThen again, I must admit my column’s only partially interactive: the reader has to make choices for the narrative to unfold, but she’s only as “free” as I decided she’d. We are somehow closer to a Socratic approach than to a genuine discussion here. But take it as a first draft, produced in a bare two working days – I felt I had to put myself in real newsroom time constraints for the experiment to be interesting.\nLet’s write a system!\nMy (hyper)text’s general idea was to provide an overview of the games rejected by Apple because they talk about reality, and the specific reasons why they were turned down. So I started by making a list, noting each game’s specifics. One of them adopted a journalistic approach to deal with the conflict in Syria. Two others had political significance: the first dealt with sweatshops, the second with undocumented immigrants. And the last one, produced by a group of activists, had a “meta” dimension, since by criticizing the smartphones’ production line, it directly challenged Apple.\nBesides, I have discarder other games because they did not meet my journalistic angle. For example, Pipe Trouble is an online game that has suffered censorship because it dealt with the conflict between pipelines builders and environmentalists in Canada – it could have been an interesting case. But it is TVO, the Ontarian TV channel, which decided to take the game offline after several complaints, not Apple. Pipe Trouble thereby did not belong to my column.\nSo far, I had done basic journalistic job: identify the elements of the story, put each into context, and think about how they organize in relation to each other. But it is the rendering of this work that is different. Had I written a classic article, I would have decided to present my information in a static order (What exemple will I use as my piece’s hook? Which one will come next?…). But writing a non-linear chronicle implies to transfer this responsibility to the reader.\nI just did a bit of storytelling and asked the user to imagine she’s in charge of a video games compagny. What type of game will she produce? Will she wants to make a political game or a news-related game? Then if she opts for a political game, she’ll have to pick a theme: sweatshops or undocumented immigrants?…\nI then tell my reader about real-world game studios that have taken the same decisions she has, and introduce her with the obstacles they faced. Later in the story, when at least one of my reader’s games has been rejected by Apple, I’ll give her the opportunity to “take revenge” and develop another title, this time directly aimed at criticizing the Cupertino firm…\nNext step to the story: this way !\nWhat I’m doing here is I’m giving the reader the opportunity to explore the system I identified through my work as a journalist, and “rebuilt” as an interactive chronicle. In this system, there’s no way Apple would validate a game that talks about a real-world issues. Here’s the conclusion I want to bring my readers to, so that they’d finally ask themselves a question: why such a policy?\nTo get there, I’m using a game mechanic coined by Ian Bogost: the rhetoric of failure. In my story (as in reality), the reader’s games will always be rejected from the App Store, regardless of the choices she makes – that is, unless she decides to produce a purely distracting title, but in this case she’ll have relinquished her will to use games as a media to describe the real world. Once she’s suffered several rejections, I finally allow the reader to reach the piece’s “conclusion”: an attempted analysis of Apple’s policy, and an inventory of alternative solutions available to developers who’d like their products to exist out of the App Store and its censorship.\nHack your word processor\nHere’s for the approach to non-linear journalism. Now how did I manage to build this piece? Well I used a simple program, originally designed to write interactive fiction/CYOA games: Twine. This program has several advantages:\nIt is easy\nIt allows you to export your text in HTML format, thus making it compatible with every computer, tablet and even smartphone on the market\nIt can handle variables, which, through not mandatory, is extremely useful to provide narrative coherence (more on that later on)\nTwine’s interface’s quite austere, but it is very easy to use. You’ll start writing your text in a window, and when you’ll reach the part where you’d like to offer your reader a choice, you’ll simply select a word or phrase and click “create link” in the program menu. This will open a new window, where you’ll continue writing your text. Then, when you’ll export and publish your story, the user will simply have to click the words you selected (which appear in blue and bold) to continue reading.\nTwine’s interface is a bit rough around the edges, but efficient as hell\nAs you write, Twine drawe a map of your story. It’s very handy to check your reader’s available paths through it, and also to make sure they won’t be stuck in any narrative cul-de-sac. In the end, a story diagram may seem complex, but since you write it over the pen, you’ll easily be able to browse through it. For instance, here is how my #Antibuzz column looked like:\nThe story starts in the upper left corner and ends in the lower right\nTwine also accepts HTML tags, and other media integration: audio, video (Youtube embed works great), images… In a nutshell, through a bit of coding, you’ll be able to do all the things you can do in a basic news website’s CMS. For instance, my chronicle is enhanced with a series of links pointing to many articles written on each case of Apple censorship.\nBut what makes Twine a far better tool than a classic HTML editor is its ability to handle variables. Through some (once again very straigt-forward) code, you’ll be able to keep track of the passages your reader has reached. This is important because it gives you editorial control over your narrative. If you think the reader should not be able to access a part of your story without having previously read another, just tell Twine to display a link only if another one has already been clicked on. I did that in my column: I only presented the Molleindustria (the studio that produced a game directly critiquing Apple) case after at least one of my reader’s other games has been rejected by the Cupertino company.\nLet’s also note that using variable means you actually transform a text into a “real” game. To me, the definition of a game is quite wide: it’s an experience framed by rules and whose result varies depending on user actions. Using a variable to keep track of how many times each player is rejected by Apple before arriving at the narrative’s unfolding, I built one of the very first news-piece-with-a-score!\nOn this screenshot, the underlined text varies according to the path the reader took on her way to the narrative’s conclusion.\nWould you like to use Twine to conduct experiments in non-linear storytelling (be it journalistic or not), a very simple tutorial is available here. Incidentally, this software can also be very useful to imagine interactive documentaries architectures.\nThis article’s final point is that I think online newsrooms should learn how to use such tools, the same way they learned how to use Storify, Thinglink, Zeega or other multimedia storytelling tool. This could be an easy, efficient and quick solution to offer their readers new, more interactive, more immersive, and more “loyalty-building” stories. At a time of churnalism and info-zapping, when both readers and journalists are unsatisfied, this could be an interesting path to follow…\nCategoriesRead the Blog\nPrevious PostPrevious Interactive docs: how to help your audience go with the flow.\nNext PostNext Video games ain’t what they used to be…\nThe Wreck, The Pixel Hunt’s new game!\nInua – A Story in Ice and Time\nThe Kingdom of Istyald\nThe Moral of the Story\nMu: Dive into the Mucem\nA documentary film about Bury me, my Love\nBury me, my Love coming to PC and Nintendo Switch\nGoogle Play Developer Story about Bury me, my Love\nZero Impunity, the 3D march\nPolitique de confidentialité\tProudly powered by WordPress","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1386369"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6394842863082886,"wiki_prob":0.6394842863082886,"text":"OpinionPaywalls\nOpen, free access to academic research? This will be a seismic shift\nOpening up access to academic research will put more data and power in the hands of the people who pay for it\nWikipedia's Jimmy Wales will be helping ensure that the publicly funded portal promotes collaboration and engagement. Photograph: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty\nMy department spends about £5bn each year funding academic research – and it is because we believe in the fundamental importance of this research that we have protected the science budget for the whole of this parliament.\nWe fund this research because it furthers human knowledge and drives intellectual, social and economic progress. In line with our commitment to open information, tomorrow I will be announcing at the Publishers Association annual meeting that we will make publicly funded research accessible free of charge to readers. Giving people the right to roam freely over publicly funded research will usher in a new era of academic discovery and collaboration, and will put the UK at the forefront of open research.\nThe challenge is how we get there without ruining the value added by academic publishers. The controversy about the status and reliability of reviews on TripAdvisor is a reminder of how precious genuine, objective peer review is. We still need to pay for such functions, which is why one attractive model – known as gold – has the funders of research covering the costs. Another approach, known as green, includes a closed period before wider release during which journals can earn revenues.\nWhile opening up the fruits of research is a seismic shift for academic publishing, it is not a leap into the unknown. There are many good examples in medicine. For instance, the Wellcome Trust requires all the research it funds to be made freely available online. A report this year from the U.S. Committee for Economic Development has concluded that the US National Institute of Health's policy of open access has accelerated the transition from basic research to commercialisation, generated more follow-on research and reduced duplicate or dead-end lines of inquiry – so increasing the US government's return on its investment in research. And the researcher Philip Davis has found that, when publishers randomly make articles open access on journal websites, readership increases by up to 250%.\nMoving from an era in which taxpayer-funded academic articles are stuck behind paywalls for much of their life to one in which they are available free of charge will not be easy. There are clear trade-offs. If those funding research pay open-access journals in advance, where will this leave individual researchers who can't cover the cost? If we improve the world's access to British research, what might we get in response? Does a preference for open access mean different incentives for different disciplines?\nThese questions explain why I have asked Dame Janet Finch, one of the UK's most experienced and respected academics, to produce a report setting out the steps needed to fulfil our radical ambition. She is working with all interested parties and her report will appear before the summer. It is expected to chart a course towards a world where academic articles are freely and openly available at or around the time of publication.\nTwenty years ago it would have been impossible to imagine an encyclopedia written by millions, openly and freely collaborating via the internet. Today, Wikipedia is an important part of our lives and its co-founder, Jimmy Wales, will be advising us on the common standards that will have to be agreed and adopted for open access to be a success, and also helping to make sure that the new government-funded portal for accessing research really promotes collaboration and engagement. We want to harness new technologies to enable people to comment and rate published papers in ways that were not possible before, and we want to develop new online channels that enable researchers from around the world to collaborate and share data and build new research partnerships. With Jimmy Wales's help, I'm confident that we can achieve all this and much more.\nOur commitment to open up access to academic research will help strengthen this information revolution, and put more data and power in the hands of people. It's proof that there are still dividing lines in British politics – and that we are firmly on the side of openness.\nPaywalls\nPeer review and scientific publishing\nOpen access scientific publishing","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1162751"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7159219980239868,"wiki_prob":0.2840780019760132,"text":"Medical Industry Feature\nUnderstanding Neurogenic Orthostatic Hypotension and the Role of Norepinephrine\nRestartResume\nTranscript PDF\nAnnouncer:\nWelcome to ReachMD.\nThis medical industry feature, titled “Understanding neurogenic orthostatic hypotension and the key role of norepinephrine” is sponsored by Lundbeck.\nYour guest is Dr. Satish R. Raj. Dr. Raj is Professor of Cardiac Services, Medical Director of Calgary Autonomic Clinic, and Chief of Cardiac Arhythmia Service at the University of Calgary in Canada. He is the past-president of the American Autonomic Society and now serves on the board of directors.\nDr. Raj:\nnOH is a rare but distinct subset of orthostatic hypotension caused by autonomic nervous system failure. It occurs frequently in patients with certain neurodegenerative disorders.\nnOH reflects an inability to maintain an adequate blood pressure in response to the orthostatic challenge of standing up.\nAlthough nOH presents as a hemodynamic problem, its potentially debilitating symptoms need to be the focus of clinical management. These can include dizziness, lightheadedness, blurry vision, fatigue, neck and shoulder pain, and cognitive impairment.\nStill, understanding the underlying pathophysiology may help align management approaches to patient needs.\nNormally, following a shift to an upright posture, blood shifts downward, to below the level of the heart, resulting in baroreceptors signaling the brain to initiate a compensatory response. Mediated by the neurotransmitter norepinephrine this signaling sustains blood pressure by promoting peripheral vasoconstriction.\nIn a setting of autonomic nervous system failure, inadequate norepinephrine release results in impaired vasoconstriction. Plasma norepinephrine levels may serve as one index of sympathetic function.\nIn a patient with nOH, normal to slightly reduced norepinephrine levels indicate lesions of preganglionic origin, as seen in Multiple System Atrophy, while very low levels of norepinephrine are characteristic of postganglionic lesions, observed in Pure Autonomic Failure. Both pre- and postganglionic lesions can be present in Parkinson’s disease patients with nOH. Their plasma norepinephrine levels typically fall below normal on standing up.\nIn symptomatic patients with nOH, blood pressure may be modulated by enhancing cholinergic activity in preganglionic sympathetic nerves, or replenishing endogenous norepinephrine in neuronal and non-neuronal tissues to activate both alpha-1 and alpha-2 adrenoreceptors in peripheral arteries and veins, or improving vascular resistance by exogenous stimulation of only the alpha-1 adrenoreceptors, or increasing sodium retention which expands blood volume to improve vascular pressure.\nChanges in blood pressure from supine to standing are a hallmark metric of nOH. However, after diagnosis, it is essential that we direct our efforts to addressing the burden of nOH symptoms.\nNon-pharmacological methods are a key component of nOH management and may be supplemented with pharmacological measures when symptoms persist.\nYou’ve been listening to ReachMD. This program was sponsored by Lundbeck. Dr. Satish Raj is a paid consultant for Lundbeck. If you missed any part of this discussion, visit www.ReachMD.com/IndustryFeature. This is ReachMD. Be part of the knowledge.\nGuest Satish R. Raj, MD, MSCI\nView an animated exploration of the pathogenesis of nOH, as well as the mechanisms behind therapeutic approaches to controlling its effects.\nLikeLikedUnlike\nNeurogenic orthostatic hypotension (nOH) is a subset of orthostatic hypotension and is prevalent in patients with autonomic dysfunction.1,2 In these patients, there is insufficient compensatory peripheral release of norepinephrine, the major neurotransmitter responsible for blood pressure maintenance, upon standing or following postural change.2-4 Due to this norepinephrine deficiency, there is inadequate vasoconstriction to maintain blood pressure or cerebral blood flow.1,5 This may lead to symptoms of nOH which may increase the risk of falls and lead to serious consequences.2,3,6\nHere. Dr. Satish Raj, Professor of Cardiac Sciences at the Libin Cardiovascular Institute at the University of Calgary's Cumming School of Medicine and Medical Director of Calgary Autonomic Clinic, discusses the pathogenesis of nOH, as well as the mechanisms behind therapeutic approaches to controlling its effects.\nPalma JA, Kaufmann H. Epidemiology, diagnosis, and management of neurogenic orthostatic hypotension. Mov Disord Clin Pract. 2017;4(3):298-308.\nFreeman R, Wieling W, Axelrod FB, et al. Consensus statement on the definition of orthostatic hypotension, neurally mediated syncope and the postural tachycardia syndrome. Clin Auton Res. 2011:21(2) 69-72.\nLow PA. Neurogenic orthostatic hypotension: pathophysiology and diagnosis. Am J Manag Care. 2015;21(suppl 13):s248-s257.\nGoldstein DS, Sharabi Y. Neurogenic orthostatic hypotension: a pathophysiological approach. Circulation. 2009:119(1):139-146.\nFreeman R. Neurogenic orthostatic hypotension. N Engl J Med. 2008;358(6):615-624.\nRascol 0. Perez-Lloret S, Damier P, et al. Falls in ambulatory non-demented patients with Parkinson's disease. J Neural Transm (Vienna). 2015;122(10):1447-1455.\n© 2021 Lundbeck. All rights reserved. UBR-D-100852\nnoH Matters\nNeurogenic Orthostatic Hypotension in Parkinson Disease: A Primer\nThe Impact of Neurogenic Orthostatic Hypotension on Patients and Caregivers\nNavigating nOH: What to Know About Causes, Symptoms, & Management Approaches","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1192647"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.603780210018158,"wiki_prob":0.39621978998184204,"text":"Sky’s the Limit for Young Professional\nWhen Shane McKinzie moved back home to Enid to take a job for a startup environmental consulting firm, he was pleased by what he found. He and his wife Shayla loved the new parks and trails, the national performances at the new event center, and the quality of the local Chisholm School District. “It was obvious there was an intentional push by the city toward welcoming young families,” he says.\nEnid also proved an excellent place to launch his new career with TSC Environmental, which was rapidly growing alongside the booming oil and gas industry. Shane’s technical background prompted a quick promotion to aerial services manager where he managed drone-related services for the construction, energy and agriculture industries.\n“I thought I might have to go to Oklahoma City for training, but I found out I could do the study and testing needed to become a certified unmanned aerial systems pilot without leaving town. It’s really helpful that Enid’s Woodring Airport has a licensed FAA testing center. I’ve been able to bring that licensing to our business and train three other pilots as well,” he says.\nTSC’s current drone services include mapping and land surveying, stockpile and excavation calculations, thermal inspections, pipeline monitoring, and much more. “Every month we’re adding new clients. We’re even working with the aeronautical engineering department at OSU to design an aircraft that meets our specific needs for pipeline leak detection.”\n“This town is very aviation-minded. Because of Woodring Airport and Vance Air Force Base, I think we’ll see the drone industry progress much faster here than in other places. It’s an ideal location to grow our business.”\nShane McKinzie, Aerial Services Manager, TSC ENVIRONMENTAL","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line343389"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6761599779129028,"wiki_prob":0.6761599779129028,"text":"Devil Dogs keep community safe\n16 Aug 2002 | Lance Cpl. Kim Thompson\nMARINE CORPS AIR STATION BEAUFORT, S.C. -- They are attentive, enthusiastic and motivated. Countless hours of training have contributed to their mental and physical conditioning, making them optimum physical specimens and exemplary Marines.\nThey are Military working dogs of Fightertown. The dogs are trained to perform their job with attention to detail and instant obedience to orders.\nIt may seem like the dogs are having fun working for chew-toys, verbal praise and a scratch behind the ears, but they work as hard as the Marines who handle them.\nThe Air Station Provost Marshal's kennel is comprised of four dogs, three handlers, a non-commissioned officer-in-charge of training and a kennel master. Each dog is certified in patrol, attack, and the detection of either narcotics or explosives.\nKimbo is a Belgian Melanois and Tommie is a Dutch Shepherd. Their handlers are military police officers Lance Cpls. Felicia A. Bazan and Jacob J. Chiasson. As a part of the Military Working Dog program their primary objective is providing security.\n\"We provide security for the Air Station, we work as a deterrent to prevent future terrorist attacks and we also assist police departments from Savannah to Charleston,\" said Cpl. Robert M. Apolinario, MWD training NCO. \"I've got a great bunch of Marines working for me.\"\nDogs and their handlers conduct patrols, go on deployments and help locate lost children. They also participate in demonstrations, assist in suspect apprehension, perform inspections and serve in missions with organizations such as Customs and the Secret Service.\nThe handlers and their four-legged partners are held to high standards from the first days of training at formal schools, and continuing with their entrance into the fleet.\nIn order to become a handler, Marines must complete Military Police school in Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. Then attend a 13-week canine school, which is held at Lackland Air Force Base San Antonio, Texas.\n\"It's a specialized MOS,\" Bazan said. \"They take the top two percent of the MP class and put them up for a board to attend canine school. You have to be a good student and have good conduct. Out of ten Marines they might choose two.\"\nCanine school starts out teaching both students and dogs the basic fundamentals of command and response. Dogs are trained to respond to both verbal commands and hand signals. Although canines may specialize in narcotics or explosives detection, the commands for both dogs are the same.\n\"Civilian dogs are trained in German, but we (the Marine Corps) use English,\" Apolinario said. \"The commands have to be uniform throughout the Marine Corps because every 2-3 years a dog switches handlers. Verbal and nonverbal commands are important in case a working environment is loud or requires distance between dogs and handlers.\"\nOnce a handler graduates and makes his way into the fleet, he is paired up with a dog. Each handler is responsible for performing their primary duties and taking care of their animal. Working as a handler requires a great deal of time and dedication, according to Bazan and Chiasson.\n\"It's a lot of training and a lot of work,\" Bazan said. Each week requires at least five hours of training in order to keep both dogs and handlers certified in detection and patrol.\n\"We work about 12 to 14 hour shifts and then we train physically after that,\" Chiasson said. \"There is also a great deal of paper work, because every thing we do on a call has to be annotated from start to finish.\"\nMany of the Marines at the PMO kennel agree the best part of their job is the interaction with the dogs.\n\"A lot of people say that when you work with a human partner, you never know how they're going to react,\" Bazan said. \"With a dog you always know where you stand.\"\nMilitary working dogs like Tommie and Kimbo provide a valuable service, Bazan said. They may seem cute and furry like the family pet or the friendly neighborhood mutt, but they are skilled service members that deserve respect.\n\"Don't ask to pet the dogs or catcall them,\" Apolinario said. \"They're MPs. Respect the fact that they have a job to do.\"","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line898399"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.591786801815033,"wiki_prob":0.591786801815033,"text":"Peachland Boys and Girls Club\nThese are times we should be extra-proud of the resiliency of our kids.\nSchool is different, there’s no sleepovers or playdates, sitting on Santa’s knee is cancelled, and there’s times when the adults seem extra-worried.\nThere’s a lot going on, but the Boys and Girls Club here in Peachland has remained a safe place throughout this pandemic. Richelle Leckey says even in the early stages, they were able to remain open so kids of essential workers had someone to care for them during the day.\n“We’re an essential service,” says Leckey, who is the community engagement coordinator for the Okanagan Boys and Girls Club.\n“We know there are people who need us, and for a variety of reasons whether they’re working or they have their own challenges in the home and it’s necessary for the kids to be in our care.”\nThere’s always something fun going on at the Boys and Girls Club!\nHere in Peachland, the after school program is a happy group of kids who do crafts, tell stories and play fun games. Leckey says like other local groups, the pandemic has hit them hardest when it comes to fundraising. Usually, they’re able to pull in about $4,000 to $5,000 a year, thanks to their annual movie in the park and their West Jet raffles.\n“That money helps support all the supplies and equipment and things that we need to run the program in Peachland – so we’ve had to be really wise and try and figure how to stretch the dollar and ensure that we’re still providing high quality programs,” she says.\nThe Boys and Girls Club was thrilled to learn they’re one of the beneficiaries of Peachland’s Light-Up Virtual Gala, held in December. The event raised a little over $12,400, and the amount will be shared with three other community groups.\nThe pandemic has taken an emotional toll on so many people, Leckey adds, and that’s why it’s important the Boys and Girls Clubs are able to continue on.\n“The club itself – and being able to come to the club – is critical for the kids’ well-being, not only for the engagement with staff, but with their peers,” she says.\n“We’ve talked a lot about kids in isolation and the importance of being able to engage in person with people. So the club itself is all about relationships and strengthening those relationships and helping give kids the inspiration and the drive to want to learn and grow and become amazing people.”\nHere’s a message from the Boys and Girls Club about their Peachland programming:\nThe Boys and Girls Clubs of the Okanagan is a leading service provider of programs and services for children in Peachland. From Preschool classes to After School programs, activities for youth, and community events, there is always something great happening at the Club!\nAt Peachland Preschool, we believe in the importance of play in an environment where children learn, explore, create and grow. Being located in Peachland Elementary school allows preschoolers to experience a school setting which ensures a smooth transition into Kindergarten with their peers.\nThe After School program takes place at the Peachland Club for children Kindergarten to Grade 5. Our programs are designed to provide a safe, nurturing, inclusive environment where children will be engaged in activities including creative arts, sports, personal growth, and life skills development. Transportation is provided from Peachland Elementary and kids receive a nutritious snack each day. Programs are also available on professional days and school breaks. Stay tuned for information on exciting summer camps and recreation programs coming soon!\nFor more information, contact us at 250-767-2515 (250-768-3049 for preschool inquiries). You can also visit out our website www.boysandgirlsclubs.ca and navigate to the Peachland Page or find us on Facebook and check out why the Boys and Girls Club is a ‘good place to be’!\nWritten by Kristen Friesen\nPeachland Watershed Protection Alliance\nA PWPA representative was able to take part in a tour of the new Peachland water treatment plant in late 2021. The District's Healthy Watersheds...\nHere's the latest from BEEPS - Peachland's Bat Education and Ecological Protection Society Here's a press release BEEPS just sent my way. It's from...\nPeachland History\nLocal historian Richard Smith was kind enough to send me some cool 'did you knows' about Peachland, and he's going to share what he knows right...","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1431178"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5900145173072815,"wiki_prob":0.4099854826927185,"text":"North Carolina State University. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering\nInstitute of Radio Engineers -- History\nInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. North Carolina State University Student Branch\nAmerican Institute of Electrical Engineers -- History\nFilters: North Carolina State University -- HistoryInstitute of Radio Engineers -- HistoryNorth Carolina State University. Department of Electrical and Computer EngineeringAmerican Institute of Electrical Engineers -- HistoryNorth Carolina State College1930-19391980-1989North Carolina State College\nNorth Carolina State University, Student and Other Organizations, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., North Carolina State University Student Branch Records, 1948-1989\nSize: 0.25 linear feet (1 archival half box) Collection ID: UA 021.467\nThe records of North Carolina State's student branch of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE) include annual reports, correspondence, meeting and recruitment information, general information about the branch, and branch manuals issued by IEEE. The IEEE works to advance the theory and application of ... More\nThe records of North Carolina State's student branch of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE) include annual reports, correspondence, meeting and recruitment information, general information about the branch, and branch manuals issued by IEEE. The IEEE works to advance the theory and application of electrotechnology and allied sciences and to serve as a catalyst for technological innovation. North Carolina State's student branch of the IEEE began as a chapter of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers in or before 1948, and remains active as of 2008. Less","source":"cc/2022-05/en_head_0000.json.gz/line719054"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8167909383773804,"wiki_prob":0.8167909383773804,"text":"Difference between revisions of \"New Precedents in Conveyancing\"\nFrom Wythepedia: The George Wythe Encyclopedia\nLktesar (talk | contribs)\nSjwilmes (talk | contribs)\n}}[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nathaniel_Pigott Nathaniel Pigott] (1661-1737) was a barrister and counselor at law. He was admitted to the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inner_Temple Inner Temple] in 1683 and called to the bar in 1688.F. A. Inderwick, “Bench Table Orders,” in ''A Calendar of the Inner Temple Records'' (London: Chiswick Press, 1901), 248. In 1689 he refused to take the required oaths of supremacy and allegiance and receive the sacrament.Richard G. Williams, [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/89542 “Pigott, Nathaniel (bap. 1661, d. 1737)”] ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (Oxford University Press, 2004- ), accessed December 4, 2013. As a result, he was vacated on the grounds that he was a Roman Catholic.Ibid. In 1690 his suspension was removed although he was still prescribed from pleading a case in court.Ibid. Pigott was the last Catholic called to the bar until 1791.Ibid.