raw_content
stringlengths
3
912k
doc_id
stringlengths
30
36
meta
stringlengths
196
800
quality_signals
stringlengths
1.93k
2.27M
domain
stringlengths
6
48
Post-election, time to rethink redistricting By Nicholas Stephanopoulos America’s electoral system has many features that its backers would call quirks, but that its critics would describe as grave flaws. The Electoral College focuses presidential candidates’ money and attention on a handful of contested “swing states.” Each state comes up with its own unique ballot design and vote-counting method. Spending on commercials spirals inexorably upward despite campaign finance reform laws. Perhaps worst of all, gerrymandering is rampant in almost every state in the country. Whichever party controls the state legislature ruthlessly manipulates the electoral map in order to protect incumbents from almost any challenge and to “crack” and “pack” voters who favor the opposing party. For years, opponents of gerrymandering tried to put a stop to the practice through litigation. Voters in states like Pennsylvania — where in 2000 the legislature redrew congressional districts so that 12 of the state’s 19 representatives would be Republicans, even though the state as a whole went for Gore — sued to have gerrymandering held unconstitutional as a violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court thwarted these efforts with its decision last spring in Vieth v. Jubelirer. The Court ruled that Pennsylvania’s redistricting plan did not violate the Constitution — and four members of the Court went so far as to say that no partisan gerrymander could ever be found unconstitutional. Is there any hope for opponents of gerrymandering after Vieth? At least for the time being, it is clear that attempts to combat the practice through litigation will meet with little success. Another option might be to lobby state legislatures to change their approaches to redistricting and to grant control over the process to nonpartisan commissions that would shape districts on the basis of compactness and geographical coherence. Iowa has taken this route, with the result that it now has about as many up-for-grabs congressional districts as California. Alternatively, opponents of gerrymandering could try to convince Congress to seize control of congressional redistricting across the country. Article I of the Constitution endows Congress with the authority to do so; Congress has twice passed anti-gerrymandering laws in the past, in 1901 and 1911. The problem with these approaches, of course, is that they require large numbers of legislators to vote against their own self-interest. Gerrymandering may be bad for democracy, but it’s a godsend for members of Congress, who enjoy re-election rates above 90 percent and almost never have to worry about viable challengers emerging from their finely crafted districts. Any serious anti-gerrymandering proposal would weaken incumbents’ hold on power, while also undermining the majority’s efforts to redistrict the opposing party out of its seats. Politicians know this, which is why no national anti-gerrymandering law has been passed since the Progressive Era. What opponents of gerrymandering should clamor for, then, is a law requiring congressional districts to be named rather than numbered. Currently, each district is known by nothing more than a numeral, e.g. Pennsylvania Congressional District 6 (the misshapen district at the heart of the Vieth litigation). As a result, voters exhibit little allegiance to their district, and legislators can freely slice and dice districts in order to maximize their personal and partisan advantage. But if every district had a name of its own — e.g., the District of Manhattan (N.Y.), the Appalachian District (W.Va.), Greater Tucson (Ariz.), Golden Valley (Calif.) — voters might start to feel a genuine connection with their district. Congressional districts might become real political communities rather than agglomerations of voters with little in common beyond their tendency to cast their ballots a certain way. And politicians would face a higher risk of voter backlash if they were to disrupt coherent geographical units during redistricting — while also incurring some embarrassment if, say, the Greater Raleigh (N.C.) District suddenly spouted a tendril reaching all the way to Charlotte. But won’t legislators oppose naming districts on the same grounds they oppose creating nonpartisan redistricting commissions? They might, but there are reasons to think that their opposition could more easily be overcome. First, many politicians would actually enjoy representing a better-defined geographical area. There’s more cachet in being the Congressman from Boston than the Congressman from Massachusetts’s Eighth District. Second, the naming of districts is more difficult for politicians to criticize than the creation of redistricting commissions. The latter can be portrayed as undemocratic bureaucracies; the former just sounds like plain good sense. Third, once districts are named, it would be extremely difficult to revert to the old numbered system. That means supporters of named districts only need to prevail once, while redistricting commissions would need to be re-authorized every Census cycle. So, what’s in a name? For opponents of gerrymandering, it turns out, quite a lot. Nicholas Stephanopoulos is a second-year student at the Law School. His column appears on alternate Mondays.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2183
{"url": "http://yaledailynews.com/blog/2004/11/29/post-election-time-to-rethink-redistricting/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "yaledailynews.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:32:44Z", "digest": "sha1:GC2TXSKIZZY2TKK2F3KCC767TSIZDM77"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5322, 5322.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5322, 6181.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5322, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5322, 59.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5322, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5322, 259.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5322, 0.42421053]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5322, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5322, 0.01248581]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5322, 0.02837684]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5322, 0.01271283]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5322, 0.00631579]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5322, 0.14]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5322, 0.50621891]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5322, 5.47885572]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5322, 5.46296497]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5322, 804.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 72, 0.0], [72, 5322, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 72, 0.0], [72, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 5.0], [45, 72, 3.0], [72, 5322, 796.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 72, 0.0], [72, 5322, 0.00369794]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 72, 0.0], [72, 5322, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.02222222], [45, 72, 0.11111111], [72, 5322, 0.01885714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5322, 0.94473714]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5322, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5322, 0.82175469]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5322, -114.39481023]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5322, 137.47573874]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5322, -56.26450276]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5322, 51.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
yaledailynews.com
Wild pitch tops off home sweep By Matt Eisen Just before five o’clock Monday afternoon, in what was supposed to be an off day for the baseball Bulldogs, a wild pitch went sailing to the backstop at Yale Field. As it soared, so too did the spirits of a reenergized Yale squad. Charles Bush ’09 came to bat in the second game against Columbia with the score tied at nine apiece in the bottom of the ninth inning — two runners on, two outs. A cinematic setup for the designated hitter. The left-handed slugger could see his teammates on their feet, hoping for a walk-off hit. What they got was just as good. Columbia pitcher Daniel Bagjer tossed a pitch over the outstretched glove of his catcher, and Ryan Lavarnway ’09 sprinted from third, tagging home to secure the 10-9 victory. Matt LucasJustin Ankney ’07 begins his cut against an offering from a UConn Husky at Yale Field on March 28. The captain picked up 4 hits and 3 RBI in an invigorating Eli sweep of Columbia yesterday. “I was thinking that the tide has turned,” center fielder Josh Cox ’08 said. “I felt so encouraged to see things go our way.” Things did look more cheery after Yale’s dramatic victory. The win capped the Bulldogs’ (9-18, 3-5 Ivy) first Ivy League sweep of the year after a 6-3 victory over the Lions (10-18-1, 5-7) in Game One. Starter Brandon Josselyn ’09 threw a seven-inning complete game, giving up only seven hits and two earned runs. The pitcher collected his second win of the season and continued to work down his ERA, which now stands at 6.75. Josselyn’s dominating performance was similar to junior ace Chris Wietlispach’s two-run, 15-strikeout display against Princeton that ended last weekend’s Ancient Eight road trip. “I’m getting more and more comfortable,” Josselyn said. “In my last starts, when things went wrong I would get a little bit flustered. Today I was a lot more focused.” Josselyn was aided by a solid offensive showing. The Bulldogs scored a run in each of the first three innings of Game One and helped themselves to three more in the fifth inning. All the runs came largely as a result of small-ball play. The Elis utilized singles and smart baserunning to advance the men on the bags and bring guys home. Josselyn said that even though he always pitches games as though the score is tied 0-0, it’s good to know that his team can score runs at any point. That was never truer than in Game Two, when the Bulldogs found a way to put 10 runs on the scoreboard with only eight hits — a runs-to-hits ratio the team has not managed thus far this season. A lot can be credited to Eli power at the plate and a convenient wind blowing toward the outfield. “The second game today was a slugfest,” captain Justin Ankney ’07 said. “Our first two hits were solo home runs. That’s definitely another way to play offense.” The first of those home runs belonged to Ankney, who smacked the ball deep over the right field fence in the first inning and added to a day in which he hit .500 and drove in three runs. Third baseman Pedro Obregon ’07 followed suit in the second when he turned on a ball and sent a solo home run to left field. Later in the same inning, Lavarnway connected on a fastball and sent it over the left field wall for a grand slam. The catcher, who continues to lead the Ivy League in the Triple Crown categories, went 4-for-8 on the afternoon and had five RBI. “It wasn’t just the power,” Cox said. “We were able to get on base, keep the innings alive, and allow guys to drive us in.” The Elis got off to an early lead in both games, including a 6-0 lead in the second game. But the team allowed Columbia to fight back and tie the score in the late game, bringing back memories of the loss to Penn on Saturday where the Quakers tied the score and won in extra innings. Second baseman Ankney said it is good to get out to a lead, but the team needs to concentrate on winning each inning. He said his team needs to score and then make sure the other team gets three quick outs. The formula should help the team continue to put up wins and take this momentum into the upcoming games. “We’re a little more confident,” Josselyn said. “We didn’t really play great today and we still came away 2-0. It’s important to get everyone headed in the right direction.” After a two-game series with Sacred Heart at home tomorrow, one direction the Elis are guaranteed to head is to Cambridge, where their first divisional opponent waits.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2184
{"url": "http://yaledailynews.com/blog/2007/04/10/wild-pitch-tops-off-home-sweep/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "yaledailynews.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:45:28Z", "digest": "sha1:BXNIHNZSNPQH2VOXM3QG4MI3OENUYG2U"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4437, 4437.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4437, 5318.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4437, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4437, 75.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4437, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4437, 321.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4437, 0.41495902]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4437, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4437, 0.01418037]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4437, 0.00935905]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4437, 0.00850822]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4437, 0.0102459]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4437, 0.17418033]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4437, 0.49382716]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4437, 4.35308642]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4437, 5.41108332]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4437, 810.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 45, 0.0], [45, 276, 1.0], [276, 780, 1.0], [780, 980, 1.0], [980, 1106, 1.0], [1106, 1712, 1.0], [1712, 1880, 1.0], [1880, 2217, 1.0], [2217, 2366, 1.0], [2366, 2658, 1.0], [2658, 2819, 1.0], [2819, 3376, 1.0], [3376, 3500, 1.0], [3500, 3784, 1.0], [3784, 3991, 1.0], [3991, 4096, 1.0], [4096, 4270, 1.0], [4270, 4437, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 45, 0.0], [45, 276, 0.0], [276, 780, 0.0], [780, 980, 0.0], [980, 1106, 0.0], [1106, 1712, 0.0], [1712, 1880, 0.0], [1880, 2217, 0.0], [2217, 2366, 0.0], [2366, 2658, 0.0], [2658, 2819, 0.0], [2819, 3376, 0.0], [3376, 3500, 0.0], [3500, 3784, 0.0], [3784, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4096, 0.0], [4096, 4270, 0.0], [4270, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 31, 6.0], [31, 45, 3.0], [45, 276, 43.0], [276, 780, 89.0], [780, 980, 37.0], [980, 1106, 24.0], [1106, 1712, 98.0], [1712, 1880, 30.0], [1880, 2217, 62.0], [2217, 2366, 29.0], [2366, 2658, 57.0], [2658, 2819, 27.0], [2819, 3376, 108.0], [3376, 3500, 25.0], [3500, 3784, 56.0], [3784, 3991, 41.0], [3991, 4096, 19.0], [4096, 4270, 29.0], [4270, 4437, 27.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 45, 0.0], [45, 276, 0.0], [276, 780, 0.01425662], [780, 980, 0.03045685], [980, 1106, 0.01639344], [1106, 1712, 0.03614458], [1712, 1880, 0.0], [1880, 2217, 0.0], [2217, 2366, 0.0137931], [2366, 2658, 0.00699301], [2658, 2819, 0.01282051], [2819, 3376, 0.01284404], [3376, 3500, 0.0], [3500, 3784, 0.00719424], [3784, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4096, 0.0], [4096, 4270, 0.01190476], [4270, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 45, 0.0], [45, 276, 0.0], [276, 780, 0.0], [780, 980, 0.0], [980, 1106, 0.0], [1106, 1712, 0.0], [1712, 1880, 0.0], [1880, 2217, 0.0], [2217, 2366, 0.0], [2366, 2658, 0.0], [2658, 2819, 0.0], [2819, 3376, 0.0], [3376, 3500, 0.0], [3500, 3784, 0.0], [3784, 3991, 0.0], [3991, 4096, 0.0], [4096, 4270, 0.0], [4270, 4437, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.03225806], [31, 45, 0.21428571], [45, 276, 0.03030303], [276, 780, 0.0218254], [780, 980, 0.08], [980, 1106, 0.03174603], [1106, 1712, 0.0379538], [1712, 1880, 0.03571429], [1880, 2217, 0.02373887], [2217, 2366, 0.00671141], [2366, 2658, 0.02054795], [2658, 2819, 0.0310559], [2819, 3376, 0.02692998], [3376, 3500, 0.02419355], [3500, 3784, 0.02464789], [3784, 3991, 0.01449275], [3991, 4096, 0.00952381], [4096, 4270, 0.02298851], [4270, 4437, 0.02994012]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4437, 0.52435648]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4437, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4437, 0.95344543]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4437, -245.05010289]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4437, 151.91923504]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4437, -156.88054714]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4437, 46.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
yaledailynews.com
Alum shares Eskimo tales By Nicolas Niarchos “Udak” is an Inuit greeting, something like the English “good morning.” About 50 children and adults gathered at the Peabody Museum of Natural History on Monday afternoon at the feet of John Houston ’75, master storyteller and arctic adventurer, rolling the word off their tongues. Some were barely old enough to speak but “Udak” rang with an icy clarity across the room. Houston, who is part Inuit, held the crowd of children rapt with traditional Eskimo tales about blind boys, loons and talking mosquitoes. Part Hemingway, part Shackleton, he described how he learned the stories: He spent long nights in igloos, fostering a love of folk tales. Houston’s storytelling was part of a three-day celebration of indigenous peoples that also featured a mini film festival on Inuit life and a celebration of Inuit art, dance and music. Yale had already been treated to a dose of the documentary filmmaker at a Silliman College Master’s Tea last Thursday, where he recalled his personal experiences of Eskimo culture. He told of the communal love for art in Inuit communities and how he was surprised, upon arriving at an English boarding school, that there was little creation of art in the community. Last Friday, the Whitney Humanities Center gave a showing of his 1998 directorial debut, “Songs in Stone: An Arctic Journey Home”. The film tells of his rediscovery of the North and the story of his parents, James and Alma Houston, who introduced Inuit art onto the world stage. Monday’s festival brought polar life to the children of New Haven. “I came because I like animals,” said one of them, Harlow, an 8-year-old who attended. His favorite bit of the festival was the talk on arctic wildlife by Caleb Pungowiyi, a Yup’ik Eskimo and a former president of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference. Pungowiyi’s speech featured slides with pictures of the different mammals and marine wildlife that inhabit the region. “I really enjoyed the event and Caleb’s presence is an unexpected delight,” Houston said in an interview. “The multifaceted aspect is great, there are people here from 3 to 93 and that’s how Inuit culture works: embracing a full range of people. If we didn’t, it’d be hypocritical and I think this event is a shining example of doing it right.” The festival also included the yearly “Celebration of Native American Cultures” exposé in the Peabody’s Great Hall. Here, children swarmed past the dinosaur skeletons to tables where Native American wares were shown. Feathered figures with tomahawks and booming voices strode past the stands showcasing arrowheads and fabric-making. But the filmmaker’s presence upstairs caused a temporary lull in the festivities. “It’s been well-attended, but when they have a storyteller like [Houston] upstairs, the hall tends to empty out,” said Victoria Da Palma, a public schools volunteer. One of the Peabody’s high school volunteers said she felt the event was a necessity. “This year’s event is a little slower than last year’s, but it still has plenty of people,” said Eevee Herazo, a student at the Cooperative Arts and Humanities high school. “We’re celebrating Native American culture because Columbus was a killer.”
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2185
{"url": "http://yaledailynews.com/blog/2008/10/14/alum-shares-eskimo-tales/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "yaledailynews.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:52:12Z", "digest": "sha1:Z5SIY3G3QFUXIQPVKZ7USPC3V3MHLMEI"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3214, 3214.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3214, 4086.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3214, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3214, 73.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3214, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3214, 310.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3214, 0.36956522]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3214, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3214, 0.01333841]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3214, 0.00609756]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3214, 0.00621118]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3214, 0.16149068]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3214, 0.57333333]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3214, 4.99809524]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3214, 5.23297313]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3214, 525.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 45, 0.0], [45, 117, 1.0], [117, 417, 1.0], [417, 693, 1.0], [693, 877, 1.0], [877, 1243, 1.0], [1243, 1522, 1.0], [1522, 1589, 1.0], [1589, 1676, 1.0], [1676, 1956, 1.0], [1956, 2301, 1.0], [2301, 2634, 1.0], [2634, 2716, 1.0], [2716, 2882, 1.0], [2882, 2967, 1.0], [2967, 3214, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 45, 0.0], [45, 117, 0.0], [117, 417, 0.0], [417, 693, 0.0], [693, 877, 0.0], [877, 1243, 0.0], [1243, 1522, 0.0], [1522, 1589, 0.0], [1589, 1676, 0.0], [1676, 1956, 0.0], [1956, 2301, 0.0], [2301, 2634, 0.0], [2634, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 2967, 0.0], [2967, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 25, 4.0], [25, 45, 3.0], [45, 117, 11.0], [117, 417, 51.0], [417, 693, 45.0], [693, 877, 30.0], [877, 1243, 62.0], [1243, 1522, 48.0], [1522, 1589, 11.0], [1589, 1676, 15.0], [1676, 1956, 44.0], [1956, 2301, 61.0], [2301, 2634, 47.0], [2634, 2716, 12.0], [2716, 2882, 26.0], [2882, 2967, 15.0], [2967, 3214, 40.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 45, 0.0], [45, 117, 0.0], [117, 417, 0.01355932], [417, 693, 0.0], [693, 877, 0.0], [877, 1243, 0.0], [1243, 1522, 0.01476015], [1522, 1589, 0.0], [1589, 1676, 0.0125], [1676, 1956, 0.0], [1956, 2301, 0.00890208], [2301, 2634, 0.0], [2634, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 2967, 0.0], [2967, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 45, 0.0], [45, 117, 0.0], [117, 417, 0.0], [417, 693, 0.0], [693, 877, 0.0], [877, 1243, 0.0], [1243, 1522, 0.0], [1522, 1589, 0.0], [1589, 1676, 0.0], [1676, 1956, 0.0], [1956, 2301, 0.0], [2301, 2634, 0.0], [2634, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 2967, 0.0], [2967, 3214, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.08], [25, 45, 0.15], [45, 117, 0.04166667], [117, 417, 0.03333333], [417, 693, 0.02536232], [693, 877, 0.01630435], [877, 1243, 0.0273224], [1243, 1522, 0.0609319], [1522, 1589, 0.04477612], [1589, 1676, 0.03448276], [1676, 1956, 0.03214286], [1956, 2301, 0.02028986], [2301, 2634, 0.03603604], [2634, 2716, 0.01219512], [2716, 2882, 0.03012048], [2882, 2967, 0.02352941], [2967, 3214, 0.04048583]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3214, 0.77545291]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3214, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3214, 0.88061011]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3214, -144.22969229]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3214, 118.7386347]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3214, -103.62654618]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3214, 25.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
yaledailynews.com
Home › Keep America Safe and Free › Medical Privacy HIV Surveillance and Name Reporting: A Public Health Case for Protecting Civil Liberties Share October 4, 1997 HIV SURVEILLANCE AND NAME REPORTING: A Public Health Case for Protecting Civil Liberties An American Civil Liberties Union Report II. BACKGROUND TO CURRENT DEBATE III. NAME REPORTING IS BAD PUBLIC POLICY A. Name Reporting Is Bad Public Policy If it Discourages People from Being Tested for HIV, and the Available Evidence Shows That it Does B. Testee Fear of HIV Name Reporting Cannot Be Dismissed as Irrational IV. UNIQUE IDENTIFIERS: A BETTER ALTERNATIVE TO NAME REPORTING V. CONCLUSION See also THE MARYLAND LESSON: Conducting Effective HIV Surveillance with Unique Identifiers, December 1997 Your support helps the ACLU defend privacy rights and a broad range of civil liberties. APPENDIX I: Responses to Common Arguments for Name Reporting APPENDIX II: State-by-state List of Name Reporting Systems APPENDIX III: Studies on Anonymous and Confidential HIV Testing HIV SURVEILLANCE AND NAME REPORTING: Recently, there have been renewed calls for HIV surveillance, and specifically for reporting the names of all those who test positive for HIV to public health authorities. Proponents of HIV surveillance and name reporting frequently suggest that there is a conflict between the privacy rights of individuals who have or may have HIV and the public health needs of the country, and that individual civil liberties must take a back seat in order to effectively battle the spread of HIV and AIDS. In the public debate concerning society's response to the AIDS epidemic the American Civil Liberties Union has consistently advocated policies that protect the public health while respecting civil liberties and individual privacy. The ACLU recognizes that given the rapid speed with which HIV treatment, the social response to HIV and the disease itself change, every important social and legal policy about HIV must be under constant re- examination. There are no permanent answers. The ACLU also believes that policy must be based on cool examination of the best evidence we have, and not on ideology or visions of the world as we would like it to be. The ACLU is issuing this position paper now because the available evidence shows that, when it comes to reporting the names of people with HIV, there is no conflict between public health and civil liberties. Instead, the available evidence strongly suggests that public health measures that respect the privacy of individuals testing for HIV are more effective means of fighting the spread of HIV than intrusive measures like name reporting. Specifically, as discussed in more detail in this position paper, the evidence indicates that reporting the names of those who test positive for HIV will set back public health efforts. For this reason, the ACLU opposes name reporting. Renewed calls for HIV surveillance are at least partly the result of new developments in the AIDS epidemic, primarily the emergence of promising new medical treatments. Proponents of name reporting argue that in the face of medical and other developments, it no longer makes sense to systematically track only AIDS cases, which represent the late stages of HIV disease; they argue that we must start to track HIV systematically from the point of infection. A number of propositions are generally advanced in support of HIV surveillance and name reporting *: 1) there is a need to monitor the spread of HIV and collect more accurate epidemiological data; 2) it would help better target prevention and public health efforts; 3) it would permit individuals with HIV to proactively link to appropriate health care services; 4) it would permit a more efficient allocation of AIDS funding; and 5) concerns about discrimination against people with HIV and AIDS are much reduced as a result of supposedly strong legal protections of confidentiality and against discrimination. Even though there are various methods for HIV surveillance that preserve the privacy of individuals with HIV, surveillance proponents generally argue that reporting the names of individuals who test positive for HIV is necessary for effective HIV surveillance. The case for HIV surveillance may well be stronger at this juncture of the AIDS epidemic. However, while the reasons cited above may justify increased tracking of cases of HIV infection, they do not support name reporting for several reasons. First, while the goal of increased tracking of HIV infection is to bring those with HIV into the public health system and to obtain more accurate epidemiological data, name reporting will likely have the opposite effect. This is because the available evidence strongly suggests that eliminating anonymous HIV testing will discourage individuals from being tested, thus preventing their entrance into the public health system and hampering HIV tracking. Second, name reporting is not essential to effectively monitor the epidemic, target prevention, link individuals with HIV to health care, and allocate AIDS funding. Existing HIV tracking mechanisms, including sentinel studies and incidence and prevalence surveys, help to accomplish these goals. And the use of unique identifiers (alphanumerical codes) provides an alternative means of reporting individual cases of HIV without using names. Third, legal protections for people with HIV appear to be weaker than advocates of name reporting think they are. There are troubling examples of breaches of privacy in spite of the confidentiality protections that accompany name reporting in the states where it presently exists. And recent legal developments indicate that some courts do not believe that the Americans with Disabilities Act provides broad-based protection to people with HIV who are not seriously ill. It is, in short, not accurate to say that the fears of discrimination that appear to drive people away from testing are groundless. Finally, given that we presently are unable or unwilling to provide access to anti-retroviral therapy and other forms of health care to individuals with HIV who are already seeking treatment, it is hard to see how imposition of names-based reporting is going to result in better health care for those individuals with HIV who are not yet in the health care system. Therefore, the ACLU opposes name reporting as a means of tracking HIV unless and until: (1) it has been demonstrated that there is a strong need for additional HIV surveillance; (2) there is no alternative means to accomplish this surveillance; (3) we can honestly assure those who will be tested that protection from discrimination is real; and (4) serious efforts to deliver care to those who will be identified will be made. These conditions have not been satisfied. AIDS first emerged in the early 1980's as a health crisis among gay men, who began experiencing an onset of severe and unexplained health problems that quickly turned fatal. At the time there was no medical understanding of the emerging epidemic, and there was widespread societal fear about possible contagion. AIDS became a marker for gay men, and since many in the population held strong biases against gay people, a social stigma attached to AIDS that set the syndrome apart from other contagious diseases. Gay men with AIDS were fired from their jobs, lost their health insurance and their homes, were turned away by health care providers, and were ostracized by their families, either because of their mysterious health condition, their sexual orientation, or both. Surveillance of AIDS cases, including reporting the names of persons diagnosed with AIDS to public health authorities, began almost immediately and with little fanfare. There were several reasons for this. First, name reporting was a public health response which had been used with some other sexually transmitted diseases. Second, individuals who were diagnosed with AIDS were already in the late stages of what we now know to be HIV disease, and were for the most part already participating in the health care system. Thus in a real sense they had already been "identified&
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2248
{"url": "https://www.aclu.org/technology-and-liberty/hiv-surveillance-and-name-reporting-public-health-case-protecting-civil-liber?quicktabs_content_video_podcasts=0", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.aclu.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:43:23Z", "digest": "sha1:GUBFOHZ3VYTE2HALVJ2Z4JSSPW3VL7IK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8146, 8146.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8146, 8838.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8146, 22.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8146, 59.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8146, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8146, 244.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8146, 2.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8146, 0.4054242]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8146, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8146, 0.02234138]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8146, 0.13062258]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8146, 0.06910932]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8146, 0.02234138]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8146, 0.02234138]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8146, 0.02234138]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8146, 0.0406613]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8146, 0.01608579]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8146, 0.01638368]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8146, 0.07788595]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8146, 0.10570236]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8146, 0.34544049]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8146, 5.1885626]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8146, 5.32539522]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8146, 1294.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 147, 0.0], [147, 200, 0.0], [200, 252, 0.0], [252, 293, 0.0], [293, 326, 0.0], [326, 504, 0.0], [504, 638, 0.0], [638, 652, 0.0], [652, 759, 0.0], [759, 847, 1.0], [847, 908, 0.0], [908, 967, 0.0], [967, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1068, 0.0], [1068, 2894, 1.0], [2894, 3351, 1.0], [3351, 4224, 1.0], [4224, 5361, 1.0], [5361, 6329, 1.0], [6329, 6799, 1.0], [6799, 7571, 1.0], [7571, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 147, 0.0], [147, 200, 0.0], [200, 252, 0.0], [252, 293, 0.0], [293, 326, 0.0], [326, 504, 0.0], [504, 638, 0.0], [638, 652, 0.0], [652, 759, 0.0], [759, 847, 0.0], [847, 908, 0.0], [908, 967, 0.0], [967, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1068, 0.0], [1068, 2894, 0.0], [2894, 3351, 0.0], [3351, 4224, 0.0], [4224, 5361, 0.0], [5361, 6329, 0.0], [6329, 6799, 0.0], [6799, 7571, 0.0], [7571, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 147, 24.0], [147, 200, 8.0], [200, 252, 8.0], [252, 293, 6.0], [293, 326, 5.0], [326, 504, 31.0], [504, 638, 21.0], [638, 652, 2.0], [652, 759, 14.0], [759, 847, 15.0], [847, 908, 9.0], [908, 967, 8.0], [967, 1031, 9.0], [1031, 1068, 5.0], [1068, 2894, 297.0], [2894, 3351, 74.0], [3351, 4224, 134.0], [4224, 5361, 170.0], [5361, 6329, 158.0], [6329, 6799, 78.0], [6799, 7571, 125.0], [7571, 8146, 93.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 147, 0.0], [147, 200, 0.1], [200, 252, 0.0], [252, 293, 0.0], [293, 326, 0.0], [326, 504, 0.0], [504, 638, 0.0], [638, 652, 0.0], [652, 759, 0.03846154], [759, 847, 0.0], [847, 908, 0.0], [908, 967, 0.0], [967, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1068, 0.0], [1068, 2894, 0.0], [2894, 3351, 0.0], [3351, 4224, 0.00583431], [4224, 5361, 0.0], [5361, 6329, 0.0], [6329, 6799, 0.00881057], [6799, 7571, 0.00529101], [7571, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 147, 0.0], [147, 200, 0.0], [200, 252, 0.0], [252, 293, 0.0], [293, 326, 0.0], [326, 504, 0.0], [504, 638, 0.0], [638, 652, 0.0], [652, 759, 0.0], [759, 847, 0.0], [847, 908, 0.0], [908, 967, 0.0], [967, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1068, 0.0], [1068, 2894, 0.0], [2894, 3351, 0.0], [3351, 4224, 0.0], [4224, 5361, 0.0], [5361, 6329, 0.0], [6329, 6799, 0.0], [6799, 7571, 0.0], [7571, 8146, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 147, 0.14285714], [147, 200, 0.60377358], [200, 252, 0.13461538], [252, 293, 0.14634146], [293, 326, 0.81818182], [326, 504, 0.29775281], [504, 638, 0.47761194], [638, 652, 0.78571429], [652, 759, 0.25233645], [759, 847, 0.05681818], [847, 908, 0.2295082], [908, 967, 0.25423729], [967, 1031, 0.28125], [1031, 1068, 0.83783784], [1068, 2894, 0.04052574], [2894, 3351, 0.04157549], [3351, 4224, 0.03894616], [4224, 5361, 0.03693931], [5361, 6329, 0.02066116], [6329, 6799, 0.02553191], [6799, 7571, 0.02331606], [7571, 8146, 0.03478261]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8146, 0.52921665]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8146, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8146, 0.74337584]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8146, -152.99237633]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8146, 65.30000882]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8146, -54.20503228]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8146, 44.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.aclu.org
In English Nosebleeds Sitting in science class one afternoon, you feel your nose begin to run. As you wonder if you're catching a cold, you swipe your nose with a tissue and are shocked to see blood! You have a nosebleed, and if you're like most teens, you may be embarrassed. You might hope no one will notice, and you might be a little scared, too. Although nosebleeds are usually harmless and easily controlled, it may look like a quart of blood is coming from your nose! Try not to worry — nosebleeds are almost always easy to stop. Stopping the Gush Try these simple tips to stop your nosebleed: Get some tissues or a damp cloth to catch the blood. Sit or stand so your head is above your heart. Tilt your head forward and pinch the soft part of your nose (the nostrils) together just below the bony center part of your nose. Applying pressure helps stop the blood flow and the nosebleed will usually stop with 10 minutes of steady pressure — don't keep checking to see if the bleeding has stopped. If you get a nosebleed, don't blow your nose. Doing so can cause additional nosebleeds. Also, don't tilt your head back. This common practice will cause blood to run into your throat. This can make you cough or choke, and if you swallow a lot of blood, you might begin vomiting. If you've tried the steps above twice and the bleeding continues after the second attempt, you'll need to see your school nurse or a doctor. Once you've stopped the initial nosebleed, don't lift heavy objects or do other activities that cause you to strain, and try not to blow your nose for 24 hours. Now that your nosebleed is over, let's take a look at what a nosebleed is and what can cause it. Different Kinds of Nosebleeds The most common kind of nosebleed is an anterior nosebleed, which comes from the front of the nose. Capillaries, or very small blood vessels, that are inside the nose may break and bleed, causing this type of nosebleed. Another kind of nosebleed is a posterior nosebleed, which comes from the deepest part of the nose. Blood from a posterior nosebleed flows down the back of the throat even if the person is sitting or standing. Teens rarely have posterior nosebleeds, which occur most often in older people, people who have high blood pressure, and people who have had nose or face injuries. Causes and Remedies The most common cause of anterior nosebleeds is dry air. A dry climate or heated indoor air irritates and dries out nasal membranes, causing crusts that may itch and then bleed when scratched or picked. Colds may also irritate the lining of the nose. Bleeding may occur after repeated blowing. When you combine a cold with dry winter air, you have the perfect formula for nosebleeds. Allergies can also cause problems, and a doctor may prescribe medications such as antihistamines or decongestants to control an itchy, runny, or stuffy nose. This can also dry out the nasal membranes and contribute to nosebleeds. An injury or blow to the nose may cause bleeding and isn't usually cause for alarm. If you ever have a facial injury, use the tips outlined earlier to stop the nosebleed. If you can't stop the bleeding after 10 minutes or you are concerned about other facial injuries, see a medical professional right away. Nosebleeds are rarely cause for alarm, but frequent nosebleeds might indicate a more serious problem. If you get nosebleeds more than once a week, you should see your doctor. Most cases of frequent nosebleeds are easily treated. Sometimes tiny blood vessels inside the nose become irritated and don't heal. This happens more frequently in teens who have ongoing allergies or frequent colds. A doctor may have a solution if you have this problem. If your doctor rules out a sinus infection, allergies, or irritated blood vessels, he or she may order other tests to see why you're getting frequent nosebleeds. Rarely, a bleeding disorder or abnormally formed blood vessels could be a possibility. Cocaine (or other drugs that are snorted through the nose) can also cause nosebleeds. If you suspect a friend is using cocaine, try talking about it and get help from a trusted adult. Preventing Nosebleeds Whenever you blow your nose (especially when you have a cold), you should blow gently into a soft tissue. Don't blow forcefully or pick your nose. Your doctor may recommend a humidifier to moisten your indoor air. You can also prevent your nasal passages from becoming too dry in winter months by using lubricants such as an antibiotic ointment before going to bed at night. Apply a pea-sized dab to a cotton swab and gently rub just the cotton tip up inside each nostril, especially on the middle part of the nose (called the nasal septum). Some doctors prescribe saline (salt water) drops for the same purpose. Wear protective athletic equipment when participating in sports that could cause injury to the nose. An occasional nosebleed may make you worry, but there's no need to panic — now you know what to do! Reviewed by: Kate M. Cronan, MDDate reviewed: January 2011 American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) The AAP is committed to the health and well-being of infants, adolescents, and young adults. The website offers news articles and tips on health for families. Coping With Colds Most teens get between two and four colds each year. Read this article for the facts on chicken soup, cold medicines, and other ways to feel better.Dehydration Your body is about two thirds water. When the water level dips below that level, you could be dehydrated. Read about what causes dehydration, what it does to your body, and how to prevent it.Body Piercing Wondering whether you should pierce one of your precious parts? Read about what to expect.Blood Without blood, our organs couldn't get the oxygen and nutrients they need, we couldn't keep warm or cool off, we couldn't fight infections, and we couldn't get rid of our own waste products. Find out about the mysterious, life-sustaining fluid called blood.What to Do if You Get the Flu You've probably heard warnings about flu season. If you do get the flu this year, read this article on how to feel better.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2251
{"url": "https://www.akronchildrens.org/cms/kidshealth/5e934a76ed1280da/index.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.akronchildrens.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:25:01Z", "digest": "sha1:2L2DAT3PN34YBRSYE6AXT2HIIDPT3DCM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6105, 6105.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6105, 11014.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6105, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6105, 143.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6105, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6105, 277.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6105, 0.44489139]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6105, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6105, 0.01063612]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6105, 0.01472694]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6105, 0.00736347]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6105, 0.00572714]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6105, 0.00402253]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6105, 0.13113435]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6105, 0.401322]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6105, 4.61661945]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6105, 5.39085268]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6105, 1059.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 5021, 0.0], [5021, 5217, 1.0], [5217, 6105, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 5021, 0.0], [5021, 5217, 0.0], [5217, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 22, 3.0], [22, 5021, 872.0], [5021, 5217, 31.0], [5217, 6105, 153.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 5021, 0.00205128], [5021, 5217, 0.0], [5217, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 5021, 0.0], [5021, 5217, 0.0], [5217, 6105, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.13636364], [22, 5021, 0.01380276], [5021, 5217, 0.05612245], [5217, 6105, 0.0259009]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6105, 0.57154983]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6105, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6105, 0.03369343]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6105, -138.67155905]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6105, -38.8253327]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6105, -450.67572125]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6105, 65.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.akronchildrens.org
Sample Block Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives FIREARMSFirearms Industry Firearms Enforcement Firearms Technology EXPLOSIVESExplosives Industry Explosives Enforcement ALCOHOL & TOBACCO LIBRARYForms Laws, Regulations & Rulings CAREERSSpecial Agent Industry Operations Investigator Professional / Technical CONTACT USLocal ATF Office Home » Leases » 2013 » 08 » 082913 Kc Underwood Iowa Resident Sentenced To 96 Months In Prison For Possession Of A Firearm By A Prohibited Person.html United States AttorneySouthern District of Iowa Southern District of Iowa www.justice.gov/usao/ias Nicholas A. Klinefeldt, Acting United States Attorney Contact: Kevin VanderSchel(515) 473-9300kevin.vanderschel@usdoj.gov Underwood, Iowa Resident Sentenced to 96 Months in Prison for Possession of a Firearm by a Prohibited Person COUNCIL BLUFFS, IA — On August 27, 2013, Christopher A. Morresi, a 35 year–old resident of Underwood, Iowa, was sentenced by United States District Court Judge John A. Jarvey to ninety–six months in prison for possessing firearms after a felony conviction, announced U.S. Attorney Nicholas A. Klinefeldt. Judge Jarvey also ordered Morresi to serve three years of supervised release following completion of the imprisonment. On June 7, 2013, Morresi pled guilty to being in possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The charge was the result of an investigation conducted by officers of the Council Bluffs, Iowa, Police Department after they were called to a motor vehicle with a passed–out driver on December 6, 2012. Morresi was determined to be the driver of the vehicle, and he had in his possession a firearm that was reported stolen out of Nemaha County, Nebraska. Prior to December 6, 2012, Morresi had been convicted of felony offenses in New Jersey and in Iowa. The investigation was conducted by the Council Bluffs, Iowa, Police Department, Nemaha County, Nebraska Sheriff's Office, the Pottawattamie County Attorney's Office and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. The case was prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Iowa. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives United States Department of Justice STAY CONNECTED ATF | 99 New York Avenue, NE, Washington, DC 20226 CONTACT USService Centers Local ATF Office PRESS ROOMNews Releases RESOURCESA-Z Index ATF's Most Wanted ATFOnline NIBIN OPEN GOVERNMENTPrivacy Policy Footer End Amended Definition of Adjudicated as a Mental Defective and Committed to a Mental Institution Accessibility & Plug-InsATF.gov is an official site of the U.S. Department of Justice
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2255
{"url": "https://www.atf.gov/press/releases/2013/08/082913-kc-underwood-iowa-resident-sentenced-to-96-months-in-prison-for-possession-of-a-firearm-by-a-prohibited-person.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.atf.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:36:39Z", "digest": "sha1:E6NIFHSUTEVONNGDDR4RZZU7M4CHGFOH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2614, 2614.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2614, 3714.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2614, 35.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2614, 94.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2614, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2614, 243.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2614, 0.22245322]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2614, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2614, 0.07795824]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2614, 0.18190255]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2614, 0.18190255]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2614, 0.13781903]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2614, 0.07795824]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2614, 0.07795824]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2614, 0.02598608]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2614, 0.02088167]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2614, 0.03062645]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2614, 0.06652807]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2614, 0.20997921]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2614, 0.49473684]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2614, 5.67105263]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2614, 4.84462705]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2614, 380.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 91, 0.0], [91, 112, 0.0], [112, 132, 0.0], [132, 162, 0.0], [162, 185, 0.0], [185, 203, 0.0], [203, 216, 0.0], [216, 244, 0.0], [244, 265, 0.0], [265, 298, 0.0], [298, 323, 0.0], [323, 350, 0.0], [350, 501, 0.0], [501, 549, 0.0], [549, 575, 0.0], [575, 600, 0.0], [600, 654, 0.0], [654, 722, 0.0], [722, 831, 0.0], [831, 1805, 1.0], [1805, 2120, 1.0], [2120, 2208, 0.0], [2208, 2274, 0.0], [2274, 2300, 0.0], [2300, 2317, 0.0], [2317, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2360, 0.0], [2360, 2378, 0.0], [2378, 2388, 0.0], [2388, 2394, 0.0], [2394, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2529, 0.0], [2529, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 91, 0.0], [91, 112, 0.0], [112, 132, 0.0], [132, 162, 0.0], [162, 185, 0.0], [185, 203, 0.0], [203, 216, 0.0], [216, 244, 0.0], [244, 265, 0.0], [265, 298, 0.0], [298, 323, 0.0], [323, 350, 0.0], [350, 501, 0.0], [501, 549, 0.0], [549, 575, 0.0], [575, 600, 0.0], [600, 654, 0.0], [654, 722, 0.0], [722, 831, 0.0], [831, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2208, 0.0], [2208, 2274, 0.0], [2274, 2300, 0.0], [2300, 2317, 0.0], [2317, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2360, 0.0], [2360, 2378, 0.0], [2378, 2388, 0.0], [2388, 2394, 0.0], [2394, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2529, 0.0], [2529, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 13, 2.0], [13, 91, 9.0], [91, 112, 2.0], [112, 132, 2.0], [132, 162, 2.0], [162, 185, 2.0], [185, 203, 2.0], [203, 216, 1.0], [216, 244, 3.0], [244, 265, 2.0], [265, 298, 3.0], [298, 323, 2.0], [323, 350, 4.0], [350, 501, 28.0], [501, 549, 6.0], [549, 575, 4.0], [575, 600, 1.0], [600, 654, 7.0], [654, 722, 4.0], [722, 831, 18.0], [831, 1805, 161.0], [1805, 2120, 45.0], [2120, 2208, 12.0], [2208, 2274, 11.0], [2274, 2300, 3.0], [2300, 2317, 3.0], [2317, 2341, 3.0], [2341, 2360, 2.0], [2360, 2378, 3.0], [2378, 2388, 1.0], [2388, 2394, 1.0], [2394, 2424, 3.0], [2424, 2435, 2.0], [2435, 2529, 14.0], [2529, 2614, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 91, 0.0], [91, 112, 0.0], [112, 132, 0.0], [132, 162, 0.0], [162, 185, 0.0], [185, 203, 0.0], [203, 216, 0.0], [216, 244, 0.0], [244, 265, 0.0], [265, 298, 0.0], [298, 323, 0.0], [323, 350, 0.0], [350, 501, 0.09395973], [501, 549, 0.0], [549, 575, 0.0], [575, 600, 0.0], [600, 654, 0.0], [654, 722, 0.16666667], [722, 831, 0.01869159], [831, 1805, 0.0243129], [1805, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2208, 0.0], [2208, 2274, 0.11666667], [2274, 2300, 0.0], [2300, 2317, 0.0], [2317, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2360, 0.0], [2360, 2378, 0.0], [2378, 2388, 0.0], [2388, 2394, 0.0], [2394, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2529, 0.0], [2529, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 91, 0.0], [91, 112, 0.0], [112, 132, 0.0], [132, 162, 0.0], [162, 185, 0.0], [185, 203, 0.0], [203, 216, 0.0], [216, 244, 0.0], [244, 265, 0.0], [265, 298, 0.0], [298, 323, 0.0], [323, 350, 0.0], [350, 501, 0.0], [501, 549, 0.0], [549, 575, 0.0], [575, 600, 0.0], [600, 654, 0.0], [654, 722, 0.0], [722, 831, 0.0], [831, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2208, 0.0], [2208, 2274, 0.0], [2274, 2300, 0.0], [2300, 2317, 0.0], [2317, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2360, 0.0], [2360, 2378, 0.0], [2378, 2388, 0.0], [2388, 2394, 0.0], [2394, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2529, 0.0], [2529, 2614, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 13, 0.15384615], [13, 91, 0.19230769], [91, 112, 0.0952381], [112, 132, 0.1], [132, 162, 0.4], [162, 185, 0.08695652], [185, 203, 0.77777778], [203, 216, 0.61538462], [216, 244, 0.10714286], [244, 265, 0.42857143], [265, 298, 0.09090909], [298, 323, 0.08], [323, 350, 0.51851852], [350, 501, 0.13245033], [501, 549, 0.125], [549, 575, 0.11538462], [575, 600, 0.0], [600, 654, 0.12962963], [654, 722, 0.05882353], [722, 831, 0.09174312], [831, 1805, 0.06057495], [1805, 2120, 0.08888889], [2120, 2208, 0.10227273], [2208, 2274, 0.36363636], [2274, 2300, 0.42307692], [2300, 2317, 0.29411765], [2317, 2341, 0.45833333], [2341, 2360, 0.63157895], [2360, 2378, 0.27777778], [2378, 2388, 0.4], [2388, 2394, 0.83333333], [2394, 2424, 0.53333333], [2424, 2435, 0.18181818], [2435, 2529, 0.08510638], [2529, 2614, 0.11764706]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2614, 0.0037716]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2614, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2614, 0.83629137]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2614, -143.85432906]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2614, -18.86219747]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2614, 61.73262312]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2614, 25.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.atf.gov
Bible Book List 1550 Stephanus New Testament Public Domain Testaments This Bible is in the public domain in the United States. We have no further information about its publication history, but are making it available in the same format in which we acquired it as a public service. Copyright Information Because this Bible is in the public domain, you are free to quote from or reprint it. In the absence of more detailed publication information, if you need to cite it in a paper or published work, we recommend citing the website where you found it (such as BibleGateway.com); we have no additional copyright or historical data about this Bible. Bible-Book List ΚΑΤΑ ΜΑΤΘΑΙΟΝ ΚΑΤΑ ΜΑΡΚΟΝ ΚΑΤΑ ΛΟΥΚΑΝ ΚΑΤΑ ΙΩΑΝΝΗΝ ΠΡΑΞΕΙΣ ΤΩΝ ΑΠΟΣΤΟΛΩΝ ΠΡΟΣ ΡΩΜΑΙΟΥΣ ΠΡΟΣ ΚΟΡΙΝΘΙΟΥΣ Α΄ ΠΡΟΣ ΚΟΡΙΝΘΙΟΥΣ Β΄ ΠΡΟΣ ΓΑΛΑΤΑΣ ΠΡΟΣ ΕΦΕΣΙΟΥΣ ΠΡΟΣ ΦΙΛΙΠΠΗΣΙΟΥΣ ΠΡΟΣ ΚΟΛΟΣΣΑΕΙΣ ΠΡΟΣ ΘΕΣΣΑΛΟΝΙΚΕΙΣ Α΄ ΠΡΟΣ ΘΕΣΣΑΛΟΝΙΚΕΙΣ Β΄ ΠΡΟΣ ΤΙΜΟΘΕΟΝ Α΄ ΠΡΟΣ ΤΙΜΟΘΕΟΝ Β΄ ΠΡΟΣ ΤΙΤΟΝ ΠΡΟΣ ΦΙΛΗΜΟΝΑ ΠΡΟΣ ΕΒΡΑΙΟΥΣ ΙΑΚΩΒΟΥ ΠΕΤΡΟΥ Α΄ ΠΕΤΡΟΥ Β΄ ΙΩΑΝΝΟΥ Α΄ ΙΩΑΝΝΟΥ Β΄ ΙΩΑΝΝΟΥ Γ΄ ΙΟΥΔΑ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΨΙΣ ΙΩΑΝΝΟΥ
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2260
{"url": "https://www.biblegateway.com/versions/index.php?action=getVersionInfo&vid=69", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.biblegateway.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:46:52Z", "digest": "sha1:VJ5TXM2ZZNY222ICQLKL7VEXJSAMXAZB"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1051, 1051.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1051, 8915.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1051, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1051, 553.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1051, 0.57]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1051, 234.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1051, 0.29591837]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1051, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1051, 0.06451613]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1051, 0.06451613]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1051, 0.06451613]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1051, 0.02880184]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1051, 0.02534562]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1051, 0.02995392]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1051, 0.30102041]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1051, 0.42346939]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1051, 0.55555556]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1051, 5.07602339]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1051, 4.26178177]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1051, 171.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 70, 0.0], [70, 303, 0.0], [303, 663, 0.0], [663, 677, 0.0], [677, 689, 0.0], [689, 701, 0.0], [701, 714, 0.0], [714, 736, 0.0], [736, 750, 0.0], [750, 769, 0.0], [769, 788, 0.0], [788, 801, 0.0], [801, 815, 0.0], [815, 833, 0.0], [833, 849, 0.0], [849, 871, 0.0], [871, 893, 0.0], [893, 910, 0.0], [910, 927, 0.0], [927, 938, 0.0], [938, 952, 0.0], [952, 966, 0.0], [966, 974, 0.0], [974, 984, 0.0], [984, 994, 0.0], [994, 1005, 0.0], [1005, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1033, 0.0], [1033, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 70, 0.0], [70, 303, 0.0], [303, 663, 0.0], [663, 677, 0.0], [677, 689, 0.0], [689, 701, 0.0], [701, 714, 0.0], [714, 736, 0.0], [736, 750, 0.0], [750, 769, 0.0], [769, 788, 0.0], [788, 801, 0.0], [801, 815, 0.0], [815, 833, 0.0], [833, 849, 0.0], [849, 871, 0.0], [871, 893, 0.0], [893, 910, 0.0], [910, 927, 0.0], [927, 938, 0.0], [938, 952, 0.0], [952, 966, 0.0], [966, 974, 0.0], [974, 984, 0.0], [984, 994, 0.0], [994, 1005, 0.0], [1005, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1033, 0.0], [1033, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 7.0], [45, 70, 3.0], [70, 303, 40.0], [303, 663, 62.0], [663, 677, 2.0], [677, 689, 2.0], [689, 701, 2.0], [701, 714, 2.0], [714, 736, 3.0], [736, 750, 2.0], [750, 769, 3.0], [769, 788, 3.0], [788, 801, 2.0], [801, 815, 2.0], [815, 833, 2.0], [833, 849, 2.0], [849, 871, 3.0], [871, 893, 3.0], [893, 910, 3.0], [910, 927, 3.0], [927, 938, 2.0], [938, 952, 2.0], [952, 966, 2.0], [966, 974, 1.0], [974, 984, 2.0], [984, 994, 2.0], [994, 1005, 2.0], [1005, 1016, 2.0], [1016, 1027, 2.0], [1027, 1033, 1.0], [1033, 1051, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.09090909], [45, 70, 0.0], [70, 303, 0.0], [303, 663, 0.0], [663, 677, 0.0], [677, 689, 0.0], [689, 701, 0.0], [701, 714, 0.0], [714, 736, 0.0], [736, 750, 0.0], [750, 769, 0.0], [769, 788, 0.0], [788, 801, 0.0], [801, 815, 0.0], [815, 833, 0.0], [833, 849, 0.0], [849, 871, 0.0], [871, 893, 0.0], [893, 910, 0.0], [910, 927, 0.0], [927, 938, 0.0], [938, 952, 0.0], [952, 966, 0.0], [966, 974, 0.0], [974, 984, 0.0], [984, 994, 0.0], [994, 1005, 0.0], [1005, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1033, 0.0], [1033, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 70, 0.0], [70, 303, 0.0], [303, 663, 0.0], [663, 677, 0.0], [677, 689, 0.0], [689, 701, 0.0], [701, 714, 0.0], [714, 736, 0.0], [736, 750, 0.0], [750, 769, 0.0], [769, 788, 0.0], [788, 801, 0.0], [801, 815, 0.0], [815, 833, 0.0], [833, 849, 0.0], [849, 871, 0.0], [871, 893, 0.0], [893, 910, 0.0], [910, 927, 0.0], [927, 938, 0.0], [938, 952, 0.0], [952, 966, 0.0], [966, 974, 0.0], [974, 984, 0.0], [984, 994, 0.0], [994, 1005, 0.0], [1005, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1033, 0.0], [1033, 1051, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.13333333], [45, 70, 0.12], [70, 303, 0.03004292], [303, 663, 0.025], [663, 677, 0.85714286], [677, 689, 0.83333333], [689, 701, 0.83333333], [701, 714, 0.84615385], [714, 736, 0.86363636], [736, 750, 0.85714286], [750, 769, 0.78947368], [769, 788, 0.78947368], [788, 801, 0.84615385], [801, 815, 0.85714286], [815, 833, 0.88888889], [833, 849, 0.875], [849, 871, 0.81818182], [871, 893, 0.81818182], [893, 910, 0.76470588], [910, 927, 0.76470588], [927, 938, 0.81818182], [938, 952, 0.85714286], [952, 966, 0.85714286], [966, 974, 0.875], [974, 984, 0.7], [984, 994, 0.7], [994, 1005, 0.72727273], [1005, 1016, 0.72727273], [1016, 1027, 0.72727273], [1027, 1033, 0.83333333], [1033, 1051, 0.94444444]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1051, 0.6091457]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1051, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1051, 0.02441627]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1051, -57.28079751]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1051, -11.15564715]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1051, -38.60863994]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1051, 6.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.biblegateway.com
Bill McKibben Bill McKibben is Schumann Distinguished Scholar at Middlebury College and co-founder of 350.org. His most recent book is Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet. Articles by this author: February 25, 2009 Why I’ll Get Arrested To Stop the Burning of Coal 112 Comments January 14, 2009 Greening The Stimulus 12 Comments January 5, 2009 Think Again: Climate Change 120 Comments December 16, 2008 The Most Important Number on Earth 112 Comments October 25, 2008 What the Next American Leader Needs to do to Deal with Global Warming 15 Comments October 18, 2008 Green Fantasia 7 Comments May 11, 2008 Civilization's Last Chance: The Planet Is Nearing a Tipping Point on Climate Change, and It Gets Much Worse, Fast 181 Comments February 29, 2008 First, Step Up 40 Comments December 29, 2007 Gandhi: A Man for All Seasons 16 Comments November 10, 2007 The Unsung Solution: What Rhymes With Waste-Heat Recovery? 23 Comments 2 Comments Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments... Common DreamsBreaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.Independent, non-profit newscenter since 1997.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2263
{"url": "https://www.commondreams.org/bill-mckibben?page=9&quicktabs_1=0", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.commondreams.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:57:43Z", "digest": "sha1:EFULUG4U3WQ6JMPVNQCCP56WOYUPOQSK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1341, 1341.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1341, 2879.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1341, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1341, 55.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1341, 0.88]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1341, 336.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1341, 0.18796992]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1341, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1341, 0.02220167]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1341, 0.02035153]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1341, 0.02775208]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1341, 0.0075188]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1341, 0.27819549]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1341, 0.67123288]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1341, 4.93607306]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1341, 0.0037594]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1341, 4.76460554]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1341, 219.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 205, 0.0], [205, 938, 0.0], [938, 1341, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 205, 0.0], [205, 938, 0.0], [938, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 205, 33.0], [205, 938, 125.0], [938, 1341, 61.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 205, 0.01515152], [205, 938, 0.11657303], [938, 1341, 0.02067183]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 205, 0.0], [205, 938, 0.0], [938, 1341, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 205, 0.09268293], [205, 938, 0.11323329], [938, 1341, 0.06203474]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1341, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1341, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1341, -8.94e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1341, -172.6118717]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1341, -70.9797986]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1341, -74.69264418]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1341, 12.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.commondreams.org
FDIC Calls Upon American Consumers to Save and Build Wealth America Saves Week Is February 25 � March 2, 2013 Greg Hernandez (202) 898-6984 Email: ghernandez@fdic.gov The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is encouraging consumers to take actions to save toward financial goals during America Saves Week. FDIC Chairman Martin J. Gruenberg today said, “Saving money in a federally insured bank account is the safest way to build savings for emergencies or future dreams. During America Saves Week, I encourage everyone to set a savings goal and work with an insured financial institution to meet their goal.” During the annual America Saves Week, consumers are encouraged to assess their savings progress and take action to advance this progress. The theme of the 2013 week is “Set a Goal, Make a Plan, Save Automatically.” Ways to save automatically toward a goal could include establishing regular transfers into a savings account and making regular contributions into a retirement plan. People who regularly save even small amounts will be amazed at how quickly their investment grows over time as a result of compounding. The FDIC’s research shows that 30 percent of American households do not have saving accounts, a much higher percentage than those who do not have transaction accounts, such as checking. Savings accounts are vital for dealing with unexpected emergencies and expenses, or predictable life events such as college or retirement. (See The 2011 Survey of Unbanked and Underbanked Households, http://www.economicinclusion.gov/surveys/2011household/.) Consumers can jumpstart their savings commitment by allocating a portion of any tax refund into a savings account or savings bonds. Low- and moderate-income taxpayers may be able to obtain free tax help from an IRS-trained volunteer through a Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) site—contact the IRS at call 1-800-906-9887 to find a nearby site. To learn more about America Saves Week and about savings-related resources from the FDIC, please visit http://www.fdic.gov/deposit/deposits/savings.html. Congress created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in 1933 to restore public confidence in the nation's banking system. The FDIC insures deposits at the nation's 7,181 banks and savings associations, and it promotes the safety and soundness of these institutions by identifying, monitoring and addressing risks to which they are exposed. The FDIC receives no federal tax dollars — insured financial institutions fund its operations.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2268
{"url": "https://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2013/pr13011.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.fdic.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:46:22Z", "digest": "sha1:OA2N6KOYWOKTTNA3FRI4LW4MXZ4QZHLJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2522, 2522.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2522, 4538.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2522, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2522, 104.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2522, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2522, 273.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2522, 0.29361702]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2522, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2522, 0.03562831]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2522, 0.02888782]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2522, 0.03851709]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2522, 0.02503611]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2522, 0.02553191]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2522, 0.18085106]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2522, 0.59416446]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2522, 5.50928382]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2522, 5.07182741]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2522, 377.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 110, 0.0], [110, 140, 0.0], [140, 167, 0.0], [167, 1579, 0.0], [1579, 1928, 1.0], [1928, 2082, 1.0], [2082, 2522, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 110, 0.0], [110, 140, 0.0], [140, 167, 0.0], [167, 1579, 0.0], [1579, 1928, 0.0], [1928, 2082, 0.0], [2082, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 60, 10.0], [60, 110, 10.0], [110, 140, 4.0], [140, 167, 2.0], [167, 1579, 214.0], [1579, 1928, 55.0], [1928, 2082, 17.0], [2082, 2522, 65.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 110, 0.14583333], [110, 140, 0.38461538], [140, 167, 0.0], [167, 1579, 0.01015228], [1579, 1928, 0.03254438], [1928, 2082, 0.0], [2082, 2522, 0.01851852]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 110, 0.0], [110, 140, 0.0], [140, 167, 0.0], [167, 1579, 0.0], [1579, 1928, 0.0], [1928, 2082, 0.0], [2082, 2522, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 60, 0.18333333], [60, 110, 0.12], [110, 140, 0.06666667], [140, 167, 0.03703704], [167, 1579, 0.0368272], [1579, 1928, 0.04584527], [1928, 2082, 0.05194805], [2082, 2522, 0.03409091]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2522, 0.12053478]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2522, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2522, 0.17173499]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2522, -176.93903306]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2522, -18.91863402]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2522, -69.96264257]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2522, 23.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.fdic.gov
Release No. 50439 / September 24, 2004 FRANKLIN MARONE, ORDER MAKING FINDINGS AND IMPOSING REMEDIAL SANCTIONS PURSUANT TO SECTION 15(b) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 AGAINST FRANKLIN MARONE The Securities and Exchange Commission ("Commission") dee
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2290
{"url": "https://www.sec.gov/litigation/admin/34-50439.htm", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.sec.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:38:53Z", "digest": "sha1:SXMOWBTBNSMPAFR5IOV6KE3KA2COJX64"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 256, 256.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 256, 522.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 256, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 256, 15.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 256, 0.6]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 256, 320.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 256, 0.04444444]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 256, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 256, 0.13333333]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 256, 0.46666667]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 256, 0.28888889]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 256, 0.77777778]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 256, 5.83333333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 256, 3.27545352]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 256, 36.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 56, 0.0], [56, 199, 0.0], [199, 256, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 56, 0.0], [56, 199, 0.0], [199, 256, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 39, 6.0], [39, 56, 2.0], [56, 199, 21.0], [199, 256, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.32352941], [39, 56, 0.0], [56, 199, 0.04285714], [199, 256, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 56, 0.0], [56, 199, 0.0], [199, 256, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.07692308], [39, 56, 0.82352941], [56, 199, 0.79020979], [199, 256, 0.0877193]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 256, 0.00175369]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 256, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 256, -9.89e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 256, -24.39771878]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 256, -11.08796318]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 256, -5.19635578]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 256, 2.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.sec.gov
John F. Kennedy Memorabilia Auction: In Photos JFK Presidential Auction More than 650 pieces of memorabilia of former President John F. Kennedy were auctioned Feb. 17, 2013, including this size-44, leather "Air Force One Bomber Jacket" from 1962, which sold for $570,000. The items are from the estate of David F. Powers, special assistant to Kennedy and the first curator of the JFK Library. This is the 50th year since JFK's assassination. JFK Presidential AuctionMore than 650 pieces of memorabilia of former President John F. Kennedy were auctioned Feb. 17, 2013, including this size-44, leather "Air Force One Bomber Jacket" from 1962, which sold for $570,000. The items are from the estate of David F. Powers, special assistant to Kennedy and the first curator of the JFK Library. This is the 50th year since JFK's assassination.John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionA portrait of John F. Kennedy in uniform in World War II by Robert J. Donovan from 1943 and printed in 1961 (fifth printing) and a collection of photos are valued between $250 and $500. The collection contains seven photographs, photocopies of letters J.F.K. sent home during war, accounts of the PT 109 boat he commanded, and a seven-page paper entitled, Lieutenant John F. Kennedy, USNR.John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionA birthday card signed by John, Jr. around May 29, 1963 is valued beteween $2,500 and $5,000. Signed "John xxooxxo", it was given to his father on his 46th birthday. The item description notes that this is the only birthday card that John, Jr. gave to his father, which was written in his own hand. John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionA Presidential Flag with Great Seal of the President is valued between $5,000 and $10,000. It measures 18" x 26". The item description states that as "one of the responsibilities as Presidential Aide, Dave Powers assured that this flag was flown on Presidential trips whether on boat or motorcade. This flag is one of two known from his administration."John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionThe "Kennedy Administration White House Desk" is valued between $5,000 and $10,000. The Lycoming Furniture Company made the double bank mahogany veneer desk and "cockmolded drawers with bell metal brass pulls." The description states: "Overall even wear reflective of decades of continual use by Dave Powers in the White House and throughout his career up until his retirement at the J.F.K. Library."John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionTwo photographs of the bachelor party of Senator Kennedy at Parker House, Boston, on Sept. 9, 1953 are worth $150 to $300. There are also reprints of photobooth photographs of J.F.K. and Jacqueline Kennedy taken in the spring of 1953, plus the two of them on the grounds of the family compound. Also to be sold is an early photographic potrait of Jackie. John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionA 4-piece invitation to Mr. and Mrs. David Powers for the wedding of Jacqueline Lee Bouvier to the Honorable John Fitzgerald Kennedy" on Sept. 12, 1953 is valued between $300 and $600.John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionDave Powers' "WWII Dog Tags Ribbons Pins" are valued between $250 and $500. The ten ribbons include: American Defense, Asiatic Pacific Campaign, American Campaign, Good Conduct, Bronze Star, Victory, Air Medal, three Dog tags including one with wrong middle initial, one China India Burma Headquarters patch, one Sterling Silver Wing, one Brass US round pin, one Brass Air Force round pin.John McInnis AuctioneersJFK Presidential AuctionThe pen used by J.F.K. at the signing of the "Interdiction of the Delivery of Offensive Weapons to Cuba" on Oct. 23, 1962 during the Cuban Missile Crisis is valued between $5,000 and $10,000. It was presented to Dave Powers by J.F.K. It is a described as a 6" Estabrook acrylic steel pointed pen. John F. Kennedy Memorabilia Auction: In Photos All ABC News Photos Home> Money > Photos > John F. Kennedy Memorabilia Auction: In Photos
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2302
{"url": "http://abcnews.go.com/Business/photos/john-kennedy-memorabilia-auction-photos-18285895?page=7", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "abcnews.go.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:30:36Z", "digest": "sha1:355USQAURSKSE23KW3RTDKEOWUZTGC7H"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4021, 4021.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4021, 6136.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4021, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4021, 100.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4021, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4021, 272.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4021, 0.26360339]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4021, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4021, 0.17018634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4021, 0.27732919]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4021, 0.24937888]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4021, 0.24099379]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4021, 0.17018634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4021, 0.17018634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4021, 0.01397516]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4021, 0.08198758]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4021, 0.05093168]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4021, 0.04474002]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4021, 0.25876663]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4021, 0.44566929]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4021, 5.07086614]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4021, 5.13918193]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4021, 635.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 72, 0.0], [72, 442, 1.0], [442, 3885, 1.0], [3885, 3952, 0.0], [3952, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 72, 0.0], [72, 442, 0.0], [442, 3885, 0.0], [3885, 3952, 0.0], [3952, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 47, 7.0], [47, 72, 3.0], [72, 442, 62.0], [442, 3885, 542.0], [3885, 3952, 11.0], [3952, 4021, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 72, 0.0], [72, 442, 0.06534091], [442, 3885, 0.03875265], [3885, 3952, 0.0], [3952, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 72, 0.0], [72, 442, 0.0], [442, 3885, 0.0], [3885, 3952, 0.0], [3952, 4021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 47, 0.14893617], [47, 72, 0.2], [72, 442, 0.06486486], [442, 3885, 0.07464421], [3885, 3952, 0.19402985], [3952, 4021, 0.14492754]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4021, 0.18176305]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4021, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4021, 0.61938488]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4021, -191.98020158]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4021, -25.25554642]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4021, 99.62087029]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4021, 61.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
abcnews.go.com
Live ABCNews.com> GMA> Entertainment>Books Pete Peterson's 'The Education of an American Dreamer' Peter Peterson's Memoir Offers Lessons for Business and Life Amazon.com Pete Peterson has lived the American Dream. The son of Greek immigrants, Peterson grew up during the Great Depression, working in his family's 24-hour diner in a town smack in the center of America, Kearny, Neb. "It's 1,733 miles to Boston. And 1,733 to San Francisco," Peterson said. In Peterson's new memoir, "The Education of an American Dreamer," he writes about his humble beginnings and the many successes he's achieved since leaving his family's Nebraska home. Peterson has held some of the most prestigious positions in the financial world. He was CEO of Lehman Brothers in the 1970s, President Nixon's secretary of commerce, chairman of the New York Federal Reserve, and co-founder of the Blackstone Group, a hedge fund that amassed a worth of $31 billion. Through all that, Peterson said, he never forgot the lessons of hard work, sacrifice, and personal savings that he learned from his father. Armed with these lessons and $1 billion, Peterson has devoted himself to educating future generations that he worries will suffer the consequences of today's overspending. "I visualize myself on a death bed," Peterson said on "Good Morning America." "And I visualize myself saying, 'You know, you enjoyed the American Dream for yourself. You don't think it's gonna be there for your kids, and so forth. And yet, knowing that and having all this money, you did nothing.' And I can't imagine a worse feeling than that." The self-made billionaire shared his concerns for the future of the American economy and offered five solutions to reclaiming fiscal responsibility in the areas where he feels it is most needed: health care. 1. Develop a Health Care Budget Peterson said he believes the United States spends far too much on health care. "We're the only country that doesn't have a budget for health care," Peterson said. "They leave it to the states and Medicare to decide how to allocate [the money]." Without a federal budget, Peterson described the system as "totally open-ended" and called the incentives "perverse." 2. Develop a Best Practices Method in Health Care The current system encourages endless tests that, Peterson argued, are inefficient and costly. "You [patients] don't care what kind of procedures and tests they do because it doesn't cost you anything," Peterson said. But for the doctors, Peterson said, the increased chance for profits and the decreased chance of litigation make it worthwhile to conduct expensive, sometimes unnecessary procedures. "We need to be more efficient and stop the over-prescribing of tests, surgical procedures," Peterson said. 3. Reform Open-Ended Tax Subsidies for Health Insurance to build an Incentive for the Consumer to Reduce Costs Currently, Peterson said, the tax-free system does not allow patients to make decisions on a procedure's value and worth. "There should be a progressive tax, based on salary that sets limits on how much health care you can deduct without paying taxes on it," Peterson said. He said there should be limits on how much of the employee's benefit is tax free, adding employees should have to pay taxes on some of their contribution so there is a built-in incentive to reduce costs. 4. Elderly Who Can, Should Pay for Their Own Health Insurance Peterson said that able elderly people should pay for their own health insurance, arguing that this would allow us to take care of the poor while still having an incentive to reduce costs. He proposed an affluence test. "If you make above a certain income, you start paying taxes on your social security. People with incomes less than X amount can deduct this," Peterson said. 5. Create an Integrated Health Care System Peterson suggested that a single coordinated system could drive down rising health care costs. "Instead of having eight different doctors, have one doctor who gets a set payment to care for your health -- all the records are there, and they don't do things that they don't think is necessary," he said. Read an excerpt from Peterson's "The Education of an American Dreamer": Chapter 1 Kearney Beacon in the Night Kearney, Nebraska, where I grew up in the 1930s, was a good-sized town by the standards of the plains. It was large enough for people to want to eat at all hours of the day and night, and the Central Cafe, my father's restaurant, was there for them. It was half a block from the Union Pacific railway station, its neon sign blinking through the night beckoning the train crews rotating off their shifts and the passengers who had arrived, for whatever reason they had come, at the absolute midpoint of the United States. Kearney was halfway between Boston and San Francisco, 1,733 miles from each, as attested by the plaque near the swimming pool at the 1733 Park where I played as a boy. My father had worked for the railroad. He took a job no one else wanted, washing dishes in the steamy caboose that served as living quarters to a crew of laborers laying track in western Nebraska. From washing dishes he learned to cook, which he much preferred to driving railroad spikes and hauling rails and ties. But the track crews couldn't work through the Nebraska winter, so when the crew crossed paths with a traveling circus looking for someone to feed its collection of roustabouts, aerialists, and animal tamers, my father took off with the circus. This was sometime around 1917, five years after he arrived at America's golden shore from Greece, a boy of seventeen who spoke no English and had a third grade education. Other cooking jobs followed, and he learned more about the restaurant business. He learned to speak English. His employers often gave him room and board, which allowed him to save much of what he earned. Finally, his experience and his savings reached the point where he was ready to start out on his own. He bought and quickly sold restaurants in Lexington, Nebraska, and in Iowa before settling on Kearney, a town with growth potential and not much competition. It had a college that he envisioned as a source of cheap, smart labor, a handful of Greek families that would make him feel at home, and a vacant lot downtown near the railway station. He bought it and built the Central Cafe, whose sign was a beacon not only to the travelers who passed through Kearney but to its townspeople as well. "Home of Fine Foods Since 1923," read that sign in inexhaustible neon. That was the year my father opened the cafe. It stayed open twenty-four hours a day, and for twenty-five years it would literally never close. He married my mother a year later. Two years after that I came into the world, and by 1934, when I was eight, I was counting out change to my father's customers. My biggest challenge as a boy was trying to fit in. But fitting in was really tough, because I wanted to be 100 percent American while my parents clung to their Greek customs. They pulled furiously one way, I the other. All children struggle to escape their parents so they can define themselves, but mine had roots deep in another world. George and Venetia My father was George Peterson, which was not the name he was born with. That was Georgios Petropoulos, the surname literally translating into "Peter's son," and often over the years he told me he deeply regretted changing it. "I wouldn't want anyone to think I wasn't proud of our race," he said. In the scheme of things, however, he kept the more important thing he brought from the Old Country, his bedrock values. He was from a town called Vahlia, in the mountains of the Peloponnesian Peninsula in southern Greece. It was a poor town, and his family was among the poorest. His father, Peter, for whom I am named, according to the family lore preferred sleeping under an apple tree to working and would move only to find a new patch of shade when the shifting sunlight hit his eyes and woke him up. His indolence did nothing to diminish the imperial tendencies of his wife, my grandmother Nicoletta, who upon meeting new people would offer her hand to be kissed. They tried to keep a garden, but rainfall was sparse and water had to be carried in buckets from a nearby stream. They kept chickens, which provided eggs, and goats, which provided milk, and when a new baby was born in the family, a goat was slaughtered over the protests of the children, who had made pets of the animals. My father had six brothers and a sister, and they all slept on straw mattresses crowded together on the floor of the family's two-room house or, if the weather was good, outside in the yard. Regardless of the season, none of them wore shoes. The shoes their parents wore were fashioned from discarded tires. They told time by the sun since they could not afford a clock, and on cloudy days relied on guesswork. School was an afterthought. Girls could expect six years of education. Boys might reach higher, but only if they paid a price. They would have to leave home at the beginning of each week, walk thirty miles to a larger village that had a more advanced school, and live in a hostel with other boys until the weekend when they could walk home again. This was not my father's lot. For his older brothers who went off to school, my grandmother would bake a loaf of bread and score it with a knife five times, to let them know how much—or little—they could eat each day with slices from the block of cheese she gave them from her homemade stores. At some point, they started dreaming of America. My father's older brother Nick was the first to make the passage. By 1912, he had a job at a meatpacking plant in Milwaukee and could send money for my father's ticket. The Titanic sank that year, but my father's trip was uneventful in his fetid quarters deep in the ship's bowels where he longed to breathe fresh air. He entered America through Ellis Island and headed to Milwaukee to meet up with Nick as soon as he cleared the immigration hurdles. His first job, at a fruit stand, fell through because he could not understand the customers; if asked for "a couple of apples," he would heave a sackful on the counter. Soon, however, Nick got him a job at the meatpacking plant. It was the starting job from hell, feeding cattle hooves and horns into grinding machines to be processed into fertilizer, the kind of job that to this day immigrants are willing to do because their foothold in America is that precious. Choking dust rose from the machines; the men fed them with one hand and clamped damp rags over their noses with the other, which was murder on their arms and shoulders. My father almost gave up and headed home. But he stuck it out and moved up to cutting meat, learning the fine points of reducing cattle and hogs to roasts and chops with very little waste. When he moved on to the railroad job, he changed his name to Peterson, as Nick had done before him. If he was sorry for it later, he could blame the Union Pacific timekeepers who claimed they could never understand him when he said Petropoulos. And as he grew into his twenties and cooked for railroad laborers and circus folk and saved money and set his sights on building the cafe, he waited for someone to marry. My mother, Venetia Papapavlou, lived in Niata, in southern Greece southeast of Sparta. The Papapavlous had prospered by comparison with the Petropoulos clan. Yanni Papapavlou—or Big John, as her father was known—had land and a big house. Like everyone else in the village, he had no electricity or running water. Rain supplied drinking water that was stored in big clay pots called amphorae, and there was a cistern that provided water for the garden so that no one had to haul water from a stream. Olive, almond, fig, orange, and lemon groves, wheat fields, and vineyards dotted the landscape beyond the house. Only the olive groves qualified as a commercial operation. Big John had an olive press and used the proceeds from the oil to purchase more olive groves. He paid his workers with the very crops they harvested; the olive pickers were paid one bushel of olives for every four they picked, which he would then press into oil for them. The men who picked grapes and stamped them to make wine kept much of it for themselves and sold the rest. My mother remembered an abundance of food prepared by her mother, Demitroula. Hungry neighbors always knew they would be fed, and her father's generosity extended to the local schoolhouse, where he would hand out small cloth bags filled with a mixture of sun-dried raisins, fruit, and almonds. On weekends this became the stuff of barter and a social life, with Big John hitching up his horses, piling his children—known collectively as Little Big Johns—into the wagon, and driving to town to trade the bags of fruits and nuts for other goods. If there were any bags left, he would give them away rather than carry them back home. John and Demitroula had an easy, bantering relationship. His was the only horse-drawn wagon in Niata, and he always insisted that she ride in the front seat with him as he drove, a rare display of gender equality in that place and time. But he also warned her, laughingly, that if she got too big for her britches he would assign her to "live spotter" duty in front of the horses, a reference to the dangerous job of locating the land mines that littered the countryside after Greece's past wars. Of course he never did carry out his threat. His generosity was deep. He had an old neighbor, Stavros, who depended on his donkey, called Kitso, or "helper," to gather wild berries and tsai, the Greek mountain tea also called shepherd's tea. Stavros sold some of what he had gathered for a few pennies or traded it. Returning from church one Sunday with three of his children, Big John heard a commotion as they were passing Stavros's small house. Stopping to inquire, he found Stavros berating his donkey, which had died. "Look what Kitso did to me," Stavros cried. "How could she do this to me?" Big John agreed that Kitso was a thoughtless beast but joked that she had never done such a thing before. Stavros, not amused, ordered him off his property forever. John hustled away, bought another donkey, and returned the next day to present it as a gift from all the Papapavlou children. They were there as their father knocked on the old man's door and they saw how, still furious, he again ordered Big John off his property. Sadly, Big John explained that his children would have to give the donkey to someone else. The old man was moved to take a look at the animal and then received it with gratitude, gushing with prayers that Big John would live a long and healthy life. "You had better pray for an even longer and healthier life for your new Kitso," said Big John. Life in Niata had changed. The young men began to leave for better jobs. Without them Big John could not cultivate his groves, and young women like mother had fewer chances of marrying. So the day came when Big John accepted that three of his children had little choice but to emigrate and join other members of the family already in America. On a mid-September day in 1920, eight years after my father had arrived in America, my mother, Venetia, her sister Patra and brother Demetrios (James), with his new wife Adamandia, boarded a ship called the Megali Hellas in Piraeus bound for New York. They had nineteen days of hell, with passengers falling sick all the way before they steamed past the Statue of Liberty and docked at Ellis Island on October 4, 1920. My mother, like my father, was seventeen when she first set foot in America. And like him, she traveled halfway across the continent. With the small group of immigrant Greeks, she boarded a train for Fremont, Nebraska, west of Omaha. It was all mapped out. She was to work as a housekeeper for her Uncle John and Aunt Vasso Petrow and nanny to their three children. John was an entrepreneur who owned a restaurant and a J. C. Penney store in Fremont. It was he who had sent the money for her passage. Venetia quickly learned that she would pay a price for her journey to America. She cleaned house and cared for John and Vasso's children and toiled in his restaurant, too. There was no letup and she, like my father, dreamed of what now seemed like a golden past in Greece. But to return home would have been disloyal, and she forced herself to look ahead. After three and a half years, when she turned twenty-one, Uncle John decided it was time for his ward to marry. This could not have come as bad news to my mother. The Nebraska Greek community was small and highly interwoven, and John knew where to find likely candidates for marriage to a beautiful and highly eligible young woman. One was my father, whose reputation for making a success of the Central Cafe had spread the 160 miles that separated Kearney from Fremont. Three bachelors called simultaneously at John Petrow's house that day in late May 1924. One, to hear my mother tell it, was a version of Washington Irving's Ichabod Crane, gawky and tall, all limbs and knees and elbows. The second apparently was not memorable enough to recall. The third was my father, smelling of Aqua Velva aftershave, his jet-black hair combed straight back from his forehead and shining with a dose of Lucky Tiger hair tonic. As the bachelors sat in the Petrow living room, no doubt appraising one another, my mother served them water and fruit drinks and thus had a chance to imagine what might lie ahead. "Which one do you want?" her uncle asked when she returned to the kitchen with the empty tray. She and my father were married forty days later. The Peterson Family Begins They were married twice, as it turned out. The first time, on July 6, they exchanged vows in the Fremont chambers of a Dodge County judge named Wintersteen. This was legal and official, but it lacked the overarching authority of the Greek church. The church ceremony came a few days later, when the one Greek Orthodox priest for Nebraska and parts of Iowa had a break in his schedule and came out from Omaha. Uncle John Petrow had assembled his Greek friends and relatives in a roped-off section of the J. C. Penney store before it opened. Uncle John gave Venetia away, and a cousin of my father's stood up as his best man. My parents dressed for this one, my father in a rented tuxedo, my mother in a white dress and a fantastic hat made from layers of chiffon. She carried an equally fantastic spray of flowers. By all accounts the -occasion was a joyous one, but the formality of the official wedding portraits seems to have overwhelmed them. Neither looks happy. They stare at the camera with grave, almost grim expressions, in my mother's case perhaps because the Greek Orthodox ceremony places the wife secondary to the husband, who is "head of his wife" in a marriage. After-ward, everyone rode out to the Petrow farm for the wedding lunch. I imagine those early days were hard. They were two people whose only certain points of common interest were that they were Greek and had to struggle to survive. My father, the child of poverty, ascetic and hardworking; my mother, warmer and spontaneous—in a perfect world each would have complemented the other and compensated for what the other lacked. But the depth of their divisions came to light at once. They honeymooned in Colorado. This was not a romantic choice, but a family obligation. My father's closest maternal relative in the United States, his mother's sister, lived in Colorado Springs and he wanted to show his new bride to his aunt. My mother had the idea that her honeymoon was worth recording, so she got her hands on a Brownie camera and took some photographs. Somehow this escaped my father's notice. Back in Kearney, they set up housekeeping. My mother had the film developed and one day, when they were walking the seven blocks from the Central Cafe to their house—the family budget did not permit a car—she brought out the photographs to show my father. She must have been shocked at his reaction. He erupted in fury, raging at her "gall" and "disrespect" for taking and developing photographs without his knowledge and consent. It was an act of disobedience, and furthermore, an unapproved expense. No bride of his could walk with her husband after committing such an act. He ordered her across the street to walk on the opposite sidewalk the rest of the way home. What to make of this? It was not in my mother's nature or her cultural background to complain about her marriage, but it was she and not my father who told me this story many years after it had occurred. In fact, she waited until he died to tell me, although I had long since concluded that she had much more to complain about. After my father's death, her manner was completely different from the one I had known much of my life. As a widow, she found a joy I hadn't seen. She spoke with a voice that was happy and light. Cousins who had known her as a girl in Greece said she was that girl again. She was finally free of the yoke of the imperious patriarch, my father. She always was a loving mother. That was clear to me from my earliest moments. She could anticipate my needs, which spoiled me and caused problems later in my life when others—business colleagues as well as romantic partners—could not do the same. Her doting gave me a punch line when Jewish colleagues told me stories about the fussy attentions of their mothers and their maternal pride. I'd listen to them all and say, when they were finished, "Greek mothers make Jewish mothers look criminally negligent." The world began to open up to me when I was about three. By then I had already been to Greece with my parents on a visit to their home villages, but I was only two and don't remember the trip. One of my first memories is of attending a movie with my mother. It was Al Jolson's The Singing Fool, the tale of a singer who broke the hearts of those early talking-picture audiences as he sang "Sonny Boy" to his -dying son. I remember jumping up in the dark theater and shouting, "I am the Sonny Boy!" My mother shrugged off the stares and laughed and hugged me. Soon after that, in 1929, my sister, Elaine, was born. I think this fulfilled my mother in some way that I or any son could not. My mother felt born again. Elaine would achieve the life my mother had imagined for herself. The year after Elaine was born, we were happy. The following summer, my parents drove away—we were now the owners of a Model T Ford—to spend a weekend with the Petrows in Fremont. They had two things to celebrate—the Fourth of July and their sixth wedding anniversary two days later. They left Elaine and me in the care of one of Kearney's eight Greek families, but before the weekend was over Elaine developed a frightening, barking cough. A phone call brought my parents rushing home, but it was too late. She died at age one on their anniversary, July 6, of croup. Croup is a child's disease, a normally mild viral infection that restricts the upper airways. The worst cases occur not in the summer but in the winter and the early spring, and even in those cases it is rarely life-threatening. But this time the stars were cruelly misaligned. That Elaine died was bad enough. That her death occurred on the anniversary of a marriage that was tense at best can only have added to the pain. My father was a stoic. Of my two parents, my mother seemed to suffer far more. A deep gloom descended over my mother and she could not escape it. Pregnant at the time of Elaine's death, two months later she went into early labor, two months premature. She called my father at the cafe to say she was having rapid contractions and needed to go to the hospital. He told her he was baking pies and couldn't leave, and sent someone else to take her. My brother, John, was born into her sadness. And pretty baby though he was, he could not lift her spirits. Nor could I, as eager as I was to see her smile and feel her warmth again. But her life was as barren as the Nebraska winter that followed the summer of Elaine's death. "Just push me into the grave with my beloved Elaine," I heard her say once to my father. She couldn't even bear to hold my brother when he was a baby, something my brother never got over. I had felt special, doted on, warm, secure, and all of that vanished. After Elaine's death, my mother was a different woman, cold, detached, and strange. I tried to be perfect and loving in order to please her: There we are, the two of us, in the kitchen of our house. I am standing over the register in the corner trying to catch the heat rising from the coal furnace in the basement, but my father keeps the heat low to save money and I am never warm enough, so I shiver, hug myself, hop from foot to foot. It's a little dance I do for her, hoping she will notice. She sits across the room at the table, with a heavy shawl around her shoulders, her fingers twisting the fringes at the ends, staring at nothing. Sometimes she hums, over and over, a sad tune that must have been a Greek lament. But more often she sits in utter silence. That is the worst. The silence is a clammy hand, and I try to drive it away with Mommy this, Mommy that, Mommy, Mommy, Mommy. And she responds with more silence. That is why, today, I fill a pause with words, too many, some would say. In my experience, silence is a pall. Freudian psychologists tell us that a child's separation from the mother, when the child suddenly realizes he or she is no longer the center of the solar system, is nearly always painful. When the separation takes place at a very young age, suddenly and in the midst of tragedy or trauma, it is especially painful. As indeed I learned. Thus, the year went by. My father, deprived of his helpmate at the restaurant, decided to try anything to get her back. This led him to bring her to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, which by the early 1930s was already a major medical institution serving a wide range of conditions both physical and mental. My mother stayed there for two or three weeks, and returned with a diagnosis of "nervousness." How language changes. What was once called "melancholia" evolved into "neurasthenia," then "nervousness," and then the dire-sounding "nervous breakdown." Today she would have "clinical depression," the debilitating state memorably described by novelist William Styron as "darkness visible." The cure prescribed, in those days before effective and tolerable psychotropic drugs, was rest and counseling. She got the rest, but not the counseling. Enter Mrs. Boulos. That Kearney, Nebraska, could be so filled with immigrants strikes me as remarkable only in retrospect. Our little neighborhood seven blocks from downtown included not only Greeks but a poor Lebanese Catholic woman. Her kitchen was always fragrant with the smell of fresh-baked pita bread. She offered a lifeline of escape from the lonely quiet imposed by our mother's need to rest and withdraw. As soon as my brother, John, was big enough to toddle, I would take him by the hand first thing on weekday mornings and lead him through backyards to Mrs. Boulos's kitchen door. Barreling into her warm kitchen, we left behind our distracted mother and received instead the indulgence of an older woman whose own children were grown. She must have liked having children around, because she fussed and served us piping hot rounds of pita bread and tousled our hair as we sat at her kitchen table with our toys. If my own mother ever resented this turn to a substitute, I never knew it. She was probably relieved that we left her to her rest, and neither she nor my father ever worried, because the Bouloses were friends as well as neighbors. As John got older and more athletic, he tried to outrun me to Mrs. Boulos's door, but it didn't matter who got there first since she was equally warm and giving to us both. "Economia!" My father played a small part in this equation. As my awareness grew, he was a distracted and elusive figure who appeared mainly late at night. Sometimes, if I was up early on a weekday, around six or so, I could see him leave for work. He would rush into the kitchen fresh from shaving, his cheeks aglow, combed-back hair still neat and glistening, wearing the uniform in which he presided over the Central Cafe—dark pants and a white shirt, a tie that he stuck between the buttons of the shirt to protect from stains, black shoes, and white socks, the socks white on the theory that white was better for the feet because it retained less heat and moisture. Then he was gone. There were no hugs, kisses, or conversation, only the kitchen door banging in his wake. Saturday night was the occasion for a family meal at the cafe, but even then my father was continually jumping up to attend to customers. On Sundays we had lunch together at home, but this was a hurried affair at around eleven-thirty in the morning so he could get back to the cafe by noon. When he came home at night, usually at nine or later, he looked exhausted, his combed-back hair unkempt, the cheeks that had been glowing in the morning now dark with stubble, the promise of his white socks replaced by the reality of fifteen painful hours on his feet and varicose veins that he wrapped in damp cloths and soaked in a tub of water laced with Epsom salts while he sat at the kitchen table with his trouser legs rolled up. He didn't talk to us, or to Mother, very much. (I never once in my lifetime saw him hug her.) There was no joshing, no sitting down with us to read, not much curiosity about how we spent our days or what we were studying in school. He never worked around the home, never mowed the grass. Yet it wasn't that he didn't care for us. It was just that he seemed able to express his love only by his utter and exhausting devotion to our livelihood and our future through his work at the cafe. He was what would later come to be called a workaholic, and this tendency to focus on work at the expense of family and personal relationships was, unfortunately, one of the legacies he passed on to me. Elaine had died approximately eight months after the stock market crash of October 1929. I was too young to notice how things changed as a result of the widespread loss of jobs and income that came to be called the Great Depression. Farmers had been locked in a depression of their own caused by crop surpluses, drought, and mortgage debt for most of the 1920s, so maybe things didn't change that much in Kearney. Cattle and hogs continued to ride through daily on the Union -Pacific, one-way passengers bound for the Omaha stockyards. I do remember that encouragements to thrift were everywhere, at the cafe and at home. Visiting the cafe's sole bathroom brought one face-to-face with the sign my father had taped to the paper towel dispenser: "Why Use Two When One Wipes Dry." It was not a question. To my father, "big spender" was a big-time insult. But at least the customer had a choice. At home things were different. There we lived according to a set of rigid guidelines calculated to squeeze every last measure of wastefulness out of our behavior. The worst of these governed the weekly Saturday night bath. Never was a ritual designed that said more about a child's place in the pecking order. It began with a steaming tub in our one small—and in the winter frigidly cold—bathroom. My father was first into the tub, and I expect he sank into the hot water with a sigh of relief from the pain of his labors. Once he was soaped and rinsed and out, it was my mother's turn. Next, it was time for John and me. We bathed together in the twice-used, now lukewarm water, and it was never clear to me whether I was cleaner after the bath, or before. The living room was kept cold and was sealed off during the entire winter, as was the small guest bedroom that my father had made by erecting a wall that cut the living room in half. The bedroom was opened for guests, who came frequently and often unannounced. This was a habit among Nebraska's Greek immigrants; they treated one another's houses and restaurants like wayside inns where they expected to find overnight lodgings and good food, all for free. In our house they had to endure the plastic coverings my father kept on all the furniture to protect the upholstery, another of his economizing measures. But my mother loved the company and saw these visits as great social occasions. Other visitors stayed longer. I would arrive home from school to find that a new crop of my father's relatives from Greece had shown up, wearing odd clothes and carrying old suitcases tied up with twine, and had taken over the guest bedroom where they would stay for months while they worked
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2303
{"url": "http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Books/story?id=7788674&page=1&singlePage=true", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "abcnews.go.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:33:33Z", "digest": "sha1:XRFVFXW4ZOSNN6K5NKE4G2QEWLO67YM3"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 32774, 32774.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 32774, 33464.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 32774, 81.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 32774, 139.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 32774, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 32774, 289.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 32774, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 32774, 0.44903621]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 32774, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 32774, 0.00695245]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 32774, 0.00695245]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 32774, 0.0057617]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 32774, 0.0057617]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 32774, 0.00211262]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 32774, 0.00184374]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 32774, 0.0083236]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 32774, 0.13449182]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 32774, 0.30564613]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 32774, 4.46782221]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 32774, 6.20815493]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 32774, 5827.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 98, 0.0], [98, 170, 0.0], [170, 214, 1.0], [214, 382, 1.0], [382, 455, 1.0], [455, 638, 1.0], [638, 936, 1.0], [936, 1248, 1.0], [1248, 1594, 0.0], [1594, 1802, 1.0], [1802, 1914, 1.0], [1914, 2080, 0.0], [2080, 2198, 0.0], [2198, 2248, 0.0], [2248, 2343, 1.0], [2343, 2466, 1.0], [2466, 2649, 1.0], [2649, 2756, 1.0], [2756, 2867, 0.0], [2867, 2989, 1.0], [2989, 3345, 1.0], [3345, 3407, 0.0], [3407, 3596, 1.0], [3596, 3784, 1.0], [3784, 3827, 0.0], [3827, 3922, 1.0], [3922, 4130, 1.0], [4130, 4202, 0.0], [4202, 4220, 0.0], [4220, 4240, 0.0], [4240, 4929, 1.0], [4929, 5660, 1.0], [5660, 6459, 1.0], [6459, 6835, 1.0], [6835, 7174, 1.0], [7174, 7193, 0.0], [7193, 7610, 1.0], [7610, 8893, 1.0], [8893, 9583, 1.0], [9583, 11274, 1.0], [11274, 11773, 1.0], [11773, 12323, 1.0], [12323, 12954, 1.0], [12954, 13496, 1.0], [13496, 14049, 0.0], [14049, 14729, 1.0], [14729, 14824, 1.0], [14824, 15663, 1.0], [15663, 16087, 1.0], [16087, 16606, 1.0], [16606, 16914, 1.0], [16914, 17542, 1.0], [17542, 17637, 1.0], [17637, 17686, 1.0], [17686, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 18961, 1.0], [18961, 19091, 0.0], [19091, 19372, 1.0], [19372, 19787, 1.0], [19787, 20087, 1.0], [20087, 20455, 1.0], [20455, 21126, 1.0], [21126, 21635, 0.0], [21635, 22194, 1.0], [22194, 22463, 1.0], [22463, 23487, 1.0], [23487, 23899, 1.0], [23899, 24318, 1.0], [24318, 25427, 1.0], [25427, 25763, 1.0], [25763, 26618, 1.0], [26618, 27542, 1.0], [27542, 27946, 1.0], [27946, 27958, 0.0], [27958, 28723, 1.0], [28723, 30141, 1.0], [30141, 30994, 1.0], [30994, 31792, 1.0], [31792, 32483, 1.0], [32483, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 98, 0.0], [98, 170, 0.0], [170, 214, 0.0], [214, 382, 0.0], [382, 455, 0.0], [455, 638, 0.0], [638, 936, 0.0], [936, 1248, 0.0], [1248, 1594, 0.0], [1594, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1914, 0.0], [1914, 2080, 0.0], [2080, 2198, 0.0], [2198, 2248, 0.0], [2248, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2466, 0.0], [2466, 2649, 0.0], [2649, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2867, 0.0], [2867, 2989, 0.0], [2989, 3345, 0.0], [3345, 3407, 0.0], [3407, 3596, 0.0], [3596, 3784, 0.0], [3784, 3827, 0.0], [3827, 3922, 0.0], [3922, 4130, 0.0], [4130, 4202, 0.0], [4202, 4220, 0.0], [4220, 4240, 0.0], [4240, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 5660, 0.0], [5660, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 6835, 0.0], [6835, 7174, 0.0], [7174, 7193, 0.0], [7193, 7610, 0.0], [7610, 8893, 0.0], [8893, 9583, 0.0], [9583, 11274, 0.0], [11274, 11773, 0.0], [11773, 12323, 0.0], [12323, 12954, 0.0], [12954, 13496, 0.0], [13496, 14049, 0.0], [14049, 14729, 0.0], [14729, 14824, 0.0], [14824, 15663, 0.0], [15663, 16087, 0.0], [16087, 16606, 0.0], [16606, 16914, 0.0], [16914, 17542, 0.0], [17542, 17637, 0.0], [17637, 17686, 0.0], [17686, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 18961, 0.0], [18961, 19091, 0.0], [19091, 19372, 0.0], [19372, 19787, 0.0], [19787, 20087, 0.0], [20087, 20455, 0.0], [20455, 21126, 0.0], [21126, 21635, 0.0], [21635, 22194, 0.0], [22194, 22463, 0.0], [22463, 23487, 0.0], [23487, 23899, 0.0], [23899, 24318, 0.0], [24318, 25427, 0.0], [25427, 25763, 0.0], [25763, 26618, 0.0], [26618, 27542, 0.0], [27542, 27946, 0.0], [27946, 27958, 0.0], [27958, 28723, 0.0], [28723, 30141, 0.0], [30141, 30994, 0.0], [30994, 31792, 0.0], [31792, 32483, 0.0], [32483, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 43, 4.0], [43, 98, 8.0], [98, 170, 10.0], [170, 214, 7.0], [214, 382, 29.0], [382, 455, 12.0], [455, 638, 28.0], [638, 936, 50.0], [936, 1248, 48.0], [1248, 1594, 61.0], [1594, 1802, 33.0], [1802, 1914, 20.0], [1914, 2080, 29.0], [2080, 2198, 16.0], [2198, 2248, 9.0], [2248, 2343, 13.0], [2343, 2466, 20.0], [2466, 2649, 26.0], [2649, 2756, 16.0], [2756, 2867, 18.0], [2867, 2989, 19.0], [2989, 3345, 64.0], [3345, 3407, 11.0], [3407, 3596, 33.0], [3596, 3784, 32.0], [3784, 3827, 7.0], [3827, 3922, 14.0], [3922, 4130, 37.0], [4130, 4202, 11.0], [4202, 4220, 3.0], [4220, 4240, 4.0], [4240, 4929, 125.0], [4929, 5660, 126.0], [5660, 6459, 142.0], [6459, 6835, 69.0], [6835, 7174, 61.0], [7174, 7193, 3.0], [7193, 7610, 73.0], [7610, 8893, 233.0], [8893, 9583, 128.0], [9583, 11274, 309.0], [11274, 11773, 85.0], [11773, 12323, 98.0], [12323, 12954, 108.0], [12954, 13496, 99.0], [13496, 14049, 97.0], [14049, 14729, 124.0], [14729, 14824, 18.0], [14824, 15663, 149.0], [15663, 16087, 79.0], [16087, 16606, 97.0], [16606, 16914, 51.0], [16914, 17542, 109.0], [17542, 17637, 18.0], [17637, 17686, 9.0], [17686, 17713, 4.0], [17713, 18961, 222.0], [18961, 19091, 23.0], [19091, 19372, 47.0], [19372, 19787, 71.0], [19787, 20087, 53.0], [20087, 20455, 63.0], [20455, 21126, 132.0], [21126, 21635, 85.0], [21635, 22194, 110.0], [22194, 22463, 51.0], [22463, 23487, 185.0], [23487, 23899, 77.0], [23899, 24318, 83.0], [24318, 25427, 214.0], [25427, 25763, 59.0], [25763, 26618, 133.0], [26618, 27542, 158.0], [27542, 27946, 77.0], [27946, 27958, 1.0], [27958, 28723, 139.0], [28723, 30141, 269.0], [30141, 30994, 149.0], [30994, 31792, 149.0], [31792, 32483, 119.0], [32483, 32774, 52.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 98, 0.0], [98, 170, 0.0], [170, 214, 0.0], [214, 382, 0.0125], [382, 455, 0.125], [455, 638, 0.0], [638, 936, 0.02083333], [936, 1248, 0.00331126], [1248, 1594, 0.0], [1594, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1914, 0.00917431], [1914, 2080, 0.0], [2080, 2198, 0.0], [2198, 2248, 0.02083333], [2248, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2466, 0.0], [2466, 2649, 0.0], [2649, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2867, 0.00925926], [2867, 2989, 0.0], [2989, 3345, 0.0], [3345, 3407, 0.01694915], [3407, 3596, 0.0], [3596, 3784, 0.0], [3784, 3827, 0.02439024], [3827, 3922, 0.0], [3922, 4130, 0.0], [4130, 4202, 0.0], [4202, 4220, 0.05882353], [4220, 4240, 0.0], [4240, 4929, 0.01791045], [4929, 5660, 0.00559441], [5660, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 6835, 0.02222222], [6835, 7174, 0.00906344], [7174, 7193, 0.0], [7193, 7610, 0.0], [7610, 8893, 0.0], [8893, 9583, 0.0], [9583, 11274, 0.00241838], [11274, 11773, 0.0], [11773, 12323, 0.0], [12323, 12954, 0.0], [12954, 13496, 0.0], [13496, 14049, 0.0], [14049, 14729, 0.0], [14729, 14824, 0.0], [14824, 15663, 0.01101591], [15663, 16087, 0.0], [16087, 16606, 0.0], [16606, 16914, 0.00990099], [16914, 17542, 0.00654664], [17542, 17637, 0.0], [17637, 17686, 0.0], [17686, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 18961, 0.0008244], [18961, 19091, 0.0], [19091, 19372, 0.0], [19372, 19787, 0.0], [19787, 20087, 0.0], [20087, 20455, 0.0], [20455, 21126, 0.0], [21126, 21635, 0.0], [21635, 22194, 0.0], [22194, 22463, 0.01550388], [22463, 23487, 0.001001], [23487, 23899, 0.0], [23899, 24318, 0.0], [24318, 25427, 0.0], [25427, 25763, 0.0], [25763, 26618, 0.00488998], [26618, 27542, 0.0], [27542, 27946, 0.0], [27946, 27958, 0.0], [27958, 28723, 0.0], [28723, 30141, 0.0], [30141, 30994, 0.00968523], [30994, 31792, 0.0], [31792, 32483, 0.0], [32483, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 98, 0.0], [98, 170, 0.0], [170, 214, 0.0], [214, 382, 0.0], [382, 455, 0.0], [455, 638, 0.0], [638, 936, 0.0], [936, 1248, 0.0], [1248, 1594, 0.0], [1594, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1914, 0.0], [1914, 2080, 0.0], [2080, 2198, 0.0], [2198, 2248, 0.0], [2248, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2466, 0.0], [2466, 2649, 0.0], [2649, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2867, 0.0], [2867, 2989, 0.0], [2989, 3345, 0.0], [3345, 3407, 0.0], [3407, 3596, 0.0], [3596, 3784, 0.0], [3784, 3827, 0.0], [3827, 3922, 0.0], [3922, 4130, 0.0], [4130, 4202, 0.0], [4202, 4220, 0.0], [4220, 4240, 0.0], [4240, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 5660, 0.0], [5660, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 6835, 0.0], [6835, 7174, 0.0], [7174, 7193, 0.0], [7193, 7610, 0.0], [7610, 8893, 0.0], [8893, 9583, 0.0], [9583, 11274, 0.0], [11274, 11773, 0.0], [11773, 12323, 0.0], [12323, 12954, 0.0], [12954, 13496, 0.0], [13496, 14049, 0.0], [14049, 14729, 0.0], [14729, 14824, 0.0], [14824, 15663, 0.0], [15663, 16087, 0.0], [16087, 16606, 0.0], [16606, 16914, 0.0], [16914, 17542, 0.0], [17542, 17637, 0.0], [17637, 17686, 0.0], [17686, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 18961, 0.0], [18961, 19091, 0.0], [19091, 19372, 0.0], [19372, 19787, 0.0], [19787, 20087, 0.0], [20087, 20455, 0.0], [20455, 21126, 0.0], [21126, 21635, 0.0], [21635, 22194, 0.0], [22194, 22463, 0.0], [22463, 23487, 0.0], [23487, 23899, 0.0], [23899, 24318, 0.0], [24318, 25427, 0.0], [25427, 25763, 0.0], [25763, 26618, 0.0], [26618, 27542, 0.0], [27542, 27946, 0.0], [27946, 27958, 0.0], [27958, 28723, 0.0], [28723, 30141, 0.0], [30141, 30994, 0.0], [30994, 31792, 0.0], [31792, 32483, 0.0], [32483, 32774, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.23255814], [43, 98, 0.10909091], [98, 170, 0.11111111], [170, 214, 0.09090909], [214, 382, 0.04761905], [382, 455, 0.08219178], [455, 638, 0.03825137], [638, 936, 0.05033557], [936, 1248, 0.01282051], [1248, 1594, 0.04046243], [1594, 1802, 0.00961538], [1802, 1914, 0.0625], [1914, 2080, 0.02409639], [2080, 2198, 0.01694915], [2198, 2248, 0.12], [2248, 2343, 0.02105263], [2343, 2466, 0.01626016], [2466, 2649, 0.01092896], [2649, 2756, 0.01869159], [2756, 2867, 0.0990991], [2867, 2989, 0.01639344], [2989, 3345, 0.00842697], [3345, 3407, 0.14516129], [3407, 3596, 0.00529101], [3596, 3784, 0.02659574], [3784, 3827, 0.11627907], [3827, 3922, 0.01052632], [3922, 4130, 0.00480769], [4130, 4202, 0.08333333], [4202, 4220, 0.11111111], [4220, 4240, 0.1], [4240, 4929, 0.02467344], [4929, 5660, 0.01367989], [5660, 6459, 0.02002503], [6459, 6835, 0.02925532], [6835, 7174, 0.02359882], [7174, 7193, 0.10526316], [7193, 7610, 0.02877698], [7610, 8893, 0.01325019], [8893, 9583, 0.0115942], [9583, 11274, 0.01655825], [11274, 11773, 0.03006012], [11773, 12323, 0.01090909], [12323, 12954, 0.01584786], [12954, 13496, 0.01291513], [13496, 14049, 0.03074141], [14049, 14729, 0.02205882], [14729, 14824, 0.04210526], [14824, 15663, 0.03694875], [15663, 16087, 0.04481132], [16087, 16606, 0.02312139], [16606, 16914, 0.02922078], [16914, 17542, 0.02707006], [17542, 17637, 0.01052632], [17637, 17686, 0.02040816], [17686, 17713, 0.14814815], [17713, 18961, 0.02724359], [18961, 19091, 0.02307692], [19091, 19372, 0.00711744], [19372, 19787, 0.02650602], [19787, 20087, 0.02], [20087, 20455, 0.01086957], [20455, 21126, 0.01788376], [21126, 21635, 0.01571709], [21635, 22194, 0.03577818], [22194, 22463, 0.02973978], [22463, 23487, 0.02441406], [23487, 23899, 0.01699029], [23899, 24318, 0.02625298], [24318, 25427, 0.02344454], [25427, 25763, 0.01190476], [25763, 26618, 0.01754386], [26618, 27542, 0.02056277], [27542, 27946, 0.01980198], [27946, 27958, 0.08333333], [27958, 28723, 0.0130719], [28723, 30141, 0.00916784], [30141, 30994, 0.02579132], [30994, 31792, 0.01754386], [31792, 32483, 0.01013025], [32483, 32774, 0.01030928]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 32774, 0.90195823]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 32774, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 32774, 0.76440114]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 32774, 1458.40205091]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 32774, 776.6057216]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 32774, -222.89041254]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 32774, 318.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
abcnews.go.com
This Week In Pictures: April 7, 2013 Guilford County Animal Control officer E. Afari carries a loose pig to his truck after catching it in Greensboro, N.C., April 11, 2013. Citizens in the area called police after seeing the animal roaming around the area. Nelson Kepley/News & Record/AP Photo Today in Pictures: April 12, 2003Guilford County Animal Control officer E. Afari carries a loose pig to his truck after catching it in Greensboro, N.C., April 11, 2013. Citizens in the area called police after seeing the animal roaming around the area. Nelson Kepley/News & Record/AP PhotoToday in Pictures: April 12, 2003A girl sits by Buddhist monks during a public meeting of the Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, after he was awarded the Minority Award by province of Bolzano, April 11, 2013, in Trento, Italy.Olivier Morin/AFP/Getty ImagesToday in Pictures: April 12, 2003This photo shows the Kennecott Utah Copper Bingham Canyon Mine after a landslide, April 11, 2013, in Bingham Canyon, Utah. Kennecott Utah Copper has suspended mining inside one of the world's deepest open pits as geologists assess a landslide the company says it anticipated for months. Ravell Call/The Deseret News/AP PhotoToday in Pictures: April 12, 2003Volunteers place grave markers on the National Mall as over 3,300 crosses, stars of David, and other religious symbols are placed to remember those affected by gun violence, April 11, 2013, in Washington, DC. Mark Wilson/Getty ImagesToday in Pictures: April 11, 2013A woman observes from her window, as fireman inspect the debris after a fire in central Bermeo, Spain, April 11, 2013. EPAToday in Pictures: April 11, 2013Actors Robert Downey Jr. and Sir Ben Kingsley attend a photocall on the roof of The Ritz Carlton hotel during the Russia Tour for Iron Man 3, April 10, 2013, in Moscow, Russia. Oleg Nikishin/Epsilon/Getty ImagesToday in Pictures: April 11, 2013An Israeli woman is arrested for wearing a prayer shawl at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, April 11, 2013. Israeli police have detained five women while praying at the Western Wall in Jerusalem for performing religious rituals that ultra-Orthodox Jews say are reserved for men. Michal Fattal/AP PhotoToday in Pictures: April 11, 2013An Afghan woman waits in a changing room to try out a new Burqa, in a shop at in the old city of Kabul, Afghanistan, April 11, 2013. Before the Taliban took power in Afghanistan, the Burqa was infrequently worn in cities. Anja Niedringhaus/AP PhotoToday In Pictures: April 10, 2013People walk past a flowering tree in Manhattan during warm weather, April 9, 2013, in New York City. For the first time since October, temperatures rose above 70 degrees in New York and surrounding areas.Mario Tama/Getty ImagesToday In Pictures: April 10, 2013Sculptor Helaine Blumenfeld stands next to her bronze sculpture, Flight, which has been installed inside Salisbury Cathedral as part of her major new sculpture exhibition, Messenger of the Spirit, April 10, 2013 in Salisbury, England.Matt Cardy/Getty ImagesToday In Pictures: April 10, 2013Nepalese people carry a dead leopard who attacked locals at Gothatar, Katmandu, Nepal, April 10, 2013. According to reports, 15 people were injured including three policemen and two officials from the Department of Forestry. The leopard was later killed with the help of Nepalese policemen and local media. Niranjan Shrestha/AP PhotoToday In Pictures: April 10, 2013A Kashmiri government employee shouts as policemen beat him during a protest in Srinagar, India, April 10, 2013. Police used force to stop government employees during a protest called by the workers' union demanding regularization of contractual jobs and a hike in salary.Mukhtar Khan/AP PhotoToday in Pictures: April 9, 2013Michigan guard Trey Burke (3) walks off the court as confetti falls on Louisville players, including Russ Smith (2), Luke Hancock (11), Stephan Van Treese (44) and Zach Price (25), after the NCAA Final Four tournament college basketball championship game, April 8, 2013, in Atlanta. Louisville won 82-76.Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution/AP PhotoToday in Pictures: April 9, 2013This picture taken, April 8, 2013, shows ice hanging on flowers in a garden in Hami, northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. A sharp temperature decrease has hit this area following a strong cold air. AFP/Getty ImagesToday in Pictures: April 8, 2013Revelers take part in a giant pillow fight in Trafalgar Square on "International Pillow Fight Day," April 6, 2013 in London. Oli Scarff/Getty ImagesToday in Pictures: April 8, 2013A health worker takes a swab sample from a chicken at Meijiang poultry wholesale market, April 8, 2013, in Changde, China. China has confirmed 21 H7N9 bird flu cases, including six deaths.ChinaFotoPress/Getty ImagesToday in Pictures: April 8, 2013A topless demonstrator with written messages on her back walks towards Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, during the opening tour at the Hannover Fair in Hanover, Germany, April 8, 2013. Several activists stormed the booth of Volkswagen to demonstrate in presence of the politicians. Jochen Lurbke/dpa/AP Photo This Week In Pictures: April 7, 2013 All ABC News Photos Home> International > Photos > This Week In Pictures: April 7, 2013
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2304
{"url": "http://abcnews.go.com/International/photos/week-pictures-april-2013-19077176&page=16", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "abcnews.go.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T10:05:59Z", "digest": "sha1:UIW3DIT354V56OWX3M6G5J7NKQTR3QQV"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5315, 5315.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5315, 7430.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5315, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5315, 99.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5315, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5315, 328.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5315, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5315, 0.22337418]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5315, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5315, 0.08918982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5315, 0.21293486]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5315, 0.13635302]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5315, 0.10880224]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5315, 0.08918982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5315, 0.08918982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5315, 0.04669624]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5315, 0.07004436]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5315, 0.04856409]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5315, 0.02544769]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5315, 0.25636192]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5315, 0.52976914]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5315, 5.20413123]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5315, 5.42924007]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5315, 823.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 294, 0.0], [294, 5191, 0.0], [5191, 5248, 0.0], [5248, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 294, 0.0], [294, 5191, 0.0], [5191, 5248, 0.0], [5248, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 37, 7.0], [37, 294, 41.0], [294, 5191, 754.0], [5191, 5248, 11.0], [5248, 5315, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 37, 0.14705882], [37, 294, 0.02459016], [294, 5191, 0.04629433], [5191, 5248, 0.09259259], [5248, 5315, 0.08333333]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 294, 0.0], [294, 5191, 0.0], [5191, 5248, 0.0], [5248, 5315, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 37, 0.13513514], [37, 294, 0.07003891], [294, 5191, 0.06779661], [5191, 5248, 0.19298246], [5248, 5315, 0.11940299]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5315, 0.06939167]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5315, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5315, 0.91295809]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5315, -446.31079008]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5315, -100.97423569]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5315, -0.26640024]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5315, 39.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
abcnews.go.com
Login Radial velocity measurements of a sample of K-giants with the Hobby-Eberly telescope Niedzielski, A. and Wolszczan, A. and Konacki, M. Radial velocity measurements of a sample of K-giants with the Hobby-Eberly telescope. In: Stellar Astrophysics with the World's Largest Telescopes: First International Workshop on Stellar Astrophysics with the World's Largest Telescopes, Torun, Poland, 7-10 September 2004. American Institute of Physics Conference Proceedings. No.752. , Melville, NY, pp. 38-41. ISBN 0-7354-0237-X http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:NIEaipcp05 134KbUse this Persistent URL to link to this item: http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:NIEaipcp05AbstractWe present motivation and initial results of a large RV survey of K giants aimed at a detection of low-mass companions. The survey, performed with the Hobby-Eberly Telescope, utilizes high resolution (60,000) spectra for high precision radial velocity measurements. The primary goal of the survey is the selection of astrometrically stable reference stars for the Extrasolar Planet Interferometric Survey key project to be carried out with the Space Interferometry Mission.Item Type:Book SectionAdditional Information:©2005 American Institute of Physics. Issue Date: March 23, 2005. Kind cooperation of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope staff is acknowledged with thanks. We also thank C. Gelino for making available his list of SIM/EPIcS candidate reference stars. The Hobby-Eberly Telescope (HET) is a joint project of the University of Texas at Austin, the Pennsylvania State University, Stanford University, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, and Georg-August-Universität Göttingen. The HET is named in honor of its principal benefactors, William P. Hobby and Robert E. Eberly.Record Number:CaltechAUTHORS:NIEaipcp05Persistent URL:http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:NIEaipcp05Alternative URL:http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1893331Usage Policy:No commercial reproduction, distribution, display or performance rights in this work are provided.ID Code:9651Collection:CaltechAUTHORSDeposited By: Deposited On:21 Feb 2008Last Modified:26 Dec 2012 09:50Repository Staff Only: item control page
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2354
{"url": "http://authors.library.caltech.edu/9651/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "authors.library.caltech.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:18:18Z", "digest": "sha1:FZMWX3AFYNERGTRH3Q6UWJZOSQKTFTZS"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2183, 2183.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2183, 2695.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2183, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2183, 28.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2183, 0.77]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2183, 317.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2183, 0.18224299]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2183, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2183, 0.07845304]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2183, 0.13259669]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2183, 0.13259669]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2183, 0.13259669]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2183, 0.07845304]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2183, 0.07845304]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2183, 0.02320442]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2183, 0.06353591]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2183, 0.04475138]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2183, 0.04672897]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2183, 0.29906542]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2183, 0.64122137]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2183, 6.90839695]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2183, 4.79537695]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2183, 262.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 141, 1.0], [141, 227, 1.0], [227, 415, 1.0], [415, 469, 1.0], [469, 477, 1.0], [477, 504, 1.0], [504, 523, 0.0], [523, 577, 0.0], [577, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 141, 0.0], [141, 227, 0.0], [227, 415, 0.0], [415, 469, 0.0], [469, 477, 0.0], [477, 504, 0.0], [504, 523, 0.0], [523, 577, 0.0], [577, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 91, 13.0], [91, 141, 8.0], [141, 227, 12.0], [227, 415, 24.0], [415, 469, 6.0], [469, 477, 1.0], [477, 504, 4.0], [504, 523, 2.0], [523, 577, 1.0], [577, 2088, 178.0], [2088, 2183, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 141, 0.0], [141, 227, 0.0], [227, 415, 0.03932584], [415, 469, 0.0], [469, 477, 0.6], [477, 504, 0.21052632], [504, 523, 0.6], [523, 577, 0.04347826], [577, 2088, 0.02912621], [2088, 2183, 0.17582418]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 141, 0.0], [141, 227, 0.0], [227, 415, 0.0], [415, 469, 0.0], [469, 477, 0.0], [477, 504, 0.0], [504, 523, 0.0], [523, 577, 0.0], [577, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 91, 0.05494505], [91, 141, 0.12], [141, 227, 0.04651163], [227, 415, 0.09042553], [415, 469, 0.09259259], [469, 477, 0.125], [477, 504, 0.11111111], [504, 523, 0.26315789], [523, 577, 0.2037037], [577, 2088, 0.0939775], [2088, 2183, 0.09473684]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2183, 0.08693248]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2183, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2183, 0.19799054]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2183, -208.17137946]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2183, -90.40934084]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2183, -52.94073803]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2183, 34.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
authors.library.caltech.edu
Money Matters – youth development in Russia » Dzagoev Russia This entry was posted on Sunday, August 12th, 2012 at 10:08 am and is filed under .
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2359
{"url": "http://backpagefootball.com/money-matters-youth-development-in-russia/46601/dzagoev-russia/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "backpagefootball.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:35:06Z", "digest": "sha1:XD2VVRVKLLN266OUL2EGMM3UXFPVRIJU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 144, 144.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 144, 1234.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 144, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 144, 87.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 144, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 144, 223.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 144, 0.25806452]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 144, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 144, 0.29032258]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 144, 0.96153846]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 144, 4.38461538]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 144, 3.20477752]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 144, 26.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 144, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 10.0], [61, 144, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 144, 0.12820513]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.08196721], [61, 144, 0.03614458]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 144, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 144, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 144, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 144, -22.69360951]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 144, -6.66512441]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 144, -8.14382658]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 144, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
backpagefootball.com
Is climate change a passing fad? Question: Is climate change a passing fad? Copeland: There’s no question. There’s no question. I mean listen. Environmental awareness has been around since the ‘60s. It’s . . . There were problems in the ‘60s which we still face today in the same way that we did back then. And through the course of that . . . those last 40 years or so, there has been an increase in the intensity and the nature of those concerns. And yet we’ve still seen sway back and forth between a cultural awareness and a media awareness and not. The only thing that perhaps might separate us today than, you know . . . than those past trends that came and went is the increased number and the breadth of those . . . of those natural disasters and the occurrence . . . and those occurrences. And so I think that today it is very difficult to turn a blind eye to an event that may claim dozens if not hundreds of thousands of lives and create millions if not billions of dollars of damages; and thereby really crippling certain types of budgets, and at times certain economies. So I don’t think that the environmental platform, as well as that through the . . . you know the advent of communication, and the, you know . . . and by making good use of communication through, as you were mentioning earlier, those different mediums – whether they be films or books and whatnot – we are penetrating the collective consciousness in a way that is perhaps more proactive, and especially more effective than had been done in the past; as well as that through the exponential demographic growth . . . the explosive demographic growth that we’re experiencing, and with it the claim into the industrial market that . . . that those different . . . that that demographic is creating. We are faced with inescapable realities, and we live in a way that is simply not sustainable . . . not at . . . when you . . . When a population . . . our global population has more than doubled in 50 years, and has more than tripled in 100 years; and when we see that our reliance on, you know . . . on plastics, you know . . . In the U.S. we use 200,000 plastic bags every five seconds. We discard two million plastic bottles every five minutes. When you factor that about two percent of that is recycled, the rest of that is landfill. When you see that our oceans are being over fished, and that our lands are being polluted through heavy metal pollutants, and mercury, and PCBs, POPs – persistent organic pollutants – and what not, we are literally contaminating our waterways; that we are polluting our air, and it’s having an impact not just on the quality of living, but our health in the sense that we are seeing an increase in instances of asthma in children, and all the different activities that are directly being impacted by our . . . by our industrial economy and our consumerism. Then I think it’s very difficult to escape the platform of environmental awareness. And all the while there are no guarantees. I think that through the medium of communication it’s gonna be . . . become more and more apparent that we need to address this issue. And then we can go into debate whether we have a shot at doing it or not. But I don’t think the platform itself is gonna disappear. Recorded on: 12/3/07 More ideas from Sebastian Copeland Can technology fix climate change? Does it take sleek packaging for us to pay attention to the environment? How scared should we be? by Sebastian Copeland There’s a danger that this too will fade in our consciousness, Copeland says. Is climate change a passing...
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2374
{"url": "http://bigthink.com/videos/is-climate-change-a-passing-fad", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "bigthink.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:06:17Z", "digest": "sha1:PEZUB3CDL3SOFBBOT5QRGAWZEBHZFG5T"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3586, 3586.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3586, 6379.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3586, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3586, 70.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3586, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3586, 226.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3586, 0.5]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3586, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3586, 0.05094407]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3586, 0.03420021]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3586, 0.01068757]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3586, 0.01603135]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3586, 0.01710011]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3586, 0.0106383]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3586, 0.1]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3586, 0.1875]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3586, 0.44078947]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3586, 4.61677632]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3586, 0.00132979]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3586, 5.02010681]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3586, 608.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 33, 1.0], [33, 76, 1.0], [76, 3288, 0.0], [3288, 3323, 0.0], [3323, 3358, 1.0], [3358, 3431, 1.0], [3431, 3456, 1.0], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3556, 1.0], [3556, 3586, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 33, 0.0], [33, 76, 0.0], [76, 3288, 0.0], [3288, 3323, 0.0], [3323, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3431, 0.0], [3431, 3456, 0.0], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3556, 0.0], [3556, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 33, 6.0], [33, 76, 7.0], [76, 3288, 546.0], [3288, 3323, 5.0], [3323, 3358, 5.0], [3358, 3431, 13.0], [3431, 3456, 5.0], [3456, 3478, 3.0], [3478, 3556, 13.0], [3556, 3586, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 33, 0.0], [33, 76, 0.0], [76, 3288, 0.00721311], [3288, 3323, 0.0], [3323, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3431, 0.0], [3431, 3456, 0.0], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3556, 0.0], [3556, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 33, 0.0], [33, 76, 0.0], [76, 3288, 0.0], [3288, 3323, 0.0], [3323, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3431, 0.0], [3431, 3456, 0.0], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3556, 0.0], [3556, 3586, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 33, 0.03030303], [33, 76, 0.04651163], [76, 3288, 0.01120797], [3288, 3323, 0.08571429], [3323, 3358, 0.02857143], [3358, 3431, 0.01369863], [3431, 3456, 0.04], [3456, 3478, 0.09090909], [3478, 3556, 0.02564103], [3556, 3586, 0.03333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3586, 0.63142633]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3586, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3586, 0.15513724]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3586, -49.18325659]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3586, 84.10129297]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3586, -309.30411576]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3586, 46.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
bigthink.com
Tags > Desert Stories for "desert" 7 talks on ideas for life without water Posted By Kate Torgovnick MayJanuary 31, 2013 at 12:16 pm EDT The glittering skyline of Doha, the capital of Qatar, has become famous in recent years. But as Fahad Al-Attiya points out in today’s talk, the ability for any city to grow in Qatar is surprising. After all, this is a country without any water. Al-Attiya, the chair of Qatar’s National Food Security Programme, reveals that […]
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2403
{"url": "http://blog.ted.com/tag/desert/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "blog.ted.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:58:07Z", "digest": "sha1:CHCMREJZNHEWU6LHWEXWWSFDL666UZJ7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 464, 464.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 464, 2311.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 464, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 464, 62.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 464, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 464, 250.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 464, 0.30097087]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 464, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 464, 0.00970874]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 464, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 464, 0.23300971]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 464, 0.8]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 464, 4.575]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 464, 0.00970874]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 464, 4.06781728]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 464, 80.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 75, 0.0], [75, 137, 0.0], [137, 464, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 75, 0.0], [75, 137, 0.0], [137, 464, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 35, 5.0], [35, 75, 8.0], [75, 137, 11.0], [137, 464, 56.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 75, 0.02564103], [75, 137, 0.16949153], [137, 464, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 75, 0.0], [75, 137, 0.0], [137, 464, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.08571429], [35, 75, 0.0], [75, 137, 0.14516129], [137, 464, 0.04892966]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 464, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 464, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 464, -5.72e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 464, -46.39417236]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 464, 2.28465268]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 464, -17.35888893]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 464, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
blog.ted.com
How Same-Sex ‘Marriage’ Will Harm Christians It is all about equal rights, the gay “marriage” lobby keeps telling us. We just want the right to marry, like everyone else. That is what they are telling us. But that is not what they mean. If same-sex “marriage” becomes the law of the land, we can expect massive persecution of the Church. As my friend Jennifer Roback Morse notes in the National Catholic Register, “Legalizing same-sex ‘marriage’ is not a stand-alone policy . . . Once governments assert that same-sex unions are the equivalent of marriage, those governments must defend and enforce a whole host of other social changes.” The bad news is these changes affect other liberties we take for granted, such as religious freedom and private property rights. Several recent cases give us a sobering picture of what we can expect if we do not actively embrace-and even promote-same-sex “marriage.” For instance, a Methodist retreat center recently refused to allow two lesbian couples to use a campground pavilion for a civil union ceremony. The state of New Jersey punished the Methodists by revoking the center’s tax-exempt status-a vindictive attack on the Methodists’ religious liberty. In Massachusetts, where judges imposed gay marriage a few years ago, Catholic Charities was ordered to accept homosexual couples as candidates for adoption. Rather than comply with an order that would be harmful to children, Catholic Charities closed down its adoption program. California public schools have been told they must be “gay friendly,” as Roback Morse notes. But it will not stop with public schools. Just north of the border in Quebec, the government told a Mennonite school that it must conform to provincial law regarding curriculum-a curriculum that teaches children that homosexuality is a valid lifestyle. How long will it be before the U.S. government goes after private schools? Even speaking out against homosexuality can get you fired. Crystal Dixon, an associate vice president at the University of Toledo, was fired after writing an opinion piece in the Toledo Free Press in support of traditional marriage . . . Fired-for exercising her First Amendment rights! Promoters of same-sex “marriage” seem to go out of their way to target Christian businesses and churches. Their goal, it seems, is not the right to “marry,” but to punish anyone who disagrees with them. Clearly, there is a spiritual battle going on here: Christians are under attack because they are a public witness to the fact that a holy God created us male and female, and we will always put obedience to Him and His laws above obedience to any earthly demand for loyalty. The coming persecution of Christians is one more reason why we need to get involved with efforts to pass laws at the state and federal level defining marriage as a legal relationship between one man and one woman. We must protect, not only genuine marriage, but also many of the freedoms we now take for granted: freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of association, freedom to use private property the way we see fit-all are under threat. And we must tell our friends and neighbors why gay “marriage” is not just about equality: It is about forcing religious believers to accept the validity of the homosexual lifestyle-or else. By Charles Colson kent4jmj It may be hard to comprehend let alone accept the seriousness of what is euphemistically called the culture war. Mr. Colson’s article is the tip of an ice berg that will sink our Republic. We, like the Titanic, are vulnerable to sinking if unwilling to change course. We have crossed many lines, abortion, stem cell research, cloning, same sex marriage and the beginnings of euthanasia. Pray, pray hard and let God lead you to action. I know He wants the people of this Country to regain their Moral courage to speak and live the Truth. Pingback: Protect Marriage Equality » Charles Colson: How Same-Sex Marriage Will Harm Christians Bruce Roeder Didn’t Jesus say something about sowing and reaping? As we sow, so shall we reap…. Apparently, it’s only when we reap fruits whose taste we don’t care for that we remember this teaching. Some of us are only now noticing. And we find that we’ve yielded every point of the arguments. Years ago. Without a whimper. First, we removed the procreative aspect of marital love with contraception. We said the marriage embrace was about pleasure. Then, we legalized on demand, no-fault divorce. We said the marriage contract was about being happy. Now we are shocked — SHOCKED — that a loud demand for same-sex “marriage” is on the scene. Seems pretty logical, really. If marriage is about sexual pleasure (not babies) and about being happy (not lifelong commitment), then what is the objection? We gave up marriage long ago. Without a fight. It has not been considered a sacrament of God in the USA for a long time. And we want to fight about it NOW? irishcatholic This piece fails to address what ought to be the main point, which is why the recognition of same-sex marriages is harmful to society in and of itself. Our opponents deserve such a straightforward explanation, along with the material covered in this post about which future evils are risked. Here are four of the main reasons to oppose governmental recognition of same-sex marriages. 1) It amounts to a lie by the government: we know very well it is impossible for those of the same sex to marry. The love of a married couple requires sexual complementarity. 2) It is bad for the same-sex couples who attempt to marry. The legal recognition of their attempt encourages the idea that a commitment justifies a union which goes against God’s plan, and is not compatible with the true happiness of the persons involved. 3) Society’s laws shape what is seen as acceptable. Certainly, it is unlikely that a homosexual couple will repent of their homosexuality because the law is not changed to allow homosexual marriage. However, for the next generation that is struggling with sexuality, the legal recognition of homosexual marriages might contribute to a cultural atmosphere that sends the wrong message. For someone who might overcome over time the temptation to homosexuality in the right climate, a cultural climate that says homosexuality is all right might lead him/her (along with other factors) to ignore conscience and give in to temptation. 4) The slippery-slope argument, given in this article. But this argument presupposes an argument, such as in the first three reasons, which explains why government recognition of homosexuality is wrong in and of itself. However, the slippery-slope argument is helpful, because it highlights how high the stakes are — one cannot ignore the issue by brushing it off as only a small problem. Some might even argue it’s better not to fight this issue because it makes conservatives seem hateful, and doesn’t really help anything. Reason 1′s point about lying is an argument against this, and so are 2) and 3), but maybe the full force of this argument is not seen without the slippery-slope argument. Finally, I want to note that not all who argue for homosexual marriage “go out of their way to target Christian businesses and churches.” In response to Bruce Roeder: I take his point about the gradual diminishing of marriage, which is certainly, but it seems he didn’t state it quite precisely enough. “If marriage is about sexual pleasure (not babies) and about being happy (not lifelong commitment), then what is the objection?” Actually, marriage is about all four of those things, isn’t it? Isn’t marriage given by God to man for his happiness (in the true and fullest sense)? And there’s nothing wrong with sexual pleasure, in the context of a loving self-giving act. What’s wrong is to turn these two goods into idols. It is wrong to seek sexual pleasure for its own sake, and not as an expression of committed love that entails the entire gift of self; and it is wrong to break a life-long commitment because a marriage is not as happy as it could be.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2432
{"url": "http://catholicexchange.com/how-same-sex-marriage-will-harm-christians", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "catholicexchange.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:43:17Z", "digest": "sha1:IG3XDOGZX7VNEL5G3BW5O7O3F4ZZXMHJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8034, 8034.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8034, 9758.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8034, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8034, 84.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8034, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8034, 304.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8034, 8.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8034, 0.44086687]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8034, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8034, 0.0277307]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8034, 0.04097982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8034, 0.04097982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8034, 0.04097982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8034, 0.04097982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8034, 0.04097982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8034, 0.00693268]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8034, 0.00693268]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8034, 0.00400555]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8034, 0.00495356]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8034, 0.14798762]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8034, 0.42218913]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8034, 4.83320923]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8034, 0.0006192]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8034, 5.6141819]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8034, 1343.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 171, 1.0], [171, 338, 1.0], [338, 638, 1.0], [638, 905, 1.0], [905, 1198, 1.0], [1198, 1476, 1.0], [1476, 1897, 1.0], [1897, 2184, 1.0], [2184, 2387, 1.0], [2387, 2661, 1.0], [2661, 3111, 1.0], [3111, 3301, 1.0], [3301, 3319, 0.0], [3319, 3328, 0.0], [3328, 3596, 1.0], [3596, 3865, 1.0], [3865, 3962, 0.0], [3962, 3975, 0.0], [3975, 4287, 1.0], [4287, 4413, 1.0], [4413, 4514, 1.0], [4514, 4883, 1.0], [4883, 4918, 1.0], [4918, 4932, 0.0], [4932, 5316, 1.0], [5316, 5491, 1.0], [5491, 5748, 1.0], [5748, 7075, 1.0], [7075, 7213, 1.0], [7213, 8034, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 171, 0.0], [171, 338, 0.0], [338, 638, 0.0], [638, 905, 0.0], [905, 1198, 0.0], [1198, 1476, 0.0], [1476, 1897, 0.0], [1897, 2184, 0.0], [2184, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2661, 0.0], [2661, 3111, 0.0], [3111, 3301, 0.0], [3301, 3319, 0.0], [3319, 3328, 0.0], [3328, 3596, 0.0], [3596, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 3962, 0.0], [3962, 3975, 0.0], [3975, 4287, 0.0], [4287, 4413, 0.0], [4413, 4514, 0.0], [4514, 4883, 0.0], [4883, 4918, 0.0], [4918, 4932, 0.0], [4932, 5316, 0.0], [5316, 5491, 0.0], [5491, 5748, 0.0], [5748, 7075, 0.0], [7075, 7213, 0.0], [7213, 8034, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 6.0], [45, 171, 23.0], [171, 338, 31.0], [338, 638, 44.0], [638, 905, 43.0], [905, 1198, 44.0], [1198, 1476, 42.0], [1476, 1897, 68.0], [1897, 2184, 43.0], [2184, 2387, 35.0], [2387, 2661, 50.0], [2661, 3111, 78.0], [3111, 3301, 31.0], [3301, 3319, 3.0], [3319, 3328, 1.0], [3328, 3596, 47.0], [3596, 3865, 48.0], [3865, 3962, 13.0], [3962, 3975, 2.0], [3975, 4287, 56.0], [4287, 4413, 19.0], [4413, 4514, 16.0], [4514, 4883, 67.0], [4883, 4918, 8.0], [4918, 4932, 1.0], [4932, 5316, 63.0], [5316, 5491, 33.0], [5491, 5748, 44.0], [5748, 7075, 214.0], [7075, 7213, 24.0], [7213, 8034, 146.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 171, 0.0], [171, 338, 0.0], [338, 638, 0.0], [638, 905, 0.0], [905, 1198, 0.0], [1198, 1476, 0.0], [1476, 1897, 0.0], [1897, 2184, 0.0], [2184, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2661, 0.0], [2661, 3111, 0.0], [3111, 3301, 0.0], [3301, 3319, 0.0], [3319, 3328, 0.125], [3328, 3596, 0.0], [3596, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 3962, 0.0], [3962, 3975, 0.0], [3975, 4287, 0.0], [4287, 4413, 0.0], [4413, 4514, 0.0], [4514, 4883, 0.0], [4883, 4918, 0.0], [4918, 4932, 0.0], [4932, 5316, 0.0], [5316, 5491, 0.00588235], [5491, 5748, 0.00398406], [5748, 7075, 0.003861], [7075, 7213, 0.0], [7213, 8034, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 171, 0.0], [171, 338, 0.0], [338, 638, 0.0], [638, 905, 0.0], [905, 1198, 0.0], [1198, 1476, 0.0], [1476, 1897, 0.0], [1897, 2184, 0.0], [2184, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2661, 0.0], [2661, 3111, 0.0], [3111, 3301, 0.0], [3301, 3319, 0.0], [3319, 3328, 0.0], [3328, 3596, 0.0], [3596, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 3962, 0.0], [3962, 3975, 0.0], [3975, 4287, 0.0], [4287, 4413, 0.0], [4413, 4514, 0.0], [4514, 4883, 0.0], [4883, 4918, 0.0], [4918, 4932, 0.0], [4932, 5316, 0.0], [5316, 5491, 0.0], [5491, 5748, 0.0], [5748, 7075, 0.0], [7075, 7213, 0.0], [7213, 8034, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.15555556], [45, 171, 0.01587302], [171, 338, 0.0239521], [338, 638, 0.03], [638, 905, 0.00749064], [905, 1198, 0.02389078], [1198, 1476, 0.02517986], [1476, 1897, 0.02375297], [1897, 2184, 0.03832753], [2184, 2387, 0.01477833], [2387, 2661, 0.01824818], [2661, 3111, 0.00666667], [3111, 3301, 0.01052632], [3301, 3319, 0.16666667], [3319, 3328, 0.0], [3328, 3596, 0.02238806], [3596, 3865, 0.02973978], [3865, 3962, 0.13402062], [3962, 3975, 0.15384615], [3975, 4287, 0.02564103], [4287, 4413, 0.01587302], [4413, 4514, 0.01980198], [4514, 4883, 0.04607046], [4883, 4918, 0.11428571], [4918, 4932, 0.0], [4932, 5316, 0.0078125], [5316, 5491, 0.01142857], [5491, 5748, 0.01167315], [5748, 7075, 0.00678222], [7075, 7213, 0.02173913], [7213, 8034, 0.01339829]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8034, 0.78510016]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8034, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8034, 0.36378461]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8034, -226.27141365]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8034, 163.52587993]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8034, -387.80917046]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8034, 77.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
catholicexchange.com
"ANC" redirects here. For other uses, see ANC (disambiguation). "Tripartite Alliance" redirects here. For the envisioned Anglo-French-Soviet alliance of 1939, see Tripartite military talks. For the defunct political party in Trinidad and Tobago, see African National Congress (Trinidad and Tobago). John Dube, Pixley ka Isaka Seme, Sol Plaatje National Chairperson Baleka Mbete Treasurer-General Zweli Mkhize 8 January 1912 (1912-01-08) Luthuli House, 54 Sauer Street, Johannesburg, Gauteng ANC Youth League Women's wing ANC Women's League Paramilitary wing (formerly) African nationalism Left-wing nationalism Democratic socialism Left-wing Socialist International,[1] Progressive Alliance Black, green, gold National Assembly seats NCOP seats NCOP delegations www.anc.org.za Party flag Politics of South Africa The African National Congress (ANC) is the Republic of South Africa's governing political party, supported by its Tripartite Alliance with the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) and the South African Communist Party (SACP), since the establishment of multi-racial democracy in April 1994. It defines itself as a "disciplined force of the left".[2] Members founded the organisation as the South African Native National Congress (SANNC) on 8 January 1912 at the Waaihoek Wesleyan Church in Bloemfontein to increase the rights of the black South African population. John Dube, its first president, and poet and author Sol Plaatje were among its founding members. The organisation became the ANC in 1923 and formed a military wing, the Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation) in 1961. It has been the ruling party of post-apartheid South Africa on the national level since 1994. It increased its majority in the South African general election. Further increases in 2004, with 69.7% of the votes. In 2009 its share of the vote reduced slightly, but it remained the dominant party with 65.9% of the votes. 1.1 Umkhonto we Sizwe 2 Ideology 2.1 Tripartite Alliance 2.2 2008 schism 2.3 2013 NUMSA split 3 ANC flag 4 Party list 5.1 Parliament 5.2 Municipal elections 6 Role of the ANC in resolving the conflict 7.1 Controversy over corrupt members 7.2 Controversy over wasteful expenditure 7.3 Condemnation over Secrecy Bill 7.4 Role in the Marikana killings Main article: History of the African National Congress This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (February 2010) The founding of the SANNC was in direct response to injustice against black South Africans at the hands of the government then in power. It can be said that the SANNC had its origins in a pronouncement by Pixley ka Isaka Seme who said in 1911, "Forget all the past differences among Africans and unite in one national organisation." The SANNC was founded the following year on 8 January 1912.[3] The government of the newly formed Union of South Africa began a systematic oppression of black people in South Africa. The Land Act was promulgated in 1913 forcing many non-whites from their farms into the cities and towns to work, and to restrict their movement within South Africa. By 1919, the SANNC was leading a campaign against passes (an ID which non-whites had to possess). However, it then became dormant in the mid-1920s. During that time, black people were also represented by the ICU and the previously white-only Communist party. In 1923, the organisation became the African National Congress, and in 1929 the ANC supported a militant mineworkers' strike. By 1927, J.T. Gumede (president of the ANC) proposed co-operation with the Communists in a bid to revitalise the organisation, but he was voted out of power in the 1930s. This led to the ANC becoming largely ineffectual and inactive, until the mid-1940s when the ANC was remodelled as a mass movement. The ANC responded militarily to attacks on the rights of black South Africans, as well as calling for strikes, boycotts, and defiance. This led to a later Defiance Campaign in the 1950s, a mass movement of resistance to apartheid. The government tried to stop the ANC by banning party leaders and enacting new laws to stop the ANC, however these measures ultimately proved to be ineffective. In 1955, the Congress of the People officially adopted the Freedom Charter, stating the core principles of the South African Congress Alliance, which consisted of the African National Congress and its allies the South African Communist Party (SACP), the South African Indian Congress, the South African Congress of Democrats (COD) and the Coloured People's Congress.[4] The government claimed that this was a communist document, and consequently leaders of the ANC and Congress were arrested. 1960 saw the Sharpeville massacre, in which 69 people were killed when police opened fire on anti-apartheid protesters. Whites eventually joined the fight against apartheid, leading many Black nationalists to break away from the ANC. During apartheid there was violence between the ANC and the Inkatha Freedom Party. For example between 1985 and 1989, 5,000 civilians were killed in fighting between the two parties.[5] Massacres by each of the other's supporters included the Shell House massacre and the Boipatong massacre. The ANC and its members were officially removed from the United States terrorism watch list in 2008.[6] Umkhonto we Sizwe[edit] Umkhonto we Sizwe or MK, translated "Spear of the Nation", was the military wing of the ANC. Partly in response to the Sharpeville massacre of 1960, individual members of the ANC found it necessary to consider violence to combat what passive protest had failed to quell. There was a significant portion of the ANC who therefore turned to violence to achieve their goals. A significant portion of ANC leadership agreed that this violence was needed to combat increasing backlash from the government. Some ANC members were upset by the actions of the MK, and refused to accept violence as necessary for the ending of apartheid, but these individuals became a minority as the militant leaders such as Nelson Mandela gained significant popularity. Many consider their actions to be criminal, but the MK deemed the means justified by the end goal of ending apartheid. The MK committed terrorist acts to achieve their aims, and MK was responsible for the deaths of both civilians and members of the military. Acts of terrorism committed by the MK include the Church Street bombing and the Magoo's Bar bombing. In co-operation with the South African Communist Party, MK was founded in 1961.[7] Ideology[edit] The ANC deems itself a force of national liberation in the post-apartheid era; it officially defines its agenda as the National Democratic Revolution. The ANC is a member of the Socialist International.[1] It also sets forth the redressing of socio-economic differences stemming from colonial- and apartheid-era policies as a central focus of ANC policy. The National Democratic Revolution (NDR) is described as a process through which the National Democratic Society (NDS) is achieved; a society in which people are intellectually, socially, economically and politically empowered. The drivers of the NDR are also called the motive forces and are defined as the elements within society that gain from the success of the NDR. Using contour plots or concentric circles the centre represents the elements in society that gain the most out of the success of the NDR. Moving away from the centre results in the reduction of the gains that those elements derive. It is generally believed that the force that occupies the centre of those concentric circles in countries with low unemployment is the working class while in countries with higher levels of unemployment it is the unemployed. Some of the many theoreticians that have written about the NDR include Joe Slovo, Joel Netshitenzhe and Tshilidzi Marwala.[8][9][10] In 2004, the ANC declared itself to be a social democratic party.[11] Tripartite Alliance[edit] The ANC holds a historic alliance with the South African Communist Party (SACP) and Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), known as the Tripartite Alliance. The SACP and COSATU have not contested any election in South Africa, but field candidates through the ANC, hold senior positions in the ANC, and influence party policy and dialogue. During Mbeki's presidency, the government took a more pro-capitalist stance, often running counter to the demands of the SACP and COSATU.[12][13][14][15] 2008 schism[edit] Following Zuma's accession to the ANC leadership in 2007 and Mbeki's resignation as president in 2008, the Mbeki faction of former ministers led by Mosiuoa Lekota split away from the ANC to form the Congress of the People. 2013 NUMSA split[edit] On 20 December 2013, a special congress of the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA), the country's biggest trade union with 338,000 members,[16] voted to withdraw support from the ANC and SACP, and form a socialist party to protect the interests of the working class. NUMSA secretary general Irvin Jim condemned the ANC and SACP's support for big business and stated: "It is clear that the working class cannot any longer see the ANC or the SACP as its class allies in any meaningful sense."[16] ANC flag[edit] The ANC flag is composed of three stripes – black, green and gold.[17] Black symbolises the native people of South Africa, green represents the land and gold represents the mineral and other natural wealth of South Africa. This flag was also the battle flag of the Umkhonto we Sizwe. The official party flag also has the emblem of the party incorporated onto the flag. Party list[edit] Politicians in the party win a place in parliament by being on the Party List, which is drawn up before the elections and enumerates, in order, the party's preferred MPs. The number of seats allocated is proportional to the popular national vote, and this determines the cut-off point. The ANC has also gained members through the controversial floor crossing process. Although most South African parties announced their candidate list for provincial premierships in the 2009 election, the ANC did not, as it is not required for parties to do so.[18] Election results[edit] Proportion of votes cast for the ANC in the 2009 election, by ward. Parliament[edit] National Assembly Election year # of overall votes % of overall vote overall seats won +/– in coalition
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2528
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_National_Congress", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:54:37Z", "digest": "sha1:MTZCDEUT4CLQZ5JASVHJLX54CXU3RTXX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10492, 10492.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10492, 11207.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10492, 86.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10492, 136.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10492, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10492, 146.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10492, 0.33612205]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10492, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10492, 0.0449042]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10492, 0.02515575]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10492, 0.00916892]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10492, 0.02115905]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10492, 0.01586928]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10492, 0.01222523]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10492, 0.04084646]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10492, 0.18897638]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10492, 0.39182692]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10492, 5.11237981]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10492, 0.00049213]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10492, 5.49259132]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10492, 1664.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 64, 1.0], [64, 190, 1.0], [190, 299, 1.0], [299, 310, 0.0], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 344, 0.0], [344, 365, 0.0], [365, 378, 0.0], [378, 396, 0.0], [396, 409, 0.0], [409, 437, 0.0], [437, 491, 0.0], [491, 508, 0.0], [508, 521, 0.0], [521, 540, 0.0], [540, 558, 0.0], [558, 569, 0.0], [569, 589, 0.0], [589, 611, 0.0], [611, 632, 0.0], [632, 642, 0.0], [642, 691, 0.0], [691, 710, 0.0], [710, 734, 0.0], [734, 745, 0.0], [745, 762, 0.0], [762, 777, 0.0], [777, 788, 0.0], [788, 813, 0.0], [813, 1607, 1.0], [1607, 1926, 1.0], [1926, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 1959, 0.0], [1959, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 1999, 0.0], [1999, 2020, 0.0], [2020, 2031, 0.0], [2031, 2044, 0.0], [2044, 2059, 0.0], [2059, 2083, 0.0], [2083, 2127, 0.0], [2127, 2164, 0.0], [2164, 2206, 0.0], [2206, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 2275, 0.0], [2275, 2330, 0.0], [2330, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2924, 0.0], [2924, 3209, 1.0], [3209, 3594, 1.0], [3594, 3896, 1.0], [3896, 4288, 1.0], [4288, 4901, 1.0], [4901, 5015, 1.0], [5015, 5307, 1.0], [5307, 5411, 0.0], [5411, 5435, 0.0], [5435, 6622, 0.0], [6622, 6637, 0.0], [6637, 6992, 1.0], [6992, 7953, 0.0], [7953, 8023, 0.0], [8023, 8049, 0.0], [8049, 8552, 0.0], [8552, 8570, 0.0], [8570, 8793, 1.0], [8793, 8816, 0.0], [8816, 9330, 0.0], [9330, 9345, 0.0], [9345, 9714, 1.0], [9714, 9731, 0.0], [9731, 10017, 1.0], [10017, 10099, 1.0], [10099, 10281, 0.0], [10281, 10304, 0.0], [10304, 10372, 1.0], [10372, 10389, 0.0], [10389, 10407, 0.0], [10407, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10426, 0.0], [10426, 10440, 0.0], [10440, 10445, 0.0], [10445, 10458, 0.0], [10458, 10476, 0.0], [10476, 10480, 0.0], [10480, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 190, 0.0], [190, 299, 0.0], [299, 310, 0.0], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 344, 0.0], [344, 365, 0.0], [365, 378, 0.0], [378, 396, 0.0], [396, 409, 0.0], [409, 437, 0.0], [437, 491, 0.0], [491, 508, 0.0], [508, 521, 0.0], [521, 540, 0.0], [540, 558, 0.0], [558, 569, 0.0], [569, 589, 0.0], [589, 611, 0.0], [611, 632, 0.0], [632, 642, 0.0], [642, 691, 0.0], [691, 710, 0.0], [710, 734, 0.0], [734, 745, 0.0], [745, 762, 0.0], [762, 777, 0.0], [777, 788, 0.0], [788, 813, 0.0], [813, 1607, 0.0], [1607, 1926, 0.0], [1926, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 1959, 0.0], [1959, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 1999, 0.0], [1999, 2020, 0.0], [2020, 2031, 0.0], [2031, 2044, 0.0], [2044, 2059, 0.0], [2059, 2083, 0.0], [2083, 2127, 0.0], [2127, 2164, 0.0], [2164, 2206, 0.0], [2206, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 2275, 0.0], [2275, 2330, 0.0], [2330, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2924, 0.0], [2924, 3209, 0.0], [3209, 3594, 0.0], [3594, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 4288, 0.0], [4288, 4901, 0.0], [4901, 5015, 0.0], [5015, 5307, 0.0], [5307, 5411, 0.0], [5411, 5435, 0.0], [5435, 6622, 0.0], [6622, 6637, 0.0], [6637, 6992, 0.0], [6992, 7953, 0.0], [7953, 8023, 0.0], [8023, 8049, 0.0], [8049, 8552, 0.0], [8552, 8570, 0.0], [8570, 8793, 0.0], [8793, 8816, 0.0], [8816, 9330, 0.0], [9330, 9345, 0.0], [9345, 9714, 0.0], [9714, 9731, 0.0], [9731, 10017, 0.0], [10017, 10099, 0.0], [10099, 10281, 0.0], [10281, 10304, 0.0], [10304, 10372, 0.0], [10372, 10389, 0.0], [10389, 10407, 0.0], [10407, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10426, 0.0], [10426, 10440, 0.0], [10440, 10445, 0.0], [10445, 10458, 0.0], [10458, 10476, 0.0], [10476, 10480, 0.0], [10480, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 64, 9.0], [64, 190, 15.0], [190, 299, 16.0], [299, 310, 2.0], [310, 332, 4.0], [332, 344, 2.0], [344, 365, 2.0], [365, 378, 2.0], [378, 396, 1.0], [396, 409, 2.0], [409, 437, 4.0], [437, 491, 7.0], [491, 508, 3.0], [508, 521, 2.0], [521, 540, 3.0], [540, 558, 2.0], [558, 569, 1.0], [569, 589, 2.0], [589, 611, 2.0], [611, 632, 2.0], [632, 642, 1.0], [642, 691, 4.0], [691, 710, 3.0], [710, 734, 3.0], [734, 745, 2.0], [745, 762, 2.0], [762, 777, 1.0], [777, 788, 2.0], [788, 813, 4.0], [813, 1607, 125.0], [1607, 1926, 55.0], [1926, 1948, 4.0], [1948, 1959, 2.0], [1959, 1983, 3.0], [1983, 1999, 3.0], [1999, 2020, 4.0], [2020, 2031, 3.0], [2031, 2044, 3.0], [2044, 2059, 2.0], [2059, 2083, 3.0], [2083, 2127, 9.0], [2127, 2164, 5.0], [2164, 2206, 5.0], [2206, 2241, 5.0], [2241, 2275, 6.0], [2275, 2330, 8.0], [2330, 2528, 27.0], [2528, 2924, 70.0], [2924, 3209, 48.0], [3209, 3594, 61.0], [3594, 3896, 52.0], [3896, 4288, 66.0], [4288, 4901, 92.0], [4901, 5015, 17.0], [5015, 5307, 45.0], [5307, 5411, 17.0], [5411, 5435, 3.0], [5435, 6622, 197.0], [6622, 6637, 1.0], [6637, 6992, 54.0], [6992, 7953, 153.0], [7953, 8023, 12.0], [8023, 8049, 2.0], [8049, 8552, 77.0], [8552, 8570, 2.0], [8570, 8793, 38.0], [8793, 8816, 3.0], [8816, 9330, 87.0], [9330, 9345, 2.0], [9345, 9714, 64.0], [9714, 9731, 2.0], [9731, 10017, 48.0], [10017, 10099, 12.0], [10099, 10281, 30.0], [10281, 10304, 2.0], [10304, 10372, 13.0], [10372, 10389, 1.0], [10389, 10407, 2.0], [10407, 10421, 2.0], [10421, 10426, 1.0], [10426, 10440, 2.0], [10440, 10445, 1.0], [10445, 10458, 2.0], [10458, 10476, 3.0], [10476, 10480, 1.0], [10480, 10492, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 190, 0.03389831], [190, 299, 0.0], [299, 310, 0.0], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 344, 0.0], [344, 365, 0.0], [365, 378, 0.0], [378, 396, 0.0], [396, 409, 0.0], [409, 437, 0.56521739], [437, 491, 0.04], [491, 508, 0.0], [508, 521, 0.0], [521, 540, 0.0], [540, 558, 0.0], [558, 569, 0.0], [569, 589, 0.0], [589, 611, 0.0], [611, 632, 0.0], [632, 642, 0.0], [642, 691, 0.02222222], [691, 710, 0.0], [710, 734, 0.0], [734, 745, 0.0], [745, 762, 0.0], [762, 777, 0.0], [777, 788, 0.0], [788, 813, 0.0], [813, 1607, 0.02346806], [1607, 1926, 0.05863192], [1926, 1948, 0.1], [1948, 1959, 0.1], [1959, 1983, 0.09090909], [1983, 1999, 0.42857143], [1999, 2020, 0.31578947], [2020, 2031, 0.1], [2031, 2044, 0.08333333], [2044, 2059, 0.15384615], [2059, 2083, 0.09090909], [2083, 2127, 0.02325581], [2127, 2164, 0.05714286], [2164, 2206, 0.05], [2206, 2241, 0.06060606], [2241, 2275, 0.0625], [2275, 2330, 0.0], [2330, 2528, 0.02083333], [2528, 2924, 0.02583979], [2924, 3209, 0.01428571], [3209, 3594, 0.04336043], [3594, 3896, 0.04137931], [3896, 4288, 0.01044386], [4288, 4901, 0.01851852], [4901, 5015, 0.0], [5015, 5307, 0.0459364], [5307, 5411, 0.05], [5411, 5435, 0.0], [5435, 6622, 0.00773861], [6622, 6637, 0.0], [6637, 6992, 0.00290698], [6992, 7953, 0.00425532], [7953, 8023, 0.09230769], [8023, 8049, 0.0], [8049, 8552, 0.01670146], [8552, 8570, 0.26666667], [8570, 8793, 0.03669725], [8793, 8816, 0.2], [8816, 9330, 0.03232323], [9330, 9345, 0.0], [9345, 9714, 0.00555556], [9714, 9731, 0.0], [9731, 10017, 0.0], [10017, 10099, 0.0], [10099, 10281, 0.03409091], [10281, 10304, 0.0], [10304, 10372, 0.06153846], [10372, 10389, 0.0], [10389, 10407, 0.0], [10407, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10426, 0.0], [10426, 10440, 0.0], [10440, 10445, 0.0], [10445, 10458, 0.0], [10458, 10476, 0.0], [10476, 10480, 0.0], [10480, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 190, 0.0], [190, 299, 0.0], [299, 310, 0.0], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 344, 0.0], [344, 365, 0.0], [365, 378, 0.0], [378, 396, 0.0], [396, 409, 0.0], [409, 437, 0.0], [437, 491, 0.0], [491, 508, 0.0], [508, 521, 0.0], [521, 540, 0.0], [540, 558, 0.0], [558, 569, 0.0], [569, 589, 0.0], [589, 611, 0.0], [611, 632, 0.0], [632, 642, 0.0], [642, 691, 0.0], [691, 710, 0.0], [710, 734, 0.0], [734, 745, 0.0], [745, 762, 0.0], [762, 777, 0.0], [777, 788, 0.0], [788, 813, 0.0], [813, 1607, 0.0], [1607, 1926, 0.0], [1926, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 1959, 0.0], [1959, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 1999, 0.0], [1999, 2020, 0.0], [2020, 2031, 0.0], [2031, 2044, 0.0], [2044, 2059, 0.0], [2059, 2083, 0.0], [2083, 2127, 0.0], [2127, 2164, 0.0], [2164, 2206, 0.0], [2206, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 2275, 0.0], [2275, 2330, 0.0], [2330, 2528, 0.0], [2528, 2924, 0.0], [2924, 3209, 0.0], [3209, 3594, 0.0], [3594, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 4288, 0.0], [4288, 4901, 0.0], [4901, 5015, 0.0], [5015, 5307, 0.0], [5307, 5411, 0.0], [5411, 5435, 0.0], [5435, 6622, 0.0], [6622, 6637, 0.0], [6637, 6992, 0.0], [6992, 7953, 0.0], [7953, 8023, 0.0], [8023, 8049, 0.0], [8049, 8552, 0.0], [8552, 8570, 0.0], [8570, 8793, 0.0], [8793, 8816, 0.0], [8816, 9330, 0.0], [9330, 9345, 0.0], [9345, 9714, 0.0], [9714, 9731, 0.0], [9731, 10017, 0.0], [10017, 10099, 0.0], [10099, 10281, 0.0], [10281, 10304, 0.0], [10304, 10372, 0.0], [10372, 10389, 0.0], [10389, 10407, 0.0], [10407, 10421, 0.0], [10421, 10426, 0.0], [10426, 10440, 0.0], [10440, 10445, 0.0], [10445, 10458, 0.0], [10458, 10476, 0.0], [10476, 10480, 0.0], [10480, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.109375], [64, 190, 0.05555556], [190, 299, 0.0733945], [299, 310, 0.18181818], [310, 332, 0.13636364], [332, 344, 0.16666667], [344, 365, 0.0952381], [365, 378, 0.15384615], [378, 396, 0.11111111], [396, 409, 0.15384615], [409, 437, 0.03571429], [437, 491, 0.11111111], [491, 508, 0.29411765], [508, 521, 0.07692308], [521, 540, 0.26315789], [540, 558, 0.05555556], [558, 569, 0.0], [569, 589, 0.05], [589, 611, 0.04545455], [611, 632, 0.04761905], [632, 642, 0.1], [642, 691, 0.08163265], [691, 710, 0.05263158], [710, 734, 0.08333333], [734, 745, 0.36363636], [745, 762, 0.23529412], [762, 777, 0.0], [777, 788, 0.09090909], [788, 813, 0.12], [813, 1607, 0.07934509], [1607, 1926, 0.02507837], [1926, 1948, 0.09090909], [1948, 1959, 0.09090909], [1959, 1983, 0.08333333], [1983, 1999, 0.0], [1999, 2020, 0.23809524], [2020, 2031, 0.27272727], [2031, 2044, 0.07692308], [2044, 2059, 0.06666667], [2059, 2083, 0.04166667], [2083, 2127, 0.09090909], [2127, 2164, 0.02702703], [2164, 2206, 0.02380952], [2206, 2241, 0.08571429], [2241, 2275, 0.05882353], [2275, 2330, 0.09090909], [2330, 2528, 0.02020202], [2528, 2924, 0.06565657], [2924, 3209, 0.03859649], [3209, 3594, 0.05454545], [3594, 3896, 0.04966887], [3896, 4288, 0.04081633], [4288, 4901, 0.06525285], [4901, 5015, 0.04385965], [5015, 5307, 0.04109589], [5307, 5411, 0.05769231], [5411, 5435, 0.08333333], [5435, 6622, 0.04380792], [6622, 6637, 0.06666667], [6637, 6992, 0.04788732], [6992, 7953, 0.03746098], [7953, 8023, 0.05714286], [8023, 8049, 0.07692308], [8049, 8552, 0.11133201], [8552, 8570, 0.0], [8570, 8793, 0.06278027], [8793, 8816, 0.2173913], [8816, 9330, 0.07976654], [9330, 9345, 0.2], [9345, 9714, 0.03523035], [9714, 9731, 0.05882353], [9731, 10017, 0.02097902], [10017, 10099, 0.04878049], [10099, 10281, 0.03296703], [10281, 10304, 0.04347826], [10304, 10372, 0.05882353], [10372, 10389, 0.05882353], [10389, 10407, 0.11111111], [10407, 10421, 0.07142857], [10421, 10426, 0.0], [10426, 10440, 0.0], [10440, 10445, 0.0], [10445, 10458, 0.0], [10458, 10476, 0.0], [10476, 10480, 0.0], [10480, 10492, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10492, 0.95967114]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10492, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10492, 0.90705597]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10492, -265.01073867]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10492, 231.80652217]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10492, 412.48980693]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10492, 91.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Amahl and the Night Visitors Gian Carlo Menotti Amelia Goes to the Ball (1937) The Old Maid and the Thief (1939) The Island God (1942) The Medium (1946) The Telephone, or L'Amour à trois (1947) The Consul (1950) Amahl and the Night Visitors (1951) The Saint of Bleecker Street (1954) The Unicorn, the Gorgon, and the Manticore (1956) Maria Golovin (1958) The Last Savage (1963) Martin's Lie (1964) Help, Help, the Globolinks! (1968) The Hero (1976) The Boy Who Grew Too Fast (1982) Amahl and the Night Visitors is an opera in one act by Gian Carlo Menotti with an original English libretto by the composer.[1] It was commissioned by NBC and first performed by the NBC Opera Theatre on December 24, 1951, in New York City at NBC studio 8H in Rockefeller Center, the same studio where it was broadcast live on television from that venue as the debut production of the Hallmark Hall of Fame. It was the first opera specifically composed for television in America.[2] 1 Composition history 2 The Genesis of "Amahl" 3 Premiere 4 Performance history 4.4 BBC productions 4.5 Australian version 5 Roles 7 Recordings Composition history[edit] Menotti was inspired by The Adoration of the Magi (Hieronymus Bosch, died 1516) to create Amahl and the Night Visitors. Menotti was commissioned by Peter Herman Adler, director of NBC's new opera programming, to write the first opera for television. The composer had trouble settling on a subject for the opera, but took his inspiration from Hieronymus Bosch's The Adoration of the Magi hanging in The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. As the airdate neared, Menotti had yet to finish the score. The singers had little time to rehearse, and received the final passages of the score just days before the broadcast. The composer's companion Samuel Barber was brought in to complete the orchestrations.[3] After the dress rehearsal, NBC Symphony conductor Arturo Toscanini told Menotti, "This is the best you've ever done."[4] Menotti distinctly wanted Amahl to be performed by a boy. In the Production Notes contained in the Piano-Vocal score he wrote: "It is the express wish of the composer that the role of Amahl should always be performed by a boy. Neither the musical nor the dramatic concept of the opera permits the substitution of a woman costumed as a child."[1] The Genesis of "Amahl"[edit] The booklet with the original cast recording contains the following anecdote: This is an opera for children because it tries to recapture my own childhood. You see, when I was a
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2529
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amahl_and_the_Night_Visitors", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:44:07Z", "digest": "sha1:N7VYEBQOVUSWXXNKBEWRHXN2WOECARQ7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2521, 2521.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2521, 2784.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2521, 34.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2521, 50.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2521, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2521, 144.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2521, 0.30812854]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2521, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2521, 0.08591409]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2521, 0.01798202]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2521, 0.02197802]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2521, 0.03196803]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2521, 0.01701323]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2521, 0.23251418]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2521, 0.55188679]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2521, 4.72169811]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2521, 4.85645808]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2521, 424.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 48, 0.0], [48, 79, 0.0], [79, 113, 0.0], [113, 135, 0.0], [135, 153, 0.0], [153, 194, 0.0], [194, 212, 0.0], [212, 248, 0.0], [248, 284, 0.0], [284, 334, 0.0], [334, 355, 0.0], [355, 378, 0.0], [378, 398, 0.0], [398, 433, 0.0], [433, 449, 0.0], [449, 482, 0.0], [482, 964, 0.0], [964, 986, 0.0], [986, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1022, 0.0], [1022, 1044, 0.0], [1044, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1087, 0.0], [1087, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1108, 0.0], [1108, 1134, 0.0], [1134, 1254, 1.0], [1254, 1581, 1.0], [1581, 1969, 0.0], [1969, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2344, 0.0], [2344, 2422, 0.0], [2422, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 48, 0.0], [48, 79, 0.0], [79, 113, 0.0], [113, 135, 0.0], [135, 153, 0.0], [153, 194, 0.0], [194, 212, 0.0], [212, 248, 0.0], [248, 284, 0.0], [284, 334, 0.0], [334, 355, 0.0], [355, 378, 0.0], [378, 398, 0.0], [398, 433, 0.0], [433, 449, 0.0], [449, 482, 0.0], [482, 964, 0.0], [964, 986, 0.0], [986, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1022, 0.0], [1022, 1044, 0.0], [1044, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1087, 0.0], [1087, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1108, 0.0], [1108, 1134, 0.0], [1134, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1581, 0.0], [1581, 1969, 0.0], [1969, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2344, 0.0], [2344, 2422, 0.0], [2422, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 5.0], [29, 48, 3.0], [48, 79, 6.0], [79, 113, 7.0], [113, 135, 4.0], [135, 153, 3.0], [153, 194, 7.0], [194, 212, 3.0], [212, 248, 6.0], [248, 284, 6.0], [284, 334, 8.0], [334, 355, 3.0], [355, 378, 4.0], [378, 398, 3.0], [398, 433, 5.0], [433, 449, 3.0], [449, 482, 7.0], [482, 964, 85.0], [964, 986, 3.0], [986, 1011, 5.0], [1011, 1022, 2.0], [1022, 1044, 3.0], [1044, 1064, 3.0], [1064, 1087, 3.0], [1087, 1095, 2.0], [1095, 1108, 2.0], [1108, 1134, 2.0], [1134, 1254, 20.0], [1254, 1581, 54.0], [1581, 1969, 61.0], [1969, 2315, 61.0], [2315, 2344, 4.0], [2344, 2422, 11.0], [2422, 2521, 20.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 48, 0.0], [48, 79, 0.14285714], [79, 113, 0.12903226], [113, 135, 0.21052632], [135, 153, 0.26666667], [153, 194, 0.10810811], [194, 212, 0.26666667], [212, 248, 0.12121212], [248, 284, 0.12121212], [284, 334, 0.08888889], [334, 355, 0.22222222], [355, 378, 0.2], [378, 398, 0.25], [398, 433, 0.13793103], [433, 449, 0.30769231], [449, 482, 0.13333333], [482, 964, 0.01910828], [964, 986, 0.04761905], [986, 1011, 0.04545455], [1011, 1022, 0.1], [1022, 1044, 0.04761905], [1044, 1064, 0.11111111], [1064, 1087, 0.0952381], [1087, 1095, 0.14285714], [1095, 1108, 0.08333333], [1108, 1134, 0.0], [1134, 1254, 0.03478261], [1254, 1581, 0.0], [1581, 1969, 0.00539084], [1969, 2315, 0.00297619], [2315, 2344, 0.0], [2344, 2422, 0.0], [2422, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 48, 0.0], [48, 79, 0.0], [79, 113, 0.0], [113, 135, 0.0], [135, 153, 0.0], [153, 194, 0.0], [194, 212, 0.0], [212, 248, 0.0], [248, 284, 0.0], [284, 334, 0.0], [334, 355, 0.0], [355, 378, 0.0], [378, 398, 0.0], [398, 433, 0.0], [433, 449, 0.0], [449, 482, 0.0], [482, 964, 0.0], [964, 986, 0.0], [986, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1022, 0.0], [1022, 1044, 0.0], [1044, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1087, 0.0], [1087, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1108, 0.0], [1108, 1134, 0.0], [1134, 1254, 0.0], [1254, 1581, 0.0], [1581, 1969, 0.0], [1969, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2344, 0.0], [2344, 2422, 0.0], [2422, 2521, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.10344828], [29, 48, 0.15789474], [48, 79, 0.09677419], [79, 113, 0.11764706], [113, 135, 0.13636364], [135, 153, 0.11111111], [153, 194, 0.09756098], [194, 212, 0.11111111], [212, 248, 0.08333333], [248, 284, 0.11111111], [284, 334, 0.08], [334, 355, 0.0952381], [355, 378, 0.13043478], [378, 398, 0.1], [398, 433, 0.08571429], [433, 449, 0.125], [449, 482, 0.18181818], [482, 964, 0.06431535], [964, 986, 0.04545455], [986, 1011, 0.12], [1011, 1022, 0.09090909], [1022, 1044, 0.04545455], [1044, 1064, 0.15], [1064, 1087, 0.04347826], [1087, 1095, 0.125], [1095, 1108, 0.07692308], [1108, 1134, 0.03846154], [1134, 1254, 0.075], [1254, 1581, 0.06116208], [1581, 1969, 0.03865979], [1969, 2315, 0.02890173], [2315, 2344, 0.10344828], [2344, 2422, 0.01282051], [2422, 2521, 0.03030303]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2521, 0.96754056]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2521, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2521, 0.86889839]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2521, -104.76871335]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2521, 3.54714806]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2521, 81.59582935]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2521, 18.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Arimaspi The Arimaspi were a legendary people of northern Scythia who lived in the foothills of the Riphean Mountains, variously identified with the Ural Mountains or the Carpathians.[1] All tales of their struggles with the gold-guarding griffins in the Hyperborean lands near the cave of Boreas, the North Wind (Geskleithron), had their origin in a lost work by Aristeas, reported in Herodotus. 1 Legendary Arimaspi 2 Historical Arimaspi 3 Mythological background Legendary Arimaspi[edit] Battles between griffons and warriors in Scythian tunics and leggings were a theme for Greek vase-painters. Spiritual descendants of the one-eyed Arimaspi of Inner Asia may be found in the decorative borderlands of medieval maps and in the monstrous imagery of Hieronymus Bosch.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2530
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arimaspi", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:41:32Z", "digest": "sha1:RXU6CQLLGYXWBBEUNPH6F7JCRCHKNMI5"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 769, 769.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 769, 950.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 769, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 769, 15.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 769, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 769, 277.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 769, 0.35294118]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 769, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 769, 0.03139717]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 769, 0.13970588]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 769, 0.67241379]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 769, 5.49137931]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 769, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 769, 4.03328277]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 769, 116.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 397, 1.0], [397, 418, 0.0], [418, 440, 0.0], [440, 466, 0.0], [466, 491, 0.0], [491, 769, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 397, 0.0], [397, 418, 0.0], [418, 440, 0.0], [440, 466, 0.0], [466, 491, 0.0], [491, 769, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 9, 1.0], [9, 397, 61.0], [397, 418, 3.0], [418, 440, 3.0], [440, 466, 3.0], [466, 491, 2.0], [491, 769, 43.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 397, 0.00265957], [397, 418, 0.05], [418, 440, 0.04761905], [440, 466, 0.04], [466, 491, 0.0], [491, 769, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 397, 0.0], [397, 418, 0.0], [418, 440, 0.0], [440, 466, 0.0], [466, 491, 0.0], [491, 769, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 9, 0.11111111], [9, 397, 0.04123711], [397, 418, 0.0952381], [418, 440, 0.09090909], [440, 466, 0.03846154], [466, 491, 0.08], [491, 769, 0.0323741]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 769, 0.69609565]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 769, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 769, 0.08221614]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 769, 0.21811076]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 769, 8.9621782]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 769, 16.01595373]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 769, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
See also Aurora (disambiguation), Aurora Australis (disambiguation), or Aurora Borealis (disambiguation). Images of the aurora australis and aurora borealis from around the world, including those with rarer red and blue lights An aurora (plural: auroras or aurorae;[1] from the Latin word aurora, "sunrise" or the Roman goddess of dawn) is a natural light display in the sky particularly in the high latitude (Arctic and Antarctic) regions, caused by the collision of energetic charged particles with atoms in the high altitude atmosphere (thermosphere). The charged particles originate in the magnetosphere and solar wind and, on Earth, are directed by the Earth's magnetic field into the atmosphere. Most auroras occur in a band known as the auroral zone,[2][3] which is typically 3° to 6° wide in latitude and observed at 10° to 20° from the geomagnetic poles at all local times (or longitudes). The solar wind is directed into the atmosphere by the Earth's magnetosphere. A geomagnetic storm expands the auroral zone to lower latitudes. 2 History of aurora theories 3 Auroral mechanism 3.1 Auroral colors 4 Forms and magnetism 5 Solar wind and the magnetosphere 6 Frequency of occurrence 7 Auroral events of historical significance 10 Sounds associated with auroras 12 On other planets 13 In traditional and popular culture Auroras are classified as diffuse and discrete. The diffuse aurora is a featureless glow in the sky that may not be visible to the naked eye, even on a dark night. It defines the extent of the auroral zone. The discrete auroras are sharply defined features within the diffuse aurora that vary in brightness from just barely visible to the naked eye, to bright enough to read a newspaper by at night. Discrete auroras are usually seen in only the night sky, because they are not as bright as the sunlit sky. Auroras occasionally occur poleward of the auroral zone as diffuse patches or arcs,[4] which are generally subvisual. In northern latitudes, the effect is known as the aurora borealis (or the northern lights), named after the Roman goddess of dawn, Aurora, and the Greek name for the north wind, Boreas, by Pierre Gassendi in 1621.[5] Auroras seen near the magnetic pole may be high overhead, but from farther away, they illuminate the northern horizon as a greenish glow or sometimes a faint red, as if the Sun were rising from an unusual direction. Discrete auroras often display magnetic field lines or curtain-like structures, and can change within seconds or glow unchanging for hours, most often in fluorescent green. The aurora borealis most often occurs near the equinoxes. The northern lights have had a number of names throughout history. The Cree call this phenomenon the "Dance of the Spirits". In Medieval Europe, the auroras were commonly believed to be a sign from God.[6] Its southern counterpart, the aurora australis (or the southern lights), has features that are almost identical to the aurora borealis and changes simultaneously with changes in the northern auroral zone.[7] It is visible from high southern latitudes in Antarctica, South America, New Zealand, and Australia. Auroras occur on other planets. Similar to the Earth's aurora, they are visible close to the planet's magnetic poles. Modern style guides recommend that the names of meteorological phenomena, such as aurora borealis, be uncapitalized.[8] Video of the aurora australis taken by the crew of Expedition 28 on board the International Space Station, its sequence of shots was taken 17 September 2011 from 17:22:27 to 17:45:12 GMT, on an ascending pass from south of Madagascar to just north of Australia over the Indian Ocean Video of the aurora australis taken by the crew of Expedition 28 on board the International Space Station, its sequence of shots was taken 7 September 2011 from 17:38:03 to 17:49:15 GMT, from the French Southern and Antarctic Lands in the South Indian Ocean to southern Australia Video of the aurora australis taken by the crew of Expedition 28 on board the International Space Station, its sequence of shots was taken 11 September 2011 from 13:45:06 to 14:01:51 GMT, from a descending pass near eastern Australia, rounding about to an ascending pass to the east of New Zealand History of aurora theories[edit] Multiple superstitions and obsolete theories explaining the aurora have surfaced over the centuries. Seneca speaks diffusely on auroras in the first book of his Naturales Quaestiones, drawing mainly from Aristotle; he classifies them ("putei" or wells when they are circular and "rim a large hole in the sky", "pithaei" when they look like casks, "chasmata" from the same root of the English chasm, "pogoniae" when they are bearded, "cyparissae" when they look like cypresses), describes their manifold colors and asks himself whether they are above or below the clouds. He recalls that under Tiberius, an aurora formed above Ostia, so intense and so red that a cohort of the army, stationed nearby for fireman duty, galloped to the city. Walter William Bryant wrote in his book Kepler (1920) that Tycho Brahe "seems to have been something of a homœopathist, for he recommends sulfur to cure infectious diseases “brought on by the sulphurous vapours of the Aurora Borealis."[9] Benjamin Franklin theorized that the "mystery of the Northern Lights" was caused by a concentration of electrical charges in the polar regions intensified by the snow and other moisture.[10] Auroral electrons come from beams emitted by the Sun. This was claimed around 1900 by Kristian Birkeland, whose experiments in a vacuum chamber with electron beams and magnetized spheres (miniature models of Earth or "terrellas") showed that such electrons would be guided toward the polar regions. Problems with this model included absence of aurora at the poles themselves, self-dispersal of such beams by their negative charge, and more recently, lack of any observational evidence in space. The aurora is the overflow of the radiation belt ("leaky bucket theory"). This was first disproved around 1962 by James Van Allen and co-workers, who showed that the high rate of energy dissipation by the aurora would quickly drain the radiation belt. Soon afterward, it became clear that most of the energy in trapped particles resided in positive ions, while auroral particles were almost always electrons, of relatively low energy. The aurora is produced by solar wind particles guided by Earth's field lines to the top of the atmosphere. This holds true for the cusp aurora, but outside the cusp, the solar wind has no direct access. In addition, the main energy in the solar wind resides in positive ions; electrons only have about 0.5 eV (electron volt), and while in the cusp this may be raised to 50–100 eV, that still falls short of auroral energies. Auroral mechanism[edit] Auroras are associated with the solar wind, a flow of ions continuously flowing outward from the Sun. The Earth's magnetic field traps these particles, many of which travel toward the poles where they are accelerated toward Earth. Collisions between these ions and atmospheric atoms and molecules cause energy releases in the form of auroras appearing in large circles around the poles. Auroras are more frequent and brighter during the intense phase of the solar cycle when coronal mass ejections increase the intensity of the solar wind.[11] Auroras result from emissions of photons in the Earth's upper atmosphere, above 80 km (50 mi), from ionized nitrogen molecules regaining an electron, and oxygen atoms and nitrogen molecules returning from an excited state to ground state.[12] They are ionized or excited by the collision of solar wind and magnetospheric particles being funneled down and accelerated along the Earth's magnetic field lines; excitation energy is lost by the emission of a photon, or by collision with another atom or molecule: oxygen emissions green or brownish-red, depending on the amount of energy absorbed. nitrogen emissions blue or red; blue if the atom regains an electron after it has been ionized, red if returning to ground state from an excited state. Oxygen is unusual in terms of its return to ground state: it can take three quarters of a second to emit green light and up to two minutes to emit red. Collisions with other atoms or molecules absorb the excitation energy and prevent emission. Because the very top of the atmosphere has a higher percentage of oxygen and is sparsely distributed such collisions are rare enough to allow time for oxygen to emit red. Collisions become more frequent progressing down into the atmosphere, so that red emissions do not have time to happen, and eventually even green light emissions are prevented. This is why there is a color differential with altitude; at high altitude oxygen red dominates, then oxygen green and nitrogen blue/red, then finally nitrogen blue/red when collisions prevent oxygen from emitting anything. Green is the most common of all auroras. Behind it is pink, a mixture of light green and red, followed by pure red, yellow (a mixture of red and green), and finally, pure blue. Auroral colors[edit] Red: At the highest altitudes, excited atomic oxygen emits at 630.0 nm (red); low concentration of atoms and lower sensitivity of eyes at this wavelength make this color visible only under some circumstances with more intense solar activity. The low amount of oxygen atoms and their very gradually diminishing concentration is responsible for the faint, gradual appearance of the top parts of the "curtains". Green: At lower altitudes the more frequent collisions suppress this mode and the 557.7 nm emission (green) dominates; fairly high concentration of atomic oxygen and higher eye sensitivity in green make green auroras the most common. The excited molecular nitrogen (atomic nitrogen being rare due to high stability of the N2 molecule) plays its role here as well, as it can transfer energy by collision to an oxygen atom, which then radiates it away at the green wavelength. (Red and green can also mix together to pink or yellow hues.) The rapid decrease of concentration of atomic oxygen below about 100 km is responsible for the abrupt-looking end of the bottom parts of the curtains. Yellow and pink are a mix of red and green. Blue: At yet lower altitudes atomic oxygen is not common anymore, and ionized molecular nitrogen takes over in visible light emission; it radiates at a large number of wavelengths in both red and blue parts of the spectrum, with 428 nm (blue) being dominant. Blue and purple emissions, typically at the bottoms of the "curtains", show up at the highest levels of solar activity.[13] A predominantly red aurora australis Forms and magnetism[edit] Aurora timelapse video (40 minutes) Northern lights over Calgary Typically the aurora appears either as a diffuse glow or as "curtains" that approximately extend in the east-west direction. At some times, they form "quiet arcs"; at others ("active aurora"), they evolve and change constantly. Each curtain consists of many parallel rays, each lined up with the local direction of the magnetic field lines, suggesting that auroras are shaped by Earth's magnetic field. Indeed, satellites show that electrons are guided by magnetic field lines, spiraling around them while moving toward Earth. The similarity to curtains is often enhanced by folds called "striations". When the field line guiding a bright auroral patch leads to a point directly above the observer, the aurora may appear as a "corona" of diverging rays, an effect of perspective. Although it was first mentioned by Ancient Greek explorer/geographer Pytheas, Hiorter and Celsius first described in 1741 evidence for magnetic control, namely, large magnetic fluctuations occurred whenever the aurora was observed overhead. This indicates (it was later realized) that large electric currents were associated with the aurora, flowing in the region where auroral light originated. Kristian Birkeland (1908)[14] deduced that the currents flowed in the east-west directions along the auroral arc, and such currents, flowing from the dayside toward (approximately) midnight were later named "auroral electrojets" (see also Birkeland currents). Still more evidence for a magnetic connection are the statistics of auroral observations. Elias Loomis (1860) and later in more detail Hermann Fritz (1881)[15] and S. Tromholt (1882)[16] established that the aurora appeared mainly in the "auroral zone", a ring-shaped region with a radius of approximately 2500 km around Earth's magnetic pole. It was hardly ever seen near the geographic pole, which is about 2000 km away from the magnetic pole. The instantaneous distribution of auroras ("auroral oval"[2][3]) is slightly different, centered about 3–5 degrees nightward of the magnetic pole, so that auroral arcs reach furthest toward the equator about an hour before midnight. The aurora can be seen best at this time, called magnetic midnight, which occurs when an observer, the magnetic pole in question and the Sun are in alignment. In the 1970s, astrophysicist Joan Feynman deduced that auroras are a product of the interaction between the Earth's magnetosphere and the magnetic field of the solar wind.[17] Her work resulted from data collected by the Explorer 33 spacecraft.[18] On 26 February 2008, THEMIS probes were able to determine, for the first time, the triggering event for the onset of magnetospheric substorms.[19] Two of the five probes, positioned approximately one third the distance to the moon, measured events suggesting a magnetic reconnection event 96 seconds prior to auroral intensification.[20] Dr. Vassilis Angelopoulos of the University of California, Los Angeles, the principal investigator for the THEMIS mission, claimed, "Our data show clearly and for the first time that magnetic reconnection is the trigger."[21] Solar wind and the magnetosphere[edit] Schematic of Earth's magnetosphere The Earth is constantly immersed in the solar wind, a rarefied flow of hot plasma (gas of free electrons and positive ions) emitted by the Sun in all directions, a result of the two-million-degree heat of the Sun's outermost layer, the corona. The solar wind usually reaches Earth with a velocity around 400 km/s, density around 5 ions/cm3 and magnetic field intensity around 2–5 nT (nanoteslas; Earth's surface field is typically 30,000–50,000 nT). These are typical values. During magnetic storms, in particular, flows can be several times faster; the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) may also be much stronger. The IMF originates on the Sun, related to the field of sunspots, and its field lines (lines of force) are dragged out by the solar wind. That alone would tend to line them up in the Sun-Earth direction, but the rotation of the Sun skews them (at Earth) by about 45 degrees, so that field lines passing Earth may actually start near the western edge ("limb") of the visible Sun.[22] Eart
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2531
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:02:59Z", "digest": "sha1:LJ5JURIUNFIIEORC4C6G5FRY6WU7VYDW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 14930, 14930.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 14930, 15178.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 14930, 56.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 14930, 69.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 14930, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 14930, 251.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 14930, 0.36694387]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 14930, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 14930, 0.02832298]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 14930, 0.03511387]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 14930, 0.02832298]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 14930, 0.02832298]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 14930, 0.02832298]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 14930, 0.02832298]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 14930, 0.01407867]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 14930, 0.00695652]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 14930, 0.00662526]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 14930, 0.0038115]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 14930, 0.17914068]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 14930, 0.35520267]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 14930, 5.0459674]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 14930, 5.76360461]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 14930, 2393.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 106, 1.0], [106, 227, 0.0], [227, 1041, 1.0], [1041, 1070, 0.0], [1070, 1090, 0.0], [1090, 1109, 0.0], [1109, 1131, 0.0], [1131, 1166, 0.0], [1166, 1192, 0.0], [1192, 1236, 0.0], [1236, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1290, 0.0], [1290, 1328, 0.0], [1328, 1953, 1.0], [1953, 2823, 0.0], [2823, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3653, 0.0], [3653, 3933, 0.0], [3933, 4231, 0.0], [4231, 4264, 0.0], [4264, 4365, 1.0], [4365, 5003, 1.0], [5003, 5242, 0.0], [5242, 5433, 0.0], [5433, 5928, 1.0], [5928, 6363, 1.0], [6363, 6788, 1.0], [6788, 6812, 0.0], [6812, 7356, 0.0], [7356, 7865, 0.0], [7865, 7882, 0.0], [7882, 7949, 1.0], [7949, 7968, 0.0], [7968, 8101, 1.0], [8101, 8693, 1.0], [8693, 9093, 1.0], [9093, 9114, 0.0], [9114, 9523, 1.0], [9523, 10211, 1.0], [10211, 10255, 1.0], [10255, 10638, 0.0], [10638, 10675, 0.0], [10675, 10701, 0.0], [10701, 10737, 0.0], [10737, 10766, 0.0], [10766, 11293, 1.0], [11293, 11546, 1.0], [11546, 12202, 1.0], [12202, 13040, 1.0], [13040, 13289, 0.0], [13289, 13853, 0.0], [13853, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 13927, 0.0], [13927, 14544, 1.0], [14544, 14926, 0.0], [14926, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 106, 0.0], [106, 227, 0.0], [227, 1041, 0.0], [1041, 1070, 0.0], [1070, 1090, 0.0], [1090, 1109, 0.0], [1109, 1131, 0.0], [1131, 1166, 0.0], [1166, 1192, 0.0], [1192, 1236, 0.0], [1236, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1290, 0.0], [1290, 1328, 0.0], [1328, 1953, 0.0], [1953, 2823, 0.0], [2823, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3653, 0.0], [3653, 3933, 0.0], [3933, 4231, 0.0], [4231, 4264, 0.0], [4264, 4365, 0.0], [4365, 5003, 0.0], [5003, 5242, 0.0], [5242, 5433, 0.0], [5433, 5928, 0.0], [5928, 6363, 0.0], [6363, 6788, 0.0], [6788, 6812, 0.0], [6812, 7356, 0.0], [7356, 7865, 0.0], [7865, 7882, 0.0], [7882, 7949, 0.0], [7949, 7968, 0.0], [7968, 8101, 0.0], [8101, 8693, 0.0], [8693, 9093, 0.0], [9093, 9114, 0.0], [9114, 9523, 0.0], [9523, 10211, 0.0], [10211, 10255, 0.0], [10255, 10638, 0.0], [10638, 10675, 0.0], [10675, 10701, 0.0], [10701, 10737, 0.0], [10737, 10766, 0.0], [10766, 11293, 0.0], [11293, 11546, 0.0], [11546, 12202, 0.0], [12202, 13040, 0.0], [13040, 13289, 0.0], [13289, 13853, 0.0], [13853, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 13927, 0.0], [13927, 14544, 0.0], [14544, 14926, 0.0], [14926, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 106, 11.0], [106, 227, 20.0], [227, 1041, 132.0], [1041, 1070, 5.0], [1070, 1090, 3.0], [1090, 1109, 3.0], [1109, 1131, 4.0], [1131, 1166, 6.0], [1166, 1192, 4.0], [1192, 1236, 6.0], [1236, 1270, 5.0], [1270, 1290, 4.0], [1290, 1328, 6.0], [1328, 1953, 109.0], [1953, 2823, 144.0], [2823, 3370, 80.0], [3370, 3653, 49.0], [3653, 3933, 47.0], [3933, 4231, 51.0], [4231, 4264, 4.0], [4264, 4365, 13.0], [4365, 5003, 106.0], [5003, 5242, 38.0], [5242, 5433, 29.0], [5433, 5928, 76.0], [5928, 6363, 70.0], [6363, 6788, 77.0], [6788, 6812, 2.0], [6812, 7356, 86.0], [7356, 7865, 80.0], [7865, 7882, 2.0], [7882, 7949, 10.0], [7949, 7968, 2.0], [7968, 8101, 25.0], [8101, 8693, 101.0], [8693, 9093, 67.0], [9093, 9114, 2.0], [9114, 9523, 64.0], [9523, 10211, 115.0], [10211, 10255, 10.0], [10255, 10638, 64.0], [10638, 10675, 5.0], [10675, 10701, 3.0], [10701, 10737, 5.0], [10737, 10766, 4.0], [10766, 11293, 81.0], [11293, 11546, 42.0], [11546, 12202, 90.0], [12202, 13040, 132.0], [13040, 13289, 38.0], [13289, 13853, 83.0], [13853, 13892, 5.0], [13892, 13927, 4.0], [13927, 14544, 98.0], [14544, 14926, 70.0], [14926, 14930, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 106, 0.0], [106, 227, 0.0], [227, 1041, 0.01149425], [1041, 1070, 0.03571429], [1070, 1090, 0.05263158], [1090, 1109, 0.11764706], [1109, 1131, 0.04761905], [1131, 1166, 0.02941176], [1166, 1192, 0.04], [1192, 1236, 0.02325581], [1236, 1270, 0.06060606], [1270, 1290, 0.10526316], [1290, 1328, 0.05405405], [1328, 1953, 0.00163399], [1953, 2823, 0.00713436], [2823, 3370, 0.00380952], [3370, 3653, 0.07246377], [3653, 3933, 0.06959707], [3933, 4231, 0.06896552], [4231, 4264, 0.0], [4264, 4365, 0.0], [4365, 5003, 0.0], [5003, 5242, 0.02173913], [5242, 5433, 0.01081081], [5433, 5928, 0.00829876], [5928, 6363, 0.00947867], [6363, 6788, 0.01703163], [6788, 6812, 0.0], [6812, 7356, 0.00374532], [7356, 7865, 0.01212121], [7865, 7882, 0.0], [7882, 7949, 0.0], [7949, 7968, 0.0], [7968, 8101, 0.0], [8101, 8693, 0.0], [8693, 9093, 0.0], [9093, 9114, 0.0], [9114, 9523, 0.01007557], [9523, 10211, 0.0119225], [10211, 10255, 0.0], [10255, 10638, 0.01358696], [10638, 10675, 0.0], [10675, 10701, 0.0], [10701, 10737, 0.06060606], [10737, 10766, 0.0], [10766, 11293, 0.0], [11293, 11546, 0.0], [11546, 12202, 0.01582278], [12202, 13040, 0.03491272], [13040, 13289, 0.04166667], [13289, 13853, 0.02583026], [13853, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 13927, 0.0], [13927, 14544, 0.02881356], [14544, 14926, 0.01098901], [14926, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 106, 0.0], [106, 227, 0.0], [227, 1041, 0.0], [1041, 1070, 0.0], [1070, 1090, 0.0], [1090, 1109, 0.0], [1109, 1131, 0.0], [1131, 1166, 0.0], [1166, 1192, 0.0], [1192, 1236, 0.0], [1236, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1290, 0.0], [1290, 1328, 0.0], [1328, 1953, 0.0], [1953, 2823, 0.0], [2823, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3653, 0.0], [3653, 3933, 0.0], [3933, 4231, 0.0], [4231, 4264, 0.0], [4264, 4365, 0.0], [4365, 5003, 0.0], [5003, 5242, 0.0], [5242, 5433, 0.0], [5433, 5928, 0.0], [5928, 6363, 0.0], [6363, 6788, 0.0], [6788, 6812, 0.0], [6812, 7356, 0.0], [7356, 7865, 0.0], [7865, 7882, 0.0], [7882, 7949, 0.0], [7949, 7968, 0.0], [7968, 8101, 0.0], [8101, 8693, 0.0], [8693, 9093, 0.0], [9093, 9114, 0.0], [9114, 9523, 0.0], [9523, 10211, 0.0], [10211, 10255, 0.0], [10255, 10638, 0.0], [10638, 10675, 0.0], [10675, 10701, 0.0], [10701, 10737, 0.0], [10737, 10766, 0.0], [10766, 11293, 0.0], [11293, 11546, 0.0], [11546, 12202, 0.0], [12202, 13040, 0.0], [13040, 13289, 0.0], [13289, 13853, 0.0], [13853, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 13927, 0.0], [13927, 14544, 0.0], [14544, 14926, 0.0], [14926, 14930, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 106, 0.05660377], [106, 227, 0.00826446], [227, 1041, 0.01474201], [1041, 1070, 0.03448276], [1070, 1090, 0.05], [1090, 1109, 0.05263158], [1109, 1131, 0.04545455], [1131, 1166, 0.02857143], [1166, 1192, 0.03846154], [1192, 1236, 0.02272727], [1236, 1270, 0.02941176], [1270, 1290, 0.05], [1290, 1328, 0.02631579], [1328, 1953, 0.0096], [1953, 2823, 0.02298851], [2823, 3370, 0.02193784], [3370, 3653, 0.0459364], [3653, 3933, 0.06071429], [3933, 4231, 0.04026846], [4231, 4264, 0.03030303], [4264, 4365, 0.00990099], [4365, 5003, 0.01253918], [5003, 5242, 0.0334728], [5242, 5433, 0.02094241], [5433, 5928, 0.01414141], [5928, 6363, 0.0137931], [6363, 6788, 0.01411765], [6788, 6812, 0.04166667], [6812, 7356, 0.01286765], [7356, 7865, 0.00785855], [7865, 7882, 0.0], [7882, 7949, 0.0], [7949, 7968, 0.0], [7968, 8101, 0.0], [8101, 8693, 0.00675676], [8693, 9093, 0.0075], [9093, 9114, 0.04761905], [9114, 9523, 0.00733496], [9523, 10211, 0.00872093], [10211, 10255, 0.02272727], [10255, 10638, 0.0078329], [10638, 10675, 0.02702703], [10675, 10701, 0.03846154], [10701, 10737, 0.02777778], [10737, 10766, 0.06896552], [10766, 11293, 0.0113852], [11293, 11546, 0.00790514], [11546, 12202, 0.0152439], [12202, 13040, 0.01431981], [13040, 13289, 0.02409639], [13289, 13853, 0.04078014], [13853, 13892, 0.02564103], [13892, 13927, 0.05714286], [13927, 14544, 0.02269044], [14544, 14926, 0.03141361], [14926, 14930, 0.25]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 14930, 0.97723961]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 14930, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 14930, 0.63572437]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 14930, -227.78144767]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 14930, 132.64772438]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 14930, 336.62216617]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 14930, 93.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
This article is about the domestic occupation. For other uses, see Butler (disambiguation). "Butlers" redirects here. For other uses, see Butlers (disambiguation). A butler in the White House Butler's Pantry A butler is a domestic worker in a large household. In great houses, the household is sometimes divided into departments with the butler in charge of the dining room, wine cellar, and pantry. Some also have charge of the entire parlour floor, and housekeepers caring for the entire house and its appearance.[1] A butler is usually male,[2] and in charge of male servants, while a housekeeper is usually a woman, and in charge of female servants. Traditionally, male servants (such as footmen) were rarer and therefore better paid and of higher status than female servants. The butler, as the senior male servant, has the highest servant status. He can also be sometimes used as a chauffeur. In modern houses where the butler is the most senior worker, titles such as majordomo, butler administrator, house manager, manservant, staff manager, chief of staff, staff captain, estate manager and head of household staff are sometimes given. The precise duties of the employee will vary to some extent in line with the title given, but perhaps, more importantly in line with the requirements of the individual employer. In the grandest homes or when the employer owns more than one residence, there is sometimes an estate manager of higher rank than the butler. 2 Origin and history 2.1 Ancient through medieval eras 2.2 Elizabethan through Victorian eras 2.3 Butlers in early America 2.4 The modern butler 4 Gender and butlering 5 Historically important butlers 6 In visual art 7 In fiction The word "butler" comes from Anglo-Norman buteler, variant form of Old Norman *butelier, corresponding to Old French botellier "officer in charge of the king's wine bottles", derived of boteille "bottle", Modern French bouteille, itself from Gallo-Romance BUTICULA "bottle". The role of the butler, for centuries, has been that of the chief steward of a household, the attendant entrusted with the care and serving of wine and other bottled beverages which in ancient times might have represented a considerable portion of the household's assets. In Britain, the butler was originally a middle-ranking member of the staff of a grand household. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the butler gradually became the senior, usually male, member of a household's staff in the very grandest households. However, there was sometimes a steward who ran the outside estate and financial affairs, rather than just the household, and who was senior to the butler in social status into the 19th century. Butlers used always to be attired in a special uniform, distinct from the livery of junior servants, but today a butler is more likely to wear a business suit or business casual clothing and appear in uniform only on special occasions. A silverman or silver butler has expertise and professional knowledge of the management, secure storage, use and cleaning of all silverware, associated tableware and other paraphernalia for use at military and other special functions. See also Silver (household). Origin and history[edit] A slave in charge of wine in ancient Rome. The garb indicates he was probably of Phrygian origin. The modern role of the butler has evolved from earlier roles that were generally concerned with the care and serving of alcoholic beverages. Ancient through medieval eras[edit] From ancient through medieval times, alcoholic beverages were chiefly stored first in earthenware vessels, then later in wooden barrels, rather than in glass bottles; these containers would have been an important part of a household's possessions. The care of these assets was therefore generally reserved for trusted slaves, although the job could also go to free persons because of heredity-based class lines or the inheritance of trades. The biblical book of Genesis contains a reference to a role precursive to modern butlers. The early Hebrew Joseph interpreted a dream of Pharaoh's שקה (shaqah) (literally "to give to drink"), which is most often translated into English as "chief butler" or "chief cup-bearer".[3] In ancient Greece and Rome, it was nearly always slaves who were charged with the care and service of wine, while during the Medieval Era the pincerna, usually a serf, filled the role within the noble court. The English word "butler" itself comes from the Middle English word bo(u)teler (and several other forms), from Anglo-Norman buteler, itself from Old Norman butelier, corresponding to Old French botellier ("bottle bearer"), Modern French bouteiller, and before that from Medieval Latin butticula. The modern English "butler" thus relates both to bottles and casks. A pincerna depicted in service to a noble court during the Medieval Era. Eventually the European butler emerged as a middle-ranking member of the servants of a great house, in charge of the buttery (originally a storeroom for "butts" of liquor, although the term later came to mean a general storeroom or pantry).[4] While this is so for household butlers, those with the same title but in service to the Crown enjoyed a position of administrative power and were only minimally involved with various stores. In a large house, the butler (centre-left) is traditionally head over a full array of household servants. This is the servant staff at the Stonehouse Hill of Massachusetts, the estate of Frederick Lothrop Ames, 1914. Elizabethan through Victorian eras[edit] The Steward of the Elizabethan era was more akin to the butler that later emerged.[5] Gradually, throughout the 19th century and particularly the Victorian era, as the number of butlers and other domestic servants greatly increased in various countries (including America), the butler became a senior male servant of a household's staff. By this time he was in charge of the more modern wine cellar, the "buttery" or pantry (from French pan from Latin panis, bread) as it came to be called, which supplied bread, butter, cheese, and other basic provisions, and the ewery, which contained napkins and basins for washing and shaving.[6] In the very grandest households there was sometimes an Estate Steward or other senior steward who oversaw the butler and his duties.[7] Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management, a manual published in Britain in 1861, reported: The number of the male domestics in a family varies according to the wealth and position of the master, from the owner of the ducal mansion, with a retinue of attendants, at the head of which is the chamberlain and house-steward, to the occupier of the humbler house, where a single footman, or even the odd man-of-all-work, is the only male retainer. The majority of gentlemen's establishments probably comprise a servant out of livery, or butler, a footman, and coachman, or coachman and groom, where the horses exceed two or three.[8] Glanusk Park in Powys County, U.K., in 1891. The residence had 17 servants in residence. The largest stately houses could have 40 or more. Butlers were head of a strict service hierarchy and therein held a position of power and respect. They were more managerial than "hands on"—more so than serving, they officiated in service. For example, although the butler was at the door to greet and announce the arrival of a formal guest, the door was actually opened by a footman, who would receive the guest's hat and coat. Even though the butler helped his employer into his coat, this had been handed to him by a footman. However, even the highest-ranking butler would "pitch in" when necessary, such as during a staff shortage, to ensure that the household ran smoothly, although some evidence suggests this was so even during normal times.[9] The household itself was generally divided into areas of responsibility. The butler was in charge of the dining room, the wine cellar, pantry, and sometimes the entire main floor. Directly under the butler was the first footman (or head footman), who was also deputy butler or under-butler that would fill in as butler during the butler's illness or absence. The footman—there were frequently numerous young men in the role within a household—performed a range of duties including serving meals, attending doors, carrying or moving heavy items, and they often doubled as valets. Valets themselves performed a variety of personal duties for their employer. Butlers engaged and directed all these junior staff and each reported directly to him. The housekeeper was in charge of the house as a whole and its appearance. In a household without an official head housekeeper, female servants and kitchen staff were also directly under the butler's management, while in smaller households, the butler usually doubled as valet. Employers and their children and guests addressed the butler by last name alone; fellow servants, retainers, and tradespersons as "Mr. [Surname]". Butlers were typically hired by the master of the house but usually reported to its lady. Beeton in her manual suggested a GBP 25 - 50 (USD 2,675 - 5,350) per-year salary for butlers; room and board and livery clothing were additional benefits, and tipping known as vails, were common.[10] The few butlers who were married had to make separate housing arrangements for their families, as did all other servants within the hierarchy. Butlers in early America[edit] Robert Roberts's The House Servant's Directory, 1827.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2532
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Butler", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:01:53Z", "digest": "sha1:UPYC2KKDA4REIIHU6DGYST6BLVSC5YZU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 9467, 9467.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 9467, 9724.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 9467, 36.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 9467, 50.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 9467, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 9467, 224.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 9467, 0.39270386]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 9467, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 9467, 0.04338139]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 9467, 0.02516383]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 9467, 0.01310616]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 9467, 0.01310616]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 9467, 0.01441678]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 9467, 0.01179554]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 9467, 0.0102228]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 9467, 0.00590129]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 9467, 0.17435622]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 9467, 0.37565789]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 9467, 5.01973684]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 9467, 5.43286312]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 9467, 1520.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 92, 1.0], [92, 164, 1.0], [164, 208, 0.0], [208, 899, 1.0], [899, 1465, 1.0], [1465, 1486, 0.0], [1486, 1520, 0.0], [1520, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1588, 0.0], [1588, 1610, 0.0], [1610, 1633, 0.0], [1633, 1666, 0.0], [1666, 1682, 0.0], [1682, 1695, 0.0], [1695, 2242, 1.0], [2242, 2918, 1.0], [2918, 3182, 1.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3305, 1.0], [3305, 3446, 1.0], [3446, 3482, 0.0], [3482, 3923, 1.0], [3923, 4203, 0.0], [4203, 4775, 1.0], [4775, 4848, 1.0], [4848, 5283, 1.0], [5283, 5500, 1.0], [5500, 5541, 0.0], [5541, 6404, 0.0], [6404, 6942, 0.0], [6942, 7081, 1.0], [7081, 7783, 0.0], [7783, 8950, 1.0], [8950, 9383, 1.0], [9383, 9414, 0.0], [9414, 9467, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 92, 0.0], [92, 164, 0.0], [164, 208, 0.0], [208, 899, 0.0], [899, 1465, 0.0], [1465, 1486, 0.0], [1486, 1520, 0.0], [1520, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1588, 0.0], [1588, 1610, 0.0], [1610, 1633, 0.0], [1633, 1666, 0.0], [1666, 1682, 0.0], [1682, 1695, 0.0], [1695, 2242, 0.0], [2242, 2918, 0.0], [2918, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3305, 0.0], [3305, 3446, 0.0], [3446, 3482, 0.0], [3482, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4203, 0.0], [4203, 4775, 0.0], [4775, 4848, 0.0], [4848, 5283, 0.0], [5283, 5500, 0.0], [5500, 5541, 0.0], [5541, 6404, 0.0], [6404, 6942, 0.0], [6942, 7081, 0.0], [7081, 7783, 0.0], [7783, 8950, 0.0], [8950, 9383, 0.0], [9383, 9414, 0.0], [9414, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 92, 13.0], [92, 164, 9.0], [164, 208, 8.0], [208, 899, 116.0], [899, 1465, 92.0], [1465, 1486, 4.0], [1486, 1520, 5.0], [1520, 1559, 5.0], [1559, 1588, 5.0], [1588, 1610, 4.0], [1610, 1633, 4.0], [1633, 1666, 4.0], [1666, 1682, 4.0], [1682, 1695, 3.0], [1695, 2242, 83.0], [2242, 2918, 114.0], [2918, 3182, 38.0], [3182, 3207, 3.0], [3207, 3305, 18.0], [3305, 3446, 23.0], [3446, 3482, 4.0], [3482, 3923, 67.0], [3923, 4203, 44.0], [4203, 4775, 89.0], [4775, 4848, 13.0], [4848, 5283, 72.0], [5283, 5500, 35.0], [5500, 5541, 4.0], [5541, 6404, 139.0], [6404, 6942, 91.0], [6942, 7081, 24.0], [7081, 7783, 119.0], [7783, 8950, 182.0], [8950, 9383, 71.0], [9383, 9414, 4.0], [9414, 9467, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 92, 0.0], [92, 164, 0.0], [164, 208, 0.0], [208, 899, 0.0029985], [899, 1465, 0.0], [1465, 1486, 0.05], [1486, 1520, 0.0625], [1520, 1559, 0.05405405], [1559, 1588, 0.07407407], [1588, 1610, 0.1], [1610, 1633, 0.04545455], [1633, 1666, 0.03125], [1666, 1682, 0.06666667], [1682, 1695, 0.08333333], [1695, 2242, 0.0], [2242, 2918, 0.00909091], [2918, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3305, 0.0], [3305, 3446, 0.0], [3446, 3482, 0.0], [3482, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4203, 0.00381679], [4203, 4775, 0.0], [4775, 4848, 0.0], [4848, 5283, 0.00236967], [5283, 5500, 0.01923077], [5500, 5541, 0.0], [5541, 6404, 0.01084337], [6404, 6942, 0.00193798], [6942, 7081, 0.0610687], [7081, 7783, 0.00147275], [7783, 8950, 0.0], [8950, 9383, 0.03381643], [9383, 9414, 0.0], [9414, 9467, 0.08163265]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 92, 0.0], [92, 164, 0.0], [164, 208, 0.0], [208, 899, 0.0], [899, 1465, 0.0], [1465, 1486, 0.0], [1486, 1520, 0.0], [1520, 1559, 0.0], [1559, 1588, 0.0], [1588, 1610, 0.0], [1610, 1633, 0.0], [1633, 1666, 0.0], [1666, 1682, 0.0], [1682, 1695, 0.0], [1695, 2242, 0.0], [2242, 2918, 0.0], [2918, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3305, 0.0], [3305, 3446, 0.0], [3446, 3482, 0.0], [3482, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4203, 0.0], [4203, 4775, 0.0], [4775, 4848, 0.0], [4848, 5283, 0.0], [5283, 5500, 0.0], [5500, 5541, 0.0], [5541, 6404, 0.0], [6404, 6942, 0.0], [6942, 7081, 0.0], [7081, 7783, 0.0], [7783, 8950, 0.0], [8950, 9383, 0.0], [9383, 9414, 0.0], [9414, 9467, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 92, 0.0326087], [92, 164, 0.04166667], [164, 208, 0.11363636], [208, 899, 0.01013025], [899, 1465, 0.00530035], [1465, 1486, 0.04761905], [1486, 1520, 0.02941176], [1520, 1559, 0.05128205], [1559, 1588, 0.06896552], [1588, 1610, 0.04545455], [1610, 1633, 0.04347826], [1633, 1666, 0.03030303], [1666, 1682, 0.0625], [1682, 1695, 0.07692308], [1695, 2242, 0.03656307], [2242, 2918, 0.00739645], [2918, 3182, 0.01136364], [3182, 3207, 0.04], [3207, 3305, 0.04081633], [3305, 3446, 0.0070922], [3446, 3482, 0.02777778], [3482, 3923, 0.00453515], [3923, 4203, 0.025], [4203, 4775, 0.03671329], [4775, 4848, 0.04109589], [4848, 5283, 0.0091954], [5283, 5500, 0.03686636], [5500, 5541, 0.04878049], [5541, 6404, 0.02085747], [6404, 6942, 0.00371747], [6942, 7081, 0.05755396], [7081, 7783, 0.00712251], [7783, 8950, 0.00942588], [8950, 9383, 0.02078522], [9383, 9414, 0.06451613], [9414, 9467, 0.11320755]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 9467, 0.98671329]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 9467, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 9467, 0.78285056]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 9467, -2.7312116]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 9467, 131.27222259]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 9467, 323.68642044]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 9467, 71.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
(Redirected from Cloth) "Fabric" redirects here. For other uses, see Fabric (disambiguation) and Textile (disambiguation). Sunday textile market on the sidewalks of Karachi, Pakistan Simple textile – magnified A small fabric shop in Al-Mukalla, Yemen Late antique textile, Egyptian, now in the Dumbarton Oaks collection. Mrs. Condé Nast wearing one of the famous Fortuny tea gowns. This one has no tunic but is finely pleated, in the Fortuny manner, and falls in long lines, closely following the figure, to the floor. Traditional Romanian table cloth, Maramureș. A textile[1] or cloth[2] is a flexible woven material consisting of a network of natural or artificial fibres often referred to as thread or yarn. Yarn is produced by spinning raw fibres of wool, flax, cotton, or other material to produce long strands.[3] Textiles are formed by weaving, knitting, crocheting, knotting, or pressing fibres together (felt). The words fabric and cloth are used in textile assembly trades (such as tailoring and dressmaking) as synonyms for textile. However, there are subtle differences in these terms in specialized usage. Textile refers to any material made of interlacing fibres. Fabric refers to any material made through weaving, knitting, spreading, crocheting, or bonding that may be used in production of further goods (garments, etc.). Cloth may be used synonymously with fabric but often refers to a finished piece of fabric used for a specific purpose (e.g., table cloth). Alpaca Textile at the Otavalo Artisan Market in the Andes Mountains, Ecuador 4 Fashion and textile designers 5.1 Animal textiles 5.2 Plant textiles 5.3 Mineral textiles 5.4 Synthetic textiles 6 Production methods 7 Treatments The word 'textile' is from Latin, from the adjective textilis, meaning 'woven', from textus, the past participle of the verb texere, 'to weave'.[4] The word 'fabric' also derives from Latin, most recently from the Middle French fabrique, or 'building, thing made', and earlier as the Latin fabrica 'workshop; an art, trade; a skillful production, structure, fabric', which is from the Latin faber, or 'artisan who works in hard materials', from PIE dhabh-, meaning 'to fit together'.[5] The word 'cloth' derives from the Old English clað, meaning a cloth, woven or felted material to wrap around one, from Proto-Germanic kalithaz (compare O.Frisian 'klath', Middle Dutch 'cleet', Dutch 'kleed', Middle High German 'kleit', and German 'kleid', all meaning "garment").[6] There are several different types of fabric from two main sources: manmade and natural. Inside natural, there are two others, plant and animal. Some examples of animal textiles are silk and wool. An example of plants is cotton. Main article: History of clothing and textiles The discovery of dyed flax fibres in a cave in the Republic of Georgia dated to 34,000 BCE suggests textile-like materials were made even in prehistoric times.[7][8] The production of textiles is a craft whose speed and scale of production has been altered almost beyond recognition by industrialization and the introduction of modern manufacturing techniques. However, for the main types of textiles, plain weave, twill, or satin weave, there is little difference between the ancient and modern methods. Incas have been crafting quipus (or khipus) made of fibres either from a protein, such as spun and plied thread like wool or hair from camelids such as alpacas, llamas, and camels, or from a cellulose like cotton for thousands of years. Khipus are a series of knots along pieces of string. Until recently, they were thought to have been only a method of accounting, but new evidence discovered by Harvard professor Gary Urton indicates there may be more to the khipu than just numbers. Preservation of khipus found in museum and archive collections follow general textile preservation principles and practice. During the 15th century, textiles were the largest single industry.[clarification needed] Before the 15th century textiles were produced only in a few towns but during[clarification needed], they shifted into districts like East Anglia, and the Cotswolds.[9] Uses[edit] Textiles have an assortment of uses, the most common of which are for clothing and for containers such as bags and baskets. In the household they are used in carpeting, upholstered furnishings, window shades, towels, coverings for tables, beds, and other flat surfaces, and in art. In the workplace they are used in industrial and scientific processes such as filtering. Miscellaneous uses include flags, backpacks, tents, nets, handkerchiefs, cleaning rags, transportation devices such as balloons, kites, sails, and parachutes; textiles are also used to provide strengthening in composite materials such as fibreglass and industrial geotextiles. Using textiles, children can learn to sew and quilt and to make collages and toys. Textiles used for industrial purposes, and chosen for characteristics other than their appearance, are commonly referred to as technical textiles. Technical textiles include textile structures for automotive applications, medical textiles (e.g. implants), geotextiles (reinforcement of embankments), agrotextiles (textiles for crop protection), protective clothing (e.g. against heat and radiation for fire fighter clothing, against molten metals for welders, stab protection, and bullet proof vests). In all these applications stringent performance requirements must be met. Woven of threads coated with zinc oxide nanowires, laboratory fabric has been shown capable of "self-powering nanosystems" using vibrations created by everyday actions like wind or body movements.[10][11] Fashion and textile designers[edit] Fashion designers commonly rely on textile designs to set their fashion collections apart from others. Armani, the late Gianni Versace, and Emilio Pucci can be easily recognized by their signature print driven designs. Sources and types[edit] Textiles can be made from many materials. These materials come from four main sources: animal (wool, silk), plant (cotton, flax, jute), mineral (asbestos, glass fibre), and synthetic (nylon, polyester, acrylic). In the past, all textiles were made from natural fibres, including plant, animal, and mineral sources. In the 20th century, these were supplemented by artificial fibres made from petroleum. Textiles are made in various strengths and degrees of durability, from the finest gossamer to the sturdiest canvas. The relative thickness of fibres in cloth is measured in deniers. Microfibre refers to fibres made of strands thinner than one denier. Animal textiles[edit] Animal textiles are commonly made from hair, fur, skin or silk (in the silkworms case). Wool refers to the hair of the domestic goat or sheep, which is distinguished from other types of animal hair in that the individual strands are coated with scales and tightly crimped, and the wool as a whole is coated with a wax mixture known as lanolin (sometimes called wool grease), which is waterproof and dirtproof[citation needed]. Woollen refers to a bulkier yarn produced from carded, non-parallel fibre, while worsted refers to a finer yarn spun from longer fibres which have been combed to be parallel. Wool is commonly used for warm clothing. Cashmere, the hair of the Indian cashmere goat, and mohair, the hair of the North African angora goat, are types of wool known for their softness. Other animal textiles which are made from hair or fur are alpaca wool, vicuña wool, llama wool, and camel hair, generally used in the production of coats, jackets, ponchos,
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2533
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cloth", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:10:21Z", "digest": "sha1:SXXJVS2P5277P34ML4QIRQC2OYT544BS"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7563, 7563.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7563, 7817.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7563, 38.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7563, 52.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7563, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7563, 316.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7563, 0.32147743]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7563, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7563, 0.01607875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7563, 0.00820345]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7563, 0.00442986]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7563, 0.00590648]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7563, 0.00341997]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7563, 0.20383037]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7563, 0.46585998]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7563, 5.26793431]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7563, 5.57957156]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7563, 1157.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 123, 1.0], [123, 183, 0.0], [183, 210, 0.0], [210, 251, 0.0], [251, 321, 1.0], [321, 519, 1.0], [519, 564, 1.0], [564, 920, 1.0], [920, 1479, 1.0], [1479, 1556, 0.0], [1556, 1588, 0.0], [1588, 1608, 0.0], [1608, 1627, 0.0], [1627, 1648, 0.0], [1648, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 1692, 0.0], [1692, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1853, 0.0], [1853, 2192, 0.0], [2192, 2703, 1.0], [2703, 2750, 0.0], [2750, 2916, 0.0], [2916, 3255, 1.0], [3255, 3865, 1.0], [3865, 4124, 0.0], [4124, 4135, 0.0], [4135, 4866, 1.0], [4866, 5647, 0.0], [5647, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5902, 1.0], [5902, 5926, 0.0], [5926, 6328, 1.0], [6328, 6579, 1.0], [6579, 6601, 0.0], [6601, 6689, 1.0], [6689, 7391, 1.0], [7391, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 123, 0.0], [123, 183, 0.0], [183, 210, 0.0], [210, 251, 0.0], [251, 321, 0.0], [321, 519, 0.0], [519, 564, 0.0], [564, 920, 0.0], [920, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1556, 0.0], [1556, 1588, 0.0], [1588, 1608, 0.0], [1608, 1627, 0.0], [1627, 1648, 0.0], [1648, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 1692, 0.0], [1692, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1853, 0.0], [1853, 2192, 0.0], [2192, 2703, 0.0], [2703, 2750, 0.0], [2750, 2916, 0.0], [2916, 3255, 0.0], [3255, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 4124, 0.0], [4124, 4135, 0.0], [4135, 4866, 0.0], [4866, 5647, 0.0], [5647, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5902, 0.0], [5902, 5926, 0.0], [5926, 6328, 0.0], [6328, 6579, 0.0], [6579, 6601, 0.0], [6601, 6689, 0.0], [6689, 7391, 0.0], [7391, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 24, 3.0], [24, 123, 12.0], [123, 183, 9.0], [183, 210, 4.0], [210, 251, 7.0], [251, 321, 10.0], [321, 519, 36.0], [519, 564, 5.0], [564, 920, 56.0], [920, 1479, 88.0], [1479, 1556, 12.0], [1556, 1588, 5.0], [1588, 1608, 3.0], [1608, 1627, 3.0], [1627, 1648, 3.0], [1648, 1671, 3.0], [1671, 1692, 3.0], [1692, 1705, 2.0], [1705, 1853, 23.0], [1853, 2192, 53.0], [2192, 2703, 79.0], [2703, 2750, 7.0], [2750, 2916, 27.0], [2916, 3255, 51.0], [3255, 3865, 101.0], [3865, 4124, 36.0], [4124, 4135, 1.0], [4135, 4866, 110.0], [4866, 5647, 101.0], [5647, 5683, 4.0], [5683, 5902, 33.0], [5902, 5926, 3.0], [5926, 6328, 59.0], [6328, 6579, 40.0], [6579, 6601, 2.0], [6601, 6689, 15.0], [6689, 7391, 119.0], [7391, 7563, 29.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 123, 0.0], [123, 183, 0.0], [183, 210, 0.0], [210, 251, 0.0], [251, 321, 0.0], [321, 519, 0.0], [519, 564, 0.0], [564, 920, 0.00890208], [920, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1556, 0.0], [1556, 1588, 0.03225806], [1588, 1608, 0.11111111], [1608, 1627, 0.11764706], [1627, 1648, 0.10526316], [1648, 1671, 0.0952381], [1671, 1692, 0.05], [1692, 1705, 0.08333333], [1705, 1853, 0.0075188], [1853, 2192, 0.00321543], [2192, 2703, 0.0021097], [2703, 2750, 0.0], [2750, 2916, 0.0443038], [2916, 3255, 0.0], [3255, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 4124, 0.02024291], [4124, 4135, 0.0], [4135, 4866, 0.0], [4866, 5647, 0.00535475], [5647, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5902, 0.0], [5902, 5926, 0.0], [5926, 6328, 0.00534759], [6328, 6579, 0.0], [6579, 6601, 0.0], [6601, 6689, 0.0], [6689, 7391, 0.0], [7391, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 123, 0.0], [123, 183, 0.0], [183, 210, 0.0], [210, 251, 0.0], [251, 321, 0.0], [321, 519, 0.0], [519, 564, 0.0], [564, 920, 0.0], [920, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1556, 0.0], [1556, 1588, 0.0], [1588, 1608, 0.0], [1608, 1627, 0.0], [1627, 1648, 0.0], [1648, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 1692, 0.0], [1692, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1853, 0.0], [1853, 2192, 0.0], [2192, 2703, 0.0], [2703, 2750, 0.0], [2750, 2916, 0.0], [2916, 3255, 0.0], [3255, 3865, 0.0], [3865, 4124, 0.0], [4124, 4135, 0.0], [4135, 4866, 0.0], [4866, 5647, 0.0], [5647, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5902, 0.0], [5902, 5926, 0.0], [5926, 6328, 0.0], [6328, 6579, 0.0], [6579, 6601, 0.0], [6601, 6689, 0.0], [6689, 7391, 0.0], [7391, 7563, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.08333333], [24, 123, 0.04040404], [123, 183, 0.05], [183, 210, 0.03703704], [210, 251, 0.09756098], [251, 321, 0.05714286], [321, 519, 0.03030303], [519, 564, 0.06666667], [564, 920, 0.00842697], [920, 1479, 0.00894454], [1479, 1556, 0.1038961], [1556, 1588, 0.03125], [1588, 1608, 0.05], [1608, 1627, 0.05263158], [1627, 1648, 0.04761905], [1648, 1671, 0.04347826], [1671, 1692, 0.04761905], [1692, 1705, 0.07692308], [1705, 1853, 0.01351351], [1853, 2192, 0.02654867], [2192, 2703, 0.03522505], [2703, 2750, 0.04255319], [2750, 2916, 0.03614458], [2916, 3255, 0.00589971], [3255, 3865, 0.01147541], [3865, 4124, 0.01930502], [4124, 4135, 0.09090909], [4135, 4866, 0.00683995], [4866, 5647, 0.00512164], [5647, 5683, 0.02777778], [5683, 5902, 0.02739726], [5902, 5926, 0.04166667], [5926, 6328, 0.00995025], [6328, 6579, 0.01195219], [6579, 6601, 0.04545455], [6601, 6689, 0.01136364], [6689, 7391, 0.00997151], [7391, 7563, 0.00581395]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7563, 0.94864261]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7563, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7563, 0.51126015]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7563, -198.4582058]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7563, 11.85303291]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7563, 145.5605266]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7563, 66.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
DWANGO For the company, see Dwango (company). Interactive Visual Systems December 1994[1] DOS, Microsoft Windows Official website at the Wayback Machine (archived February 7, 1998) The Dial-up Wide-Area Network Game Operation, better known by the acronym DWANGO, was an early online gaming service based in the United States. Launched in 1994, it was originally known for its compatibility with Doom, for which it functioned as a matchmaking service for online multiplayer. The service also supported various other titles, including other id Software games such as Doom II and Heretic as well as titles from other companies like Duke Nukem 3D, Blood and Shadow Warrior from 3D Realms.[2] To use the service, players would pay a fee and run the DWANGO client software which would dial into a DWANGO server. Initially, a phone number in Houston, Texas had to be dialed, but soon a number of servers in other cities were also set up.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2534
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DWANGO", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:17:49Z", "digest": "sha1:BQK2IXFB5XEWWTSRIEJBZWU2FQJGMHIT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 930, 930.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 930, 1119.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 930, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 930, 20.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 930, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 930, 162.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 930, 0.35326087]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 930, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 930, 0.02670227]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 930, 0.04347826]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 930, 0.17934783]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 930, 0.69281046]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 930, 4.89542484]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 930, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 930, 4.47784935]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 930, 153.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 46, 1.0], [46, 73, 0.0], [73, 90, 0.0], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 181, 0.0], [181, 688, 0.0], [688, 930, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 46, 0.0], [46, 73, 0.0], [73, 90, 0.0], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 181, 0.0], [181, 688, 0.0], [688, 930, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 7, 1.0], [7, 46, 6.0], [46, 73, 3.0], [73, 90, 2.0], [90, 113, 3.0], [113, 181, 10.0], [181, 688, 82.0], [688, 930, 46.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 46, 0.0], [46, 73, 0.0], [73, 90, 0.35714286], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 181, 0.078125], [181, 688, 0.01419878], [688, 930, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 46, 0.0], [46, 73, 0.0], [73, 90, 0.0], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 181, 0.0], [181, 688, 0.0], [688, 930, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 7, 0.85714286], [7, 46, 0.05128205], [46, 73, 0.11111111], [73, 90, 0.05882353], [90, 113, 0.2173913], [113, 181, 0.05882353], [181, 688, 0.06114398], [688, 930, 0.0661157]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 930, 0.99149251]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 930, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 930, 0.41858697]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 930, -36.01496922]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 930, 8.25350904]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 930, 35.21102337]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 930, 6.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Ivan Vyhovsky Hetman of Ukraine October 21, 1657 – October 17, 1659 Yurii Khmelnytsky beginning of the 17th century Vyhiv, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth March 16, 1664(1664-03-16) Korsun, Zaporizhian Host Greek Orthodox Church Ivan Vyhovsky (Ukrainian: Іван Виговський, Polish: Iwan Wyhowski) (date of birth unknown, died 1664) was a hetman (or otoman) of the Ukrainian Cossacks during three years (1657–59) of the Russo-Polish War (1654–1667). He was the successor to the famous hetman and rebel leader Bohdan Khmelnytsky (see Hetmans of Ukrainian Cossacks). His time as hetman was characterized by his generally pro-Polish policies, which led to his defeat by pro-Russian faction among the Cossacks. 1 Origin and family 3 Military service Origin and family[edit] Vyhovsky was born in his family estate of Vyhov, near Korosten in the Kiev voivodship, a son of Ostap Vyhovsky, a vicegerent of Kiev fortress under voivode Adam Kisiel and an Orthodox nobleman from the Kiev region. There is also a po
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2535
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan_Vyhovsky", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:51:52Z", "digest": "sha1:UZSE3AE4Y3ZY5WYFOCL6BKMDFXWGDUYU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 999, 999.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 999, 1293.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 999, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 999, 31.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 999, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 999, 235.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 999, 0.25]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 999, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 999, 0.01858736]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 999, 0.28431373]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 999, 0.69032258]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 999, 5.20645161]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 999, 4.44958139]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 999, 155.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 32, 0.0], [32, 68, 0.0], [68, 86, 0.0], [86, 116, 0.0], [116, 154, 0.0], [154, 181, 0.0], [181, 206, 0.0], [206, 228, 0.0], [228, 703, 1.0], [703, 723, 0.0], [723, 742, 0.0], [742, 766, 0.0], [766, 999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 32, 0.0], [32, 68, 0.0], [68, 86, 0.0], [86, 116, 0.0], [116, 154, 0.0], [154, 181, 0.0], [181, 206, 0.0], [206, 228, 0.0], [228, 703, 0.0], [703, 723, 0.0], [723, 742, 0.0], [742, 766, 0.0], [766, 999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 14, 2.0], [14, 32, 3.0], [32, 68, 7.0], [68, 86, 2.0], [86, 116, 5.0], [116, 154, 3.0], [154, 181, 3.0], [181, 206, 3.0], [206, 228, 3.0], [228, 703, 72.0], [703, 723, 4.0], [723, 742, 3.0], [742, 766, 3.0], [766, 999, 42.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 32, 0.0], [32, 68, 0.36363636], [68, 86, 0.0], [86, 116, 0.06896552], [116, 154, 0.0], [154, 181, 0.66666667], [181, 206, 0.0], [206, 228, 0.0], [228, 703, 0.03982301], [703, 723, 0.05263158], [723, 742, 0.05555556], [742, 766, 0.0], [766, 999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 32, 0.0], [32, 68, 0.0], [68, 86, 0.0], [86, 116, 0.0], [116, 154, 0.0], [154, 181, 0.0], [181, 206, 0.0], [206, 228, 0.0], [228, 703, 0.0], [703, 723, 0.0], [723, 742, 0.0], [742, 766, 0.0], [766, 999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.14285714], [14, 32, 0.11111111], [32, 68, 0.05555556], [68, 86, 0.11111111], [86, 116, 0.0], [116, 154, 0.10526316], [154, 181, 0.03703704], [181, 206, 0.12], [206, 228, 0.13636364], [228, 703, 0.04842105], [703, 723, 0.05], [723, 742, 0.05263158], [742, 766, 0.04166667], [766, 999, 0.05150215]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 999, 0.87182724]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 999, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 999, 0.14021051]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 999, -54.69285088]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 999, -6.05211261]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 999, 51.38079086]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 999, 5.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
For other uses, see Locarno (disambiguation). 46°10′N 8°48′E / 46.167°N 8.800°E / 46.167; 8.800Coordinates: 46°10′N 8°48′E / 46.167°N 8.800°E / 46.167; 8.800 15,483 (Dec 2012)[1] 803 /km2 (2,081 /sq mi) 19.27 km2 (7.44 sq mi)[2] SFOS number with 7 members Sindaco (list) Carla Speziali (as of February 2014) Consiglio comunale with 40 members Surrounded by Ascona, Avegno, Cadenazzo, Contone, Cugnasco, Gerra (Verzasca), Gordola, Lavertezzo, Losone, Magadino, Minusio, Muralto, Orselina, Piazzogna, San Nazzaro, Tegna, Tenero-Contra www.locarno.ch SFSO statistics Location of Locarno Locarno is the capital of the Locarno district, located on the northern tip of Lake Maggiore (Lago Maggiore) in the Swiss canton of Ticino, close to Ascona at the foot of the Alps. It has a population of about 15,000[3] (60,000 for the urban area including Ascona). The official language of Locarno is Italian. It is the 74th biggest city in Switzerland by population[citation needed] and the 3rd biggest of the canton Ticino, after Lugano and Bellinzona. The Locarno International Film Festival takes place every year in August in the city and, at night, on the Piazza Grande. The Locarno Treaties were negotiated here in 1925. In January 2004, the Italian historian Marino Vigano speculated that Locarno's castle may have been designed by Leonardo da Vinci.[4] 1.1 Prehistoric Locarno 1.2 Roman era 1.3 Capitanei di Locarno 1.4 Early Locarno 1.5 Under the Swiss Confederation 1.6 Locarno's Castles 1.7 Early Modern Locarno 1.8 Protestant Reformation 1.9 The Canton of Ticino 1.10 Modern Locarno 2.1 Climate 3 Coat of arms 5 Historic Population 6 Heritage sites of national significance 7 Main sights 7.1 Astrovia Locarno 7.2 Madonna del Sasso, Cardada and Cimetta 7.3 Castello Visconteo 8 Politics 10 Religion 11 Education 13 International relations 13.1 Twin towns – Sister cities Prehistoric Locarno[edit] In 1934 in the vicinity of today's Via S. Jorio, a necropolis with 14 urn graves from the Early Bronze Age (about 14th century BC) were found. Some of the urns were directly buried, while others were placed in boxes of uncut stone. The urns contained, in addition to burned bones, bronze ornaments, which had some fire damage, including, bangles, hair pins with conical head and slightly thickened neck, rings and knives. Similar urns were also discovered in the district of S. Antonio, which was probably also a small cemetery. The ceramic and bronze objects date from the Canegrate culture (named after a large necropolis in the province of Milan). However, no traces of the settlement have been discovered.[5] In 1935, a large necropolis was discovered at Solduno. The over 200 graves cover nearly a thousand years, from the La Tène culture to the 3rd century AD. Many of the La Tène era grave goods (particularly from the 3rd-1st century BC) are Celtic style Fibulae or brooches. These objects demonstrate a cultural influence from regions north of the Alps. However, the ceramic objects are indigenous to Golasecca culture which spread into Ticino and Lombardy.[5] Roman era[edit] Between 1946-49, a number of Roman era tombs were discovered on the terrace between the churches of S. Maria in Selva and S. Giovanni Battista in Solduno. The Roman city that became Locarno was therefore between the Vicus of Muralto and this cemetery. Unfortunately, intensive construction and agricultural activity have destroyed many traces of the city. In 1995 and 1997, 57 graves were found in Via Valle Maggia. Nineteen were from the Roman period, which confirms that even in the 3rd century cremation and body burials were practiced side by side. Among the significant, a number of glass items were discovered. The Roman necropolis was used from the end of the Latène era until the middle of the 3rd century AD. The Romanization of Locarno wiped out much of the local culture or replaced the rest with Roman elements. However, it appears that there was no Roman ruling class, which could have dominated the local population.[6] Capitanei di Locarno[edit] The Capitanei, were a group of noble families that led Locarno. The term is first mentioned in a document granting market rights to the town by Emperor Frederick I in 1164. This title was originally only the direct vassals of the king's fief. The lower vassals were known as valvassores, but could have been awarded the title of Capitanei as a special concession. The Capitanei were probably descendants of the old Lombard noble Da Besozzo family from the county of Seprioio. Around 1000, the family was granted a fief in Locarno by the schismatic Bishop of Como Landolfo da Carcano. The Capitanei were given the right of management of Church property entrusted to the pieve, they had the rights of immunity and coercion, but were not owners of the village cooperatives' (Vicini) land, with the exception of the churches and royal estates. They did not have the right of high justice so their political power was limited. However, they played an important role in the 13th and 14th century conflicts between the Guelphs and Ghibellines and in the wars between Como and Milan. In Locarno, at the Reformation, two of the three great feudal families of capitanei: Muralto and Orelli emigrated to Zürich. A branch of Muralt was established in Bern. The third great family, Magoria, remained in Locarno.[7] The Capitanei retained a role in Locarno's politics until 1798. In 1803, the lands and rights of the Capitanei were integrated into the political municipality of Locarno.[8] Early Locarno[edit] Harbor of Locarno. Trade along the lake allowed Locarno to flourish Starting in the Lombard period (after 569), the area around Locarno (and presumably the town) was part of the county Stazzona and later the Mark of Lombardy. Locarno is first mentioned in 807 as Leocarni. In German, it came to be known as Luggarus, Lucarius, Lucaris.[9] It is likely that a market existed at or near the lake since the Roman era. The long history of the town and its location led to the creation of a royal court, which is first mentioned in 866. During the Middle Ages Locarno and Ascona formed a community, with several, separate neighborhoods. The community managed its common goods (alpine pastures, pastures, forests, churches) and tax officials and police. In the 10th century, Bishop of Milan began to consolidate more and more power to himself at the expense of the Kings of the Germans. This expansion by Milan was countered by Henry II, who incorporated Locarno in 1002/04 with the surrounding areas into the Diocese of Como. Friedrich Barbarossa granted extensive market rights to Locarno in 1164 and granted imperial immediacy in 1186. Due to these privileges, Locarno developed substantial local autonomy, which assisted the development of municipal institutions. The nobles (Nobili) lost more and more rights to the citizens (borghesi). By 1224, the borghesi had their own administration and various privileges, including: market rights, the right to their own weights, maintenance of mills and grazing rights in Saleggi, in Colmanicchio (Alp Vignasca) and in the Magadino and Quartino valleys.[6] Locarno was the administrative center of the parish of Locarno. The Podestà or high government official, resided in the Casa della Gallinazza, which was burned in 1260 during the clashes between the Guelphs and Ghibellines. Several Locarno families, including members of the Capitanei di Locarno and Simone da Orello, played an important role in the battles between the two factions. In 1342, Luchino and Giovanni Visconti conquered the area, which brought Locarno back under the power of Milan. In 1439, Count Franchino Rusca was awarded Locarno as a fief.[6] In 1291, a Humiliati monastery was first mentioned in Locarno. St. Catherine's church, attached to the monastery, probably dates to the mid-14th century.[10] Under the Swiss Confederation[edit] Swiss Confederation in 1530, showing Locarno and other territories of the Ticino region The rule of the Rusca ended 1503, when the Confederates occupied Locarno, but failed to conquer the Visconti castle. After the battle of Novara in 1513, the French King Louis XII gave the Confederates the castle. In the Treaty of Freiburg in 1516, they received all of Locarno. The Twelve Cantons took turns appointing a governor (Italian: commissario), to rule over Locarno. The governor had both civil and criminal jurisdiction, except in certain cases after 1578, where seven judges were elected by the locals to try the cases. On taking office, the Governor swore under oath to obey the statutes of Locarno. The Governor was supported by a local mayor, and criminal fines were usually given to local community.[6]
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2536
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locarno", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:59:53Z", "digest": "sha1:YQCTSHUUT7JRCMVE53VU5VYQEVGM5TEF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8700, 8700.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8700, 9162.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8700, 61.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8700, 95.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8700, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8700, 215.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8700, 0.30756208]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8700, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8700, 0.02599257]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8700, 0.00742645]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8700, 0.01785204]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8700, 0.00914025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8700, 0.00771208]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8700, 0.01241535]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8700, 0.24209932]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8700, 0.46771879]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8700, 5.02295552]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8700, 5.58963583]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8700, 1394.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 46, 1.0], [46, 164, 0.0], [164, 185, 0.0], [185, 209, 0.0], [209, 235, 0.0], [235, 247, 0.0], [247, 262, 0.0], [262, 277, 0.0], [277, 292, 0.0], [292, 314, 0.0], [314, 333, 0.0], [333, 349, 0.0], [349, 363, 0.0], [363, 539, 0.0], [539, 570, 0.0], [570, 590, 0.0], [590, 1046, 1.0], [1046, 1168, 1.0], [1168, 1219, 1.0], [1219, 1353, 0.0], [1353, 1377, 0.0], [1377, 1391, 0.0], [1391, 1416, 0.0], [1416, 1434, 0.0], [1434, 1468, 0.0], [1468, 1490, 0.0], [1490, 1515, 0.0], [1515, 1542, 0.0], [1542, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 1587, 0.0], [1587, 1599, 0.0], [1599, 1614, 0.0], [1614, 1636, 0.0], [1636, 1678, 0.0], [1678, 1692, 0.0], [1692, 1713, 0.0], [1713, 1756, 0.0], [1756, 1779, 0.0], [1779, 1790, 0.0], [1790, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1900, 0.0], [1900, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 3070, 0.0], [3070, 3086, 0.0], [3086, 4020, 0.0], [4020, 4047, 0.0], [4047, 5123, 1.0], [5123, 5349, 0.0], [5349, 5523, 0.0], [5523, 5543, 0.0], [5543, 5611, 0.0], [5611, 6291, 1.0], [6291, 7140, 0.0], [7140, 7701, 0.0], [7701, 7859, 0.0], [7859, 7895, 0.0], [7895, 7983, 0.0], [7983, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 164, 0.0], [164, 185, 0.0], [185, 209, 0.0], [209, 235, 0.0], [235, 247, 0.0], [247, 262, 0.0], [262, 277, 0.0], [277, 292, 0.0], [292, 314, 0.0], [314, 333, 0.0], [333, 349, 0.0], [349, 363, 0.0], [363, 539, 0.0], [539, 570, 0.0], [570, 590, 0.0], [590, 1046, 0.0], [1046, 1168, 0.0], [1168, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1353, 0.0], [1353, 1377, 0.0], [1377, 1391, 0.0], [1391, 1416, 0.0], [1416, 1434, 0.0], [1434, 1468, 0.0], [1468, 1490, 0.0], [1490, 1515, 0.0], [1515, 1542, 0.0], [1542, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 1587, 0.0], [1587, 1599, 0.0], [1599, 1614, 0.0], [1614, 1636, 0.0], [1636, 1678, 0.0], [1678, 1692, 0.0], [1692, 1713, 0.0], [1713, 1756, 0.0], [1756, 1779, 0.0], [1779, 1790, 0.0], [1790, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1900, 0.0], [1900, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 3070, 0.0], [3070, 3086, 0.0], [3086, 4020, 0.0], [4020, 4047, 0.0], [4047, 5123, 0.0], [5123, 5349, 0.0], [5349, 5523, 0.0], [5523, 5543, 0.0], [5543, 5611, 0.0], [5611, 6291, 0.0], [6291, 7140, 0.0], [7140, 7701, 0.0], [7701, 7859, 0.0], [7859, 7895, 0.0], [7895, 7983, 0.0], [7983, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 46, 6.0], [46, 164, 12.0], [164, 185, 3.0], [185, 209, 5.0], [209, 235, 5.0], [235, 247, 2.0], [247, 262, 3.0], [262, 277, 2.0], [277, 292, 2.0], [292, 314, 4.0], [314, 333, 2.0], [333, 349, 3.0], [349, 363, 2.0], [363, 539, 19.0], [539, 570, 3.0], [570, 590, 3.0], [590, 1046, 77.0], [1046, 1168, 21.0], [1168, 1219, 8.0], [1219, 1353, 20.0], [1353, 1377, 3.0], [1377, 1391, 3.0], [1391, 1416, 4.0], [1416, 1434, 3.0], [1434, 1468, 5.0], [1468, 1490, 3.0], [1490, 1515, 4.0], [1515, 1542, 3.0], [1542, 1567, 5.0], [1567, 1587, 3.0], [1587, 1599, 2.0], [1599, 1614, 4.0], [1614, 1636, 3.0], [1636, 1678, 6.0], [1678, 1692, 3.0], [1692, 1713, 3.0], [1713, 1756, 7.0], [1756, 1779, 3.0], [1779, 1790, 2.0], [1790, 1802, 2.0], [1802, 1815, 2.0], [1815, 1842, 3.0], [1842, 1874, 6.0], [1874, 1900, 2.0], [1900, 2613, 119.0], [2613, 3070, 75.0], [3070, 3086, 2.0], [3086, 4020, 156.0], [4020, 4047, 3.0], [4047, 5123, 183.0], [5123, 5349, 36.0], [5349, 5523, 27.0], [5523, 5543, 2.0], [5543, 5611, 11.0], [5611, 6291, 115.0], [6291, 7140, 131.0], [7140, 7701, 89.0], [7701, 7859, 23.0], [7859, 7895, 4.0], [7895, 7983, 13.0], [7983, 8700, 119.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 164, 0.51020408], [164, 185, 0.66666667], [185, 209, 0.44444444], [209, 235, 0.47368421], [235, 247, 0.0], [247, 262, 0.07142857], [262, 277, 0.0], [277, 292, 0.0], [292, 314, 0.21052632], [314, 333, 0.0], [333, 349, 0.13333333], [349, 363, 0.0], [363, 539, 0.0], [539, 570, 0.0], [570, 590, 0.0], [590, 1046, 0.03196347], [1046, 1168, 0.0], [1168, 1219, 0.08163265], [1219, 1353, 0.0390625], [1353, 1377, 0.09090909], [1377, 1391, 0.16666667], [1391, 1416, 0.08695652], [1416, 1434, 0.125], [1434, 1468, 0.0625], [1468, 1490, 0.10526316], [1490, 1515, 0.08695652], [1515, 1542, 0.08], [1542, 1567, 0.08695652], [1567, 1587, 0.16666667], [1587, 1599, 0.2], [1599, 1614, 0.07142857], [1614, 1636, 0.04761905], [1636, 1678, 0.02439024], [1678, 1692, 0.07692308], [1692, 1713, 0.10526316], [1713, 1756, 0.05], [1756, 1779, 0.0952381], [1779, 1790, 0.1], [1790, 1802, 0.18181818], [1802, 1815, 0.16666667], [1815, 1842, 0.07692308], [1842, 1874, 0.1], [1874, 1900, 0.0], [1900, 2613, 0.01311953], [2613, 3070, 0.0247191], [3070, 3086, 0.0], [3086, 4020, 0.02081051], [4020, 4047, 0.0], [4047, 5123, 0.01137441], [5123, 5349, 0.00462963], [5349, 5523, 0.05389222], [5523, 5543, 0.0], [5543, 5611, 0.0], [5611, 6291, 0.01529052], [6291, 7140, 0.0255164], [7140, 7701, 0.023766], [7701, 7859, 0.05442177], [7859, 7895, 0.0], [7895, 7983, 0.04651163], [7983, 8700, 0.02442529]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 164, 0.0], [164, 185, 0.0], [185, 209, 0.0], [209, 235, 0.0], [235, 247, 0.0], [247, 262, 0.0], [262, 277, 0.0], [277, 292, 0.0], [292, 314, 0.0], [314, 333, 0.0], [333, 349, 0.0], [349, 363, 0.0], [363, 539, 0.0], [539, 570, 0.0], [570, 590, 0.0], [590, 1046, 0.0], [1046, 1168, 0.0], [1168, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1353, 0.0], [1353, 1377, 0.0], [1377, 1391, 0.0], [1391, 1416, 0.0], [1416, 1434, 0.0], [1434, 1468, 0.0], [1468, 1490, 0.0], [1490, 1515, 0.0], [1515, 1542, 0.0], [1542, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 1587, 0.0], [1587, 1599, 0.0], [1599, 1614, 0.0], [1614, 1636, 0.0], [1636, 1678, 0.0], [1678, 1692, 0.0], [1692, 1713, 0.0], [1713, 1756, 0.0], [1756, 1779, 0.0], [1779, 1790, 0.0], [1790, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1900, 0.0], [1900, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 3070, 0.0], [3070, 3086, 0.0], [3086, 4020, 0.0], [4020, 4047, 0.0], [4047, 5123, 0.0], [5123, 5349, 0.0], [5349, 5523, 0.0], [5523, 5543, 0.0], [5543, 5611, 0.0], [5611, 6291, 0.0], [6291, 7140, 0.0], [7140, 7701, 0.0], [7701, 7859, 0.0], [7859, 7895, 0.0], [7895, 7983, 0.0], [7983, 8700, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.04347826], [46, 164, 0.07627119], [164, 185, 0.04761905], [185, 209, 0.0], [209, 235, 0.0], [235, 247, 0.33333333], [247, 262, 0.0], [262, 277, 0.06666667], [277, 292, 0.13333333], [292, 314, 0.04545455], [314, 333, 0.05263158], [333, 349, 0.0], [349, 363, 0.07142857], [363, 539, 0.11363636], [539, 570, 0.12903226], [570, 590, 0.1], [590, 1046, 0.04385965], [1046, 1168, 0.06557377], [1168, 1219, 0.05882353], [1219, 1353, 0.05970149], [1353, 1377, 0.08333333], [1377, 1391, 0.07142857], [1391, 1416, 0.08], [1416, 1434, 0.11111111], [1434, 1468, 0.08823529], [1468, 1490, 0.09090909], [1490, 1515, 0.12], [1515, 1542, 0.07407407], [1542, 1567, 0.12], [1567, 1587, 0.1], [1587, 1599, 0.08333333], [1599, 1614, 0.06666667], [1614, 1636, 0.09090909], [1636, 1678, 0.02380952], [1678, 1692, 0.07142857], [1692, 1713, 0.0952381], [1713, 1756, 0.09302326], [1756, 1779, 0.08695652], [1779, 1790, 0.09090909], [1790, 1802, 0.08333333], [1802, 1815, 0.07692308], [1815, 1842, 0.03703704], [1842, 1874, 0.0625], [1874, 1900, 0.07692308], [1900, 2613, 0.02524544], [2613, 3070, 0.04376368], [3070, 3086, 0.0625], [3086, 4020, 0.03533191], [4020, 4047, 0.07407407], [4047, 5123, 0.02973978], [5123, 5349, 0.05309735], [5349, 5523, 0.03448276], [5523, 5543, 0.1], [5543, 5611, 0.05882353], [5611, 6291, 0.03235294], [6291, 7140, 0.03180212], [7140, 7701, 0.04456328], [7701, 7859, 0.03164557], [7859, 7895, 0.08333333], [7895, 7983, 0.04545455], [7983, 8700, 0.0404463]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8700, 0.96458393]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8700, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8700, 0.7453993]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8700, -278.22814095]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8700, 70.78684048]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8700, 338.29786482]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8700, 103.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Lu Yu Not to be confused with Song Dynasty poet Lu You, who may also be referred to as Lu Yu. This article includes a list of references, related reading or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. Please improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (March 2013) This is a Chinese name; the family name is Lu.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2537
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lu_Yu", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:55:11Z", "digest": "sha1:QWR7LI37Q26BRLXINS6H45SOZFDH75GE"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 365, 365.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 365, 473.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 365, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 365, 6.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 365, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 365, 276.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 365, 0.33783784]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 365, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 365, 0.02739726]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 365, 0.14864865]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 365, 0.796875]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 365, 4.5625]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 365, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 365, 3.84745544]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 365, 64.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 6, 0.0], [6, 94, 1.0], [94, 319, 0.0], [319, 365, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 6, 0.0], [6, 94, 0.0], [94, 319, 0.0], [319, 365, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 6, 2.0], [6, 94, 19.0], [94, 319, 33.0], [319, 365, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 6, 0.0], [6, 94, 0.0], [94, 319, 0.01834862], [319, 365, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 6, 0.0], [6, 94, 0.0], [94, 319, 0.0], [319, 365, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 6, 0.33333333], [6, 94, 0.07954545], [94, 319, 0.01333333], [319, 365, 0.06521739]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 365, 0.1629073]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 365, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 365, 0.00043589]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 365, -26.22557219]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 365, -4.35941175]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 365, -4.56911554]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 365, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Milli- Look up milli- in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. "Milli" redirects here; for the village in Azerbaijan, see Birinci Milli; for the Lil Wayne song, see A Milli; for similar-sounding words, see Millie. Milli (symbol m) is a prefix in the metric system denoting a factor of one thousandth (10−3).[1] Adopted in 1795, the prefix comes from the Latin mille, meaning one thousand (the plural is milia). A snow crystal is about 1 millimeter in diameter.[2] Metric prefixes
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2538
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milli-", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:26:03Z", "digest": "sha1:F6HZNEPHP6KX2AVNRQX3WBQWOYDSWYVG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 474, 474.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 474, 609.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 474, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 474, 11.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 474, 0.8]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 474, 219.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 474, 0.2962963]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 474, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 474, 0.0326087]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 474, 0.01851852]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 474, 0.2962963]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 474, 0.65384615]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 474, 4.71794872]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 474, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 474, 3.68990513]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 474, 78.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 58, 1.0], [58, 209, 1.0], [209, 406, 1.0], [406, 459, 0.0], [459, 474, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 58, 0.0], [58, 209, 0.0], [209, 406, 0.0], [406, 459, 0.0], [459, 474, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 7, 1.0], [7, 58, 8.0], [58, 209, 24.0], [209, 406, 34.0], [406, 459, 9.0], [459, 474, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 58, 0.0], [58, 209, 0.0], [209, 406, 0.04347826], [406, 459, 0.04081633], [459, 474, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 7, 0.0], [7, 58, 0.0], [58, 209, 0.0], [209, 406, 0.0], [406, 459, 0.0], [459, 474, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 7, 0.14285714], [7, 58, 0.03921569], [58, 209, 0.05960265], [209, 406, 0.01522843], [406, 459, 0.01886792], [459, 474, 0.06666667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 474, 0.50997859]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 474, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 474, 0.00033951]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 474, -26.40439064]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 474, -3.86208648]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 474, -0.87272974]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 474, 6.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Natural dye Naturally dyed skeins made with madder root, Colonial Williamsburg, VA Natural dyes are dyes or colorants derived from plants, invertebrates, or minerals. The majority of natural dyes are vegetable dyes from plant sources—roots, berries, bark, leaves, and wood—and other organic sources such as fungi and lichens. Archaeologists have found evidence of textile dyeing dating back to the Neolithic period. In China, dyeing with plants, barks and insects has been traced back more than 5,000 years.[1] The essential process of dyeing changed little over time. Typically, the dye material is put in a pot of water and then the textiles to be dyed are added to the pot, which is heated and stirred until the color is transferred. Textile fibre may be dyed before spinning ("dyed in the wool"), but most textiles are "yarn-dyed" or "piece-dyed" after weaving. Many natural dyes require the use of chemicals called mordants to bind the dye to the textile fibres; tannin from oak galls, salt, natural alum, vinegar, and ammonia from stale urine were used by early dyers. Many mordants, and some dyes themselves, produce strong odors, and large-scale dyeworks were often isolated in their own districts. Throughout history, people have dyed their textiles using common, locally available materials, but scarce dyestuffs that produced brilliant and permanent colors such as the natural invertebrate dyes, Tyrian purple and crimson kermes, became highly prized luxury items in the ancient and medieval world. Plant-based dyes such as woad (Isatis tinctoria), indigo, saffron, and madder were raised commercially and were important trade goods in the economies of Asia and Europe. Across Asia and Africa, patterned fabrics were produced using resist dyeing techniques to control the absorption of color in piece-dyed cloth. Dyes such as cochineal and logwood (Haematoxylum campechianum) were brought to Europe by the Spanish treasure fleets, and the dyestuffs of Europe were carried by colonists to America. The discovery of man-made synthetic dyes in the mid-19th century triggered a long decline in the large-scale market for natural dyes. Synthetic dyes, which could be produced in large quantities, quickly superseded natural dyes for the commercial textile production enabled by the industrial revolution, and unlike natural dyes, were suitable for the synthetic fibres that followed. Artists of the Arts and Crafts Movement preferred the pure shades and subtle variability of natural dyes, which mellow with age but preserve their true colors, unlike early synthetic dyes,[1] and helped ensure that the old European techniques for dyeing and printing with natural dyestuffs were preserved for use by home and craft dyers. Natural dyeing techniques are also preserved by artisans in traditional cultures around the world. In the early 21st century, the market for natural dyes in the fashion industry is experiencing a resurgence.[2] Western consumers have become more concerned about the health and environmental impact of synthetic dyes in manufacturing and there is a growing demand for products that use natural dyes. The European Union, for example, has encouraged Indonesian batik cloth producers to switch to natural dyes to improve their export market in Europe.[3] 1 Dyes in use in the fashion industry 3 Processes 4 Common dyestuffs 4.1 Reds and pinks 4.2 Oranges 4.3 Yellows 4.4 Greens 4.5 Blues 5 Natural dyeing with Indigo, Jaipur (Rajasthan, India) 5.1 Purples 5.2 Browns 5.3 Greys and blacks 5.4 Lichen 5.5 Fungi 6 Luxury dyestuffs 6.1 Royal purple 6.2 Crimson and scarlet 6.3 The rise of formal black 7 Decline and rediscovery Dyes in use in the fashion industry[edit] Fibre content determines the type of dye required for a fabric: Cellulose fibres: cotton, linen, hemp, ramie, bamboo, rayon Protein fibres: wool, angora, mohair, cashmere, silk, soy, leather, suede Cellulose fibres require fibre-reactive, direct/substantive, and vat dyes, which are colourless, soluble dyes fixed by light and/or oxygen. Protein fibres require vat, acid, or indirect/mordant dyes, that require a bonding agent. Each synthetic fibre requires its own dyeing method, for example, nylon requires acid, disperse and pigment dyes, rayon acetate requires disperse dyes, and so on. The types of natural dyes currently in use by the global fashion industry include:[4] Animal: Cochineal insect (red) Cow urine (Indian yellow) Lac insect (red, violet) Murex snail (purple) Octopus/Cuttlefish (sepia brown) Plant: Catechu or Cutch tree (brown) Gamboge tree resin (dark mustard yellow) Himalayan rubhada root (yellow) Indigofera plant (blue) Kamala tree (red) Larkspur[disambiguation needed][clarification needed] plant (yellow) Madder root (red, pink, orange) Myrabolan fruit (yellow, green, black) Pomegranate peel (yellow) Weld herb (yellow) Origins[edit] Colors in the "ruddy" range of reds, browns, and oranges are the first attested colors in a number of ancient textile sites ranging from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age across the Levant, Egypt, Mesopotamia and Europe, followed by evidence of blues and then yellows, with green appearing somewhat later. The earliest surviving evidence of textile dyeing was found at the large Neolithic settlement at Çatalhöyük in southern Anatolia, where traces of red dyes, possible from ochre (iron oxide pigments from clay), were found.[5] Polychrome or multicolored fabrics seem to have been developed in the 3rd or 2nd millennium BCE.[5] Textiles with a "red-brown warp and an ochre-yellow weft" were discovered in Egyptian pyramids of the Sixth Dynasty (2345–2180 BCE).[6] The chemical analysis that would definitively identify the dyes used in ancient textiles has rarely been conducted, and even when a dye such as indigo blue is detected it is impossible to determine which of several indigo-bearing plants was used.[7] Nevertheless, based on the colors of surviving textile fragments and the evidence of actual dyestuffs found in archaeological sites, reds, blues, and yellows from plant sources were in common use by the late Bronze Age and Iron Age.[8] Processes[edit] For more details on this topic, see Glossary of dyeing terms. Dyeing wool cloth, 1482, from British Library Royal MS 15.E.iii, f. 269. The essential process of dyeing requires soaking the material containing the dye (the dyestuff) in water, adding the textile to be dyed to the resulting solution (the dyebath), and bringing the solution to a simmer for an extended period, often measured in days or even weeks, stirring occasionally until the color has evenly transferred to the textiles.[9] Some dyestuffs, such as indigo and lichens, will give good color when used alone; these dyes are called direct dyes or substantive dyes. The majority of plant dyes, however, also require the use of a mordant, a chemical used to "fix" the color in the textile fibres. These dyes are called adjective dyes. By using different mordants, dyers can often obtain a variety of colors and shades from the same dye. Fibres or cloth may be pretreated with mordants, or the mordant may be incorporated in the dyebath. In traditional dyeing, the common mordants are vinegar, tannin from oak bark, sumac or oak galls, ammonia from stale urine, and wood-ash liquor or potash (potassium carbonate) made by leaching wood ashes and evaporating the solution.[10][11][12] We shall never know by what chances primitive man discovered that salt, vinegar from fermenting fruit, natural alum, and stale urine helped to fix and enhance the colours of his yarns, but for many centuries these four substances were used as mordants.[10] Salt helps to "fix" or increase "fastness" of colors, vinegar improves reds and purples, and the ammonia in stale urine assists in the fermentation of indigo dyes.[10] Natural alum (aluminum sulfate) is the most common metallic salt mordant, but tin (stannous chloride), copper (cupric sulfate), iron (ferrous sulfate, called copperas) and chrome (potassium dichromate) are also used. Iron mordants "sadden" colors, while tin and chrome mordants brighten colors. The iron mordants contribute to fabric deterioration, referred to as "dye rot". Additional chemicals or alterants may be applied after dying to further alter or reinforce the colors.[13][14][15] A dye-works with baskets of dyestuffs, skeins of dyed yarn, and heated vats for dyeing. Textiles may be dyed as raw fibre (dyed in the fleece or dyed in the wool), as spun yarn (dyed in the hank or yarn-dyed), or after weaving (piece-dyed).[16] Mordants often leave residue in wool fibre that makes it difficult to spin, so wool was generally dyed after spinning, as yarn or woven cloth. Indigo, however, requires no mordant, and cloth manufacturers in medieval England often dyed wool in the fleece with the indigo-bearing plant woad and then dyed the cloth again after weaving to produce deep blues, browns, reds, purples, blacks, and tawnies.[17][18] In China, Japan, India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Gambia, and other parts of West Africa and southeast Asia, patterned silk and cotton fabrics were produced using resist dyeing techniques in which the cloth is printed or stenciled with starch or wax, or tied in various ways to prevent even penetration of the dye when the cloth is piece-dyed. Chinese ladao is dated to the 10th century; other traditional techniques include tie-dye, batik, Rōketsuzome, katazome, bandhani and leheria.[19] The mordants used in dyeing and many dyestuffs themselves give off strong and unpleasant odors, and the actual process of dyeing requires a good supply of fresh water, storage areas for bulky plant materials, vats which can be kept heated (often for days or weeks), and airy spaces to dry the dyed textiles. Ancient large-scale dye-works tended to be located on the outskirts of populated areas, on windy promontories.[20] Common dyestuffs[edit] The Hunt of the Unicorn Tapestr
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2539
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_dye", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:33:42Z", "digest": "sha1:P5OEDNTLRKAWJAJBBZG3B45GCIME4KXM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 9895, 9895.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 9895, 10076.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 9895, 64.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 9895, 72.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 9895, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 9895, 325.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 9895, 0.29301619]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 9895, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 9895, 0.02361216]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 9895, 0.01682994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 9895, 0.01155489]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 9895, 0.01130369]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 9895, 0.00452148]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 9895, 0.00577744]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 9895, 0.00303644]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 9895, 0.2145749]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 9895, 0.42050616]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 9895, 5.16677482]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 9895, 5.69512387]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 9895, 1541.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 12, 0.0], [12, 83, 0.0], [83, 326, 1.0], [326, 1207, 1.0], [1207, 2008, 1.0], [2008, 2827, 1.0], [2827, 3279, 0.0], [3279, 3317, 0.0], [3317, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3348, 0.0], [3348, 3367, 0.0], [3367, 3379, 0.0], [3379, 3391, 0.0], [3391, 3402, 0.0], [3402, 3412, 0.0], [3412, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3480, 0.0], [3480, 3491, 0.0], [3491, 3512, 0.0], [3512, 3523, 0.0], [3523, 3533, 0.0], [3533, 3552, 0.0], [3552, 3569, 0.0], [3569, 3593, 0.0], [3593, 3622, 0.0], [3622, 3648, 0.0], [3648, 3690, 0.0], [3690, 3754, 0.0], [3754, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 4367, 0.0], [4367, 4375, 0.0], [4375, 4398, 0.0], [4398, 4424, 0.0], [4424, 4449, 0.0], [4449, 4470, 0.0], [4470, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4540, 0.0], [4540, 4581, 0.0], [4581, 4613, 0.0], [4613, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4655, 0.0], [4655, 4724, 0.0], [4724, 4756, 0.0], [4756, 4795, 0.0], [4795, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 4854, 0.0], [4854, 5618, 0.0], [5618, 6104, 0.0], [6104, 6120, 0.0], [6120, 6182, 1.0], [6182, 6255, 1.0], [6255, 6613, 0.0], [6613, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7623, 0.0], [7623, 8281, 0.0], [8281, 8369, 1.0], [8369, 8935, 0.0], [8935, 9418, 0.0], [9418, 9841, 0.0], [9841, 9864, 0.0], [9864, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 12, 0.0], [12, 83, 0.0], [83, 326, 0.0], [326, 1207, 0.0], [1207, 2008, 0.0], [2008, 2827, 0.0], [2827, 3279, 0.0], [3279, 3317, 0.0], [3317, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3348, 0.0], [3348, 3367, 0.0], [3367, 3379, 0.0], [3379, 3391, 0.0], [3391, 3402, 0.0], [3402, 3412, 0.0], [3412, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3480, 0.0], [3480, 3491, 0.0], [3491, 3512, 0.0], [3512, 3523, 0.0], [3523, 3533, 0.0], [3533, 3552, 0.0], [3552, 3569, 0.0], [3569, 3593, 0.0], [3593, 3622, 0.0], [3622, 3648, 0.0], [3648, 3690, 0.0], [3690, 3754, 0.0], [3754, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 4367, 0.0], [4367, 4375, 0.0], [4375, 4398, 0.0], [4398, 4424, 0.0], [4424, 4449, 0.0], [4449, 4470, 0.0], [4470, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4540, 0.0], [4540, 4581, 0.0], [4581, 4613, 0.0], [4613, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4655, 0.0], [4655, 4724, 0.0], [4724, 4756, 0.0], [4756, 4795, 0.0], [4795, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 4854, 0.0], [4854, 5618, 0.0], [5618, 6104, 0.0], [6104, 6120, 0.0], [6120, 6182, 0.0], [6182, 6255, 0.0], [6255, 6613, 0.0], [6613, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7623, 0.0], [7623, 8281, 0.0], [8281, 8369, 0.0], [8369, 8935, 0.0], [8935, 9418, 0.0], [9418, 9841, 0.0], [9841, 9864, 0.0], [9864, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 12, 2.0], [12, 83, 10.0], [83, 326, 36.0], [326, 1207, 146.0], [1207, 2008, 118.0], [2008, 2827, 124.0], [2827, 3279, 70.0], [3279, 3317, 8.0], [3317, 3329, 2.0], [3329, 3348, 3.0], [3348, 3367, 4.0], [3367, 3379, 2.0], [3379, 3391, 2.0], [3391, 3402, 2.0], [3402, 3412, 2.0], [3412, 3468, 8.0], [3468, 3480, 2.0], [3480, 3491, 2.0], [3491, 3512, 4.0], [3512, 3523, 2.0], [3523, 3533, 2.0], [3533, 3552, 3.0], [3552, 3569, 3.0], [3569, 3593, 4.0], [3593, 3622, 6.0], [3622, 3648, 4.0], [3648, 3690, 7.0], [3690, 3754, 11.0], [3754, 3814, 8.0], [3814, 3888, 10.0], [3888, 4367, 70.0], [4367, 4375, 1.0], [4375, 4398, 3.0], [4398, 4424, 4.0], [4424, 4449, 4.0], [4449, 4470, 3.0], [4470, 4503, 3.0], [4503, 4510, 1.0], [4510, 4540, 5.0], [4540, 4581, 6.0], [4581, 4613, 4.0], [4613, 4637, 3.0], [4637, 4655, 3.0], [4655, 4724, 5.0], [4724, 4756, 5.0], [4756, 4795, 5.0], [4795, 4821, 3.0], [4821, 4840, 3.0], [4840, 4854, 1.0], [4854, 5618, 120.0], [5618, 6104, 78.0], [6104, 6120, 1.0], [6120, 6182, 11.0], [6182, 6255, 12.0], [6255, 6613, 57.0], [6613, 7366, 124.0], [7366, 7623, 42.0], [7623, 8281, 96.0], [8281, 8369, 15.0], [8369, 8935, 94.0], [8935, 9418, 75.0], [9418, 9841, 69.0], [9841, 9864, 2.0], [9864, 9895, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 12, 0.0], [12, 83, 0.0], [83, 326, 0.0], [326, 1207, 0.00591017], [1207, 2008, 0.0], [2008, 2827, 0.00374065], [2827, 3279, 0.00907029], [3279, 3317, 0.02702703], [3317, 3329, 0.09090909], [3329, 3348, 0.05555556], [3348, 3367, 0.11764706], [3367, 3379, 0.2], [3379, 3391, 0.2], [3391, 3402, 0.22222222], [3402, 3412, 0.25], [3412, 3468, 0.01960784], [3468, 3480, 0.2], [3480, 3491, 0.22222222], [3491, 3512, 0.10526316], [3512, 3523, 0.22222222], [3523, 3533, 0.25], [3533, 3552, 0.05555556], [3552, 3569, 0.13333333], [3569, 3593, 0.09090909], [3593, 3622, 0.07407407], [3622, 3648, 0.04], [3648, 3690, 0.0], [3690, 3754, 0.0], [3754, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 4367, 0.00219298], [4367, 4375, 0.0], [4375, 4398, 0.0], [4398, 4424, 0.0], [4424, 4449, 0.0], [4449, 4470, 0.0], [4470, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4540, 0.0], [4540, 4581, 0.0], [4581, 4613, 0.0], [4613, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4655, 0.0], [4655, 4724, 0.0], [4724, 4756, 0.0], [4756, 4795, 0.0], [4795, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 4854, 0.0], [4854, 5618, 0.01763908], [5618, 6104, 0.00422833], [6104, 6120, 0.0], [6120, 6182, 0.0], [6182, 6255, 0.13846154], [6255, 6613, 0.00289017], [6613, 7366, 0.00831025], [7366, 7623, 0.00803213], [7623, 8281, 0.01294498], [8281, 8369, 0.0], [8369, 8935, 0.01121495], [8935, 9418, 0.00862069], [9418, 9841, 0.00488998], [9841, 9864, 0.0], [9864, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 12, 0.0], [12, 83, 0.0], [83, 326, 0.0], [326, 1207, 0.0], [1207, 2008, 0.0], [2008, 2827, 0.0], [2827, 3279, 0.0], [3279, 3317, 0.0], [3317, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3348, 0.0], [3348, 3367, 0.0], [3367, 3379, 0.0], [3379, 3391, 0.0], [3391, 3402, 0.0], [3402, 3412, 0.0], [3412, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3480, 0.0], [3480, 3491, 0.0], [3491, 3512, 0.0], [3512, 3523, 0.0], [3523, 3533, 0.0], [3533, 3552, 0.0], [3552, 3569, 0.0], [3569, 3593, 0.0], [3593, 3622, 0.0], [3622, 3648, 0.0], [3648, 3690, 0.0], [3690, 3754, 0.0], [3754, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 4367, 0.0], [4367, 4375, 0.0], [4375, 4398, 0.0], [4398, 4424, 0.0], [4424, 4449, 0.0], [4449, 4470, 0.0], [4470, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4510, 0.0], [4510, 4540, 0.0], [4540, 4581, 0.0], [4581, 4613, 0.0], [4613, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4655, 0.0], [4655, 4724, 0.0], [4724, 4756, 0.0], [4756, 4795, 0.0], [4795, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 4854, 0.0], [4854, 5618, 0.0], [5618, 6104, 0.0], [6104, 6120, 0.0], [6120, 6182, 0.0], [6182, 6255, 0.0], [6255, 6613, 0.0], [6613, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7623, 0.0], [7623, 8281, 0.0], [8281, 8369, 0.0], [8369, 8935, 0.0], [8935, 9418, 0.0], [9418, 9841, 0.0], [9841, 9864, 0.0], [9864, 9895, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 12, 0.08333333], [12, 83, 0.07042254], [83, 326, 0.00823045], [326, 1207, 0.01021566], [1207, 2008, 0.01872659], [2008, 2827, 0.00976801], [2827, 3279, 0.01548673], [3279, 3317, 0.02631579], [3317, 3329, 0.08333333], [3329, 3348, 0.05263158], [3348, 3367, 0.05263158], [3367, 3379, 0.08333333], [3379, 3391, 0.08333333], [3391, 3402, 0.09090909], [3402, 3412, 0.1], [3412, 3468, 0.08928571], [3468, 3480, 0.08333333], [3480, 3491, 0.09090909], [3491, 3512, 0.04761905], [3512, 3523, 0.09090909], [3523, 3533, 0.1], [3533, 3552, 0.05263158], [3552, 3569, 0.05882353], [3569, 3593, 0.04166667], [3593, 3622, 0.03448276], [3622, 3648, 0.03846154], [3648, 3690, 0.02380952], [3690, 3754, 0.015625], [3754, 3814, 0.01666667], [3814, 3888, 0.01351351], [3888, 4367, 0.00835073], [4367, 4375, 0.125], [4375, 4398, 0.04347826], [4398, 4424, 0.07692308], [4424, 4449, 0.04], [4449, 4470, 0.04761905], [4470, 4503, 0.06060606], [4503, 4510, 0.14285714], [4510, 4540, 0.06666667], [4540, 4581, 0.02439024], [4581, 4613, 0.03125], [4613, 4637, 0.04166667], [4637, 4655, 0.05555556], [4655, 4724, 0.01449275], [4724, 4756, 0.03125], [4756, 4795, 0.02564103], [4795, 4821, 0.03846154], [4821, 4840, 0.05263158], [4840, 4854, 0.07142857], [4854, 5618, 0.03010471], [5618, 6104, 0.01234568], [6104, 6120, 0.0625], [6120, 6182, 0.03225806], [6182, 6255, 0.09589041], [6255, 6613, 0.0027933], [6613, 7366, 0.00796813], [7366, 7623, 0.00389105], [7623, 8281, 0.00759878], [8281, 8369, 0.01136364], [8369, 8935, 0.00706714], [8935, 9418, 0.02484472], [9418, 9841, 0.00472813], [9841, 9864, 0.04347826], [9864, 9895, 0.12903226]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 9895, 0.91047281]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 9895, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 9895, 0.57432723]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 9895, -357.17767546]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 9895, 4.07152716]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 9895, 176.3510307]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 9895, 69.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
(1946-05-19) 19 May 1946 (age 67) Leicester, England Self proclaimed Medium and Healer Samantha Altea (b. 1970) www.rosemaryaltea.com Rosemary Altea (born 19 May 1946) is a British author and self-proclaimed psychic. She has appeared on various programs, including Larry King Live, The Oprah Winfrey Show (with Michael Shermer in 1995) and was ridiculed on Penn and Teller's Bullshit! in premiere episode, "Talking to the Dead." She has written five books and claims to have a "Healing Society". Altea was born in Leicester, England to Lilian and William Edwards, and has two brothers and three sisters.[1] Her formal education ended at the age of 16 when she left school and then got married when she was 19.[1] Altea is divorced and has one daughter born in 1970.[1] Career[edit] In 2001 Altea inherited a farm in Dorset, Vermont from Llewella Day, an elderly cancer victim. Ms. Day changed her will shortly before she died, thereby cutting her family out and leaving the $740,000 farm to Altea, with the desire it remain a working farm. Altea successfully fought Day's family's attempts to invalidate the will, and—against Ms. Day's wishes—demolished the farm house to make the farm into a "a healing foundation".[2][3] The family argued in court that Altea used "undue influence to convince a dying woman to change her will."[4] Regarding the 2003 Bullshit! episode, Kevin Christopher of the Skeptical Inquirer wrote that the segment on Altea "was a nice expose of Rosemary Altea during a taped reading arranged by Showtime. Viewers got a clear picture of how she worked the small group of people present for readings prior to the taping in order to glean information for later use. Skeptic and Mentalist Mark Edward replicated the cold reading tactics she used and showed how her publicist, Joni Evans, seeded the group with people whose biographies were already known to Altea in order to boost her on-camera success." a clear example of hot reading[5] On 26 January 2007 Altea appeared on Larry King Live with sceptic James Randi. When asked on the show to take the One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge, she refused to answer whether she would take the test.[6] In 2009, Altea learned that Denise M. Hall, her accountant, had stolen $200,000 from her since, using four credit cards to obtain cash advances, forging cheques and giving herself unauthorised electronic paychecks all under Altea's name.[7]
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2540
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosemary_Altea", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:46:36Z", "digest": "sha1:SF4ES5NMGCHGWRB3J4DPAHZQ7KXAPEGH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2412, 2412.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2412, 2712.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2412, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2412, 31.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2412, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2412, 202.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2412, 2.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2412, 0.33267327]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2412, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2412, 0.00520291]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2412, 0.00936524]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2412, 0.0019802]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2412, 0.23168317]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2412, 0.61167513]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2412, 4.87817259]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2412, 5.07663378]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2412, 394.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 53, 0.0], [53, 87, 0.0], [87, 112, 0.0], [112, 134, 0.0], [134, 496, 1.0], [496, 769, 0.0], [769, 782, 0.0], [782, 1333, 0.0], [1333, 1959, 0.0], [1959, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 53, 0.0], [53, 87, 0.0], [87, 112, 0.0], [112, 134, 0.0], [134, 496, 0.0], [496, 769, 0.0], [769, 782, 0.0], [782, 1333, 0.0], [1333, 1959, 0.0], [1959, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 34, 6.0], [34, 53, 2.0], [53, 87, 5.0], [87, 112, 4.0], [112, 134, 1.0], [134, 496, 59.0], [496, 769, 49.0], [769, 782, 1.0], [782, 1333, 90.0], [1333, 1959, 104.0], [1959, 2172, 37.0], [2172, 2412, 36.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 34, 0.59259259], [34, 53, 0.0], [53, 87, 0.0], [87, 112, 0.19047619], [112, 134, 0.0], [134, 496, 0.02906977], [496, 769, 0.04214559], [769, 782, 0.0], [782, 1333, 0.02480916], [1333, 1959, 0.00815661], [1959, 2172, 0.03381643], [2172, 2412, 0.04824561]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 53, 0.0], [53, 87, 0.0], [87, 112, 0.0], [112, 134, 0.0], [134, 496, 0.0], [496, 769, 0.0], [769, 782, 0.0], [782, 1333, 0.0], [1333, 1959, 0.0], [1959, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2412, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 34, 0.02941176], [34, 53, 0.10526316], [53, 87, 0.08823529], [87, 112, 0.08], [112, 134, 0.0], [134, 496, 0.06077348], [496, 769, 0.02930403], [769, 782, 0.07692308], [782, 1333, 0.02722323], [1333, 1959, 0.02875399], [1959, 2172, 0.0657277], [2172, 2412, 0.025]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2412, 0.68811095]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2412, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2412, 0.54121584]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2412, -75.81777304]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2412, 4.99304297]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2412, 28.91775835]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2412, 25.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Tulio Demicheli (1914-08-15)August 15, 1914 May 25, 1992(1992-05-25) (aged 77) Film director, Screenwriter Tulio Demicheli (born 15 August 1914,
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2541
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tulio_Demicheli", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:45:38Z", "digest": "sha1:G6CBR2CFORT2EIAIPUKGKHBUQMESGSYC"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 144, 144.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 144, 360.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 144, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 144, 16.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 144, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 144, 48.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 144, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 144, 0.25225225]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 144, 0.7]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 144, 0.78947368]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 144, 5.84210526]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 144, 2.65258753]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 144, 19.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 44, 0.0], [44, 79, 0.0], [79, 107, 0.0], [107, 144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 44, 0.0], [44, 79, 0.0], [79, 107, 0.0], [107, 144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 16, 2.0], [16, 44, 3.0], [44, 79, 5.0], [79, 107, 3.0], [107, 144, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 44, 0.63636364], [44, 79, 0.59259259], [79, 107, 0.0], [107, 144, 0.17142857]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 44, 0.0], [44, 79, 0.0], [79, 107, 0.0], [107, 144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 16, 0.125], [16, 44, 0.03571429], [44, 79, 0.02857143], [79, 107, 0.07142857], [107, 144, 0.08108108]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 144, 0.00181329]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 144, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 144, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 144, -45.04322703]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 144, -20.28877486]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 144, -0.60525806]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 144, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Vat dye Vat dyes are a class of dyes that are classified as such because of the method by which they are applied. Vat dyeing is a process that refers to dyeing that takes place in a bucket or vat. Almost any dye, including fiber-reactive dyes, direct dyes, and acid dyes, can be used in a vat dye. Cotton, wool, and other fibers can be all dyed with vat dyes. The original vat dye is indigo, once obtained from plants but now produced synthetically.[1] 1 Materials suited for vat dying 2 Dyeing process 2.1 Properties 3 Light-oxidized vat dyes 4 Chemical structures Materials suited for vat dying[edit] Although almost all dyeing can be done in a vat, the term vat dye is used to describe a chemical class of dyes that are applied to cellulosic fibre (i.e. cotton) using a redox reaction as described below. Because of the use of caustic soda, and the very high pH of the dye bath in the dyeing process, wool cannot be dyed using vat dyestuffs. Wool is soluble in caustic soda solutions. It is possible to dye wool at room temperatures with indigo (vat blue 1) and other low substantive vat dyes using soda ash as the alkali source with very little strength loss. Vat red 10, vat violet 13 and vat orange 1 can be applied in this manner as well.[2] Dyeing process[edit] Vat dyes characteristically require a reducing agent to solubilize them. The most common reducing agent is sodium dithionite (Na2S2O4), which converts the dye to its "leuco" form that is soluble. Once attached to the fabric, the leuco dye is then oxidized to the insoluble state which is intensely colored. Chemical reactions such as oxidation, reduction, pH control are often necessary; even the diss
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2542
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vat_dye", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:02:20Z", "digest": "sha1:VSPP6IRV62WP3AG6DPHPFRJDQQFMK7AN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1671, 1671.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1671, 1819.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1671, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1671, 17.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1671, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1671, 133.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1671, 0.36676218]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1671, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1671, 0.02710843]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1671, 0.02635542]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1671, 0.01656627]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1671, 0.02259036]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1671, 0.16905444]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1671, 0.49659864]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1671, 4.5170068]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1671, 4.56863095]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1671, 294.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 453, 0.0], [453, 486, 0.0], [486, 503, 0.0], [503, 518, 0.0], [518, 544, 0.0], [544, 566, 0.0], [566, 603, 0.0], [603, 1249, 0.0], [1249, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 453, 0.0], [453, 486, 0.0], [486, 503, 0.0], [503, 518, 0.0], [518, 544, 0.0], [544, 566, 0.0], [566, 603, 0.0], [603, 1249, 0.0], [1249, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 8, 2.0], [8, 453, 82.0], [453, 486, 6.0], [486, 503, 3.0], [503, 518, 2.0], [518, 544, 4.0], [544, 566, 3.0], [566, 603, 5.0], [603, 1249, 122.0], [1249, 1270, 2.0], [1270, 1671, 63.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 453, 0.002331], [453, 486, 0.03125], [486, 503, 0.0625], [503, 518, 0.15384615], [518, 544, 0.04166667], [544, 566, 0.04761905], [566, 603, 0.0], [603, 1249, 0.0111465], [1249, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1671, 0.00771208]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 8, 0.0], [8, 453, 0.0], [453, 486, 0.0], [486, 503, 0.0], [503, 518, 0.0], [518, 544, 0.0], [544, 566, 0.0], [566, 603, 0.0], [603, 1249, 0.0], [1249, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1671, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 8, 0.125], [8, 453, 0.01123596], [453, 486, 0.03030303], [486, 503, 0.05882353], [503, 518, 0.06666667], [518, 544, 0.03846154], [544, 566, 0.04545455], [566, 603, 0.02702703], [603, 1249, 0.00928793], [1249, 1270, 0.04761905], [1270, 1671, 0.01995012]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1671, 0.81269139]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1671, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1671, 0.13964534]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1671, -60.39836047]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1671, 4.37580261]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1671, 14.93539351]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1671, 17.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Yitzhak Rabin assassination conspiracy theories Yitzhak Rabin assassination conspiracy theories arose almost immediately following the assassination of Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli Prime Minister, on November 4, 1995. The gunman Yigal Amir, a Jewish Israeli student, was apprehended within seconds by other people in the crowd. Rabin died later on the operating table of Ichilov Hospital. Amir confessed to the assassination of Rabin. The matter has been reported as clear cut in the media, and the Shamgar national inquiry commission and the court all drew the same conclusion that Amir was guilty of murder. Yet, some inconsistencies in the evidence have been alleged, both in the medical records and in the inquiry testimony. These allegations and other suspicions have been included in occasional left-wing, and more prevalent right-wing conspiracy theories. 1 Conspiracy claims 2 Criticisms of the conspiracy theories 6.1 Articles in press and magazines 6.2 Articles on alternative news sites 6.3 Miscellaneous Conspiracy claims[edit] Conspiracy theories have made some or all of the following claims. Others have been strident in opposing these conclusions.[1] Police reports state that gunpowder was found on Rabin's body and clothing, suggesting that he had been shot at point-blank range, as gunpowder travels only a few inches before dispersing. According to the official version, Amir shot from a distance at which no powder traces could have settled on Rabin's body and clothing.[2][3] Surgery reports describe a bullet wound with the bullet entrance in the chest[4] are inconsistent with the eyewitness reports and the Kempler video, which suggests that Rabin was shot in the back while walking away from Yigal Amir. Source of this provides link to a video in Hebrew and a written, inaccurate translation to English. Both versions, however, contain no hint that there was a chest entry wound, merely that there was a wound in the chest (can equally be an exit wound). Both versions report two gunshots rather than three. Rabin would have walked after Amir's shots in a manner inconsistent with gunshot, an impossibility if they shattered the vertebrae.[5][6] Each medical record describes wounds which are "completely different" in nature to those concluded by the official Shamgar Commission. Medical descriptions of Rabin's condition are described as suddenly appearing to change.[7] An anonymous physician who consulted Barry Chamish opined that "[t]he first two wounds, to the chest and abdomen occurred before Rabin's arrival. The third, frontal chest wound, had to have been inflicted after he entered the hospital," and that "it is inconceivable that Rabin had no spinal damage. The six members of the operating team were too skilled to have all been wrong about that."[6] Three police officers who had been present testified that "when Yitzhak Rabin was placed in the car, he showed no visible wounds."[8][9] Gordon Thomas in his book "Gideon's Spies" adds: "The surgeons insisted there was no possible gunshot wound that would have allowed Rabin to leave the attack site showing no evidence of a wound and arrive at the hospital with multiple damage ... subsequently the doctors have refused to discuss the matter."[6] Rabin's motorcade took 22 minutes to arrive at the hospital, even though he had a highly experienced chauffeur, and the streets were cordoned off.[10] The distance between the crime scene and the hospital is a five minute walk.[11] Police ballistics tests on shell casings found at the scene did not match Amir's gun.[2][12] No gunpowder residue was found on Amir's hands, clothing, or hair. Gunpowder residue would inevitably have been present if Amir had shot genuine bullets, as opposed to blanks.[3][13] No blood was seen coming from Rabin at the scene, despite wounds to his lung and spleen, nor was any found later at that location.[8][9] By contrast witnesses describe blood "gushing" from a chest wound upon arriving at hospital.[14] Some witnesses stated that someone shouted, "It's nothing ... they're blanks. It's a toy gun."[8][15][16] A Shin Bet (secret service) agent testified that "I heard a policeman shout to people to calm down. The shot is a blank."[8][9] Policeman Moshe Ephron stated: "The shots didn't sound natural. If they were real shots, they should have sounded much louder."[8][9] Leah Rabin stated that a security guard told her immediately after the incident that the bullets shot at her husband were "blanks". She further stated that she was told by an Israeli security chief that she "should not worry as the whole thing had been staged."[17] Amir, who was employed by the Shin Bet in Latvia about two years before the murder,[18] commented at a court hearing, "If I were to tell the whole truth, the entire system would collapse. I know enough to destroy this country."[19][20][21] Nahum Shahaf, an Israeli physicist who went on to play a major role in the Muhammad al-Durrah affair, has asserted that he had photographic evidence that the wrong man was being held for the assassination. He blamed the assassination on a conspiracy headed by Shimon Peres, who took over from Rabin as Prime Minister and later became the President of Israel.[22]
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2543
{"url": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yitzhak_Rabin_assassination_conspiracy_theories", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:29:43Z", "digest": "sha1:N27REW2YJ2P7MOY7N7MRXAKZEJ2I2AKD"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5217, 5217.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5217, 5424.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5217, 26.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5217, 34.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5217, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5217, 237.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5217, 0.38145315]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5217, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5217, 0.02058894]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5217, 0.01197031]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5217, 0.01197031]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5217, 0.01675844]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5217, 0.00382409]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5217, 0.1959847]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5217, 0.48192771]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5217, 5.03253012]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5217, 0.00191205]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5217, 5.40208172]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5217, 830.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 433, 1.0], [433, 861, 1.0], [861, 881, 0.0], [881, 921, 0.0], [921, 957, 0.0], [957, 996, 0.0], [996, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1496, 0.0], [1496, 2032, 1.0], [2032, 2170, 0.0], [2170, 2397, 0.0], [2397, 2791, 0.0], [2791, 3239, 0.0], [3239, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3564, 0.0], [3564, 3747, 0.0], [3747, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 4087, 0.0], [4087, 4215, 0.0], [4215, 4349, 0.0], [4349, 4615, 0.0], [4615, 4855, 0.0], [4855, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 433, 0.0], [433, 861, 0.0], [861, 881, 0.0], [881, 921, 0.0], [921, 957, 0.0], [957, 996, 0.0], [996, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1496, 0.0], [1496, 2032, 0.0], [2032, 2170, 0.0], [2170, 2397, 0.0], [2397, 2791, 0.0], [2791, 3239, 0.0], [3239, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3564, 0.0], [3564, 3747, 0.0], [3747, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 4087, 0.0], [4087, 4215, 0.0], [4215, 4349, 0.0], [4349, 4615, 0.0], [4615, 4855, 0.0], [4855, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 48, 5.0], [48, 433, 57.0], [433, 861, 67.0], [861, 881, 3.0], [881, 921, 6.0], [921, 957, 6.0], [957, 996, 6.0], [996, 1014, 2.0], [1014, 1038, 2.0], [1038, 1165, 19.0], [1165, 1496, 53.0], [1496, 2032, 91.0], [2032, 2170, 20.0], [2170, 2397, 31.0], [2397, 2791, 65.0], [2791, 3239, 72.0], [3239, 3471, 38.0], [3471, 3564, 15.0], [3564, 3747, 28.0], [3747, 3981, 39.0], [3981, 4087, 14.0], [4087, 4215, 23.0], [4215, 4349, 20.0], [4349, 4615, 46.0], [4615, 4855, 41.0], [4855, 5217, 61.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 433, 0.01333333], [433, 861, 0.0], [861, 881, 0.05263158], [881, 921, 0.02564103], [921, 957, 0.05882353], [957, 996, 0.05405405], [996, 1014, 0.125], [1014, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1165, 0.00819672], [1165, 1496, 0.00628931], [1496, 2032, 0.00191571], [2032, 2170, 0.01538462], [2170, 2397, 0.00456621], [2397, 2791, 0.00265252], [2791, 3239, 0.00704225], [3239, 3471, 0.02702703], [3471, 3564, 0.03488372], [3564, 3747, 0.01744186], [3747, 3981, 0.01809955], [3981, 4087, 0.05747126], [4087, 4215, 0.01709402], [4215, 4349, 0.01639344], [4349, 4615, 0.0077821], [4615, 4855, 0.03587444], [4855, 5217, 0.00564972]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 433, 0.0], [433, 861, 0.0], [861, 881, 0.0], [881, 921, 0.0], [921, 957, 0.0], [957, 996, 0.0], [996, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1496, 0.0], [1496, 2032, 0.0], [2032, 2170, 0.0], [2170, 2397, 0.0], [2397, 2791, 0.0], [2791, 3239, 0.0], [3239, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3564, 0.0], [3564, 3747, 0.0], [3747, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 4087, 0.0], [4087, 4215, 0.0], [4215, 4349, 0.0], [4349, 4615, 0.0], [4615, 4855, 0.0], [4855, 5217, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.04166667], [48, 433, 0.04675325], [433, 861, 0.01168224], [861, 881, 0.05], [881, 921, 0.025], [921, 957, 0.02777778], [957, 996, 0.02564103], [996, 1014, 0.05555556], [1014, 1038, 0.04166667], [1038, 1165, 0.01574803], [1165, 1496, 0.01510574], [1496, 2032, 0.01865672], [2032, 2170, 0.01449275], [2170, 2397, 0.02202643], [2397, 2791, 0.0177665], [2791, 3239, 0.02008929], [3239, 3471, 0.00862069], [3471, 3564, 0.02150538], [3564, 3747, 0.02185792], [3747, 3981, 0.01282051], [3981, 4087, 0.02830189], [4087, 4215, 0.0390625], [4215, 4349, 0.03731343], [4349, 4615, 0.01503759], [4615, 4855, 0.02916667], [4855, 5217, 0.0359116]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5217, 0.97114062]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5217, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5217, 0.90718508]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5217, 36.81667152]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5217, 148.4093519]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5217, 24.90197673]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5217, 48.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
en.wikipedia.org
Las Vegas Sands Corp. Message Board Excellent Wall ... bjspokanimal bjspokanimal Excellent Wall Street Journal Piece on Singapore, MBS & Pangaea Nightclub Today I can't paste it here, but if you access the Wall Street Journal, the article is entitled: "Wealth Over the Edge: Singapore". Spok Thanks for pasting the entire piece into this thread, blitz. It was a great, feature article and does a good job of pointing up the increasingly central role that LVS plays in Central Singapore high-class entertainment. mbablitz mbablitz I think this is the article: It's midnight on a Saturday night at the Marina Bay Sands resort near the sparkling Singapore River, and all the boutiques are shut. But past a cosmetic-surgery clinic and a Ferrari accessories store close by, a large crowd is getting increasingly agitated. Dozens of hopefuls are clamoring to get in to what is billed as the world's most expensive club, Pangaea. Tight-fitting Herve Leger bandage dresses are practically a uniform here, often paired with Christian Louboutin heels and Chanel 2.55 bags, as women try to befriend club goers who are lucky enough to get past the red-velvet barrier and bouncers. It is frequently the leggy models, part of the club's core demographic, who succeed. Out-of-town visitors who negotiated their way onto the guest list weeks earlier are turned away, even after offering to pay more than $3,000 for a table. The nightclub is completely full. Past the bouncers, a walk through a long tunnel with blue ultraviolet lights and a ride up an elevator reveal one of the world's most exclusive parties. Michael Ault, Pangaea's founder, sits at the club's most prestigious table by the bar, on cushions covered in exotic African ostrich skins. His table is covered with bottles of Belvedere vodka, Cristal champagne, buckets of ice and dozens of glasses for his friends. His wife, Sabrina Ault, a former fashion model and now his business partner, wears a fake shark's head and wields a plastic gun while dancing on a table top. At Pangaea, all surfaces are made for dancing—even tables made from the trunks of 1,000-year-old trees and the crocodile-skinned couches. (more...) 1 Reply to mbablitz It may seem counterintuitive, but a dance club does not need a dance floor if you are Michael Ault. A veteran of Manhattan nightlife and descendant of blue-blooded socialites—he is the son of a Van Cleef from the Van Cleef & Arpels jewelry family and the stepson of Wall Street's famed Dean Witter—Ault, 49, prides himself on one thing above all others: the ability to throw a good party. And he has done just that over the years at more than 25 clubs from New York to Miami Beach and São Paulo to London. He is credited with being one of the first nightclub impresarios to introduce bottle service—now commonplace globally—at the legendary New York Spy Bar in the 1990s, where even Kate Moss was turned away on exceptionally packed nights. The Pangaea experience, he says, replicates the feeling of being at a house party—one that just happens to offer African tribal masks from Ault's personal collection, throbbing music, a $26,000 cocktail that contains a diamond inside and is served by waitresses in black dresses, and the knowledge that many of the people around you are worth billions. Pangaea, though just over a year old, is now considered the most profitable club in the world with revenues of more than $100,000 per night in recent months, Ault says. It's also one of the most expensive clubs, with tables costing as much as $15,000, and the uber-rich regularly chalking up six-figure bills. He could have brought this extravagance to just about anywhere in the world. London, with its collection of royals and a party scene that attracts Europe's glitterati. Dubai, too, the land of if-you-want-an-island-you-just-build-one. And of course, his hometown and former playground, Manhattan. But Ault, who moved to Singapore three years ago, says he "no longer feels the magic" in Gotham, which still bears the scars of a financial crisis that knocked the wind out of much of its most extravagant party culture. Singapore, he says, is another matter. (more...) Pangaea, which is in the Crystal Pavillian at Marina Bay Sands, is portrayed in this article as the hottest nightclub in all of Singapore. It talks about people offering $3,000 just to get seated... and being turned down. 1 Reply to bjspokanimal While I was looking for the article I found this... Pangaea is also one of the most expensive nightclubs in the world to get into, with tables costing anywhere between S$2,500 and S$20,000. The most expensive of these has couches lined with gold python skin. “If you go to some bars… Singapore is increasingly about where you’ve parked your Bentley or Lamborghini, and which table you sit on at a club,” said Mr. Comer. The city-state is home to the highest percentage of millionaire households in the world (15.5%), according to a study by the Boston Consulting Group.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2571
{"url": "http://finance.yahoo.com/mbview/threadview/?bn=fd278a8f-5571-33db-956b-d83198beb09a&tid=1362767862922-f025cd0a-0f25-46d7-b925-6cdefd46dfc7", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "finance.yahoo.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:54:04Z", "digest": "sha1:UOYTDN3F37K3J6Z7CTBJ7X7EFNP53EW7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4972, 4972.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4972, 9670.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4972, 20.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4972, 142.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4972, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4972, 292.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4972, 0.39597315]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4972, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4972, 0.01258178]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4972, 0.01258178]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4972, 0.00754907]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4972, 0.00805234]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4972, 0.00603926]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4972, 0.00862895]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4972, 0.05]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4972, 0.18120805]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4972, 0.51331719]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4972, 4.81113801]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4972, 0.00575264]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4972, 5.46772382]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4972, 826.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 55, 1.0], [55, 81, 0.0], [81, 161, 0.0], [161, 287, 1.0], [287, 292, 0.0], [292, 512, 1.0], [512, 530, 0.0], [530, 923, 1.0], [923, 1442, 1.0], [1442, 2168, 0.0], [2168, 2188, 0.0], [2188, 2929, 1.0], [2929, 3282, 1.0], [3282, 3888, 1.0], [3888, 4157, 0.0], [4157, 4379, 1.0], [4379, 4403, 0.0], [4403, 4662, 1.0], [4662, 4972, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 55, 0.0], [55, 81, 0.0], [81, 161, 0.0], [161, 287, 0.0], [287, 292, 0.0], [292, 512, 0.0], [512, 530, 0.0], [530, 923, 0.0], [923, 1442, 0.0], [1442, 2168, 0.0], [2168, 2188, 0.0], [2188, 2929, 0.0], [2929, 3282, 0.0], [3282, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 4157, 0.0], [4157, 4379, 0.0], [4379, 4403, 0.0], [4403, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 36, 6.0], [36, 55, 2.0], [55, 81, 2.0], [81, 161, 11.0], [161, 287, 22.0], [287, 292, 1.0], [292, 512, 36.0], [512, 530, 2.0], [530, 923, 67.0], [923, 1442, 84.0], [1442, 2168, 120.0], [2168, 2188, 4.0], [2188, 2929, 130.0], [2929, 3282, 57.0], [3282, 3888, 95.0], [3888, 4157, 47.0], [4157, 4379, 38.0], [4379, 4403, 4.0], [4403, 4662, 45.0], [4662, 4972, 53.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 55, 0.0], [55, 81, 0.0], [81, 161, 0.0], [161, 287, 0.0], [287, 292, 0.0], [292, 512, 0.0], [512, 530, 0.0], [530, 923, 0.0], [923, 1442, 0.01397206], [1442, 2168, 0.00573888], [2168, 2188, 0.05263158], [2188, 2929, 0.01098901], [2929, 3282, 0.01457726], [3282, 3888, 0.01919721], [3888, 4157, 0.0], [4157, 4379, 0.01886792], [4379, 4403, 0.04347826], [4403, 4662, 0.03629032], [4662, 4972, 0.01003344]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 55, 0.0], [55, 81, 0.0], [81, 161, 0.0], [161, 287, 0.0], [287, 292, 0.0], [292, 512, 0.0], [512, 530, 0.0], [530, 923, 0.0], [923, 1442, 0.0], [1442, 2168, 0.0], [2168, 2188, 0.0], [2188, 2929, 0.0], [2929, 3282, 0.0], [3282, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 4157, 0.0], [4157, 4379, 0.0], [4379, 4403, 0.0], [4403, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4972, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.16666667], [36, 55, 0.10526316], [55, 81, 0.0], [81, 161, 0.15], [161, 287, 0.06349206], [287, 292, 0.2], [292, 512, 0.03181818], [512, 530, 0.0], [530, 923, 0.03053435], [923, 1442, 0.01734104], [1442, 2168, 0.01790634], [2168, 2188, 0.05], [2188, 2929, 0.04048583], [2929, 3282, 0.01133144], [3282, 3888, 0.01485149], [3888, 4157, 0.01858736], [4157, 4379, 0.03603604], [4379, 4403, 0.04166667], [4403, 4662, 0.02702703], [4662, 4972, 0.03225806]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4972, 0.41807753]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4972, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4972, 0.63186175]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4972, -66.77760168]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4972, 80.38331384]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4972, -73.41349413]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4972, 43.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
finance.yahoo.com
Aegerion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (AEGR) Message Board Posts by gmns888 gmns888 87 posts | Last Activity: 14 hours ago Member since: Nov 5, 2001 1 million shorts are toast gmns888 by gmns888 Tonight lol longs...........................................lolo CEO buying 100k in stock over 10 today Hold your shares this is a short attack Shorts are at it hard here lol longs...................................................... 100 share hit bid offer comes down all Short bs happening here..................................... We need news shorts are crushing this Company pr would help now I think tonight or Tuesday ....lol longs Massive short position almost Half the float wow if this comes out with any news 20 fast.................................... Expect new highs coming Over 20 fast only 2 million in float.................... 500k shares shorts now wow 15 today Shorts are toast,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,lol longs dammmmm shorts naked selling this ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 6k shares on 100 share blocks traded last night and morning don't get into the pump........................... Reply to Sue Goldman. by daxapatel gmns888 gmns888 yes rich get richer public gets screwed again. GS crooks,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Pipeline is deep. phase 3 drug to 2 million in float??? 30 soon shorts are toast,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, wow being pumped hard im shorting today lol all,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Big dilution before trial results bad For outcome, not liking this to much now ......... Reply to News after the bell... by jon.smith301 no news needed this is going to 9.............................. Breakout buy this going to 9 lol all longs,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, wow next q looks like dog .all hype on what they might do in 2015 hahahahahha what a pump and dump............... Why is this up???? wow good short here.................................... Next q only 20 to 30 mill vs 200 est? ????????????? is this right?????????????? Not good. news still not out Sorry longs this is going to be bad,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2572
{"url": "http://finance.yahoo.com/mbview/userview/?u=gmns888&bn=a8a0445b-28cc-37cd-992c-0084b86b78a6&stb=r&sto=d&lv=e&page=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "finance.yahoo.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:51:33Z", "digest": "sha1:2LOIGV2F3YF6GYOYSBCH2KZV32LCLLVX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2156, 2156.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2156, 8432.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2156, 47.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2156, 308.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2156, 0.69]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2156, 104.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2156, 0.33836858]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2156, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2156, 0.03746878]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2156, 0.02331391]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2156, 0.02497918]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2156, 0.01208459]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2156, 0.19148936]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2156, 0.18429003]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2156, 0.61672474]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2156, 4.18466899]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2156, 0.31117825]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2156, 4.94100644]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2156, 287.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 69, 0.0], [69, 77, 0.0], [77, 116, 0.0], [116, 142, 0.0], [142, 169, 0.0], [169, 188, 0.0], [188, 253, 0.0], [253, 292, 0.0], [292, 332, 0.0], [332, 359, 0.0], [359, 423, 1.0], [423, 462, 0.0], [462, 523, 1.0], [523, 561, 0.0], [561, 628, 0.0], [628, 658, 0.0], [658, 753, 1.0], [753, 777, 0.0], [777, 834, 1.0], [834, 870, 0.0], [870, 918, 0.0], [918, 933, 0.0], [933, 1013, 0.0], [1013, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1124, 1.0], [1124, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1175, 0.0], [1175, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1368, 0.0], [1368, 1402, 0.0], [1402, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1517, 0.0], [1517, 1568, 1.0], [1568, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1680, 1.0], [1680, 1709, 0.0], [1709, 1776, 0.0], [1776, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1890, 1.0], [1890, 1909, 1.0], [1909, 1965, 1.0], [1965, 2003, 1.0], [2003, 2045, 1.0], [2045, 2074, 0.0], [2074, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 69, 0.0], [69, 77, 0.0], [77, 116, 0.0], [116, 142, 0.0], [142, 169, 0.0], [169, 188, 0.0], [188, 253, 0.0], [253, 292, 0.0], [292, 332, 0.0], [332, 359, 0.0], [359, 423, 0.0], [423, 462, 0.0], [462, 523, 0.0], [523, 561, 0.0], [561, 628, 0.0], [628, 658, 0.0], [658, 753, 0.0], [753, 777, 0.0], [777, 834, 0.0], [834, 870, 0.0], [870, 918, 0.0], [918, 933, 0.0], [933, 1013, 0.0], [1013, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1124, 0.0], [1124, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1175, 0.0], [1175, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1368, 0.0], [1368, 1402, 0.0], [1402, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1517, 0.0], [1517, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1680, 0.0], [1680, 1709, 0.0], [1709, 1776, 0.0], [1776, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 1909, 0.0], [1909, 1965, 0.0], [1965, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2074, 0.0], [2074, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 52, 6.0], [52, 69, 3.0], [69, 77, 1.0], [77, 116, 7.0], [116, 142, 5.0], [142, 169, 5.0], [169, 188, 3.0], [188, 253, 3.0], [253, 292, 8.0], [292, 332, 8.0], [332, 359, 6.0], [359, 423, 2.0], [423, 462, 8.0], [462, 523, 4.0], [523, 561, 7.0], [561, 628, 12.0], [628, 658, 4.0], [658, 753, 13.0], [753, 777, 4.0], [777, 834, 8.0], [834, 870, 7.0], [870, 918, 4.0], [918, 933, 2.0], [933, 1013, 3.0], [1013, 1043, 6.0], [1043, 1124, 10.0], [1124, 1159, 6.0], [1159, 1175, 2.0], [1175, 1258, 10.0], [1258, 1292, 7.0], [1292, 1368, 9.0], [1368, 1402, 6.0], [1402, 1479, 3.0], [1479, 1517, 6.0], [1517, 1568, 8.0], [1568, 1616, 8.0], [1616, 1680, 8.0], [1680, 1709, 6.0], [1709, 1776, 3.0], [1776, 1812, 8.0], [1812, 1890, 13.0], [1890, 1909, 4.0], [1909, 1965, 4.0], [1965, 2003, 10.0], [2003, 2045, 3.0], [2045, 2074, 6.0], [2074, 2156, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 69, 0.1875], [69, 77, 0.42857143], [77, 116, 0.11428571], [116, 142, 0.2173913], [142, 169, 0.03846154], [169, 188, 0.33333333], [188, 253, 0.0], [253, 292, 0.13157895], [292, 332, 0.0], [332, 359, 0.0], [359, 423, 0.0], [423, 462, 0.07894737], [462, 523, 0.0], [523, 561, 0.0], [561, 628, 0.0], [628, 658, 0.0], [658, 753, 0.03448276], [753, 777, 0.0], [777, 834, 0.08333333], [834, 870, 0.14285714], [870, 918, 0.0], [918, 933, 0.0], [933, 1013, 0.0], [1013, 1043, 0.13793103], [1043, 1124, 0.0], [1124, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1175, 0.4], [1175, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1292, 0.03125], [1292, 1368, 0.06976744], [1368, 1402, 0.0], [1402, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1517, 0.0], [1517, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1616, 0.06976744], [1616, 1680, 0.03030303], [1680, 1709, 0.03571429], [1709, 1776, 0.0], [1776, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1890, 0.06451613], [1890, 1909, 0.0], [1909, 1965, 0.0], [1965, 2003, 0.19444444], [2003, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2074, 0.0], [2074, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 69, 0.0], [69, 77, 0.0], [77, 116, 0.0], [116, 142, 0.0], [142, 169, 0.0], [169, 188, 0.0], [188, 253, 0.0], [253, 292, 0.0], [292, 332, 0.0], [332, 359, 0.0], [359, 423, 0.0], [423, 462, 0.0], [462, 523, 0.0], [523, 561, 0.0], [561, 628, 0.0], [628, 658, 0.0], [658, 753, 0.0], [753, 777, 0.0], [777, 834, 0.0], [834, 870, 0.0], [870, 918, 0.0], [918, 933, 0.0], [933, 1013, 0.0], [1013, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1124, 0.0], [1124, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1175, 0.0], [1175, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1368, 0.0], [1368, 1402, 0.0], [1402, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1517, 0.0], [1517, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1680, 0.0], [1680, 1709, 0.0], [1709, 1776, 0.0], [1776, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 1909, 0.0], [1909, 1965, 0.0], [1965, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2074, 0.0], [2074, 2156, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 52, 0.17307692], [52, 69, 0.05882353], [69, 77, 0.0], [77, 116, 0.05128205], [116, 142, 0.07692308], [142, 169, 0.0], [169, 188, 0.0], [188, 253, 0.01538462], [253, 292, 0.07692308], [292, 332, 0.025], [332, 359, 0.03703704], [359, 423, 0.0], [423, 462, 0.0], [462, 523, 0.01639344], [523, 561, 0.02631579], [561, 628, 0.04477612], [628, 658, 0.03333333], [658, 753, 0.01052632], [753, 777, 0.04166667], [777, 834, 0.01754386], [834, 870, 0.0], [870, 918, 0.02083333], [918, 933, 0.0], [933, 1013, 0.0], [1013, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1124, 0.0], [1124, 1159, 0.08571429], [1159, 1175, 0.0], [1175, 1258, 0.02409639], [1258, 1292, 0.02941176], [1292, 1368, 0.0], [1368, 1402, 0.0], [1402, 1479, 0.0], [1479, 1517, 0.02631579], [1517, 1568, 0.01960784], [1568, 1616, 0.04166667], [1616, 1680, 0.0], [1680, 1709, 0.03448276], [1709, 1776, 0.0], [1776, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 1909, 0.05263158], [1909, 1965, 0.0], [1965, 2003, 0.02631579], [2003, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2074, 0.03448276], [2074, 2156, 0.01219512]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2156, 4.673e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2156, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2156, 0.00260216]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2156, -123.82012427]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2156, -38.83236742]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2156, -116.66425344]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2156, 24.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
finance.yahoo.com
First Person: Making Sure I Meet My Financial Milestones By Melissa Matters When I bought my first house, I felt a great sense of achievement. I was married, had a steady full-time job and money in the bank. After having kids and going from two incomes to one, I didn't have quite as much money in my emergency fund. Yet, according to Kiplinger.com, there are certain money milestones one should meet in their 20s. Now, that I'm in my 30s, I'm glad a met a lot of my financial milestones. After all, it has given me some stability in an uncertain economy. Graduating Debt-Free I have zero student loans. For the most part, I can thank my parents for this. However, my parents were not the types to pay for me to go to school forever. Thus, I knew I couldn't change my degree several times. In addition, I made sure to take a heavy course load and graduated with a B.A. in three and a half years. I went on to take an intensive graduate program for an additional year that resulted in a Master's Degree and a teaching credential. I worked part-time to cover costs such as food and books. As G.E. Miller says in the Kiplinger article, it's important to "graduate and move on." Don't spend years of time and money jumping from one major to the next. I went to school for four and a half years and then immediately entered into the workforce. It helped me stay out of debt. Being a Homeowner When we first got married, my husband and I purchased a townhouse. Less than two years later, we sold it for $100,000 over the purchase price. We were able to buy a bigger house. Although the housing market has been dismal, the value of our house has been going up this year. Having a Retirement Account Before we had kids, my husband and I started a Roth 403B. At the time, we had a double income without children so we had some extra money to put away. For the time being, we have stopped contributing to our account. However, when I go back to teaching, I will continue to put more money away for retirement. Creating a Strong Professional Network According to the same Kiplinger article, when you enter the workforce it's important to "build a strong network." I have never burned any bridges in the workforce. I have letters of recommendation from nearly every administrator and dean I have worked with. I have positive interactions with former colleagues. Getting Married and Having Children According to a money milestone article from Refinery 29, only 22% of millennials (turning 30 in 2010) were married. Those who did tie the knot spent quite a bit of money on their nuptials. In fact, in 2012, the average cost of a wedding was $28,400. When I got married, I kept my wedding costs under $10,000. Now, I have been married for 10 years and have two children. My kids are four years apart in school so we won't be paying for two college tuitions at the same time. Yes, kids are expensive, but they aren't as expensive as some people make them out to be. In fact, as I wrote about here, my baby's first year cost us only $2,600. I may need a little bit more in my emergency fund. And, I may need to live below my means a bit more. However, as I approach my mid-30s, I happy to be able to check off some important financial milestones. *Note: This was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Do you have a personal finance story that you'd like to share? Sign up with the Yahoo! Contributor Network to start publishing your own finance articles. More from this contributor:First Person: I'm Not Ready for a Cashless SocietyFirst Person: Buying Generic Saves Me $60 a MonthFirst Person: 3 Ways I'm Supplementing My Family's IncomePersonal Finance - Lifestyle Market News Play Oil investors 'on edge' over oil price: Pr … 01:32 Play Europe opens higher on China data; Ukraine watched 02:25 Play Trading the Aussie dollar after China's data d … 03:24 Copyright © 2011 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2573
{"url": "http://finance.yahoo.com/news/first-person-making-sure-meet-financial-milestones-230200188.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "finance.yahoo.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:28:01Z", "digest": "sha1:YEFNUS7OHBOATB36WDMUDRPIRA3MLVD2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3884, 3884.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3884, 5412.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3884, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3884, 44.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3884, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3884, 239.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3884, 0.38824885]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3884, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3884, 0.00985222]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3884, 0.0137931]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3884, 0.01116585]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3884, 0.0437788]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3884, 0.18663594]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3884, 0.489301]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3884, 4.34379458]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3884, 0.00230415]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3884, 5.32912627]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3884, 701.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 3645, 0.0], [3645, 3884, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 3645, 0.0], [3645, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 57, 9.0], [57, 76, 3.0], [76, 3645, 647.0], [3645, 3884, 42.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 3645, 0.01394943], [3645, 3884, 0.07017544]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 3645, 0.0], [3645, 3884, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.15789474], [57, 76, 0.15789474], [76, 3645, 0.03474363], [3645, 3884, 0.07112971]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3884, 0.030128]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3884, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3884, 0.09731364]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3884, -94.70988894]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3884, -10.27678097]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3884, -318.13921224]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3884, 53.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
finance.yahoo.com
Merrill A. Miller Jr., the Chairman and CEO of National Oilwell Varco (NOV), Interviews with The Wall Street Transcript January 3, 2014 12:27 PM 67 WALL STREET, New York - January 3, 2014 - The Wall Street Transcript has just published its Oil & Gas: Drilling Equipment and Services Report offering a timely review of the sector to serious investors and industry executives. This special feature contains expert industry commentary through in-depth interviews with public company CEOs and Equity Analysts. The full issue is available by calling (212) 952-7433 or via The Wall Street Transcript Online.Topics covered: Oil Price Expectations - Shale, Offshore and Deepwater Drilling - Unconventional Resources - Bundled Oil and Gas Services - Oil and Gas Transportation Services - Dividend Yields for Energy Investors - Domestic Crude Prices - International Energy Opportunities Companies include: National Oilwell Varco (NOV) and many more. In the following excerpt from the Oil & Gas: Drilling Equipment and Services Report, the Chairman and CEO of National Oilwell Varco (NOV) discusses company strategy and the outlook for this vital industry:TWST: What is happening in the macro environment and/or within your customers' businesses that you think could be catalysts for growth for National Oilwell Varco?Mr. Miller: I think the biggest thing in the macro environment is really going to be the LNG exports from this country. I think you should take a look at some of the companies like Cheniere and others that have export permits to start in the 2015 time frame. If that happens, I think what that does is opens up an awful lot of opportunity to drill gas wells. If you notice today, there was the largest withdrawal of natural gas because of the cold weather that we've ever had. But I think as you take a look at some of the opportunity to move gas out of this country, that means it's going to see more gas wells drilled. Because today most of the rigs that are working, the majority is working on oil drilling, and I think as that gas drilling improves and LNG is on the horizon, that's very positive for us. That's one. The second macro is really the places like the Bakken and the Eagle Ford that you are actually getting oil shales, and that's making the United States become a much bigger producer of oil, less dependent upon foreign sources, and I think that for the industry is going to be very positive as that continues on.TWST: How have your utilization rates been trending and what indicators do you have about where they will go in 2014?Mr. Miller: We always are going to kind of be a couple of different stories. On our capital side of the business, we are just capacity constrained. We are moving on and on every day. We're building all sorts of drill ships and jackup rigs and land rigs. So we are pushing ahead other parts of the company because of a little bit of softness in Canada and a little bit of softness in the United States. So it's really a kind of a tale of two cities – some are really, really positive and some not so positive. When I say not so positive that doesn't mean are bad. It just doesn't mean that they are run and flat out the way we are in other parts of the company. So we are a little bit of mixed bag in that regard.TWST: Which geographic regions are you focused on right now and what is happening in those regions to create opportunities?For more of this interview and many others visit the Wall Street Transcript - a unique service for investors and industry researchers - providing fresh commentary and insight through verbatim interviews with CEOs, portfolio managers and research analysts. This special issue is available by calling (212) 952-7433 or via The Wall Street Transcript Online.Basic Materials IndustryConglomeratesNational Oilwell Varco FTI53.67+2.33% WFT17.04-0.64% CLB208.00+2.46% FMC Technologies, Inc. FMC Technologies, BP in $322M Deal 8:05 am FMC Tech announces $322 mln order from BP 1 day 21 hrs ago Core Laboratories NV 208.00+4.99(+2.46%) Market News Play Dark side 05:54 Play Oil investors 'on edge' over oil price: Pr … 01:32 Play Europe opens higher on China data; Ukraine watched 02:25 Copyright © 2014 <a href="http://www.twst.com">twst.com</a>. All rights reserved.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2574
{"url": "http://finance.yahoo.com/news/merrill-miller-jr-chairman-ceo-172700498.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "finance.yahoo.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:06:44Z", "digest": "sha1:O2FHDQMJ3A7NOR75ENDSVE2LU7JE46D5"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4249, 4249.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4249, 6039.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4249, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4249, 63.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4249, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4249, 332.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4249, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4249, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4249, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4249, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4249, 0.37429538]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4249, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4249, 0.03720106]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4249, 0.12341305]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4249, 0.1104222]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4249, 0.09743136]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4249, 0.06200177]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4249, 0.06200177]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4249, 0.01180986]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4249, 0.01919102]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4249, 0.03395335]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4249, 0.03494927]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4249, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4249, 0.20405862]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4249, 0.48011364]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4249, 4.81107955]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4249, 0.0011274]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4249, 5.31908688]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4249, 704.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 120, 0.0], [120, 145, 0.0], [145, 3805, 0.0], [3805, 3820, 0.0], [3820, 3835, 0.0], [3835, 3851, 0.0], [3851, 3874, 1.0], [3874, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 3959, 0.0], [3959, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 3997, 0.0], [3997, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4249, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 120, 0.0], [120, 145, 0.0], [145, 3805, 0.0], [3805, 3820, 0.0], [3820, 3835, 0.0], [3835, 3851, 0.0], [3851, 3874, 0.0], [3874, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 3959, 0.0], [3959, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 3997, 0.0], [3997, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4249, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 120, 19.0], [120, 145, 5.0], [145, 3805, 614.0], [3805, 3820, 1.0], [3820, 3835, 1.0], [3835, 3851, 1.0], [3851, 3874, 3.0], [3874, 3909, 6.0], [3909, 3959, 10.0], [3959, 3976, 5.0], [3976, 3997, 3.0], [3997, 4017, 1.0], [4017, 4249, 35.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 120, 0.0], [120, 145, 0.40909091], [145, 3805, 0.00983975], [3805, 3820, 0.7], [3820, 3835, 0.7], [3835, 3851, 0.72727273], [3851, 3874, 0.0], [3874, 3909, 0.09375], [3909, 3959, 0.12765957], [3959, 3976, 0.1875], [3976, 3997, 0.0], [3997, 4017, 1.0], [4017, 4249, 0.07655502]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 120, 0.0], [120, 145, 0.0], [145, 3805, 0.0], [3805, 3820, 0.0], [3820, 3835, 0.0], [3835, 3851, 0.0], [3851, 3874, 0.0], [3874, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 3959, 0.0], [3959, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 3997, 0.0], [3997, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4249, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 120, 0.15833333], [120, 145, 0.12], [145, 3805, 0.04535519], [3805, 3820, 0.2], [3820, 3835, 0.2], [3835, 3851, 0.1875], [3851, 3874, 0.2173913], [3874, 3909, 0.22857143], [3909, 3959, 0.12], [3959, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 3997, 0.19047619], [3997, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4249, 0.05603448]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4249, 0.01840264]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4249, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4249, 0.32307065]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4249, -270.44797364]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4249, -56.45144616]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4249, -267.97407864]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4249, 45.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
finance.yahoo.com
Foreign Policy In Focus Syria’s Stalin and His Gulag Like Soviet Russia, Syria also has chemical weapons and suspected biological weapons programs. By Russ Wellen, July 3, 2012. Print By now Focal Points readers are no doubt aware of the report that Human Rights Watch issued titled Torture Archipelago: Arbitrary Arrests, Torture, and Enforced Disappearances in Syria’s Underground Prisons since March 2011. From the summary: Since the beginning of anti-government protests in March 2011, Syrian authorities have subjected tens of thousands of people to arbitrary arrests, unlawful detentions, enforced disappearances, ill-treatment, and torture using an extensive network of detention facilities, an archipelago of torture centers, scattered throughout Syria. Based on more than 200 interviews with former detainees, including women and children, and defectors from the Syrian military and intelligence agencies, this report focuses on 27 of these detention facilities. On the other hand, the reader may not be aware of Syria’s chemical weapons program and suspected biological weapons program. At the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Charles Blair wrote in March: Syria likely has one of the largest and most sophisticated chemical weapon programs in the world. Moreover, Syria may also possess an offensive biological weapons capability that Libya did not. Syria’s chemical weapons stockpile is thought to be massive. One of only eight nations that is not a member of the Chemical Weapons Convention — an arms control agreement that outlaws the production, possession, and use of chemical weapons — Syria has a chemical arsenal that includes several hundred tons of blistering agents along with likely large stockpiles of deadly nerve agents, including VX, the most toxic of all chemical weapons Between that and their gulag-like archipelago, one can’t help but suspect that Syria takes too much of its cue from the former Soviet Union, with President Bashar al-Assad serving as Syria’s Stalin. Issues: UncategorizedRegions: Middle East & North Africa, SyriaTags: Bashar Al-Assad, Chemical and Biological Weapons, human rights watch, Syria About We sniff out issues hiding in the foreign-policy forest and haul them back to the laboratory for inspection. We examine the anterior, posterior, and underside of an issue, as well as its shadows.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2588
{"url": "http://fpif.org/syrias_stalin_and_his_gulag/?q=Tag%253ANationalism", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "fpif.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:46:53Z", "digest": "sha1:OTX5S7WSSDJMPV3V5SKJR2MXSBPX654C"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2347, 2347.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2347, 3980.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2347, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2347, 86.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2347, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2347, 214.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2347, 0.32867133]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2347, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2347, 0.0464876]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2347, 0.02272727]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2347, 0.02995868]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2347, 0.002331]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2347, 0.16317016]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2347, 0.57746479]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2347, 5.45352113]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2347, 4.94822485]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2347, 355.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 184, 0.0], [184, 427, 0.0], [427, 762, 1.0], [762, 972, 1.0], [972, 1169, 0.0], [1169, 1363, 1.0], [1363, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 2001, 1.0], [2001, 2347, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 184, 0.0], [184, 427, 0.0], [427, 762, 0.0], [762, 972, 0.0], [972, 1169, 0.0], [1169, 1363, 0.0], [1363, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 53, 9.0], [53, 184, 20.0], [184, 427, 36.0], [427, 762, 43.0], [762, 972, 31.0], [972, 1169, 32.0], [1169, 1363, 30.0], [1363, 1802, 71.0], [1802, 2001, 32.0], [2001, 2347, 51.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 184, 0.04], [184, 427, 0.01687764], [427, 762, 0.01234568], [762, 972, 0.02439024], [972, 1169, 0.0], [1169, 1363, 0.0], [1363, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 184, 0.0], [184, 427, 0.0], [427, 762, 0.0], [762, 972, 0.0], [972, 1169, 0.0], [1169, 1363, 0.0], [1363, 1802, 0.0], [1802, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2347, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.1509434], [53, 184, 0.06870229], [184, 427, 0.07407407], [427, 762, 0.0119403], [762, 972, 0.00952381], [972, 1169, 0.04568528], [1169, 1363, 0.02061856], [1363, 1802, 0.01822323], [1802, 2001, 0.04522613], [2001, 2347, 0.05491329]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2347, 0.44285929]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2347, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2347, 0.79965174]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2347, -87.13649979]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2347, 40.81800368]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2347, -0.2748294]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2347, 12.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
fpif.org
[Edwards] "CLUELESS ON CHARLIE ROSE": HERE'S THE TRANSCRIPT (MUST READ) NROTC ^ | Charlie Rose etc all Posted on 07/07/2004 3:18:39 PM PDT by swilhelm73 CHARLIE ROSE: All right. Stay with me. John Edwards has joined us. The senator from North Carolina, a Democrat in the Senate. Senator Edwards, tell me the mood in Washington and the feeling for what they -- senators and congress people -- might want the president to say and to do. I mean is there a sense of what kind of resolution the Congress might be called on by its leadership to pass tomorrow? Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Well, Charlie, I think what happened is the mood in Washington changed over the course of the day. I just dropped my three-year-old off at day care and was on my way to the office this morning when the first airplane hit the first tower of the World Trade Center. I got a phone call in my car. And then when I arrived in my office, and I think this was the prevailing mood at the time, there were just lots of questions. What's happening? How is this possible? And I think as the realization occurred that, among all of us, that what we were seeing on television was, in fact, reality, that these were-- these events were actually occurring, over the course of the day I think the mood changed. It went from questioning, then to disbelief, then to acceptance that in fact these things had happened. And I think over the course of the day a very strong feeling of resolution that we were going to be deliberative about this, but that deliberation was backed up by a feeling of anger, that this was something-- that this was an attack on our nation, that our people were dying, that something was going to have to be done about it. And I think by this afternoon when a bunch of senators met to talk with our leadership around five o'clock this afternoon, I would describe the prevailing feeling in that room -- and there must have been 50 to 75 senators present -- as one of quiet anger. There were a lot of people who were mad, were mad about what had happened, but were thoughtful and deliberative about the process of what the next step needed to be. CHARLIE ROSE: All right. Let me ask this question of everyone, including Tom. Does this day change America in some way? Will we-- are we going to be-- are things going to be different for this country from now on out? General Sneh, you've experienced more of this my people in Israel tell me because of attacks there, you know, that the whole country is on edge. Now this is one series of events on one day. Another shoe may fall, as some have suggested here. But does something change? EPHRAIM SNEH: It seems to me that America today knows for one day what we experienced for several years; the feeling that there is no safe place. That a shopping mall, a restaurant, a bus station, railway station may turn in a moment to a target of a suicide bomber. This feeling prevails today in the United States. And I know that it takes a great deal of resolve and spiritual process to stand against such reality, if it takes a long time. I would like to refer to one professional point to make. We'll discussed a lot who did it. Nobody knows. One thing is very clear -- a very serious, concerted intelligence effort is needed now to know who is behind it, who sponsored it. And it takes a very sincere and professional cooperation of the intelligence organizations of all the western democracies. SAMUEL BERGER: Charlie. CHARLIE ROSE: OK. That raises an interesting question. Go ahead-- SAMUEL BERGER: I want to-- I'm sure everyone will agree with this. This is enormous strong and resilient, which has faced challenges of monumental proportions before. The world now is watching us as to how we will respond to this. There should be no questions -- number one -- that everyone will be united behind the president. There's no question-- there should be no question -- number two -- of our resoluteness. But, while I think the landscape of international terrorism has changed, we cannot let this corrode the fabric of American society or the people who did that today prevail. And so, while there are a whole series of things that have to be done in terms of security, in terms of precaution, in terms of intelligence, in terms of a strategy for dealing with this, we cannot let fear become the dominant self-fulfilling prophecy here which dictates how we live. CHARLIE ROSE: But it also demands, I would assume-- TOM CLANCY: If I can jump in at this point, Charlie-- CHARLIE ROSE: --it also-- Go ahead, who is that? TOM CLANCY: This is Clancy. CHARLIE ROSE: OK. Go ahead, Tom. TOM CLANCY: I'd like to agree completely with last statement. The thing we have to keep in mind is the terrorist is a political actor performing on a political stage. His objective is cause political change in his target. We are the target at the moment. If we change our society, the terrorists win. If we tell the terrorists, ``We are who we are and what we choose to be, and you can't change that, fella,'' then we win. CHARLIE ROSE: So, therefore, Tom, what kind of response do you think is demanded in order to make that statement to whoever did this act? TOM CLANCY: Identify the target, locate the target, engage the target, destroy the target, and live our lives the way we choose to be. Remain the United States of America. CHARLIE ROSE: All right. Well, let me make that a specific. Let's assume this is someone like Osama bin Laden or Osama bin Laden and they are being protected by a government of another country, what do you think we do? TOM CLANCY: We-- CHARLIE ROSE: Do we go-- TOM CLANCY: We tell-- CHARLIE ROSE: --go to that country and demand that they turn over somebody or some group of people or we will issue an ultimatum that the United States military-- TOM CLANCY: The most important-- CHARLIE ROSE: --will come in with full force? TOM CLANCY: The most important thing the president said tonight was, you know, when he said that whoever shelters these people is to us the same as the people we are hunting. CHARLIE ROSE: Well, you've said that. TOM CLANCY: Now, that means we could-- If we find out that Slobovia is sheltering these terrorists, we call the president of Slobovia. We tell him politely one time, ``Don't do that or something really bad's gonna happen.'' If he does not heed our words, the bad thing happens. CHARLIE ROSE: And what's the ``bad thing'' though, Tom? I mean, that becomes just-- TOM CLANCY: We destroy things that he doesn't want destroyed. We hurt his country for committing an act of war against the United States of America. Committing the act of war against the United States of America is a dangerous thing. It carries a heavy price. CHARLIE ROSE: All right. TOM CLANCY: We make people pay that price. RICHARD HOLBROOKE: But [crosstalk]-- CHARLIE ROSE: All right, Richard? And then I want to go John Edwards. RICHARD HOLBROOKE: I'd like to-- I also was gonna raise the question. I was very struck by what John Edwards said earlier about the mood in Washington over the day. And I just wanted to ask Senator Edwards whether he-- where he thinks the administration is going to go in asking Congress-- They're going to need new funds, John. They're gonna need legislation. Have they indicated to you yet where they're going? And what do you think Congress is prepared to offer to them? Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Well, Mr. Ambassador, we-- First of all, we've not heard from the administration yet -- and, I think, understandably so -- precisely what they'd like to see us do. I've heard some of the discussion over the course of this program by you and other panelists. And I think you're exactly on the right track. And, as I think you and I have already discussed in the past, this issue of terrorism, of course, is the greatest national-security threat we face in this country today. There are a number of us who have been working on this issue. We've actually been in the process of drafting legislation aimed at accomplishing a number of things. Number one -- establishing terrorism as the kind of national-security priority that it should be. Number two -- making sure that the federal agencies who are involved in this are adequately and properly coordinated in their activities. Number three -- making sure that the institutions who are involved have the authority, the legal authority, to do what's need-- what needs to be done. I've heard the discussion in this program -- and we've talked about it in the past -- the building of coalitions, internationally, to deal with this issue because we're going to need partners around the world to make this process work. But I think the single most important thing is for the American people and our government to recognize what an enormous priority this needs to be. And I have to say, Charlie -- and you may have discussed this and I apologize if you have -- but I think the will of the American people will become stronger as we go forward because they watched this devastation today. But what's gonna happen as we move forward through this thing is all of those people who lost their lives and who were injured at the World Trade Center and here at the Pentagon -- brave Americans who were totally innocent in this process -- this is gonna become a very personal thing for the American people. And the American people are gonna respond in a strong and personal way. And I think they're going to expect their leadership to do what's necessary to insure that this sort of thing does not happen again. CHARLIE ROSE: All right. Let me go to STEVE EMERSON-- TOM CLANCY: Gee, Senator. But then what actually are you going to do? I think the-- I think the American people recognize that this is a 10,000-plus dead American citizens. What action are we going to take, sir? What are you gonna vote for? What are you gonna authorize? What are you gonna fund? Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Well, I think the-- I think the starting place is to do the thing-- First of all, there is an immediate response to what just occurred. And then there's a long-term issue, which is the issue that I've been discussing. Long-term, we have the national-security threat of ongoing terrorism. There are multiple things that need to be done in connection with that-- TOM CLANCY: OK. Let's-- What are they? What are you gonna do? Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Those are the things I just talked about -- putting more resources in our counter-terrorism, making sure that the things that need to be done are in fact being done, making sure that the federal agencies who are involved are working together, making sure that they have the authority to do what needs to be done-- TOM CLANCY: Senator, you're not-- Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): --making sure that-- TOM CLANCY: You're not doing anything. You're just talking. What are we going to do? What action are we going to take? CHARLIE ROSE: I think, Tom, what he is saying is ``give the people that are responsible for this in the executive branch the resources to do it'' is what his answer has been. Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): And, Charlie, if I can add to that, that has to do-- that has to do with the long-term issue. And, by the way, I think the building of these coalitions internationally are also a critical component. CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): In addition to that, we have a specific response to these particular incidents, which is to identify who did this and go out and hold them responsible. CHARLIE ROSE: I've gotta bring STEVE EMERSON. STEVE EMERSON, tell me know and what you have learned today and what you have heard and what-- based on all the things you have known before, what perspective you have on this. STEVE EMERSON, Terrorist Analyst and Investigator: Well, you'll bear with me because I have not been able to listen to what's transpired before in the program. But clearly the lead indications are at this point, based on intelligence assessments, is that there is really only one group -- led by Osama bin Laden -- that had the capability, the wherewithal, the motive, and the-- and who had evinced publicly his determination to carry the war into the United States. As of June of this year, he made a statement saying, ``I'm gonna take the war into the United States.'' Number two -- there is now an assessment of the cockpit tapes and the transmissions between the pilots and the radar stations on the-- command station stations on the ground. That will help determine what went on during those precious few minutes before the planes were exploded into the-- into the Pentagon as well as the World Trade Center. CHARLIE ROSE: Steve, I'm asking-- Have you-- have you heard anything from sources you might have about any of that today, in terms of either statements that bin Laden might have made-- Specifically, even though we have made clear that no one yet has the evidence that connects him to it, that suggests he was saying something specific might happen on this date, et cetera? STEVE EMERSON: No, I have no information that he was warning about this particular date itself. And, remember, I think, as Judy said appropriately, this type of operation takes a year-- a minimum of a year, maybe two years for the reconnaissance, the intelligence, the rehearsal, and to plant the infrastructure on the ground. And I think what the senator was talking about in terms of giving resources-- I think there's gonna have to be a lowering of a threshold for collecting intelligence on domestic-based groups. And there's no distinction anymore between domestic and international. They're hear on American soil. And they're here in Europe. And they're in Beirut. And they're all over. CHARLIE ROSE: OK. JUDITH MILLER? JUDITH MILLER: Well, I think we've been talking about international coalitions and, as General Sneh said and Steve said, the importance of intelligence information. I would just point out that the Osama bin Laden network's apparently tried to carry out a huge attack on the United States and Jordan and other countries during the millennium. And that it was Sandy Berger's administration which fortunately helped stop them in coop-- CHARLIE ROSE: This is the Seattle event-- JUDITH MILLER: Yes, Seattle. SAMUEL BERGER: Not just Seattle. Seattle-- JUDITH MILLER: Seattle-- SAMUEL BERGER: Amman, Jordan. And we now know that-- CHARLIE ROSE: This was all, you think, from Osama bin Laden? Or you don't know? SAMUEL BERGER: Yes, we do know. And we now know that the U.S.S. Cole was actually scheduled for contemporaneous action. And the boat that was taking the explosives out to a different ship sunk. So, there was an-- there was a multiple effort. CHARLIE ROSE: All right. But that does beg this question, Sandy. SAMUEL BERGER: Yeah. CHARLIE ROSE: Which is-- and this has been raised today. How much human intelligence do we have with respect to these groups? TOM CLANCY: Practically none. CHARLIE ROSE: Tom, you say what? TOM CLANCY: Practically none. CHARLIE ROSE: Sandy-- SAMUEL BERGER: Well-- TOM CLANCY: Because, you know, the human intelligence-- the director of operations, TI, is the orphan child of the whole intelligence community. CHARLIE ROSE: Sandy? SAMUEL BERGER: Yeah, there's going to be a tremendous tendency here to pounce on the intelligence community. CHARLIE ROSE: Saying, ``You should have known. You didn't know enough. You don't have any--'' SAMUEL BERGER: When things go beyond the imaginable some-- TOM CLANCY: Why is [unintelligible] our driveway? SAMUEL BERGER: --it is easy to-- CHARLIE ROSE: Tom, wait 'til I come to you. TOM CLANCY: [unintelligible] our driveway? SAMUEL BERGER: --to get in the blame game here. I think the intelligence community is far more sophisticated about the bin Laden network than they were two years ago or four years ago. But what today suggests is that there's a-- there's a heck of a lot we don't know. CHARLIE ROSE: OK. But were you hampered by your inability to do something when you were the national security adviser? SAMUEL BERGER: I think what-- CHARLIE ROSE: Was there enough urgency to do something? SAMUEL BERGER: Yes, certainly. And we did on more than one occasion, as you know. CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. SAMUEL BERGER: We-- we-- we-- But I think the escalation here is going to change the risk calculation for the United States. CHARLIE ROSE: Senator Edwards, do you think-- RICHARD HOLBROOKE: May I just make one very quick point? CHARLIE ROSE: Yes. RICHARD HOLBROOKE: We're talking there about an intelligence failure. This was not so much an intelligence failure as it was a security failure. We -- all of us who go through these airport security -- have been led to believe that we had a certain degree of safety. If it had been one plane, perhaps it'd been an aberration. CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah, right. RICHARD HOLBROOKE: But clearly the people who did this identified a fatal -- and I mean ``fatal'' in the most dramatic possible sense -- a fatal flaw in airport security and then managed a very sophisticated operation to simultaneously exploit it in at least four different planes. And perhaps will continue to. And right now, as we sit here tonight, the American security and intelligence services do not yet know exactly what that flaw they exploited was, which is what makes the administration's decision on when to resume flights and other comparable issues quite tricky. CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. And how will they find that out? RICHARD HOLBROOKE: I would defer to Senator Edwards on the sequence. But I just want to stress that, before we beat on people who are trying very hard to do their jobs in the intelligence field, let's focus on why people are dead tonight. It was a security failure today that caused this tragedy, and it was a huge one. There was a flaw in the way people get on airplanes. And how did they get in the cockpits? As General Sneh has said they undoubtedly killed the pilots 'cause no pilot would take a plane into a building when they could go into the Hudson and Potomac rivers. So, something went wrong, and we sit here tonight and we don't know what it was yet. CHARLIE ROSE: General Sneh? EPHRAIM SNEH: With various other countries to adopt again some of the methods that we use in order to have-- CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. EPHRAIM SNEH: --the maximal security-- CHARLIE ROSE: But TOM CLANCY has made the point over and over, which is that when you have somebody who doesn't care whether they live or die then you have a much more difficult problem. EPHRAIM SNEH: The problem is not to hit the suicide bomber, but those who train him and send him to the mission. CHARLIE ROSE: Yeah. EPHRAIM SNEH: And in this I hope that, after this horrible day, the activities of my small country will have more understanding and we shall listen to less exhortations about what we are doing. CHARLIE ROSE: OK. All right. Well said. Senator Edwards, do you think that there will be an examination -- a legitimate, interesting examination -- now about how this country is, in fact, vulnerable -- whether it's security risk or whether it's an intelligence-- and the need for more intelligence-- TOM CLANCY: Oh, Charlie. CHARLIE ROSE: --and need to be more, that that will be one of the demands on the Congress-- that rather than missile defense, maybe we ought to look at some other areas that deserve equal attention for American vulnerability. Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Charlie, I think there will appropriately be a demand from the American people for us to do all of those things. I think that a lot of us have known, including some of your panelists who I've spoken to at length about this before-- Dick Holbrooke, Sandy Berger -- those guys all understand very well that this is the most serious and most imminent threat to our national security that exists. So, there are a lot of folks who have known this. And I think what this event does is make it very, very personal to the American people. And I think they're going to appropriately demand that we respond. I just want to re-emphasize something, though, that Dick Holbrooke said just a minute ago. It would be absolutely the right thing to do to go in and examine our intelligence-gathering activities where we went-- what mistakes we made, how we can do a better job, and what changes we can make. That's something we absolutely-- It's imperative that we do that. But the second point and the point that Dick made just a minute ago is this breach of security is critical because without that breach of security these terrorist activities could not have been executed. And sometimes that gets lost in the process, but the breach of airport security that allowed these events to take place is a critical component in this. STEVE EMERSON: But let me just add one thing that-- I agree that breach of security must be analyzed, and we've gotta go through all the steps of trying to plug up the holes. But the bottom line is we have to recognize that the United States faces an implacable militant foe in the world today and it's not just located in Afghanistan by bin Laden. He's got cells all over. This is an international organization that has an incredible amount of capabilities. It's Islamic fundamentalist. They hate the United States-- CHARLIE ROSE: Well, not all Islamic fundamentalists. STEVE EMERSON: Well, I would say ``most''-- I would say ``all militant Islamic fundamentalists.'' The degree of celebrations you see in the West Bank today and in Lebanon today by people celebrating this act-- CHARLIE ROSE: I'm coming to you, Tom. STEVE EMERSON: I think it clearly shows there is a major threat and that we have to not just flagellate ourselves and criticize ourselves for the intelligence failure -- to the extent that it was one -- but really go after the enemy that carried this out. JUDITH MILLER: I mean, I would point out that the armed forces of the United States and many of our military bases and facilities and embassies have been on alert since June precisely because the U.S. government had intelligence information that a major terrorist attack was being planned. TOM CLANCY: What is that? SAMUEL BERGER: What's qualitatively different here -- and I agree with Judy, and we've closed embassies repeatedly -- is an operation conducted within the United States. JUDITH MILLER: Exactly. SAMUEL BERGER: Obviously going on within the United States for weeks undetected. CHARLIE ROSE: All right. Let me go talk to TOM CLANCY. One final remark, Tom. What would you like to see the United States do? And I think you have said it well, which is identify who did this and go do something about it, as the president said earlier, ``punish them.'' TOM CLANCY: Charlie, the first line of defense against terrorism is good intelligence information. Senator Edwards, one thing we gotta do is beef up the operations directorate of CIA. That's an agency of 20,000 people of whom maybe 800 are field intelligence officers. The mission here to infiltrate and find out about these terrorist organizations, essentially what the FBI did when they invented-- when they sneaked Joe Pistone into the-- into Mafia under the name of Donnie Brasco. You infiltrate, and you learn what they're up to, and then you break them up. CHARLIE ROSE: All right. TOM CLANCY: But to do that you've gotta have field spooks. And we don't have enough field spooks. CHARLIE ROSE: I've got less than a minute, Tom. You expected to get strong international support along the line we've talked about earlier here. TOM CLANCY: Anybody that doesn't support us is in for-- CHARLIE ROSE: Thank you, Tom. I'll be right back. TOM CLANCY: For a major headache. Yeah. CHARLIE ROSE: Ambassador Holbrooke? RICHARD HOLBROOKE: Yes. CHARLIE ROSE: They'll be responsive to this event? RICHARD HOLBROOKE: I think-- I think you're gonna see an enormous set of consequential actions stemming from this. And, if the United States shows the leadership that we can show, should show, must show, we will get support, but not 100 percent. There are gonna be some people in the Mideast, some of Israel's neighbors who are going to not come all the way. But-- [crosstalk] SAMUEL BERGER: But, of course, ultimately they will be consumed by the same forces of militancy-- RICHARD HOLBROOKE: Of course. SAMUEL BERGER: --unless they stand up to-- [crosstalk] RICHARD HOLBROOKE: Well, both Egypt and Saudi Arabia are afraid of just what Sandy's talking about. CHARLIE ROSE: Egypt and Saudi Arabia. RICHARD HOLBROOKE: Sure. That they'll get overwhelmed. CHARLIE ROSE: They'll be consumed by the same forces that were on the attack here. RICHARD HOLBROOKE: Sure. CHARLIE ROSE: Senator Edwards, do you expect some kind of sense of the Senate to come out tomorrow and the next day? Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Oh, I think by the end of the day tomorrow, Charlie, there will be a very strong resolution passed by the Congress. CHARLIE ROSE: Saying what? In 25 seconds. Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Saying basically that we universally condemn what occurred and that we're prepared to take action necessary to prevent it from occurring again. CHARLIE ROSE: The resolution of the Senate, the Congress, the American people, across the board. Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): That's exactly right. CHARLIE ROSE: Thank you, all. I thank you for coming in for this live program from New York and from Washington and from Arkansas, looking at this day that people have declared an act of war against the United States. Thank you, we'll see you. TOM CLANCY: OK. See you, Charlie. TOPICS: Politics/Elections; War on Terror KEYWORDS: 911; charlierose; johnedwards; tomclancy NOTE: TOM CLANCY: Gee, Senator. But then what actually are you going to do? I think the-- I think the American people recognize that this is a 10,000-plus dead American citizens. What action are we going to take, sir? What are you gonna vote for? What are you gonna authorize? What are you gonna fund? Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Well, I think the-- I think the starting place is to do the thing-- First of all, there is an immediate response to what just occurred. And then there's a long-term issue, which is the issue that I've been discussing. Long-term, we have the national-security threat of ongoing terrorism. There are multiple things that need to be done in connection with that-- TOM CLANCY: OK. Let's-- What are they? What are you gonna do? Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): Those are the things I just talked about -- putting more resources in our counter-terrorism, making sure that the things that need to be done are in fact being done, making sure that the federal agencies who are involved are working together, making sure that they have the authority to do what needs to be done-- TOM CLANCY: Senator, you're not-- Sen. JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC): --making sure that-- TOM CLANCY: You're not doing anything. You're just talking. What are we going to do? What action are we going to take? by swilhelm73 To: swilhelm73 === If we change our society, the terrorists win. If we tell the terrorists, ``We are who we are and what we choose to be, and you can't change that, fella,'' then we win. Doesn't get the fact we lost, does he? What really burns me is the fact those who cheer the rest of his words would have no answer to others' bombing the crap out of innocent Americans simply because they didn't like the actions of the "Mad Bomber of Sudan". I fail to see how -- yet in the shadow of Clinton such that we're still blaming him for just about everything -- we're so confident in our "new" powers we have nothing to fear should the likes of Mrs. Clinton enjoy one day the increased veils of privacy or powers of summary execution -- among other things -- Bush has claimed for his Executive Branch this term. by Askel5 When did the interview (round table) take place? From your link: "CLUELESS ON CHARLIE ROSE": HERE'S THE TRANSCRIPT [KJL] Here's the transcript of John Edwards on Charlie Rose on 9/11. Courtesy of Steve Emerson and Andy Cochran from the Investigative Project. (Emerson was sitting next to Edwards). Sorry it's long. I've bolded the memorable Tom Clancy-John Edwards exchange. If I were at the RNC, my e-mail about it might begin: DO YOU WANT THIS MAN A HEARTBEAT AWAY FROM THE PRESIDENCY? Democratic vice-presidential candidate John Edwards's response to 9/11: "Well, I think the-- I think the starting place is to do the thing." 3 ("Dick Cheney can be president. Next?") Thousands of Americans have been murdered by terrorists. How does John "Silky Pony" Edwards, the boy who would be president, decisively deal with the crisis: "Well, I think the-- I think the starting place is to do the thing--"Visionary leadership in a dangerous world. by inkling To: inkling He wasn't a leader, then. Or even campaigning to become one. The job of Congress is to pass laws and to provide resources, not to set policy or execute it. Clancy was asking what the country should do, what the government should do. Edwards was answering with what Congress would do. And as far as it went, it was the right answer - make sure the Executive had what it needed in order to do what needed to be done. It's not a wrong answer, but it's not a very visionary one. It indicates someone who's prone to looking only at the problem in front of him - who has difficulty seeing the larger context. Someone who has problems with the "vision thing". Which is not what we need in a leadership position right now. by jdege bump for later - for posterity by Lyford To: Constitution Day; mykdsmom Edwards, a man of vision...Well, I think the-- I think the starting place is to do the thing-- John Edwards on what the response to the 9/11 attack should be. by Phantom Lord (Distributor of Pain, Your Loss Becomes My Gain) To: jdege True. He answered like a politician hedging his bets and burying his head in process. Compare this to another senator, McCain, who famously responded to the perpetrators of 9-11 with, "may God have mercy on their souls, because we won't." Edwards shouldn't have yelled, "I'm in command" and started barking orders. But it is a little unsettling that his only reaction in a long interview was to sputter anemic vagaries. Remember how you felt the night of 9-11? No leader would have spoken like Edwards. Hell, any average American would have responded with more passion. I hope that Dick Cheney has a copy of this. Quick, send a copy to Scooter Libby (Dick's Chief of Staff). This will be great fodder for the debates. by NavySEAL F-16 ("proud to be a Reagan Republican") "Well, I think the-- I think the starting place is to do the thing."That's a WHOPPER compared to the "Bush sitting for 7 seconds in a classroom after being notified about the first plane hitting the WTC..." the left seems so enamored over. John Edwards doesn't know what he'll do, but President George W. Bush freed 50 million people in 2 different countries in 2 and a half years. by BigSkyFreeper (1973: Kerry was razing villages in 'Nam and Edwards was raising beer bombs in college.) To: BigSkyFreeper He is an empty suit trolling for lawsuits. He is totally unqualified to be a heartbeat away from the presidency. Were it not for our dishonest and biased media, the ticket of Kerry/Edwards would be a laugher. 11 Were it not for our dishonest and biased media, the ticket of Kerry/Edwards would be a laugher.Exactly. Even after their snoozefest of a televised speech, the media spent a lot of time trying to build those two dullards up. It was tedious to watch. To: Blue Highway by perfect stranger
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2592
{"url": "http://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1167126/posts?page=5", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "freerepublic.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:08:10Z", "digest": "sha1:PYN37A2ULHX5AO3BBLFQGSTRBCNXTF5A"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 31412, 31412.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 31412, 33450.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 31412, 38.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 31412, 159.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 31412, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 31412, 325.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 31412, 5.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 31412, 0.44521152]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 31412, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 31412, 0.10307849]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 31412, 0.1564526]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 31412, 0.13630989]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 31412, 0.1166157]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 31412, 0.1095209]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 31412, 0.10813456]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 31412, 0.02735984]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 31412, 0.00844037]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 31412, 0.00970438]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 31412, 0.07270858]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 31412, 0.17934783]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 31412, 0.20962704]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 31412, 4.50578725]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 31412, 0.00029377]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 31412, 5.80219991]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 31412, 5443.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 80, 0.0], [80, 103, 0.0], [103, 153, 0.0], [153, 25427, 1.0], [25427, 25469, 0.0], [25469, 25520, 0.0], [25520, 26811, 1.0], [26811, 26825, 0.0], [26825, 26840, 0.0], [26840, 27634, 1.0], [27634, 27644, 0.0], [27644, 28275, 0.0], [28275, 28315, 0.0], [28315, 28585, 1.0], [28585, 28596, 0.0], [28596, 28608, 0.0], [28608, 29323, 1.0], [29323, 29332, 0.0], [29332, 29363, 0.0], [29363, 29373, 0.0], [29373, 29404, 0.0], [29404, 29563, 1.0], [29563, 29579, 0.0], [29579, 29628, 0.0], [29628, 29638, 0.0], [29638, 30208, 1.0], [30208, 30356, 1.0], [30356, 30373, 0.0], [30373, 30409, 0.0], [30409, 30791, 1.0], [30791, 30808, 0.0], [30808, 30897, 0.0], [30897, 30915, 0.0], [30915, 31127, 0.0], [31127, 31376, 1.0], [31376, 31393, 0.0], [31393, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 80, 0.0], [80, 103, 0.0], [103, 153, 0.0], [153, 25427, 0.0], [25427, 25469, 0.0], [25469, 25520, 0.0], [25520, 26811, 0.0], [26811, 26825, 0.0], [26825, 26840, 0.0], [26840, 27634, 0.0], [27634, 27644, 0.0], [27644, 28275, 0.0], [28275, 28315, 0.0], [28315, 28585, 0.0], [28585, 28596, 0.0], [28596, 28608, 0.0], [28608, 29323, 0.0], [29323, 29332, 0.0], [29332, 29363, 0.0], [29363, 29373, 0.0], [29373, 29404, 0.0], [29404, 29563, 0.0], [29563, 29579, 0.0], [29579, 29628, 0.0], [29628, 29638, 0.0], [29638, 30208, 0.0], [30208, 30356, 0.0], [30356, 30373, 0.0], [30373, 30409, 0.0], [30409, 30791, 0.0], [30791, 30808, 0.0], [30808, 30897, 0.0], [30897, 30915, 0.0], [30915, 31127, 0.0], [31127, 31376, 0.0], [31376, 31393, 0.0], [31393, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 72, 10.0], [72, 80, 1.0], [80, 103, 4.0], [103, 153, 8.0], [153, 25427, 4376.0], [25427, 25469, 5.0], [25469, 25520, 5.0], [25520, 26811, 226.0], [26811, 26825, 2.0], [26825, 26840, 2.0], [26840, 27634, 146.0], [27634, 27644, 2.0], [27644, 28275, 104.0], [28275, 28315, 6.0], [28315, 28585, 44.0], [28585, 28596, 2.0], [28596, 28608, 2.0], [28608, 29323, 133.0], [29323, 29332, 2.0], [29332, 29363, 5.0], [29363, 29373, 2.0], [29373, 29404, 4.0], [29404, 29563, 30.0], [29563, 29579, 3.0], [29579, 29628, 8.0], [29628, 29638, 2.0], [29638, 30208, 95.0], [30208, 30356, 29.0], [30356, 30373, 3.0], [30373, 30409, 6.0], [30409, 30791, 69.0], [30791, 30808, 2.0], [30808, 30897, 15.0], [30897, 30915, 2.0], [30915, 31127, 38.0], [31127, 31376, 44.0], [31376, 31393, 3.0], [31393, 31412, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 80, 0.0], [80, 103, 0.0], [103, 153, 0.33333333], [153, 25427, 0.00091109], [25427, 25469, 0.0], [25469, 25520, 0.06521739], [25520, 26811, 0.00413223], [26811, 26825, 0.15384615], [26825, 26840, 0.15384615], [26840, 27634, 0.0], [27634, 27644, 0.11111111], [27644, 28275, 0.01178451], [28275, 28315, 0.0], [28315, 28585, 0.0], [28585, 28596, 0.0], [28596, 28608, 0.0], [28608, 29323, 0.0], [29323, 29332, 0.0], [29332, 29363, 0.0], [29363, 29373, 0.0], [29373, 29404, 0.0], [29404, 29563, 0.02040816], [29563, 29579, 0.0], [29579, 29628, 0.0], [29628, 29638, 0.0], [29638, 30208, 0.01098901], [30208, 30356, 0.0], [30356, 30373, 0.13333333], [30373, 30409, 0.0], [30409, 30791, 0.0137741], [30791, 30808, 0.0], [30808, 30897, 0.04819277], [30897, 30915, 0.0], [30915, 31127, 0.00970874], [31127, 31376, 0.0], [31376, 31393, 0.0], [31393, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 80, 0.0], [80, 103, 0.0], [103, 153, 0.0], [153, 25427, 0.0], [25427, 25469, 0.0], [25469, 25520, 0.0], [25520, 26811, 0.0], [26811, 26825, 0.0], [26825, 26840, 0.0], [26840, 27634, 0.0], [27634, 27644, 0.0], [27644, 28275, 0.0], [28275, 28315, 0.0], [28315, 28585, 0.0], [28585, 28596, 0.0], [28596, 28608, 0.0], [28608, 29323, 0.0], [29323, 29332, 0.0], [29332, 29363, 0.0], [29363, 29373, 0.0], [29373, 29404, 0.0], [29404, 29563, 0.0], [29563, 29579, 0.0], [29579, 29628, 0.0], [29628, 29638, 0.0], [29638, 30208, 0.0], [30208, 30356, 0.0], [30356, 30373, 0.0], [30373, 30409, 0.0], [30409, 30791, 0.0], [30791, 30808, 0.0], [30808, 30897, 0.0], [30897, 30915, 0.0], [30915, 31127, 0.0], [31127, 31376, 0.0], [31376, 31393, 0.0], [31393, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.66666667], [72, 80, 0.625], [80, 103, 0.08695652], [103, 153, 0.12], [153, 25427, 0.08945952], [25427, 25469, 0.23809524], [25469, 25520, 0.15686275], [25520, 26811, 0.08985283], [26811, 26825, 0.0], [26825, 26840, 0.06666667], [26840, 27634, 0.02015113], [27634, 27644, 0.1], [27644, 28275, 0.1933439], [28275, 28315, 0.075], [28315, 28585, 0.04074074], [28585, 28596, 0.0], [28596, 28608, 0.08333333], [28608, 29323, 0.01818182], [29323, 29332, 0.0], [29332, 29363, 0.0], [29363, 29373, 0.1], [29373, 29404, 0.09677419], [29404, 29563, 0.03773585], [29563, 29579, 0.125], [29579, 29628, 0.14285714], [29628, 29638, 0.1], [29638, 30208, 0.0245614], [30208, 30356, 0.06756757], [30356, 30373, 0.35294118], [30373, 30409, 0.05555556], [30409, 30791, 0.05497382], [30791, 30808, 0.17647059], [30808, 30897, 0.03370787], [30897, 30915, 0.22222222], [30915, 31127, 0.02358491], [31127, 31376, 0.02409639], [31376, 31393, 0.17647059], [31393, 31412, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 31412, 0.69735122]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 31412, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 31412, 0.60833043]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 31412, 21.16674278]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 31412, 445.74830004]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 31412, -2650.27383054]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 31412, 364.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
freerepublic.com
Study: Universe 13 Billion Years Old | Wednesday, April 24, 2002; 4:21 PM | Paul Recer Posted on 04/24/2002 6:30:34 PM PDT by longshadow By Paul Recer AP Science Writer Wednesday, April 24, 2002; 4:21 PM WASHINGTON –– The universe is about 13 billion years old, slightly younger than previously believed, according to a study that measured the cooling of the embers in ancient dying stars.Experts said the finding gives "very comparable results" to an earlier study that used a different method to conclude that the universe burst into existence with the theoretical "Big Bang" between 13 and 14 billion years ago.Harvey B. Richer, an astronomer at the University of British Columbia, said the Hubble Space Telescope gathered images of the faintest dying stars it could find in M4, a star cluster some 7,000 light years away.Richer said the fading stars, called white dwarfs, are actually burnt out coals of stars that were once up to eight times the size of the sun. After they exhausted their fuel, the stars collapsed into Earth-sized spheres of cooling embers that eventually will turn cold and wink out of sight.Earlier studies had established the rate of cooling for these stars, said Richer. By looking at the very faintest and oldest white dwarfs possible, astronomers can use this cooling rate to estimate the age of the universe.Speaking at a news conference Wednesday, Richer said the dimmest of the white dwarfs are about 12.7 billion years old, plus or minus about half a billion years.Richer said it is estimated that star formation did not begin until about a billion years after the Big Bang. He said this means his best estimate for age of the universe is "about 13 billion years."Three years ago, astronomers using another method estimated the age at 13 to 14 billion years. That was based on precise measurements of the rate at which galaxies are moving apart, an expansion that started with the Big Bang. They then back-calculated – like running a movie backward – to arrive at the age estimate."Our results are in very good agreement" with Richer's estimate, said Wendy L. Freedman, an astronomer at the Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena, Calif., and a leader of the group performing the universe age calculations three years ago.Bruce Margon, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute, said both conclusions are based on "a lot of assumptions" but the fact that two independent methods arrived within 10 percent of the same answer is important."To find an independent way to measure the age and then get essentially the same answer is a fantastic advance," said Margon. It may not be the final answer for the universe's age, he said, but is "very, very, very close."To get the new age estimate, the Hubble Space Telescope collected light from M4 for eight days over a 67-day period. Only then did the very faintest of the white dwarfs become visible."These are the coolest white dwarf stars that we know about in the universe," said Richer. "These stars get cooler and cooler and less luminous as they age."He added: "We think we have seen the faintest ones. If we haven't, then we'll have to rethink" the conclusions.The faintest of the white dwarfs are less than one-billionth the apparent brightness of the dimmest stars visible to the naked eye.M4 is a globular cluster, thought to be the first group of stars that formed in the Milky Way galaxy, the home galaxy for the sun, early in the history of the universe. There are about 150 globular clusters in the Milky Way; M4 was selected because it is closest to Earth.The new age estimate for the universe is the latest in a long series of attempts to measure the passage of time since the Big Bang. Edwin Hubble, the famed astronomer who first proved that the universe is uniformly expanding, estimated in 1928 that the universe was two billion years old.Later studies, using the very expansion that Hubble discovered, arrived at an estimate of about nine billion years for the universe age. This created a paradox for astronomers because some stars were known to be more ancient and it is impossible for stellar bodies to be older than the universe where they formed.Freedman and others then determined, using proven values for the brightness and distance of certain stars, that the universe throughout its history has not expanded at a constant rate. Instead, the separation of galaxies is actually accelerating, pushed by a poorly understood force known as "dark energy." By adding in calculations for this mysterious force, the Freedman group arrived at the estimate of 13 to 14 billion years.–––––On the Net:Hubble Images: http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/pr/2002/10NASA: http://www.nasa.gov TOPICS: Miscellaneous; News/Current Events KEYWORDS: astronomy; cosmology; science; stringtheory; universe Big time cosmology implications! by longshadow To: longshadow The universe is about 13 billion years old, slightly younger than previously believed...Amazing...13 billion? I could swear, it doesn't look any older than 8 billion. Really. by Recovering_Democrat To: Physicist; ThinkPlease; purple haze; RadioAstronomer; Scully; edwin hubble; PatrickHenry; VadeRetro cosmological bump! To: Recovering_Democrat Really! It's looking pretty good for its age, too, isn't it? It's old news, however. What they're seeing happened over 7,000 years ago, the news is just now reaching us. (grin) by nightdriver "These are the coolest white dwarf stars that we know about in the universe," said Richer. "These stars get cooler and cooler and less luminous as they age."He added: "We think we have seen the faintest ones. If we haven't, then we'll have to rethink" the conclusions.What if some of the white dwarfs have already "gone out"? How would you know? the Hubble Space Telescope collected light from M4 for eight days over a 67-day period. Only then did the very faintest of the white dwarfs become visible. If they collected light for an additional 8 days, or 80 days, would additional, "dimmer" white dwarfs become visible? by FairWitness From the lead article:Harvey B. Richer, an astronomer at the University of British Columbia, said the Hubble Space Telescope gathered images of the faintest dying stars it could find in M4, a star cluster some 7,000 light years away. Is that the farthest cluster in which we can distinguish such stars? On the one hand, it's not all that far (cosmologically speaking); but on the other hand, resolving individual stars in such a cluster seems quite a trick. by PatrickHenry Well, it's decided then! Good thing this is cleared up.... until the next estimate is made. by ValerieUSA Study: Universe 13 Billion Years Old When? Today? I didn't get it a thing. Why didn't someone tell me? by Risky Schemer They don't even know when humans came on the scene - 50,000 years ago? 100,000? How can they ever know how old the universe is? They should concentrate on proving that wonderful theory the dinosaur was wiped out by an asteroid. These people actually get paid to make educated guesses like this? Where can I get a job like that? by Reaganwuzthebest Give or take a few billion, and until the next theory comes along. To: Risky Schemer When? Today? I didn't get it a thing. Why didn't someone tell me? Hustle down to Hallmark.They have some of those "belated" thingys you can send. by billorites These may be the coolest white dwarfs we know about in the universe, but Tommy Daschle is still the coolest white dwarf in the U.S. Senate, at least in his own mind. To: FairWitness If they collected light for an additional 8 days, or 80 days, would additional, "dimmer" white dwarfs become visible? This was addressed in the press conference today. They took exposures that were adequate to detect fainter white dwarfs if they existed, but they found none; hence they conclude that these ARE the faintest. What if some of the white dwarfs have already "gone out"?White dwarf stars take a gigantically long time to "go out" (which in this case means to cool until they cannot be seen). by Physicist To: PatrickHenry Is that the farthest cluster in which we can distinguish such stars? Excellent question, grasshopper..... It is actually the CLOSEST cluster where astronomers hoped to detect such faint beasts, because of the limitations in their equipment precluded from being able to detect objects this faint at greater distances.... ..... however, the new equipment JUST installed last month on the Hubble Space Telescope will be many times more sensitive that what they used for this research, and thus will be invaluable in observing more distant clusters to see if the data collected from them supports (or contradicts) this finding. To: Reaganwuzthebest How can they ever know how old the universe is? By looking at the evidence. The universe obeys physical laws, you know.These people actually get paid to make educated guesses like this?No, they get paid to make measurements like this. Where can I get a job like that?You start by spending twelve years in college (as I did). The younger the universe actually is, the better I like it. First, we may be among the earliest intelligent species to evolve, so if we can develop the technology for interstellar travel, we may have a big head start on everyone else. Second, the earlier we are in the cosmological history of the universe, the longer we have to play out our destiny. Of course, eventually it all comes to an end, so it doesn't really matter. Nothing really matters ... grumble, grumble. Still, I persevere. These people actually get paid to make educated guesses like this? Where can I get a job like that? Well, first you start out with an IQ of say 140+, then you matriculate at a first tier university, and major in Physics, or Mathematics, or Astronomy, and after four years of hard work you get your Bachelor's degree; then you apply to grad school and get into an Astronomy/Astrophysics program, and after a couple more years of hard work, you'll have your Master's degree, and then you put in more time doing original research on your doctoral Thesis, which, with a bit of luck and a lot of hard work, might be accepted, and so you eventually get your Ph.D. Then you go to work, continuing to do original research like these guys did, and by that time you would have come to understand how it is that scientists are able to devise observations that measure the age of the Universe using multiple independent methods, which indicate very similar results. To: Physicist What does college have to do with anything? I've got six behind me, so what? With all of our technology, we still haven't scratched the surface of what's out there. You can measure till the sun goes down, it's still all theories. You've got some scientists saying the universe is expanding, while others say no no, it's contracting. They haven't got a clue, neither do I, and neither do you. To: Cicero Give or take a few billion, and until the next theory comes along. Actually, the error in their measurement is half a billion years, which is roughly 4%. Not bad. These scientists sure have a thing for older universes. I myself, prefer younger ones with perkier nebula. by Northpaw Oh yeah, right. 13 Billion. The whole universe that goes on for infinity. hehechchchee. Who's paying this guy. Please tell me not us. by Osinski Nothing really matters ... grumble, grumble. Still, I persevere. What does your mascot, Plato the Platypus, say about it? You can measure till the sun goes down ... You'll get better results if you do it after the sun goes down. To: Northpaw I myself, prefer younger ones with perkier nebula. Watch it; this is a family forum. ;-) What does your mascot, Plato the Platypus, say about it? Plato says 14.2 billion years. I don't doubt the intelligence of these people, and for our survival, that of mankind it's good to research these things as best they can. But I prefer to see proof, not theories. And the age of the universe is way to speculative. They're not even certain about the so-called big-bang theory, so the whole origins of the universe will probably never be be known for certain. You start by spending twelve years in college Oh heck, I could do that. :-) by jlogajan And the age of the universe is way to speculative. They're not even certain about the so-called big-bang theory, so the whole origins of the universe will probably never be be known for certain. There are dozens of very good books on the subject, written in layman's language by the very people who are doing this research. You'd be amazed to discover how much in agreement they all are. They explain their thinking, their evidence, and how they arrive at their conclusions. Very stimulating reading. Try it. But I prefer to see proof, not theories. Then I suggest you restrict yourself to logic, Mathematics, and distilled spirits, the only realms in which absolute "proof" is possible. Scientific theories are based on consonance with observed evidence and multiple unsuccessfull attempts at falsification. Thus, they are NEVER "proven" in the sense of metaphysical certitude. That is the nature of science, and it has seerved us very well, despite it's shortcomings. "These people actually get paid to make educated guesses like this?"This has to be the ultimate job --predicting the age of the Universe as one of the "important" tasks of an astronomer. Sorta like the "job" of counting the angels on the head of a pin. I remember the scientists a few years ago who "discovered" asteroids colliding with the planet Jupiter. They were dancing in the streets. Total contribution to Mankind for this crucial "discovery"? Nada. Zilch. Nothing. To: Osinski; Physicist Oh yeah, right. 13 Billion. The whole universe that goes on for infinity. If you are having trouble understanding that these two concepts are NOT mutually exclusive, I suggest you avail yourself of "Physicists" knowledge, expertise, and amazing ability to explain complex scientific concepts in a manner easily understood by layman. He's right here on this thread. I'm sure he'd be happy to explain it to you if you were to ask him. To: Osinski The whole universe that goes on for infinity. Does it? Before you can find proof of something, you have to work out theories so you have some idea what you're trying to prove. So what you're saying I'm in total agreement with. But the laws of physics are not necessarily absolute. There have been instances out there in space where what they thought, or expected to be ocurring was not. They're going back 13 billion light years in time to see what happened then because that's how long it took for the light to reach us. But for all we know, as another poster said the universe goes on in infinity, there are probably galaxies a hundred trillion light years away, and farther. My point is, and it's a theory, fifteen billion years for the universe is like a second for us. It's been around a lot longer than that. Yay! Yet another contradictory story about the age of the earth. These "scientists" (and I use the term loosely) will never get a clue. by DennisR ". . . between 13 and 14 billion years ago." You would thank that, given the utter and sheer brilliance of these "experts," that they would be able to get the age of the earth closer than to within 1,000,000,000 years. To: DennisR Yet another contradictory story about the age of the earth. Okay; I'll bite. Show us the contradiction you alluded to. the universe goes on in infinity Does it?the universe [has] been around a lot longer than [fifteen billion years]. Has it? ". . . multiple independent methods . . ." is no guarantee that accuracy is achieved, especially if the "multiple independent methods" are all erroneous. if Let's see a little meat with your "if's". There are dozens of very good books on the subject, written in layman's language by the very people who are doing this research. You'd be amazed to discover how much in agreement they all are. That's what bothers me.Because 20 years ago they all agreed that it was a different age. by Politically Correct To: Politically Correct Because 20 years ago they all agreed that it was a different age. Are you smarter than you were 20 years ago? You are kidding, right? If not, just go to google.com, type in the following, and press [Google Search]. That should give you plenty of contradictory reading material. You would thank that, given the utter and sheer brilliance of these "experts," that they would be able to get the age of the earth closer than to within 1,000,000,000 years. Actually, the result being reported here measured it to within half a billion years, which is an error of about 4%. Considering that they are measuring something that happened about 13 billion years ago (give or take), 4% error is pretty darned good. Seriously, are you going to disparage science until they can tell you the month, day, and hour of the Big Bang? How much accuracy do you demand, and why? Because 20 years ago they all agreed that it was a different age. They're always working with the data they have. When new data arrives, from new telescopes and better technology, what do you suggest they do? Supress the new information? They don't do that. They welcome the opportunity to revise their understanding, in the light of the best available information. Why do you find this objectionable? Before you can find proof of something, you have to work out theories so you have some idea what you're trying to prove. So what you're saying I'm in total agreement with. But the laws of physics are not necessarily absolute. There have been instances out there in space where what they thought, or expected to be ocurring was not. They're going back 13 billion light years in time to see what happened then because that's how long it took for the light to reach us. But for all we know, as another poster said the universe goes on in infinity, there are probably galaxies a hundred trillion light years away, and farther. My point is, and it's a theory, fifteen billion years for the universe is like a second for us. It's been around a lot longer than that. I'm sorry; you lost me. I'm getting some strong hints that some of the posters here have the opinion that the universe is only 6,000 years old, which would explain their open hostility to the current findings of science. Yet another contradictory story about the age of the earth. Perhaps you are communicating with the story on another astral plane, but it mentioned nothing about the age of the earth. .....especially if the "multiple independent methods" are all erroneous. I eagerly await your post of the errors in the multiple independent methodologies. Please include the evidence to back up your assertion that they are erroneous. Please also provide your analysis that explains how ALL the errors of the independent methodologies ALL produce virtually indentical results.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2593
{"url": "http://freerepublic.com/focus/news/672293/posts?page=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "freerepublic.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:53:35Z", "digest": "sha1:UJSFCIXYVW5F5IFCE5NUZH3H7EAZ7NDD"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 18851, 18851.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 18851, 25223.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 18851, 86.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 18851, 522.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 18851, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 18851, 308.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 18851, 0.43891974]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 18851, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 18851, 0.29625912]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 18851, 0.37114368]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 18851, 0.36344777]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 18851, 0.34116309]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 18851, 0.33647862]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 18851, 0.31365857]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 18851, 0.01238038]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 18851, 0.01130964]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 18851, 0.00809744]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 18851, 0.01463907]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 18851, 0.18122161]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 18851, 0.26752594]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 18851, 4.69757938]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 18851, 0.00252398]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 18851, 5.8052806]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 18851, 3181.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 74, 0.0], [74, 87, 0.0], [87, 137, 0.0], [137, 4687, 0.0], [4687, 4730, 0.0], [4730, 4794, 0.0], [4794, 4827, 1.0], [4827, 4841, 0.0], [4841, 4856, 0.0], [4856, 5031, 1.0], [5031, 5054, 0.0], [5054, 5158, 0.0], [5158, 5177, 1.0], [5177, 5201, 0.0], [5201, 5378, 0.0], [5378, 5393, 0.0], [5393, 6013, 1.0], [6013, 6028, 0.0], [6028, 6486, 1.0], [6486, 6502, 0.0], [6502, 6594, 1.0], [6594, 6608, 0.0], [6608, 6711, 1.0], [6711, 6728, 0.0], [6728, 7056, 1.0], [7056, 7076, 0.0], [7076, 7143, 1.0], [7143, 7161, 0.0], [7161, 7307, 1.0], [7307, 7321, 0.0], [7321, 7487, 1.0], [7487, 7503, 0.0], [7503, 7828, 1.0], [7828, 8007, 1.0], [8007, 8020, 0.0], [8020, 8037, 0.0], [8037, 8661, 1.0], [8661, 8682, 0.0], [8682, 9007, 1.0], [9007, 9498, 1.0], [9498, 10452, 1.0], [10452, 10466, 0.0], [10466, 10858, 1.0], [10858, 10869, 0.0], [10869, 11032, 1.0], [11032, 11139, 1.0], [11139, 11151, 0.0], [11151, 11285, 1.0], [11285, 11296, 0.0], [11296, 11418, 1.0], [11418, 11525, 1.0], [11525, 11538, 0.0], [11538, 11627, 0.0], [11627, 11715, 1.0], [11715, 12090, 1.0], [12090, 12166, 0.0], [12166, 12178, 0.0], [12178, 12687, 1.0], [12687, 13148, 1.0], [13148, 13621, 1.0], [13621, 13644, 0.0], [13644, 14077, 1.0], [14077, 14089, 0.0], [14089, 14144, 1.0], [14144, 14904, 1.0], [14904, 15040, 1.0], [15040, 15051, 0.0], [15051, 15096, 0.0], [15096, 15270, 1.0], [15270, 15282, 0.0], [15282, 15401, 1.0], [15401, 15524, 1.0], [15524, 15678, 1.0], [15678, 15723, 1.0], [15723, 16005, 1.0], [16005, 16028, 0.0], [16028, 16052, 0.0], [16052, 16162, 1.0], [16162, 16330, 1.0], [16330, 16909, 1.0], [16909, 17311, 1.0], [17311, 18095, 1.0], [18095, 18292, 1.0], [18292, 18475, 1.0], [18475, 18851, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 74, 0.0], [74, 87, 0.0], [87, 137, 0.0], [137, 4687, 0.0], [4687, 4730, 0.0], [4730, 4794, 0.0], [4794, 4827, 0.0], [4827, 4841, 0.0], [4841, 4856, 0.0], [4856, 5031, 0.0], [5031, 5054, 0.0], [5054, 5158, 0.0], [5158, 5177, 0.0], [5177, 5201, 0.0], [5201, 5378, 0.0], [5378, 5393, 0.0], [5393, 6013, 0.0], [6013, 6028, 0.0], [6028, 6486, 0.0], [6486, 6502, 0.0], [6502, 6594, 0.0], [6594, 6608, 0.0], [6608, 6711, 0.0], [6711, 6728, 0.0], [6728, 7056, 0.0], [7056, 7076, 0.0], [7076, 7143, 0.0], [7143, 7161, 0.0], [7161, 7307, 0.0], [7307, 7321, 0.0], [7321, 7487, 0.0], [7487, 7503, 0.0], [7503, 7828, 0.0], [7828, 8007, 0.0], [8007, 8020, 0.0], [8020, 8037, 0.0], [8037, 8661, 0.0], [8661, 8682, 0.0], [8682, 9007, 0.0], [9007, 9498, 0.0], [9498, 10452, 0.0], [10452, 10466, 0.0], [10466, 10858, 0.0], [10858, 10869, 0.0], [10869, 11032, 0.0], [11032, 11139, 0.0], [11139, 11151, 0.0], [11151, 11285, 0.0], [11285, 11296, 0.0], [11296, 11418, 0.0], [11418, 11525, 0.0], [11525, 11538, 0.0], [11538, 11627, 0.0], [11627, 11715, 0.0], [11715, 12090, 0.0], [12090, 12166, 0.0], [12166, 12178, 0.0], [12178, 12687, 0.0], [12687, 13148, 0.0], [13148, 13621, 0.0], [13621, 13644, 0.0], [13644, 14077, 0.0], [14077, 14089, 0.0], [14089, 14144, 0.0], [14144, 14904, 0.0], [14904, 15040, 0.0], [15040, 15051, 0.0], [15051, 15096, 0.0], [15096, 15270, 0.0], [15270, 15282, 0.0], [15282, 15401, 0.0], [15401, 15524, 0.0], [15524, 15678, 0.0], [15678, 15723, 0.0], [15723, 16005, 0.0], [16005, 16028, 0.0], [16028, 16052, 0.0], [16052, 16162, 0.0], [16162, 16330, 0.0], [16330, 16909, 0.0], [16909, 17311, 0.0], [17311, 18095, 0.0], [18095, 18292, 0.0], [18292, 18475, 0.0], [18475, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 37, 6.0], [37, 74, 6.0], [74, 87, 2.0], [87, 137, 8.0], [137, 4687, 752.0], [4687, 4730, 4.0], [4730, 4794, 6.0], [4794, 4827, 4.0], [4827, 4841, 2.0], [4841, 4856, 2.0], [4856, 5031, 26.0], [5031, 5054, 2.0], [5054, 5158, 11.0], [5158, 5177, 2.0], [5177, 5201, 2.0], [5201, 5378, 31.0], [5378, 5393, 2.0], [5393, 6013, 107.0], [6013, 6028, 2.0], [6028, 6486, 78.0], [6486, 6502, 2.0], [6502, 6594, 16.0], [6594, 6608, 2.0], [6608, 6711, 19.0], [6711, 6728, 3.0], [6728, 7056, 59.0], [7056, 7076, 2.0], [7076, 7143, 13.0], [7143, 7161, 3.0], [7161, 7307, 26.0], [7307, 7321, 2.0], [7321, 7487, 32.0], [7487, 7503, 2.0], [7503, 7828, 53.0], [7828, 8007, 33.0], [8007, 8020, 2.0], [8020, 8037, 2.0], [8037, 8661, 97.0], [8661, 8682, 2.0], [8682, 9007, 58.0], [9007, 9498, 85.0], [9498, 10452, 170.0], [10452, 10466, 2.0], [10466, 10858, 70.0], [10858, 10869, 2.0], [10869, 11032, 30.0], [11032, 11139, 17.0], [11139, 11151, 2.0], [11151, 11285, 23.0], [11285, 11296, 2.0], [11296, 11418, 18.0], [11418, 11525, 21.0], [11525, 11538, 2.0], [11538, 11627, 15.0], [11627, 11715, 15.0], [11715, 12090, 67.0], [12090, 12166, 14.0], [12166, 12178, 2.0], [12178, 12687, 87.0], [12687, 13148, 71.0], [13148, 13621, 79.0], [13621, 13644, 3.0], [13644, 14077, 73.0], [14077, 14089, 2.0], [14089, 14144, 10.0], [14144, 14904, 140.0], [14904, 15040, 24.0], [15040, 15051, 2.0], [15051, 15096, 7.0], [15096, 15270, 31.0], [15270, 15282, 2.0], [15282, 15401, 20.0], [15401, 15524, 21.0], [15524, 15678, 19.0], [15678, 15723, 9.0], [15723, 16005, 51.0], [16005, 16028, 3.0], [16028, 16052, 3.0], [16052, 16162, 22.0], [16162, 16330, 27.0], [16330, 16909, 103.0], [16909, 17311, 67.0], [17311, 18095, 145.0], [18095, 18292, 34.0], [18292, 18475, 31.0], [18475, 18851, 55.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 37, 0.05714286], [37, 74, 0.3], [74, 87, 0.0], [87, 137, 0.28888889], [137, 4687, 0.01199638], [4687, 4730, 0.0], [4730, 4794, 0.0], [4794, 4827, 0.0], [4827, 4841, 0.0], [4841, 4856, 0.0], [4856, 5031, 0.0308642], [5031, 5054, 0.0], [5054, 5158, 0.0], [5158, 5177, 0.0], [5177, 5201, 0.0], [5201, 5378, 0.02484472], [5378, 5393, 0.0], [5393, 6013, 0.01015228], [6013, 6028, 0.0], [6028, 6486, 0.01131222], [6486, 6502, 0.0], [6502, 6594, 0.0], [6594, 6608, 0.0], [6608, 6711, 0.02105263], [6711, 6728, 0.0], [6728, 7056, 0.03481013], [7056, 7076, 0.0], [7076, 7143, 0.0], [7143, 7161, 0.0], [7161, 7307, 0.0], [7307, 7321, 0.0], [7321, 7487, 0.0], [7487, 7503, 0.0], [7503, 7828, 0.00955414], [7828, 8007, 0.0], [8007, 8020, 0.0], [8020, 8037, 0.0], [8037, 8661, 0.0], [8661, 8682, 0.0], [8682, 9007, 0.0], [9007, 9498, 0.0], [9498, 10452, 0.00323974], [10452, 10466, 0.0], [10466, 10858, 0.0], [10858, 10869, 0.0], [10869, 11032, 0.00645161], [11032, 11139, 0.0], [11139, 11151, 0.0], [11151, 11285, 0.016], [11285, 11296, 0.0], [11296, 11418, 0.0], [11418, 11525, 0.0], [11525, 11538, 0.0], [11538, 11627, 0.0], [11627, 11715, 0.03658537], [11715, 12090, 0.0], [12090, 12166, 0.0], [12166, 12178, 0.0], [12178, 12687, 0.0], [12687, 13148, 0.0], [13148, 13621, 0.0], [13621, 13644, 0.0], [13644, 14077, 0.00479616], [14077, 14089, 0.0], [14089, 14144, 0.0], [14144, 14904, 0.0027137], [14904, 15040, 0.0], [15040, 15051, 0.0], [15051, 15096, 0.11428571], [15096, 15270, 0.06060606], [15270, 15282, 0.0], [15282, 15401, 0.0], [15401, 15524, 0.0], [15524, 15678, 0.0], [15678, 15723, 0.0], [15723, 16005, 0.00732601], [16005, 16028, 0.0], [16028, 16052, 0.0], [16052, 16162, 0.03738318], [16162, 16330, 0.0], [16330, 16909, 0.02522523], [16909, 17311, 0.00514139], [17311, 18095, 0.00263852], [18095, 18292, 0.02083333], [18292, 18475, 0.0], [18475, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 74, 0.0], [74, 87, 0.0], [87, 137, 0.0], [137, 4687, 0.0], [4687, 4730, 0.0], [4730, 4794, 0.0], [4794, 4827, 0.0], [4827, 4841, 0.0], [4841, 4856, 0.0], [4856, 5031, 0.0], [5031, 5054, 0.0], [5054, 5158, 0.0], [5158, 5177, 0.0], [5177, 5201, 0.0], [5201, 5378, 0.0], [5378, 5393, 0.0], [5393, 6013, 0.0], [6013, 6028, 0.0], [6028, 6486, 0.0], [6486, 6502, 0.0], [6502, 6594, 0.0], [6594, 6608, 0.0], [6608, 6711, 0.0], [6711, 6728, 0.0], [6728, 7056, 0.0], [7056, 7076, 0.0], [7076, 7143, 0.0], [7143, 7161, 0.0], [7161, 7307, 0.0], [7307, 7321, 0.0], [7321, 7487, 0.0], [7487, 7503, 0.0], [7503, 7828, 0.0], [7828, 8007, 0.0], [8007, 8020, 0.0], [8020, 8037, 0.0], [8037, 8661, 0.0], [8661, 8682, 0.0], [8682, 9007, 0.0], [9007, 9498, 0.0], [9498, 10452, 0.0], [10452, 10466, 0.0], [10466, 10858, 0.0], [10858, 10869, 0.0], [10869, 11032, 0.0], [11032, 11139, 0.0], [11139, 11151, 0.0], [11151, 11285, 0.0], [11285, 11296, 0.0], [11296, 11418, 0.0], [11418, 11525, 0.0], [11525, 11538, 0.0], [11538, 11627, 0.0], [11627, 11715, 0.0], [11715, 12090, 0.0], [12090, 12166, 0.0], [12166, 12178, 0.0], [12178, 12687, 0.0], [12687, 13148, 0.0], [13148, 13621, 0.0], [13621, 13644, 0.0], [13644, 14077, 0.0], [14077, 14089, 0.0], [14089, 14144, 0.0], [14144, 14904, 0.0], [14904, 15040, 0.0], [15040, 15051, 0.0], [15051, 15096, 0.0], [15096, 15270, 0.0], [15270, 15282, 0.0], [15282, 15401, 0.0], [15401, 15524, 0.0], [15524, 15678, 0.0], [15678, 15723, 0.0], [15723, 16005, 0.0], [16005, 16028, 0.0], [16028, 16052, 0.0], [16052, 16162, 0.0], [16162, 16330, 0.0], [16330, 16909, 0.0], [16909, 17311, 0.0], [17311, 18095, 0.0], [18095, 18292, 0.0], [18292, 18475, 0.0], [18475, 18851, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 37, 0.13513514], [37, 74, 0.10810811], [74, 87, 0.15384615], [87, 137, 0.12], [137, 4687, 0.02461538], [4687, 4730, 0.23255814], [4730, 4794, 0.125], [4794, 4827, 0.03030303], [4827, 4841, 0.0], [4841, 4856, 0.06666667], [4856, 5031, 0.02285714], [5031, 5054, 0.08695652], [5054, 5158, 0.10576923], [5158, 5177, 0.0], [5177, 5201, 0.125], [5201, 5378, 0.02259887], [5378, 5393, 0.0], [5393, 6013, 0.02258065], [6013, 6028, 0.13333333], [6028, 6486, 0.02838428], [6486, 6502, 0.125], [6502, 6594, 0.02173913], [6594, 6608, 0.28571429], [6608, 6711, 0.08737864], [6711, 6728, 0.11764706], [6728, 7056, 0.01829268], [7056, 7076, 0.05], [7076, 7143, 0.01492537], [7143, 7161, 0.16666667], [7161, 7307, 0.04794521], [7307, 7321, 0.0], [7321, 7487, 0.03614458], [7487, 7503, 0.1875], [7503, 7828, 0.01846154], [7828, 8007, 0.01117318], [8007, 8020, 0.07692308], [8020, 8037, 0.17647059], [8037, 8661, 0.02724359], [8661, 8682, 0.0952381], [8682, 9007, 0.02769231], [9007, 9498, 0.01629328], [9498, 10452, 0.01886792], [10452, 10466, 0.14285714], [10466, 10858, 0.01785714], [10858, 10869, 0.18181818], [10869, 11032, 0.01840491], [11032, 11139, 0.01869159], [11139, 11151, 0.08333333], [11151, 11285, 0.03731343], [11285, 11296, 0.09090909], [11296, 11418, 0.04918033], [11418, 11525, 0.01869159], [11525, 11538, 0.15384615], [11538, 11627, 0.02247191], [11627, 11715, 0.04545455], [11715, 12090, 0.01333333], [12090, 12166, 0.03947368], [12166, 12178, 0.0], [12178, 12687, 0.01375246], [12687, 13148, 0.02819957], [13148, 13621, 0.02536998], [13621, 13644, 0.13043478], [13644, 14077, 0.02540416], [14077, 14089, 0.16666667], [14089, 14144, 0.03636364], [14144, 14904, 0.01184211], [14904, 15040, 0.02941176], [15040, 15051, 0.18181818], [15051, 15096, 0.0], [15096, 15270, 0.00574713], [15270, 15282, 0.25], [15282, 15401, 0.03361345], [15401, 15524, 0.01626016], [15524, 15678, 0.0], [15678, 15723, 0.02222222], [15723, 16005, 0.0141844], [16005, 16028, 0.08695652], [16028, 16052, 0.125], [16052, 16162, 0.01818182], [16162, 16330, 0.0297619], [16330, 16909, 0.01208981], [16909, 17311, 0.01741294], [17311, 18095, 0.0127551], [18095, 18292, 0.00507614], [18292, 18475, 0.01092896], [18475, 18851, 0.02393617]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 18851, 0.56371045]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 18851, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 18851, 0.62326038]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 18851, -80.4607924]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 18851, 251.49458407]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 18851, -905.58537127]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 18851, 239.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
freerepublic.com
Orly Taitz Discovers Second ObamaJanuary 24th, 2013 by Ed BraytonBirther queen Orly Taitz has made yet another shocking discovery, presumably in her anal cavity (where she has plenty of time to look since that is where her head is lodged). In her latest dismissed lawsuit, she declares that there is not one but two Obamas — and the one in the White House just might be an Indonesian spy.Additionally, widely published picture by Dr. Scott Inoue, Obama’s former classmate, shows Barack Obama as a third grade student in Hawaii in 1969. At the same time official Obama school records show him in Indonesia in 1967-1969 attending school in Jakarta Indonesia under the name Barry Soetoro. It means that from January 1, 1967 till 1969 we could see two distinct individuals: Barry Obama residing in Hawaii and Barry Soetoro residing in Indonesia. We do not know, (sic) which one of them came back to the U.S. in 1971. Recorded interview and recollection of Lia Soetoro Sabah, foster daughter of Ann Dunham and her second husband, Obama’s stepfather Lolo Soetoro, confirms the recollection by Scott Inoue. (Liah Soetoro Sabah died suddenly at the age of 52 before Obama’s scheduled visit to Indonesia) If Barry Soetoro came back, than (sic) the question is, what happened to Barry Obama? Is he even alive? A number of high ranking officials of the U.S. Government and the government of Hawaii are complicit in the most egregious crimes, cover up of the forgery, however it might be more than fraud and forgery. If Barry Soetoro came from Indonesia instead of Barry Obama, this is espionage.Even better, she tells the judge that if he doesn’t rule the way she wants him to, he’ll be tried for treason:Based on all of the above if this court does not reconsider and does not issue an immediate TRO, this court willa. violate its’ Oath of Office to protect the U.s. constitutionb. will become complicit in the elections fraudc. will become complicit in the cover up of forged IDs of Barack Obamad. will become complicit in selective Service fraude. will become complicit to the Social Security fraud committed by Obamaf. will become complicit to the IRS fraud, as it will allow Obama to continue using a stolen Social Security number in his tax returnsg. will become complicit to treason against the United States of America by knowingly allowing a foreign national to usurp the U.S. PresidencyIF THE DEFENDANTS AND THIS COURT CERTIFY OBAMA AS A LEGITIMATE PRESIDENT, WHILE POSSESSING ALL OF THE DOCUMENTS AT HAND, THEY MAYBE LATER PROSECUTED AS BEING A PART OF A RICO, RACKETEERING CONSPIRACY TO DEFRAUD AMERICAN CITIZENSSomeone might want to give her a copy of RICO. It has nothing whatsoever to do with the case. The judge gave this petition all the consideration it was due, which I suspect was about 5 minutes of gut-busting laughter followed by a quick dismissal.Share this:EmailFacebookTwitterRedditGoogleMoreStumbleUponTumblrDiggPinterestGoogle+ Ed BraytonPosted in Uncategorized | 39 commentsPrevious post: Alex Jones: Government Creates Gay PeopleNext post: McCarthy: Obama May Release Rahman 39 comments on this post. lclane2: January 24th, 2013 at 10:46 am We may be dealing with Capgras syndrome. Wes: January 24th, 2013 at 10:50 am Additionally, widely published picture by Dr. Scott Inoue, Obama’s former classmate, shows Barack Obama as a third grade student in Hawaii in 1969. At the same time official Obama school records show him in Indonesia in 1967-1969 attending school in Jakarta Indonesia under the name Barry Soetoro. It means that from January 1, 1967 till 1969 we could see two distinct individuals: Barry Obama residing in Hawaii and Barry Soetoro residing in Indonesia. Because it couldn’t possibly mean that he spent the spring semester of 1969 at one school and the fall semester at another. That never happens (except for all the times where that happens all over the world). January 24th, 2013 at 10:51 am It’s Cargo Cult law yet again. Say or write the magic words and what you wish for will be yours. Mix in a lot of paranoia and some general-purpose stupidity and you have Orly Taitz. Not only is RICO not applicable, but threatening the court with *anything* is a move almost guaranteed to get your filing thrown out. I have a (repulsive) picture in my minds eye of Taitz stomping her foot like a 4yo and crying “If you don’t give me what I want, my big brother Rico will come and beat you up! So you better do it!” It’s fascinating, in a train-wreck sort of way, how disconnected from reality people like Taitz can be while still able to function day-to-day. How big is the step from her current state (or Alex Jones’) to a strait-jacket and padded cell? TCC: January 24th, 2013 at 10:52 am It means that from January 1, 1967 till 1969 we could see two distinct individuals: Barry Obama residing in Hawaii and Barry Soetoro residing in Indonesia. We do not know, (sic) which one of them came back to the U.S. in 1971. Since it would have been impossible to “come back to the U.S.” from Hawaii in 1971, the answer should be clear. (Which means, of course, that Orly won’t get it.) dugglebogey: January 24th, 2013 at 10:53 am You can always tell the evil twin, he’s the one with the beard. tulle: January 24th, 2013 at 10:57 am Oh no,I just found out I was enrolled at Beasley Elementry in Missouri in 1969 and also in Arlington Jr High in Florida in 1969. I have no idea how this could be. Am I really me?????? Hmm after thinking about it, maybe it was because my father was transfered from St. Louis to Jacksonville? Naw that could not be it. January 24th, 2013 at 10:58 am Right…because even back in 1967, the NWO knew that this Barry dude was going to get himself elected to the Presidency. I totally buy it. NWO finds an obscure third grader in Indonesia and conspires to have him take the place of an obscure Hawaiian. third grader in order that in 2013, he can ban all guns and set up death camps. Either that or make sure people have health insurance. TGAP Dad: January 24th, 2013 at 11:01 am Isn’t it time for someone to step in and prevent her from having direct access to the federal court system? It seems like the ABA, the licensing authority, or courts should step in and put a stop to her. I say these things knowing full well that if this comes to fruition, my own entertainment would be diminished. dingojack: January 24th, 2013 at 11:03 am Ironically, a quick search of the US White Pages came up with two people calling themselves ‘Orly Taitz’ at two different addresses. Suspicious or what? Is the Orly Taitz filing her motions in court the real Orly Taitz? If the Californian Bar Association helps perpetrate this fraud they could be opening themselves up to RICO proceedings…. &etc. slc1: January 24th, 2013 at 11:10 am Finally, a judge has told Mr.Taitz what I have expounded on several comments here and elsewhere, namely that the courts have no jurisdiction in this matter. http://lagunaniguel-danapoint.patch.com/articles/orly-taitz-judge-states-why-she-s-wrong Money quote: England said Taitz should have taken up her claim with the U.S. Congress, for “the Constitution gives Congress, and Congress alone, the power to remove the President.” The court has no say in the matter, England said: “The Court cannot require that President Obama present, or even possess,” a birth certificate or social security card. Additionally, Ms. Taitz has claimed that she has the power to arrest the president in Connecticut. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/24/orly-taitz-connecticut_n_2541233.html About time that this nutcase is committed to a psychiatric institution where she will get some much needed therapy. Larry: January 24th, 2013 at 11:18 am Can’t someone please give this woman the help she so sorely needs? Our treatment of the mentally handicapped over the last 30 years has degenerated to the point where sick people wander the streets and courtrooms, mumbling about conspiracies, dual identities, and other such things that are echoing within their head. In reality, these are cries for help that go unanswered. Hah! I can do better. This was a while ago, but on a couple days in my childhoot I was in Melbourne (Australia) and Hawaii at the exact same time and date. :) matty1: January 24th, 2013 at 11:24 am Almost there, in fact there are multiple Obama’s, every time a conspiracy theory is muttered another Obama is born and inserted into the space time continuum. I have made three myself, one who was born on Mars as part of a top secret Al Quaeda experiment, one who is the reanimated corpse of Joseph Stalin and another (you won’t believe this) who is legitimate President of the United States and a political moderate. raven: January 24th, 2013 at 11:29 am that there is not one but two Obamas — and the one in the White House just might be an Indonesian spy. She has found us out!!! The Obama in the White House is a pod person. All the best people are pod people these days. Seriously, it is hard to say when wingnuts cross over into mental illness. But it looks like Taitz has done it. As mentioned in comment #1, a common delusion among the seriously disturbed is that all your friends and family have been replaced by duplicates who nevertheless still look and act exactly the same. kantalope: January 24th, 2013 at 11:35 am Those Indonesians…recruiting 10 year old spies…they are so devious! And what has this spy, now that he has become President, done to repay Indonesian handlers? Something secret, I’m sure. Moggie: January 24th, 2013 at 11:39 am As far as I can remember, the state supreme court has the power to order an attorney to submit to a psychiatric evaluation (as happened with the notorious Jack Thompson). Surely it’s beyond time this was done with Taitz? Crip Dyke, MQ, Right Reverend Feminist FuckToy of Death & Her Handmaiden: January 24th, 2013 at 11:40 am Okay, to be fair, RICO was a suave move by congress to criminalize talking to people from whom you benefit financially about doing something illegal. It could hardly be more broad. The judge gets money which is administered by someone. I actually haven’t looked up the law, but I don’t believe that the federal judiciary has their own independent treasury. So the judge – though not answering to Obama – gets a paycheck from the gjy who reports to him. Then, to the benefit of Obama, decides a lawsuit. We all know the facts here, but in bizarro-land where there’s a smidgen of a possibility that this judge knowingly assisted in a fraud, if the judge later has a conversation with someone whom the judge can reasonably expect to be in communication with the treasury or with the office of the president, and if in that conversation the judge says 1) that the case was decided without considering the merits (even if he didn’t consider them b/c he didn’t think it had any), and 2) that the judge expects to continue getting paid… that might just be enough under RICO. Eh, on second thought not. Life tenure of the judiciary. However if the judge was originally appointed by Obama, then you might just have enough, with one important reservation: I very strongly suspect – not having looked at the whole law ever, and not having read any part of it in the last 3 or 4 years – that there’s an exemption for the federal government itself (the government per se cannot be a corrupt organization …bwahahahahahaha!! We know why that would be put in there). But even then, it the conversation was with someone who spoke with the Obama campaign rather than the office of the president, you have an analogous situation if Obama later nominates/hires the judge for a new/better job. This is one of the reasons that free speech protections and freedom of association protections are so vulnerable. Once there is a financial tie, the crimes of one person that somehow benefit another person makes that other person’s speech criminal if that person discusses anything about a) the crimes or b) things that might benefit the criminals in the exercise of their criminal enterprise. It is ridiculously broad. Yuck, I say, Yuck. d.c.wilson: January 24th, 2013 at 11:46 am I am still amazed that this woman ever passed the bat exam. Are the standards in California really that low? MikeMa: January 24th, 2013 at 11:51 am DC: ‘bat exam’ Tee hee. Excellent error. Really amazed at the breadth of this lunatic’s reach into the abyss. January 24th, 2013 at 11:56 am Re d. c. wilson @ #18 Actually, the California bar exam, along with that of Massachusetts, is supposed to be the most difficult to pass of any of the states. January 24th, 2013 at 12:04 pm dingojack “Ironically, a quick search of the US White Pages came up with two people calling themselves ‘Orly Taitz’ at two different addresses. Suspicious or what?” And one of them is only at one address from 9-5 Monday to Friday while the other is never at the other address there during those times. What are they trying to hide? Larry “Can’t someone please give this woman the help she so sorely needs?” Hmmm. The old treatment, of elections every two years, isn’t working any more. We’ll have to up the dose. Annual elections for everyone! raven “As mentioned in comment #1, a common delusion among the seriously disturbed is that all your friends and family have been replaced by duplicates who nevertheless still look and act exactly the same.” Yes. The worst thing about being surrounded by pod people is that it isn’t even an upgrade. At least pay for drinks, pod people! fifthdentist: January 24th, 2013 at 12:08 pm Well, duh, if Obama has a time machine that he used to go back in time and place birth announcements in newspapers, then surely he could travel into the future and steal a cloning machine. And he would have gotten away with it to, if not for etc., etc. baal: January 24th, 2013 at 12:12 pm Shhhh, noone tell Orly about the lizard people. I don’t think she could handle it. marcus: January 24th, 2013 at 12:37 pm “Birther queen Orly Taitz has made yet another shocking discovery, presumably in her anal cavity (where she has plenty of time to look since that is where her head is lodged).” Pure. Fucking. Gold. DaveL: January 24th, 2013 at 12:45 pm Orly Taitz must have been raised by sea sponges, if she finds it suspicious that someone could be in two different places within the same year. 5 Tips for WordPress Beginners | MagnifiBlog: January 24th, 2013 at 12:48 pm [...] /* */ Most User Friendly Content Management System – WordPressHow To Write Better Copy For My Small Business Website“Girl in the Air”, New Feature Article ← Brita SigourneyEssential Requirements In Catering ServicesOrly Taitz Discovers Second Obama » Dispatches from the Culture Wars [...] John Pieret: January 24th, 2013 at 12:51 pm You can see the judge’s decision on the TRO (pdf) here: http://www.orlytaitzesq.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/Grinols-01.16.2013-order-denying-emergency-TRO-motion-heard-on-01.03.2013.pdf The money quote: At the hearing, Plaintiffs’ counsel argued that “common-sense” demands the Court interpret the United States Constitution as requiring the President of the United States to have a valid birth certificate, social security number, and selective service certificate. However, in deciding the merits of a case, the Court cannot simply rely on suspicions and what Plaintiffs claim is “common sense.” To be clear, the Court understands that “common sense,” has its place in the political process. However, courts must base their decisions on the Constitution, statutes, rules, and regulations passed by the legislative branch and signed into law by the executive branch. Hey! No fair referring to stuff like the Constitution, statutes, rules, and regulations that Orly has never heard of! January 24th, 2013 at 12:59 pm DaveL – Surely not this little guy? (He’s sooooo gaaaaayyyy!!!) :D Dingo savagemutt: January 24th, 2013 at 1:03 pm I think she’s been swallowing her dental patient’s old mercury fillings. Sastra: January 24th, 2013 at 1:06 pm Orly Taitz needs to read (or re-read) James Thurber’s “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.” If she does, she’ll note that the main character, while often confused, still has it together enough to avoid playing out his private roles in public life. Read and learn, my dear, read and learn. Karen Locke: January 24th, 2013 at 1:18 pm Do judges go into their chambers to roll on the floor laughing, or do they do it in the courtroom? There is a transcript of the motion hearing but it won’t be released at the court’s site until April 18th. If I remember, I’ll get it then. There should be some comic gold. chilidog99: January 24th, 2013 at 5:54 pm @ D. C. Wilson She passes the “bat” exam. She bit its head off and ate it. iangould: January 24th, 2013 at 7:03 pm That Orly Taitz is to at least some degree delusional is pretty obvious. But as with all these cult leaders, you have to ask yourself how much is sincere insanity and how much is conscious deceit to keep the adulation and money coming in from the rubes. When Orly claims her car has been tampered with, or that statements in Obama’s public speeches are directed at her personally she’s pretty obviously delusional. when she tells her followers “This next case will succeed unlike all the previous ones. Send money!” You have to wonder. Crudely Wrott: January 25th, 2013 at 2:10 am When I was a kid growing up in Madbury, New Hampshire, where the road passed the house roughly north to south, I attended first grade by walking south to catch the bus to Oyster River School in Durham. In second and third grades I walked north to catch the bus to Woodman Park School in Dover. From fourth grade on I walked north to catch the bus to Oyster River. Gee, that makes me a triplet! But I’ll be damned if I can find my doppelgangers. They must be cloaked behind new identities the gummint gave them. I shudder to think of what mischief they must have been up to and are possibly still doing. Do mind yourself around me. Why Is Nobody In the US Mainstream Media Talking About This?: February 13th, 2013 at 2:13 am [...] LATER PROSECUTED AS BEING A PART OF A RICO, RACKETEERING CONSPIRACY TO DEFRAUD AMERICAN CITIZENS http://freethoughtblogs.com/dispatch…-second-obama/ ———————– Shakespeare said it long ago when he described the Right Wing political [...] martat: February 17th, 2013 at 3:56 am I find it extremely disrespectful to claim that another person’s head is located in their anal cavity, just because they happen to disagree with a given opinion. Everybody on this pages seems to happily agree that somebody attacking President Obama must be some sort of nutcase or villain – never mind that the US president signed the NDAA on New Year’s eve , doesn’t give a damn that he kills civilians and children by drones on a daily basis, has a record of having individuals murdered without due process, and possesses a kill-list! Isn’t there more evidence that he is a villain than that Taitz is? No need to pull the racism card because: A villain is a villain, no matter the color of his/her skin. Appearances and impressions can be very deceptive. Orly Taitz has more guts than you can imagine. “It is likely that the overwhelming information coming from credible parties cannot be ignored any longer and it might be the reason behind the decision by the Hon. Chief Justice John Roberts to grant [attorney Dr. Orly] Taitz a full Supreme Court Conference on February 15, 2013. This story will be updated as the events evolve. The case titled Noonan, Judd, MacLeran, Taitz v Bowen provides a mountain of evidence of Barack Obama using a last name not legally his, forged Selective Service application, forged long form and short form birth certificate and a Connecticut Social Security number 042-68-4425 which was never assigned to him according to E-Verify and SSNVS. Who is Harrison J. Bounel? According to the 2009 tax return submitted by President Barack Obama, he’s the President of the United States. All nine U.S. Supreme Court Justices are scheduled to discuss this anomaly today. …The word is spreading, 2 million 30 thousand hits on Google under Orly Taitz… ” http://www.secretsofthefed.com/media-blackout-obamas-supreme-court-hearing-about-forged-ids-was-friday-decision-on-tuesday/ February 17th, 2013 at 5:30 am Re martat Let’s suppose that everything that Mr. martat says is 100% true. What does he expect the SCOTUS to do about it? They have no authority to remove the president from office. That is the prerogative of the Congress. That’s the whole problem with the birthers, they are wasting their time in courtrooms. They should be taking their “evidence” to the Congress and demanding an investigation. February 17th, 2013 at 5:31 am Aww how cute – an Orly sockpuppet! Apparently it’s terribly, terribly disrespectful to call Orly for what she is, but calling the President, the Congress, the Chief Justices of the USA liars and evil is perfectly A-OK. “…doesn’t give a damn that he kills civilians and children by drones on a daily basis, has a record of having individuals murdered without due process, and possesses a kill-list! Isn’t there more evidence that he is a villain than that Taitz is?” Citations required. Also wouldn’t killing civilians and children include Washington, Jackson, Theodore and Franklin Roosevelt, Taft, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Reagan, Clinton, Bush (both senior and junior) as well as Obama. It’s called war, Americans do it all the time. Going to call them villains too? Or is that only reserved for last (and why would that be I wonder?) Except all this ‘evidence’ amounts to nothing at all. Easily falsifiable flim-flam that’ll be laughed out of court. “…a full Supreme Court Conference on February 15, 2013…” Well I suspect the Justices need a laugh now and then. BTW how did it go (you realise it’s the seventeenth today, right?) 2 million hits is nothing. How popular (or in this case not) makes no difference in a court of law. Ms Taitz can’t be much of a lawyer, she doesn’t even know that the courts can’t remove the President, only Congress can do that (here’s a hint for you it’s in the Constitution of the United States under ‘Impeachment ‘). And even if they did, the Presidency would fall onto the VP Joseph Biden*. The last paragraph alone demonstrates, beyond reasonable doubt, that Orly has her head firmly wedged into her rectal passage * Even a dumb foreigner like me knows that!
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2594
{"url": "http://freethoughtblogs.com/dispatches/2013/01/24/orly-taitz-discovers-second-obama/?wpmp_switcher=mobile", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "freethoughtblogs.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:38:18Z", "digest": "sha1:JY5MXTSYPSMWPGSXAINRYPPCWZ7HHDSI"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 22366, 22366.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 22366, 23948.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 22366, 123.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 22366, 148.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 22366, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 22366, 321.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 22366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 22366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 22366, 4.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 22366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 22366, 0.39886816]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 22366, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 22366, 0.13985426]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 22366, 0.16659193]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 22366, 0.15717489]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 22366, 0.14921525]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 22366, 0.14288117]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 22366, 0.13985426]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 22366, 0.01244395]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 22366, 0.02690583]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 22366, 0.03049327]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 22366, 0.02808636]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 22366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 22366, 0.20247328]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 22366, 0.33756278]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 22366, 4.71583399]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 22366, 0.00398239]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 22366, 6.16042703]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 22366, 3783.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 3094, 0.0], [3094, 3129, 0.0], [3129, 3201, 1.0], [3201, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3691, 1.0], [3691, 3900, 1.0], [3900, 4445, 1.0], [4445, 4685, 1.0], [4685, 4690, 0.0], [4690, 4948, 1.0], [4948, 5110, 0.0], [5110, 5123, 0.0], [5123, 5218, 1.0], [5218, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5440, 1.0], [5440, 5573, 1.0], [5573, 5723, 1.0], [5723, 5988, 1.0], [5988, 5998, 0.0], [5998, 6344, 1.0], [6344, 6355, 0.0], [6355, 6539, 1.0], [6539, 6606, 1.0], [6606, 6733, 1.0], [6733, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6927, 1.0], [6927, 7016, 0.0], [7016, 7197, 1.0], [7197, 7366, 1.0], [7366, 7544, 0.0], [7544, 7660, 1.0], [7660, 7667, 0.0], [7667, 8073, 1.0], [8073, 8232, 0.0], [8232, 8240, 0.0], [8240, 8430, 1.0], [8430, 8689, 1.0], [8689, 8696, 0.0], [8696, 8830, 1.0], [8830, 8854, 1.0], [8854, 8947, 1.0], [8947, 9059, 1.0], [9059, 9258, 1.0], [9258, 9269, 0.0], [9269, 9488, 1.0], [9488, 9496, 0.0], [9496, 9748, 1.0], [9748, 9822, 0.0], [9822, 12065, 1.0], [12065, 12077, 0.0], [12077, 12217, 1.0], [12217, 12225, 0.0], [12225, 12297, 1.0], [12297, 12366, 1.0], [12366, 12419, 0.0], [12419, 12555, 1.0], [12555, 12751, 1.0], [12751, 12918, 1.0], [12918, 12993, 1.0], [12993, 13130, 1.0], [13130, 13337, 1.0], [13337, 13466, 1.0], [13466, 13480, 0.0], [13480, 13700, 1.0], [13700, 13764, 1.0], [13764, 13770, 0.0], [13770, 13884, 1.0], [13884, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 14100, 1.0], [14100, 14121, 1.0], [14121, 14128, 0.0], [14128, 14303, 1.0], [14303, 14349, 0.0], [14349, 14676, 0.0], [14676, 14689, 0.0], [14689, 14776, 0.0], [14776, 14909, 0.0], [14909, 14926, 0.0], [14926, 15591, 1.0], [15591, 15709, 1.0], [15709, 15748, 0.0], [15748, 15804, 0.0], [15804, 15813, 0.0], [15813, 15825, 0.0], [15825, 15928, 1.0], [15928, 15936, 0.0], [15936, 16252, 1.0], [16252, 16265, 0.0], [16265, 16394, 1.0], [16394, 16567, 1.0], [16567, 16579, 0.0], [16579, 16624, 0.0], [16624, 16684, 1.0], [16684, 16694, 0.0], [16694, 16797, 1.0], [16797, 16978, 1.0], [16978, 17260, 1.0], [17260, 17275, 0.0], [17275, 17669, 1.0], [17669, 17908, 1.0], [17908, 17936, 1.0], [17936, 17998, 0.0], [17998, 18271, 0.0], [18271, 18279, 0.0], [18279, 19444, 1.0], [19444, 19787, 1.0], [19787, 20007, 1.0], [20007, 20088, 1.0], [20088, 20212, 0.0], [20212, 20253, 0.0], [20253, 20640, 1.0], [20640, 20706, 1.0], [20706, 20890, 1.0], [20890, 21137, 1.0], [21137, 21157, 1.0], [21157, 21508, 0.0], [21508, 21624, 1.0], [21624, 21681, 1.0], [21681, 21803, 0.0], [21803, 21903, 1.0], [21903, 22198, 1.0], [22198, 22323, 0.0], [22323, 22366, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 3094, 0.0], [3094, 3129, 0.0], [3129, 3201, 0.0], [3201, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3691, 0.0], [3691, 3900, 0.0], [3900, 4445, 0.0], [4445, 4685, 0.0], [4685, 4690, 0.0], [4690, 4948, 0.0], [4948, 5110, 0.0], [5110, 5123, 0.0], [5123, 5218, 0.0], [5218, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5440, 0.0], [5440, 5573, 0.0], [5573, 5723, 0.0], [5723, 5988, 0.0], [5988, 5998, 0.0], [5998, 6344, 0.0], [6344, 6355, 0.0], [6355, 6539, 0.0], [6539, 6606, 0.0], [6606, 6733, 0.0], [6733, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6927, 0.0], [6927, 7016, 0.0], [7016, 7197, 0.0], [7197, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7544, 0.0], [7544, 7660, 0.0], [7660, 7667, 0.0], [7667, 8073, 0.0], [8073, 8232, 0.0], [8232, 8240, 0.0], [8240, 8430, 0.0], [8430, 8689, 0.0], [8689, 8696, 0.0], [8696, 8830, 0.0], [8830, 8854, 0.0], [8854, 8947, 0.0], [8947, 9059, 0.0], [9059, 9258, 0.0], [9258, 9269, 0.0], [9269, 9488, 0.0], [9488, 9496, 0.0], [9496, 9748, 0.0], [9748, 9822, 0.0], [9822, 12065, 0.0], [12065, 12077, 0.0], [12077, 12217, 0.0], [12217, 12225, 0.0], [12225, 12297, 0.0], [12297, 12366, 0.0], [12366, 12419, 0.0], [12419, 12555, 0.0], [12555, 12751, 0.0], [12751, 12918, 0.0], [12918, 12993, 0.0], [12993, 13130, 0.0], [13130, 13337, 0.0], [13337, 13466, 0.0], [13466, 13480, 0.0], [13480, 13700, 0.0], [13700, 13764, 0.0], [13764, 13770, 0.0], [13770, 13884, 0.0], [13884, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 14100, 0.0], [14100, 14121, 0.0], [14121, 14128, 0.0], [14128, 14303, 0.0], [14303, 14349, 0.0], [14349, 14676, 0.0], [14676, 14689, 0.0], [14689, 14776, 0.0], [14776, 14909, 0.0], [14909, 14926, 0.0], [14926, 15591, 0.0], [15591, 15709, 0.0], [15709, 15748, 0.0], [15748, 15804, 0.0], [15804, 15813, 0.0], [15813, 15825, 0.0], [15825, 15928, 0.0], [15928, 15936, 0.0], [15936, 16252, 0.0], [16252, 16265, 0.0], [16265, 16394, 0.0], [16394, 16567, 0.0], [16567, 16579, 0.0], [16579, 16624, 0.0], [16624, 16684, 0.0], [16684, 16694, 0.0], [16694, 16797, 0.0], [16797, 16978, 0.0], [16978, 17260, 0.0], [17260, 17275, 0.0], [17275, 17669, 0.0], [17669, 17908, 0.0], [17908, 17936, 0.0], [17936, 17998, 0.0], [17998, 18271, 0.0], [18271, 18279, 0.0], [18279, 19444, 0.0], [19444, 19787, 0.0], [19787, 20007, 0.0], [20007, 20088, 0.0], [20088, 20212, 0.0], [20212, 20253, 0.0], [20253, 20640, 0.0], [20640, 20706, 0.0], [20706, 20890, 0.0], [20890, 21137, 0.0], [21137, 21157, 0.0], [21157, 21508, 0.0], [21508, 21624, 0.0], [21624, 21681, 0.0], [21681, 21803, 0.0], [21803, 21903, 0.0], [21903, 22198, 0.0], [22198, 22323, 0.0], [22323, 22366, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 3094, 504.0], [3094, 3129, 6.0], [3129, 3201, 13.0], [3201, 3206, 1.0], [3206, 3691, 79.0], [3691, 3900, 37.0], [3900, 4445, 106.0], [4445, 4685, 41.0], [4685, 4690, 1.0], [4690, 4948, 48.0], [4948, 5110, 30.0], [5110, 5123, 1.0], [5123, 5218, 19.0], [5218, 5225, 1.0], [5225, 5440, 43.0], [5440, 5573, 24.0], [5573, 5723, 27.0], [5723, 5988, 50.0], [5988, 5998, 2.0], [5998, 6344, 64.0], [6344, 6355, 1.0], [6355, 6539, 31.0], [6539, 6606, 13.0], [6606, 6733, 19.0], [6733, 6739, 1.0], [6739, 6927, 32.0], [6927, 7016, 1.0], [7016, 7197, 29.0], [7197, 7366, 28.0], [7366, 7544, 17.0], [7544, 7660, 19.0], [7660, 7667, 1.0], [7667, 8073, 67.0], [8073, 8232, 32.0], [8232, 8240, 1.0], [8240, 8430, 32.0], [8430, 8689, 47.0], [8689, 8696, 1.0], [8696, 8830, 28.0], [8830, 8854, 5.0], [8854, 8947, 19.0], [8947, 9059, 21.0], [9059, 9258, 33.0], [9258, 9269, 1.0], [9269, 9488, 35.0], [9488, 9496, 1.0], [9496, 9748, 45.0], [9748, 9822, 11.0], [9822, 12065, 391.0], [12065, 12077, 1.0], [12077, 12217, 26.0], [12217, 12225, 1.0], [12225, 12297, 13.0], [12297, 12366, 12.0], [12366, 12419, 11.0], [12419, 12555, 24.0], [12555, 12751, 32.0], [12751, 12918, 33.0], [12918, 12993, 13.0], [12993, 13130, 23.0], [13130, 13337, 34.0], [13337, 13466, 24.0], [13466, 13480, 1.0], [13480, 13700, 41.0], [13700, 13764, 14.0], [13764, 13770, 1.0], [13770, 13884, 21.0], [13884, 13892, 1.0], [13892, 14100, 37.0], [14100, 14121, 3.0], [14121, 14128, 1.0], [14128, 14303, 32.0], [14303, 14349, 6.0], [14349, 14676, 46.0], [14676, 14689, 2.0], [14689, 14776, 17.0], [14776, 14909, 1.0], [14909, 14926, 3.0], [14926, 15591, 101.0], [15591, 15709, 19.0], [15709, 15748, 8.0], [15748, 15804, 8.0], [15804, 15813, 2.0], [15813, 15825, 1.0], [15825, 15928, 17.0], [15928, 15936, 1.0], [15936, 16252, 56.0], [16252, 16265, 2.0], [16265, 16394, 26.0], [16394, 16567, 33.0], [16567, 16579, 1.0], [16579, 16624, 9.0], [16624, 16684, 13.0], [16684, 16694, 1.0], [16694, 16797, 19.0], [16797, 16978, 34.0], [16978, 17260, 46.0], [17260, 17275, 2.0], [17275, 17669, 76.0], [17669, 17908, 45.0], [17908, 17936, 5.0], [17936, 17998, 11.0], [17998, 18271, 35.0], [18271, 18279, 1.0], [18279, 19444, 203.0], [19444, 19787, 54.0], [19787, 20007, 36.0], [20007, 20088, 15.0], [20088, 20212, 1.0], [20212, 20253, 8.0], [20253, 20640, 65.0], [20640, 20706, 13.0], [20706, 20890, 30.0], [20890, 21137, 43.0], [21137, 21157, 2.0], [21157, 21508, 57.0], [21508, 21624, 18.0], [21624, 21681, 9.0], [21681, 21803, 23.0], [21803, 21903, 20.0], [21903, 22198, 54.0], [22198, 22323, 19.0], [22323, 22366, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 3094, 0.01192448], [3094, 3129, 0.09375], [3129, 3201, 0.14705882], [3201, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3691, 0.06567797], [3691, 3900, 0.01960784], [3900, 4445, 0.02079395], [4445, 4685, 0.0], [4685, 4690, 0.0], [4690, 4948, 0.09349593], [4948, 5110, 0.02631579], [5110, 5123, 0.0], [5123, 5218, 0.11111111], [5218, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5440, 0.08866995], [5440, 5573, 0.0], [5573, 5723, 0.09655172], [5723, 5988, 0.01544402], [5988, 5998, 0.0], [5998, 6344, 0.02967359], [6344, 6355, 0.0], [6355, 6539, 0.05617978], [6539, 6606, 0.0], [6606, 6733, 0.0], [6733, 6739, 0.25], [6739, 6927, 0.05524862], [6927, 7016, 0.0], [7016, 7197, 0.0], [7197, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7544, 0.09375], [7544, 7660, 0.0], [7660, 7667, 0.0], [7667, 8073, 0.03030303], [8073, 8232, 0.0], [8232, 8240, 0.16666667], [8240, 8430, 0.05434783], [8430, 8689, 0.0], [8689, 8696, 0.0], [8696, 8830, 0.07692308], [8830, 8854, 0.0], [8854, 8947, 0.0], [8947, 9059, 0.0], [9059, 9258, 0.00512821], [9258, 9269, 0.0], [9269, 9488, 0.05714286], [9488, 9496, 0.0], [9496, 9748, 0.04098361], [9748, 9822, 0.0], [9822, 12065, 0.00638686], [12065, 12077, 0.0], [12077, 12217, 0.07407407], [12217, 12225, 0.0], [12225, 12297, 0.15151515], [12297, 12366, 0.0], [12366, 12419, 0.26666667], [12419, 12555, 0.0], [12555, 12751, 0.05263158], [12751, 12918, 0.01226994], [12918, 12993, 0.0], [12993, 13130, 0.0], [13130, 13337, 0.00492611], [13337, 13466, 0.0], [13466, 13480, 0.0], [13480, 13700, 0.04694836], [13700, 13764, 0.0], [13764, 13770, 0.0], [13770, 13884, 0.09259259], [13884, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 14100, 0.04975124], [14100, 14121, 0.0], [14121, 14128, 0.0], [14128, 14303, 0.05882353], [14303, 14349, 0.02380952], [14349, 14676, 0.03278689], [14676, 14689, 0.0], [14689, 14776, 0.12345679], [14776, 14909, 0.20560748], [14909, 14926, 0.0], [14926, 15591, 0.0], [15591, 15709, 0.0], [15709, 15748, 0.27777778], [15748, 15804, 0.0], [15804, 15813, 0.0], [15813, 15825, 0.0], [15825, 15928, 0.09090909], [15928, 15936, 0.0], [15936, 16252, 0.02980132], [16252, 16265, 0.0], [16265, 16394, 0.07258065], [16394, 16567, 0.01190476], [16567, 16579, 0.2], [16579, 16624, 0.23684211], [16624, 16684, 0.0], [16684, 16694, 0.0], [16694, 16797, 0.09090909], [16797, 16978, 0.0], [16978, 17260, 0.0], [17260, 17275, 0.0], [17275, 17669, 0.02337662], [17669, 17908, 0.0], [17908, 17936, 0.0], [17936, 17998, 0.0], [17998, 18271, 0.03614458], [18271, 18279, 0.0], [18279, 19444, 0.01315789], [19444, 19787, 0.02702703], [19787, 20007, 0.01886792], [20007, 20088, 0.03797468], [20088, 20212, 0.0], [20212, 20253, 0.23684211], [20253, 20640, 0.00795756], [20640, 20706, 0.14516129], [20706, 20890, 0.0], [20890, 21137, 0.0], [21137, 21157, 0.0], [21157, 21508, 0.0], [21508, 21624, 0.0], [21624, 21681, 0.10909091], [21681, 21803, 0.0], [21803, 21903, 0.01052632], [21903, 22198, 0.0], [22198, 22323, 0.0], [22323, 22366, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 3094, 0.0], [3094, 3129, 0.0], [3129, 3201, 0.0], [3201, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3691, 0.0], [3691, 3900, 0.0], [3900, 4445, 0.0], [4445, 4685, 0.0], [4685, 4690, 0.0], [4690, 4948, 0.0], [4948, 5110, 0.0], [5110, 5123, 0.0], [5123, 5218, 0.0], [5218, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5440, 0.0], [5440, 5573, 0.0], [5573, 5723, 0.0], [5723, 5988, 0.0], [5988, 5998, 0.0], [5998, 6344, 0.0], [6344, 6355, 0.0], [6355, 6539, 0.0], [6539, 6606, 0.0], [6606, 6733, 0.0], [6733, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6927, 0.0], [6927, 7016, 0.0], [7016, 7197, 0.0], [7197, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7544, 0.0], [7544, 7660, 0.0], [7660, 7667, 0.0], [7667, 8073, 0.0], [8073, 8232, 0.0], [8232, 8240, 0.0], [8240, 8430, 0.0], [8430, 8689, 0.0], [8689, 8696, 0.0], [8696, 8830, 0.0], [8830, 8854, 0.0], [8854, 8947, 0.0], [8947, 9059, 0.0], [9059, 9258, 0.0], [9258, 9269, 0.0], [9269, 9488, 0.0], [9488, 9496, 0.0], [9496, 9748, 0.0], [9748, 9822, 0.0], [9822, 12065, 0.0], [12065, 12077, 0.0], [12077, 12217, 0.0], [12217, 12225, 0.0], [12225, 12297, 0.0], [12297, 12366, 0.0], [12366, 12419, 0.0], [12419, 12555, 0.0], [12555, 12751, 0.0], [12751, 12918, 0.0], [12918, 12993, 0.0], [12993, 13130, 0.0], [13130, 13337, 0.0], [13337, 13466, 0.0], [13466, 13480, 0.0], [13480, 13700, 0.0], [13700, 13764, 0.0], [13764, 13770, 0.0], [13770, 13884, 0.0], [13884, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 14100, 0.0], [14100, 14121, 0.0], [14121, 14128, 0.0], [14128, 14303, 0.0], [14303, 14349, 0.0], [14349, 14676, 0.0], [14676, 14689, 0.0], [14689, 14776, 0.0], [14776, 14909, 0.0], [14909, 14926, 0.0], [14926, 15591, 0.0], [15591, 15709, 0.0], [15709, 15748, 0.0], [15748, 15804, 0.0], [15804, 15813, 0.0], [15813, 15825, 0.0], [15825, 15928, 0.0], [15928, 15936, 0.0], [15936, 16252, 0.0], [16252, 16265, 0.0], [16265, 16394, 0.0], [16394, 16567, 0.0], [16567, 16579, 0.0], [16579, 16624, 0.0], [16624, 16684, 0.0], [16684, 16694, 0.0], [16694, 16797, 0.0], [16797, 16978, 0.0], [16978, 17260, 0.0], [17260, 17275, 0.0], [17275, 17669, 0.0], [17669, 17908, 0.0], [17908, 17936, 0.0], [17936, 17998, 0.0], [17998, 18271, 0.0], [18271, 18279, 0.0], [18279, 19444, 0.0], [19444, 19787, 0.0], [19787, 20007, 0.0], [20007, 20088, 0.0], [20088, 20212, 0.0], [20212, 20253, 0.0], [20253, 20640, 0.0], [20640, 20706, 0.0], [20706, 20890, 0.0], [20890, 21137, 0.0], [21137, 21157, 0.0], [21157, 21508, 0.0], [21508, 21624, 0.0], [21624, 21681, 0.0], [21681, 21803, 0.0], [21803, 21903, 0.0], [21903, 22198, 0.0], [22198, 22323, 0.0], [22323, 22366, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 3094, 0.10698125], [3094, 3129, 0.0], [3129, 3201, 0.04166667], [3201, 3206, 0.2], [3206, 3691, 0.04948454], [3691, 3900, 0.00956938], [3900, 4445, 0.03486239], [4445, 4685, 0.02083333], [4685, 4690, 0.6], [4690, 4948, 0.04651163], [4948, 5110, 0.03703704], [5110, 5123, 0.0], [5123, 5218, 0.02105263], [5218, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5440, 0.06511628], [5440, 5573, 0.03759398], [5573, 5723, 0.04666667], [5723, 5988, 0.02641509], [5988, 5998, 0.5], [5998, 6344, 0.02023121], [6344, 6355, 0.0], [6355, 6539, 0.04891304], [6539, 6606, 0.07462687], [6606, 6733, 0.06299213], [6733, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6927, 0.02659574], [6927, 7016, 0.0], [7016, 7197, 0.05524862], [7197, 7366, 0.03550296], [7366, 7544, 0.02247191], [7544, 7660, 0.00862069], [7660, 7667, 0.14285714], [7667, 8073, 0.00985222], [8073, 8232, 0.04402516], [8232, 8240, 0.0], [8240, 8430, 0.02105263], [8430, 8689, 0.03474903], [8689, 8696, 0.0], [8696, 8830, 0.03731343], [8830, 8854, 0.04166667], [8854, 8947, 0.05376344], [8947, 9059, 0.02678571], [9059, 9258, 0.00502513], [9258, 9269, 0.0], [9269, 9488, 0.03652968], [9488, 9496, 0.125], [9496, 9748, 0.02777778], [9748, 9822, 0.16216216], [9822, 12065, 0.01515827], [12065, 12077, 0.0], [12077, 12217, 0.02857143], [12217, 12225, 0.25], [12225, 12297, 0.06944444], [12297, 12366, 0.01449275], [12366, 12419, 0.03773585], [12419, 12555, 0.02205882], [12555, 12751, 0.04591837], [12751, 12918, 0.0239521], [12918, 12993, 0.02666667], [12993, 13130, 0.02919708], [13130, 13337, 0.00483092], [13337, 13466, 0.02325581], [13466, 13480, 0.0], [13480, 13700, 0.01363636], [13700, 13764, 0.015625], [13764, 13770, 0.0], [13770, 13884, 0.03508772], [13884, 13892, 0.0], [13892, 14100, 0.01923077], [14100, 14121, 0.14285714], [14121, 14128, 0.28571429], [14128, 14303, 0.01714286], [14303, 14349, 0.13043478], [14349, 14676, 0.11926606], [14676, 14689, 0.15384615], [14689, 14776, 0.05747126], [14776, 14909, 0.03007519], [14909, 14926, 0.05882353], [14926, 15591, 0.02406015], [15591, 15709, 0.03389831], [15709, 15748, 0.07692308], [15748, 15804, 0.03571429], [15804, 15813, 0.22222222], [15813, 15825, 0.0], [15825, 15928, 0.01941748], [15928, 15936, 0.125], [15936, 16252, 0.03797468], [16252, 16265, 0.15384615], [16265, 16394, 0.01550388], [16394, 16567, 0.03468208], [16567, 16579, 0.0], [16579, 16624, 0.08888889], [16624, 16684, 0.03333333], [16684, 16694, 0.0], [16694, 16797, 0.03883495], [16797, 16978, 0.00552486], [16978, 17260, 0.0212766], [17260, 17275, 0.13333333], [17275, 17669, 0.05329949], [17669, 17908, 0.0251046], [17908, 17936, 0.03571429], [17936, 17998, 0.17741935], [17998, 18271, 0.31135531], [18271, 18279, 0.0], [18279, 19444, 0.02918455], [19444, 19787, 0.06122449], [19787, 20007, 0.07727273], [20007, 20088, 0.04938272], [20088, 20212, 0.0], [20212, 20253, 0.04878049], [20253, 20640, 0.03875969], [20640, 20706, 0.04545455], [20706, 20890, 0.06521739], [20890, 21137, 0.00809717], [21137, 21157, 0.05], [21157, 21508, 0.05413105], [21508, 21624, 0.01724138], [21624, 21681, 0.07017544], [21681, 21803, 0.04918033], [21803, 21903, 0.01], [21903, 22198, 0.04745763], [22198, 22323, 0.016], [22323, 22366, 0.02325581]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 22366, 0.10822403]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 22366, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 22366, 0.17222703]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 22366, -1389.05511881]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 22366, 2.97094457]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 22366, -1441.4704261]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 22366, 248.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
freethoughtblogs.com
Gaming Trend Forums > Non-Gaming > Political / Religious Nonsense (Moderators: farley2k, naednek) > Hmmm. What if: Hilary = VP? Does That Sway Your Vote to McCain? Topic: Hmmm. What if: Hilary = VP? Does That Sway Your Vote to McCain? (Read 11274 times) Re: Hmmm. What if: Hilary = VP? Does That Sway Your Vote to McCain? Quote from: ATB on May 14, 2008, 08:52:50 PMQuote from: Fireball1244 on May 14, 2008, 05:50:03 PMQuote from: Exodor on May 14, 2008, 05:01:48 PMQuote from: Fireball1244 on May 14, 2008, 04:51:12 PMBut when someone supports Obama's policy positions, and then adds a Veep who supports those same positions, albeit in slightly different ways, and that someone precludes voting for Obama? That's just mind-bogglingly illogical. I expect that crap from folks who don't actually understand the policy positions involved, not those who do.Perhaps when picking the leader of the country some people consider more than just policy positions?Yes, some people actually do make choices based on things other than what really matters -- policy. Doesn't make it any more logical.The irony, Mr. Campaign manager, is how often are elections decided by policy?More than you'd think, obviously. Not as many as I would like, unfortunately.QuoteThey're not because people like you who are a part of the political machine and those who run campaigns find any flaw with an individual and try to exploit it to make the other person look bad regardless of what that persons policy is.So what's your point? Other than trying to imply that I'm either a hypocrite or bad at my job?See, I was trying to actually be respectful of you, and assume that you do things more intelligently than the average person (ie, vote on policy). I apologize for what appears to be my mistake. Quote from: Fireball1244 on May 14, 2008, 10:24:51 PMQuote from: ATB on May 14, 2008, 08:52:50 PMQuote from: Fireball1244 on May 14, 2008, 05:50:03 PMQuote from: Exodor on May 14, 2008, 05:01:48 PMQuote from: Fireball1244 on May 14, 2008, 04:51:12 PMBut when someone supports Obama's policy positions, and then adds a Veep who supports those same positions, albeit in slightly different ways, and that someone precludes voting for Obama? That's just mind-bogglingly illogical. I expect that crap from folks who don't actually understand the policy positions involved, not those who do.Perhaps when picking the leader of the country some people consider more than just policy positions?Yes, some people actually do make choices based on things other than what really matters -- policy. Doesn't make it any more logical.The irony, Mr. Campaign manager, is how often are elections decided by policy?More than you'd think, obviously. Not as many as I would like, unfortunately.QuoteThey're not because people like you who are a part of the political machine and those who run campaigns find any flaw with an individual and try to exploit it to make the other person look bad regardless of what that persons policy is.So what's your point? Other than trying to imply that I'm either a hypocrite or bad at my job?See, I was trying to actually be respectful of you, and assume that you do things more intelligently than the average person (ie, vote on policy). I apologize for what appears to be my mistake.I think his point is that (at least in non-local elections) the politics of personal destruction work better than the politics of policy, and because of that those who design campaigns rely on them, all the while decrying sad, sad fact that it can't be about the *issues*.It's not your fault personally, of course - in fact, I'll happily place the blame squarely at the feet of the morons who are swayed by things like Swift Boat innuendo and rumors of illegitimate black babies pushed over a phone, but the fact remains that when those things are shown to work (or when a candidate gets desperate) they happily go down that road. What I like about Obama is that he has, so far, seemingly rejected these tactics, and in the larger scheme I'm hopeful that he and McCain *could* be the beginning of a sea change in how politics are approached. It's a small chance - probably next to zero - but I already know how Hillary works, and I want that out of our government. Logged Quote from: Geezer on May 14, 2008, 11:07:53 PMWhat I like about Obama is that he has, so far, seemingly rejected these tactics, and in the larger scheme I'm hopeful that he and McCain *could* be the beginning of a sea change in how politics are approached. McCain? No, he's given up on straight talk. Blackadar Quote from: Ironrod on May 14, 2008, 09:14:13 PMWell put. Had Obama not entered the race, a good number of the forum liberals would be Hillary enthusiasts right now. Just a few short years ago they (you) thought that Bill Clinton was one of the greatest presidents of the 20th century -- He still is. Logged Raise the bridge! I have an erection! Quote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 12:02:05 AMQuote from: Ironrod on May 14, 2008, 09:14:13 PMWell put. Had Obama not entered the race, a good number of the forum liberals would be Hillary enthusiasts right now. Just a few short years ago they (you) thought that Bill Clinton was one of the greatest presidents of the 20th century -- He still is. Not to have another pointless Clinton debate, but thank you very much for that, I needed a good laugh for the week. Quote from: Brendan on May 14, 2008, 09:06:19 PMQuote from: ATB on May 14, 2008, 08:52:50 PMThey're not because people like you who are a part of the political machine and those who run campaigns find any flaw with an individual and try to exploit it to make the other person look bad regardless of what that persons policy is. Look at the hype Wright is getting. So if it's a matter of logic, perhaps you should retool how elections are run and make policy the most important issue.Hey, chief, this has been mostly a one-sided affair for decades. Please note how many well-meaning policy wonks the democrats nominate, and the strategery by which they're derailed: Willie Horton, tank rides, "I invented the internet", "Faked purple heart!1!", wind-surfing, flag pins, and Jeremiah Wright.When McCain's campaign succumbed to the adulterous-black-daughter rumors in South Carolina in 2000, it was Bush/Rove who did it to him, not the dems.Sorry, Unbreakable. I didn't realize that only repubs do smear campaigns..QuoteSee, I was trying to actually be respectful of you, Yeah. You've been very respectful:Quoteany vote against Obama because Hillary Clinton and not, say, Ed Rendell, is his Vice Presidential candidate is just flat out illogical.QuoteYou'll vote for more of the same on the war, more restrictions on personal freedoms through frighteningly conservative judicial appointments and more fiscal irresponsibility just because you don't like Hillary Clinton as a person? Even though she wouldn't change any of Barack Obama's policy positions?That's just <I cuss because I'm too lazy to use intelligent non-crutch words> insane.QuoteYes, I know people use stupid measures for determining their vote all the timeQuote That's just mind-bogglingly illogical. QuoteYes, some people actually do make choices based on things other than what really matters -- policy. Doesn't make it any more logical.Smearing is so ingrained in your political DNA you don't even realize you're doing it...or perhaps you think we the people is so dumb we cain't catch the subtlety? « Last Edit: May 15, 2008, 01:15:02 AM by ATB » Quote from: brettmcd on May 15, 2008, 12:13:38 AMQuote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 12:02:05 AMQuote from: Ironrod on May 14, 2008, 09:14:13 PMWell put. Had Obama not entered the race, a good number of the forum liberals would be Hillary enthusiasts right now. Just a few short years ago they (you) thought that Bill Clinton was one of the greatest presidents of the 20th century -- He still is. Not to have another pointless Clinton debate, but thank you very much for that, I needed a good laugh for the week.+1 Logged Quote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 01:45:36 AMQuote from: brettmcd on May 15, 2008, 12:13:38 AMQuote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 12:02:05 AMQuote from: Ironrod on May 14, 2008, 09:14:13 PMWell put. Had Obama not entered the race, a good number of the forum liberals would be Hillary enthusiasts right now. Just a few short years ago they (you) thought that Bill Clinton was one of the greatest presidents of the 20th century -- He still is. Not to have another pointless Clinton debate, but thank you very much for that, I needed a good laugh for the week.+1 I'll take 8 years of relative peace, prosperity and a balanced budget over any Republican financial/civil rights debacle of the last 20 years. ScubaV Quote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 02:37:54 AMQuote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 01:45:36 AMQuote from: brettmcd on May 15, 2008, 12:13:38 AMQuote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 12:02:05 AMQuote from: Ironrod on May 14, 2008, 09:14:13 PMWell put. Had Obama not entered the race, a good number of the forum liberals would be Hillary enthusiasts right now. Just a few short years ago they (you) thought that Bill Clinton was one of the greatest presidents of the 20th century -- He still is. Not to have another pointless Clinton debate, but thank you very much for that, I needed a good laugh for the week.+1 I'll take 8 years of relative peace, prosperity and a balanced budget over any Republican financial/civil rights debacle of the last 20 years.That you think this was due to active work by Clinton is as hilarious as the conservatives at work who think global warming is a farce powered by pseudo-science.As for policy guiding voters' presidential decisions, sure policy is important, but it's Congress's job to do legislating. The president's responsibility is to lead the country, and that involves far more than just political stances. I have absolute faith in the power of people to be stupid.My vision is augmented. Quote from: ScubaV on May 15, 2008, 03:23:21 AMThat you think this was due to active work by Clinton is as hilarious as the conservatives at work who think global warming is a farce powered by pseudo-science.Prove it wasn't. You won't be able to...we've already had that discussion:http://www.gamingtrend.com/forums/index.php/topic,25629.0.htmlThe problem is that Republicans can't stand that Clinton took away the veil of Republicans being "fiscally conservative" and how voodoo economics don't work in a vacuum. And the statistics so overwhelming support it that the "conservatives" can't even rationally debate it, so they try the old "blow job, blow job!" routine. Shit, unlike the Republican sex scandals the last few years, at least Clinton got blown by a woman. Logged Back to the original topic, I don't think Hillary is going to be Obama's first choice. She (and her supporters) might try to leverage her delegates to broker a deal and Obama may be pushed into a corner on it. But Bill Richardson makes perfect sense to be the #2 on the ticket:He's from the southwestern USA (New Mexico), negating McCain's (Arizona) regional advantage.He's Hispanic, shoring up one of the weakest groups for Obama and states with large Hispanic populations (including FL).He has a LOT of experience - more than Hillary - shoring up another perceived Obama weakness. His term expires in 2011 and can't run again for Governor of New Mexico. He endorsed Obama earlier than most big names (March, 2008).It's a pretty natural fit all the way around. Logged Quote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 02:37:54 AMQuote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 01:45:36 AMQuote from: brettmcd on May 15, 2008, 12:13:38 AMQuote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 12:02:05 AMQuote from: Ironrod on May 14, 2008, 09:14:13 PMWell put. Had Obama not entered the race, a good number of the forum liberals would be Hillary enthusiasts right now. Just a few short years ago they (you) thought that Bill Clinton was one of the greatest presidents of the 20th century -- He still is. Not to have another pointless Clinton debate, but thank you very much for that, I needed a good laugh for the week.+1 I'll take 8 years of relative peace, prosperity and a balanced budget over any Republican financial/civil rights debacle of the last 20 years."Wag the Dog" Quote from: ATB on May 15, 2008, 01:13:24 AMQuote from: Brendan on May 14, 2008, 09:06:19 PMQuote from: ATB on May 14, 2008, 08:52:50 PMThey're not because people like you who are a part of the political machine and those who run campaigns find any flaw with an individual and try to exploit it to make the other person look bad regardless of what that persons policy is. Look at the hype Wright is getting. So if it's a matter of logic, perhaps you should retool how elections are run and make policy the most important issue.Hey, chief, this has been mostly a one-sided affair for decades. Please note how many well-meaning policy wonks the democrats nominate, and the strategery by which they're derailed: Willie Horton, tank rides, "I invented the internet", "Faked purple heart!1!", wind-surfing, flag pins, and Jeremiah Wright.When McCain's campaign succumbed to the adulterous-black-daughter rumors in South Carolina in 2000, it was Bush/Rove who did it to him, not the dems.Sorry, Unbreakable. I didn't realize that only repubs do smear campaigns..QuoteSee, I was trying to actually be respectful of you, Yeah. You've been very respectful:Yes, I was being respectful, because I thought that you were too intelligent to vote based on something other than substance, and didn't really believe it when you said it.Sorry for the misunderstanding. Logged Quote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 03:53:05 AMBack to the original topic, I don't think Hillary is going to be Obama's first choice. She (and her supporters) might try to leverage her delegates to broker a deal and Obama may be pushed into a corner on it. But Bill Richardson makes perfect sense to be the #2 on the ticket:He's from the southwestern USA (New Mexico), negating McCain's (Arizona) regional advantage.He's Hispanic, shoring up one of the weakest groups for Obama and states with large Hispanic populations (including FL).He has a LOT of experience - more than Hillary - shoring up another perceived Obama weakness. His term expires in 2011 and can't run again for Governor of New Mexico. He endorsed Obama earlier than most big names (March, 2008).It's a pretty natural fit all the way around. Bill Richardson was a flop, a complete and utter flop, as a candidate this year. He performed miserably, was bad in every debate, got no traction and basically embarrassed himself. He endorsed, but after Texas was over, so too late to really help (this thing might not have gone all the way to MO/SD if Obama had won Texas) and, really, not all that early. And, having endorsed Obama and been declared a "Judas" by the Clintonites, he has no value as a party unifier, which is a key criteria for the Veep spot. He'll be on the list, but the logic of choosing him is less than that of choosing Rendell, Strickland or, yes, Clinton. Quote from: ATB on May 15, 2008, 01:13:24 AMQuote from: Brendan on May 14, 2008, 09:06:19 PMQuote from: ATB on May 14, 2008, 08:52:50 PMThey're not because people like you who are a part of the political machine and those who run campaigns find any flaw with an individual and try to exploit it to make the other person look bad regardless of what that persons policy is. Look at the hype Wright is getting. So if it's a matter of logic, perhaps you should retool how elections are run and make policy the most important issue.Hey, chief, this has been mostly a one-sided affair for decades. Please note how many well-meaning policy wonks the democrats nominate, and the strategery by which they're derailed: Willie Horton, tank rides, "I invented the internet", "Faked purple heart!1!", wind-surfing, flag pins, and Jeremiah Wright.When McCain's campaign succumbed to the adulterous-black-daughter rumors in South Carolina in 2000, it was Bush/Rove who did it to him, not the dems.Sorry, Unbreakable. I didn't realize that only repubs do smear campaigns..Have you paid any attention to national politics at all in the last twenty years? You're welcome to give some counter-examples. And for the record, I'm not a fucking conspiracy theorist. Quote from: Fireball1244 on May 15, 2008, 04:52:12 AMBill Richardson was a flop, a complete and utter flop, as a candidate this year. He performed miserably, was bad in every debate, got no traction and basically embarrassed himself. He endorsed, but after Texas was over, so too late to really help (this thing might not have gone all the way to MO/SD if Obama had won Texas) and, really, not all that early. And, having endorsed Obama and been declared a "Judas" by the Clintonites, he has no value as a party unifier, which is a key criteria for the Veep spot. He'll be on the list, but the logic of choosing him is less than that of choosing Rendell, Strickland or, yes, Clinton.I'd have to agree with that, I think there was a time when he could have been on the very short list of being a good candidate for VP, but that was squandered and he really wouldn't add any value to the ticket now.Several times though i've wondered if Obama might take a female as his VP. Pelosi or Sebelius both seem to be in good standing right now (although admittedly my knowledge of either of them is fairly limited) Quote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 04:19:09 AM"Wag the Dog"Translation: If you can't respond with any facts to back up your point, respond with a not-so-pithy statement!Yea, wag the dog might be true if the debt didn't immediately decrease under Clinton and a Democratic Congress and if Clinton hadn't won the Government shutdown against the Republicans over....(wait for it)....(wait for it)...the budget in '96! And notice on the graph how the debt drops precipitously after the shutdown? Hmmm, I guess we know who the dog really was (in more ways than one, I suppose). Thanks for playing! Give him a big hand, folks. Quote from: Blackadar on May 15, 2008, 12:25:14 PMQuote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 04:19:09 AM"Wag the Dog"Translation: If you can't respond with any facts to back up your point, respond with a not-so-pithy statement!Yea, wag the dog might be true if the debt didn't immediately decrease under Clinton and a Democratic Congress and if Clinton hadn't won the Government shutdown against the Republicans over....(wait for it)....(wait for it)...the budget in '96! And notice on the graph how the debt drops precipitously after the shutdown? Hmmm, I guess we know who the dog really was (in more ways than one, I suppose). Thanks for playing! Give him a big hand, folks.No reason to act so condescending. Especially when you're missing the point entirely. The wag the dog reference was not about debt but literally about the controversy about the bombings in 1998 we did that many believed were intended to distract from some of his personal scandals (and no I don't believe that's true)I'm not arguing that Clinton wasn't a "decent" president nor that debt didn't decrease under him. But there was a comment recently about Clinton being one of the best presidents, yet I just don't see it that way. Yes, He did some good stuff, but he also did a lot of negative things and his entire presidency was tainted by one controversy after another. Better than Bush? Absolutely! But that certainly isn't enough to be considered one of the best.it's funny to me how some people look back more fondly on a President's term of office after the fact. Scary thought is -- will people eventually be reminiscing about how good Bush was one day? « Last Edit: May 15, 2008, 01:55:38 PM by DarkEL » Remus West2 Quote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 01:51:10 PMit's funny to me how some people look back more fondly on a President's term of office after the fact.Thats a very ironic comment when taken in context. Which president do you think would be above Clinton for best ever? Name one that did not have scandals around them since that seems to be what is detracting from him for you. It's how I say Hello - Richard Quote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 01:51:10 PMScary thought is -- will people eventually be reminiscing about how good Bush was one day?Don't rule it out. During Reagan's presidency, (liberal) popular opinion regarded him as a warmongering simpleton who napped through his presidency. That's not how history ultimately sized him up, though. Bush's legacy will depend on the ultimate outcome in Iraq, which we probably won't know for at least another decade. Back to Obama...I wonder if Edwards would accept the VP slot? He owns the anti-poverty, blue-collar, populist turf that Hillary is exploiting now, and could be a good counter to Obama's elitism. It would certainly sway my vote. Logged Quote from: Remus West2 on May 15, 2008, 02:32:07 PMQuote from: DarkEL on May 15, 2008, 01:51:10 PMit's funny to me how some people look back more fondly on a President's term of office after the fact.Thats a very ironic comment when taken in context. Which president do you think would be above Clinton for best ever? Name one that did not have scandals around them since that seems to be what is detracting from him for you.that's just it, I think it's been so long since we've had a great president that it's like we're looking in a barrel of rotten fruit and saying "oh look - this one isn't quite as moldy as the other's therefore he's the best". Trouble is few of us are old enough to actually remember a decent president. As I look back over the Presidents that I've been able to actually witness (not just read about)Carter - To be fair I didn't pay too much attention to him - a bit too young to care. But remember thinking rather poorly about him.Reagan -- To be honest - I actually likes Reagan during his first term -just not so much during his second term. He had some great "presidential moments" though which is why I think he's remembered so fondlyNever cared for Bush Sr. He seemed to always be trying to fight the "wimp" label, and never seemed to do much good for the country.Never cared for Clinton. Little things like integrity just seemed too complex for him to grasp. He also cut military spending far too much while I was in the Marines.GWB - Never cared for him but he did have the one great presidential moment around 9/11, but then he squandered all that good will. Everything since then has struck me as fairly evil. Quote from: Ironrod on May 15, 2008, 02:36:06 PMDon't rule it out. During Reagan's presidency, (liberal) popular opinion regarded him as a warmongering simpleton who napped through his presidency. That's not how history ultimately sized him up, though. Bush's legacy will depend on the ultimate outcome in Iraq, which we probably won't know for at least another decade. Back to Obama...I wonder if Edwards would accept the VP slot? He owns the anti-poverty, blue-collar, populist turf that Hillary is exploiting now, and could be a good counter to Obama's elitism. It would certainly sway my vote. If Edwards did, McCain might as well not even bother running because the race would be over. Logged Many people have speculated that Jim Webb is on the short list. Logged Quote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 15, 2008, 05:43:48 PMMany people have speculated that Jim Webb is on the short list. That would be a fantastic ticket. I can see some of the far left base freaking out, but I think it would be solid. Quote from: Geezer on May 15, 2008, 09:15:12 PMQuote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 15, 2008, 05:43:48 PMMany people have speculated that Jim Webb is on the short list. That would be a fantastic ticket. I can see some of the far left base freaking out, but I think it would be solid.I like that ticket. I also like Richardson. He's not a spectacular speaker, but he certainly didn't "embarrass himself" and his record is exemplary.To me, those are better than Edwards (who couldn't carry his home state of NC in 2004) or Hillary (whose antics have turned me off during this election cycle). Quote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 15, 2008, 05:43:48 PMMany people have speculated that Jim Webb is on the short list. Jim Webb already said he has no interest.I'm voting for McCain regardless, so I don't care! Quote from: pr0ner on May 16, 2008, 04:33:20 PMI'm voting for McCain regardless, so I don't care! Logged Quote from: pr0ner on May 16, 2008, 04:33:20 PMQuote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 15, 2008, 05:43:48 PMMany people have speculated that Jim Webb is on the short list. Jim Webb already said he has no interest.Everyone says they have no interest in the VP position. Logged Quote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 16, 2008, 06:17:51 PMQuote from: pr0ner on May 16, 2008, 04:33:20 PMQuote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 15, 2008, 05:43:48 PMMany people have speculated that Jim Webb is on the short list. Jim Webb already said he has no interest.Everyone says they have no interest in the VP position. O Rly? Quote from: pr0ner on May 16, 2008, 07:44:58 PMQuote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 16, 2008, 06:17:51 PMQuote from: pr0ner on May 16, 2008, 04:33:20 PMQuote from: Freezer-TPF- on May 15, 2008, 05:43:48 PMMany people have speculated that Jim Webb is on the short list. Jim Webb already said he has no interest.Everyone says they have no interest in the VP position. O Rly?Thanks for proving my point. But it's always good to see that some Senators have a personality and a sense of humor.QuoteSen. Tom Carper (D-Del.)�Yes. Sign me up. I�ve been kidding people for years: The hours are better, the wages are just as good � whoever heard of a vice president getting shot at? � and it�s a great opportunity to travel. And actually since time has gone by, the job is robust � So sure. Anybody here would, if they�re going to be honest. The chances are slim to none. But I promise you, I would deliver all three of Delaware�s electoral votes.�Sen. Mel Martinez (R-Fla.)�I�d say, �Please read the Constitution.� I wasn�t born in America; I can�t be VP.�Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Miss.)�The chances of that are so remote that I�m more likely to be hit by an asteroid.�QuoteSen. John Kerry (D-Mass.)�I don�t get into hypotheticals. No, I haven�t considered it. I don�t have a clue, honestly.�With some exceptions, of course. I really liked this one:QuoteSen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.)�Are you kidding? Every senator would accept that offer. My guess is that almost every senator looks at themselves in the mirror in the morning and sees either a future president or vice president.�See, not EVERYONE says no. Logged Quote from: pr0ner on May 16, 2008, 09:12:40 PMI really liked this one:QuoteSen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.)�Are you kidding? Every senator would accept that offer. My guess is that almost every senator looks at themselves in the mirror in the morning and sees either a future president or vice president.�See, not EVERYONE says no. Like N.D. is even a state. I think all the residents just take turns being Senator there anyway. Quote from: Fireball1244 on May 14, 2008, 04:21:38 PMVice Presidential picks can be shown to effect party unity, but I've never seen a study where they impact "independent" voters. Go down a checklist of issues. Find me major areas of disagreement between Clinton and Obama. They're running on basically the same platform, with different focus issues. A Vice President Hillary Clinton would not change the legislative or diplomatic substance of an Obama administration. Since that is what the point of a presidential election is -- the agenda set out by the candidate -- any vote against Obama because Hillary Clinton and not, say, Ed Rendell, is his Vice Presidential candidate is just flat out illogical.You'll vote for more of the same on the war, more restrictions on personal freedoms through frighteningly conservative judicial appointments and more fiscal irresponsibility just because you don't like Hillary Clinton as a person? Even though she wouldn't change any of Barack Obama's policy positions?That's just fucking insane.Still not going to be active in this forum, but for some reason I peeked in here and saw this thread. I need to throw some across-the-isle support to my brotha Fireball here.1980 -- Reagan and Bush had a bitter primary campaign in which nobody expected they would join forces because they didn't seem to like each other too much after all was said and done. Reagan called Bush. The party was united. The rest is history. Quote from: msduncan on May 27, 2008, 02:58:18 AMStill not going to be active in this forum, but for some reason I peeked in here and saw this thread. I need to throw some across-the-isle support to my brotha Fireball here.1980 -- Reagan and Bush had a bitter primary campaign in which nobody expected they would join forces because they didn't seem to like each other too much after all was said and done. Reagan called Bush. The party was united. The rest is history.That's good historical perspective.Hillary certainly wouldn't be my pick, but she may very well broker a deal to be the Veep (or Senate Majority Leader) and it might be out of Obama's hands. It didn't change my vote for Bush Sr. because I thought Quayle was an idiot. It won't change it now. After giving it a lot of thought, I've decided that what Obama needs is a proven winner, a running mate that adds adorableness, loyalty and possibly even the state of Texas to Obama's campaign arsenal: Quote from: Fireball1244 on May 27, 2008, 09:02:21 PMAfter giving it a lot of thought, I've decided that what Obama needs is a proven winner, a running mate that adds adorableness, loyalty and possibly even the state of Texas to Obama's campaign arsenal:Horrible choice. His handler believes Kennel Cough was created by the government to get rid of Black Labs. Quote from: cheeba on May 27, 2008, 10:30:10 PMHorrible choice. His handler believes Kennel Cough was created by the government to get rid of Black Labs.Ok Ok. 2 Pts for that one Logged Hilary is open to the idea.Huge mistake if Obama does it. SuperHiro If Hillary is VP, I'd probably still vote for the ticket, but I'd feel really yucky. And I'm not sure that's a feeling the Obama campaign wants to cultivate. Logged Just Hiro will do. PaulBot Obama McCain ! Logged CEO of the GT Post Padders Club
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2599
{"url": "http://gamingtrend.com/forums/political-religious-nonsense/hmmm-what-if-hilary-vp-does-that-sway-your-vote-to-mccain/msg407569/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gamingtrend.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:32:30Z", "digest": "sha1:LI7P2KNLRZCNXBBF36UHYISAOMTK5NOY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 30266, 30266.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 30266, 39238.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 30266, 54.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 30266, 389.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 30266, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 30266, 303.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 30266, 6.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 30266, 0.39274403]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 30266, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 30266, 0.69246668]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 30266, 0.71621394]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 30266, 0.71073056]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 30266, 0.70849502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 30266, 0.7022524]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 30266, 0.69246668]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 30266, 0.01434115]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 30266, 0.01366627]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 30266, 0.01577527]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 30266, 0.02317881]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 30266, 0.24517708]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 30266, 0.206037]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 30266, 4.61694255]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 30266, 0.00172761]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 30266, 5.98948804]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 30266, 5135.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 164, 1.0], [164, 254, 0.0], [254, 322, 1.0], [322, 1770, 1.0], [1770, 4242, 0.0], [4242, 4544, 1.0], [4544, 4554, 0.0], [4554, 4862, 0.0], [4862, 4900, 1.0], [4900, 5367, 1.0], [5367, 7480, 0.0], [7480, 8005, 0.0], [8005, 8713, 1.0], [8713, 8720, 0.0], [8720, 9872, 1.0], [9872, 9954, 1.0], [9954, 10730, 0.0], [10730, 11499, 0.0], [11499, 12270, 0.0], [12270, 13628, 0.0], [13628, 15071, 1.0], [15071, 16314, 1.0], [16314, 17419, 0.0], [17419, 18040, 1.0], [18040, 19671, 1.0], [19671, 19722, 0.0], [19722, 19734, 0.0], [19734, 20109, 1.0], [20109, 20140, 0.0], [20140, 20834, 0.0], [20834, 22479, 1.0], [22479, 23177, 0.0], [23177, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23480, 1.0], [23480, 24066, 1.0], [24066, 24275, 1.0], [24275, 24380, 0.0], [24380, 24648, 0.0], [24648, 24969, 1.0], [24969, 26276, 1.0], [26276, 26563, 0.0], [26563, 26987, 1.0], [26987, 28443, 1.0], [28443, 29204, 1.0], [29204, 29406, 0.0], [29406, 29767, 1.0], [29767, 29953, 0.0], [29953, 30011, 1.0], [30011, 30021, 0.0], [30021, 30186, 0.0], [30186, 30205, 1.0], [30205, 30213, 0.0], [30213, 30235, 0.0], [30235, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 164, 0.0], [164, 254, 0.0], [254, 322, 0.0], [322, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 4242, 0.0], [4242, 4544, 0.0], [4544, 4554, 0.0], [4554, 4862, 0.0], [4862, 4900, 0.0], [4900, 5367, 0.0], [5367, 7480, 0.0], [7480, 8005, 0.0], [8005, 8713, 0.0], [8713, 8720, 0.0], [8720, 9872, 0.0], [9872, 9954, 0.0], [9954, 10730, 0.0], [10730, 11499, 0.0], [11499, 12270, 0.0], [12270, 13628, 0.0], [13628, 15071, 0.0], [15071, 16314, 0.0], [16314, 17419, 0.0], [17419, 18040, 0.0], [18040, 19671, 0.0], [19671, 19722, 0.0], [19722, 19734, 0.0], [19734, 20109, 0.0], [20109, 20140, 0.0], [20140, 20834, 0.0], [20834, 22479, 0.0], [22479, 23177, 0.0], [23177, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23480, 0.0], [23480, 24066, 0.0], [24066, 24275, 0.0], [24275, 24380, 0.0], [24380, 24648, 0.0], [24648, 24969, 0.0], [24969, 26276, 0.0], [26276, 26563, 0.0], [26563, 26987, 0.0], [26987, 28443, 0.0], [28443, 29204, 0.0], [29204, 29406, 0.0], [29406, 29767, 0.0], [29767, 29953, 0.0], [29953, 30011, 0.0], [30011, 30021, 0.0], [30021, 30186, 0.0], [30186, 30205, 0.0], [30205, 30213, 0.0], [30213, 30235, 0.0], [30235, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 164, 22.0], [164, 254, 16.0], [254, 322, 13.0], [322, 1770, 238.0], [1770, 4242, 419.0], [4242, 4544, 55.0], [4544, 4554, 1.0], [4554, 4862, 55.0], [4862, 4900, 7.0], [4900, 5367, 84.0], [5367, 7480, 336.0], [7480, 8005, 93.0], [8005, 8713, 123.0], [8713, 8720, 1.0], [8720, 9872, 193.0], [9872, 9954, 15.0], [9954, 10730, 118.0], [10730, 11499, 129.0], [11499, 12270, 133.0], [12270, 13628, 221.0], [13628, 15071, 252.0], [15071, 16314, 204.0], [16314, 17419, 203.0], [17419, 18040, 104.0], [18040, 19671, 278.0], [19671, 19722, 11.0], [19722, 19734, 2.0], [19734, 20109, 69.0], [20109, 20140, 6.0], [20140, 20834, 111.0], [20834, 22479, 297.0], [22479, 23177, 114.0], [23177, 23248, 13.0], [23248, 23480, 44.0], [23480, 24066, 103.0], [24066, 24275, 36.0], [24275, 24380, 18.0], [24380, 24648, 46.0], [24648, 24969, 55.0], [24969, 26276, 224.0], [26276, 26563, 46.0], [26563, 26987, 71.0], [26987, 28443, 235.0], [28443, 29204, 136.0], [29204, 29406, 35.0], [29406, 29767, 60.0], [29767, 29953, 33.0], [29953, 30011, 11.0], [30011, 30021, 1.0], [30021, 30186, 30.0], [30186, 30205, 4.0], [30205, 30213, 1.0], [30213, 30235, 3.0], [30235, 30266, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 164, 0.00694444], [164, 254, 0.0625], [254, 322, 0.0], [322, 1770, 0.04040404], [1770, 4242, 0.03036693], [4242, 4544, 0.04210526], [4544, 4554, 0.0], [4554, 4862, 0.04778157], [4862, 4900, 0.0], [4900, 5367, 0.05855856], [5367, 7480, 0.02032722], [7480, 8005, 0.07862903], [8005, 8713, 0.08059701], [8713, 8720, 0.0], [8720, 9872, 0.06010929], [9872, 9954, 0.0], [9954, 10730, 0.0246238], [10730, 11499, 0.01227831], [11499, 12270, 0.09090909], [12270, 13628, 0.03175833], [13628, 15071, 0.01526163], [15071, 16314, 0.03474576], [16314, 17419, 0.01503759], [17419, 18040, 0.02422145], [18040, 19671, 0.01931745], [19671, 19722, 0.26666667], [19722, 19734, 0.09090909], [19734, 20109, 0.03305785], [20109, 20140, 0.0], [20140, 20834, 0.01823708], [20834, 22479, 0.01773274], [22479, 23177, 0.01807229], [23177, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23480, 0.05454545], [23480, 24066, 0.05054152], [24066, 24275, 0.06153846], [24275, 24380, 0.13684211], [24380, 24648, 0.09920635], [24648, 24969, 0.12457912], [24969, 26276, 0.04065041], [26276, 26563, 0.0], [26563, 26987, 0.03233831], [26987, 28443, 0.01421464], [28443, 29204, 0.02194787], [29204, 29406, 0.0], [29406, 29767, 0.04610951], [29767, 29953, 0.07344633], [29953, 30011, 0.0], [30011, 30021, 0.0], [30021, 30186, 0.0], [30186, 30205, 0.0], [30205, 30213, 0.0], [30213, 30235, 0.0], [30235, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 164, 0.0], [164, 254, 0.0], [254, 322, 0.0], [322, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 4242, 0.0], [4242, 4544, 0.0], [4544, 4554, 0.0], [4554, 4862, 0.0], [4862, 4900, 0.0], [4900, 5367, 0.0], [5367, 7480, 0.0], [7480, 8005, 0.0], [8005, 8713, 0.0], [8713, 8720, 0.0], [8720, 9872, 0.0], [9872, 9954, 0.0], [9954, 10730, 0.0], [10730, 11499, 0.0], [11499, 12270, 0.0], [12270, 13628, 0.0], [13628, 15071, 0.0], [15071, 16314, 0.0], [16314, 17419, 0.0], [17419, 18040, 0.0], [18040, 19671, 0.0], [19671, 19722, 0.0], [19722, 19734, 0.0], [19734, 20109, 0.0], [20109, 20140, 0.0], [20140, 20834, 0.0], [20834, 22479, 0.0], [22479, 23177, 0.0], [23177, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23480, 0.0], [23480, 24066, 0.0], [24066, 24275, 0.0], [24275, 24380, 0.0], [24380, 24648, 0.0], [24648, 24969, 0.0], [24969, 26276, 0.0], [26276, 26563, 0.0], [26563, 26987, 0.0], [26987, 28443, 0.0], [28443, 29204, 0.0], [29204, 29406, 0.0], [29406, 29767, 0.0], [29767, 29953, 0.0], [29953, 30011, 0.0], [30011, 30021, 0.0], [30021, 30186, 0.0], [30186, 30205, 0.0], [30205, 30213, 0.0], [30213, 30235, 0.0], [30235, 30266, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 164, 0.12804878], [164, 254, 0.15555556], [254, 322, 0.19117647], [322, 1770, 0.03107735], [1770, 4242, 0.02669903], [4242, 4544, 0.04635762], [4544, 4554, 0.1], [4554, 4862, 0.04545455], [4862, 4900, 0.05263158], [4900, 5367, 0.04496788], [5367, 7480, 0.03644108], [7480, 8005, 0.04952381], [8005, 8713, 0.0480226], [8713, 8720, 0.28571429], [8720, 9872, 0.03819444], [9872, 9954, 0.02439024], [9954, 10730, 0.02448454], [10730, 11499, 0.05071521], [11499, 12270, 0.05317769], [12270, 13628, 0.03755523], [13628, 15071, 0.04365904], [15071, 16314, 0.03620274], [16314, 17419, 0.03167421], [17419, 18040, 0.03864734], [18040, 19671, 0.02881668], [19671, 19722, 0.15686275], [19722, 19734, 0.16666667], [19734, 20109, 0.032], [20109, 20140, 0.12903226], [20140, 20834, 0.03746398], [20834, 22479, 0.02978723], [22479, 23177, 0.03724928], [23177, 23248, 0.05633803], [23248, 23480, 0.06034483], [23480, 24066, 0.04778157], [24066, 24275, 0.08133971], [24275, 24380, 0.08571429], [24380, 24648, 0.07835821], [24648, 24969, 0.09345794], [24969, 26276, 0.06579954], [26276, 26563, 0.07317073], [26563, 26987, 0.06839623], [26987, 28443, 0.03021978], [28443, 29204, 0.03547963], [29204, 29406, 0.02475248], [29406, 29767, 0.04432133], [29767, 29953, 0.07526882], [29953, 30011, 0.05172414], [30011, 30021, 0.2], [30021, 30186, 0.06060606], [30186, 30205, 0.10526316], [30205, 30213, 0.25], [30213, 30235, 0.18181818], [30235, 30266, 0.25806452]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 30266, 0.07753563]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 30266, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 30266, 0.11596859]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 30266, -1277.19659385]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 30266, -141.47645468]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 30266, -2116.0640911]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 30266, 338.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
gamingtrend.com
Gaming Trend Forums > Non-Gaming > Steals and Deals (Moderators: farley2k, naednek) > Amazon MP3 Deals (keep it updated!) Topic: Amazon MP3 Deals (keep it updated!) (Read 117966 times) Re: Amazon MP3 Daily Deal plus various other MP3 deals (keep it updated!) aha! didn't miss a day, Engine screwed up! he listed 2 3-10's in a row Quote from: EngineNo9 on March 10, 2009, 03:00:20 PMAnd today (3/10/09) brings Chris Cornell's new album Scream. On a quick listen it sounds like terrible electronic music, which is maybe why he's smashing a guitar on the cover?Quote from: EngineNo9 on March 11, 2009, 02:21:00 PMFor 3/10/09 we have Ben Kweller's Changing Horses on which he apparently goes a bit old-school country. « Last Edit: March 14, 2009, 07:18:32 PM by CeeKay » Quote from: CeeKay on March 14, 2009, 07:13:34 PM3-14The Ultimate Blue Train by John ColtranePretty much everyone should own Blue Train. TradeAble Quote from: Freezer-TPF- on March 15, 2009, 02:26:04 AMQuote from: CeeKay on March 14, 2009, 07:13:34 PM3-14The Ultimate Blue Train by John ColtranePretty much everyone should own Blue Train.Well not everyone. I tried to convince myself to like it but it just bored me. Logged d'oh, almost missed a day:3-15The Definitive Collection by Diana Ross & The Supremes 3-16If I Should Fall From Grace With God by The Pogues Quote from: CeeKay on March 16, 2009, 02:13:36 PM3-16If I Should Fall From Grace With God by The PoguesThat's a great one. 3-17and for St. Patty's Day we have a... rap album Don't Feed Da Animals by Gorilla Zoeat least they could have tossed up some Floggin Molly or Dropkick Murphy's.... Quote from: CeeKay on March 17, 2009, 02:16:21 PM3-17and for St. Patty's Day we have a... rap album Don't Feed Da Animals by Gorilla Zoeat least they could have tossed up some Floggin Molly or Dropkick Murphy's....You got the Pogues yesterday. What more could you want? Quote from: CeeKay on March 17, 2009, 02:16:21 PMat least they could have tossed up some Floggin Molly or Dropkick Murphy's....Why? I would have expected something Irish. Quote from: Lee on March 17, 2009, 11:21:58 PMQuote from: CeeKay on March 17, 2009, 02:16:21 PMat least they could have tossed up some Floggin Molly or Dropkick Murphy's....Why? I would have expected something Irish.close enough. 3-18The Grass Is Blue by Dolly Parton 3-19umm.... Mar Dulce by Bajofondo 3-20The Pretender by Jackson Browne 3-21Let's Stay Together by Al Green BUY BUY BUYThe Hold Steady - Boys and Girls in AmericaI love this album. 3-23Rhino Hi-Five: The Cars by The Cars 3-24no deal posted yet.... Quote from: CeeKay on March 24, 2009, 02:12:34 PM3-24no deal posted yet....You're fired. Quote from: Captain Caveman on March 24, 2009, 02:38:56 PMQuote from: CeeKay on March 24, 2009, 02:12:34 PM3-24no deal posted yet....You're fired....gonna burn this place down.... What? They can't just do this for two months and then think they can skip a day! Outrage! Quote from: EngineNo9 on March 24, 2009, 02:51:17 PMOutrage!LOUD NOISES! It's probably better that you don't know. Quote from: Laner on March 24, 2009, 10:01:41 PMIt's probably better that you don't know.aaaiiieeeee!!! KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!!!!!! Logged 3-25Leap Of Faith by Seth Walker 3-26Motown Number 1's Vol. 2 3-2799 Perfectly Relaxing Songs for 99 cents, Quote from: CeeKay on March 27, 2009, 02:20:45 PM3-2799 Perfectly Relaxing Songs for 99 cents,Thanks for the info, just picked this up 2 minutes ago. Not bad for a dollar. 3-28Them vs. You vs. Me by Finger Eleven 3-29I Love Rock N' Roll by Joan Jett & The Blackhearts Quote from: CeeKay on March 29, 2009, 07:24:15 AM3-273-283-27Wait, did we roll back the clocks a full day again and nobody told me? Quote from: EngineNo9 on March 29, 2009, 05:47:49 PMQuote from: CeeKay on March 29, 2009, 07:24:15 AM3-273-283-27Wait, did we roll back the clocks a full day again and nobody told me?hey, at 3:30ish in the morning you're lucky that went to Amazon and not somewhere else Logged d'oh! got so busy yesterday I forgot to post the deal. I think it was:3-30The Very Best Of Asleep At The Wheel by Asleep at the Wheel3-31Defying Gravity by Keith Urban 4-1The Transformed Man by William Shatner Quote from: CeeKay on April 01, 2009, 03:00:03 PM4-1The Transformed Man by William Shatner Logged SERIOUSLY?! One buck for a musical gem that will never grow old? Sooooo In. As one of the reviewes points out, you put this baby in when you depressed, and it will make you laugh. I don't think it's by chance that AMazon picked this as their april fools day ofering. « Last Edit: April 01, 2009, 09:11:02 PM by Big Jake » 4-2R.O.O.T.S. by Flo RidaQuote from: Big Jake on April 01, 2009, 09:08:21 PM I don't think it's by chance that AMazon picked this as their april fools day ofering.I was half expecting the link to take me to something else when I saw it on their site, like a Bruce Springsteen or Fitty Cents album. Daming, how did I miss Shatner! Ceekay, you need to post at like 6 in the morning to make sure I don't miss it and forget to check again at night. They usually have the deals up for a couple of days Logged 4-3Fox Confessor Brings The Flood by Neko Case also, there's a bunch of 5 dollar albums for today.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2600
{"url": "http://gamingtrend.com/forums/steals-and-deals/amazon-mp3-daily-deal-plus-various-other-mp3-deals-(keep-it-updated!)/msg532541/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gamingtrend.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:05:21Z", "digest": "sha1:V3VXGT6TMLFN2JCPFGGHZQWFIDXTSUKR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5204, 5204.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5204, 17875.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5204, 46.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5204, 452.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5204, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5204, 323.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5204, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5204, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5204, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5204, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5204, 0.27265861]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5204, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5204, 0.27210884]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5204, 0.3973293]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5204, 0.31166541]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5204, 0.29805996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5204, 0.29805996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5204, 0.28823381]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5204, 0.0335097]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5204, 0.03628118]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5204, 0.04711514]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5204, 0.03549849]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5204, 0.06521739]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5204, 0.34667674]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5204, 0.4440678]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5204, 4.48474576]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5204, 0.00906344]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5204, 5.46926106]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5204, 885.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 122, 0.0], [122, 185, 0.0], [185, 259, 0.0], [259, 714, 1.0], [714, 767, 0.0], [767, 904, 1.0], [904, 914, 0.0], [914, 1191, 0.0], [1191, 1276, 0.0], [1276, 1331, 0.0], [1331, 1454, 1.0], [1454, 1620, 1.0], [1620, 1890, 1.0], [1890, 2061, 1.0], [2061, 2291, 1.0], [2291, 2329, 0.0], [2329, 2364, 0.0], [2364, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2436, 0.0], [2436, 2509, 1.0], [2509, 2549, 0.0], [2549, 2576, 1.0], [2576, 2665, 1.0], [2665, 2845, 1.0], [2845, 2935, 1.0], [2935, 3008, 1.0], [3008, 3050, 1.0], [3050, 3187, 0.0], [3187, 3220, 0.0], [3220, 3249, 0.0], [3249, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3467, 1.0], [3467, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3695, 1.0], [3695, 3972, 0.0], [3972, 4140, 0.0], [4140, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4280, 0.0], [4280, 4547, 1.0], [4547, 4602, 0.0], [4602, 4900, 1.0], [4900, 5047, 1.0], [5047, 5106, 0.0], [5106, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5204, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 122, 0.0], [122, 185, 0.0], [185, 259, 0.0], [259, 714, 0.0], [714, 767, 0.0], [767, 904, 0.0], [904, 914, 0.0], [914, 1191, 0.0], [1191, 1276, 0.0], [1276, 1331, 0.0], [1331, 1454, 0.0], [1454, 1620, 0.0], [1620, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 2061, 0.0], [2061, 2291, 0.0], [2291, 2329, 0.0], [2329, 2364, 0.0], [2364, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2436, 0.0], [2436, 2509, 0.0], [2509, 2549, 0.0], [2549, 2576, 0.0], [2576, 2665, 0.0], [2665, 2845, 0.0], [2845, 2935, 0.0], [2935, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3050, 0.0], [3050, 3187, 0.0], [3187, 3220, 0.0], [3220, 3249, 0.0], [3249, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3467, 0.0], [3467, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3972, 0.0], [3972, 4140, 0.0], [4140, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4280, 0.0], [4280, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4602, 0.0], [4602, 4900, 0.0], [4900, 5047, 0.0], [5047, 5106, 0.0], [5106, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5204, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 122, 16.0], [122, 185, 10.0], [185, 259, 13.0], [259, 714, 77.0], [714, 767, 11.0], [767, 904, 21.0], [904, 914, 1.0], [914, 1191, 45.0], [1191, 1276, 12.0], [1276, 1331, 11.0], [1331, 1454, 22.0], [1454, 1620, 29.0], [1620, 1890, 46.0], [1890, 2061, 27.0], [2061, 2291, 36.0], [2291, 2329, 7.0], [2329, 2364, 5.0], [2364, 2400, 5.0], [2400, 2436, 6.0], [2436, 2509, 13.0], [2509, 2549, 7.0], [2549, 2576, 4.0], [2576, 2665, 13.0], [2665, 2845, 26.0], [2845, 2935, 18.0], [2935, 3008, 10.0], [3008, 3050, 7.0], [3050, 3187, 20.0], [3187, 3220, 6.0], [3220, 3249, 5.0], [3249, 3295, 7.0], [3295, 3467, 30.0], [3467, 3508, 8.0], [3508, 3563, 10.0], [3563, 3695, 23.0], [3695, 3972, 47.0], [3972, 4140, 31.0], [4140, 4182, 6.0], [4182, 4280, 15.0], [4280, 4547, 51.0], [4547, 4602, 12.0], [4602, 4900, 55.0], [4900, 5047, 31.0], [5047, 5106, 12.0], [5106, 5153, 8.0], [5153, 5204, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 122, 0.01869159], [122, 185, 0.125], [185, 259, 0.02898551], [259, 714, 0.09433962], [714, 767, 0.25531915], [767, 904, 0.11627907], [904, 914, 0.0], [914, 1191, 0.10384615], [1191, 1276, 0.03846154], [1276, 1331, 0.05660377], [1331, 1454, 0.13157895], [1454, 1620, 0.01960784], [1620, 1890, 0.06], [1890, 2061, 0.07594937], [2061, 2291, 0.11374408], [2291, 2329, 0.08333333], [2329, 2364, 0.10344828], [2364, 2400, 0.08823529], [2400, 2436, 0.09090909], [2436, 2509, 0.0], [2509, 2549, 0.08333333], [2549, 2576, 0.14285714], [2576, 2665, 0.19736842], [2665, 2845, 0.17419355], [2845, 2935, 0.0], [2935, 3008, 0.2], [3008, 3050, 0.0], [3050, 3187, 0.1025641], [3187, 3220, 0.09677419], [3220, 3249, 0.2], [3249, 3295, 0.1627907], [3295, 3467, 0.1242236], [3467, 3508, 0.08108108], [3508, 3563, 0.06], [3563, 3695, 0.17355372], [3695, 3972, 0.14341085], [3972, 4140, 0.03726708], [4140, 4182, 0.05], [4182, 4280, 0.15384615], [4280, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4602, 0.24489796], [4602, 4900, 0.04982206], [4900, 5047, 0.0070922], [5047, 5106, 0.0], [5106, 5153, 0.04444444], [5153, 5204, 0.02083333]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 122, 0.0], [122, 185, 0.0], [185, 259, 0.0], [259, 714, 0.0], [714, 767, 0.0], [767, 904, 0.0], [904, 914, 0.0], [914, 1191, 0.0], [1191, 1276, 0.0], [1276, 1331, 0.0], [1331, 1454, 0.0], [1454, 1620, 0.0], [1620, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 2061, 0.0], [2061, 2291, 0.0], [2291, 2329, 0.0], [2329, 2364, 0.0], [2364, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2436, 0.0], [2436, 2509, 0.0], [2509, 2549, 0.0], [2549, 2576, 0.0], [2576, 2665, 0.0], [2665, 2845, 0.0], [2845, 2935, 0.0], [2935, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3050, 0.0], [3050, 3187, 0.0], [3187, 3220, 0.0], [3220, 3249, 0.0], [3249, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3467, 0.0], [3467, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3972, 0.0], [3972, 4140, 0.0], [4140, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4280, 0.0], [4280, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4602, 0.0], [4602, 4900, 0.0], [4900, 5047, 0.0], [5047, 5106, 0.0], [5106, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5204, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 122, 0.09836066], [122, 185, 0.0952381], [185, 259, 0.10810811], [259, 714, 0.05054945], [714, 767, 0.13207547], [767, 904, 0.10948905], [904, 914, 0.2], [914, 1191, 0.09386282], [1191, 1276, 0.08235294], [1276, 1331, 0.18181818], [1331, 1454, 0.13821138], [1454, 1620, 0.07831325], [1620, 1890, 0.08148148], [1890, 2061, 0.07602339], [2061, 2291, 0.07826087], [2291, 2329, 0.15789474], [2329, 2364, 0.08571429], [2364, 2400, 0.11111111], [2400, 2436, 0.13888889], [2436, 2509, 0.21917808], [2509, 2549, 0.175], [2549, 2576, 0.0], [2576, 2665, 0.07865169], [2665, 2845, 0.07222222], [2845, 2935, 0.03333333], [2935, 3008, 0.23287671], [3008, 3050, 0.02380952], [3050, 3187, 0.15328467], [3187, 3220, 0.15151515], [3220, 3249, 0.10344828], [3249, 3295, 0.06521739], [3295, 3467, 0.06395349], [3467, 3508, 0.12195122], [3508, 3563, 0.16363636], [3563, 3695, 0.0530303], [3695, 3972, 0.05415162], [3972, 4140, 0.0952381], [4140, 4182, 0.11904762], [4182, 4280, 0.12244898], [4280, 4547, 0.05992509], [4547, 4602, 0.12727273], [4602, 4900, 0.0738255], [4900, 5047, 0.03401361], [5047, 5106, 0.03389831], [5106, 5153, 0.14893617], [5153, 5204, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5204, 5.01e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5204, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5204, 0.06639016]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5204, -611.06929375]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5204, -321.51788412]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5204, -522.71937917]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5204, 69.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
gamingtrend.com
Welcome to "Ask the White House". This online interactive forum, the first of its kind in politics, allows you to interact with Bush administration officials and friends of the White House. Launched in April 2003, citizens have participated in over 400 online discussions with Cabinet Secretaries, Senior White House Officials, behind-the-scenes professionals at the White House, and others. Transcripts of every live chat session are available on this page. If you would like to suggest a participant to appear on Ask the White House, click here. Jay Hein, Director of the Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives Good afternoon. It's a pleasure to participate in Ask the White House again, and I'm pleased that you joined me. Tomorrow is an exciting day for my office. We are hosting a national conference called "Innovations in Effective Compassion" and over 1,000 have registered to attend. Headlining the event, President Bush will give a landscape view of what the Faith-Based and Community Initiative (FBCI) has achieved since he launched the Initiative over seven years ago. The conference bring together faith-based and community leaders of all stripes, as well as policymakers and others, to explore the scope and scale of the Initiative's impact and what the future holds now that this foundation has been laid. I'm pleased to take your questions. Keith Hennessey, Assistant to the President for Economic Policy and Director of the National Economic Council Good afternoon from the West Wing of the White House. Last Wednesday marked the 5th anniversary of the 2003 tax relief, and this Sunday is the 7th anniversary of the 2001 tax cut. Just yesterday, the President spoke about the importance of making both tax relief bills permanent. If Congress fails to do so, taxes will go up on 116 million American households – a typical four person family with $40,000 in income would pay $2,345 more in taxes; a single mother with two kids would face a tax increase of $1,615. I look forward to taking questions and providing more information about the importance of providing certainty in the tax code for families, businesses, and our economy. November / December
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2605
{"url": "http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/ask/jun08.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:02:59Z", "digest": "sha1:43KGXSILE6AUGTTB6HVDMDQSTDCHRNT6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2177, 2177.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2177, 3846.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2177, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2177, 131.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2177, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2177, 165.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2177, 0.38443396]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2177, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2177, 0.03966006]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2177, 0.04419263]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2177, 0.02719547]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2177, 0.00943396]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2177, 0.16981132]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2177, 0.57507082]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2177, 5.0]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2177, 4.89345124]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2177, 353.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 190, 1.0], [190, 548, 1.0], [548, 622, 0.0], [622, 1366, 1.0], [1366, 1476, 0.0], [1476, 2158, 1.0], [2158, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 190, 0.0], [190, 548, 0.0], [548, 622, 0.0], [622, 1366, 0.0], [1366, 1476, 0.0], [1476, 2158, 0.0], [2158, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 190, 31.0], [190, 548, 55.0], [548, 622, 11.0], [622, 1366, 120.0], [1366, 1476, 16.0], [1476, 2158, 118.0], [2158, 2177, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 190, 0.0], [190, 548, 0.02017291], [548, 622, 0.0], [622, 1366, 0.00554785], [1366, 1476, 0.0], [1476, 2158, 0.03915663], [2158, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 190, 0.0], [190, 548, 0.0], [548, 622, 0.0], [622, 1366, 0.0], [1366, 1476, 0.0], [1476, 2158, 0.0], [2158, 2177, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 190, 0.04210526], [190, 548, 0.04189944], [548, 622, 0.10810811], [622, 1366, 0.03494624], [1366, 1476, 0.09090909], [1476, 2158, 0.02052786], [2158, 2177, 0.10526316]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2177, 0.18011051]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2177, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2177, 0.2455976]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2177, -103.97049576]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2177, 9.93795605]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2177, -49.24066687]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2177, 18.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov
Network | C. Douglas Lummis: Ruth Benedict's Obituary for Japanese Culture Blogs Clio Blogroll Ira Chernus's MythicAmerica Iwan Morgan Jim Loewen Joshua Brown Post-Soviet Futures Blog Revolutionary Moments Robin Lindley Stephanie Coontz Walid Phares SOURCE: Japan Focus 7-19-07 C. Douglas Lummis: Ruth Benedict's Obituary for Japanese Culture [C. Douglas Lummis is the author of Radical Democracy and is a Japan Focus associate. He taught at Tsuda College.] I first found Ruth Benedict’s The Chrysanthemum and the Sword in the Charles Tuttle Bookstore in Okinawa in 1960. I had just decided to spend some time living in Japan (little suspecting that “some time” would turn out to be a big part of the rest of my life) and I was delighted to discover that Benedict, whose Patterns of Culture I greatly admired, had written this book too. I read it avidly, and for some years was corrupted by the myth of (as Malinowski called it) the “ethnographer’s magic”. I walked around Japan like a miniature Benedict, seeing “patterns” everywhere, and thinking it was wonderfully clever to be able to “analyze” the behavior of the people around me, including even invitations to dialogue and expressions of friendship. I claim no monopoly to this kind of attitude; in those days it was rampant within the community of Westerners in Japan, and especially among the Americans, so many of whom saw themselves not only as miniature Benedicts, but also as miniature MacArthurs (some still do today). After some time I realized that I would never be able to live in a decent relationship with the people of that country unless I could drive this book, and its politely arrogant world view, out of my head. The method I chose was to begin the research that led to the following essay. The original version of “Ruth Benedict’s Obituary for Japan” was serialized in the journal Shiso no Kagaku (Science of Thought) in 1980, and then appeared as part two of my book Uchi Naru Gaikoku (The Abroad Within) (Jiji Tsushinsha, 1981). In English it was published in the form of an annotated textbook for Japanese college students, under the title Rethinking the Chrysanthemum and the Sword (Ikeda Masayuki, ed. Shohakusha, 1982). Looking back on it now, I think this essay can be considered as a fairly early study of what is now called the critique of orientalism, though at the time I wrote it I did not know the term, and was blithely ignorant of Edward Said’s then-recently-published book of that title. At the same time, it can also be seen as an, again fairly early, example of post-colonial studies (early because the term had not yet been coined). (Or if there are those who object to using the word “colonial” in relation to Japan, shall we call it “post-occupational studies?”) But while the essay got some attention in Japan, it has pretty much remained unknown outside the country. In 1996 I was granted a sabbatical leave by Tsuda College where I was teaching then (Thanks, Tsuda College!) and I decided to use it to fill in some of the research gaps in the essay, and to rewrite it in a longer version. I had not, for example, yet had the opportunity to visit Vassar College Special Collections, where the Benedict papers are. When I finally managed to get there, I made two major discoveries. One was Benedict’s “country report” on Germany. Benedict wrote this at about the same time she was doing her research on Japan, but the two works could not be more different. In Germany, Nazism is a recently cobbled together ideology; in Japan, totalitarian militarism is – just Japan. The other discovery was Benedict’s notes taken from her interviews with Robert Hashima, in which the insights that make up the core of The Chrysanthemum and the Sword are to be found. After I found the Hashima notes I mentioned them in an interview with the Asahi Shinbun, and shortly after someone called the newspaper and said, “That’s my uncle! He’s well and living in Tokyo.” And that’s how I was able to meet that remarkable man and do two interviews with him. Even people who utterly disagree with the rest of my argument will, I believe, find in the Hashima notes and interviews much that cannot be ignored by Benedict scholarship in the future. On the basis of this new research I rewrote the essay and published it in Japanese as “Kiku to Katana Saikou – Paato II” (“Rethinking The Chrysanthemum and the Sword – Part II” ) in Kokuritsu Rekishi Minzoku Hakubutsukan Kenkyu Houkoku Dai 91 hen (Bulletin of the National Museum of Japanese History #91, March, 2001). Then I had an offer to publish it in a book of essays on the work of Ruth Benedict and Margaret Mead. I submitted it, but the editors saw fit to publish, not what I sent them, but a badly hacked up version that I saw for the first time when I received the book. (“Ruth Benedict’s Obituary for Japan” in Dolores Janiewsky and Lois Banner, eds., Reading Benedict/Reading Mead: Feminism, Race, and Imperial Visions [Johns Hopkins, 2005]) I advise readers who want to quote from this essay, assign it to students, or use it in any other fashion not to use the version in the Johns Hopkins book, as that could lead to serious misunderstanding, but to use only the version printed here. [CLICK ON THE SOURCE LINK ABOVE TO CONTINUE READING.] Read entire article at Japan Focus Please enable JavaScript to view the comments powered by Disqus.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2622
{"url": "http://hnn.us/article/41144", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hnn.us", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:03:51Z", "digest": "sha1:UNPDWDKGYHEZOQQDVTXCAA23O2DOKMW6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5372, 5372.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5372, 6566.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5372, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5372, 50.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5372, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5372, 255.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5372, 0.40904977]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5372, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5372, 0.06457607]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5372, 0.02462253]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5372, 0.02462253]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5372, 0.02462253]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5372, 0.02462253]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5372, 0.00813008]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5372, 0.01765389]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5372, 0.02044135]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5372, 0.04162896]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5372, 0.15746606]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5372, 0.47135135]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5372, 4.65405405]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5372, 0.00090498]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5372, 5.39624922]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5372, 925.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 75, 0.0], [75, 343, 0.0], [343, 458, 0.0], [458, 1766, 1.0], [1766, 2202, 1.0], [2202, 3750, 1.0], [3750, 4219, 1.0], [4219, 5219, 1.0], [5219, 5273, 0.0], [5273, 5372, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 75, 0.0], [75, 343, 0.0], [343, 458, 0.0], [458, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 2202, 0.0], [2202, 3750, 0.0], [3750, 4219, 0.0], [4219, 5219, 0.0], [5219, 5273, 0.0], [5273, 5372, 1.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 75, 10.0], [75, 343, 36.0], [343, 458, 20.0], [458, 1766, 229.0], [1766, 2202, 70.0], [2202, 3750, 274.0], [3750, 4219, 83.0], [4219, 5219, 178.0], [5219, 5273, 9.0], [5273, 5372, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 75, 0.0], [75, 343, 0.01930502], [343, 458, 0.0], [458, 1766, 0.00312012], [1766, 2202, 0.02863962], [2202, 3750, 0.00265604], [3750, 4219, 0.0], [4219, 5219, 0.01239669], [5219, 5273, 0.0], [5273, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 75, 0.0], [75, 343, 0.0], [343, 458, 0.0], [458, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 2202, 0.0], [2202, 3750, 0.0], [3750, 4219, 0.0], [4219, 5219, 0.0], [5219, 5273, 0.0], [5273, 5372, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 75, 0.12], [75, 343, 0.15298507], [343, 458, 0.08695652], [458, 1766, 0.02675841], [1766, 2202, 0.05963303], [2202, 3750, 0.02971576], [3750, 4219, 0.03198294], [4219, 5219, 0.06], [5219, 5273, 0.77777778], [5273, 5372, 0.07070707]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5372, 0.8930158]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5372, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5372, 0.4083336]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5372, -118.13765024]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5372, 83.73932875]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5372, -157.54886848]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5372, 38.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
hnn.us
Woman at GOP Rally, “I was not calling Ryan out” posted at 8:31 am on October 6, 2012 by Jazz Shaw To hear the Obama campaign tell the story, VP candidate Paul Ryan got a real earful at one of his own events this past week. An Iowa woman chimed in with a question for the candidate which she felt deserved an answer. At the town hall event on Tuesday, [Linda] Morrison cited a contentious exchange between Ryan and Fox News anchor Chris Wallace on Sunday, in which Ryan said it would take too long to explain the details of his tax plan. She asked the vice presidential candidate why he wasn’t more specific, and why he “didn’t answer his question about what are your plans.”
That was too good of an opportunity to pass up for Team Obama, who immediately took to the wires with a snark filled attack. Paul Ryan “can’t attend his own campaign rallies without being called out for failing to provide specifics about what Mitt Romney would do if elected.” Or so went the meme of the day. Unfortunately for Obama, Ms. Morrison not only follows the news, but wasn’t shy about penning a letter to the editor straightening out the events of the day. I am the woman in the Green Bay Packer jacket at Rep. Paul Ryan’s rally in Clinton who asked him the question about specific plans to fix our economy. Needless to say, I was quite shocked to learn the Obama campaign seized my question, putting out the statement “Even Ryan can’t attend his own rally without being called out.” I was not calling Ryan out. I had the opportunity to ask a direct question to Paul Ryan and what I got was a complete direct answer with no spin… Today I am outraged that my question is being misrepresented and used as a political tool against the Romney/Ryan campaign by both media and the Obama camp. The question I asked is what we the citizens want to know: How is the Romney/Ryan plan going to tackle this economy? Paul Ryan answered it with precise clarity. The author makes it clear that she felt her question was pertinent and she was satisfied with the response. In closing, she poses pretty much the same question to President Obama. What will he do to address the country’s fiscal woes if given another four years? As of this posting, no answer has been forthcoming from the White House. Wow… that lady’s a real radical, isn’t she? Must be one of those crazy Tea Party women. Tags: 2012 election, Barack Obama, Mitt Romney, Paul Ryan Related Posts: New Landrieu ad: The Obama administration’s oil and gas policies are just plain wrong GayPatriot » What’s your plan for a second term, Mr. President? Ryan: Economy ‘Going in the Wrong Direction « BGTV MEDIA ONLINE – REAL HISTORY-REAL NEWS-REAL PEOPLE- KNOW THE TRUTH. mr. elitist, did you want to debate the other fact that I brought up ..namely that tax revenues, as a percentage of GDP, have not fluctated in the last 70 years regardless of tax rates? DebraChicago on October 6, 2012 at 12:42 PM Mr. elitist, here are a few 1%’rs to target, oh wait, we can’t, they’re the legislators LMAO go figure … Here are some members of the Top 1% who are or should be targets: Barack Obama: (supports OWS) Annual POTUS salary (not total income): $400,000 Net worth in 2010: $10.5 million The 25 richest members of Congress (in Roll Call’s 2009 annual survey that gives only their estimated net worth. Under federal law, members of Congress must disclose their personal investments and liabilities, but only in broad categories, thereby shielding the exact value of any asset or debt): Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass): $188.37 million Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Ca): $160.05 million Rep. Jane Harman (D-Ca): $152.62 million Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va): $81.50 million Rep. Michael McCaul (R-Texas): $73.75 million Sen. Mark Warner (D- W.Va): $70.19 million Rep. Jared Polis (D-Colo): $56.49 million Rep. Vern Buchanan (R-Fla): 55.47 million Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ): $49.70 million Sen. Diane Feinstein (D-Ca): $46.07 million Sen. Alan Grayson (D-Fla): $31.41 million Rep. Harry Teague (D-NM): $25.52 million Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Ca): $21.74 million (supports OWS) Rep. Rodney Frelinghuysen (R-NY): $19.90 million Sen. James Riche (R-Idaho) : $19.69 million Rep. Gary Miller (R-Ca): $19.37 million Rep. Kenny Marchant (R-Tx): $18.41 million Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn): $18.21 million Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo): $15.73 million Rep. Nita Lowey (D-NY): $14.90 million Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine): $12.52 million Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn): $12.12 million Rep. Denny Rehberg (R-Mont): $10.90 million Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz): $10.52 million Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa): $10.45 million DebraChicago on October 6, 2012 at 12:43 PM more targets..those lousy one percenters… Non-elected political figures: Louis Farrakhan (leader of Nation of Islam): $3 million Ralph Nader: $4.2 million Chelsea Clinton: $5 million Al Sharpton: $5 million Joy Behar: $8 million Ann Coulter: $8.5 million Rev. Jesse Jackson: $10 million (supports OWS) Henry Kissinger: $10 million Eric Holder (U.S. attorney general): $11.5 million Sarah Palin: $12 million (networth); $1 million (annual salary) Hillary Clinton: $21.5 million Arianna Huffington: $35 million (Forbes calls her the 2nd most influential liberal in the media) John Edwards: $55.5 million Al Gore: $100 million (supports OWS) Mitt Romney: $250 million DebraChicago on October 6, 2012 at 12:44 PM oh and mr. idon’tknowchit elitist, you DO acknowledge that tax rates have LITTLE bearing on tax revenues as a percentage of GDP, as history cleary shows they’ve remained static at 18-20% of GDP for the last 70 years or so..right? *winks DebraChicago on October 6, 2012 at 12:19 PM 18-20% is a significant fluctuation in this context — $300 billion. And — cause and effect are not exact, here, but tax receipts went from 19% of GDP before Reagan to a low of 17.3% before the ’87 tax reform, fell during the Bush years (recession) and kicked back up to 20.6 %by 2000, after the clinton years. During Bush, they dropped significantly, to as low as 16.1% in 2004. Break out individual rates and the fluctuation is more significant. From 9.4% in ’81, to 7.9% in 86 to 10.2% in 2000, to 8.4% in 2007. So, the effects are may be “little,” but they’re far from negligible. urban elitist on October 6, 2012 at 12:44 PM let’s not forget these gasbag elitists while we’re at it…from one elitist to another n all *grins The Media: Rachael Maddow: $12.5 million Matt Drudge: $15 million Brian Williams: $30 million (networth); $13 million (annual salary) Keith Olbermann: $35 million (networth); $10 million (annual salary) Sean Hannity: $35 million Diane Sawyer: $40 million (networth); $12 million (annual salary) Katie Couric: $55 million (networth); $15 million (annual salary) Jon Stewart: $80 million (networth); $15 million (annual salary) Glenn Beck: $85 million Anderson Cooper: $100 million (networth); $11 million (annual salary) Barbara Walters: $150 million Rush Limbaugh: $300 million (networth); $40 million (annual salary). Oprah Winfrey: $2.7 Billion Celebrities who’ve spoken out in support of Occupy Wall Street (ain’t hypocrisy and stupidity grand?): Yoko Ono: $500 million Russell Simmons: $325 million Sean Penn: $150 million Rosie O’Donnell: $100 million Roseanne Barr: $80 million Deepak Chopra: $80 million Kanye West: $70 million Alec Baldwin: $65 million Russell Brand (networth: 15 million; combined networth with wife, singer Katy Perry: $63 million) Susan Sarandon: $50 million Tim Robbins: $50 million Michael Moore: $50 million Danny Glover: $15 million Talib Kweli: $14 million Mark Ruffalo: $10 million DebraChicago on October 6, 2012 at 12:46 PM Although, I do have a nice Mansion in Georgetown picked out for my commune if the revolution comes. ;) urban elitist on October 6, 2012 at 12:27 PM so did marie antoinette, she had versailles :)… jimver on October 6, 2012 at 12:46 PM it’s not a “significant fluctuation in this context” it’s a fact junior ; ) DebraChicago on October 6, 2012 at 12:47 PM hahaha, georgetown …hahaha, got your ammo ready too or some lackey gonna cover your asz for ya elitist? If Odumbo is re-elected itR
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2625
{"url": "http://hotair.com/archives/2012/10/06/woman-at-gop-rally-i-was-not-calling-ryan-out/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hotair.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:22:45Z", "digest": "sha1:T2VN6OYIXCMDUEUK6ACUJESTBRJU6JLP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8104, 8104.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8104, 8993.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8104, 100.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8104, 120.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8104, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8104, 330.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8104, 0.22889115]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8104, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8104, 0.06646381]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8104, 0.06646381]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8104, 0.04147982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8104, 0.01921845]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8104, 0.01601537]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8104, 0.02242152]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8104, 0.04018311]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8104, 0.04]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8104, 0.35757884]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8104, 0.50446429]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8104, 4.64583333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8104, 0.00356053]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8104, 5.90425215]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8104, 1344.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 49, 1.0], [49, 99, 0.0], [99, 317, 1.0], [317, 1143, 1.0], [1143, 1470, 1.0], [1470, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1934, 1.0], [1934, 2269, 1.0], [2269, 2357, 1.0], [2357, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2580, 1.0], [2580, 2698, 1.0], [2698, 2884, 1.0], [2884, 3033, 0.0], [3033, 3099, 0.0], [3099, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3177, 0.0], [3177, 3507, 0.0], [3507, 3549, 0.0], [3549, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3632, 0.0], [3632, 3678, 0.0], [3678, 3724, 0.0], [3724, 3767, 0.0], [3767, 3809, 0.0], [3809, 3851, 0.0], [3851, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 3940, 0.0], [3940, 3982, 0.0], [3982, 4023, 0.0], [4023, 4079, 0.0], [4079, 4128, 0.0], [4128, 4172, 0.0], [4172, 4212, 0.0], [4212, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4296, 0.0], [4296, 4341, 0.0], [4341, 4380, 0.0], [4380, 4425, 0.0], [4425, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 4515, 0.0], [4515, 4557, 0.0], [4557, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4684, 0.0], [4684, 4715, 0.0], [4715, 4771, 0.0], [4771, 4797, 0.0], [4797, 4825, 0.0], [4825, 4849, 0.0], [4849, 4871, 0.0], [4871, 4897, 0.0], [4897, 4944, 0.0], [4944, 4973, 0.0], [4973, 5024, 0.0], [5024, 5088, 0.0], [5088, 5119, 0.0], [5119, 5216, 0.0], [5216, 5244, 0.0], [5244, 5281, 0.0], [5281, 5307, 0.0], [5307, 5588, 0.0], [5588, 5632, 0.0], [5632, 6011, 1.0], [6011, 6146, 1.0], [6146, 6216, 1.0], [6216, 6359, 0.0], [6359, 6370, 0.0], [6370, 6400, 0.0], [6400, 6425, 0.0], [6425, 6493, 0.0], [6493, 6562, 0.0], [6562, 6588, 0.0], [6588, 6654, 0.0], [6654, 6720, 0.0], [6720, 6785, 0.0], [6785, 6809, 0.0], [6809, 6879, 0.0], [6879, 6909, 0.0], [6909, 6978, 1.0], [6978, 7109, 0.0], [7109, 7132, 0.0], [7132, 7162, 0.0], [7162, 7186, 0.0], [7186, 7216, 0.0], [7216, 7243, 0.0], [7243, 7270, 0.0], [7270, 7294, 0.0], [7294, 7320, 0.0], [7320, 7418, 0.0], [7418, 7446, 0.0], [7446, 7471, 0.0], [7471, 7498, 0.0], [7498, 7524, 0.0], [7524, 7549, 0.0], [7549, 7575, 0.0], [7575, 7722, 0.0], [7722, 7767, 0.0], [7767, 7815, 0.0], [7815, 7929, 0.0], [7929, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 99, 0.0], [99, 317, 0.0], [317, 1143, 0.0], [1143, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1934, 0.0], [1934, 2269, 0.0], [2269, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2698, 0.0], [2698, 2884, 0.0], [2884, 3033, 0.0], [3033, 3099, 0.0], [3099, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3177, 0.0], [3177, 3507, 0.0], [3507, 3549, 0.0], [3549, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3632, 0.0], [3632, 3678, 0.0], [3678, 3724, 0.0], [3724, 3767, 0.0], [3767, 3809, 0.0], [3809, 3851, 0.0], [3851, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 3940, 0.0], [3940, 3982, 0.0], [3982, 4023, 0.0], [4023, 4079, 0.0], [4079, 4128, 0.0], [4128, 4172, 0.0], [4172, 4212, 0.0], [4212, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4296, 0.0], [4296, 4341, 0.0], [4341, 4380, 0.0], [4380, 4425, 0.0], [4425, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 4515, 0.0], [4515, 4557, 0.0], [4557, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4684, 0.0], [4684, 4715, 0.0], [4715, 4771, 0.0], [4771, 4797, 0.0], [4797, 4825, 0.0], [4825, 4849, 0.0], [4849, 4871, 0.0], [4871, 4897, 0.0], [4897, 4944, 0.0], [4944, 4973, 0.0], [4973, 5024, 0.0], [5024, 5088, 0.0], [5088, 5119, 0.0], [5119, 5216, 0.0], [5216, 5244, 0.0], [5244, 5281, 0.0], [5281, 5307, 0.0], [5307, 5588, 0.0], [5588, 5632, 0.0], [5632, 6011, 0.0], [6011, 6146, 0.0], [6146, 6216, 0.0], [6216, 6359, 0.0], [6359, 6370, 0.0], [6370, 6400, 0.0], [6400, 6425, 0.0], [6425, 6493, 0.0], [6493, 6562, 0.0], [6562, 6588, 0.0], [6588, 6654, 0.0], [6654, 6720, 0.0], [6720, 6785, 0.0], [6785, 6809, 0.0], [6809, 6879, 0.0], [6879, 6909, 0.0], [6909, 6978, 0.0], [6978, 7109, 0.0], [7109, 7132, 0.0], [7132, 7162, 0.0], [7162, 7186, 0.0], [7186, 7216, 0.0], [7216, 7243, 0.0], [7243, 7270, 0.0], [7270, 7294, 0.0], [7294, 7320, 0.0], [7320, 7418, 0.0], [7418, 7446, 0.0], [7446, 7471, 0.0], [7471, 7498, 0.0], [7498, 7524, 0.0], [7524, 7549, 0.0], [7549, 7575, 0.0], [7575, 7722, 0.0], [7722, 7767, 0.0], [7767, 7815, 0.0], [7815, 7929, 0.0], [7929, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 49, 10.0], [49, 99, 11.0], [99, 317, 42.0], [317, 1143, 147.0], [1143, 1470, 59.0], [1470, 1616, 30.0], [1616, 1934, 56.0], [1934, 2269, 59.0], [2269, 2357, 17.0], [2357, 2516, 25.0], [2516, 2580, 11.0], [2580, 2698, 19.0], [2698, 2884, 35.0], [2884, 3033, 28.0], [3033, 3099, 14.0], [3099, 3128, 4.0], [3128, 3177, 7.0], [3177, 3507, 53.0], [3507, 3549, 6.0], [3549, 3591, 6.0], [3591, 3632, 6.0], [3632, 3678, 6.0], [3678, 3724, 6.0], [3724, 3767, 7.0], [3767, 3809, 6.0], [3809, 3851, 6.0], [3851, 3896, 6.0], [3896, 3940, 6.0], [3940, 3982, 6.0], [3982, 4023, 6.0], [4023, 4079, 8.0], [4079, 4128, 6.0], [4128, 4172, 6.0], [4172, 4212, 6.0], [4212, 4255, 6.0], [4255, 4296, 6.0], [4296, 4341, 6.0], [4341, 4380, 6.0], [4380, 4425, 6.0], [4425, 4471, 6.0], [4471, 4515, 6.0], [4515, 4557, 6.0], [4557, 4598, 6.0], [4598, 4684, 13.0], [4684, 4715, 3.0], [4715, 4771, 9.0], [4771, 4797, 4.0], [4797, 4825, 4.0], [4825, 4849, 4.0], [4849, 4871, 4.0], [4871, 4897, 4.0], [4897, 4944, 7.0], [4944, 4973, 4.0], [4973, 5024, 7.0], [5024, 5088, 9.0], [5088, 5119, 4.0], [5119, 5216, 15.0], [5216, 5244, 4.0], [5244, 5281, 6.0], [5281, 5307, 4.0], [5307, 5588, 49.0], [5588, 5632, 8.0], [5632, 6011, 70.0], [6011, 6146, 26.0], [6146, 6216, 12.0], [6216, 6359, 26.0], [6359, 6370, 2.0], [6370, 6400, 4.0], [6400, 6425, 4.0], [6425, 6493, 9.0], [6493, 6562, 9.0], [6562, 6588, 4.0], [6588, 6654, 9.0], [6654, 6720, 9.0], [6720, 6785, 9.0], [6785, 6809, 4.0], [6809, 6879, 9.0], [6879, 6909, 4.0], [6909, 6978, 9.0], [6978, 7109, 19.0], [7109, 7132, 4.0], [7132, 7162, 4.0], [7162, 7186, 4.0], [7186, 7216, 4.0], [7216, 7243, 4.0], [7243, 7270, 4.0], [7270, 7294, 4.0], [7294, 7320, 4.0], [7320, 7418, 14.0], [7418, 7446, 4.0], [7446, 7471, 4.0], [7471, 7498, 4.0], [7498, 7524, 4.0], [7524, 7549, 4.0], [7549, 7575, 4.0], [7575, 7722, 26.0], [7722, 7767, 9.0], [7767, 7815, 8.0], [7815, 7929, 20.0], [7929, 8104, 31.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 99, 0.17021277], [99, 317, 0.0], [317, 1143, 0.0], [1143, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1934, 0.0], [1934, 2269, 0.0], [2269, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2516, 0.02631579], [2516, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2698, 0.0], [2698, 2884, 0.01123596], [2884, 3033, 0.07142857], [3033, 3099, 0.01587302], [3099, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3177, 0.13953488], [3177, 3507, 0.04075235], [3507, 3549, 0.14705882], [3549, 3591, 0.14705882], [3591, 3632, 0.15151515], [3632, 3678, 0.10810811], [3678, 3724, 0.10526316], [3724, 3767, 0.11764706], [3767, 3809, 0.11764706], [3809, 3851, 0.11428571], [3851, 3896, 0.10810811], [3896, 3940, 0.11111111], [3940, 3982, 0.11764706], [3982, 4023, 0.12121212], [4023, 4079, 0.08695652], [4079, 4128, 0.09756098], [4128, 4172, 0.11428571], [4172, 4212, 0.125], [4212, 4255, 0.11428571], [4255, 4296, 0.12121212], [4296, 4341, 0.10810811], [4341, 4380, 0.12903226], [4380, 4425, 0.10810811], [4425, 4471, 0.10526316], [4471, 4515, 0.11111111], [4515, 4557, 0.11764706], [4557, 4598, 0.12121212], [4598, 4684, 0.11111111], [4684, 4715, 0.0], [4715, 4771, 0.01960784], [4771, 4797, 0.09090909], [4797, 4825, 0.04], [4825, 4849, 0.04761905], [4849, 4871, 0.05263158], [4871, 4897, 0.09090909], [4897, 4944, 0.04878049], [4944, 4973, 0.07692308], [4973, 5024, 0.06976744], [5024, 5088, 0.05454545], [5088, 5119, 0.11111111], [5119, 5216, 0.0326087], [5216, 5244, 0.125], [5244, 5281, 0.09375], [5281, 5307, 0.13043478], [5307, 5588, 0.05576208], [5588, 5632, 0.2195122], [5632, 6011, 0.07843137], [6011, 6146, 0.17213115], [6146, 6216, 0.0], [6216, 6359, 0.0647482], [6359, 6370, 0.0], [6370, 6400, 0.11538462], [6400, 6425, 0.09090909], [6425, 6493, 0.06779661], [6493, 6562, 0.06666667], [6562, 6588, 0.08695652], [6588, 6654, 0.07017544], [6654, 6720, 0.07017544], [6720, 6785, 0.07142857], [6785, 6809, 0.0952381], [6809, 6879, 0.08196721], [6879, 6909, 0.11111111], [6909, 6978, 0.08474576], [6978, 7109, 0.01626016], [7109, 7132, 0.15], [7132, 7162, 0.11111111], [7162, 7186, 0.14285714], [7186, 7216, 0.11111111], [7216, 7243, 0.08333333], [7243, 7270, 0.08333333], [7270, 7294, 0.0952381], [7294, 7320, 0.08695652], [7320, 7418, 0.04444444], [7418, 7446, 0.08], [7446, 7471, 0.09090909], [7471, 7498, 0.08333333], [7498, 7524, 0.08695652], [7524, 7549, 0.09090909], [7549, 7575, 0.08695652], [7575, 7722, 0.0647482], [7722, 7767, 0.21428571], [7767, 7815, 0.0], [7815, 7929, 0.08411215], [7929, 8104, 0.05325444]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 99, 0.0], [99, 317, 0.0], [317, 1143, 0.0], [1143, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1616, 0.0], [1616, 1934, 0.0], [1934, 2269, 0.0], [2269, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2698, 0.0], [2698, 2884, 0.0], [2884, 3033, 0.0], [3033, 3099, 0.0], [3099, 3128, 0.0], [3128, 3177, 0.0], [3177, 3507, 0.0], [3507, 3549, 0.0], [3549, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3632, 0.0], [3632, 3678, 0.0], [3678, 3724, 0.0], [3724, 3767, 0.0], [3767, 3809, 0.0], [3809, 3851, 0.0], [3851, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 3940, 0.0], [3940, 3982, 0.0], [3982, 4023, 0.0], [4023, 4079, 0.0], [4079, 4128, 0.0], [4128, 4172, 0.0], [4172, 4212, 0.0], [4212, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4296, 0.0], [4296, 4341, 0.0], [4341, 4380, 0.0], [4380, 4425, 0.0], [4425, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 4515, 0.0], [4515, 4557, 0.0], [4557, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4684, 0.0], [4684, 4715, 0.0], [4715, 4771, 0.0], [4771, 4797, 0.0], [4797, 4825, 0.0], [4825, 4849, 0.0], [4849, 4871, 0.0], [4871, 4897, 0.0], [4897, 4944, 0.0], [4944, 4973, 0.0], [4973, 5024, 0.0], [5024, 5088, 0.0], [5088, 5119, 0.0], [5119, 5216, 0.0], [5216, 5244, 0.0], [5244, 5281, 0.0], [5281, 5307, 0.0], [5307, 5588, 0.0], [5588, 5632, 0.0], [5632, 6011, 0.0], [6011, 6146, 0.0], [6146, 6216, 0.0], [6216, 6359, 0.0], [6359, 6370, 0.0], [6370, 6400, 0.0], [6400, 6425, 0.0], [6425, 6493, 0.0], [6493, 6562, 0.0], [6562, 6588, 0.0], [6588, 6654, 0.0], [6654, 6720, 0.0], [6720, 6785, 0.0], [6785, 6809, 0.0], [6809, 6879, 0.0], [6879, 6909, 0.0], [6909, 6978, 0.0], [6978, 7109, 0.0], [7109, 7132, 0.0], [7132, 7162, 0.0], [7162, 7186, 0.0], [7186, 7216, 0.0], [7216, 7243, 0.0], [7243, 7270, 0.0], [7270, 7294, 0.0], [7294, 7320, 0.0], [7320, 7418, 0.0], [7418, 7446, 0.0], [7446, 7471, 0.0], [7471, 7498, 0.0], [7498, 7524, 0.0], [7524, 7549, 0.0], [7549, 7575, 0.0], [7575, 7722, 0.0], [7722, 7767, 0.0], [7767, 7815, 0.0], [7815, 7929, 0.0], [7929, 8104, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.14285714], [49, 99, 0.06], [99, 317, 0.03669725], [317, 1143, 0.02905569], [1143, 1470, 0.03975535], [1470, 1616, 0.04109589], [1616, 1934, 0.03773585], [1934, 2269, 0.0238806], [2269, 2357, 0.04545455], [2357, 2516, 0.08176101], [2516, 2580, 0.078125], [2580, 2698, 0.51694915], [2698, 2884, 0.02150538], [2884, 3033, 0.06711409], [3033, 3099, 0.03030303], [3099, 3128, 0.17241379], [3128, 3177, 0.12244898], [3177, 3507, 0.02121212], [3507, 3549, 0.11904762], [3549, 3591, 0.11904762], [3591, 3632, 0.12195122], [3632, 3678, 0.13043478], [3678, 3724, 0.13043478], [3724, 3767, 0.13953488], [3767, 3809, 0.11904762], [3809, 3851, 0.11904762], [3851, 3896, 0.13333333], [3896, 3940, 0.11363636], [3940, 3982, 0.11904762], [3982, 4023, 0.14634146], [4023, 4079, 0.14285714], [4079, 4128, 0.12244898], [4128, 4172, 0.11363636], [4172, 4212, 0.125], [4212, 4255, 0.11627907], [4255, 4296, 0.12195122], [4296, 4341, 0.13333333], [4341, 4380, 0.15384615], [4380, 4425, 0.11111111], [4425, 4471, 0.10869565], [4471, 4515, 0.11363636], [4515, 4557, 0.14285714], [4557, 4598, 0.12195122], [4598, 4684, 0.05813953], [4684, 4715, 0.03225806], [4715, 4771, 0.07142857], [4771, 4797, 0.07692308], [4797, 4825, 0.07142857], [4825, 4849, 0.08333333], [4849, 4871, 0.09090909], [4871, 4897, 0.07692308], [4897, 4944, 0.12765957], [4944, 4973, 0.06896552], [4973, 5024, 0.07843137], [5024, 5088, 0.03125], [5088, 5119, 0.06451613], [5119, 5216, 0.03092784], [5216, 5244, 0.07142857], [5244, 5281, 0.13513514], [5281, 5307, 0.07692308], [5307, 5588, 0.06761566], [5588, 5632, 0.11363636], [5632, 6011, 0.02110818], [6011, 6146, 0.01481481], [6146, 6216, 0.01428571], [6216, 6359, 0.02097902], [6359, 6370, 0.18181818], [6370, 6400, 0.06666667], [6400, 6425, 0.08], [6425, 6493, 0.02941176], [6493, 6562, 0.02898551], [6562, 6588, 0.07692308], [6588, 6654, 0.03030303], [6654, 6720, 0.03030303], [6720, 6785, 0.03076923], [6785, 6809, 0.08333333], [6809, 6879, 0.02857143], [6879, 6909, 0.06666667], [6909, 6978, 0.02898551], [6978, 7109, 0.05343511], [7109, 7132, 0.08695652], [7132, 7162, 0.06666667], [7162, 7186, 0.08333333], [7186, 7216, 0.1], [7216, 7243, 0.07407407], [7243, 7270, 0.07407407], [7270, 7294, 0.08333333], [7294, 7320, 0.07692308], [7320, 7418, 0.04081633], [7418, 7446, 0.07142857], [7446, 7471, 0.08], [7471, 7498, 0.07407407], [7498, 7524, 0.07692308], [7524, 7549, 0.08], [7549, 7575, 0.07692308], [7575, 7722, 0.06122449], [7722, 7767, 0.06666667], [7767, 7815, 0.0], [7815, 7929, 0.02631579], [7929, 8104, 0.04571429]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8104, 0.10275096]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8104, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8104, 0.72901261]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8104, -1208.75405983]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8104, -121.81066911]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8104, -451.826285]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8104, 115.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
hotair.com
About nine million pdf files are downloaded through RePEc every year.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2637
{"url": "http://ideas.repec.org/p/dpr/wpaper/0766.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ideas.repec.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:12:10Z", "digest": "sha1:5V47BTKPMKSIAZ6S4GGAUZZXYRXFZ5FY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 69, 69.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 69, 839.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 69, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 69, 49.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 69, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 69, 254.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.33333333]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 69, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 69, 0.08333333]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 69, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 69, 5.27272727]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 69, 2.39789527]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 69, 11.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 69, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 69, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 69, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.05797101]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 69, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 69, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 69, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 69, -6.19867729]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 69, -2.28354306]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 69, -2.63217495]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 69, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
ideas.repec.org
RePEc services are free for all parties as they are run by volunteers.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2638
{"url": "http://ideas.repec.org/p/ins/quaeco/qf04025.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ideas.repec.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:16:27Z", "digest": "sha1:FPJBKXVVT4GCGTWFY5JWDCIKU3ND6CEG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 70, 70.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 70, 868.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 70, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 70, 49.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 70, 1.0]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 70, 87.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 70, 0.5]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 70, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 70, 0.07142857]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 70, 0.92307692]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 70, 4.38461538]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 70, 2.45831133]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 70, 13.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 70, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 70, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 70, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 70, 0.04285714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 70, 0.00011504]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 70, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 70, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 70, -2.48026545]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 70, -0.05809039]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 70, -3.82633405]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 70, 1.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
ideas.repec.org
Best Buy Illustrates the Stupidity of Buybacks by Will Ashworth | September 7, 2012 6:30 am Best Buy (NYSE:BBY[1]) has a bit of a shopping addiction. And it needs to stop. According to The Wall Street Journal‘s CFO Report, Best Buy has repurchased more than 98 million of its shares since April 2010 at a total cost of $3 billion, or roughly $30 a share. At its Sept. 5 closing price of $17.91, it has lost $1.2 billion on its investment. That means to get back to breakeven, its stock must rise in value by 67%. Clearly, Best Buy has squandered shareholder funds at a time when it is fighting for its very survival. BBY demonstrates why share repurchases should be the choice of last resort. We should explore others that are equally stupid, but first, let’s look at just why Best Buy’s share buybacks were such a bad idea: By now we all know that Best Buy’s second-quarter earnings stunk[2], making an adjusted profit of $68 million, or 20 cents per share — a calculation based on 340 million shares. Add back the 98 million shares it repurchased over the past two-and-a-half years, and the per-share profit drops to 16 cents. You could make the case that a 20% drop in the quarterly EPS (beyond the already pitiful report) would exert significant downward pressure on its stock price. On the other hand, you also could argue that if it kept the $3 billion in cash and instead paid out a 75-cent special dividend in each of the last nine quarters, the stock price wouldn’t be nearly as woeful today. If a business can’t figure out what to do with its excess cash, it should give it back to shareholders. While buybacks pretend to do that, dividends actually get the job done — regular or special. Now, onto the others. My first example of stupidity is Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL[3]), which I first wrote about in March when it announced it was giving back $45 billion[4] in cash to shareholders over the next three years. I believe that the dividend yield produced by Apple’s gesture is meaningless to anyone who is a serious income investor because it’s too small to matter and exposes one to an unacceptable level of risk given the reward. Further, assuming its stock price keeps rising (the iPhone 5 is coming out shortly), it’s going to be purchasing its shares at levels approaching $800, which means the buybacks won’t even cover the dilution from management stock options. Unless Apple commits serious money ($100 billion or more) to buybacks to reverse the effect of dilution due to executive compensation, it’s a complete waste. Up next is Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ[5]), which repurchased 262 million shares in fiscal 2011 (October year-end) at an average cost of $38.55 a share. That’s a total return of -55% as of the Sept. 5 closing price of $17.27. HPQ has done a little better in the first six months of fiscal 2012 buying back 43 million shares at $25.58 each; a loss of 32%. In the past five fiscal years, it has repurchased 1.06 billion shares at an average cost of $42.36, for a negative return of 59%. An investment of $45 billion is now worth $18.3 billion. CEO Meg Whitman has been in the job almost a year now, and if the second quarter is any indication, HPQ has definitely taken its foot off the share repurchase pedal. Hindsight is 20/20, but $45 billion invested in its stock today would reduce its share count to zero, and the employees would own the entire company. I realize it’s an implausible scenario; I’m simply illustrating what a colossal waste buybacks often are. One of the ways I evaluate the success or failure of a share repurchase program, in addition to the total return, is to look at the average price paid by a company in relation to the average price of its stock during the period under review. The bigger the discount translates into bigger success. Factset‘s (NYSE:FDS[6]) Buyback Quarterly lists the top 10 stocks based on share repurchase discounts for the trailing 12 months ended March 31, 2012. The stock with the biggest discount is Ecolab (NYSE:ECL[7]) at 59.5%. It bought back its stock at an average price of $32.49 when its average stock price during the 12 months was $54.60. The payback for buying smart was a total return of 24.1%, far superior to the 6.2% return for the S&P 500. Unfortunately, the practice isn’t perfect. The next-best stock in terms of a discount is Eastman Chemical (NYSE:EMN[8]) at 63.3%. Its total return over 12 months was -1.9%. According to Greg Milano, CEO of Fortuna Advisors, “From 2008 through mid 2011, nearly two out of three companies in the S&P 500 had negative buyback effectiveness.” Credit Suisse analyst David Zion released a report June 18[9] that examines the effectiveness of share repurchases and found that between 2004-2011, S&P 500 companies spent $2.7 trillion buying back stock. Only 180 were able to achieve a return higher than a 7% cost of equity (the annual return most investors expect from a stock), and just 98 companies did better than simply using dollar cost averaging. Of the 10 worst performers, it’s no surprise that six were financial companies. The worst performance by a non-bank is Sprint Nextel (NYSE:S[10]), which managed to lose $3 billion over eight years. Its annualized return is -31%. If the CFO was a chief investment officer, he or she would be fired in a heartbeat. (If you get a chance, have a read of Zion’s report[11]. It’s an eye-opener.) Warren Buffett is on record stating that he will buy back Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK.B[12]) stock whenever it is trading at or below 110% of book value. It’s too bad Best Buy management didn’t pay attention to the master, because they could have saved shareholders a whole lot of money and grief. Stupid is as stupid does. As of this writing, Will Ashworth did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities. Endnotes:BBY: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=BBYBest Buy’s second-quarter earnings stunk: http://investorplace.com/2012/08/best-buy-profit-plunges-suspends-guidance/AAPL: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=AAPLgiving back $45 billion: http://investorplace.com/2012/03/why-apples-buyback-plan-misses-the-mark/HPQ: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=HPQFDS: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=FDSECL: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=ECLEMN: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=EMNreleased a report June 18: https://doc.research-and-analytics.csfb.com/docView?sourceid=em&document_id=x454556&serialid=e45HdNbTyfzxqJiuVkQbC5cPZZDE1SdAOSK1XWRCbxs%3dS: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=SZion’s report: https://doc.research-and-analytics.csfb.com/docView?sourceid=em&document_id=x454556&serialid=e45HdNbTyfzxqJiuVkQbC5cPZZDE1SdAOSK1XWRCbxs%3dBRK.B: http://studio-5.financialcontent.com/investplace/quote?Symbol=BRK.B Source URL: http://investorplace.com/2012/09/best-buy-illustrates-the-stupidity-of-buybacks-bby/ Short URL: http://invstplc.com/1fviqjC Copyright ©2014 InvestorPlace Media, LLC. All rights reserved. 700 Indian Springs Drive, Lancaster, PA 17601.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2647
{"url": "http://investorplace.com/2012/09/best-buy-illustrates-the-stupidity-of-buybacks-bby/print", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "investorplace.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:00:01Z", "digest": "sha1:OQQLJOSOZ5SFM5A6K5NENDVECRJ6J2JH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7149, 7149.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7149, 7281.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7149, 21.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7149, 21.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7149, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7149, 325.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7149, 0.30703883]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7149, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7149, 0.01267159]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7149, 0.00844773]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7149, 0.00580781]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7149, 0.00598381]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7149, 0.02973301]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7149, 0.30582524]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7149, 0.47768281]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7149, 5.3960114]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7149, 5.6118534]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7149, 1053.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 92, 0.0], [92, 172, 1.0], [172, 439, 1.0], [439, 513, 1.0], [513, 825, 0.0], [825, 1129, 1.0], [1129, 1699, 1.0], [1699, 1721, 1.0], [1721, 2136, 1.0], [2136, 2532, 1.0], [2532, 3072, 1.0], [3072, 3494, 1.0], [3494, 4237, 1.0], [4237, 4410, 1.0], [4410, 4576, 1.0], [4576, 4983, 1.0], [4983, 5373, 0.0], [5373, 5672, 1.0], [5672, 5698, 1.0], [5698, 5797, 1.0], [5797, 7149, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 92, 0.0], [92, 172, 0.0], [172, 439, 0.0], [439, 513, 0.0], [513, 825, 0.0], [825, 1129, 0.0], [1129, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1721, 0.0], [1721, 2136, 0.0], [2136, 2532, 0.0], [2532, 3072, 0.0], [3072, 3494, 0.0], [3494, 4237, 0.0], [4237, 4410, 0.0], [4410, 4576, 0.0], [4576, 4983, 0.0], [4983, 5373, 0.0], [5373, 5672, 0.0], [5672, 5698, 0.0], [5698, 5797, 0.0], [5797, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 92, 15.0], [92, 172, 15.0], [172, 439, 50.0], [439, 513, 15.0], [513, 825, 54.0], [825, 1129, 52.0], [1129, 1699, 104.0], [1699, 1721, 4.0], [1721, 2136, 71.0], [2136, 2532, 63.0], [2532, 3072, 98.0], [3072, 3494, 73.0], [3494, 4237, 131.0], [4237, 4410, 27.0], [4410, 4576, 27.0], [4576, 4983, 67.0], [4983, 5373, 68.0], [5373, 5672, 51.0], [5672, 5698, 5.0], [5698, 5797, 17.0], [5797, 7149, 46.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 92, 0.09195402], [92, 172, 0.01388889], [172, 439, 0.06299213], [439, 513, 0.02857143], [513, 825, 0.0], [825, 1129, 0.04137931], [1129, 1699, 0.00899281], [1699, 1721, 0.0], [1721, 2136, 0.00992556], [2136, 2532, 0.01827676], [2532, 3072, 0.08928571], [3072, 3494, 0.01459854], [3494, 4237, 0.0464135], [4237, 4410, 0.05095541], [4410, 4576, 0.06875], [4576, 4983, 0.05597964], [4983, 5373, 0.02465753], [5373, 5672, 0.01736111], [5672, 5698, 0.0], [5698, 5797, 0.0], [5797, 7149, 0.05746141]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 92, 0.0], [92, 172, 0.0], [172, 439, 0.0], [439, 513, 0.0], [513, 825, 0.0], [825, 1129, 0.0], [1129, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1721, 0.0], [1721, 2136, 0.0], [2136, 2532, 0.0], [2532, 3072, 0.0], [3072, 3494, 0.0], [3494, 4237, 0.0], [4237, 4410, 0.0], [4410, 4576, 0.0], [4576, 4983, 0.0], [4983, 5373, 0.0], [5373, 5672, 0.0], [5672, 5698, 0.0], [5698, 5797, 0.0], [5797, 7149, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 92, 0.08695652], [92, 172, 0.125], [172, 439, 0.05243446], [439, 513, 0.01351351], [513, 825, 0.02884615], [825, 1129, 0.01315789], [1129, 1699, 0.0122807], [1699, 1721, 0.04545455], [1721, 2136, 0.03855422], [2136, 2532, 0.01010101], [2532, 3072, 0.03333333], [3072, 3494, 0.02606635], [3494, 4237, 0.03633917], [4237, 4410, 0.06936416], [4410, 4576, 0.06626506], [4576, 4983, 0.01965602], [4983, 5373, 0.04358974], [5373, 5672, 0.05016722], [5672, 5698, 0.03846154], [5698, 5797, 0.03030303], [5797, 7149, 0.09467456]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7149, 0.4375211]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7149, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7149, 0.70980406]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7149, -992.48132185]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7149, -144.84069465]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7149, -535.21085696]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7149, 108.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
investorplace.com
Home > IPO Playbook > LinkedIn Can Do No Wrong LinkedIn Can Do No Wrong The company posts another strong earnings report Nov 2, 2012, 11:13 am EDT | By Tom Taulli, InvestorPlace Writer & IPO Playbook Editor While other social IPOs like Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) and Zynga (NASDAQ:ZNGA) have been duds, the much less sexy LinkedIn (NYSE:LNKD) continues to be the winner. The shares are up about 72% year-to-date. Then again, LinkedIn continues to post strong results, as seen with its latest quarterly report. Revenues rose by 81% to $252 million and earnings came to 22 cents a share. The Street consensus was for revenues of $244.6 million and earnings of 11 cents. And LinkedIn has upped its guidance for the full year to between $939 million and $944 million, up from the prior forecast of $915 million to $925 million. The main driver continues to be the hiring solutions business, which allows for high-end recruiting of employees. The division saw revenues almost double to $138.4 million. Revenues from premium subscriptions and marketing solutions climbed by 74% and 60%, respectively. To keep up the momentum, LinkedIn has continued to invest heavily in its product development. The company has launched updates to its mobile apps, redesigned the website and has introduced new features like user endorsements and notifications. These efforts should be helpful in boosting traffic. Keep in mind that there are more than 187 million active users. But it’s worth noting that LinkedIn’s valuation is still rich, coming to about 900 times earnings. In other words, it may be tough for the stock price to tack on more gains, even though the company continues to grow at a rapid clip. Tom Taulli runs the InvestorPlace blog IPOPlaybook, a site dedicated to the hottest news and rumors about initial public offerings. He is also the author of “How to Create the Next Facebook.“ Follow him on Twitter at @ttaulli. As of this writing, he did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities. Article printed from InvestorPlace Media, http://investorplace.com/ipo-playbook/linkedin-can-do-no-wrong/. Buzzworthy IPOsAbout IPO PlaybookBased in Silicon Valley, Tom Taulli is in the heart of IPO land. On a regular basis, he talks with many of the top tech CEOs and founders trying to find the next hot deals and finding out which start-ups are stinkers. A long-time follower of the IPO scene, back in 1999 Tom started one of the first sites in the space called WebIPO. It was a place where investors got research as well as access to deals for the dot-com boom. Tom also wrote the top-selling book, Investing in IPOs. In it, he covers all the aspects of analyzing an IPO, such as reading the prospectus, detecting the risk factors and understanding some of the arcane regulations. But don’t worry — if that process is too intimidating for you, thankfully Tom will do the legwork for you right here in the IPO Playbook blog. Tom recently wrote High-Profit IPO Strategies: Finding Breakout IPOs for Investors and Traders, which recently hit the market. Tom is routinely quoted in the media about upcoming deals with his interviews on CNBC and Bloomberg TV, but he is eager to take your questions too. You can message him on Twitter at @ttaulli. And feel free to weigh in via the comments section on any of his IPO Playbook posts. Follow Us by EmailADVERTISEMENTArchives April 2014 Most Popular1The Best Ways to Buy the Alibaba IPOPoll of the Day ADVERTISEMENTTop Performing IPOs ALLY04/10/1425.00—LQ04/09/1417.00—GRUB04/04/1426.00—IMS04/04/1420.00—KING03/26/1422.50—
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2648
{"url": "http://investorplace.com/ipo-playbook/linkedin-can-do-no-wrong/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "investorplace.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:59:00Z", "digest": "sha1:XILENUD7XCGUM27B5NLN7XBU7D5KXNDR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3566, 3566.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3566, 6318.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3566, 18.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3566, 136.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3566, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3566, 321.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3566, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3566, 0.33110814]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3566, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3566, 0.02863128]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3566, 0.01047486]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3566, 0.00907821]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3566, 0.01047486]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3566, 0.03204272]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3566, 0.22296395]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3566, 0.57118056]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3566, 4.97222222]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3566, 5.30401217]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3566, 576.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 121, 0.0], [121, 207, 0.0], [207, 407, 1.0], [407, 818, 1.0], [818, 1089, 1.0], [1089, 1450, 1.0], [1450, 1683, 1.0], [1683, 1998, 1.0], [1998, 2105, 1.0], [2105, 2356, 1.0], [2356, 2926, 1.0], [2926, 3053, 1.0], [3053, 3330, 1.0], [3330, 3381, 0.0], [3381, 3446, 0.0], [3446, 3479, 0.0], [3479, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 121, 0.0], [121, 207, 0.0], [207, 407, 0.0], [407, 818, 0.0], [818, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1683, 0.0], [1683, 1998, 0.0], [1998, 2105, 0.0], [2105, 2356, 0.0], [2356, 2926, 0.0], [2926, 3053, 0.0], [3053, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3381, 0.0], [3381, 3446, 0.0], [3446, 3479, 0.0], [3479, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 72, 13.0], [72, 121, 7.0], [121, 207, 14.0], [207, 407, 31.0], [407, 818, 72.0], [818, 1089, 39.0], [1089, 1450, 57.0], [1450, 1683, 43.0], [1683, 1998, 54.0], [1998, 2105, 6.0], [2105, 2356, 45.0], [2356, 2926, 103.0], [2926, 3053, 18.0], [3053, 3330, 52.0], [3330, 3381, 6.0], [3381, 3446, 12.0], [3446, 3479, 3.0], [3479, 3566, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 121, 0.0], [121, 207, 0.11688312], [207, 407, 0.01086957], [407, 818, 0.06329114], [818, 1089, 0.03076923], [1089, 1450, 0.00847458], [1450, 1683, 0.01321586], [1683, 1998, 0.0], [1998, 2105, 0.0], [2105, 2356, 0.0], [2356, 2926, 0.00720721], [2926, 3053, 0.0], [3053, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3381, 0.08], [3381, 3446, 0.015625], [3446, 3479, 0.0], [3479, 3566, 0.69444444]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 121, 0.0], [121, 207, 0.0], [207, 407, 0.0], [407, 818, 0.0], [818, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1683, 0.0], [1683, 1998, 0.0], [1998, 2105, 0.0], [2105, 2356, 0.0], [2356, 2926, 0.0], [2926, 3053, 0.0], [3053, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3381, 0.0], [3381, 3446, 0.0], [3446, 3479, 0.0], [3479, 3566, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.23611111], [72, 121, 0.02040816], [121, 207, 0.1744186], [207, 407, 0.175], [407, 818, 0.02189781], [818, 1089, 0.01107011], [1089, 1450, 0.0166205], [1450, 1683, 0.01716738], [1683, 1998, 0.05079365], [1998, 2105, 0.03738318], [2105, 2356, 0.08366534], [2356, 2926, 0.04385965], [2926, 3053, 0.11023622], [3053, 3330, 0.05415162], [3330, 3381, 0.35294118], [3381, 3446, 0.18461538], [3446, 3479, 0.54545455], [3479, 3566, 0.1954023]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3566, 0.18130076]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3566, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3566, 0.66643101]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3566, -243.17068904]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3566, -6.36757237]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3566, -103.72184772]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3566, 40.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
investorplace.com
Egyptian military ousts President Morsi in coup Wednesday, 03 July 2013 14:08 Published in National News CAIRO (AP) - A top adviser to Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi says the country is seeing a military coup. The military today moved to tighten its control of key institutions. It did so with the passing of a deadline it had set for Morsi to meet the demands of protesters calling for him to leave office. Just before the deadline arrived, Morsi vowed again not to step down. And he criticized the military for "taking only one side." Troops backed with armored vehicles have been sent to the heart of Cairo. Meanwhile, a travel ban has been imposed on Morsi and his top allies, ahead of an almost certain push to remove the Islamist president. Soon after the deadline passed, a military helicopter circled over the anti-Morsi crowds in Cairo's central Tahrir square -- which had become a sea of furiously waving Egyptian flags. The crowd chanted for Morsi to "leave." After nightfall, fireworks went off, and green lasers flashed over the crowd. In the main squares of cities nationwide, millions of people turned out, again demanding Morsi's removal. It's the fourth day of the biggest anti-government rallies Egypt has seen -- even bigger than in the uprising that ousted his predecessor, Hosni Mubarak. Earlier today, the head of the army met with a leading reform advocate, Mohammed ElBaradei, along with Egypt's top Muslim cleric and others. A spokesman for an opposition group says they met to discuss a political road map. President Mohammed Morsy military coup Read more... Gov. Nixon vetoes change to sex offender website Wednesday, 03 July 2013 13:12 Published in Local News JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) - Gov. Jay Nixon has vetoed legislation aimed at keeping the names of people who committed offenses as juveniles off Missouri's public sex offender registry. The governor said Wednesday the legislation is too broad and would apply to anyone regardless of the crime that was committed. Nixon says crime victims would have been deprived the chance to be heard before someone's name is removed from the public websites, which are aimed at protecting the public. The vetoed legislation also ultimately would have allowed juveniles to petition the court for removal from the sex offender registry. Tagged under Governor Jay Nixon Read more... Missing infant found; father remains on the loose Wednesday, 03 July 2013 12:11 Published in Local News A ten month old girl is safe and sound after being abducted by her father this morning. Police say around 9AM Bryan Grant kicked in the door of the girl's home and kidnapped the girl. About six hours after an Amber Alert was issued, police found the girl outside the home of one of Grant's friends. Grant remains on the loose. The suspect is identified as: Bryan Grant b/m 1/21/1990 Brown eyes, black hair. The child’s name is Demi Grant, b/f, 11 months of age. child abduction
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2680
{"url": "http://ktrs.com/news/itemlist/user/1197-colinjeffery?start=1989", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ktrs.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:45:09Z", "digest": "sha1:LOTX5VZY4RR2CQUQO5SMLVDLXDEYPUO4"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2935, 2935.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2935, 6521.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2935, 18.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2935, 61.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2935, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2935, 337.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2935, 3.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2935, 0.34812287]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2935, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2935, 0.00848536]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2935, 0.01909207]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2935, 0.02418328]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2935, 0.01535836]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2935, 0.16382253]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2935, 0.56967213]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2935, 4.82991803]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2935, 0.00341297]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2935, 5.22108418]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2935, 488.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 213, 1.0], [213, 540, 0.0], [540, 750, 1.0], [750, 1052, 1.0], [1052, 1312, 1.0], [1312, 1536, 1.0], [1536, 1561, 0.0], [1561, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 1874, 1.0], [1874, 2175, 1.0], [2175, 2322, 0.0], [2322, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2815, 0.0], [2815, 2827, 0.0], [2827, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2865, 1.0], [2865, 2920, 1.0], [2920, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 213, 0.0], [213, 540, 0.0], [540, 750, 0.0], [750, 1052, 0.0], [1052, 1312, 0.0], [1312, 1536, 0.0], [1536, 1561, 0.0], [1561, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 2175, 0.0], [2175, 2322, 0.0], [2322, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2815, 0.0], [2815, 2827, 0.0], [2827, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2865, 0.0], [2865, 2920, 0.0], [2920, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 213, 34.0], [213, 540, 59.0], [540, 750, 37.0], [750, 1052, 47.0], [1052, 1312, 40.0], [1312, 1536, 38.0], [1536, 1561, 3.0], [1561, 1575, 2.0], [1575, 1874, 47.0], [1874, 2175, 50.0], [2175, 2322, 22.0], [2322, 2341, 3.0], [2341, 2815, 85.0], [2815, 2827, 2.0], [2827, 2841, 2.0], [2841, 2865, 4.0], [2865, 2920, 11.0], [2920, 2935, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 213, 0.04878049], [213, 540, 0.0], [540, 750, 0.0], [750, 1052, 0.0], [1052, 1312, 0.0], [1312, 1536, 0.0], [1536, 1561, 0.0], [1561, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 1874, 0.03533569], [1874, 2175, 0.0], [2175, 2322, 0.0], [2322, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2815, 0.02396514], [2815, 2827, 0.0], [2827, 2841, 0.7], [2841, 2865, 0.0], [2865, 2920, 0.04], [2920, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 213, 0.0], [213, 540, 0.0], [540, 750, 0.0], [750, 1052, 0.0], [1052, 1312, 0.0], [1312, 1536, 0.0], [1536, 1561, 0.0], [1561, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 2175, 0.0], [2175, 2322, 0.0], [2322, 2341, 0.0], [2341, 2815, 0.0], [2815, 2827, 0.0], [2827, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2865, 0.0], [2865, 2920, 0.0], [2920, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 213, 0.09389671], [213, 540, 0.01834862], [540, 750, 0.02380952], [750, 1052, 0.02649007], [1052, 1312, 0.02307692], [1312, 1536, 0.03125], [1536, 1561, 0.12], [1561, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 1874, 0.09364548], [1874, 2175, 0.00996678], [2175, 2322, 0.01360544], [2322, 2341, 0.15789474], [2341, 2815, 0.04008439], [2815, 2827, 0.16666667], [2827, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2865, 0.04166667], [2865, 2920, 0.05454545], [2920, 2935, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2935, 0.03098571]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2935, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2935, 0.59951776]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2935, -66.93431499]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2935, 44.07116944]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2935, 3.4159396]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2935, 30.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
ktrs.com
Subscribe to this RSS feed Michael Golde Audit: "Good" rating for MO House, Senate Friday, 22 March 2013 10:15 Published in Local News State Auditor Tom Schweich has released the audits of the Missouri House and the Missouri Senate today. Both bodies of government received a rating of "Good." However, the audit shows the House failed to issue proper documentation after the theft of three laptops and two printers worth about $5,000. The audit also shows the Senate solicited contributions from lobbyists to pay "various questionable costs" including retirement dinners and retirement gifts totaling about $8,500. Read more... Baby murdered in stroller in front of mother Friday, 22 March 2013 08:52 Published in National News The Associated Press BRUNSWICK, Ga. — Police with automatic weapons went door-to-door in a coastal Georgia town searching for suspects after a gunman opened fire on an infant as his mother pushed him in his stroller. The suspects in the Thursday killing of the 13-month-old boy and wounding of his mother are thought to be from 10 to 15 years old, Brunswick Police Chief Tobe Green said. "He said 'I'm going to kill you if you don't give me money,' and I said, 'I swear I don't have any,'" the mother, Sherry West, said in a tearful interview with WAWS-TV of Jacksonville. She said she tried to protect her baby, Antonio, but shots rang out. "I put my arms over my baby and he shoves me and then he shot my baby right in the head," West said. She was recovering from a gunshot wound to her leg after the crime, which happened around 9:15 a.m. "This is obviously a terrible day in Brunswick," Brunswick Mayor Bryan Thompson said. "Please call if you know something. You are complicit in this crime." Antonio's father, Louis Santiago, told the TV station he wishes he could have been there to protect his family. "He was special," Santiago said. "He had the bluest, bluest eyes." Residents described the neighborhood south of downtown as normally quiet, though there have been some property crimes recently. The city is about 80 miles south of Savannah. "This makes me very uneasy," Patricia Buie told The Brunswick News. "Now I am very concerned. It is making me want to move to the mountains." Officers from a SWAT team checked vacant houses as investigators tried to find possible witnesses. The Georgia Department of Natural Resources provided a helicopter to aid the search. Police are offering a $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest and conviction. Copyright The Associated Press Read more... Man beaten in north side home invasion Wednesday, 20 March 2013 09:21 Published in Local News A violent home invasion involving leaves one man injured and five suspects at large in a north St. Louis neighborhood. KMOV TV reports five suspects kicked in the front door of a home on the 5400 block of Claxton just before midnight. Three people were inside the home. Two were able to run out a basement door. A third victim, described as a 52-year-old black male, was hit over the head while he tried to escape. He's being treated. Police say the suspects got away with a flat-screen television and a cell phone. Tagged under North St. Louis home invasion Read more... StartPrev75.576.577.578.579.580.581.5NextEnd Latest News 1
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2681
{"url": "http://ktrs.com/news/local-news/itemlist/user/118-michaelgolde?start=234", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ktrs.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:14:33Z", "digest": "sha1:K7OOB4YFE662OI3HKEYMJ4HD2MIGNGVG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3265, 3265.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3265, 6562.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3265, 21.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3265, 54.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3265, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3265, 308.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3265, 0.33819242]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3265, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3265, 0.01042069]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3265, 0.01003474]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3265, 0.01312235]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3265, 0.02478134]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3265, 0.20845481]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3265, 0.56102004]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3265, 4.71948998]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3265, 0.00437318]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3265, 5.3220967]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3265, 549.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 750, 0.0], [750, 946, 1.0], [946, 1117, 1.0], [1117, 1302, 1.0], [1302, 1371, 1.0], [1371, 1472, 1.0], [1472, 1572, 1.0], [1572, 1728, 0.0], [1728, 1840, 1.0], [1840, 1907, 0.0], [1907, 2081, 1.0], [2081, 2223, 0.0], [2223, 2407, 1.0], [2407, 2497, 1.0], [2497, 2870, 1.0], [2870, 2947, 1.0], [2947, 3164, 0.0], [3164, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3194, 0.0], [3194, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 750, 0.0], [750, 946, 0.0], [946, 1117, 0.0], [1117, 1302, 0.0], [1302, 1371, 0.0], [1371, 1472, 0.0], [1472, 1572, 0.0], [1572, 1728, 0.0], [1728, 1840, 0.0], [1840, 1907, 0.0], [1907, 2081, 0.0], [2081, 2223, 0.0], [2223, 2407, 0.0], [2407, 2497, 0.0], [2497, 2870, 0.0], [2870, 2947, 0.0], [2947, 3164, 0.0], [3164, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3194, 0.0], [3194, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 41, 7.0], [41, 750, 111.0], [750, 946, 33.0], [946, 1117, 31.0], [1117, 1302, 35.0], [1302, 1371, 13.0], [1371, 1472, 23.0], [1472, 1572, 18.0], [1572, 1728, 25.0], [1728, 1840, 19.0], [1840, 1907, 11.0], [1907, 2081, 27.0], [2081, 2223, 26.0], [2223, 2407, 28.0], [2407, 2497, 14.0], [2497, 2870, 64.0], [2870, 2947, 15.0], [2947, 3164, 38.0], [3164, 3180, 3.0], [3180, 3194, 2.0], [3194, 3265, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 750, 0.04093567], [750, 946, 0.0], [946, 1117, 0.03614458], [1117, 1302, 0.0], [1302, 1371, 0.0], [1371, 1472, 0.0], [1472, 1572, 0.03157895], [1572, 1728, 0.0], [1728, 1840, 0.0], [1840, 1907, 0.0], [1907, 2081, 0.01176471], [2081, 2223, 0.0], [2223, 2407, 0.0], [2407, 2497, 0.05813953], [2497, 2870, 0.03846154], [2870, 2947, 0.0], [2947, 3164, 0.00966184], [3164, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3194, 0.0], [3194, 3265, 0.36065574]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 750, 0.0], [750, 946, 0.0], [946, 1117, 0.0], [1117, 1302, 0.0], [1302, 1371, 0.0], [1371, 1472, 0.0], [1472, 1572, 0.0], [1572, 1728, 0.0], [1728, 1840, 0.0], [1840, 1907, 0.0], [1907, 2081, 0.0], [2081, 2223, 0.0], [2223, 2407, 0.0], [2407, 2497, 0.0], [2497, 2870, 0.0], [2870, 2947, 0.0], [2947, 3164, 0.0], [3164, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3194, 0.0], [3194, 3265, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.14634146], [41, 750, 0.0493653], [750, 946, 0.06122449], [946, 1117, 0.04093567], [1117, 1302, 0.07567568], [1302, 1371, 0.02898551], [1371, 1472, 0.01980198], [1472, 1572, 0.01], [1572, 1728, 0.05128205], [1728, 1840, 0.04464286], [1840, 1907, 0.04477612], [1907, 2081, 0.01724138], [2081, 2223, 0.06338028], [2223, 2407, 0.05434783], [2407, 2497, 0.01111111], [2497, 2870, 0.05630027], [2870, 2947, 0.02597403], [2947, 3164, 0.01843318], [3164, 3180, 0.1875], [3180, 3194, 0.0], [3194, 3265, 0.09859155]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3265, 0.35934031]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3265, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3265, 0.85988259]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3265, -44.77291144]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3265, 41.69635168]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3265, -59.61822783]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3265, 46.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
ktrs.com
Study examines usage, outcomes of knee replacement procedures among Medicare patients There has been an increase in total knee arthroplasty (TKA; knee replacement) procedures over the past 20 years that has been driven by both an increase in the number of Medicare enrollees and increase in per capita utilization, according to a study in the September 26 issue of JAMA. There has also been a decrease in hospital length of stay for TKA, but increased hospital readmission rates and increased rates of infectious complications. "Total knee arthroplasty is a common and safe procedure typically performed for relief of symptoms in patients with severe knee arthritis. Available data suggest that approximately 600,000 TKA procedures are performed annually in the United States at a cost of approximately $15,000 per procedure ($9 billion per year in aggregate)," according to background information in the article. Total knee arthroplasty is one of the most common and costly surgical procedures performed in the United States. "Despite the clinical and economic policy importance of TKA, there are few analyses evaluating recent trends over time in use of and outcomes associated with TKA." Peter Cram, M.D., M.B.A., of the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa, and colleagues conducted a study to evaluate trends in primary and revision TKA volume, per capita utilization, and outcomes in the U.S. Medicare population for the time period between 1991 and 2010. The analysis included 3,271,851 patients (age 65 years or older) who underwent primary TKA and 318,563 who underwent revision TKA identified in Medicare Part A data files. The researchers found that the number of primary TKA procedures increased from 93,230 in 1991 to 243,802 in 2010 (an increase of 161.5 percent), while per capita utilization increased 99.2% (from 31.2 procedures per 10,000 Medicare enrollees in 1991 to 62.1 procedures per10,000 in 2010). The number of revision TKA procedures increased from 9,650 in 1991 to 19,871 in 2010 (an increase of 105.9 percent), and per capita utilization increased 59.4 percent (from 3.2 procedures per 10,000 Medicare enrollees in 1991 to 5.1 procedures per 10,000 in 2010). Also during this time period, the prevalence of obesity among patients undergoing primary TKA increased from 4.0 percent to 11.5 percent. The average hospital length of stay (LOS) for primary TKA declined from 7.9 days in 1991-1994 to 3.5 days in 2007-2010, a relative decline of 55.7 percent. All-cause 30-day readmission rates increased from 4.2 percent in 1991-1994 to 5.0 percent in 2007-2010. "Trends in discharge disposition after revision TKA demonstrated a similar pattern to that which was observed for primary TKA, a decline in discharges to home or inpatient rehabilitation and an increase in discharge to skilled care and outpatient rehabilitation," the authors write. The researchers add that for revision TKA, a decrease in hospital LOS was accompanied by an increase in all-cause 30-day readmission from 6.1 percent to 8.9 percent and an increase in readmission for wound infection from 1.4 percent to 3.0 percent. "These figures suggest that growth in primary and revision TKA volume is being driven by both an increase in the number of Medicare enrollees and an increase in per capita arthroplasty utilization," the authors write. "This growth is likely driven by a combination of factors including an expansion in the types of patients considered likely to benefit from TKA, an aging population, and an increasing prevalence of certain conditions that predispose patients to osteoarthritis, most notably obesity." "The growth in TKA should prompt consideration of whether too many (or too few) of these procedures are being performed both in aggregate and among key patient subgroups defined by race, sex, or age." James Slover, M.D., M.S., and Joseph D. Zuckerman, M.D., of the Hospital for Joint Diseases of New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, comment on the findings of this study in an accompanying editorial. "The report by Cram et al characterizes some important epidemiologic aspects of primary and revision knee replacement that have occurred over the past 20 years, including the evolution of increased volume and changes in care patterns, complication, and readmission rates. In an effort to control costs and improve quality of care, the findings provide important information concerning patient demographics associated with primary and revision total knee replacements and complications. In the currently challenging and dynamic health care environment, critical evaluation and systematic data collection about total knee replacements will be needed to optimize outcomes and ensure access to these life-improving procedures." More information: JAMA. 2012;308[12]:1227-1236. JAMA. 2012;308[12]:1266-1268. Journal reference: Journal of the American Medical Association Provided by JAMA and Archives Journals Study finds decrease in length of hospital stay after hip replacement, but increase in readmissions An analysis of data from Medicare beneficiaries who underwent hip replacement or subsequent follow-up corrective surgery between 1991 and 2008 indicates that the length of hospital stay after surgery declined during this ... Aquatic therapy soon after total knee arthroplasty improves outcomes Despite increased use of total hip arthroplasty (THA) and total knee arthroplasty (TKA), there is a notable lack of consensus about optimal postoperative treatment. Aquatic therapy has been shown to have a beneficial effect, ... Total knee replacements increase mobility and motor skills in older patients According to a new study from researchers at Duke University, total knee arthroplasty (TKA) procedures performed in older patients with osteoarthritis of the knee result in long-term, significant improvement of physical functioning ... A sporting chance for active total knee replacement patients Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients may be able to participate in high-impact sports without increasing risk of early implant failure, according to a new study presented today at the 2010 Annual Meeting of the American ... Study identifies patients at increased risk after bilateral knee replacement surgery A new study by researchers at Hospital for Special Surgery has identified patients who are at a higher risk of morbidity and mortality when undergoing knee replacement surgery in both legs at the same time. The study found ...
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2744
{"url": "http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-09-usage-outcomes-knee-procedures-medicare.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "medicalxpress.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:59:25Z", "digest": "sha1:NKTVND6EBF7ANSJYQMSWNPWZKJJWRSOH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6502, 6502.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6502, 10210.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6502, 25.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6502, 115.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6502, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6502, 270.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6502, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6502, 0.30838816]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6502, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6502, 0.02071563]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6502, 0.07834275]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6502, 0.04783427]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6502, 0.03691149]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6502, 0.03691149]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6502, 0.02071563]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6502, 0.01864407]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6502, 0.01581921]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6502, 0.0180791]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6502, 0.03700658]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6502, 0.2]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6502, 0.22203947]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6502, 0.36676798]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6502, 5.37993921]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6502, 0.00411184]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6502, 5.19207367]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6502, 987.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 86, 0.0], [86, 528, 1.0], [528, 1191, 0.0], [1191, 1660, 1.0], [1660, 2612, 1.0], [2612, 2895, 1.0], [2895, 3144, 1.0], [3144, 3646, 0.0], [3646, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4064, 1.0], [4064, 4788, 0.0], [4788, 4836, 1.0], [4836, 4866, 1.0], [4866, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 4968, 0.0], [4968, 5068, 0.0], [5068, 5293, 1.0], [5293, 5362, 0.0], [5362, 5591, 1.0], [5591, 5668, 0.0], [5668, 5904, 1.0], [5904, 5965, 0.0], [5965, 6191, 1.0], [6191, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6502, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 86, 0.0], [86, 528, 0.0], [528, 1191, 0.0], [1191, 1660, 0.0], [1660, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2895, 0.0], [2895, 3144, 0.0], [3144, 3646, 0.0], [3646, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4064, 0.0], [4064, 4788, 0.0], [4788, 4836, 0.0], [4836, 4866, 0.0], [4866, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 4968, 0.0], [4968, 5068, 0.0], [5068, 5293, 0.0], [5293, 5362, 0.0], [5362, 5591, 0.0], [5591, 5668, 0.0], [5668, 5904, 0.0], [5904, 5965, 0.0], [5965, 6191, 0.0], [6191, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6502, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 86, 11.0], [86, 528, 73.0], [528, 1191, 101.0], [1191, 1660, 75.0], [1660, 2612, 151.0], [2612, 2895, 42.0], [2895, 3144, 41.0], [3144, 3646, 77.0], [3646, 3847, 34.0], [3847, 4064, 35.0], [4064, 4788, 101.0], [4788, 4836, 4.0], [4836, 4866, 2.0], [4866, 4929, 8.0], [4929, 4968, 6.0], [4968, 5068, 15.0], [5068, 5293, 32.0], [5293, 5362, 9.0], [5362, 5591, 34.0], [5591, 5668, 11.0], [5668, 5904, 32.0], [5904, 5965, 9.0], [5965, 6191, 35.0], [6191, 6276, 11.0], [6276, 6502, 38.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 86, 0.0], [86, 528, 0.00921659], [528, 1191, 0.01857585], [1191, 1660, 0.05156951], [1660, 2612, 0.16186253], [2612, 2895, 0.0], [2895, 3144, 0.04166667], [3144, 3646, 0.0], [3646, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4064, 0.0], [4064, 4788, 0.00280899], [4788, 4836, 0.43589744], [4836, 4866, 0.77272727], [4866, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 4968, 0.0], [4968, 5068, 0.0], [5068, 5293, 0.03652968], [5293, 5362, 0.0], [5362, 5591, 0.0], [5591, 5668, 0.0], [5668, 5904, 0.0], [5904, 5965, 0.0], [5965, 6191, 0.01843318], [6191, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6502, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 86, 0.0], [86, 528, 0.0], [528, 1191, 0.0], [1191, 1660, 0.0], [1660, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2895, 0.0], [2895, 3144, 0.0], [3144, 3646, 0.0], [3646, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4064, 0.0], [4064, 4788, 0.0], [4788, 4836, 0.0], [4836, 4866, 0.0], [4866, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 4968, 0.0], [4968, 5068, 0.0], [5068, 5293, 0.0], [5293, 5362, 0.0], [5362, 5591, 0.0], [5591, 5668, 0.0], [5668, 5904, 0.0], [5904, 5965, 0.0], [5965, 6191, 0.0], [6191, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6502, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 86, 0.02325581], [86, 528, 0.03167421], [528, 1191, 0.02564103], [1191, 1660, 0.06609808], [1660, 2612, 0.02310924], [2612, 2895, 0.02473498], [2895, 3144, 0.02811245], [3144, 3646, 0.01792829], [3646, 3847, 0.0199005], [3847, 4064, 0.10138249], [4064, 4788, 0.00552486], [4788, 4836, 0.10416667], [4836, 4866, 0.13333333], [4866, 4929, 0.07936508], [4929, 4968, 0.17948718], [4968, 5068, 0.01], [5068, 5293, 0.00888889], [5293, 5362, 0.01449275], [5362, 5591, 0.0349345], [5591, 5668, 0.01298701], [5668, 5904, 0.02542373], [5904, 5965, 0.01639344], [5965, 6191, 0.03097345], [6191, 6276, 0.01176471], [6276, 6502, 0.02212389]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6502, 0.457344]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6502, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6502, 0.31006676]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6502, -427.24927894]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6502, 4.16137118]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6502, 134.66454731]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6502, 66.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
medicalxpress.com
Cerebral malaria: Pinpointing a potential therapeutic target Dendritic cells from human blood are integral parts of the immune system. Credit: David Scharf/Science Faction/Corbis An excessive response of the immune system to malarial infection can lead to serious complications, such as cerebral malaria. While the mechanism causing the onset of cerebral malaria is unclear, immunologists think that contributing factors include cells of the immune system and the inflammation that they cause. Laurent Renia and co-workers at the A*STAR Singapore Immunology Network and collaborators from Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, have now singled out one subtype of immune cells that is key to the onset of this often fatal disease. The researchers used an established mouse model of the disease, called experimental cerebral malaria (ECM). Accumulation of CD8+ T cells, immune cells that destroy infected or damaged cells, is one known contributing factor in this model. Dendritic cells (see image), another type of immune cell, are important in activating certain types of T cells and are also known to be involved in experimental cerebral malaria. "Dendritic cells are essential for the development of the immune response in particular T cells," explains Renia. "These cells express different markers and are present in many tissues like the spleen. It was previously shown that splenic dendritic cells are important for ECM to develop." In the earlier work, dendritic cells were modified so that they could be selectively destroyed. A marker that all dendritic cells express, called CD11c, was targeted with a diphtheria toxin receptor, allowing them to be killed using this toxin. The targeted destruction of dendritic cells prevented experimental cerebral malaria. However, this method did not discriminate between the several subtypes of dendritic cells that express CD11c, so the exact dendritic cell type responsible remained elusive. Renia and his co-workers used a similar approach in this study, but targeted a marker called Clec9A with the diphtheria toxin receptor. Clec9A is expressed by one subtype of dendritic cells only. The subtype, called CD11chighCD8+, is a candidate in experimental cerebral malaria because its cells are involved in activating CD8+ T cells. Destroying the CD11chighCD8+ cells provided mice with complete protection from experimental cerebral malaria. Renia and co-workers also showed that without these cells, fewer CD8+ T cells were activated in the spleen and fewer were found in the brain. "Our findings show that these dendritic cells are essential to CD8+ T cell development and thus to experimental cerebral malaria," says Renia. Although this work was done in an artificial model of the disease in mice, Renia notes that it provides a starting point in overcoming the disease in people. More information: Piva, L., et al. Clec9A+ dendritic cells mediate the development of experimental cerebral malaria. The Journal of Immunology 189, 1128–1132 (2012). www.jimmunol.org/cgi/doi/10.4049/jimmunol.1201171 Journal reference: Journal of Immunology Discovery of immune cells that protect against multiple sclerosis offers hope for new treatment In multiple sclerosis, the immune system attacks nerves in the brain and spinal cord, causing movement problems, muscle weakness and loss of vision. Immune cells called dendritic cells, which were previously thought to contribute ... How excess alcohol depresses immune function Alcoholism suppresses the immune system, resulting in a high risk of serious, and even life-threatening infections. A new study shows that this effect stems largely from alcohol’s toxicity to immune system cells called ... Dendritic cells as a new player in arteries and heart valves (PhysOrg.com) -- In 1973, Ralph M. Steinman launched a new scientific discipline when he published his discovery of the dendritic cell, an odd-shaped player in the immune system. Since then, dendritic cells have proved to ... Breakthrough in malaria research looks to body's immune cells Groundbreaking research from the Queensland Institute of Medical Research is set to pave the way for the development of new malaria drugs and vaccines. Skin sentry cells promote distinct immune responses A new study reveals that just as different soldiers in the field have different jobs, subsets of a type of immune cell that polices the barriers of the body can promote unique and opposite immune responses against the same ... FDA OKs Merck tablet to reduce grass allergies Merck & Co. says the Food and Drug Administration has approved its new tablet for grass allergies, Grastek, for patients five to 65 years old. Taking the sting out of insect-sting allergies (Medical Xpress)—Certain people with a history of systemic allergic reactions to insect stings are likely to benefit from immunotherapy to prevent life-threatening anaphylaxis and should, at the very least, ... Apoptosis is used by cells that are changed by disease or are simply not needed any longer to eliminate themselves before they become a hazard to the body—on a cellular level, death is part of life. Disruption ... Enzyme revealed as promising target to treat asthma and cancer In experiments with mice, Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center scientists have identified an enzyme involved in the regulation of immune system T cells that could be a useful target in treating asthma and boosting the effects ... Researchers find that influenza has an Achilles' heel Flu epidemics cause up to half a million deaths worldwide each year, and emerging strains continually threaten to spread to humans and cause even deadlier pandemics. A study published by Cell Press on April 10 in the journal ... Video: Air moisture making allergies worse indoors and outdoors As the snowy winter of 2014 winds down, Loyola allergy specialist Dr. Joseph Leija tells WJOL radio that the Midwest will likely see high counts for mold and pollen this year. Allergy symptoms seem like they're at their the ...
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2745
{"url": "http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-01-cerebral-malaria-potential-therapeutic.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "medicalxpress.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:02:01Z", "digest": "sha1:TS7DRNUOWTKHQCZAXXWZVXZEIYKMUD4Q"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6001, 6001.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6001, 8057.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6001, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6001, 112.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6001, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6001, 335.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6001, 0.3463324]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6001, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6001, 0.03987792]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6001, 0.03845371]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6001, 0.0103764]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6001, 0.02135562]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6001, 0.29032258]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6001, 0.13556175]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6001, 0.46564885]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6001, 5.35986914]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6001, 0.00835655]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6001, 5.37375588]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6001, 917.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 179, 0.0], [179, 737, 1.0], [737, 1155, 1.0], [1155, 1445, 0.0], [1445, 1948, 1.0], [1948, 2286, 1.0], [2286, 2681, 1.0], [2681, 2839, 1.0], [2839, 3055, 0.0], [3055, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3426, 1.0], [3426, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3694, 1.0], [3694, 3755, 0.0], [3755, 3981, 1.0], [3981, 4043, 0.0], [4043, 4247, 0.0], [4247, 4474, 1.0], [4474, 4521, 0.0], [4521, 4664, 1.0], [4664, 4711, 0.0], [4711, 4922, 1.0], [4922, 5136, 1.0], [5136, 5199, 0.0], [5199, 5427, 1.0], [5427, 5481, 0.0], [5481, 5710, 1.0], [5710, 5774, 0.0], [5774, 6001, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 179, 0.0], [179, 737, 0.0], [737, 1155, 0.0], [1155, 1445, 0.0], [1445, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 2286, 0.0], [2286, 2681, 0.0], [2681, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 3055, 0.0], [3055, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3426, 0.0], [3426, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3694, 0.0], [3694, 3755, 0.0], [3755, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 4043, 0.0], [4043, 4247, 0.0], [4247, 4474, 0.0], [4474, 4521, 0.0], [4521, 4664, 0.0], [4664, 4711, 0.0], [4711, 4922, 0.0], [4922, 5136, 0.0], [5136, 5199, 0.0], [5199, 5427, 0.0], [5427, 5481, 0.0], [5481, 5710, 0.0], [5710, 5774, 0.0], [5774, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 7.0], [61, 179, 16.0], [179, 737, 84.0], [737, 1155, 65.0], [1155, 1445, 45.0], [1445, 1948, 74.0], [1948, 2286, 53.0], [2286, 2681, 60.0], [2681, 2839, 28.0], [2839, 3055, 24.0], [3055, 3096, 5.0], [3096, 3192, 14.0], [3192, 3426, 34.0], [3426, 3471, 6.0], [3471, 3694, 33.0], [3694, 3755, 11.0], [3755, 3981, 34.0], [3981, 4043, 9.0], [4043, 4247, 31.0], [4247, 4474, 39.0], [4474, 4521, 8.0], [4521, 4664, 24.0], [4664, 4711, 7.0], [4711, 4922, 29.0], [4922, 5136, 37.0], [5136, 5199, 10.0], [5199, 5427, 36.0], [5427, 5481, 8.0], [5481, 5710, 38.0], [5710, 5774, 9.0], [5774, 6001, 39.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 179, 0.0], [179, 737, 0.0], [737, 1155, 0.00247525], [1155, 1445, 0.0], [1445, 1948, 0.00813008], [1948, 2286, 0.01829268], [2286, 2681, 0.01305483], [2681, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 3055, 0.14795918], [3055, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3426, 0.0], [3426, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3694, 0.0], [3694, 3755, 0.0], [3755, 3981, 0.01913876], [3981, 4043, 0.0], [4043, 4247, 0.0], [4247, 4474, 0.0], [4474, 4521, 0.0], [4521, 4664, 0.01470588], [4664, 4711, 0.0], [4711, 4922, 0.0], [4922, 5136, 0.0], [5136, 5199, 0.0], [5199, 5427, 0.0], [5427, 5481, 0.0], [5481, 5710, 0.00900901], [5710, 5774, 0.0], [5774, 6001, 0.01826484]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 179, 0.0], [179, 737, 0.0], [737, 1155, 0.0], [1155, 1445, 0.0], [1445, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 2286, 0.0], [2286, 2681, 0.0], [2681, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 3055, 0.0], [3055, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3426, 0.0], [3426, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3694, 0.0], [3694, 3755, 0.0], [3755, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 4043, 0.0], [4043, 4247, 0.0], [4247, 4474, 0.0], [4474, 4521, 0.0], [4521, 4664, 0.0], [4664, 4711, 0.0], [4711, 4922, 0.0], [4922, 5136, 0.0], [5136, 5199, 0.0], [5199, 5427, 0.0], [5427, 5481, 0.0], [5481, 5710, 0.0], [5710, 5774, 0.0], [5774, 6001, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.03278689], [61, 179, 0.05932203], [179, 737, 0.02867384], [737, 1155, 0.02392344], [1155, 1445, 0.02758621], [1445, 1948, 0.01590457], [1948, 2286, 0.03846154], [2286, 2681, 0.03544304], [2681, 2839, 0.01265823], [2839, 3055, 0.03703704], [3055, 3096, 0.07317073], [3096, 3192, 0.01041667], [3192, 3426, 0.00854701], [3426, 3471, 0.02222222], [3471, 3694, 0.00896861], [3694, 3755, 0.01639344], [3755, 3981, 0.03097345], [3981, 4043, 0.01612903], [4043, 4247, 0.02941176], [4247, 4474, 0.00440529], [4474, 4521, 0.12765957], [4521, 4664, 0.04195804], [4664, 4711, 0.0212766], [4711, 4922, 0.01421801], [4922, 5136, 0.00934579], [5136, 5199, 0.01587302], [5199, 5427, 0.03070175], [5427, 5481, 0.03703704], [5481, 5710, 0.02183406], [5710, 5774, 0.03125], [5774, 6001, 0.04845815]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6001, 0.31776857]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6001, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6001, 0.35634345]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6001, -287.10714117]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6001, 13.30506368]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6001, 23.75834405]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6001, 50.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
medicalxpress.com
Bacterial toxin a potential trigger for multiple sclerosis Researchers from Weill Cornell Medical College have added to the growing body of evidence that multiple sclerosis may be triggered by a toxin produced by common foodborne bacteria. The presented their research at the 2014 ASM Biodefense and Emerging Diseases Research Meeting. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory disease of the central nervous system characterized by blood brain (BBB) permeability and demyelination, a process in which the insulating myelin sheaths of neurons are damaged. The disease is thought to be triggered in a genetically susceptible individual by a combination of one or more environmental factors. The environmental trigger of MS, however, is still unknown. According to the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, the condition affects approximately 400,000 Americans and is, with the exception of trauma, the most frequent cause of neurological disability beginning in early to middle adulthood. "We provide evidence that supports epsilon toxin's ability to cause BBB permeability and show that epsilon toxin kills the brain's myelin producing cells, oligodendrocytes; the same cells that die in MS lesions," says Jennifer Linden of Weill Cornell Medical College, who presented the research. "We also show that epsilon toxin targets other cells types associated with MS inflammation such as the retinal vascular and meningeal cells. Epsilon toxin may be responsible for triggering MS." Epsilon toxin is produced by certain strains of Clostridium perfringens, a spore-forming bacterium that is one of the most common causes of foodborne illness in the United States. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that non-epsilon toxin producing C. perfringens strains cause nearly a million cases of foodborne illness each year. Previous studies have suggested that C. perfringens, and in particular epsilon toxin, may play a role in triggering MS. Late last year Linden and her colleagues discovered C. perfringens type B (a strain that is not known to infect humans and produces the epsilon toxin) in a 21-year-old woman who was experiencing a flare-up of her MS. To further test their hypothesis Linden and her colleagues studied the behavior of the toxin in mice, specifically which cells it targeted. They discovered that the toxin did target the brain cells associated with MS pathology. But that was not all they found. "Originally, we only thought that epsilon toxin would target the brain endothelium cells and oligodendrocytes; we just happened to notice that it also bound to and killed meningeal cells. This was exciting because it provides a possible explanation for meningeal inflammation and subpial cortical lesions exclusively observed in MS patients, but not fully understood," says Linden. They also tested samples of local foods for the presence of C. perfringens and the toxin gene. Of the 37 food samples, 13.5% were positive for bacteria and 2.7% were positive for the epsilon toxin gene. Linden says these findings are important, because if it can be confirmed that epsilon toxin is indeed a trigger of MS, development of a neutralizing antibody or vaccine directed against epsilon toxin might stop the progression of the disease or prevent it from even developing. Explore further: Toxin-emitting bacteria being evaluated as a potential multiple sclerosis trigger Provided by American Society for Microbiology Toxin-emitting bacteria being evaluated as a potential multiple sclerosis trigger A research team from Weill Cornell Medical College and The Rockefeller University has identified a bacterium it believes may trigger multiple sclerosis (MS), a chronic, debilitating disorder that damages myelin forming cells ... Engineered anti-toxin antibodies improve efficacy The effectiveness of toxin-neutralizing antibodies is considered to be mediated through the interaction of the variable region of the antibody and the toxin; however, recent studies suggest that the constant region (Fc) of ... Scientists describe how anthrax toxins cause illness, death Researchers at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, both part of the National Institutes of Health, have identified the cells in two distinct ... Botulinum toxin a shot in the arm for preventing MS tremor: research Botulinum toxin may help prevent shaking or tremor in the arms and hands of people with multiple sclerosis (MS), according to new research published in the July 3, 2012, print issue of Neurology. New cause identified for necrotic enteritis in chicken Researchers from Monash University and CSIRO Livestock Industries have demonstrated for the first time that alpha-toxin protein, long thought to be required for necrotic enteritis to develop, is not the main cause of the ...
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2746
{"url": "http://medicalxpress.com/news/2014-01-bacterial-toxin-potential-trigger-multiple.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "medicalxpress.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:39:52Z", "digest": "sha1:7YDJWPLEUKJMY5WYZTZYZ5BXO35ZWVRQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4861, 4861.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4861, 8365.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4861, 21.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4861, 115.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4861, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4861, 244.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4861, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4861, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4861, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4861, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4861, 0.36533958]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4861, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4861, 0.03543798]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4861, 0.05041178]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4861, 0.03543798]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4861, 0.03543798]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4861, 0.03543798]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4861, 0.03543798]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4861, 0.02994759]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4861, 0.01597205]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4861, 0.01946593]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4861, 0.03044496]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4861, 0.19047619]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4861, 0.13114754]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4861, 0.44911805]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4861, 5.43690638]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4861, 0.00468384]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4861, 5.18848015]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4861, 737.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 336, 1.0], [336, 988, 1.0], [988, 1478, 0.0], [1478, 1837, 1.0], [1837, 2314, 1.0], [2314, 2435, 1.0], [2435, 2817, 1.0], [2817, 3020, 1.0], [3020, 3298, 1.0], [3298, 3443, 0.0], [3443, 3525, 0.0], [3525, 3754, 1.0], [3754, 3804, 0.0], [3804, 4031, 1.0], [4031, 4091, 0.0], [4091, 4317, 1.0], [4317, 4386, 0.0], [4386, 4582, 1.0], [4582, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4861, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 336, 0.0], [336, 988, 0.0], [988, 1478, 0.0], [1478, 1837, 0.0], [1837, 2314, 0.0], [2314, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2817, 0.0], [2817, 3020, 0.0], [3020, 3298, 0.0], [3298, 3443, 0.0], [3443, 3525, 0.0], [3525, 3754, 0.0], [3754, 3804, 0.0], [3804, 4031, 0.0], [4031, 4091, 0.0], [4091, 4317, 0.0], [4317, 4386, 0.0], [4386, 4582, 0.0], [4582, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4861, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 59, 8.0], [59, 336, 42.0], [336, 988, 95.0], [988, 1478, 74.0], [1478, 1837, 54.0], [1837, 2314, 79.0], [2314, 2435, 21.0], [2435, 2817, 56.0], [2817, 3020, 36.0], [3020, 3298, 45.0], [3298, 3443, 18.0], [3443, 3525, 10.0], [3525, 3754, 32.0], [3754, 3804, 5.0], [3804, 4031, 33.0], [4031, 4091, 8.0], [4091, 4317, 34.0], [4317, 4386, 12.0], [4386, 4582, 33.0], [4582, 4637, 8.0], [4637, 4861, 34.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 336, 0.01459854], [336, 988, 0.00943396], [988, 1478, 0.0], [1478, 1837, 0.0], [1837, 2314, 0.00431965], [2314, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2817, 0.0], [2817, 3020, 0.03608247], [3020, 3298, 0.0], [3298, 3443, 0.0], [3443, 3525, 0.0], [3525, 3754, 0.0], [3754, 3804, 0.0], [3804, 4031, 0.0], [4031, 4091, 0.0], [4091, 4317, 0.0], [4317, 4386, 0.0], [4386, 4582, 0.02645503], [4582, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4861, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 336, 0.0], [336, 988, 0.0], [988, 1478, 0.0], [1478, 1837, 0.0], [1837, 2314, 0.0], [2314, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2817, 0.0], [2817, 3020, 0.0], [3020, 3298, 0.0], [3298, 3443, 0.0], [3443, 3525, 0.0], [3525, 3754, 0.0], [3754, 3804, 0.0], [3804, 4031, 0.0], [4031, 4091, 0.0], [4091, 4317, 0.0], [4317, 4386, 0.0], [4386, 4582, 0.0], [4582, 4637, 0.0], [4637, 4861, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.01694915], [59, 336, 0.05054152], [336, 988, 0.02453988], [988, 1478, 0.03673469], [1478, 1837, 0.03342618], [1837, 2314, 0.02515723], [2314, 2435, 0.03305785], [2435, 2817, 0.01308901], [2817, 3020, 0.01477833], [3020, 3298, 0.01079137], [3298, 3443, 0.04137931], [3443, 3525, 0.01219512], [3525, 3754, 0.04366812], [3754, 3804, 0.02], [3804, 4031, 0.00881057], [4031, 4091, 0.01666667], [4091, 4317, 0.0840708], [4317, 4386, 0.04347826], [4386, 4582, 0.0255102], [4582, 4637, 0.01818182], [4637, 4861, 0.04464286]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4861, 0.87472075]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4861, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4861, 0.61971796]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4861, -142.74274838]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4861, 39.39144533]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4861, 53.73390446]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4861, 34.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
medicalxpress.com
After chest radiation, girls at greater risk for early breast cancer: study June 4th, 2012 in Cancer / Even those childhood cancer survivors who got low doses should be screened yearly, researchers say. Even those childhood cancer survivors who got low doses should be screened yearly, researchers say. (HealthDay) -- Girls who receive radiation to the chest to treat childhood cancer, even those getting lower doses, have a high risk of developing breast cancer at a young age, according to a new study. Researchers from Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City said the risk posed by radiation may be as great as that of the BRCA1/2 mutation. Previously, it was thought that only moderate to high doses of radiation raised breast cancer risk, but the new research showed that even those who got low doses face an increased risk and may warrant early screening for the disease. "While radiation doses have decreased and techniques have improved, radiation is still an essential part of therapy for many childhood cancers," said the study's lead author, Chaya Moskowitz, an associate member and associate attending biostatistician at the cancer center, in a news release from the American Society of Clinical Oncology. "The goal is to maximize the cure rates for childhood cancer while minimizing future health problems," Moskowitz said. The researchers examined information on 1,200 women in the Childhood Cancer Survivor Study and 4,570 women who are first-degree relatives of participants in the Women's Environmental Cancer and Radiation Epidemiology Study, which involved women diagnosed with breast cancer who survived at least one year after diagnosis. Among the childhood cancer survivors, 24 percent were diagnosed with breast cancer by the time they were 50 years old. Moreover, 30 percent who survived Hodgkin's lymphoma developed breast cancer. In comparison, the incidence of breast cancer by age 50 was 31 percent among the carriers of a BRCA1 mutation. The researchers said the roughly 50,000 women in the United States who were treated with higher doses of radiation when they were younger should get an annual mammogram and breast MRI either by the time they are 25 years old or eight years after their radiation therapy. Another 7,000 to 9,000 women received lower-dose radiation to treat childhood cancer, the researchers said. "Our results suggest that young women treated with lower doses of radiation who are not currently being screened also have an elevated risk of breast cancer and might benefit from a similar screening strategy," Moskowitz added. Treatment with a lower dose of chest radiation reduced the incidence of breast cancer to 7 percent by the age of 40 compared to 12 percent for the women treated with higher doses of chest radiation, the researchers found. The study was scheduled for presentation Monday at the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago. Data and conclusions presented at medical meetings should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal. More information: The U.S. National Cancer Institute provides more information on breast cancer risk. Copyright © 2012 HealthDay. All rights reserved. "After chest radiation, girls at greater risk for early breast cancer: study." June 4th, 2012. http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-06-chest-girls-greater-early-breast.html
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2747
{"url": "http://medicalxpress.com/print258019931.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "medicalxpress.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:09:53Z", "digest": "sha1:UVZ56ZUBL5PSGHP3CBCK2QSYGPNXE6RP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3396, 3396.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3396, 3474.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3396, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3396, 10.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3396, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3396, 212.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3396, 0.32805071]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3396, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3396, 0.11214953]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3396, 0.17397556]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3396, 0.13803019]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3396, 0.11214953]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3396, 0.11214953]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3396, 0.11214953]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3396, 0.04744788]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3396, 0.02588066]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3396, 0.01509705]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3396, 0.00792393]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3396, 0.17274168]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3396, 0.42829828]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3396, 5.31931166]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3396, 4.91776913]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3396, 523.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 203, 1.0], [203, 894, 1.0], [894, 1353, 1.0], [1353, 1675, 1.0], [1675, 1983, 1.0], [1983, 2590, 1.0], [2590, 2812, 1.0], [2812, 2939, 1.0], [2939, 3177, 1.0], [3177, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 203, 0.0], [203, 894, 0.0], [894, 1353, 0.0], [1353, 1675, 0.0], [1675, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 2590, 0.0], [2590, 2812, 0.0], [2812, 2939, 0.0], [2939, 3177, 0.0], [3177, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 203, 32.0], [203, 894, 115.0], [894, 1353, 68.0], [1353, 1675, 46.0], [1675, 1983, 50.0], [1983, 2590, 98.0], [2590, 2812, 39.0], [2812, 2939, 20.0], [2939, 3177, 32.0], [3177, 3396, 23.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 203, 0.02564103], [203, 894, 0.00297177], [894, 1353, 0.0], [1353, 1675, 0.02539683], [1675, 1983, 0.03666667], [1983, 2590, 0.02521008], [2590, 2812, 0.02283105], [2812, 2939, 0.0], [2939, 3177, 0.0], [3177, 3396, 0.07614213]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 203, 0.0], [203, 894, 0.0], [894, 1353, 0.0], [1353, 1675, 0.0], [1675, 1983, 0.0], [1983, 2590, 0.0], [2590, 2812, 0.0], [2812, 2939, 0.0], [2939, 3177, 0.0], [3177, 3396, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 203, 0.01970443], [203, 894, 0.0260492], [894, 1353, 0.01960784], [1353, 1675, 0.03416149], [1675, 1983, 0.02597403], [1983, 2590, 0.01482702], [2590, 2812, 0.0045045], [2812, 2939, 0.05511811], [2939, 3177, 0.03361345], [3177, 3396, 0.02739726]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3396, 0.13555998]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3396, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3396, 0.26876312]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3396, -124.22734374]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3396, 29.54403179]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3396, 10.18901406]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3396, 27.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
medicalxpress.com
inflammatory agent News tagged with inflammatory agent Blueberries each day may keep the doctor away (Medical Xpress)—Eating 2 cups of wild blueberries a day for two months can reduce chronic inflammation, improve metabolism of fat and lower LDL cholesterol and triglycerides, according to research by a ... | Arthritis & Rheumatism Long-term apremilast demonstrates continued efficacy in patients with psoriatic arthritis New data presented today at EULAR 2013, the Annual Congress of the European League Against Rheumatism show that apremilast administered to patients with psoriatic arthritis continues to demonstrate meaningful clinical responses ... Analysing the benefits of seaweed for SMEs The health benefits of sea vegetables such as seaweed have been well documented by nutrition experts. Traditionally, those eating seaweed-based diets have shown fewer instances of obesity, diabetes, Alzheimer's ... Inflammatory disorders Key pathway to stop dangerous, out-of-control inflammation discovered A potential new strategy to developing new drugs to control inflammation without serious side effects has been found by Georgia State University researchers and international colleagues. Preclinical muscular dystrophy data shows promise Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute researchers have found that an experimental compound may help stem the debilitating effects of muscular dystrophy by restoring normal blood flow to muscles affected by the genetic disorder. Study adds to efforts to find more effective anti-inflammatory drugs Researchers have discovered a previously unknown function for a protein that could add to the expanding arsenal of potential new drugs for battling inflammation and tissue fibrosis in a number of disease processes. Study examines risk of heart attack associated with various psoriasis treatments Use of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors for treatment of psoriasis is associated with a significantly reduced risk for heart attack (myocardial infarction) compared to other forms of treatment, according to a report ... Standard radiation therapy dose provides pain relief for painful heel spurs Patients with plantar fasciitis (painful bone heel spur) experience significantly less pain and improved quality of life following a standard dose of external beam radiation therapy, a common cancer treatment similar to receiving ... Shingles vaccine among patients with psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis not linked with increased risk of shingles Although some have suggested that patients receiving medication for immune-mediated diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis or psoriasis may be at increased risk of herpes zoster (HZ; shingles) shortly after receipt of the ... Asbestos workers at significantly increased risk of heart disease/strokes Workers exposed to asbestos as part of their job are at significantly greater risk of heart disease and stroke than the general population, finds research published online in Occupational and Environmental Medicine. Inflammatory mediator promotes colorectal cancer by stifling protective genes Chronic inflammation combines with DNA methylation, a process that shuts down cancer-fighting genes, to promote development of colorectal cancer, scientists at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center report today ... Probiotics effective in combating antibiotic-associated diarrhea In four different studies presented at the American College of Gastroenterology's (ACG) 76th Annual Scientific meeting in Washington, DC, researchers explored the effectiveness of probiotics for antibiotic-associated diarrhea; ... Biological agents for rheumatoid arthritis associated with increased skin cancer risk Biological agents used to treat rheumatoid arthritis seem to be associated with an increased risk of skin cancer, indicates a systematic review of published research in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2748
{"url": "http://medicalxpress.com/tags/inflammatory+agent/sort/date/all/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "medicalxpress.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:32:49Z", "digest": "sha1:TMTMRN67G33SIL5MTDDETV63PNROVCDR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3883, 3883.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3883, 5839.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3883, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3883, 123.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3883, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3883, 280.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3883, 0.30756579]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3883, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3883, 0.01102941]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3883, 0.01838235]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3883, 0.01838235]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3883, 0.01480263]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3883, 0.47058824]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3883, 0.10197368]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3883, 0.56179775]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3883, 6.11235955]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3883, 0.01315789]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3883, 5.29303794]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3883, 534.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 55, 0.0], [55, 308, 1.0], [308, 333, 0.0], [333, 655, 1.0], [655, 913, 1.0], [913, 936, 0.0], [936, 1193, 1.0], [1193, 1462, 1.0], [1462, 1746, 1.0], [1746, 2053, 1.0], [2053, 2363, 1.0], [2363, 2700, 1.0], [2700, 2990, 1.0], [2990, 3295, 1.0], [3295, 3591, 1.0], [3591, 3883, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 55, 0.0], [55, 308, 0.0], [308, 333, 0.0], [333, 655, 0.0], [655, 913, 0.0], [913, 936, 0.0], [936, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1462, 0.0], [1462, 1746, 0.0], [1746, 2053, 0.0], [2053, 2363, 0.0], [2363, 2700, 0.0], [2700, 2990, 0.0], [2990, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 19, 2.0], [19, 55, 5.0], [55, 308, 39.0], [308, 333, 2.0], [333, 655, 41.0], [655, 913, 36.0], [913, 936, 2.0], [936, 1193, 34.0], [1193, 1462, 37.0], [1462, 1746, 43.0], [1746, 2053, 44.0], [2053, 2363, 44.0], [2363, 2700, 47.0], [2700, 2990, 41.0], [2990, 3295, 40.0], [3295, 3591, 34.0], [3591, 3883, 43.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 55, 0.0], [55, 308, 0.00409836], [308, 333, 0.0], [333, 655, 0.01269841], [655, 913, 0.0], [913, 936, 0.0], [936, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1462, 0.0], [1462, 1746, 0.0], [1746, 2053, 0.0], [2053, 2363, 0.0], [2363, 2700, 0.0], [2700, 2990, 0.0], [2990, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3591, 0.00706714], [3591, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 55, 0.0], [55, 308, 0.0], [308, 333, 0.0], [333, 655, 0.0], [655, 913, 0.0], [913, 936, 0.0], [936, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1462, 0.0], [1462, 1746, 0.0], [1746, 2053, 0.0], [2053, 2363, 0.0], [2363, 2700, 0.0], [2700, 2990, 0.0], [2990, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3883, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 55, 0.02777778], [55, 308, 0.02766798], [308, 333, 0.08], [333, 655, 0.04037267], [655, 913, 0.02713178], [913, 936, 0.04347826], [936, 1193, 0.01945525], [1193, 1462, 0.01858736], [1462, 1746, 0.00704225], [1746, 2053, 0.01628664], [2053, 2363, 0.00645161], [2363, 2700, 0.01186944], [2700, 2990, 0.01724138], [2990, 3295, 0.04262295], [3295, 3591, 0.04391892], [3591, 3883, 0.01712329]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3883, 0.00622982]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3883, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3883, 0.00870913]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3883, -170.07335871]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3883, -25.30948404]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3883, 8.83530768]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3883, 14.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
medicalxpress.com
Updated Jan 3, 2013 - 10:51 am Russell Wilson wins offensive rookie of the month By Brady Henderson Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson was honored Thursday for what was a December to remember, winning the NFL's offensive rookie of the month award. Wilson and the Seahawks were 5-0 in December and scored more than 40 points in three of those wins. During that stretch, Wilson completed 65.5 percent of his passes while throwing for nine touchdowns and two interceptions. December marked Wilson's emergence as a serious running threat as well. He rushed for 262 yards and four touchdowns in those five games as the Seahawks' offense began to feature more read-option plays. Two of Wilson's 13 total touchdowns in December capped game-winning drives. According to the Seahawks, Wilson is the fourth player in franchise history to win the award. Left tackle Walter Jones, defensive tackle Rocky Bernard and linebacker Lofa Tatupu are the others. Tweet
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2782
{"url": "http://mynorthwest.com/292/2166042/Russell-Wilson-wins-offensive-rookie-of-the-month", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "mynorthwest.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:34:53Z", "digest": "sha1:JZB2LHBENHSRKIGYAIZUIDN2IZWNRTWK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 949, 949.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 949, 2955.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 949, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 949, 108.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 949, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 949, 240.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 949, 0.33695652]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 949, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 949, 0.06468305]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 949, 0.04269082]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 949, 0.04398448]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 949, 0.05174644]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 949, 0.00543478]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 949, 0.18478261]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 949, 0.66013072]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 949, 5.05228758]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 949, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 949, 4.39966244]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 949, 153.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 81, 0.0], [81, 100, 0.0], [100, 249, 1.0], [249, 472, 1.0], [472, 674, 1.0], [674, 750, 1.0], [750, 949, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 81, 0.0], [81, 100, 0.0], [100, 249, 0.0], [249, 472, 0.0], [472, 674, 0.0], [674, 750, 0.0], [750, 949, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 31, 6.0], [31, 81, 8.0], [81, 100, 3.0], [100, 249, 23.0], [249, 472, 37.0], [472, 674, 33.0], [674, 750, 11.0], [750, 949, 32.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.34615385], [31, 81, 0.0], [81, 100, 0.0], [100, 249, 0.0], [249, 472, 0.03225806], [472, 674, 0.01530612], [674, 750, 0.02777778], [750, 949, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 81, 0.0], [81, 100, 0.0], [100, 249, 0.0], [249, 472, 0.0], [472, 674, 0.0], [674, 750, 0.0], [750, 949, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.06451613], [31, 81, 0.04], [81, 100, 0.15789474], [100, 249, 0.05369128], [249, 472, 0.02242152], [472, 674, 0.01980198], [674, 750, 0.03947368], [750, 949, 0.05527638]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 949, 0.70754308]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 949, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 949, 0.77494115]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 949, -35.38354204]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 949, 12.55987071]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 949, 29.31764197]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 949, 10.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
mynorthwest.com
Hispanic woman challenges Miss Seafair immigration rules BY Josh Kerns on May 23, 2013 @ 6:37 pm Tania Santiago (in yellow) was crowned Miss Hispanic Seafair Saturday and will compete for the title of Miss Seafair. (Photo courtesy Hispanic Seafair) | Zoom Should a young woman without legal immigration status be allowed to compete for the title of Miss Seafair? The annual summer festival says yes, despite a policy requiring contestants be either U.S. citizens or legal residents. Tania Santiago, 21, challenged the 63-year history after the Redmond woman took the title of Miss Hispanic Seafair over the weekend, the Seattle Times reports. It's a big deal, because the winner gets a college scholarship along with the chance to make over 100 appearances around the state. "I think it's wonderful. I think that Seafair did the right thing," said KIRO Radio's Dave Ross. While some are likely to complain or criticize Santiago for being an 'illegal immigrant', Ross called that absurd. "It's really a medieval approach it's like calling children bastards because their parents aren't married." A Seafair spokeswoman says the immigration policy was put in place because Miss Seafair had to travel internationally in the past to represent the organization. But they haven't done that for some time. Santiago is a Mexican native who has lived in the U.S. since she was 4. Her parents hope to get legal status this year. "She's been schooled here in the area, she graduated from high school here, she's attending the University of Washington. The only fault that I can find with her is that she wants to be a lawyer," said guest host Ken Schram in praising the young woman. "I think it's good that Seafair is taking this stand." Tweet Josh Kerns, MyNorthwest.com Reporter Josh Kerns is an award winning reporter/anchor and host of KIRO Radio's Seattle Sounds (Sunday afternoons 5-6p) and a digital content producer for MyNorthwest.com.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2783
{"url": "http://mynorthwest.com/813/2281140/Hispanic-woman-challenges-Miss-Seafair-immigration-rules?page=0", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "mynorthwest.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:44:18Z", "digest": "sha1:YH6JESC5IHOLLU23U5LHNYW7K5ZLMNYM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1932, 1932.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1932, 6143.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1932, 15.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1932, 222.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1932, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1932, 295.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1932, 0.36180905]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1932, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1932, 0.04007757]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1932, 0.04007757]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1932, 0.04007757]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1932, 0.02844215]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1932, 0.01939237]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1932, 0.02714932]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1932, 0.03015075]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1932, 0.18090452]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1932, 0.58860759]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1932, 4.89556962]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1932, 4.90137106]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1932, 316.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 97, 0.0], [97, 256, 0.0], [256, 483, 1.0], [483, 643, 1.0], [643, 775, 1.0], [775, 872, 1.0], [872, 987, 1.0], [987, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1298, 1.0], [1298, 1418, 1.0], [1418, 1671, 1.0], [1671, 1732, 0.0], [1732, 1769, 0.0], [1769, 1932, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 97, 0.0], [97, 256, 0.0], [256, 483, 0.0], [483, 643, 0.0], [643, 775, 0.0], [775, 872, 0.0], [872, 987, 0.0], [987, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1298, 0.0], [1298, 1418, 0.0], [1418, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 1732, 0.0], [1732, 1769, 0.0], [1769, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 57, 7.0], [57, 97, 9.0], [97, 256, 24.0], [256, 483, 36.0], [483, 643, 25.0], [643, 775, 23.0], [775, 872, 17.0], [872, 987, 18.0], [987, 1095, 15.0], [1095, 1298, 33.0], [1298, 1418, 24.0], [1418, 1671, 46.0], [1671, 1732, 11.0], [1732, 1769, 4.0], [1769, 1932, 24.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 97, 0.25714286], [97, 256, 0.0], [256, 483, 0.0], [483, 643, 0.02597403], [643, 775, 0.0234375], [775, 872, 0.0], [872, 987, 0.0], [987, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1298, 0.0], [1298, 1418, 0.00869565], [1418, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 1732, 0.0], [1732, 1769, 0.0], [1769, 1932, 0.01282051]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 97, 0.0], [97, 256, 0.0], [256, 483, 0.0], [483, 643, 0.0], [643, 775, 0.0], [775, 872, 0.0], [872, 987, 0.0], [987, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1298, 0.0], [1298, 1418, 0.0], [1418, 1671, 0.0], [1671, 1732, 0.0], [1732, 1769, 0.0], [1769, 1932, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.05263158], [57, 97, 0.125], [97, 256, 0.0754717], [256, 483, 0.02643172], [483, 643, 0.05], [643, 775, 0.00757576], [775, 872, 0.10309278], [872, 987, 0.02608696], [987, 1095, 0.00925926], [1095, 1298, 0.02463054], [1298, 1418, 0.04166667], [1418, 1671, 0.02766798], [1671, 1732, 0.04918033], [1732, 1769, 0.13513514], [1769, 1932, 0.07361963]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1932, 0.78228778]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1932, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1932, 0.99134564]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1932, -58.49782226]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1932, 26.30007828]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1932, -53.53150988]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1932, 23.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
mynorthwest.com
6 rejected Disney theme park rides By Danny Gallagher Kermit and his pals almost got their own dedicated theme-park area. Dick Tracy, the Muppets, and Mel Brooks all almost had their very own ridesThe Walt Disney Co. is reportedly considering a plan to build an entire world dedicated to Star Wars at Disneyland. But sci-fi fans and Disney aficionados shouldn't get too excited. The history of Disney's theme park development is full of unfinished rides that were once high on the engineering team's "to-build" list. Here, 6 rejected Disney theme-park rides:1. Hotel MelWhen it opened in 1989, Walt Disney World's Disney-MGM Studios, now known as Hollywood Studios, in Orlando, was meant to compete head-to-head with the Universal Studios theme park. Disney's new park needed a star attraction, and the "Imagineers" thought a ride based on horror movies would bring in the crowds. However, Disney prided itself on being family-friendly, so the company concocted a less frightening theme that starred comedy actor, writer, and director Mel Brooks. The ride would have taken guests through an old hotel that Brooks had supposedly taken over to shoot his next picture. They would then discover that the hotel was crowded with ghosts, ghouls, and monsters. Riders would board golf carts that took them through various rooms that showcased comedic setups. One room contained a vampire who keeps cutting himself as he shaves because he can't see himself in the mirror. Another featured a closed bathroom stall with Frankenstein reaching for some toilet paper, only to grab one of the Mummy's bandages instead. The project ran into problems when developers couldn't come up with a cohesive story for the ride, and Brooks left the project to star in and direct the movie Life Stinks. The hotel, however, was revamped and turned into the wildly popular elevator drop ride "The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror."2. The Great Muppet Movie RideDisney also wanted a Muppet attraction for its new park, and developers brainstormed an entire Muppet-themed ride. It would have taken riders through movie sets for Frankenstein and Peter Pan with Muppets characters composing the cast. The Frankenstein section featured a mad scientist's laboratory, with Dr. Bunsen Honeydew conducting an experiment gone awry on his long-suffering apprentice Beaker. The Peter Pan remake had the Muppets knocking over set pieces and scenery while suspended from cables and tossed around the room. The ride was to have been part of a special Muppet-themed area of the park, replete with a Muppetvision 3-D show. But only the 3-D attraction came to fruition.3. Beastly KingdomWDW's Animal Kingdom park brought wildlife into Disney's vast array of attractions. But one planned section that was scrapped would have taken visitors on rides populated by wildlife that didn't actually exist. The canceled Beastly Kingdom was to have explored "animals of myth and legend," such as dragons and unicorns. Some of the proposed rides included a Fantasia-themed boat ride with characters from the iconic film, a suspended roller coaster called "Dragon's Tower" that brought riders face to face with a massive, fire-breathing dragon, and a medieval labyrinth called "Quest of the Unicorn." However, money problems prevented Disney from building such a massive attraction. Instead, the company built the mountain roller coaster Expedition Everest, in which riders are chased and almost captured by a massive, snarling Yeti.4. Museum of the WeirdThe original Haunted Mansion at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., is one of the most beloved and hallowed of all the Disney rides. And it almost had an adjoining attraction. Imagineer Rolly Crump came up with a novel way of keeping the guests entertained while they waited in one of Disneyland's notoriously long lines, devising several props and sketches for a Museum of the Weird that would have served as a preshow to the main attraction. It was to have been filled with strange collectibles, such as wallpaper that seemed to stare back at guests, a grandfather clock decorated with human bones, and a haunted organ played by a ghostly skeleton. The project folded after Walt Disney's death, and several of the museum's ideas became part of the Haunted Mansion instead.5. The Enchanted Snow PalaceOne of Disneyland's original rides would have taken its guests out of the hot California sun and into a cold, snowy wonderland. Guests would have boarded boats and sailed through an "arctic Jungle Cruise" teeming with robotic animals, such as giant walruses, polar bears, and wolves. Then, as the boats traveled under the northern lights, they would enter the more fantastic part of the ride: The lair of the Snow Queen, complete with mythical arctic creatures like fairies and giants. The queen would proceed to greet the guests and thank them for visiting by making it snow. The plans were scrapped after park planners learned that guests wanted rides that had more thrills and less chills.6. Dick Tracy's CrimestoppersIn what would have become one of the park's first interactive rides, Disney-MGM Studios based an attraction on the film adaptation of the comic strip Dick Tracy. Guests would have been taken through the gritty, crime-ridden streets of Chicago, where they would shoot it out with gangsters and members of Big Boy Caprice's oddball collection of henchmen. Unfortunately, Dick Tracy performed poorly at the box office, and a planned sequel never materialized, so Disney had no real reason to build the ride. View this article on TheWeek.com Get 4 Free Issues of The WeekOther stories from this section:Olympus falls over a fact7 Goosebumps books that would make amazing moviesTwo hot books to watch forLike on Facebook - Follow on Twitter - Sign-up for Daily NewsletterTravel & TourismMoviesDisneyWalt Disney WorldMel Brooks &#x00A9 2010 TheWeek
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2809
{"url": "http://news.yahoo.com/6-rejected-disney-theme-park-rides-201500770.html?.tsrc=_news", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "news.yahoo.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:55:20Z", "digest": "sha1:G4C3DYRAK7FVAZCGBF5XTZPYGE2I324D"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5853, 5853.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5853, 7867.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5853, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5853, 46.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5853, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5853, 325.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5853, 4.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5853, 0.36893204]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5853, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5853, 0.01575961]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5853, 0.01176718]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5853, 0.00546333]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5853, 0.00353045]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5853, 0.14651368]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5853, 0.50321199]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5853, 5.09528908]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5853, 0.00088261]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5853, 5.55170885]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5853, 934.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 54, 0.0], [54, 122, 1.0], [122, 5833, 0.0], [5833, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 54, 0.0], [54, 122, 0.0], [122, 5833, 0.0], [5833, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 35, 6.0], [35, 54, 3.0], [54, 122, 11.0], [122, 5833, 911.0], [5833, 5853, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.02941176], [35, 54, 0.0], [54, 122, 0.0], [122, 5833, 0.00270124], [5833, 5853, 0.38888889]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 54, 0.0], [54, 122, 0.0], [122, 5833, 0.0], [5833, 5853, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.02857143], [35, 54, 0.15789474], [54, 122, 0.01470588], [122, 5833, 0.03449483], [5833, 5853, 0.15]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5853, 0.92542177]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5853, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5853, 0.90580672]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5853, 13.46688224]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5853, 93.53718382]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5853, 55.62988324]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5853, 50.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
news.yahoo.com
Sacramento Kings set to begin 'new era' By ANTONIO GONZALEZ (AP Sports Writer) Sacramento Kings center DeMarcus Cousins goes to the basket against Phoenix Suns Marcin Gortat, of Poland, … SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Here's a statement that seemed unlikely just a few months ago: the Sacramento Kings are about to begin the 2013-14 season.Just the fact that California's capital still has an NBA team might make this season a success already. The city won its fight to keep the Kings from moving to Seattle in May, and the franchise finally appears to be on firm footing again.''It's a new era,'' owner Vivek Ranadive has declared over and over since buying the Kings from the Maloof family.The TIBCO software chairman has delivered on that promise so far. He hired a new coach (Mike Malone), new general manager (Pete D'Alessandro) and a Hall of Fame consultant (Chris Mullin) along with bringing in a flashy new minority investor (Shaquille O'Neal) that will surely bring more attention to Sacramento.On the court, the Kings are still a long way from being a winning organization.The Kings are coming off their seventh straight losing season and are just beginning a rebuilding project that's likely years away from completion. Ranadive is trying to lay a solid foundation first - right down to fixing all the potholes in the parking lot of Sacramento's suburban arena. Sacramento Kings head coach Michael Malone yells out to the officials during the first half of an NB … The new owner's first major move was making center DeMarcus Cousins the franchise player by signing him to a four-year, $62 million extension. The Kings are counting on Cousins, who has drawn multiple suspensions from the NBA and the team for his behavior, to keep his cool and show he can lead the franchise's new era.''I've got big shoulders, so I can handle that,'' said Cousins, drafted fifth overall in 2010 after one season at Kentucky. ''I consider myself a leader on this team, so I take all the responsibility that comes with it. I've had pressure from the beginning, so I don't have a problem with it. I was doing it in the beginning, so I definitely don't have a problem doing it now.''Here are five things to watch with the Kings this season:CONTROLLING COUSINS: Nobody disputes Cousins' talent. He averaged 17.1 points, 9.9 rebounds and 2.7 assists per game last season and, at times, looked dominant against the NBA's best big men. But he has struggled with defense and discipline, and he couldn't co-exist with coaches Keith Smart or Paul Westphal. If Cousins can control his emotions and channel his talent, he could be the key cog in Sacramento's resurrection.DEFENSIVE MINDSET: Malone has engineered defensive turnarounds in previous stops as an assistant with Golden State, New Orleans and Cleveland, and that will be his first order of business in Sacramento. The Kings allowed a league-most 105.1 points per game last season. Opponents also shot 47.1 percent, ranking 28th in the league. Sacramento Kings guard Ben McLemore does a reverse stuff against the Phoenix Suns during the fourth … NEW KINGS: The Kings traded Tyreke Evans - the 2009-10 NBA Rookie of the Year - to New Orleans for point guard Greivis Vasquez in a three-team deal with Portland this summer. They also signed power forward Carl Landry as a free agent from Golden State and acquired forward Luc Mbah a Moute from Milwaukee for two second-round picks. How healthy the trio can stay - not to mention how they play - will be pivotal. Landry is expected to miss three or four months recovering from hip surgery. Vasquez had offseason surgery on his right ankle and was limited early in the preseason. And Mbah a Moute missed time in training camp with a sore right knee.ROOKIE JOLT: Sacramento is hoping its latest lottery pick will provide an immediate spark. Seventh-overall pick Ben McLemore averaged 15.9 points, 5.2 rebounds and two assists as a freshman on a Kansas team that went 31-6 and won a share of its ninth straight Big 12 title last season. McLemore will get a chance to shine whether he starts at shooting guard or comes off the bench.ARENA PROJECT: While the Kings have an owner committed to keeping the team in Sacramento, the relocation drama is not completely over yet. Outgoing NBA Commissioner David Stern has said Sacramento needs to build a new arena by 2017 or the league could seize control of the team and move it to another city. The Sacramento City Council's planned $258 million subsidy for a downtown arena - a project now estimated at $448 million - is facing opposition from groups gathering signatures hoping to force a ballot initiative, which could delay the project - or even scrap it entirely. So until those shovels hit the ground, the Kings' future in Sacramento isn't set in stone.---Antonio Gonzalez can be reached at: www.twitter.com/agonzalezAPSports & RecreationBasketballSacramento Kingsthe KingsNBA
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2810
{"url": "http://news.yahoo.com/sacramento-kings-set-begin-era-164235140--nba.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "news.yahoo.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:45:53Z", "digest": "sha1:7VPMNSKXV32QII67OCGTDCWAZJWWDIVX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4907, 4907.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4907, 6967.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4907, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4907, 51.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4907, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4907, 338.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4907, 0.38561439]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4907, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4907, 0.01832061]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4907, 0.01068702]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4907, 0.00763359]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4907, 0.03196803]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4907, 0.375]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4907, 0.16683317]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4907, 0.52211302]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4907, 4.82800983]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4907, 0.002997]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4907, 5.51231628]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4907, 814.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 79, 0.0], [79, 188, 0.0], [188, 1370, 1.0], [1370, 1473, 0.0], [1473, 2982, 1.0], [2982, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 79, 0.0], [79, 188, 0.0], [188, 1370, 0.0], [1370, 1473, 0.0], [1473, 2982, 0.0], [2982, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 40, 7.0], [40, 79, 6.0], [79, 188, 17.0], [188, 1370, 195.0], [1370, 1473, 19.0], [1473, 2982, 253.0], [2982, 3084, 17.0], [3084, 4907, 300.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 79, 0.0], [79, 188, 0.0], [188, 1370, 0.00527241], [1370, 1473, 0.0], [1473, 2982, 0.01519337], [2982, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 4907, 0.01470588]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 79, 0.0], [79, 188, 0.0], [188, 1370, 0.0], [1370, 1473, 0.0], [1473, 2982, 0.0], [2982, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 4907, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.05], [40, 79, 0.51282051], [79, 188, 0.09174312], [188, 1370, 0.04737733], [1370, 1473, 0.05825243], [1473, 2982, 0.05301524], [2982, 3084, 0.06862745], [3084, 4907, 0.05430609]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4907, 0.59714162]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4907, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4907, 0.85706145]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4907, -209.39756755]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4907, 52.8379275]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4907, -67.95449864]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4907, 46.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
news.yahoo.com
Cotto returns to Madison Square Garden to face Trout By Marc Raimondi September 25, 2012 | 8:21pm Miguel Cotto is returning to his “second home.” The Puerto Rican former three-division champion will take on undefeated WBA light middleweight champion Austin Trout on Dec. 1 at Madison Square Garden, where he is a massive draw with the local fans. Cotto (37-3) is 7-0 in his career at MSG, including a TKO of Antonio Margarito in December 2011. “The biggest town Puerto Rico has is New York,” Cotto said at a press conference Monday. “People here make me feel at home. People here make me feel comfortable. They root for me and they give me the support I need to beat anyone.” Trout, a 27-year-old Mexican southpaw, is 25-0, but hasn’t fought anyone with the résumé of Cotto – or anywhere like Madison Square Garden for that matter. “I know the Puerto Rican fans are going to be out in full force, but on Dec. 1, there is going to be a new star in boxing,” Trout said. “They’re going to see why I’m here, why I’m the champion. I have two things in this sport right now – my belt and my undefeated record and I plan to keep both of them.” Trout says he’s “one of the most avoided fighters in boxing” and that he and his camp have “wanted this fight for years.” “He can have whoever he wants in the crowd because it’s only me and him in the ring,” Trout said. “I’m not worried about the crowd and fighting in New York.” Trout has been to the Garden before, he said, because he’s a Knicks fan. But Cotto has owned MSG for years. “The crowd here in New York is electrifying,” Cotto said. “I get a different feeling when I fight here.” Cotto, 31, is coming off a unanimous decision loss to Floyd Mayweather, Jr. in May. Before that, he had won three straight and his only three losses have come to Mayweather, Manny Pacquiao and Margarito, which he avenged. Cotto is widely considered a top-10 pound-for-pound boxer. Trout isn’t on most people’s radars just yet. But he’s hoping to change that in December. “I’m going to take this opportunity with both hands and I’m going to run with it,” Cotto said. “It’s very honorable to be on that list of people Cotto has fought because he’s fought the best. But it’s going to be even better to be on that list of the people that have beaten Cotto.” mraimondi@nypost.com Shaq not sure… Shaq not sure Knicks improved… Twitter
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2833
{"url": "http://nypost.com/2012/09/25/cotto-returns-to-madison-square-garden-to-face-trout/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "nypost.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:55:08Z", "digest": "sha1:32JOBU7GZNUSMWHEU2DQMEAAEWWTXH3E"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2358, 2358.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2358, 6286.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2358, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2358, 169.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2358, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2358, 239.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2358, 0.43806104]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2358, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2358, 0.0171766]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2358, 0.0171766]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2358, 0.02254428]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2358, 0.03059581]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2358, 0.01502952]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2358, 0.02692998]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2358, 0.2064632]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2358, 0.51044084]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2358, 4.3225058]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2358, 0.00359066]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2358, 5.01933282]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2358, 431.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 98, 0.0], [98, 146, 1.0], [146, 444, 1.0], [444, 676, 1.0], [676, 832, 1.0], [832, 1137, 1.0], [1137, 1259, 1.0], [1259, 1417, 1.0], [1417, 1525, 1.0], [1525, 1630, 1.0], [1630, 1911, 1.0], [1911, 2001, 1.0], [2001, 2284, 1.0], [2284, 2305, 0.0], [2305, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 98, 0.0], [98, 146, 0.0], [146, 444, 0.0], [444, 676, 0.0], [676, 832, 0.0], [832, 1137, 0.0], [1137, 1259, 0.0], [1259, 1417, 0.0], [1417, 1525, 0.0], [1525, 1630, 0.0], [1630, 1911, 0.0], [1911, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2284, 0.0], [2284, 2305, 0.0], [2305, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 53, 9.0], [53, 98, 7.0], [98, 146, 8.0], [146, 444, 51.0], [444, 676, 44.0], [676, 832, 26.0], [832, 1137, 65.0], [1137, 1259, 23.0], [1259, 1417, 31.0], [1417, 1525, 21.0], [1525, 1630, 19.0], [1630, 1911, 46.0], [1911, 2001, 16.0], [2001, 2284, 55.0], [2284, 2305, 1.0], [2305, 2358, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 98, 0.225], [98, 146, 0.0], [146, 444, 0.03484321], [444, 676, 0.0], [676, 832, 0.03333333], [832, 1137, 0.00337838], [1137, 1259, 0.0], [1259, 1417, 0.0], [1417, 1525, 0.0], [1525, 1630, 0.0], [1630, 1911, 0.01498127], [1911, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2284, 0.0], [2284, 2305, 0.0], [2305, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 98, 0.0], [98, 146, 0.0], [146, 444, 0.0], [444, 676, 0.0], [676, 832, 0.0], [832, 1137, 0.0], [1137, 1259, 0.0], [1259, 1417, 0.0], [1417, 1525, 0.0], [1525, 1630, 0.0], [1630, 1911, 0.0], [1911, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2284, 0.0], [2284, 2305, 0.0], [2305, 2358, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.09433962], [53, 98, 0.08888889], [98, 146, 0.04166667], [146, 444, 0.0738255], [444, 676, 0.04741379], [676, 832, 0.03846154], [832, 1137, 0.03278689], [1137, 1259, 0.00819672], [1259, 1417, 0.03164557], [1417, 1525, 0.07407407], [1525, 1630, 0.05714286], [1630, 1911, 0.03914591], [1911, 2001, 0.03333333], [2001, 2284, 0.02473498], [2284, 2305, 0.0], [2305, 2358, 0.0754717]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2358, 0.90744895]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2358, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2358, 0.9941805]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2358, -218.80806528]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2358, 106.36173681]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2358, -276.51906725]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2358, 31.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
nypost.com
107 U.S. 671 - United States v. Curtis Home107 us 671 united states v. curtis 107 US 671 United States v. Curtis 107 U.S. 671 UNITED STATESv.CURTIS. Asst. Atty. Gen. Maury, for the United States. Chester H. Krum, for Curtis. HARLAN, J. This case comes before us on a certificate of division as to certain questions of law arising in a criminal prosecution against Edward P. Curtis, based upon sections 5211 and 5392 of the Revised Statutes of the United States. The first of those sections provides that every national banking association 'shall make to the comptroller of the currency not less than five reports during each year, according to the form which may be prescribed by him, verified by the oath or affirmation of the president or cashier of such association, and attested by the signature of at least three of the directors. Each such report shall exhibit in detail, and under appropriate heads, the resources and liabilities of the association at the close of business on any past day by him specified; and shall be transmitted to the comptroller within five days after the receipt of a request or requisition therefor from him, and in the same form in which it is made to the comptroller shall be published in a newspaper where such association is established,' etc. Section 5392 provides that 'every person who, having taken an oath before a competent tribunal, officer, or person, in any case in which a law of the United States authorizes an oath to be administered, that he will testify, declare, depose, or certify truly, or that any written testimony, declaration, deposition, or certificate by him subscribed is true, willfully and contrary to such oath states or subscribes any material matter which he does not believe to be true, is guilty of perjury, and shall be punished by a fine of not more than $2,000, and by imprisonment at hard labor not more than five years; and shall, moreover, thereafter be incapable of giving testimony in any court of the United States until such time as the judgment against him is reversed.' The willfully false declarations or statements which the defendant is charged to have made are contained in several written reports transmitted to the comptroller of currency by the National Bank of the State of Missouri, in St. Louis, in pursuance of section 5211, and to the truth of which declarations or statements Curtis, as cashier of that bank, made oath before a notary public within and for the county of St. Louis, in that state. These declarations or statements relate to the condition of the bank as to loans, discounts, checks, cash items, overdrafts, individual deposits subject to checks, surplus fund, currency on deposit, and money due from that association to other national banks. The indictment contains five counts, which, as respects any matte
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2850
{"url": "http://openjurist.org/107/us/671", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "openjurist.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:30:39Z", "digest": "sha1:GNT5ZUPCYMMOUC24HZUJTAMMEVZ2M6RN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2814, 2814.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2814, 3018.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2814, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2814, 23.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2814, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2814, 267.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2814, 0.45765766]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2814, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2814, 0.02874834]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2814, 0.04068996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2814, 0.04068996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2814, 0.04068996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2814, 0.02874834]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2814, 0.02874834]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2814, 0.02211411]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2814, 0.01946042]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2814, 0.01857585]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2814, 0.01981982]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2814, 0.16216216]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2814, 0.4535865]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2814, 4.77004219]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2814, 4.84212363]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2814, 474.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 78, 0.0], [78, 126, 0.0], [126, 149, 1.0], [149, 196, 1.0], [196, 225, 1.0], [225, 236, 1.0], [236, 1280, 1.0], [1280, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 78, 0.0], [78, 126, 0.0], [126, 149, 0.0], [149, 196, 0.0], [196, 225, 0.0], [225, 236, 0.0], [236, 1280, 0.0], [1280, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 78, 14.0], [78, 126, 10.0], [126, 149, 2.0], [149, 196, 8.0], [196, 225, 5.0], [225, 236, 2.0], [236, 1280, 178.0], [1280, 2049, 131.0], [2049, 2814, 124.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 78, 0.16901408], [78, 126, 0.27272727], [126, 149, 0.0], [149, 196, 0.0], [196, 225, 0.0], [225, 236, 0.0], [236, 1280, 0.0077821], [1280, 2049, 0.01075269], [2049, 2814, 0.00536913]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 78, 0.0], [78, 126, 0.0], [126, 149, 0.0], [149, 196, 0.0], [196, 225, 0.0], [225, 236, 0.0], [236, 1280, 0.0], [1280, 2049, 0.0], [2049, 2814, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 78, 0.07692308], [78, 126, 0.14583333], [126, 149, 0.7826087], [149, 196, 0.12765957], [196, 225, 0.13793103], [225, 236, 0.63636364], [236, 1280, 0.00957854], [1280, 2049, 0.00650195], [2049, 2814, 0.01568627]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2814, 0.9745903]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2814, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2814, 0.37726891]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2814, 46.19807268]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2814, 59.40530003]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2814, 82.9836854]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2814, 26.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
openjurist.org
645 F. 2d 122 - Miles v. Harris Home645 f2d 122 miles v. harris 645 F2d 122 Miles v. Harris 645 F.2d 122 Hanna MILES, Plaintiff-Appellant,v.Patricia HARRIS, Secretary of Health and Human Services,Defendant-Appellee. No. 627, Docket 80-6186. United States Court of Appeals,Second Circuit. Argued Jan. 8, 1981.Decided March 24, 1981. Michael P. Daly, Syracuse, N. Y. (Onondaga Neighborhood Legal Services, Inc., Syracuse, N. Y., of counsel), for plaintiff-appellant. Nancy S. Jones, Asst. U. S. Atty., N. D. New York, Syracuse, N. Y. (George H. Lowe, U. S. Atty., N. D. New York, Syracuse, N. Y., of counsel), for defendant-appellee. Before KAUFMAN, OAKES and MESKILL, Circuit Judges. IRVING R. KAUFMAN, Circuit Judge: Hanna Miles, who has a long history of lower back and leg pain, first applied for disability and disability insurance benefits in May 1974. The Social Security Administration (SSA) granted the application, and awarded benefits with an onset date of March 1974. In November 1977, however, the SSA found Miles no longer disabled and terminated her eligibility. Mrs. Miles challenges that decision. Following the termination, an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) conducted a hearing de novo to determine Miles's eligibility. Miles testified about her condition, her part-time employment as a waitress, and the pain she constantly faced. A vocational expert testified that, based on Miles's condition, age, educational background, work experience, and residual transferable skills, there was substantial gainful work she could perform. The ALJ also had physicians' reports and hospital records before him. The medical evidence revealed that Mrs. Miles first sought treatment for her back problems in 1970 and was hospitalized for seven weeks in 1972. Her physician, Dr. Donald Delahanty, ordered her hospitalized in 1974 on three occasions. On the first, in March, she was diagnosed as having a herniated disc, and an operative procedure called a laminectomy was performed to remove the disc. During the second, in October, a myelogram revealed no abnormalities. In November, Miles underwent another laminectomy. In 1975, Miles was hospitalized once for recurrent discomfort and was diagnosed as having post-laminectomy pain. Dr. Delahanty examined Miles in May 1976 and reported that she still complained of pain and was totally disabled. In September 1977, however, an examination by Dr. Daniel Elstein, a consultative orthopaedic surgeon, revealed that Miles "stands erect" and has "no measurable calf or thigh atrophy." Dr. Elstein found that she could sit and stand for approximately four hours and that she still had the use of her hands. He also noted in his report that Miles suffered only mild pain and was capable of doing light work. Mrs. Miles was hospitalized once again in October 1977. In December, Dr. Delahanty reported to the Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) (now the Secretary of Health and Human Services) that Mrs. Miles faced several physical restrictions: standing one hour; walking one block; sitting one hour; bending to a minimal degree; lifting less than ten pounds; carrying less than ten pounds. Miles nevertheless started to work again in March 1978 at a local bakery-coffee shop, working four hours a day, two days per week. She continued to work on this limited schedule until December 1978. On the basis of this evidence, the ALJ found in July 1978 that Miles was not disabled because her physical impairments did not cause severe functional losses or restrictions. He discussed Miles's hospital reports, citing the medical findings of Dr. Delahanty and Dr. Elstein, and relying primarily on Dr. Elstein's report for his conclusions. The ALJ recognized that pain is subjective, but noted that continuous pain leaves a "stigmata" voluntary or involuntary restrictions in the use of the affected body system. Finding no evidence of atrophy or physical deterioration, he discounted her testimony and found that she was not precluded from engaging in all work activities. The ALJ found that substantial gainful employment for Miles existed in the national economy. Miles petitioned the Appeals Council for review. In evaluating the ALJ's report, the Council examined additional hospital reports and physical therapist's reports which became available in late 1978 and early 1979, after the ALJ's examination of the matter. The Council found that these reports were not sufficient to justify either reopening of the case or overturning the ALJ's decision, which, as a result, became the decision of the Secretary. Miles filed suit in the Northern District of New York in April 1979, and after Magistrate Conan recommended affirmance, Judge Munson granted the Secretary's motion for judgment on the pleadings. We affirm.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2851
{"url": "http://openjurist.org/645/f2d/122/miles-v-harris", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "openjurist.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:57:38Z", "digest": "sha1:AWZIVQRFA6Y5H234FLGXKWBQI5ATYGJI"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4773, 4773.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4773, 4939.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4773, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4773, 31.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4773, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4773, 229.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4773, 0.28631139]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4773, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4773, 0.01305142]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4773, 0.04750718]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4773, 0.03445576]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4773, 0.02558079]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4773, 0.02558079]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4773, 0.01305142]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4773, 0.00939702]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4773, 0.01044114]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4773, 0.01174628]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4773, 0.04284222]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4773, 0.23092999]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4773, 0.48317631]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4773, 5.15612382]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4773, 5.37150486]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4773, 743.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 105, 0.0], [105, 216, 1.0], [216, 241, 1.0], [241, 288, 1.0], [288, 332, 1.0], [332, 465, 1.0], [465, 632, 1.0], [632, 683, 1.0], [683, 717, 0.0], [717, 1113, 1.0], [1113, 1546, 1.0], [1546, 2350, 1.0], [2350, 2755, 1.0], [2755, 3350, 1.0], [3350, 4120, 1.0], [4120, 4773, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 105, 0.0], [105, 216, 0.0], [216, 241, 0.0], [241, 288, 0.0], [288, 332, 0.0], [332, 465, 0.0], [465, 632, 0.0], [632, 683, 0.0], [683, 717, 0.0], [717, 1113, 0.0], [1113, 1546, 0.0], [1546, 2350, 0.0], [2350, 2755, 0.0], [2755, 3350, 0.0], [3350, 4120, 0.0], [4120, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 64, 13.0], [64, 105, 9.0], [105, 216, 10.0], [216, 241, 4.0], [241, 288, 6.0], [288, 332, 7.0], [332, 465, 18.0], [465, 632, 31.0], [632, 683, 7.0], [683, 717, 5.0], [717, 1113, 62.0], [1113, 1546, 60.0], [1546, 2350, 125.0], [2350, 2755, 69.0], [2755, 3350, 96.0], [3350, 4120, 120.0], [4120, 4773, 101.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.24137931], [64, 105, 0.36842105], [105, 216, 0.0], [216, 241, 0.45], [241, 288, 0.0], [288, 332, 0.28947368], [332, 465, 0.0], [465, 632, 0.0], [632, 683, 0.0], [683, 717, 0.0], [717, 1113, 0.03133159], [1113, 1546, 0.0], [1546, 2350, 0.02560819], [2350, 2755, 0.01023018], [2755, 3350, 0.02097902], [3350, 4120, 0.00531915], [4120, 4773, 0.01886792]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 105, 0.0], [105, 216, 0.0], [216, 241, 0.0], [241, 288, 0.0], [288, 332, 0.0], [332, 465, 0.0], [465, 632, 0.0], [632, 683, 0.0], [683, 717, 0.0], [717, 1113, 0.0], [1113, 1546, 0.0], [1546, 2350, 0.0], [2350, 2755, 0.0], [2755, 3350, 0.0], [3350, 4120, 0.0], [4120, 4773, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.0625], [64, 105, 0.09756098], [105, 216, 0.18918919], [216, 241, 0.08], [241, 288, 0.12765957], [288, 332, 0.09090909], [332, 465, 0.10526316], [465, 632, 0.16167665], [632, 683, 0.43137255], [683, 717, 0.47058824], [717, 1113, 0.0479798], [1113, 1546, 0.02540416], [1546, 2350, 0.02985075], [2350, 2755, 0.02469136], [2755, 3350, 0.04033613], [3350, 4120, 0.03116883], [4120, 4773, 0.04441041]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4773, 0.50658631]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4773, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4773, 0.65751928]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4773, -59.74613223]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4773, 21.9141241]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4773, 104.243171]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4773, 84.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
openjurist.org
Rochvarg, Arnold University of Baltimore - School of Law 1420 N. Charles Street Baltimore, MD 21218 United States Rochvarg, Arnold's 1. Watergate, Multiple Conspiracies, and the White House Tapes Chapman Law Review, Vol. 16, No. 1, Spring 2012, pp. 47-70, University of Baltimore School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2013-03 Rochvarg, Arnold University of Baltimore - School of Law Watergate, single conspiracy, multiple conspiracies, U.S. history, Richard Nixon, legal history, White House tapes, John Mitchell, H.R. Haldeman, Robert Mardian, Judge John Sirica, trials, evidence 2. Ratification and Undisclosed Principals McGill Law Journal, Vol. 34, p. 286, 1989 law of agency, undislosed principals, contracts, transactions 3. Enron, Watergate and the Regulation of the Legal Profession Washburn Law Journal, Vol. 43, p. 61, 2003 Watergate, Enron scandal, Richard Nixon, attorneys, accountants, legal profession, regulation 4. Is the Rule of Necessity Really Necessary in State Administrative Law: The Central Panel Solution Journal of the National Association of Administrative Law Judges, Vol. 19, No. 35, 1999 administrative hearings, rule of necessity, bias, due process, administrative decisionmaking 5. The Attorney as Advocate and Witness: Does the Prohibition of an Attorney Acting as Advocate and Witness at a Judicial Trial Also Apply in Administrative Adjudications? Journal of the National Association of Administrative Law Judges, Vol. 26, No. 1, 2006 trials, lawyers as witnesses, administrative adjudications, rules of professional conduct 6. Joint Defense Agreements and Disqualification of Co-Defendant's Counsel American Journal of Trial Advocacy, Vol. 22, p. 311, 1998 joint defense agreements, defense counsel, disqualification, courts, procedure 7. How Administrative Law Halted the Death Penalty in Maryland University of Baltimore Law Forum, Vol. 37, p. 119, 2007, University of Baltimore School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2009-12 death penalty, capital punishment, administrative law, regulation 8. Adequacy of Notice of Rulemaking Under the Federal Administrative Procedure Act - When Should a Second Round of Notice and Comment Be Provided? American University Law Review, Vol. 31, No. 1, 1981 adequacy of notice, rulemaking, administrative law, Administrative Procedure Act, public participation, courts 9. Hearsay in State Administrative Hearings: The Maryland Experience and Suggestions for Change University of Baltimore Law Review, Vol. 21, No. 1, 1991 rules of evidence, administrative hearings, due process, substantial evidence, cross-examination, de novo appeals 10. Judicial Review of Administrative Sanctions: Why Noland Should Be Abandoned Maryland Bar Journal, Vol. 44, No. 3, pp. 24-26, May/June 2011 Maryland, administrative law, judicial review, administrative sanctions, 386 Md. 556, Maryland Aviation Administration v. Noland, regulatory agencies, courts, findings requirement, judicial review, state employees 11. A Reexamination of the Agency Doctrine of Election University of Miami Law Review, Vol. 36, No. 3, 1982, University of Baltimore School of Law Legal Studies Research Rochvarg, Arnold University of Baltimore - School of LawSargent, Mark Villanova University School of Law Restatement (Second) of Agency, undisclosed principals, judgments, election doctrine, complete disclosure, rule of release, liability, agency 12. In Defense of Naturalization Reform Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, Vol. 10, No. 1, p. 43, 1996 naturalization, reform, immigration, symposiums, citizenship 13. State Adoption of Federal Law - Legislative Abdication or Reasoned Policymaking? Administrative Law Review, Vol. 35, p. 277, 1984 state law, federal law, state statutes, federal statutes, regulations, constitutional problems, delegation of power 14. Report to the Administrative Conference - Reforming the Administrative Naturalization Process: Reducing Delays While Increasing Fairness Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, Vol. 9, p. 397, 1995 naturalization, immigration, administrative law, Administrative Conference of the United States 15. The Independent Special Prosecutor Case University of Baltimore Law Forum, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 12-14, Fall 1988 Supreme Court, Morrison v. Olson, independent special prosecutor, Ethics in Government Act of 1978, Ethics Act, unconstitutional infringement
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2868
{"url": "http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=29879", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "papers.ssrn.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:14:35Z", "digest": "sha1:CT42TQNRPGNB4I226BJE5IT3PTBBZKGU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4364, 4364.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4364, 8420.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4364, 51.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4364, 265.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4364, 0.83]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4364, 316.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4364, 0.10859189]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4364, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4364, 0.06679875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4364, 0.15709029]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4364, 0.13784319]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4364, 0.11972828]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4364, 0.10755732]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4364, 0.08151712]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4364, 0.03396547]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4364, 0.05349561]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4364, 0.04585338]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4364, 0.00835322]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4364, 0.36038186]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4364, 0.45333333]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4364, 5.88833333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4364, 5.03748509]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4364, 600.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 57, 0.0], [57, 114, 0.0], [114, 133, 0.0], [133, 196, 0.0], [196, 335, 0.0], [335, 392, 0.0], [392, 590, 0.0], [590, 633, 0.0], [633, 675, 0.0], [675, 737, 0.0], [737, 800, 0.0], [800, 843, 0.0], [843, 937, 0.0], [937, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1391, 1.0], [1391, 1478, 0.0], [1478, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1843, 0.0], [1843, 1980, 0.0], [1980, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2193, 1.0], [2193, 2246, 0.0], [2246, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2453, 0.0], [2453, 2510, 0.0], [2510, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2767, 0.0], [2767, 2981, 0.0], [2981, 3036, 0.0], [3036, 3151, 0.0], [3151, 3256, 0.0], [3256, 3398, 0.0], [3398, 3438, 0.0], [3438, 3502, 0.0], [3502, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3648, 1.0], [3648, 3697, 0.0], [3697, 3813, 0.0], [3813, 3954, 0.0], [3954, 4011, 0.0], [4011, 4107, 0.0], [4107, 4151, 0.0], [4151, 4223, 0.0], [4223, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 57, 0.0], [57, 114, 0.0], [114, 133, 0.0], [133, 196, 0.0], [196, 335, 0.0], [335, 392, 0.0], [392, 590, 0.0], [590, 633, 0.0], [633, 675, 0.0], [675, 737, 0.0], [737, 800, 0.0], [800, 843, 0.0], [843, 937, 0.0], [937, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1391, 0.0], [1391, 1478, 0.0], [1478, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1843, 0.0], [1843, 1980, 0.0], [1980, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2246, 0.0], [2246, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2453, 0.0], [2453, 2510, 0.0], [2510, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2767, 0.0], [2767, 2981, 0.0], [2981, 3036, 0.0], [3036, 3151, 0.0], [3151, 3256, 0.0], [3256, 3398, 0.0], [3398, 3438, 0.0], [3438, 3502, 0.0], [3502, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3648, 0.0], [3648, 3697, 0.0], [3697, 3813, 0.0], [3813, 3954, 0.0], [3954, 4011, 0.0], [4011, 4107, 0.0], [4107, 4151, 0.0], [4151, 4223, 0.0], [4223, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 17, 2.0], [17, 57, 6.0], [57, 114, 9.0], [114, 133, 2.0], [133, 196, 9.0], [196, 335, 23.0], [335, 392, 8.0], [392, 590, 25.0], [590, 633, 5.0], [633, 675, 8.0], [675, 737, 7.0], [737, 800, 10.0], [800, 843, 8.0], [843, 937, 10.0], [937, 1038, 16.0], [1038, 1126, 14.0], [1126, 1219, 10.0], [1219, 1391, 27.0], [1391, 1478, 14.0], [1478, 1568, 10.0], [1568, 1643, 9.0], [1643, 1701, 10.0], [1701, 1780, 8.0], [1780, 1843, 10.0], [1843, 1980, 22.0], [1980, 2046, 7.0], [2046, 2193, 23.0], [2193, 2246, 9.0], [2246, 2357, 12.0], [2357, 2453, 13.0], [2453, 2510, 10.0], [2510, 2624, 13.0], [2624, 2704, 11.0], [2704, 2767, 11.0], [2767, 2981, 24.0], [2981, 3036, 9.0], [3036, 3151, 19.0], [3151, 3256, 14.0], [3256, 3398, 16.0], [3398, 3438, 6.0], [3438, 3502, 11.0], [3502, 3563, 5.0], [3563, 3648, 11.0], [3648, 3697, 8.0], [3697, 3813, 14.0], [3813, 3954, 16.0], [3954, 4011, 9.0], [4011, 4107, 10.0], [4107, 4151, 6.0], [4151, 4223, 13.0], [4223, 4364, 18.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 57, 0.0], [57, 114, 0.16666667], [114, 133, 0.0], [133, 196, 0.01694915], [196, 335, 0.13385827], [335, 392, 0.0], [392, 590, 0.0], [590, 633, 0.02439024], [633, 675, 0.25], [675, 737, 0.0], [737, 800, 0.01666667], [800, 843, 0.21621622], [843, 937, 0.0], [937, 1038, 0.01020408], [1038, 1126, 0.09756098], [1126, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1391, 0.00595238], [1391, 1478, 0.08641975], [1478, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1643, 0.01408451], [1643, 1701, 0.17307692], [1701, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1843, 0.01639344], [1843, 1980, 0.1171875], [1980, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2193, 0.00704225], [2193, 2246, 0.14893617], [2246, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2453, 0.01075269], [2453, 2510, 0.1372549], [2510, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 2704, 0.02597403], [2704, 2767, 0.20754717], [2767, 2981, 0.02985075], [2981, 3036, 0.03773585], [3036, 3151, 0.06481481], [3151, 3256, 0.0], [3256, 3398, 0.0], [3398, 3438, 0.05263158], [3438, 3502, 0.16071429], [3502, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3648, 0.025], [3648, 3697, 0.20930233], [3697, 3813, 0.0], [3813, 3954, 0.01470588], [3954, 4011, 0.15686275], [4011, 4107, 0.0], [4107, 4151, 0.04761905], [4151, 4223, 0.17460317], [4223, 4364, 0.02962963]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 57, 0.0], [57, 114, 0.0], [114, 133, 0.0], [133, 196, 0.0], [196, 335, 0.0], [335, 392, 0.0], [392, 590, 0.0], [590, 633, 0.0], [633, 675, 0.0], [675, 737, 0.0], [737, 800, 0.0], [800, 843, 0.0], [843, 937, 0.0], [937, 1038, 0.0], [1038, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1391, 0.0], [1391, 1478, 0.0], [1478, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1843, 0.0], [1843, 1980, 0.0], [1980, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2246, 0.0], [2246, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2453, 0.0], [2453, 2510, 0.0], [2510, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2767, 0.0], [2767, 2981, 0.0], [2981, 3036, 0.0], [3036, 3151, 0.0], [3151, 3256, 0.0], [3256, 3398, 0.0], [3398, 3438, 0.0], [3438, 3502, 0.0], [3502, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3648, 0.0], [3648, 3697, 0.0], [3697, 3813, 0.0], [3813, 3954, 0.0], [3954, 4011, 0.0], [4011, 4107, 0.0], [4107, 4151, 0.0], [4151, 4223, 0.0], [4223, 4364, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 17, 0.11764706], [17, 57, 0.1], [57, 114, 0.14035088], [114, 133, 0.10526316], [133, 196, 0.0952381], [196, 335, 0.10791367], [335, 392, 0.10526316], [392, 590, 0.08585859], [590, 633, 0.06976744], [633, 675, 0.11904762], [675, 737, 0.0], [737, 800, 0.07936508], [800, 843, 0.09302326], [843, 937, 0.04255319], [937, 1038, 0.11881188], [1038, 1126, 0.09090909], [1126, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1391, 0.09302326], [1391, 1478, 0.09195402], [1478, 1568, 0.0], [1568, 1643, 0.09333333], [1643, 1701, 0.0862069], [1701, 1780, 0.0], [1780, 1843, 0.11111111], [1843, 1980, 0.10218978], [1980, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2193, 0.10884354], [2193, 2246, 0.11320755], [2246, 2357, 0.02702703], [2357, 2453, 0.09375], [2453, 2510, 0.10526316], [2510, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 2704, 0.1125], [2704, 2767, 0.11111111], [2767, 2981, 0.02803738], [2981, 3036, 0.09090909], [3036, 3151, 0.11304348], [3151, 3256, 0.11428571], [3256, 3398, 0.02112676], [3398, 3438, 0.1], [3438, 3502, 0.09375], [3502, 3563, 0.0], [3563, 3648, 0.09411765], [3648, 3697, 0.08163265], [3697, 3813, 0.0], [3813, 3954, 0.08510638], [3954, 4011, 0.0877193], [4011, 4107, 0.04166667], [4107, 4151, 0.11363636], [4151, 4223, 0.09722222], [4223, 4364, 0.06382979]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4364, 0.00060868]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4364, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4364, 0.79579031]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4364, -295.96985554]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4364, -125.97201363]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4364, 50.63524056]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4364, 63.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
papers.ssrn.com
Peel 9094.2.26: University of Alberta Alumni Association. The new trail. [Edmonton: Alumni Association of the University of Alberta, v.7 no.2 (). .
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2873
{"url": "http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/bibliography/9094.2.26/14.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "peel.library.ualberta.ca", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:51:20Z", "digest": "sha1:W5LRKSDFXQLIBDKKYJXPRXORIAPHCUW6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 147, 147.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 147, 784.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 147, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 147, 29.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 147, 0.7]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 147, 232.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 147, 0.19444444]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 147, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 147, 0.21428571]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 147, 0.33928571]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 147, 0.47222222]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 147, 0.65]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 147, 5.6]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 147, 2.48436684]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 147, 20.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 147, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 147, 20.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 147, 0.06870229]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 147, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 147, 0.07482993]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 147, 0.08253294]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 147, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 147, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 147, -17.62202996]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 147, -5.64553703]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 147, 0.95129037]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 147, 7.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
peel.library.ualberta.ca
» 22 June (Wed), p. 1 La Liberté, June 22, 1927 Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2874
{"url": "http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/newspapers/LLT/1927/06/22/1/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "peel.library.ualberta.ca", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:50:01Z", "digest": "sha1:4OBN65IDJYUAJABEE4GBRU3KMDAJKLUI"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 87, 87.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 87, 689.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 87, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 87, 30.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 87, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 87, 43.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 87, 0.03125]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 87, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 87, 0.78125]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 87, 0.88461538]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 87, 2.15384615]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 87, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 87, 3.0981395]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 87, 26.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 48, 0.0], [48, 87, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 48, 0.0], [48, 87, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 22, 6.0], [22, 48, 5.0], [48, 87, 15.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.17647059], [22, 48, 0.25], [48, 87, 0.5]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 48, 0.0], [48, 87, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.09090909], [22, 48, 0.11538462], [48, 87, 0.02564103]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 87, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 87, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 87, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 87, -35.70163527]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 87, -16.70787946]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 87, -8.33994216]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 87, 2.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
peel.library.ualberta.ca
» Poundmaker » 18 October (Wed), p. 7 Poundmaker, October 18, 1972
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2875
{"url": "http://peel.library.ualberta.ca/newspapers/POU/1972/10/18/7/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "peel.library.ualberta.ca", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:49:48Z", "digest": "sha1:SKAVLIZJDZG2I37TXMIDLQHAJCVMFXX3"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 66, 66.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 66, 713.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 66, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 66, 31.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 66, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 66, 240.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 66, 0.05882353]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 66, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 66, 0.64705882]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 66, 0.66666667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 66, 4.08333333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 66, 2.02280853]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 66, 12.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 38, 0.0], [38, 66, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 38, 0.0], [38, 66, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 13, 2.0], [13, 38, 6.0], [38, 66, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 38, 0.15], [38, 66, 0.23076923]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 38, 0.0], [38, 66, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 13, 0.07692308], [13, 38, 0.08], [38, 66, 0.07142857]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 66, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 66, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 66, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 66, -17.66643117]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 66, -6.64487146]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 66, 0.12087481]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 66, 2.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
peel.library.ualberta.ca
« LIST: Survival Gear. Also, Earthquake Preparedness…. UNTIL YOU GET TO THE “ABOUT” IT’S JUST DOG-BITES-MAN: Debbie Wasserman Schultz utters a bizarre sen… » A HEALTH-CARE PROGRAM I CAN ENDORSE: Make Sebelius Pay For Our Red Wine. “We all know that the medical community has recognized the benefits of red wine for the human heart. Resveratrol is found in the tannins apparently. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. Therefore I think it is high time that insurance policies cover red wine. Does the Obama administration have any idea what a good bottle of cabernet sauvignon costs? I spend at least $3000 a year on red wine and it’s breaking the bank. So please Kathleen Sebelius, include free red wine in the HHS mandate. Let’s eradicate heart disease once and for all!” Tweet Posted by Glenn Reynolds at 7:04 am Amazon.com Widgets
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2881
{"url": "http://pjmedia.com/instapundit/138344/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "pjmedia.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:03:16Z", "digest": "sha1:MOBU63D7ZC2CH4QBJNAP4TKLLG5Y3DWR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 862, 862.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 862, 4902.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 862, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 862, 267.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 862, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 862, 302.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 862, 0.26630435]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 862, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 862, 0.05043228]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 862, 0.125]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 862, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 862, 0.18478261]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 862, 0.7414966]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 862, 4.72108844]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 862, 0.01086957]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 862, 4.49547888]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 862, 147.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 23, 1.0], [23, 55, 1.0], [55, 158, 0.0], [158, 802, 1.0], [802, 862, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 55, 0.0], [55, 158, 0.0], [158, 802, 0.0], [802, 862, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 23, 4.0], [23, 55, 3.0], [55, 158, 17.0], [158, 802, 113.0], [802, 862, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 55, 0.0], [55, 158, 0.0], [158, 802, 0.00634921], [802, 862, 0.05172414]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 55, 0.0], [55, 158, 0.0], [158, 802, 0.0], [802, 862, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.26086957], [23, 55, 0.09375], [55, 158, 0.40776699], [158, 802, 0.08229814], [802, 862, 0.1]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 862, 7.87e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 862, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 862, -4.65e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 862, -78.52613046]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 862, -7.04787307]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 862, -63.57143356]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 862, 13.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
pjmedia.com
Obama aide: Timing of news about his aunt 'suspicious'Posted byCNN Associate Political Editor Rebecca Sinderbrand Obama aide David Axelrod, pictured here at a Pennsylvania campaign office earlier this week, called the release of information about Sen. Obama's aunt 'suspicious.' (CNN) - Barack Obama’s chief strategist said Saturday that he thought the last-minute appearance of stories like this weekend’s news that the Illinois senator’s aunt may be living in the country illegally would make people “suspicious.” The Associated Press has reported that Zeituni Onyango, a native of Kenya, has been living in Boston despite losing an appeal for asylum four years ago. Obama’s campaign issued a statement earlier Saturday that the Democratic nominee “has no knowledge of her status but obviously believes that any and all appropriate laws should be followed." The campaign also said it would return $265 in donations from Onyango, who is not legally permitted to donate to Obama because she is not a U.S. citizen. CNN has been unable to independently verify the aunt's immigration status. On the campaign trail in Nevada, Axelrod said the timing of the report might raise a few eyebrows. "The campaign issued a statement on that," he said. "And I don't have anything more to add to it, other than I think people are suspicious about stories that surface in the last 72 hours of a national campaign... I think that they're going to take that, they're going to put it in that context." House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers of Michigan questioned both the timing and the source of the news Saturday, sending a public letter to Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff requesting an investigation. Filed under: Candidate Barack Obama • Extra funny how the mccain/palin ticket is finding all these "issues". can they just deal with really issue plaguing the usa and find the right solutions? or will they continue to find everything under the rock to distract the voting people. i can't vote; i'm a proud canadian but wish you american look at the facts and not all these distraction. good luck. i hope you make the right choice.... November 1, 2008 04:40 pm at 4:40 pm | surprised???? blame it all on the DEMONIC DUO....who else would do such a rotten, sleazy reporting.....they were given the info from a government person......but it won't work.....this DEMONIC DUO haven't told us what they are going to do on policy issues....all they do is LIE LIE LIE LIE...and the ignorants who follow them VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE....the only human candidates Sens Obama and Biden.....the others are just reptiles November 1, 2008 04:40 pm at 4:40 pm | Chris It doesn't make us any more suspicious that many...many...of us already are of him. November 1, 2008 04:40 pm at 4:40 pm | TimeFor Change! Pathetic how low will the McCain Campaign stoop in order to STEAL this election? However this will BACKFIRE big time on McCain, leave Relatives out of your extreme right wingnut smears!!! Palin is a National Disgrace can't wait for her scandalous interview with the Canadian comedy duo, heard she advocated the killing of innocent Baby Seals what a Heartless Woman!?!? November 1, 2008 04:40 pm at 4:40 pm | SC If the news media would have done thier job and not takng sides in the reporting of the candidates, we would have alot more info on Obama that would be suspiciuos. After finding things out about Obama, I will change my vote and vote for McCain. I rather take my changes with him than with someone the media seems to be covering up for. November 1, 2008 04:40 pm at 4:40 pm | Alissa in Kansas "CNN has been unable to independently verify the aunt's immigration status." <-- that's all I need to know. Until it's certain it's not a story. Even if it were I still wouldn't care because it's his AUNT not HIM! So who cares? November 1, 2008 04:40 pm at 4:40 pm | American Joe Obama is a liar. Period. He has lied from day one. America is losing it's sense of direction. Most all people who vote for obama is doing so just because of race and don't even know the issues or what he stands for. The are deaf, dumb & blind. With an emphasis on "dumb". All of you who get my money because I work for it and support you as it is, spend it wisely , please. That's of course if obama gets elected. God I hope and pray he don't, because those who vote for him now will be happy in 3 days and very regretful in 300 days. November 1, 2008 04:40 pm at 4:40 pm | cj The last attempt of McCain/Palin to discredit t Barack Obama's character ended real quick when McCain was brought up in the same thing. Well "gosh darn" that didn't work so now we need to find something else. So now they roll out the Aunt issue. Come on McCain;/Palin especially McCain you call this an honorable honest campaign, you and your running mate have made this the most dispiciable disgusting campaign I can remember and I am 60 years old. McCain Palin down the road your names will be linked (has already happened) with people that may be questionable so be very carefull throwing stones, it just may come back to haunt you. November 1, 2008 04:41 pm at 4:41 pm | Melanie Cole This is a very smelly fish that the RNC , the McCain Campaign and the Bush Administration have pulled out of the water. Please! This is completely illegal for the INS to leak information about the status of immigrants. Call your senator and representative and ask for an investigation. You pay the salaries of the people who brought this to light. If you support Barak Obama, your tax dollars were just spent to support John McCain. Be outraged and call for an investigation. Email Rep Conyers too...ask him to come on CNN! Make Monday a pro-Obama day on the news and lets hear about the illegal nature of all this on CNN. November 1, 2008 04:41 pm at 4:41 pm | FAYE, NV What does that have to do with Obama's policies and his agenda? There are many people in the USA that are not citizens. This is not a reflection on Obama nor what he stands for. Therefore, I don't care what the others may say. I wish each person who would like to be a citizen of the USA obtain their citizenship. Obama/Biden November 1, 2008 04:41 pm at 4:41 pm | JJ I am glad that they are looking into this and hope that they find out who endangered this woman whether she should or shouldn't be here. This is pathetic for CNN to report such information without a reputable source. This is what we call a black sheep that hides in the crowds. McCain camp has been throwing stones and hiding their hands. They should cut the press until they can find out who link the information and why. Still Obama is my man. Go Obama you are the new changer of the world. November 1, 2008 04:41 pm at 4:41 pm | Susan Cusson Oh Yes, what about the Kenya connection??? DIG!!!!!!You'll find the story. Sorry, but I am a Democrat for McCain. I don't believe in ethnic cleasning. November 1, 2008 04:41 pm at 4:41 pm | Anonymous Go figure! The Bush Administration and the McCain Campaign is willing to do anything to win! Typical Radical, Right-wing, Evangelical, Republican ways of campaigning.. They make me sick! When are the real republican's gonna come back? The Reagan Republican's.. The honorable GOP. November 1, 2008 04:42 pm at 4:42 pm | Amber We can not choose who we are related to. This is clearly a bad p.r. move and we the people want and increase in our wages, hold these companies accountable for excellent health coverage, save the people from the mortg crisis, stop allowing these companies to close down jobs her in our country and get rewarded for opening businesses overseas, and once an for all tell us the facts and not the smoke screens like this and Joe P.and dirty politics. Give us the facts and that's all we ask! The Repubs are back @ it again if u ask me Obama is destined to win this years election since this has to be a new world record of all time low! November 1, 2008 04:42 pm at 4:42 pm | Mike, Land O Lakes, FL Why is anyone surprised the Bush administration decided to leak this story few days before an election to helpout John McCain??????? November 1, 2008 04:42 pm at 4:42 pm | Bob If he is not aware of the circumstances of his own family, I'm sure he'll be very aware of the needs of everyday Americans.... November 1, 2008 04:42 pm at 4:42 pm | Lien This issue is not very important for the election. However, I am pretty sure Obama knows all about this long before. He even mentioned her in his book. As an immigrant, I know all my relatives and friends who came to this country under which status. Of course, I always get excited when my relatives and friends made it to this country. This simple issue can define what charater Obama is. Very funny. November 1, 2008 04:42 pm at 4:42 pm | Brian What did Obama know and when did he know it? The Attorney General needs to appoint a Special Prosecutor for possible impeachment charges against Obama for conspiracy to violate immigration laws and for being an accessory after the fact. IMPEACH OBAMA NOW! (That'll keep the fun of the campaign going for another year) This last attempt of McCain to attack Obama in a so viciously way just makes me throw up... It's non-news anyway- just about as critical to the election as my show size or the temperature in Omaha today! November 1, 2008 04:43 pm at 4:43 pm | NO McBushChen for AMERICA SEEMS TO ME THAT McBushChen IS BUSH & CHANEY ROLLED UP IN ONE, ECONOMIC MORON & WARMONGER. November 1, 2008 04:43 pm at 4:43 pm | Billy Palin got pranked called by The Masked Avengers from CKOI 96.9 FM, its a 6 min conversation. She is a ninny. November 1, 2008 04:43 pm at 4:43 pm | IF, Portugal People say this is not the McCain they knew... could they have been wrong? What I've seen of him on this campaign has been far from honourable. Unless he's been brain-washed this is McCain being McCain under a crisis. He keeps saying he's been tested... maybe, but if he refers to being a POW, then a lot of americans unfortunately share that past. What sets him apart from all the other POWs? Maybe he's being tested right now... and, if so, he flunked on character. November 1, 2008 04:43 pm at 4:43 pm | Cincy Nurse When is America going to wake up....this is just another thing to add to a candidate fraught with Anti-American tails. Wake up America...Wake up! You can't tell me this man didn't know about his aunt. I would know about mine. Some close knit family man. Wow Wee! And....he makes millions allowing his aunt to take from tax payers...this is so foul and gross to me, I am a democrat voting McCain on Tuesday....how much more is there? ....and don't tell me I wasn't going to vote for Obama....that isn't the case here....this is just another hidden secret. November 1, 2008 04:43 pm at 4:43 pm | Deren What does this have to do with the price of tea in China??? It's all over......why don't the GOP move on to the next installment of their soap opera and start their steward's inquiry now. No need to wait for the spanking they going to get come Nov 4th. This will be a great historical case study how to botch things up.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2886
{"url": "http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2008/11/01/obama-aide-timing-of-news-about-his-aunt-suspicious/comment-page-4/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:03:52Z", "digest": "sha1:PVMGZHWEE3WXFS5KX63PA5IKPISGYYQ5"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 11080, 11080.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 11080, 13979.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 11080, 60.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 11080, 193.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 11080, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 11080, 332.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 11080, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 11080, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 11080, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 11080, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 11080, 0.40967742]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 11080, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 11080, 0.01442699]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 11080, 0.08423502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 11080, 0.08423502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 11080, 0.08097731]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 11080, 0.08097731]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 11080, 0.01442699]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 11080, 0.02303665]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 11080, 0.03327516]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 11080, 0.01384526]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 11080, 0.0358871]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 11080, 0.05]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 11080, 0.20766129]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 11080, 0.36690283]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 11080, 4.34969636]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 11080, 0.01169355]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 11080, 5.79341447]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 11080, 1976.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 279, 0.0], [279, 516, 1.0], [516, 1014, 1.0], [1014, 1089, 1.0], [1089, 1484, 0.0], [1484, 1705, 1.0], [1705, 1749, 0.0], [1749, 2139, 1.0], [2139, 2192, 1.0], [2192, 2504, 0.0], [2504, 2627, 0.0], [2627, 2672, 0.0], [2672, 2756, 1.0], [2756, 2811, 1.0], [2811, 3180, 1.0], [3180, 3222, 0.0], [3222, 3558, 1.0], [3558, 3614, 0.0], [3614, 3842, 1.0], [3842, 3894, 0.0], [3894, 4429, 1.0], [4429, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 5107, 1.0], [5107, 5159, 0.0], [5159, 5782, 1.0], [5782, 5830, 0.0], [5830, 6008, 1.0], [6008, 6144, 1.0], [6144, 6156, 0.0], [6156, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6691, 1.0], [6691, 6743, 0.0], [6743, 6894, 1.0], [6894, 6943, 0.0], [6943, 7223, 1.0], [7223, 7268, 0.0], [7268, 7902, 1.0], [7902, 7964, 0.0], [7964, 8097, 1.0], [8097, 8140, 0.0], [8140, 8267, 1.0], [8267, 8311, 0.0], [8311, 8713, 1.0], [8713, 8758, 0.0], [8758, 9076, 0.0], [9076, 9168, 1.0], [9168, 9280, 1.0], [9280, 9345, 0.0], [9345, 9436, 1.0], [9436, 9481, 0.0], [9481, 9590, 1.0], [9590, 9642, 0.0], [9642, 10036, 1.0], [10036, 10110, 1.0], [10110, 10161, 0.0], [10161, 10716, 1.0], [10716, 10761, 0.0], [10761, 10821, 1.0], [10821, 11014, 1.0], [11014, 11080, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 279, 0.0], [279, 516, 0.0], [516, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1484, 0.0], [1484, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1749, 0.0], [1749, 2139, 0.0], [2139, 2192, 0.0], [2192, 2504, 0.0], [2504, 2627, 0.0], [2627, 2672, 0.0], [2672, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2811, 0.0], [2811, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3222, 0.0], [3222, 3558, 0.0], [3558, 3614, 0.0], [3614, 3842, 0.0], [3842, 3894, 0.0], [3894, 4429, 0.0], [4429, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 5107, 0.0], [5107, 5159, 0.0], [5159, 5782, 0.0], [5782, 5830, 0.0], [5830, 6008, 0.0], [6008, 6144, 0.0], [6144, 6156, 0.0], [6156, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6691, 0.0], [6691, 6743, 0.0], [6743, 6894, 0.0], [6894, 6943, 0.0], [6943, 7223, 0.0], [7223, 7268, 0.0], [7268, 7902, 0.0], [7902, 7964, 0.0], [7964, 8097, 0.0], [8097, 8140, 0.0], [8140, 8267, 0.0], [8267, 8311, 0.0], [8311, 8713, 0.0], [8713, 8758, 0.0], [8758, 9076, 0.0], [9076, 9168, 0.0], [9168, 9280, 0.0], [9280, 9345, 0.0], [9345, 9436, 0.0], [9436, 9481, 0.0], [9481, 9590, 0.0], [9590, 9642, 0.0], [9642, 10036, 0.0], [10036, 10110, 0.0], [10110, 10161, 0.0], [10161, 10716, 0.0], [10716, 10761, 0.0], [10761, 10821, 0.0], [10821, 11014, 0.0], [11014, 11080, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 279, 39.0], [279, 516, 35.0], [516, 1014, 83.0], [1014, 1089, 11.0], [1089, 1484, 73.0], [1484, 1705, 32.0], [1705, 1749, 7.0], [1749, 2139, 69.0], [2139, 2192, 9.0], [2192, 2504, 52.0], [2504, 2627, 19.0], [2627, 2672, 9.0], [2672, 2756, 14.0], [2756, 2811, 10.0], [2811, 3180, 60.0], [3180, 3222, 9.0], [3222, 3558, 64.0], [3558, 3614, 11.0], [3614, 3842, 41.0], [3842, 3894, 10.0], [3894, 4429, 108.0], [4429, 4471, 9.0], [4471, 5107, 112.0], [5107, 5159, 10.0], [5159, 5782, 111.0], [5782, 5830, 10.0], [5830, 6008, 35.0], [6008, 6144, 26.0], [6144, 6156, 1.0], [6156, 6198, 9.0], [6198, 6691, 93.0], [6691, 6743, 10.0], [6743, 6894, 25.0], [6894, 6943, 9.0], [6943, 7223, 42.0], [7223, 7268, 9.0], [7268, 7902, 121.0], [7902, 7964, 13.0], [7964, 8097, 21.0], [8097, 8140, 9.0], [8140, 8267, 24.0], [8267, 8311, 9.0], [8311, 8713, 73.0], [8713, 8758, 9.0], [8758, 9076, 53.0], [9076, 9168, 18.0], [9168, 9280, 20.0], [9280, 9345, 12.0], [9345, 9436, 15.0], [9436, 9481, 9.0], [9481, 9590, 21.0], [9590, 9642, 10.0], [9642, 10036, 72.0], [10036, 10110, 13.0], [10110, 10161, 10.0], [10161, 10716, 97.0], [10716, 10761, 9.0], [10761, 10821, 13.0], [10821, 11014, 36.0], [11014, 11080, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 279, 0.0], [279, 516, 0.0], [516, 1014, 0.00616016], [1014, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1484, 0.00530504], [1484, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1749, 0.0], [1749, 2139, 0.0], [2139, 2192, 0.27906977], [2192, 2504, 0.0], [2504, 2627, 0.0], [2627, 2672, 0.30769231], [2672, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2811, 0.25], [2811, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3222, 0.33333333], [3222, 3558, 0.0], [3558, 3614, 0.24], [3614, 3842, 0.0], [3842, 3894, 0.26086957], [3894, 4429, 0.00782779], [4429, 4471, 0.33333333], [4471, 5107, 0.00323102], [5107, 5159, 0.26086957], [5159, 5782, 0.0], [5782, 5830, 0.29268293], [5830, 6008, 0.0], [6008, 6144, 0.0], [6144, 6156, 0.0], [6156, 6198, 0.33333333], [6198, 6691, 0.0], [6691, 6743, 0.26086957], [6743, 6894, 0.0], [6894, 6943, 0.27906977], [6943, 7223, 0.0], [7223, 7268, 0.30769231], [7268, 7902, 0.0], [7902, 7964, 0.22222222], [7964, 8097, 0.0], [8097, 8140, 0.32432432], [8140, 8267, 0.0], [8267, 8311, 0.31578947], [8311, 8713, 0.0], [8713, 8758, 0.30769231], [8758, 9076, 0.0], [9076, 9168, 0.0], [9168, 9280, 0.0], [9280, 9345, 0.20338983], [9345, 9436, 0.0], [9436, 9481, 0.30769231], [9481, 9590, 0.03846154], [9590, 9642, 0.26666667], [9642, 10036, 0.0], [10036, 10110, 0.0], [10110, 10161, 0.26666667], [10161, 10716, 0.0], [10716, 10761, 0.30769231], [10761, 10821, 0.0], [10821, 11014, 0.00552486], [11014, 11080, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 279, 0.0], [279, 516, 0.0], [516, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1484, 0.0], [1484, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1749, 0.0], [1749, 2139, 0.0], [2139, 2192, 0.0], [2192, 2504, 0.0], [2504, 2627, 0.0], [2627, 2672, 0.0], [2672, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2811, 0.0], [2811, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3222, 0.0], [3222, 3558, 0.0], [3558, 3614, 0.0], [3614, 3842, 0.0], [3842, 3894, 0.0], [3894, 4429, 0.0], [4429, 4471, 0.0], [4471, 5107, 0.0], [5107, 5159, 0.0], [5159, 5782, 0.0], [5782, 5830, 0.0], [5830, 6008, 0.0], [6008, 6144, 0.0], [6144, 6156, 0.0], [6156, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6691, 0.0], [6691, 6743, 0.0], [6743, 6894, 0.0], [6894, 6943, 0.0], [6943, 7223, 0.0], [7223, 7268, 0.0], [7268, 7902, 0.0], [7902, 7964, 0.0], [7964, 8097, 0.0], [8097, 8140, 0.0], [8140, 8267, 0.0], [8267, 8311, 0.0], [8311, 8713, 0.0], [8713, 8758, 0.0], [8758, 9076, 0.0], [9076, 9168, 0.0], [9168, 9280, 0.0], [9280, 9345, 0.0], [9345, 9436, 0.0], [9436, 9481, 0.0], [9481, 9590, 0.0], [9590, 9642, 0.0], [9642, 10036, 0.0], [10036, 10110, 0.0], [10110, 10161, 0.0], [10161, 10716, 0.0], [10716, 10761, 0.0], [10761, 10821, 0.0], [10821, 11014, 0.0], [11014, 11080, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 279, 0.0609319], [279, 516, 0.02953586], [516, 1014, 0.03012048], [1014, 1089, 0.04], [1089, 1484, 0.02025316], [1484, 1705, 0.05429864], [1705, 1749, 0.11363636], [1749, 2139, 0.0], [2139, 2192, 0.01886792], [2192, 2504, 0.1025641], [2504, 2627, 0.28455285], [2627, 2672, 0.04444444], [2672, 2756, 0.01190476], [2756, 2811, 0.07272727], [2811, 3180, 0.07859079], [3180, 3222, 0.07142857], [3222, 3558, 0.02380952], [3558, 3614, 0.05357143], [3614, 3842, 0.06578947], [3842, 3894, 0.05769231], [3894, 4429, 0.02242991], [4429, 4471, 0.02380952], [4471, 5107, 0.03459119], [5107, 5159, 0.05769231], [5159, 5782, 0.05617978], [5782, 5830, 0.14583333], [5830, 6008, 0.04494382], [6008, 6144, 0.04411765], [6144, 6156, 0.16666667], [6156, 6198, 0.07142857], [6198, 6691, 0.02636917], [6691, 6743, 0.05769231], [6743, 6894, 0.08609272], [6894, 6943, 0.04081633], [6943, 7223, 0.075], [7223, 7268, 0.04444444], [7268, 7902, 0.0126183], [7902, 7964, 0.11290323], [7964, 8097, 0.03759398], [8097, 8140, 0.04651163], [8140, 8267, 0.02362205], [8267, 8311, 0.04545455], [8311, 8713, 0.02985075], [8713, 8758, 0.04444444], [8758, 9076, 0.0754717], [9076, 9168, 0.04347826], [9168, 9280, 0.01785714], [9280, 9345, 0.2], [9345, 9436, 0.69230769], [9436, 9481, 0.04444444], [9481, 9590, 0.10091743], [9590, 9642, 0.07692308], [9642, 10036, 0.04568528], [10036, 10110, 0.01351351], [10110, 10161, 0.05882353], [10161, 10716, 0.03423423], [10716, 10761, 0.04444444], [10761, 10821, 0.03333333], [10821, 11014, 0.03108808], [11014, 11080, 0.01515152]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 11080, 0.00153351]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 11080, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 11080, 0.42920291]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 11080, -618.63722379]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 11080, -114.88535644]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 11080, -948.42778519]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 11080, 147.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com
December 3rd, 2011 05:33 PM ET Cain Iowa supporters: Media 'took a good man down’Posted byCNN's Chris Welch Urbandale, Iowa (CNN) - Staff and supporters at Herman Cain's Iowa headquarters shared tears, hugs and overall fond memories of a candidate they say they'll continue to support in whatever his next venture may be. "Without a doubt," Iowa communications director Lisa Lockwood said when asked if she'll continue to fight for him if there is a plan B for Cain, who announced Saturday that he is suspending his bid for the Republican presidential nomination. Lockwood and a handful of volunteers sat in front of a laptop to watch a live stream of their candidate as he made the announcement that he'd be suspending his campaign. "I think he's an awesome man and I think he would have been an awesome president. I still hold out hope that one day he will," Lockwood said. But amidst the sadness and hope for the future were feelings of frustration toward members of the press over the coverage of sexual harassment allegations against Cain. "I don't recognize my industry anymore," Lockwood said. "I was taught objectivity, accuracy, fairness, balance. I don't see that happening." "Where's the investigation behind who [these accusers] are?" she said. Asked whether she believes any of the allegations are true, Lockwood said she "wouldn't speculate" but that she "believes in him." "I'm not judge or jury. It doesn't matter to me whether it's true or not." Volunteer Patti Spencer Burdette of Des Moines and her son Thom Moore are staunch supporters who've devoted a significant portion of the past year to Cain's campaign. When they heard him say the word "suspend," their hearts sank. "I don't mess with things unless I'm really going to invest my whole self," said Spencer Burdette. "And now what I've invested in has broken down in a way that I'd never ever expected. So yeah, I'm upset. I'm disappointed, a little heartbroken." Her son echoed those feelings. "I'm not happy," Moore said. "I feel like I've lost my second best friend. When I lost my best friend I lost all control of any capacity that I had, and it's taking everything in me not to fall apart." Moore said he's never been one to actively participate in politics, but when he met Cain that all changed. "This is the one time that I've actually cared." The mother and son pair came to the offices shortly after the speech ended because they said they just had to find out if it's really over. Spencer Burdette was most upset when discussing why she thinks the campaign ultimately failed. "I'm not angry at him," she began, before turning to the media gathered around her. "Present company included or excluded, you guys know what you've been doing." "You're supposed to have facts when you report something, and I just don't think that any media anywhere has taken facts and then fact-checked them before they reported them. That's what I'm angry about. It's just taken a good man and his family down." "The very good are often the target of the very evil, and I think that's all this is." This week, Ginger White, an Atlanta woman, told the news media that she and Cain engaged in an on-and-off affair for more than 13 years. She described the affair as "very casual." Cain told the Union Leader newspaper in New Hampshire this week that he repeatedly gave White money to help her with "month-to-month bills and expenses." But he denied the relationship was sexual, as White contends. Two women - Sharon Bialek and Karen Kraushaar - previously accused Cain of sexually harassing them in the 1990s while he was head of the National Restaurant Association. Two other women also have said Cain sexually harassed them while they worked at the association, but they have declined to be identified. Spencer Burdette said she believes the accusers are lying and that she feels sorry for what he and his wife have gone through. Asked if she had an opinion about the fact that Cain did not disclose his relationship with White until after he revealed it to the media, Spencer Burdette said that some people "are just built that way," implying that some people don't like bragging about helping those less fortunate. "It's because he is a Christian. He is an associate Baptist pastor. He is a father." Filed under: 2012 • Herman Cain • Iowa Not all "accusers" lie. This guy is a pig, a womanizer, a phony "bible beating baptist". He should never have made an attempt tp become President! Comparing him with Barack Obama is like trying to compare a fetid garbage heap to an intelligent and classy human. Good riddance! December 4, 2011 08:03 am at 8:03 am | mike Good riddance. Mr Cain is just another whipping boy of the Koch brothers who I hope to see pay 50% of their income in taxes soon December 4, 2011 08:08 am at 8:08 am | A real American The media made him do it? Oh, I see, it's just a rewording of the "devil made him do it" game. No, I'm sorry, but ole Herman fouled his own nest. Frankly, the media should spend more efforts on showing the duplicity of the self righteous conservative big mouths fouling our political system today. The media has much to answer for but nothing to apologize for. December 4, 2011 08:10 am at 8:10 am | Biased Press! I agree that the media had a hand in this gross injustice against Herman Cain and actually against the American people who refuse to bow to the politcal tyrants of the DNC. However, the real culprits here are in the White House and, most likely, Chicago. If there are any journalists with a shred of integrity left in this country they will immediately launch investigations of the true source of all this. Since the one thing all these women had in common is a desperate need of money, why not "follow the money?" Otherwise, this crime will likely continue against other GOP candidates until George Soros's money runs out. December 4, 2011 08:12 am at 8:12 am | abby1 The media did not take Cain down. It was Cain that took himself down. Cain has only himself to blame for his bad behavior. December 4, 2011 08:13 am at 8:13 am | korkea aika Cain lost the evangelical vote when he went from singing "Amazing Grace" to "Grace was Amazing!" December 4, 2011 08:16 am at 8:16 am | tt He's a fool. December 4, 2011 08:17 am at 8:17 am | Right Wing Nut Case In denial much??? The media didn't bring Herman down, he brought himself down. Get a grip. December 4, 2011 08:20 am at 8:20 am | BigJim oh puleeeze, the media didnt take a good man down, they just exposed an unfaithful, skirt-chasing old geezer. The mystery to me is ehy would a woman who had enjoyed 13 years of financal aid and comfort rat the man out? Book, movie payday deal hopes perhaps? December 4, 2011 08:32 am at 8:32 am | atroy His own actions took him down...it's about personal responsibility. December 4, 2011 08:34 am at 8:34 am | Herb There is an old saying: Where there is smoke there is fire. HC & the Mrs would have fought this if there weren't some very hot coals even if the fire was out regardless of what HC says. Obviously those who continue to argue the points are into 'blind obedience' and have a lot of used cars on their front lawns. How the media is blamed for anything other than reporting news, no matter how sensationalized it was, is beyond me. In fact, HC made the announcement himself on CNN. He could have kept his mouth shut, but nooooooooooooooooo. Why did he involve the media if he and his followers are so sure that he was slandered? If anything, he was trying to use the media to control the situation. December 4, 2011 08:42 am at 8:42 am | roy This country is too far gone to matter which crook enters the White House especially after 8 years of blundering Bush policies along with sidekick Chaney's brain farts. December 4, 2011 08:42 am at 8:42 am | Really? Cain took himself down. He had enough skeletons in his closet and was not skillful enough to hide them better. That shows political stupidity. Getting all religious and singing Hymns at rallies only goes so far to fool the People. He;s really a Pimp. December 4, 2011 08:42 am at 8:42 am | EddyL Yes it was the media, not the stupid blowhard himself. December 4, 2011 08:43 am at 8:43 am | Brian What exactly did the media do wrong? With the exception of internet bloggers, the media outlets reported the stories. The accusers, for the most part, went public. The media reported that directly to their audience. And most of them with details I might add. Herman Cain hasn't really presented any facts and sorry to say, looks guilty as hell. Maybe it's time for Herman to take responsibility for his own actions/inactions. Then again the easy way out it to blame someone else other than themself. It's the GOP thing to do. December 4, 2011 08:47 am at 8:47 am | George Once again, the party of "personal responsibility" refuses to take any of the blame for such a terrible candidate, so what do they do? They blame the MEDIA, just like always. December 4, 2011 08:51 am at 8:51 am | Jason Well, the media also helped to expose his woeful ignorance! You want Media sabotage of a good man, think of Howard Dean and the "Dean Scream!" December 4, 2011 08:52 am at 8:52 am | Wastrel Aw nuts. He didn't do anything, it's the media's fault. Never mind that he doesn't know that China has nukes and he seems to have quite a few moral challenges - he's the best the Republicans can do. And that's probably true. December 4, 2011 08:52 am at 8:52 am | « Previous
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2887
{"url": "http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/12/03/cain-iowa-supporters-media-took-a-good-man-down/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:40:18Z", "digest": "sha1:FCM5HFQKOIBU2KSJYNLDWYNQXJZV34PT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 9438, 9438.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 9438, 12025.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 9438, 63.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 9438, 148.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 9438, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 9438, 288.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 9438, 4.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 9438, 0.42006564]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 9438, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 9438, 0.01767265]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 9438, 0.01767265]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 9438, 0.01767265]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 9438, 0.01767265]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 9438, 0.01957586]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 9438, 0.03181077]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 9438, 0.00693312]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 9438, 0.01969058]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 9438, 0.22362869]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 9438, 0.41278375]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 9438, 4.39426523]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 9438, 0.00046882]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 9438, 5.80404158]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 9438, 1674.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 322, 1.0], [322, 564, 1.0], [564, 734, 1.0], [734, 876, 1.0], [876, 1045, 1.0], [1045, 1186, 0.0], [1186, 1257, 1.0], [1257, 1388, 0.0], [1388, 1463, 0.0], [1463, 1693, 1.0], [1693, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 1970, 1.0], [1970, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2279, 1.0], [2279, 2328, 0.0], [2328, 2468, 1.0], [2468, 2563, 1.0], [2563, 2725, 0.0], [2725, 2978, 0.0], [2978, 3065, 0.0], [3065, 3461, 1.0], [3461, 3769, 1.0], [3769, 3896, 1.0], [3896, 4183, 1.0], [4183, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4307, 0.0], [4307, 4584, 1.0], [4584, 4628, 0.0], [4628, 4757, 0.0], [4757, 4812, 0.0], [4812, 5173, 1.0], [5173, 5226, 1.0], [5226, 5850, 1.0], [5850, 5895, 0.0], [5895, 6018, 1.0], [6018, 6069, 0.0], [6069, 6166, 0.0], [6166, 6208, 0.0], [6208, 6221, 1.0], [6221, 6280, 0.0], [6280, 6371, 1.0], [6371, 6417, 0.0], [6417, 6675, 1.0], [6675, 6720, 0.0], [6720, 6788, 1.0], [6788, 6832, 0.0], [6832, 7527, 1.0], [7527, 7570, 0.0], [7570, 7739, 1.0], [7739, 7786, 1.0], [7786, 8037, 1.0], [8037, 8082, 0.0], [8082, 8137, 1.0], [8137, 8182, 0.0], [8182, 8708, 1.0], [8708, 8754, 0.0], [8754, 8929, 1.0], [8929, 8974, 0.0], [8974, 9117, 0.0], [9117, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9389, 1.0], [9389, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 322, 0.0], [322, 564, 0.0], [564, 734, 0.0], [734, 876, 0.0], [876, 1045, 0.0], [1045, 1186, 0.0], [1186, 1257, 0.0], [1257, 1388, 0.0], [1388, 1463, 0.0], [1463, 1693, 0.0], [1693, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 1970, 0.0], [1970, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2279, 0.0], [2279, 2328, 0.0], [2328, 2468, 0.0], [2468, 2563, 0.0], [2563, 2725, 0.0], [2725, 2978, 0.0], [2978, 3065, 0.0], [3065, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3769, 0.0], [3769, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4307, 0.0], [4307, 4584, 0.0], [4584, 4628, 0.0], [4628, 4757, 0.0], [4757, 4812, 0.0], [4812, 5173, 0.0], [5173, 5226, 0.0], [5226, 5850, 0.0], [5850, 5895, 0.0], [5895, 6018, 0.0], [6018, 6069, 0.0], [6069, 6166, 0.0], [6166, 6208, 0.0], [6208, 6221, 0.0], [6221, 6280, 0.0], [6280, 6371, 0.0], [6371, 6417, 0.0], [6417, 6675, 0.0], [6675, 6720, 0.0], [6720, 6788, 0.0], [6788, 6832, 0.0], [6832, 7527, 0.0], [7527, 7570, 0.0], [7570, 7739, 0.0], [7739, 7786, 0.0], [7786, 8037, 0.0], [8037, 8082, 0.0], [8082, 8137, 0.0], [8137, 8182, 0.0], [8182, 8708, 0.0], [8708, 8754, 0.0], [8754, 8929, 0.0], [8929, 8974, 0.0], [8974, 9117, 0.0], [9117, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9389, 0.0], [9389, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 31, 6.0], [31, 322, 46.0], [322, 564, 40.0], [564, 734, 31.0], [734, 876, 28.0], [876, 1045, 27.0], [1045, 1186, 20.0], [1186, 1257, 10.0], [1257, 1388, 21.0], [1388, 1463, 15.0], [1463, 1693, 38.0], [1693, 1939, 43.0], [1939, 1970, 5.0], [1970, 2172, 40.0], [2172, 2279, 19.0], [2279, 2328, 9.0], [2328, 2468, 27.0], [2468, 2563, 14.0], [2563, 2725, 27.0], [2725, 2978, 44.0], [2978, 3065, 18.0], [3065, 3461, 67.0], [3461, 3769, 49.0], [3769, 3896, 23.0], [3896, 4183, 49.0], [4183, 4268, 16.0], [4268, 4307, 8.0], [4307, 4584, 48.0], [4584, 4628, 9.0], [4628, 4757, 26.0], [4757, 4812, 11.0], [4812, 5173, 66.0], [5173, 5226, 10.0], [5226, 5850, 109.0], [5850, 5895, 9.0], [5895, 6018, 24.0], [6018, 6069, 10.0], [6069, 6166, 16.0], [6166, 6208, 9.0], [6208, 6221, 3.0], [6221, 6280, 12.0], [6280, 6371, 16.0], [6371, 6417, 9.0], [6417, 6675, 47.0], [6675, 6720, 9.0], [6720, 6788, 9.0], [6788, 6832, 9.0], [6832, 7527, 129.0], [7527, 7570, 9.0], [7570, 7739, 28.0], [7739, 7786, 9.0], [7786, 8037, 44.0], [8037, 8082, 9.0], [8082, 8137, 10.0], [8137, 8182, 9.0], [8182, 8708, 91.0], [8708, 8754, 9.0], [8754, 8929, 31.0], [8929, 8974, 9.0], [8974, 9117, 26.0], [9117, 9164, 9.0], [9164, 9389, 41.0], [9389, 9438, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.32142857], [31, 322, 0.0], [322, 564, 0.0], [564, 734, 0.0], [734, 876, 0.0], [876, 1045, 0.0], [1045, 1186, 0.0], [1186, 1257, 0.0], [1257, 1388, 0.0], [1388, 1463, 0.0], [1463, 1693, 0.0], [1693, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 1970, 0.0], [1970, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2279, 0.0], [2279, 2328, 0.0], [2328, 2468, 0.0], [2468, 2563, 0.0], [2563, 2725, 0.0], [2725, 2978, 0.0], [2978, 3065, 0.0], [3065, 3461, 0.00527704], [3461, 3769, 0.01333333], [3769, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4307, 0.10810811], [4307, 4584, 0.0], [4584, 4628, 0.31578947], [4628, 4757, 0.01587302], [4757, 4812, 0.24489796], [4812, 5173, 0.0], [5173, 5226, 0.26086957], [5226, 5850, 0.0], [5850, 5895, 0.33333333], [5895, 6018, 0.0], [6018, 6069, 0.26666667], [6069, 6166, 0.0], [6166, 6208, 0.33333333], [6208, 6221, 0.0], [6221, 6280, 0.22641509], [6280, 6371, 0.0], [6371, 6417, 0.3], [6417, 6675, 0.00803213], [6675, 6720, 0.30769231], [6720, 6788, 0.0], [6788, 6832, 0.31578947], [6832, 7527, 0.0], [7527, 7570, 0.32432432], [7570, 7739, 0.0060241], [7739, 7786, 0.3], [7786, 8037, 0.0], [8037, 8082, 0.30769231], [8082, 8137, 0.0], [8137, 8182, 0.30769231], [8182, 8708, 0.0], [8708, 8754, 0.3], [8754, 8929, 0.0], [8929, 8974, 0.30769231], [8974, 9117, 0.0], [9117, 9164, 0.29268293], [9164, 9389, 0.0], [9389, 9438, 0.27272727]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 322, 0.0], [322, 564, 0.0], [564, 734, 0.0], [734, 876, 0.0], [876, 1045, 0.0], [1045, 1186, 0.0], [1186, 1257, 0.0], [1257, 1388, 0.0], [1388, 1463, 0.0], [1463, 1693, 0.0], [1693, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 1970, 0.0], [1970, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2279, 0.0], [2279, 2328, 0.0], [2328, 2468, 0.0], [2468, 2563, 0.0], [2563, 2725, 0.0], [2725, 2978, 0.0], [2978, 3065, 0.0], [3065, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3769, 0.0], [3769, 3896, 0.0], [3896, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4307, 0.0], [4307, 4584, 0.0], [4584, 4628, 0.0], [4628, 4757, 0.0], [4757, 4812, 0.0], [4812, 5173, 0.0], [5173, 5226, 0.0], [5226, 5850, 0.0], [5850, 5895, 0.0], [5895, 6018, 0.0], [6018, 6069, 0.0], [6069, 6166, 0.0], [6166, 6208, 0.0], [6208, 6221, 0.0], [6221, 6280, 0.0], [6280, 6371, 0.0], [6371, 6417, 0.0], [6417, 6675, 0.0], [6675, 6720, 0.0], [6720, 6788, 0.0], [6788, 6832, 0.0], [6832, 7527, 0.0], [7527, 7570, 0.0], [7570, 7739, 0.0], [7739, 7786, 0.0], [7786, 8037, 0.0], [8037, 8082, 0.0], [8082, 8137, 0.0], [8137, 8182, 0.0], [8182, 8708, 0.0], [8708, 8754, 0.0], [8754, 8929, 0.0], [8929, 8974, 0.0], [8974, 9117, 0.0], [9117, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9389, 0.0], [9389, 9438, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.16129032], [31, 322, 0.06185567], [322, 564, 0.03305785], [564, 734, 0.00588235], [734, 876, 0.02816901], [876, 1045, 0.01183432], [1045, 1186, 0.02836879], [1186, 1257, 0.01408451], [1257, 1388, 0.01526718], [1388, 1463, 0.02666667], [1463, 1693, 0.04347826], [1693, 1939, 0.04065041], [1939, 1970, 0.03225806], [1970, 2172, 0.03960396], [2172, 2279, 0.01869159], [2279, 2328, 0.04081633], [2328, 2468, 0.00714286], [2468, 2563, 0.02105263], [2563, 2725, 0.01234568], [2725, 2978, 0.01976285], [2978, 3065, 0.02298851], [3065, 3461, 0.03535354], [3461, 3769, 0.03571429], [3769, 3896, 0.01574803], [3896, 4183, 0.0174216], [4183, 4268, 0.05882353], [4268, 4307, 0.1025641], [4307, 4584, 0.02888087], [4584, 4628, 0.02272727], [4628, 4757, 0.03875969], [4757, 4812, 0.05454545], [4812, 5173, 0.02216066], [5173, 5226, 0.05660377], [5226, 5850, 0.03044872], [5850, 5895, 0.02222222], [5895, 6018, 0.04065041], [6018, 6069, 0.01960784], [6069, 6166, 0.05154639], [6166, 6208, 0.02380952], [6208, 6221, 0.07692308], [6221, 6280, 0.08474576], [6280, 6371, 0.04395604], [6371, 6417, 0.06521739], [6417, 6675, 0.00775194], [6675, 6720, 0.02222222], [6720, 6788, 0.01470588], [6788, 6832, 0.04545455], [6832, 7527, 0.02589928], [7527, 7570, 0.02325581], [7570, 7739, 0.0295858], [7739, 7786, 0.04255319], [7786, 8037, 0.03187251], [8037, 8082, 0.06666667], [8082, 8137, 0.01818182], [8137, 8182, 0.04444444], [8182, 8708, 0.02851711], [8708, 8754, 0.04347826], [8754, 8929, 0.04], [8929, 8974, 0.04444444], [8974, 9117, 0.04895105], [9117, 9164, 0.04255319], [9164, 9389, 0.02666667], [9389, 9438, 0.04081633]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 9438, 0.29946703]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 9438, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 9438, 0.70566994]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 9438, 25.45620542]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 9438, 48.18642342]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 9438, -592.28316311]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 9438, 109.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com
Wednesday, April 16 2014 DoD: To conquer nations and budgets, combat must go totally autonomous Saturday, December 28, 2013 By Paul Martin By Graham Templeton Extremetech.com n a turn of phrase that seems designed to provoke headlines, the US Department of Defense this week said one of its primary goals is to “take the ‘man’ out of unmanned” combat. This quote and much more comes from the latest in the Department’s ongoing series of Roadmap to the Future reports, which seek to lay out both the current realities and future plans of the US military and defense industry. This time, the topic was ripped straight from the headlines: remote combat systems. While the American military has for a long time remained static in terms of overall manpower, one type of recruit it just can’t seem to get enough of is drone pilots. It’s not just the US, either; in the UK, they’re so desperate to meet their need for highly skilled cyber-warriors that they recently threw out the physical fitness requirements for those positions. However, as much potential as there is for an unmanned future, the most recent update (PDF) on unmanned systems policy shows that it’s autonomy that really interests the DoD. on Saturday, December 28th, 2013 at 4:42 pm and is filed under God Help Us, Government Evil, New World Order, Technology, War Without End.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2926
{"url": "http://revolutionradio.org/?p=63879", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "revolutionradio.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:23:40Z", "digest": "sha1:2HAQNXAIJL2KFOWKXGGJI63HOSGJ5ZSH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1338, 1338.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1338, 3984.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1338, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1338, 173.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1338, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1338, 293.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1338, 0.3898917]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1338, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1338, 0.01390176]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1338, 0.01805054]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1338, 0.17689531]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1338, 0.6784141]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1338, 4.75330396]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1338, 4.77709177]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1338, 227.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 96, 0.0], [96, 159, 0.0], [159, 175, 0.0], [175, 659, 1.0], [659, 1200, 1.0], [1200, 1338, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 96, 0.0], [96, 159, 0.0], [159, 175, 0.0], [175, 659, 0.0], [659, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 96, 15.0], [96, 159, 10.0], [159, 175, 1.0], [175, 659, 85.0], [659, 1200, 92.0], [1200, 1338, 24.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 96, 0.06521739], [96, 159, 0.1], [159, 175, 0.0], [175, 659, 0.0], [659, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1338, 0.06923077]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 96, 0.0], [96, 159, 0.0], [159, 175, 0.0], [175, 659, 0.0], [659, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1338, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 96, 0.05208333], [96, 159, 0.12698413], [159, 175, 0.0625], [175, 659, 0.02272727], [659, 1200, 0.02402957], [1200, 1338, 0.10144928]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1338, 0.05072653]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1338, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1338, 0.06226987]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1338, -105.48700568]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1338, 25.61487108]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1338, -49.14468346]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1338, 8.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
revolutionradio.org
This biographical article does not give any references or sources. Please help by adding reliable sources. Information about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed very quickly, especially if it could cause arguments or harm. Find sources: (Ajda Pekkan – news, books, scholar) (September 2012) Ajda Pekkan (born February 12, 1946 in Istanbul, Turkey) is a famous Turkish singer and actress. She is one of the most successful Turkish singers with the sales of over 30 million copies worldwide. She is called "Superstar". She has released more than 20 albums. Most famous ones are "Superstar", "Superstar II", "Superstar III" (also known as Superstar 83), "Ajda '90", "Ajda '93", "The Best of Ajda", "Diva", "Cool Kadın" and "Farkın Bu". Also he recorded singles in French and English.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2955
{"url": "http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ajda_Pekkan", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "simple.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:01:51Z", "digest": "sha1:AWCGQ24MFSSMYE52LGWSGHEZNZLPMPBG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 811, 811.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 811, 977.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 811, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 811, 7.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 811, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 811, 95.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 811, 0.26589595]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 811, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 811, 0.03174603]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 811, 0.01156069]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 811, 0.30057803]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 811, 0.77692308]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 811, 4.84615385]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 811, 4.48497796]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 811, 130.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 254, 1.0], [254, 811, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 254, 0.0], [254, 811, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 254, 39.0], [254, 811, 91.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 254, 0.0], [254, 811, 0.03929273]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 254, 0.0], [254, 811, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 254, 0.01181102], [254, 811, 0.06822262]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 811, 0.21705896]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 811, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 811, 0.00547129]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 811, -38.90044108]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 811, -15.33149194]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 811, 21.22334914]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 811, 9.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
simple.wikipedia.org
Emperor Senka Emperor of Japan Musa no Tsukisaka no e no misasagi (Nara) Ankan Kimmei Emperor Senka (宣化天皇, Senka-tennō?) was the 28th emperor of Japan,[1] according to the traditional order of succession.[2] Historians consider details about the life of Emperor Senka to be possibly legendary, but probable.[3] The name Senka-tennō was created for him posthumously by later generations. No certain dates can be assigned to this emperor's life or reign.[4] The conventionally accepted names and sequence of the early emperors were not to be confirmed as "traditional" until the reign of Emperor Kammu, who was the 50th monarch of the Yamato dynasty.[5] 1 Traditional history 2 Events of Senka's life 2.1 After his death Traditional history[change | edit source] According to Kojiki, Senka was a son of Emperor Keitai. When Emperor Ankan died childless, the throne passed to his brother S
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2956
{"url": "http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emperor_Senka", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "simple.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:56:12Z", "digest": "sha1:DLHWEUEBQEFKZVQ44CCCAKNC52NHRZFJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 886, 886.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 886, 1145.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 886, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 886, 29.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 886, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 886, 323.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 886, 0.31868132]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 886, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 886, 0.05063291]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 886, 0.00549451]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 886, 0.22527473]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 886, 0.64285714]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 886, 5.07857143]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 886, 4.18527945]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 886, 140.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 31, 0.0], [31, 73, 0.0], [73, 79, 0.0], [79, 86, 0.0], [86, 387, 1.0], [387, 652, 0.0], [652, 674, 0.0], [674, 699, 0.0], [699, 719, 0.0], [719, 761, 0.0], [761, 817, 1.0], [817, 886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 31, 0.0], [31, 73, 0.0], [73, 79, 0.0], [79, 86, 0.0], [86, 387, 0.0], [387, 652, 0.0], [652, 674, 0.0], [674, 699, 0.0], [699, 719, 0.0], [719, 761, 0.0], [761, 817, 0.0], [817, 886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 14, 2.0], [14, 31, 3.0], [31, 73, 8.0], [73, 79, 1.0], [79, 86, 1.0], [86, 387, 43.0], [387, 652, 44.0], [652, 674, 3.0], [674, 699, 5.0], [699, 719, 4.0], [719, 761, 4.0], [761, 817, 10.0], [817, 886, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 31, 0.0], [31, 73, 0.0], [73, 79, 0.0], [79, 86, 0.0], [86, 387, 0.01754386], [387, 652, 0.01574803], [652, 674, 0.04761905], [674, 699, 0.04347826], [699, 719, 0.11111111], [719, 761, 0.0], [761, 817, 0.0], [817, 886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 31, 0.0], [31, 73, 0.0], [73, 79, 0.0], [79, 86, 0.0], [86, 387, 0.0], [387, 652, 0.0], [652, 674, 0.0], [674, 699, 0.0], [699, 719, 0.0], [719, 761, 0.0], [761, 817, 0.0], [817, 886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.14285714], [14, 31, 0.11764706], [31, 73, 0.07142857], [73, 79, 0.16666667], [79, 86, 0.14285714], [86, 387, 0.02990033], [387, 652, 0.01886792], [652, 674, 0.04545455], [674, 699, 0.08], [699, 719, 0.05], [719, 761, 0.02380952], [761, 817, 0.08928571], [817, 886, 0.05797101]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 886, 0.99628568]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 886, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 886, 0.20602262]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 886, -22.24092362]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 886, 5.05329279]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 886, 9.80708261]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 886, 9.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
simple.wikipedia.org
Fall Out Boy on stage. Pop punk,[1] pop rock, alternative rock Decaydance Fueled by Ramen www.falloutboyrock.com Joe Trohman Fall Out Boy (often shortened to FOB) is an alternative rock band, that make music, from Chicago, Illinois, USA. The members are
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2957
{"url": "http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_Out_Boy", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "simple.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:53:22Z", "digest": "sha1:P33P3ON4UTFFKODWANOYKS5DCG6NXCOG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 253, 253.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 253, 620.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 253, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 253, 28.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 253, 0.76]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 253, 267.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 253, 0.17857143]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 253, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 253, 0.07]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 253, 0.1]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 253, 0.03571429]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 253, 0.25]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 253, 0.825]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 253, 5.0]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 253, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 253, 3.43319674]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 253, 40.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 23, 1.0], [23, 63, 0.0], [63, 74, 0.0], [74, 90, 0.0], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 125, 0.0], [125, 253, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 63, 0.0], [63, 74, 0.0], [74, 90, 0.0], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 125, 0.0], [125, 253, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 23, 5.0], [23, 63, 6.0], [63, 74, 1.0], [74, 90, 3.0], [90, 113, 1.0], [113, 125, 2.0], [125, 253, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 63, 0.02857143], [63, 74, 0.0], [74, 90, 0.0], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 125, 0.0], [125, 253, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 63, 0.0], [63, 74, 0.0], [74, 90, 0.0], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 125, 0.0], [125, 253, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.13043478], [23, 63, 0.025], [63, 74, 0.09090909], [74, 90, 0.125], [90, 113, 0.0], [113, 125, 0.16666667], [125, 253, 0.09375]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 253, 1.359e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 253, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 253, 3.576e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 253, -19.51761142]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 253, -6.6691034]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 253, -0.72377009]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 253, 5.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
simple.wikipedia.org
Square number A square number, sometimes also called a perfect square, is the result of an integer multiplied by itself. 1, 4, 9, 16 and 25 are the first five square numbers. In a formula, the square of a number n is denoted n2 (exponentiation), usually pronounced as "n squared". The name square number comes from the name of the shape; see below. Square numbers are non-negative. Another way of saying that a (non-negative) number is a square number, is that its square root is again an integer. For example, √9 = 3, so 9 is a square number. 3 Special cases 4 Odd and even square numbers 8 Other websites Examples[change | edit source] The squares (sequence A000290 in OEIS) smaller than 602 are: 02 = 0 42 = 16 102 = 100
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2958
{"url": "http://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_number", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "simple.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:59:17Z", "digest": "sha1:SZFX7CGKW73GJX3OGVQMIZP6NMHRQEYD"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 723, 723.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 723, 1118.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 723, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 723, 41.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 723, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 723, 204.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 723, 0.34131737]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 723, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 723, 0.10830325]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 723, 0.07039711]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 723, 0.05415162]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 723, 0.01796407]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 723, 0.31736527]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 723, 0.59689922]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 723, 4.29457364]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 723, 4.03218526]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 723, 129.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 349, 1.0], [349, 544, 1.0], [544, 560, 0.0], [560, 590, 0.0], [590, 607, 0.0], [607, 638, 0.0], [638, 699, 0.0], [699, 706, 0.0], [706, 714, 0.0], [714, 723, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 349, 0.0], [349, 544, 0.0], [544, 560, 0.0], [560, 590, 0.0], [590, 607, 0.0], [607, 638, 0.0], [638, 699, 0.0], [699, 706, 0.0], [706, 714, 0.0], [714, 723, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 14, 2.0], [14, 349, 61.0], [349, 544, 35.0], [544, 560, 3.0], [560, 590, 6.0], [590, 607, 3.0], [607, 638, 3.0], [638, 699, 10.0], [699, 706, 2.0], [706, 714, 2.0], [714, 723, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 349, 0.02515723], [349, 544, 0.01648352], [544, 560, 0.06666667], [560, 590, 0.03448276], [590, 607, 0.0625], [607, 638, 0.0], [638, 699, 0.15789474], [699, 706, 0.75], [706, 714, 0.8], [714, 723, 0.85714286]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 349, 0.0], [349, 544, 0.0], [544, 560, 0.0], [560, 590, 0.0], [590, 607, 0.0], [607, 638, 0.0], [638, 699, 0.0], [699, 706, 0.0], [706, 714, 0.0], [714, 723, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.07142857], [14, 349, 0.00895522], [349, 544, 0.01538462], [544, 560, 0.0625], [560, 590, 0.03333333], [590, 607, 0.05882353], [607, 638, 0.03225806], [638, 699, 0.09836066], [699, 706, 0.0], [706, 714, 0.0], [714, 723, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 723, 0.96952015]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 723, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 723, 0.12881303]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 723, -79.20711447]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 723, -9.58566606]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 723, 7.96468744]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 723, 8.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
simple.wikipedia.org
SSE Home > News & Events > News Archive > A Closer Look at the Previously Unseen Side of Mercury A Closer Look at the Previously Unseen Side of Mercury A Closer Look at the Previously Unseen Side of Mercury (Source: Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory) Just above and to the left of center of this image is a small crater with a pronounced set of bright rays extending across Mercury's surface away from the crater. Bright rays are commonly made in a crater-forming explosion when an asteroid strikes the surface of an airless body like the Moon or Mercury. Click on image for more.Two weeks ago, on January 14, 2008, MESSENGER became the first spacecraft to see the side of Mercury shown in this image. The first image transmitted back to Earth following the flyby of Mercury, and then released to the web within hours, shows the historic first look at the previously unseen side. This image, taken by the Wide Angle Camera (WAC) of the Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS), shows a closer view of much of that territory. Just above and to the left of center of this image is a small crater with a pronounced set of bright rays extending across Mercury's surface away from the crater. Bright rays are commonly made in a crater-forming explosion when an asteroid strikes the surface of an airless body like the Moon or Mercury. But rays fade with time as tiny meteoroids and particles from the solar wind strike the surface and darken the rays. The prominence of these rays implies that the small crater at the center of the ray pattern formed comparatively recently. This image is one in a planned set of 99. Nine different views of Mercury were snapped in this set to create a mosaic pattern with images in three rows and three columns. The WAC is equipped with 11 narrow-band color filters, and each of the nine different views was acquired through all 11 filters. This image was taken in filter 7, which is sensitive to light near the red end of the visible spectrum (750 nm), and shows features as small as about 6 kilometers (4 miles) in size. The MESSENGER team is studying this previously unseen side of Mercury in detail to map and identify new geologic features and to construct the planet's geological history. Additional information and features from this first flyby will be available online at http://messenger.jhuapl.edu/mer_flyby1.html, so check back frequently. Following the flyby, be sure to check for the latest released images and science results! MESSENGER (MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging) is a NASA-sponsored scientific investigation of the planet Mercury and the first space mission designed to orbit the planet closest to the Sun. The MESSENGER spacecraft launched on August 3, 2004, and after flybys of Earth, Venus, and Mercury will start a yearlong study of its target planet in March 2011. Dr. Sean C. Solomon, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, leads the mission as principal investigator. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory built and operates the MESSENGER spacecraft and manages this Discovery-class mission for NASA. News Archive Search TARGET
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/2968
{"url": "http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/news/display.cfm?News_ID=25415", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "solarsystem.nasa.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:48:44Z", "digest": "sha1:TWPGJ2VBKN3CLEWP3XFTQISF2ZHOPWZH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3150, 3150.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3150, 7169.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3150, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3150, 355.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3150, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3150, 225.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3150, 0.36513158]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3150, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3150, 0.24686028]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3150, 0.30572998]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3150, 0.29434851]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3150, 0.24686028]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3150, 0.24686028]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3150, 0.24686028]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3150, 0.02472527]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3150, 0.03924647]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3150, 0.02982732]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3150, 0.02631579]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3150, 0.13815789]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3150, 0.44061303]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3150, 4.88122605]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3150, 4.86369099]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3150, 522.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 152, 0.0], [152, 207, 0.0], [207, 269, 0.0], [269, 1037, 1.0], [1037, 1582, 1.0], [1582, 2236, 1.0], [2236, 2483, 1.0], [2483, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 152, 0.0], [152, 207, 0.0], [207, 269, 0.0], [269, 1037, 0.0], [1037, 1582, 0.0], [1582, 2236, 0.0], [2236, 2483, 0.0], [2483, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 152, 26.0], [152, 207, 10.0], [207, 269, 7.0], [269, 1037, 135.0], [1037, 1582, 95.0], [1582, 2236, 117.0], [2236, 2483, 33.0], [2483, 3150, 99.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 152, 0.0], [152, 207, 0.0], [207, 269, 0.0], [269, 1037, 0.00802139], [1037, 1582, 0.0], [1582, 2236, 0.01877934], [2236, 2483, 0.0042735], [2483, 3150, 0.01388889]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 152, 0.0], [152, 207, 0.0], [207, 269, 0.0], [269, 1037, 0.0], [1037, 1582, 0.0], [1582, 2236, 0.0], [2236, 2483, 0.0], [2483, 3150, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 152, 0.14473684], [152, 207, 0.12727273], [207, 269, 0.11290323], [269, 1037, 0.046875], [1037, 1582, 0.01284404], [1582, 2236, 0.02905199], [2236, 2483, 0.00809717], [2483, 3150, 0.11394303]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3150, 0.11051476]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3150, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3150, 0.81899309]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3150, -111.16883598]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3150, 3.21519189]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3150, 38.71665333]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3150, 27.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
solarsystem.nasa.gov
Airport Car Rentals: The Next $10 Billion Industry Ready For Disruption Posted Nov 24, 2012 by Ryan Lawler (@ryanlawler) Microsoft’s Long And Winding Road To Becoming Kind Of Cool If you travelled by air for the wonderful holiday weekend, you might have been faced with the hell that is the typical airport car rental experience. There are the lines, the hassles, the constant upsells, confusion around cost of gas and insurance, and about 15 pages of paper that you have to sign before being able to pick out your car and leave the lot. Frequent travelers and members of rewards programs aren’t treated that differently. They have a shorter line and can generally have a better choice of available cars from the lot, but the experience isn’t fundamentally better. Airport car rentals are a big business — more than $10 billion a year, by some estimates — but the experience is pretty bad all around. Which means it’s time for disruption! Time for the incumbent car rental agencies to get some competition from nimbler startups with new ideas, processes, and ways of doing things better! Thankfully, there are a few promising young companies working on this problem, and they could be coming soon to an airport near you. Flightcar: An Airbnb For Car Rentals Hundreds of thousands of travelers leave their cars in long-term parking lots while they’re away on vacation or business. But what if, instead of paying to park in those lots, they were able to get paid while they were out of town? And what if instead of paying high rates to rent a vehicle from one of the incumbent car rental agencies, you could get discounted rentals on someone else’s car while you’re traveling in a different city? That’s the idea behind Flightcar, which seeks to create a marketplace model for airport rentals. Flightcar isn’t much different from on-demand car rental marketplaces like Getaround or RelayRides — except that while they primarily focus on short-term, hourly rentals in urban areas, Flightcar is more for multi-day rentals. And while Getaround and RelayRides have their inventory spread out across a city, Flightcar users would only be able to pick up their cars from partnering parking lots near an airport. Those renting out a car would simply drop it off at an airport parking lot in the same way that they usually would, and shuttle to the terminal. But when they return, they could be issued a check for the time that their car was rented while away. If it wasn’t rented while they were away, they would simply pay the parking fee instead. The startup not only provides the marketplace for listing and renting autos, but also cleans cars before and after a car is rented and provides necessary insurance and support for drivers while they are renting. It also provides supplemental insurance for all vehicles that have been rented through its system. Flightcar co-founder Shri Ganesham told me that there were approximately 360,000 cars parked in airport parking at any given time, collecting fees. So there’s a potentially huge inventory of cars that are just waiting to be used. The hard part comes in aggregating that inventory, and matching up potential drivers with rides, since the amount of time varies for travelers on both sides of the transaction. Flightcar is on track to launch soon in Oakland and San Jose airports and expects to expand quickly thereafter. Silvercar: A Premium Experience For Airport Rentals If Flightcar is Airbnb for airport rentals, then Silvercar is more like Uber, providing a more expensive, but more convenient process than incumbent options. The startup uses a mobile app to process reservations, pick up and drop off of cars in airport rental lots, and expedite the actual process of renting a vehicle. Silvercar strips out a lot of the complexity associated with getting a rental, in part because it only has one model of car that it rents out — the Audi A4. There’s no upsell on car class, and customers will always know what kind of car they’re going to get. Rates will be competitive, but could be slightly more than the cost of full-size vehicles at the incumbents. But what customers pay more for in price is made up for in convenience. Customers won’t have to worry about getting gouged for gas at 3x the price for bringing a car back with a half-empty tank, for instance: Since cars are connected to the cloud, they’ll merely report back how empty or full the tank is, and automatically charge users for refills based on the market rate for gas. Customers will also have a limited number of insurance options to choose from, rather than having to navigate the confusing choices that more car rental agencies provide. Silvercars will be available in the same consolidated rental lots as the traditional car rental agencies, but the process for checking a car out will be completely different: Rather than waiting in line to talk to an agent about a rental, users will be able to reserve through a mobile app, which can also be used to unlock the car to start driving. The startup plans to open for business at one airport at the end of this year, and then expand to about one new airport per quarter. It’s raised $11.5 million from investors like Austin Ventures, Crunchfund, SV Angel, Dave Morin, Chris Dixon, and others. FlightCar FlightCar is the first company to establish a marketplace that allows vehicle owners parking at the airport to rent out their cars to other travelers. Owners get free airport parking, and renters choose from a wider selection of vehicles at lower prices than those offered by the major car rental chains. A similar peer-to-peer car sharing model successfully exists at a local level, where owners rent … http://flightcar.com Full profile for FlightCar Silvercar Silvercar is the airport car rental experience reimagined for you, the connected business traveler. They put the power back in your hands, enabling you to bypass lines, avoid complexity and frustration, and drive away in a world-class car at a great price. Every time. Their mission is to remake the airport car rental business. They are a team of innovators with exceptional experience from the worlds … http://silvercar.com Full profile for Silvercar
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3004
{"url": "http://techcrunch.com/2012/11/24/airport-car-rentals-please-god-someone-make-them-not-suck/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "techcrunch.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:21:48Z", "digest": "sha1:43YRQ7J4KZ7FCRBB2STAMZLKRQSUBZUB"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6193, 6193.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6193, 8390.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6193, 26.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6193, 180.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6193, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6193, 332.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6193, 0.43786008]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6193, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6193, 0.01991239]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6193, 0.01612903]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6193, 0.01354042]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6193, 0.01035444]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6193, 0.00329218]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6193, 0.07692308]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6193, 0.12345679]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6193, 0.40458015]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6193, 4.79198473]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6193, 0.00164609]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6193, 5.39203216]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6193, 1048.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 121, 0.0], [121, 180, 0.0], [180, 765, 1.0], [765, 1221, 1.0], [1221, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1792, 1.0], [1792, 2204, 1.0], [2204, 2540, 1.0], [2540, 2851, 1.0], [2851, 3370, 1.0], [3370, 3422, 0.0], [3422, 3742, 1.0], [3742, 4182, 1.0], [4182, 4664, 1.0], [4664, 5014, 1.0], [5014, 5269, 1.0], [5269, 5279, 0.0], [5279, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5731, 0.0], [5731, 5741, 0.0], [5741, 6010, 1.0], [6010, 6146, 0.0], [6146, 6167, 0.0], [6167, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 121, 0.0], [121, 180, 0.0], [180, 765, 0.0], [765, 1221, 0.0], [1221, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1792, 0.0], [1792, 2204, 0.0], [2204, 2540, 0.0], [2540, 2851, 0.0], [2851, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3422, 0.0], [3422, 3742, 0.0], [3742, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4664, 0.0], [4664, 5014, 0.0], [5014, 5269, 0.0], [5269, 5279, 0.0], [5279, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5731, 0.0], [5731, 5741, 0.0], [5741, 6010, 0.0], [6010, 6146, 0.0], [6146, 6167, 0.0], [6167, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 72, 11.0], [72, 121, 8.0], [121, 180, 10.0], [180, 765, 100.0], [765, 1221, 79.0], [1221, 1258, 6.0], [1258, 1792, 93.0], [1792, 2204, 64.0], [2204, 2540, 64.0], [2540, 2851, 50.0], [2851, 3370, 85.0], [3370, 3422, 7.0], [3422, 3742, 53.0], [3742, 4182, 82.0], [4182, 4664, 83.0], [4664, 5014, 63.0], [5014, 5269, 44.0], [5269, 5279, 1.0], [5279, 5683, 67.0], [5683, 5704, 1.0], [5704, 5731, 4.0], [5731, 5741, 1.0], [5741, 6010, 44.0], [6010, 6146, 23.0], [6146, 6167, 1.0], [6167, 6193, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.02898551], [72, 121, 0.13636364], [121, 180, 0.0], [180, 765, 0.00348432], [765, 1221, 0.00449438], [1221, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1792, 0.0], [1792, 2204, 0.0], [2204, 2540, 0.0], [2540, 2851, 0.0], [2851, 3370, 0.01178782], [3370, 3422, 0.0], [3422, 3742, 0.0], [3742, 4182, 0.00232019], [4182, 4664, 0.00211416], [4664, 5014, 0.0], [5014, 5269, 0.01229508], [5269, 5279, 0.0], [5279, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5731, 0.0], [5731, 5741, 0.0], [5741, 6010, 0.0], [6010, 6146, 0.0], [6146, 6167, 0.0], [6167, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 121, 0.0], [121, 180, 0.0], [180, 765, 0.0], [765, 1221, 0.0], [1221, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1792, 0.0], [1792, 2204, 0.0], [2204, 2540, 0.0], [2540, 2851, 0.0], [2851, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3422, 0.0], [3422, 3742, 0.0], [3742, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4664, 0.0], [4664, 5014, 0.0], [5014, 5269, 0.0], [5269, 5279, 0.0], [5279, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5731, 0.0], [5731, 5741, 0.0], [5741, 6010, 0.0], [6010, 6146, 0.0], [6146, 6167, 0.0], [6167, 6193, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.13888889], [72, 121, 0.08163265], [121, 180, 0.16949153], [180, 765, 0.00683761], [765, 1221, 0.00877193], [1221, 1258, 0.16216216], [1258, 1792, 0.0093633], [1792, 2204, 0.02427184], [2204, 2540, 0.00892857], [2540, 2851, 0.00643087], [2851, 3370, 0.01734104], [3370, 3422, 0.13461538], [3422, 3742, 0.01875], [3742, 4182, 0.01363636], [4182, 4664, 0.00622407], [4664, 5014, 0.00571429], [5014, 5269, 0.04705882], [5269, 5279, 0.2], [5279, 5683, 0.00990099], [5683, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5731, 0.11111111], [5731, 5741, 0.1], [5741, 6010, 0.01115242], [6010, 6146, 0.01470588], [6146, 6167, 0.0], [6167, 6193, 0.07692308]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6193, 0.36850256]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6193, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6193, 0.18235761]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6193, -260.88756959]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6193, 108.93590726]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6193, -282.62582991]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6193, 44.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
techcrunch.com
Investigation of the behavior of the aqueous I3-I2-I system following intense irradiation Stottlemyer, Quayton R. (1954) Investigation of the behavior of the aqueous I3-I2-I system following intense irradiation. AbstractNOTE: Text or symbols not renderable in plain ASCII are indicated by [...]. Abstract is included in .pdf document. Acidified aqueous solutions containing [...], [...], and [...] have been irradiated by a high intensity flash lamp and the resulting change in the optical density of the solution has been observed spectrophotometrically as a function of time after the flash.Immediately following the flash, there is an increase in the optical density of the solution. This is attributed to the photochemical production of the diiodide ion, [...], by reaction (1) and/or reaction (2) and (3). [...] [...] [...].The disappearance of the colored species, in about 1.5--8 milliseconds after the flash, has been found to be kinetically of the second order with respect to that species and has been explained in terms of the recombination of [...], principally by equation (4). [...] [...] [...].On the basis of these assumptions, the value of [...] has been determined at wave lengths 365 mmu. and 435 mmu. for [...] ranging from [...] to [...] M. The experimental dependence of the rate of disappearance of [...] on [...] has been found to agree qualitatively with the theoretical equation: [...].The calculated value of [...] has been found to vary with the wave length of the light used to observe the reaction as predicted by the equation: [...].The presence of [...] in concentrations about [...] caused a slight increase in the value of [...], which was attributed to one or both of the reactions: [...] [...]. [...] in concentrations less than [...] appeared to decrease the rate of disappearance of [...]; for this anomalous effect no explanation is given.Experiments performed in which a large percentage of the light absorbed by [...] was cut off by filters produced correspondingly smaller phenomena but gave no conclusive evidence as to the relative proportion of [...] and [...] dissociated by the irradiation.An extensive summary of data is presented.Item Type:Thesis (Master's thesis)Degree Grantor:California Institute of TechnologyDivision:Chemistry and Chemical EngineeringMajor Option:ChemistryThesis Availability:Public (worldwide access)Research Advisor(s):Davidson, Norman R.Thesis Committee:Unknown, UnknownDefense Date:1 January 1954Record Number:CaltechETD:etd-01272004-154020Persistent URL:http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-01272004-154020Default Usage Policy:No commercial reproduction, distribution, display or performance rights in this work are provided.ID Code:371Collection:CaltechTHESISDeposited By: Imported from ETD-db Deposited On:29 Jan 2004Last Modified:26 Dec 2012 02:29Thesis FilesPreview PDF (Stottlemyer_qr_1954.pdf) 4071KbRepository Staff Only: item control page
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3023
{"url": "http://thesis.library.caltech.edu/371/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thesis.library.caltech.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:20:51Z", "digest": "sha1:SBJBZ4QWUVXLUCZQ5U36V4SAXL3EIWRS"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2928, 2928.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2928, 3519.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2928, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2928, 25.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2928, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2928, 204.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2928, 0.3271028]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2928, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2928, 0.06716748]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2928, 0.1166593]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2928, 0.09544852]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2928, 0.09544852]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2928, 0.06716748]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2928, 0.06716748]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2928, 0.03093239]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2928, 0.01590809]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2928, 0.01855943]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2928, 0.02616822]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2928, 0.24672897]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2928, 0.56533333]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2928, 6.03466667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2928, 0.05981308]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2928, 4.81897327]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2928, 375.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 90, 0.0], [90, 114, 1.0], [114, 212, 1.0], [212, 335, 1.0], [335, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2852, 0.0], [2852, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 90, 0.0], [90, 114, 0.0], [114, 212, 0.0], [212, 335, 0.0], [335, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2852, 0.0], [2852, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 90, 12.0], [90, 114, 3.0], [114, 212, 13.0], [212, 335, 18.0], [335, 2756, 309.0], [2756, 2777, 3.0], [2777, 2852, 9.0], [2852, 2882, 2.0], [2882, 2928, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 90, 0.02298851], [90, 114, 0.0], [114, 212, 0.06521739], [212, 335, 0.0], [335, 2756, 0.02270621], [2756, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2852, 0.22535211], [2852, 2882, 0.16666667], [2882, 2928, 0.08888889]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 90, 0.0], [90, 114, 0.0], [114, 212, 0.0], [212, 335, 0.0], [335, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2852, 0.0], [2852, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 2928, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 90, 0.04444444], [90, 114, 0.125], [114, 212, 0.04081633], [212, 335, 0.09756098], [335, 2756, 0.03015283], [2756, 2777, 0.19047619], [2777, 2852, 0.12], [2852, 2882, 0.13333333], [2882, 2928, 0.08695652]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2928, 0.05301321]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2928, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2928, 0.0077492]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2928, -164.61672639]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2928, -47.92136595]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2928, 1.54372502]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2928, 44.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
thesis.library.caltech.edu
July 24, 2012 10:36 AM PDT Smash – Season 1 Please, please continue with this fabulous, brilliantly written & “smashing” songs TV series. Don’t let your fans down. Comment by Shondra – October 3, 2012 06:40 PM PDT Reply To This Post
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3044
{"url": "http://tvline.com/2012/07/24/smash-season-2-changes/smash-season-1-34/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "tvline.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:44:02Z", "digest": "sha1:FD3EK5LFXAK52IPC4XLZYJ7IQ3ILT5CY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 232, 232.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 232, 3430.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 232, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 232, 90.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 232, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 232, 332.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 232, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 232, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 232, 0.08928571]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 232, 0.41071429]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 232, 0.90243902]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 232, 4.43902439]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 232, 3.57832384]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 232, 41.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 44, 0.0], [44, 164, 1.0], [164, 232, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 44, 0.0], [44, 164, 0.0], [164, 232, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 27, 6.0], [27, 44, 4.0], [44, 164, 17.0], [164, 232, 14.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.41666667], [27, 44, 0.0625], [44, 164, 0.0], [164, 232, 0.13636364]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 44, 0.0], [44, 164, 0.0], [164, 232, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.22222222], [27, 44, 0.11764706], [44, 164, 0.03333333], [164, 232, 0.17647059]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 232, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 232, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 232, -5.6e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 232, -54.9352612]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 232, -18.02423889]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 232, -30.40145258]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 232, 3.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
tvline.com
Río Plátano Biosphere Reserve Desired state of conservation for the removal of the property from the List of World Heritage in Danger Threats for Which the property was inscribed on the List of World Heritage in Danger Illegal logging; Illegal occupation; Reduced capacity of the State Party; General deterioration of law and order and the security situation in the region. Total amount granted: USD 80,000 (in addition to approximately USD 100,000 of in-kind technical assistance) under the management effectiveness assessment project “Enhancing our Heritage”. International Assistance granted to the property 1996 Conservation strategy and preparation of a management plan for ... 30,000 USD 1988 Equipment for Rio Platano Biosphere Reserve 20,000 USD 1987 Consultant services, training and equipment for improving the ... 30,000 USD 1985 Strengthen protection and management of Rio Platano Biosphere ... 20,000 USD 1983 Implementation of protective measures, of training activities and ... 26,000 USD 1982 Financial contribution towards ecodevelopment programmes and ... 67,025 USD 1982 Rio Platano Biosphere Reserve 4,975 USD 2000: IUCN monitoring mission; 2003 and 2006: World Heritage Centre/IUCN reactive monitoring missions; 2011: Joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN reactive monitoring mission. 2006 Mission Report to UNESCO, State of Conservation of the Río Plátano Biosphere Reserve and World Heritage Site, ... Factors* affecting the property identified in previous reports a) Illegal settlements;b) Illegal livestock grazing and agricultural encroachment;c) Illegal logging;d) Illegal commercial fishing;e) Poaching;f) Alien invasive species;g) Management deficiencies;h) Potential impacts from hydroelectric development projects Patuca I,II and III;i) Lack of law enforcement;j) Lack of clarity regarding land tenure and access to natural resources. Corrective Measures Adopted, See page http://whc.unesco.org/en/decisions/4439 Timeframe for the implementation of the corrective measures To be established Current conservation issues The State Party submitted a report on the property’s state of conservation on 18 January 2013. Responses to the corrective measures identified at the time of inscription of the property onto the List of World Heritage in Danger are as follows: a) Establish permanent and systematic monitoring to identify encroachment and land use changes of the entire protected area, and if possible the broader region, and relocate illegal occupants who have recently settled on the property, in particular in the core zone of the Rio Plátano Biosphere Reserve The State Party reports on a number of initiatives contributing to this measure, based on satellite imagery, aerial surveys and a series of checkpoints and patrols operated by the armed forces (200 soldiers in 13 detachments). It recognized the need to coordinate these efforts, and is currently setting up a monitoring platform to systematize and integrate different monitoring approaches. Results from recent monitoring indicate a loss of 39,763 hectares of forest cover between 2007 and 2011. However, because the study area encompasses the Biosphere Reserve boundaries as per the 1997 expansion decree, which is larger than the World Heritage property (850,000 ha vs. 350,000 ha), it is difficult to gauge to what extent the property itself is affected. The State Party notes that the core zone of the Biosphere Reserve, which is clearly within the property boundaries, has suffered relatively little deforestation (29 hectares per year), though new illegal settlers were once again observed, despite recent State Party success in removing previous illegal settlers last year. The State Party indicates that it is currently taking action to remove them. b) Continue efforts to negotiate and clarify access to land and natural resources while enforcing existing land tenure and access arrangements and explore opportunities for more meaningful co-management with a particular focus on the indigenous communities of the cultural zone The State Party reports that 107,683 hectares of land have been organized through community forest management contracts, giving 12 neighbouring communities (indigenous and other) access to resources for economic, environmental and social benefits. It also reports that forest management plans have been approved for 9 cooperatives affecting lands within the Biosphere Reserve, along with the granting of 5 business licenses for commercial extraction of precious woods. Maps provided illustrate that a significant part of these permits and plans are granted for activities located clearly within the World Heritage property. Therefore, there is the potential of a conflict between resource extraction permits and the conservation of the property’s OUV. c) In cooperation with the indigenous communities concerned, complete land tenure and resource access arrangements adapted to their historical and cultural contexts With continuing support from German government aid, a land titling procedure specific to the needs and cultural contexts of indigenous communities was developed and officially recognized by law in August 2012. According to information from the State Party, the process is reported to have been fully discussed with affected communities, with free prior and informed consent having been obtained. The State Party expects to grant titles to at least 3 communities in 2013. d) In coordination with the World Heritage Centre and IUCN, review in a timely manner, any projects for the construction of hydroelectric dams on the Patuca River until it has been clearly demonstrated to the World Heritage Committee that they will not negatively impact the property's OUV; Though the Committee indicated in Decision 36 COM 7A.17 that it considered the Patuca III dam did not pose a threat to the property’s OUV, the State Party reports that the 40 natural resource conservation mitigation measures recommended by the environmental impact assessment had been fully met. Both the World Heritage Centre and IUCN note that the dam’s distance from the property and the presence of several tributaries of the Patuca River downstream of the dam, could potentially mitigate negative impacts. Nevertheless, IUCN recalls that indirect or long-term impacts, such as displacement of local communities, in particular as a result of potential loss of livelihood of downstream communities due to changes in water flow, further complicating the land tenure issue, and impacts on aquatic migratory species downstream from the dam should also be noted. Furthermore, recalling the Committee’s request that the State Party redefine the property’s boundaries so that its Outstanding Universal Value can be better conserved (Decision 35 COM 7B.31, 36 COM 7A.17), IUCN notes that the dam may impact areas that could be considered for inclusion in the property and also recalls that other protected areas in the region may be impacted. e) Provide the necessary human resources and logistical capacity to the agencies responsible for the protection and management of the property to enable them to regularly monitor and deal with illegal activities affecting the property; The State Party reports on the strengthening of the legal and oversight framework for the conservation of the property, along with the formulation of strategies regarding government involvement. It states that it is actively seeking international support for additional help in carrying out activities necessary for the management of the property. No specific information is provided on any actual institutional strengthening in terms of human or material resources. f) Using the on-going management planning process, seek to coordinate the many actors, various institutions and external supporters involved in Río Plátano in order to significantly improve coherence, effectiveness and efficiency of future management in addressing the issues affecting the property; The State Party does not specifically address this measure in its report. The inter-ministerial ad-hoc committee for the property is reported to have been strengthened. Beyond the corrective measures identified by the World Heritage Committee, additional issues were requested to be addressed: i) Property boundary design The updated International Assistance request was submitted to the World Heritage Centre in late 2012 and discussions on its content and budget are on-going. The World Heritage Centre and IUCN note that the revised request is exclusively to support illegal logging control work. However, given that there are several active projects endeavoringto address this issue there is little to demonstrate post-project longer term outcomes for a small project on illegal logging that is not linked in with the other ongoing projects. They are of the view that the priority would be to establish clarity on the property’s boundaries, with a focus on re-nomination, as recommended by the World Heritage Committee inDecisions35 COM 7B.31 and 36 COM 7A.17, and as referred in the 2011 UNESCO/IUCN reactive monitoring mission. IUCN notes that it would be able to support the preparation of a revised request. Currently, the property boundaries as officially recognized under the World Heritage Convention by a clarification in Decision 36 COM 8D, no longer coincide with the actual boundaries as recognized under Honduran legislation. This issue should be resolved to guarantee that the OUV of the property will be protected over the longer term. ii) Increase in illegal drug trans-shipment activities in and near the property No reference is made to any targeted effort on this issue. The State Party reports the presence of 200 members of the military in the region, occupying check points and monitoring for illegal activities. Analysis and Conclusion The World Heritage Centre and IUCN consider that gradual progress is being made in regards to several of the corrective measures, particularly in terms of systematic monitoring, land titling and the formalization of resource use agreements (measures a, b and c). The State Party is implementing mitigation measures for the Patuca III dam, however IUCN recalls that indirect or long-term impacts, such as displacement of local communities, further complicating the land tenure issue, and impacts on aquatic migratory species downstream from the dam as a result of changes in water flow, should also be noted. IUCN also recalls that the dam may impact areas that could be considered for inclusion in the property, as well as other protected areas in the region. The property appears to remain seriously under- serviced on the part of relevant government institutions. The State Party’s indications that it is seeking international support to help it deal with this issue is encouraging, but no explicit progress is reported. It is not clear if the Committee’s request to ensure greater coordination amongst the various agencies and supporters of the property’s conservation is being adequately met by the inter-ministerial ad-hoc committee on the Biosphere Reserve. Little substantive information has been provided in regards to the efforts undertaken to end the use of the property as a drug trans-shipment area. This activity had been noted in the 2011 joint World Heritage Centre/IUCN mission report as a serious long term threat to the property, undermining the rule of law and challenging the security of government representatives in the area. Of overarching importance in addressing the above-noted issues is the need to reassess the property boundaries in light of significant changes to the original Rio Platano Biosphere Reserve boundaries and zonation scheme. The State Party approved the modification of limits by national legislation but no consultation was undertaken with the World Heritage Committee. The World Heritage Centre and IUCN recommend that the Committee urge the State Party to submit a revised International Assistance request on this issue. Until this issue is addressed to the satisfaction of the World Heritage Committee, the property’s integrity cannot be guaranteed nor can the corrective measures be put in place. In light of the above, the World Heritage Centre and IUCN recommend that the Committee retain the property on the List of World Heritage in Danger. Decision 37COM7A.18 1. Having examined Document WHC-13/37.COM/7A; 2. Recalling Decision 36 COM 7A.17 , adopted at its 36th session (Saint-Petersburg, 2012); 3. Welcomes progress made towards the land titling for communities surrounding the property and in the provision of instruments designed to provide managed access to natural resources, and encourages the State Party to put in place further measures to provide greater tenure and livelihood security for indigenous communities and to ensure respect for their rights; 4. Also welcomes the establishment of a systematic monitoring platform, ensuring a systematic and integrated monitoring effort on land use and land use changes in and around the property, and the efforts undertaken to control illegal activities; 5. Notes with concern that new illegal settlements appeared on the property and urges the State Party to continue to deal swiftly and effectively with such incursions in full observance of the rule of law; 6. Requests the State Party to increase its efforts to implement the corrective measures identified in Decision 35 COM 7B.31 , in particular the measures listed in paragraph 8 items b, c, e and f; 7. Strongly urges the State Party to advance on the proposal for the property’s boundary modification, without which the corrective measures cannot be adequately implemented and the property’s Outstanding Universal Value remains at risk; 8. R eiterates its request to the State Party to finalize, in consultation with the World Heritage Centre and IUCN, a proposal for the Desired state of conservation for the removal of the property from the List of World Heritage in Danger, for examination by the World Heritage Committee at its 38th session in 2014; 9. Also requests the State Party to submit to the World Heritage Centre, by 1 February 2014, a detailed report on the state of conservation of the property, with a particular focus on the advances related to the corrective measures and on the clarification of the property’s boundaries, particularly measures b, c, e and f mentioned above; 10. Decides to retain Rio Plátano Biosphere Reserve (Honduras) on the List of World Heritage in Danger. 37COM8C.2 Having examined the state of conservation reports of properties inscribed on the List of World Heritage in Danger (WHC-13/37.COM/7A, WHC-13/37.COM/7A.Add and WHC-13/37.COM/7A.Add. Decides to maintain the following properties on the List of World Heritage in Danger: Afghanistan, Minaret and Archaeological Remains of Jam (Decision 37 COM 7A.29 ) Afghanistan, Cultural Landscape and Archaeological Remains of the Bamiyan Valley (Decision 37 COM 7A.30 ) Belize, Belize Barrier Reef Reserve System (Decision 37 COM 7A.16 ) Central African Republic, Manovo-Gounda St Floris National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.1) Chile, Humberstone and Santa Laura Saltpeter Works (Decision 37 COM 7A.37 ) Colombia, Los Katíos National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.17 ) Côte d'Ivoire, Comoé National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A .2 ) Côte d'Ivoire / Guinea, Mount Nimba Strict Nature Reserve (Decision 37 COM 7A .3 ) Democratic Rep. of the Congo, Virunga National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.4 ) Democratic Rep. of the Congo, Kahuzi-Biega National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.5 ) Democratic Rep. of the Congo, Garamba National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.6 ) Democratic Rep. of the Congo, Salonga National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.7 ) Democratic Rep. of the Congo, Okapi Wildlife Reserve (Decision 37 COM 7A.8 ) Egypt, Abu Mena (Decision 37 COM 7A.23 ) Ethiopia, Simien National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A .10 ) Georgia, Bagrati Cathedral and Gelati Monastery (Decision 37 COM 7A.32 ) Georgia, Historical Monuments of Mtskheta (Decision 37 COM 7A.33 ) Honduras, Río Plátano Biosphere Reserve (Decision 37 COM 7A.18 ) Indonesia, Tropical Rainforest Heritage of Sumatra (Decision 37 COM 7A.14 ) Iraq, Ashur (Qal'at Sherqat) (Decision 37 COM 7A.24 ) Iraq, Samarra Archaeological City (Decision 37 COM 7A.25 ) Jerusalem, Old City of Jerusalem and its Walls (Decision 37 COM 7A.26 ) Madagascar, Rainforests of the Atsinanana (Decision 37 COM 7A.11 ) Mali, Timbuktu (Decision 37 COM 7A.19 ) Mali, Tomb of Askia (Decision 37 COM 7A.20 ) Niger, Air and Ténéré Natural Reserves (Decision 37 COM 7A .12 ) Palestine, Birthplace of Jesus: Church of the Nativity and the Pilgrimage Route, Bethlehem (Decision 37 COM 7A.27 ) Panama, Fortifications on the Caribbean Side of Panama: Portobelo-San Lorenzo (Decision 37 COM 7A.36 ) Peru, Chan Chan Archaelogical Zone (Decision 37 COM 7A.38 ) Senegal, Niokolo-Koba National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.13 ) Serbia, Medieval Monuments in Kosovo (Decision 37 COM 7A.34 ) Uganda, Tombs of Buganda Kings at Kasubi (Decision 37 COM 7A.21 ) United Republic of Tanzania, Ruins of Kilwa Kisiwani and Ruins of Songo Mnara (Decision 37 COM 7A.22 ) United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Liverpool – Maritime Mercantile City (Decision 37 COM 7A.35 ) United States of America, Everglades National Park (Decision 37 COM 7A.15 ) Venezuela, Coro and its Port (Decision 37 COM 7A.39 ) Yemen, Historic Town of Zabid (Decision 37 COM 7A.28 ) Draft Decision: 37 COM 7A.18 2. Recalling Decision 36 COM 7A.17, adopted at its 36th session (Saint-Petersburg, 2012; 3. Welcomes progress made towards the land titling for communities surrounding the property and in the provision of instruments designed to provide managed access to natural resources, and encourages the State Party to put in place further measures to provide greater tenure and livelihood security for indigenous communities and to ensure respect for their rights; 4. Also welcomes the establishment of a systematic monitoring platform, ensuring a systematic and integrated monitoring effort on land use and land use changes in and around the property, and the efforts undertaken to control illegal activities; 6. Requests the State Party to increase its efforts to implement the corrective measures identified in Decision 35 COM 7B.31, in particular the measures listed in b, c, e and f therein; 7. Strongly urges the State Party to advance on the proposal for the property’s boundary modification, without which the corrective measures cannot be adequately implemented and the property’s Outstanding Universal Value remains at risk; 8. Reiterates its request to the State Party to finalize, in consultation with the World Heritage Centre and IUCN, a proposal for the Desired state of conservation for the removal of the property from the List of World Heritage in Danger, for examination by the World Heritage Committee at its 38th session in 2014; 9. Also requests the State Party to submit to the World Heritage Centre, by 1 February 2014, a detailed report on the state of conservation of the property, with a particular focus on the advances related to the corrective measures and on the clarification of the property’s boundaries, particularly measures listed in b, c, e and f heading of this report; 10. Decides to retain Rio Plátano Biosphere Reserve (Honduras) on the List of World Heritage in Danger. Río Plátano Biosphere Reserve Category: Natural Criteria: (vii)(viii)(ix)(x) Danger List: Yes View inscribed site web page WHC-13/37.COM/7A Identity, social cohesion, changes in local population and community Invasive/alien terrestrial species Land conversion Livestock farming / grazing of domesticated animals Inscription on the Danger List Year: 2011 Threats to the Site: a) Illegal logging;b) Illegal occupation;c) Reduced capacity of the State Party;d) General deterioration of law and order and the security situation in the region. Year: 1996 -2007 Threats to the Site: At both its 19th and 20th sessions, the World Heritage Committee heard reports of commercial and agricultural intrusions into the site, threatening the World Heritage values for which it had been inscribed. The advancing agricultural frontier at the west side of the reserve, pushed by small farmers and cattle ranchers, is already reducing the reserve's forest area. The southern and western zones of the Reserve are subject to massive extraction of precious wood such as Caoba (Swietenia macrophylla). Uncontrolled commercial hunting of wild animals is also practised. The introduction of exotic species is threatening to undermine the complex ecosystem of the Reserve. The absence of any management plan and the fact that there is almost no park staff to manage the 525,100 ha site has compounded the problem. An eleven-point corrective action plan, recommended by a 1996 IUCN conservation status report, has been endorsed by the Minister for the Environment of Honduras and the elaboration of a management plan for Rio Platano is being carried out with a World Heritage Fund contribution, as part of a large-scale project for strengthening the conservation of the site financed by the German GTZ-KFW. A hydroelectric development project, Patuca II, is currently proposed for implementation near the reserve with potential negative impacts on the site. According to reports, the Government is promoting the rapid implementation of this project. Matters are further complicated by the fact that communications with relevant authorities in Honduras have become difficult following recent damages caused to the country's infrastructure by Hurricane Mitch. * :
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3089
{"url": "http://whc.unesco.org/en/soc/1838", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "whc.unesco.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:45:18Z", "digest": "sha1:CE7WMU2PTYTFYKEAXKKGEI23TCPTNPE6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 21578, 21578.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 21578, 29133.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 21578, 100.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 21578, 434.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 21578, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 21578, 280.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 21578, 0.32012042]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 21578, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 21578, 0.21497121]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 21578, 0.29592413]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 21578, 0.24573783]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 21578, 0.23252794]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 21578, 0.22897144]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 21578, 0.22411652]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 21578, 0.01241956]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 21578, 0.02788755]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 21578, 0.01016145]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 21578, 0.03938786]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 21578, 0.01]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 21578, 0.1921726]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 21578, 0.29236899]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 21578, 5.42874655]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 21578, 0.00150527]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 21578, 5.70508044]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 21578, 3263.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 134, 0.0], [134, 219, 0.0], [219, 236, 0.0], [236, 256, 0.0], [256, 293, 0.0], [293, 374, 1.0], [374, 611, 0.0], [611, 694, 0.0], [694, 754, 0.0], [754, 836, 0.0], [836, 918, 0.0], [918, 1004, 0.0], [1004, 1085, 0.0], [1085, 1130, 0.0], [1130, 1306, 0.0], [1306, 1420, 1.0], [1420, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2592, 0.0], [2592, 4028, 0.0], [4028, 4945, 0.0], [4945, 6946, 1.0], [6946, 8118, 1.0], [8118, 8243, 0.0], [8243, 9811, 0.0], [9811, 12314, 0.0], [12314, 12325, 0.0], [12325, 12371, 0.0], [12371, 12462, 0.0], [12462, 12828, 0.0], [12828, 13074, 0.0], [13074, 13280, 0.0], [13280, 13477, 0.0], [13477, 13715, 0.0], [13715, 14032, 0.0], [14032, 14372, 0.0], [14372, 14486, 0.0], [14486, 14666, 1.0], [14666, 14752, 0.0], [14752, 14832, 0.0], [14832, 14938, 0.0], [14938, 15006, 0.0], [15006, 15169, 0.0], [15169, 15229, 0.0], [15229, 15289, 0.0], [15289, 15372, 0.0], [15372, 15448, 0.0], [15448, 15529, 0.0], [15529, 15605, 0.0], [15605, 15681, 0.0], [15681, 15758, 0.0], [15758, 15799, 0.0], [15799, 15856, 0.0], [15856, 15929, 0.0], [15929, 15996, 0.0], [15996, 16061, 0.0], [16061, 16137, 0.0], [16137, 16191, 0.0], [16191, 16250, 0.0], [16250, 16322, 0.0], [16322, 16389, 0.0], [16389, 16429, 0.0], [16429, 16474, 0.0], [16474, 16539, 0.0], [16539, 16655, 0.0], [16655, 16758, 0.0], [16758, 16818, 0.0], [16818, 16879, 0.0], [16879, 16941, 0.0], [16941, 17007, 0.0], [17007, 17110, 0.0], [17110, 17226, 0.0], [17226, 17302, 0.0], [17302, 17356, 0.0], [17356, 17411, 0.0], [17411, 17440, 0.0], [17440, 17529, 0.0], [17529, 18141, 0.0], [18141, 18565, 0.0], [18565, 18881, 0.0], [18881, 19238, 0.0], [19238, 19372, 0.0], [19372, 19390, 0.0], [19390, 19419, 0.0], [19419, 19465, 0.0], [19465, 19482, 0.0], [19482, 19551, 0.0], [19551, 19586, 0.0], [19586, 19602, 0.0], [19602, 19654, 0.0], [19654, 19685, 0.0], [19685, 19717, 0.0], [19717, 19919, 0.0], [19919, 20732, 1.0], [20732, 21124, 1.0], [21124, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 134, 0.0], [134, 219, 0.0], [219, 236, 0.0], [236, 256, 0.0], [256, 293, 0.0], [293, 374, 0.0], [374, 611, 0.0], [611, 694, 0.0], [694, 754, 0.0], [754, 836, 0.0], [836, 918, 0.0], [918, 1004, 0.0], [1004, 1085, 0.0], [1085, 1130, 0.0], [1130, 1306, 0.0], [1306, 1420, 0.0], [1420, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2592, 0.0], [2592, 4028, 0.0], [4028, 4945, 0.0], [4945, 6946, 0.0], [6946, 8118, 0.0], [8118, 8243, 0.0], [8243, 9811, 0.0], [9811, 12314, 0.0], [12314, 12325, 0.0], [12325, 12371, 0.0], [12371, 12462, 0.0], [12462, 12828, 0.0], [12828, 13074, 0.0], [13074, 13280, 0.0], [13280, 13477, 0.0], [13477, 13715, 0.0], [13715, 14032, 0.0], [14032, 14372, 0.0], [14372, 14486, 0.0], [14486, 14666, 0.0], [14666, 14752, 0.0], [14752, 14832, 0.0], [14832, 14938, 0.0], [14938, 15006, 0.0], [15006, 15169, 0.0], [15169, 15229, 0.0], [15229, 15289, 0.0], [15289, 15372, 0.0], [15372, 15448, 0.0], [15448, 15529, 0.0], [15529, 15605, 0.0], [15605, 15681, 0.0], [15681, 15758, 0.0], [15758, 15799, 0.0], [15799, 15856, 0.0], [15856, 15929, 0.0], [15929, 15996, 0.0], [15996, 16061, 0.0], [16061, 16137, 0.0], [16137, 16191, 0.0], [16191, 16250, 0.0], [16250, 16322, 0.0], [16322, 16389, 0.0], [16389, 16429, 0.0], [16429, 16474, 0.0], [16474, 16539, 0.0], [16539, 16655, 0.0], [16655, 16758, 0.0], [16758, 16818, 0.0], [16818, 16879, 0.0], [16879, 16941, 0.0], [16941, 17007, 0.0], [17007, 17110, 0.0], [17110, 17226, 0.0], [17226, 17302, 0.0], [17302, 17356, 0.0], [17356, 17411, 0.0], [17411, 17440, 0.0], [17440, 17529, 0.0], [17529, 18141, 0.0], [18141, 18565, 0.0], [18565, 18881, 0.0], [18881, 19238, 0.0], [19238, 19372, 0.0], [19372, 19390, 0.0], [19390, 19419, 0.0], [19419, 19465, 0.0], [19465, 19482, 0.0], [19482, 19551, 0.0], [19551, 19586, 0.0], [19586, 19602, 0.0], [19602, 19654, 0.0], [19654, 19685, 0.0], [19685, 19717, 0.0], [19717, 19919, 0.0], [19919, 20732, 0.0], [20732, 21124, 0.0], [21124, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 30, 4.0], [30, 134, 18.0], [134, 219, 15.0], [219, 236, 2.0], [236, 256, 2.0], [256, 293, 6.0], [293, 374, 13.0], [374, 611, 30.0], [611, 694, 12.0], [694, 754, 9.0], [754, 836, 11.0], [836, 918, 11.0], [918, 1004, 11.0], [1004, 1085, 9.0], [1085, 1130, 7.0], [1130, 1306, 22.0], [1306, 1420, 17.0], [1420, 1483, 8.0], [1483, 1881, 47.0], [1881, 1939, 4.0], [1939, 2045, 14.0], [2045, 2289, 41.0], [2289, 2592, 47.0], [2592, 4028, 219.0], [4028, 4945, 130.0], [4945, 6946, 314.0], [6946, 8118, 169.0], [8118, 8243, 17.0], [8243, 9811, 247.0], [9811, 12314, 391.0], [12314, 12325, 1.0], [12325, 12371, 5.0], [12371, 12462, 13.0], [12462, 12828, 55.0], [12828, 13074, 37.0], [13074, 13280, 35.0], [13280, 13477, 34.0], [13477, 13715, 34.0], [13715, 14032, 55.0], [14032, 14372, 57.0], [14372, 14486, 18.0], [14486, 14666, 22.0], [14666, 14752, 14.0], [14752, 14832, 11.0], [14832, 14938, 14.0], [14938, 15006, 10.0], [15006, 15169, 23.0], [15169, 15229, 9.0], [15229, 15289, 10.0], [15289, 15372, 13.0], [15372, 15448, 12.0], [15448, 15529, 12.0], [15529, 15605, 12.0], [15605, 15681, 12.0], [15681, 15758, 12.0], [15758, 15799, 7.0], [15799, 15856, 9.0], [15856, 15929, 10.0], [15929, 15996, 9.0], [15996, 16061, 9.0], [16061, 16137, 10.0], [16137, 16191, 8.0], [16191, 16250, 8.0], [16250, 16322, 12.0], [16322, 16389, 9.0], [16389, 16429, 6.0], [16429, 16474, 8.0], [16474, 16539, 11.0], [16539, 16655, 17.0], [16655, 16758, 14.0], [16758, 16818, 9.0], [16818, 16879, 8.0], [16879, 16941, 9.0], [16941, 17007, 11.0], [17007, 17110, 17.0], [17110, 17226, 17.0], [17226, 17302, 11.0], [17302, 17356, 9.0], [17356, 17411, 9.0], [17411, 17440, 5.0], [17440, 17529, 13.0], [17529, 18141, 92.0], [18141, 18565, 66.0], [18565, 18881, 54.0], [18881, 19238, 61.0], [19238, 19372, 21.0], [19372, 19390, 2.0], [19390, 19419, 2.0], [19419, 19465, 8.0], [19465, 19482, 1.0], [19482, 19551, 9.0], [19551, 19586, 3.0], [19586, 19602, 2.0], [19602, 19654, 6.0], [19654, 19685, 5.0], [19685, 19717, 6.0], [19717, 19919, 31.0], [19919, 20732, 128.0], [20732, 21124, 62.0], [21124, 21578, 62.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 134, 0.0], [134, 219, 0.0], [219, 236, 0.0], [236, 256, 0.0], [256, 293, 0.0], [293, 374, 0.0], [374, 611, 0.04803493], [611, 694, 0.11688312], [694, 754, 0.15517241], [754, 836, 0.12], [836, 918, 0.11842105], [918, 1004, 0.11392405], [1004, 1085, 0.12], [1085, 1130, 0.18604651], [1130, 1306, 0.11976048], [1306, 1420, 0.0], [1420, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1939, 0.08333333], [1939, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2289, 0.02489627], [2289, 2592, 0.0], [2592, 4028, 0.02558635], [4028, 4945, 0.0110742], [4945, 6946, 0.01320467], [6946, 8118, 0.0], [8118, 8243, 0.0], [8243, 9811, 0.0155642], [9811, 12314, 0.0016214], [12314, 12325, 0.55555556], [12325, 12371, 0.15384615], [12371, 12462, 0.14814815], [12462, 12828, 0.00276243], [12828, 13074, 0.00414938], [13074, 13280, 0.00492611], [13280, 13477, 0.03703704], [13477, 13715, 0.0042735], [13715, 14032, 0.02250804], [14032, 14372, 0.01812689], [14372, 14486, 0.05504587], [14486, 14666, 0.09259259], [14666, 14752, 0.0], [14752, 14832, 0.06756757], [14832, 14938, 0.05], [14938, 15006, 0.08064516], [15006, 15169, 0.05921053], [15169, 15229, 0.09090909], [15229, 15289, 0.07272727], [15289, 15372, 0.05333333], [15372, 15448, 0.05797101], [15448, 15529, 0.05479452], [15529, 15605, 0.05797101], [15605, 15681, 0.05797101], [15681, 15758, 0.05714286], [15758, 15799, 0.14285714], [15799, 15856, 0.09803922], [15856, 15929, 0.07462687], [15929, 15996, 0.08196721], [15996, 16061, 0.08196721], [16061, 16137, 0.07142857], [16137, 16191, 0.11111111], [16191, 16250, 0.09433962], [16250, 16322, 0.07575758], [16322, 16389, 0.08196721], [16389, 16429, 0.14705882], [16429, 16474, 0.12820513], [16474, 16539, 0.08064516], [16539, 16655, 0.0462963], [16655, 16758, 0.05263158], [16758, 16818, 0.09259259], [16818, 16879, 0.09259259], [16879, 16941, 0.08928571], [16941, 17007, 0.08333333], [17007, 17110, 0.05154639], [17110, 17226, 0.04545455], [17226, 17302, 0.07142857], [17302, 17356, 0.10416667], [17356, 17411, 0.10204082], [17411, 17440, 0.19230769], [17440, 17529, 0.14814815], [17529, 18141, 0.00331126], [18141, 18565, 0.01690821], [18565, 18881, 0.02258065], [18881, 19238, 0.01724138], [19238, 19372, 0.01515152], [19372, 19390, 0.0], [19390, 19419, 0.0], [19419, 19465, 0.0], [19465, 19482, 0.41666667], [19482, 19551, 0.0], [19551, 19586, 0.0], [19586, 19602, 0.0], [19602, 19654, 0.0], [19654, 19685, 0.0], [19685, 19717, 0.13793103], [19717, 19919, 0.04210526], [19919, 20732, 0.01253133], [20732, 21124, 0.01041667], [21124, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 134, 0.0], [134, 219, 0.0], [219, 236, 0.0], [236, 256, 0.0], [256, 293, 0.0], [293, 374, 0.0], [374, 611, 0.0], [611, 694, 0.0], [694, 754, 0.0], [754, 836, 0.0], [836, 918, 0.0], [918, 1004, 0.0], [1004, 1085, 0.0], [1085, 1130, 0.0], [1130, 1306, 0.0], [1306, 1420, 0.0], [1420, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1881, 0.0], [1881, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2592, 0.0], [2592, 4028, 0.0], [4028, 4945, 0.0], [4945, 6946, 0.0], [6946, 8118, 0.0], [8118, 8243, 0.0], [8243, 9811, 0.0], [9811, 12314, 0.0], [12314, 12325, 0.0], [12325, 12371, 0.0], [12371, 12462, 0.0], [12462, 12828, 0.0], [12828, 13074, 0.0], [13074, 13280, 0.0], [13280, 13477, 0.0], [13477, 13715, 0.0], [13715, 14032, 0.0], [14032, 14372, 0.0], [14372, 14486, 0.0], [14486, 14666, 0.0], [14666, 14752, 0.0], [14752, 14832, 0.0], [14832, 14938, 0.0], [14938, 15006, 0.0], [15006, 15169, 0.0], [15169, 15229, 0.0], [15229, 15289, 0.0], [15289, 15372, 0.0], [15372, 15448, 0.0], [15448, 15529, 0.0], [15529, 15605, 0.0], [15605, 15681, 0.0], [15681, 15758, 0.0], [15758, 15799, 0.0], [15799, 15856, 0.0], [15856, 15929, 0.0], [15929, 15996, 0.0], [15996, 16061, 0.0], [16061, 16137, 0.0], [16137, 16191, 0.0], [16191, 16250, 0.0], [16250, 16322, 0.0], [16322, 16389, 0.0], [16389, 16429, 0.0], [16429, 16474, 0.0], [16474, 16539, 0.0], [16539, 16655, 0.0], [16655, 16758, 0.0], [16758, 16818, 0.0], [16818, 16879, 0.0], [16879, 16941, 0.0], [16941, 17007, 0.0], [17007, 17110, 0.0], [17110, 17226, 0.0], [17226, 17302, 0.0], [17302, 17356, 0.0], [17356, 17411, 0.0], [17411, 17440, 0.0], [17440, 17529, 0.0], [17529, 18141, 0.0], [18141, 18565, 0.0], [18565, 18881, 0.0], [18881, 19238, 0.0], [19238, 19372, 0.0], [19372, 19390, 0.0], [19390, 19419, 0.0], [19419, 19465, 0.0], [19465, 19482, 0.0], [19482, 19551, 0.0], [19551, 19586, 0.0], [19586, 19602, 0.0], [19602, 19654, 0.0], [19654, 19685, 0.0], [19685, 19717, 0.0], [19717, 19919, 0.0], [19919, 20732, 0.0], [20732, 21124, 0.0], [21124, 21578, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 30, 0.13333333], [30, 134, 0.04807692], [134, 219, 0.07058824], [219, 236, 0.05882353], [236, 256, 0.05], [256, 293, 0.08108108], [293, 374, 0.01234568], [374, 611, 0.0464135], [611, 694, 0.04819277], [694, 754, 0.13333333], [754, 836, 0.04878049], [836, 918, 0.08536585], [918, 1004, 0.04651163], [1004, 1085, 0.04938272], [1085, 1130, 0.15555556], [1130, 1306, 0.10795455], [1306, 1420, 0.14912281], [1420, 1483, 0.01587302], [1483, 1881, 0.04773869], [1881, 1939, 0.03448276], [1939, 2045, 0.02830189], [2045, 2289, 0.03688525], [2289, 2592, 0.01650165], [2592, 4028, 0.01462396], [4028, 4945, 0.01526718], [4945, 6946, 0.03798101], [6946, 8118, 0.01109215], [8118, 8243, 0.032], [8243, 9811, 0.04081633], [9811, 12314, 0.03276069], [12314, 12325, 0.36363636], [12325, 12371, 0.19565217], [12371, 12462, 0.08791209], [12462, 12828, 0.00819672], [12828, 13074, 0.00406504], [13074, 13280, 0.01456311], [13280, 13477, 0.04060914], [13477, 13715, 0.02521008], [13715, 14032, 0.05678233], [14032, 14372, 0.02058824], [14372, 14486, 0.12280702], [14486, 14666, 0.15555556], [14666, 14752, 0.05813953], [14752, 14832, 0.125], [14832, 14938, 0.11320755], [14938, 15006, 0.16176471], [15006, 15169, 0.15337423], [15169, 15229, 0.16666667], [15229, 15289, 0.16666667], [15289, 15372, 0.15662651], [15372, 15448, 0.14473684], [15448, 15529, 0.14814815], [15529, 15605, 0.14473684], [15605, 15681, 0.14473684], [15681, 15758, 0.14285714], [15758, 15799, 0.19512195], [15799, 15856, 0.15789474], [15856, 15929, 0.1369863], [15929, 15996, 0.13432836], [15996, 16061, 0.15384615], [16061, 16137, 0.13157895], [16137, 16191, 0.16666667], [16191, 16250, 0.15254237], [16250, 16322, 0.13888889], [16322, 16389, 0.11940299], [16389, 16429, 0.175], [16429, 16474, 0.17777778], [16474, 16539, 0.15384615], [16539, 16655, 0.11206897], [16655, 16758, 0.12621359], [16758, 16818, 0.16666667], [16818, 16879, 0.16393443], [16879, 16941, 0.14516129], [16941, 17007, 0.15151515], [17007, 17110, 0.13592233], [17110, 17226, 0.12931034], [17226, 17302, 0.14473684], [17302, 17356, 0.14814815], [17356, 17411, 0.16363636], [17411, 17440, 0.20689655], [17440, 17529, 0.08988764], [17529, 18141, 0.00653595], [18141, 18565, 0.03301887], [18565, 18881, 0.05696203], [18881, 19238, 0.01960784], [19238, 19372, 0.10447761], [19372, 19390, 0.11111111], [19390, 19419, 0.03448276], [19419, 19465, 0.08695652], [19465, 19482, 0.41176471], [19482, 19551, 0.01449275], [19551, 19586, 0.02857143], [19586, 19602, 0.0625], [19602, 19654, 0.01923077], [19654, 19685, 0.09677419], [19685, 19717, 0.09375], [19717, 19919, 0.04455446], [19919, 20732, 0.01845018], [20732, 21124, 0.05102041], [21124, 21578, 0.02202643]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 21578, 0.47463942]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 21578, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 21578, 0.68283433]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 21578, -1216.50563944]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 21578, -108.25377302]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 21578, 285.82512383]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 21578, 151.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
whc.unesco.org
We are pleased to announce that the UNESCO World Heritage Centre in cooperation with the Conservatoire des Espaces Naturels de ... 1 2 3 4 ... 45 Next Page See All August 2012
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3090
{"url": "http://whc.unesco.org/pg.cfm?cid=83&l=en&date=2012-08-19&mode=day&mode=RSS", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "whc.unesco.org", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:21:53Z", "digest": "sha1:BIT4K4RYKL6DWP4TWK76QAYVVR6BNOFZ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 175, 175.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 175, 10378.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 175, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 175, 275.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 175, 0.8]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 175, 287.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 175, 0.21212121]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 175, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 175, 0.03030303]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 175, 0.24242424]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 175, 0.96774194]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 175, 4.41935484]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 175, 0.06060606]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 175, 3.38926803]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 175, 31.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 175, 31.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 175, 0.05988024]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 175, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 175, 0.10285714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 175, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 175, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 175, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 175, -21.07370856]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 175, -6.78004548]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 175, -6.95839713]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 175, 3.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
whc.unesco.org
/ Hydrology and Remote Sensing Laboratory Find a person Find a location ARS Organizational Chart Research Scientists Scientific Support Staff Visiting Scientists / Post Docs / Cooperators Thomas J. Jackson thomas dot jackson at ars dot usda dot gov Hydrologist Thomas Jackson, Ph.D.HydrologistUSDA-ARS Hydrology and Remote Sensing LaboratoryBldg. 007, Rm. 104, BARC-WestBeltsville, MD 20705-2350 USAVoice: (301) 504-8511Fax: (301) 504-8931Tom.Jackson@ars.usda.gov Research Interests: (click here to see a list of current research projects) Remote sensing Soil moisture and soil water modeling Hydrologic modeling Education: 1971 B.S. (Fire Protection Engineering) University of Maryland, College Park, MD. 1973 M.S. (Civil Engineering) University of Maryland, College Park, MD. 1976 Ph.D. (Civil Engineering) University of Maryland, College Park, MD. Professional Experience: 1976 - 1977: Assistant Professor, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 1977 - present: Hydrologist, USDA-ARS Hydrology and Remote Sensing Laboratory, Beltsville, MD Selected Publications: (please contact the author to determine reprint availability) (view author's publications/interpretive summaries/technical abstracts since 1999) Jackson, T. J. Multiple resolution analysis of L band brightness temperature for soil moisture. IEEE Trans. Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 39:151-164. 2001. Jackson, T. J., Hsu, A. Y., Shutko, A. M., Tishchenko, Y., Petrenko, B., Kutuza, B., and Armand, N. Priroda microwave radiometer observations in the SGP97 hydrology experiment. International Journal of Remote Sensing, 23:231-248. 2002. Jackson, T. J. and Hsu, A. Y. Soil moisture and TRMM microwave imager relationships in the Southern Great Plains 1999 (SGP99) experiment, IEEE Trans. Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 39:1632-1642. 2001. Jackson, T. J. Remote sensing, soil moisture and implications for groundwater recharge. Hydrogeology Journal, 10:40-51. 2002. Jackson, T., Hsu, A., O'Neill, P. Surface soil moisture retrieval and mapping using high frequency microwave satellite observation in the Southern Great Plains, J. Hydrometeorology, 3:688-699. 2002. Jackson, T., Gasiewski, A., Oldak, A., Klein, M., Njoku, E., Yevgrafov, A., Christiani, S., and Bindlish, R. Soil moisture retrieval using the C-Band polarimetric scanning radiometer during the Southern Great Plains 1999 experiment. IEEE Trans. Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 40:2151-2161. 2002. Njoku, E., Jackson, T., Lakshmi, V., Chan, T., and Nghiem, S. Soil moisture retrieval from AMSR-E. IEEE Trans. Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 41:215-229. 2003. Bindlish, R., Jackson, T. J., Wood, E., Gao, H., Starks, P., Bosch, D. and Lakshmi, V. Soil moisture estimates from TRMM Microwave Imager observations over the southern United States. Remote Sensing of Environment, 85:507-15. 2003. Jackson, T. J., Hsu, A.Y., Van de Griend, A., and Eagleman, J. SKYLAB L band microwave observations of soil moisture revisited, International Journal of Remote Sensing, 24: 2585-2606. 2004. Entekhabi, D., Njoku, E., Houser, P., Spencer, M., Doiron, T., Belair, S., Crow, W., Jackson, T., Kerr, Y., Kimball, J., Koster, R., McDonald, K., O'Neill, P., Pultz, T., Running, S., Shi, J.C., Wood, E., and van Zyl, J. The hydrosphere State (Hydros) mission concept: An earth system pathfinder for global mapping of soil moisture and land freeze/thaw, IEEE Trans. Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 42:2184-2195. 2004. Jackson, T., Chen, D., Cosh, M., Li, F., Anderson, M., Walthall, C., Doraiswamy, P., and Hunt, E.R. Vegetation water content mapping using Landsat data derived normalized difference water index (NDWI) for corn and soybean, Remote Sensing of Environment, 92: 475-482. 2004. Kustas, W.P., Li, F., Jackson, T. J., Prueger, J.H., MacPherson, J.I., and Wolden, M. Effects of remote sensing pixel resolution on modeled energy flux variability of croplands in Iowa, Remote Sensing of the Environment, 92:535-547. 2004. Cosh, M.H., Jackson, T. J., Bindlish, R., and Prueger, J.H. Watershed scale temporal persistence of soil moisture and its role in validation satellite estimates, Remote Sensing of Environment, 92:427-435. 2004. Jackson, T. J., Hurkmans. R., Hsu, A., and Cosh, M.H. Soil moisture algorithm validation using data from the advanced microwave scanning radiometer (AMSR-E) in Mongolia. Italian Journal of Remote Sensing., 30/31:23-32. 2004. Jackson, T .J. Remote Sensing Soil Moisture. In Encyclopedia of Soils in the Environment. Ed. D. Hillel, Elsevier, Ltd., Oxford, UK, vol. 3:392-398. 2005. Jackson, T. Passive microwave remote sensing of soil moisture and regional drought monitoring, Chapter V:89-104. in Boken, V. (ed.) Monitoring and Predicting Agricultural Drought. Oxford Univ. Press. 2005. Jackson, T. J., Bindlish, R., Gasiewski, A.J., Stankov, B., Klein, M., Njoku, E.G., Bosch, D., Coleman, T.L., Laymon, C., and Starks, P. Polarimetric Scanning Radiometer C and X band microwave observations during SMEX03. IEEE Trans. Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 43:2418-2430. 2005. Last Modified:
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3199
{"url": "http://www.ars.usda.gov/pandp/people/people.htm?personid=2744&pf=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ars.usda.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:28:25Z", "digest": "sha1:EX6LUU4HHTSLGG4CYRBS4KD3HYQE4I5Y"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5037, 5037.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5037, 5867.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5037, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5037, 59.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5037, 0.63]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5037, 317.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5037, 0.08040201]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5037, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5037, 0.18909755]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5037, 0.11476265]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5037, 0.07824726]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5037, 0.02556077]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5037, 0.07120501]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5037, 0.0258216]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5037, 0.03442879]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5037, 0.13567839]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5037, 0.42211055]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5037, 0.45184136]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5037, 5.4305949]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5037, 5.21234927]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5037, 706.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 198, 1.0], [198, 249, 0.0], [249, 261, 0.0], [261, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 198, 0.0], [198, 249, 0.0], [249, 261, 0.0], [261, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 42, 5.0], [42, 198, 21.0], [198, 249, 10.0], [249, 261, 1.0], [261, 5037, 669.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 198, 0.0], [198, 249, 0.0], [249, 261, 0.0], [261, 5037, 0.06604434]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 198, 0.0], [198, 249, 0.0], [249, 261, 0.0], [261, 5037, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.0952381], [42, 198, 0.12179487], [198, 249, 0.01960784], [249, 261, 0.08333333], [261, 5037, 0.1028057]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5037, 0.01190877]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5037, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5037, 0.34452778]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5037, -489.04002916]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5037, -260.04630336]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5037, -53.12190308]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5037, 196.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.ars.usda.gov
/ Bioenergy Research Programs and Projects Subjects of Investigation ARS National Programs Search for a research project Research Project: GENOMICS AND ENGINEERING OF STRESS TOLERANT MICROBES FOR LOWER COST PRODUCTION OF ETHANOL FROM LIGNOCELLULOSE Bioenergy Research Unit Title: Challenges of cellulosic ethanol production from xylose-extracted corncob residues Authors Zhang, Lei - Li, J-H - Li, Shi-Zhong - Liu, Zonglin Submitted to: BioResources Citation: Zhang, L., Li, J., Li, S., Liu, Z. 2011. Challenges of cellulosic ethanol production from xylose-extracted corncob residues. BioResources. 6(4):4302-4316. Interpretive Summary: Starch-to-ethanol is a classic means for production of fuel ethanol. However, the use of starch for ethanol production competes for grain supplies and food security for humans and animals worldwide. Emerging interest in ethanol production using cellulosic biomass such as agricultural crop residues is a promising technology for the second generation production of biofuels. Combined xylose production using corncobs and subsequent ethanol production using the xylose-extracted corncob residue (X-ER) is a new concept for production of value-added renewable products. This research represents the first characterization of the X-ER and evaluation of its potential use for cellulosic ethanol production. We found that cellulose-rich X-ER has a potential as a substrate for cellulosic ethanol production. However, the X-ER produced by the current industrial xylose-production process is not readily convertable to ethanol and further pretreatment is needed to enhance its conversion. Findings of our research will aid further investigation and decision-making toward improved and integrated bioprocessing procedures using corncobs and its byproduct X-ER for lower-cost production of a value-added product and cellulosic ethanol. Xylose production using corncobs is an established industrial practice. The cellulose-rich xylose-extracted corncob residue (X-ER), as a byproduct, is a potential energy resource. Efforts to convert the cellulose fraction of X-ER to ethanol have been unsatisfactory due to a lack of understanding of the substrate characteristics. The present study characterized X-ER for its potential utilization in conjunction with the sequential production of xylose and cellulosic ethanol. We found the current dilute acid treatment procedures used for the corncobs by the xylose-production industry were insufficient for deconstruction of corncob cellulose structure in order to release available sugars for the subsequent cellulosic ethanol conversion. After a secondary dilute acid hydrolysis of the X-ER, an additional 30% hemicellulose was recovered. In addition, a more efficient enzymatic hydrolysis of X-ER was observed resulting in a significantly higher yield of glucose conversion compared with an untreated X-ER control. These results suggest X-ER can be utilized for cellulosic ethanol production; however, the current industry processed X-ER is not ready for immediate applications of economic ethanol conversion. Based on the results of the current research, it is possible to pursue a combined production of xylose and cellulosic ethanol from corncobs and its byproduct X-ER using improved corncob pretreatment procedures and fermentation strategies.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3200
{"url": "http://www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/publications.htm?SEQ_NO_115=256951&pf=1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ars.usda.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:06:36Z", "digest": "sha1:7N6IRD4XKI3IN7U5WBLWZDOB2KGZG332"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3318, 3318.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3318, 4405.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3318, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3318, 68.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3318, 0.88]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3318, 288.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3318, 0.28076256]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3318, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3318, 0.12798265]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3318, 0.10918294]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3318, 0.0527838]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3318, 0.0527838]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3318, 0.0527838]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3318, 0.05531453]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3318, 0.04880694]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3318, 0.03253796]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3318, 0.08665511]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3318, 0.16291161]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3318, 0.45833333]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3318, 6.06578947]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3318, 4.76975308]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3318, 456.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 249, 0.0], [249, 273, 0.0], [273, 363, 0.0], [363, 423, 0.0], [423, 450, 0.0], [450, 1864, 1.0], [1864, 3318, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 249, 0.0], [249, 273, 0.0], [273, 363, 0.0], [363, 423, 0.0], [423, 450, 0.0], [450, 1864, 0.0], [1864, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 21, 2.0], [21, 249, 31.0], [249, 273, 3.0], [273, 363, 10.0], [363, 423, 9.0], [423, 450, 3.0], [450, 1864, 193.0], [1864, 3318, 205.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 249, 0.0], [249, 273, 0.0], [273, 363, 0.0], [363, 423, 0.0], [423, 450, 0.0], [450, 1864, 0.01025641], [1864, 3318, 0.00140548]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 249, 0.0], [249, 273, 0.0], [273, 363, 0.0], [363, 423, 0.0], [423, 450, 0.0], [450, 1864, 0.0], [1864, 3318, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0952381], [21, 249, 0.46929825], [249, 273, 0.125], [273, 363, 0.02222222], [363, 423, 0.18333333], [423, 450, 0.11111111], [450, 1864, 0.0261669], [1864, 3318, 0.02475928]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3318, 0.43354702]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3318, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3318, 0.30846649]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3318, -231.34203341]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3318, -41.30797022]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3318, -1.60191735]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3318, 25.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.ars.usda.gov
&make=Jaguar Two new Aston Martin models to debut at New York auto show Aston Martin has announced that it will debut new versions of its Vantage and DB9 sports... 2015 Volkswagen Golf GTI pricing announced Circuit and brake facts for Formula One Chinese Grand Prix Braking is going to play a huge part in Sunday's Chinese Grand Prix Formula One race.... One Lap of the Web: The Internet celebrates the Mustang Fifty years ago, Muhammad Ali became the heavyweight champion of the world, "Jeopardy!"... CAR NEWS Jaguar marks 20 years of the XJ220 The XJ220 featured a twin-turbo V6 Photo by Jaguar. The XJ220 S was upgraded to 690 hp Photo by Jaguar. The wheels have a distinctive '90s look Photo by Jaguar. The XJ220 S had parts from Jaguar's Le Mans cars Photo by Jaguar. The XJ220 S used extra carbon fiber for lightness Photo by Jaguar. By: Jake Lingeman on 1/31/2012 McLaren F1 GTR up for auction at the Quail When I win the lottery: MegaMillions car picks Jaguar to back historic-racing effort in 2012 Chrysler brands to certify non-Chrysler used vehicles in new program Jaguar XF Sportbrake revealed before Geneva motor show Jaguar XK and XKR special editions on sale 2012 Jaguar XKR-S convertible: Drive review The story behind the Icon Derelicts: Video Jaguar to close heritage center, searches for new site 2012 Land Rover Range Rover Evoque Pure: Review notes Gurney and Gurney: Father and son appreciate what it takes to win the Rolex 24 at Daytona RM Auctions to sell rare Jaguar XJ220S in Arizona Land Rover's Detroit snub not a smart move 2012 Jaguar XJL Supersport: Review notes The first time a Jaguar XJ220 supercar reached a customer's hands was 1992. President George H.W. Bush was in office, and space shuttle Endeavor took its maiden flight. The XJ220 cost that first customer $846,000, and that was 20 years ago.The car was conceived as a concept and debuted at the 1988 British motor show. Keith Helfet was the designer who signed off on production in 1989, with Tom Walkinshaw Racing as the partner.TWR took the concept and deduced what it would take to make the XJ220 a production car. It came up with the following changes: a twin-turbo V6 instead of the concept's V12, two-wheel drive rather than four, conventional doors and a slightly revised body design.The car was given the name XJ220, which was the top speed target at the time. In 1991 it clocked near there at 213 mph, with a curb weight of just 3,240 pounds. It was the fastest production car in the world for about a year, until the McLaren F1 took the crown.Jaguar Sport, which was charged with producing the car, agreed with TWR's notes, and the production version arrived with a 3.5-liter twin-turbo V6. The doors closed horizontally, Lamborghini be damned. The V6 channeled power to the rear wheels via a five-speed gearbox and AP Racing twin-plate clutch. Bridgestone Expedia tires wrapped around 18-inch wheels. The XJ220 developed 542 hp and 475 lb-ft of torque. It got to 60 mph in the high three-second range, which was closer to that Endeavor shuttle than any other car on the road. Braking was done with four-piston calipers, also from AP.Production ended in 1994, with 275 examples built.Jaguar recently held its Jaguar Experience Day at the Heritage Motor Centre in the United Kingdom. The silver car--chassis No. 004--was in attendance. It's one of 10 preproduction vehicles. This one was used for high-speed testing in Texas, where it hit 213 mph with Andy Wallace behind the wheel.The yellow example shown is an XJ220 S. It's the first example built and includes some spare parts from Jaguar's Le Mans cars. It gets a heaping dose of carbon fiber, revised springs and a claimed 690 hp. The interior got lightweight carbon-fiber trim and Kevlar seats. It's even rarer than the “base” XJ220.Check out our old drive story of the car by Denise McCluggage from August 30, 1993.Call of the Wild page one in .jpg (252 kb)Call of the Wild page two in .jpg (252 kb) Moss' mangled Mille Miglia Maserati to move Monaco money Which unveiling are you more excited to see?
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3226
{"url": "http://www.autoweek.com/article/20120131/CARNEWS/120139973/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.autoweek.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:45:34Z", "digest": "sha1:J3HDDBF2QSWNADH7UKIMDUKYZXCVBDDF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4061, 4061.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4061, 7353.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4061, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4061, 174.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4061, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4061, 333.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4061, 0.3127907]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4061, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4061, 0.03644225]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4061, 0.03644225]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4061, 0.01976529]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4061, 0.02007412]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4061, 0.01976529]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4061, 0.05]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4061, 0.09677419]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4061, 0.17906977]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4061, 0.55014327]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4061, 4.63896848]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4061, 0.00348837]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4061, 5.42102129]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4061, 698.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 72, 0.0], [72, 164, 1.0], [164, 207, 0.0], [207, 266, 0.0], [266, 355, 1.0], [355, 502, 1.0], [502, 546, 0.0], [546, 598, 1.0], [598, 650, 1.0], [650, 707, 1.0], [707, 773, 1.0], [773, 840, 1.0], [840, 871, 0.0], [871, 914, 0.0], [914, 961, 0.0], [961, 1007, 0.0], [1007, 1076, 0.0], [1076, 1131, 0.0], [1131, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1218, 0.0], [1218, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1370, 0.0], [1370, 1460, 0.0], [1460, 1510, 0.0], [1510, 1553, 0.0], [1553, 1594, 0.0], [1594, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4061, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 72, 0.0], [72, 164, 0.0], [164, 207, 0.0], [207, 266, 0.0], [266, 355, 0.0], [355, 502, 0.0], [502, 546, 0.0], [546, 598, 0.0], [598, 650, 0.0], [650, 707, 0.0], [707, 773, 0.0], [773, 840, 0.0], [840, 871, 0.0], [871, 914, 0.0], [914, 961, 0.0], [961, 1007, 0.0], [1007, 1076, 0.0], [1076, 1131, 0.0], [1131, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1218, 0.0], [1218, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1370, 0.0], [1370, 1460, 0.0], [1460, 1510, 0.0], [1510, 1553, 0.0], [1553, 1594, 0.0], [1594, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 13, 1.0], [13, 72, 12.0], [72, 164, 16.0], [164, 207, 6.0], [207, 266, 10.0], [266, 355, 16.0], [355, 502, 23.0], [502, 546, 9.0], [546, 598, 9.0], [598, 650, 11.0], [650, 707, 10.0], [707, 773, 13.0], [773, 840, 12.0], [840, 871, 5.0], [871, 914, 9.0], [914, 961, 8.0], [961, 1007, 7.0], [1007, 1076, 10.0], [1076, 1131, 8.0], [1131, 1174, 8.0], [1174, 1218, 6.0], [1218, 1261, 7.0], [1261, 1316, 9.0], [1316, 1370, 9.0], [1370, 1460, 17.0], [1460, 1510, 9.0], [1510, 1553, 8.0], [1553, 1594, 6.0], [1594, 3960, 407.0], [3960, 4017, 9.0], [4017, 4061, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 72, 0.0], [72, 164, 0.01136364], [164, 207, 0.0952381], [207, 266, 0.0], [266, 355, 0.0], [355, 502, 0.0], [502, 546, 0.11627907], [546, 598, 0.08163265], [598, 650, 0.12], [650, 707, 0.03703704], [707, 773, 0.04761905], [773, 840, 0.04615385], [840, 871, 0.25925926], [871, 914, 0.02380952], [914, 961, 0.0], [961, 1007, 0.09090909], [1007, 1076, 0.0], [1076, 1131, 0.0], [1131, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1218, 0.09756098], [1218, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1370, 0.07692308], [1370, 1460, 0.02272727], [1460, 1510, 0.06122449], [1510, 1553, 0.0], [1553, 1594, 0.1025641], [1594, 3960, 0.04382121], [3960, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 13, 0.0], [13, 72, 0.0], [72, 164, 0.0], [164, 207, 0.0], [207, 266, 0.0], [266, 355, 0.0], [355, 502, 0.0], [502, 546, 0.0], [546, 598, 0.0], [598, 650, 0.0], [650, 707, 0.0], [707, 773, 0.0], [773, 840, 0.0], [840, 871, 0.0], [871, 914, 0.0], [914, 961, 0.0], [961, 1007, 0.0], [1007, 1076, 0.0], [1076, 1131, 0.0], [1131, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1218, 0.0], [1218, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1370, 0.0], [1370, 1460, 0.0], [1460, 1510, 0.0], [1510, 1553, 0.0], [1553, 1594, 0.0], [1594, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4017, 0.0], [4017, 4061, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 13, 0.07692308], [13, 72, 0.08474576], [72, 164, 0.05434783], [164, 207, 0.11627907], [207, 266, 0.10169492], [266, 355, 0.07865169], [355, 502, 0.06802721], [502, 546, 0.22727273], [546, 598, 0.11538462], [598, 650, 0.11538462], [650, 707, 0.05263158], [707, 773, 0.13636364], [773, 840, 0.08955224], [840, 871, 0.09677419], [871, 914, 0.1627907], [914, 961, 0.08510638], [961, 1007, 0.02173913], [1007, 1076, 0.02898551], [1076, 1131, 0.09090909], [1131, 1174, 0.13953488], [1174, 1218, 0.13636364], [1218, 1261, 0.09302326], [1261, 1316, 0.01818182], [1316, 1370, 0.12962963], [1370, 1460, 0.05555556], [1460, 1510, 0.16], [1510, 1553, 0.06976744], [1553, 1594, 0.14634146], [1594, 3960, 0.04184277], [3960, 4017, 0.0877193], [4017, 4061, 0.02272727]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4061, 0.58595109]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4061, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4061, 0.96466202]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4061, -167.37564215]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4061, 10.59894463]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4061, 40.76500281]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4061, 43.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.autoweek.com
4 arrested for defying San Francisco’s nudity ban Fri Feb 1, 2013 3:59 PM SAN FRANCISCO — Four protesters were arrested entirely in the buff as they took to the steps of San Francisco City Hall in a brazen challenge of the city’s ban on public nudity on Friday, the first day it went into effect. One woman and three men — one wearing just a mesh thong — were taken into custody as about a dozen other protesters in various states of undress paraded around with painted slogans on their bodies, holding up signs with messages such as “The Human Body is Beautiful.” Police gave them a 15-minute warning to disperse or put pants on before officers arrested those who failed to cover themselves. The protesters said their arrest would advance the cause of “body freedom.” “No matter what, we’re going to continue practicing body freedom,” said Gypsy Taub, a mother of two who hosts a local cable program devoted to the nudist cause. “In a society that’s repressed and crazy, that glorifies war and at the same time criminalizes the human body … nudity is a political statement.” In December, the Board of Supervisors voted 7-4 in favor of the ordinance, which prohibits exposed genitals in most public places, including streets, sidewalks and public transit. A federal judge ruled Tuesday that nudity was not protected free speech and upheld San Francisco’s ban on most displays of public nudity. Protesters vowed to appeal the judge’s decision. Police spokesman Albie Esparza said the arrests were simply an attempt to enforce compliance with the law, which the city enacted after residents complained about people in various stages of undress. “We’re not here to arrest and cite people if we don’t have to, but if we have to, we will enforce the law,” he said. “We want to admonish as many people as possible and try to gain compliance.” Activists challenging the measure also had argued that the ordinance was unfair because it grants exceptions for nudity at permitted public events such as the city’s gay pride parade. They complained that forcing people to cover up would undermine San Francisco’s reputation as a city without inhibitions. ► Join the DiscussionView/Add Comments »
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3232
{"url": "http://www.azcentral.com/news/free/20130201san-francisco-nudity-ban-arrests.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.azcentral.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:43:42Z", "digest": "sha1:FSQPKBXQDTK7BBNSAXPGIKZBSJ6SZTSA"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2183, 2183.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2183, 3341.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2183, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2183, 33.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2183, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2183, 250.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2183, 7.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2183, 0.40646651]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2183, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2183, 0.02358226]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2183, 0.00923788]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2183, 0.14549654]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2183, 0.60810811]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2183, 4.81351351]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2183, 0.00230947]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2183, 5.08101447]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2183, 370.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 74, 0.0], [74, 297, 1.0], [297, 565, 1.0], [565, 769, 1.0], [769, 1076, 1.0], [1076, 1394, 1.0], [1394, 1443, 1.0], [1443, 1643, 1.0], [1643, 1837, 1.0], [1837, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 74, 0.0], [74, 297, 0.0], [297, 565, 0.0], [565, 769, 0.0], [769, 1076, 0.0], [1076, 1394, 0.0], [1394, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1837, 0.0], [1837, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 50, 8.0], [50, 74, 6.0], [74, 297, 42.0], [297, 565, 48.0], [565, 769, 33.0], [769, 1076, 53.0], [1076, 1394, 50.0], [1394, 1443, 7.0], [1443, 1643, 31.0], [1643, 1837, 39.0], [1837, 2183, 53.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.02040816], [50, 74, 0.38095238], [74, 297, 0.0], [297, 565, 0.0], [565, 769, 0.01], [769, 1076, 0.0], [1076, 1394, 0.00645161], [1394, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1837, 0.0], [1837, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 74, 0.0], [74, 297, 0.0], [297, 565, 0.0], [565, 769, 0.0], [769, 1076, 0.0], [1076, 1394, 0.0], [1394, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1837, 0.0], [1837, 2183, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.04], [50, 74, 0.16666667], [74, 297, 0.08071749], [297, 565, 0.01865672], [565, 769, 0.00980392], [769, 1076, 0.01302932], [1076, 1394, 0.02515723], [1394, 1443, 0.02040816], [1443, 1643, 0.015], [1643, 1837, 0.01030928], [1837, 2183, 0.02601156]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2183, 0.8674137]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2183, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2183, 0.55751252]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2183, -112.46588973]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2183, 93.05617693]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2183, -80.65747435]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2183, 15.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.azcentral.com
INTRODUCTION TO THE KINGDOM (1:1-4:23) Accounts of Jesus' Childhood (1:18-2:23) The First Star Trek (2:1-12) As early as the second century, Bethlehemites believed they could identify the exact cave where, following Luke's account of the manger, Jesus had been born (Stauffer 1960:21; Finegan 1969:20-23; for echoes of Jesus' birth in Bethlehem in early rabbinic disputes, see Herford 1966:253-55).A microcosm of Matthew's Gospel as a whole, this passage reminds us that we must preach the gospel to all people because we cannot always predict who will hear the message and who will not. Those we least expect to honor Jesus may worship him, and those we least expect to oppose him may seek his death. This passage confronts Matthew's readers with a summons to personal decision by contrasting the main characters (contrasting characters was a standard ancient literary device; see, for example, Schuler 1982:50). The Magi worship Jesus; Herod seeks his death; Jerusalem's religious elite-forerunners of the opponents of Matthew's audience-take Jesus for granted. The reader must identify with the pagan Magi rather than with Herod or Jerusalem's religious elite, and hence are compelled to recognize God's interest in the mission to the Gentiles. The God who sought servants like the Roman centurion (8:5-13) from the pagan west also sought previously pagan servants from the east (2:1; compare Is 2:6) like the Magi (see 8:11).Matthew challenges prejudice against pagans. The first story after Jesus' birth opens with Magi who have traveled a long distance to offer homage to a new king born in Judea. They enter Jerusalem with a large enough caravan to attract the city's attention (2:3); they must have assumed that they would find the newborn king in Herod's palace in Jerusalem.Magi were astrologers from the royal court of the king of Persia. Part of their job description was to make the king of Persia look good, but here they come to promote another king. Kings would often send congratulations to new rulers in other realms, but the king of Persia called himself "king of kings," that is, the highest of kings (compare, for example, Ezra 7:12; Dan 2:37). We might not expect the Magi to worship Jesus, especially if they found him not in the royal palace but in a cave.More unexpectedly, these Magi are astrologers, which is why they noticed the star to begin with. Many sources from this period report the skill of Magi in divination, but Matthew's audience would probably recall first the Magi of their Greek translation of the Old Testament: Daniel's enemies, whom Daniel's narratives portray in a negative light as selfish, incompetent and brutal pagans (Dan 2:2, 10). (Their identity is even clearer in some later Greek versions of the Old Testament. In this period the Magi probably would have been Zoroastrian, but Matthew's readers would think more of Daniel's pagan accusers.)Although the Bible forbade divination (Deut 18:9-13), which includes astrology (Is 47:13; see also Deut 4:19), for one special event in history the God who rules the heavens chose to reveal himself where the pagans were looking (compare Acts 19:12, 15-20). Without condoning astrology, Matthew's narrative challenges our prejudice against outsiders to our faith (see also 8:5-13; 15:21-28): even the most pagan of pagans may respond to Jesus if given the opportunity (compare Jon 1:13-16; 3:6-10). What a resounding call for the church today to pursue a culturally sensitive yet uncompromising commitment to missions!Yet even supernatural guidance like the star can take the astrologers only so far; for more specific direction they must ask the leaders in Jerusalem where the king is to be born (2:2). That is, their celestial revelation was only partial; they must finally submit to God's revelation in the Scriptures, preserved by the Jewish people (see Meier 1980:11).Matthew challenges prejudice that favors political power. Another central character in this narrative is Herod (2:3, 7-8). That Herod is dismayed by the Magi's announcement is not surprising (2:3); in this period most Greeks, Romans and even Jews respected astrological predictions. Further, a cosmic signal of another ruler would necessarily indicate the end of the current ruler's reign (as in Suet. Vespasian 23; Artem. 2.36). Other rulers also proved paranoid about astrologers (see MacMullen 1966:133; Kee 1980:71), and some had been ready to kill their own descendants to keep the throne (Herod. Hist. 1.107-10). But as many incidents during Herod's reign illustrate, he was more paranoid than most other rulers (see comment on 2:16). For Herod, little room existed for two kings in his realm: although he was Idumean by birth (Jos. War 1.123, 313; see Deut 17:15), he considered himself king of the Jews (compare 2:2). Here the one who reigns as king of God's people acts just like the oppressors of old: in Jewish tradition, both Pharaoh and his people feared when they learned in advance of the coming of Israel's deliverer (Jos. Ant. 2.206; Allison 1993b:146).Herod's brutal power, played out in the following narrative, contrasts starkly with the human defenselessness of the Child and his mother (2:11, 19, 21). Whereas pagan Magi act like God's people (v. 11), the king of God's people acts like a notorious pagan king of old (v. 16; compare Ex 1:16). When we side with the politically powerful to seek human help against common foes, we could actually find ourselves fighting God's agendas (compare Is 30:1-5; 31:1-3). Jesus came and served among the weakest, depending solely on God's vindication (Mt 11:29; 12:19-21; 18:3-4; 19:14).Matthew challenges the prejudice that respects spiritually complacent religion. Not knowing himself where the king would be born, Herod gathers the religious experts, the chief priests and scribes (2:4), most of whom in this period were loyal to his agendas (compare Jos. Ant. 15.2, 5). These experts immediately identify the place where the Messiah will be born on the basis of Micah 5:2 (Mt 2:5-6). But while the religious leaders know where the Messiah will be born, they do not join the Magi in their quest. These are the religious leaders, but they fail to act on all their Bible knowledge. Jesus is just a baby, and they take him for granted.Although these authorities did not desire to kill Jesus as Herod did, their successors a generation later-when Jesus could no longer be taken for granted-did seek his death (26:57, 59). One is tempted to note that the line between taking Jesus for granted and wanting him out of the way may remain very thin today as well. And we must not forget that the sin of taking Jesus for granted is the sin not of pagans who know little about him, but of religious folk and Bible teachers.Matthew reinforces these points by reminding us that it is the pagans who worshiped Jesus. After the Magi have left Jerusalem, they come and worship Jesus (2:9-11). A road led south to Bethlehem, which was about six miles from Jerusalem, so the rest of the Magi's journey probably did not take very long. That they offer Jesus both homage and standard gifts from the East (2:11) fits Eastern practices; for instance, royal courts there used frankincense and myrrh (though these spices also had many other uses). The Magi's homage to Jesus may reflect biblical language alluding to the pilgrimage and homage of nations in Psalm 72:10 or Isaiah 60:6, or to the queen of Sheba's visit to Solomon (1 Kings 10:1-13), or to all three texts; a late midrash on the queen of Sheba story includes a miraculous star (Bruns 1961). If Matthew has Psalm 72 or 1 Kings 10 in mind, he expects us to recognize Jesus as King Solomon's greatest son (compare Mt 1:6-7; 12:42).At any rate, the threefold repetition of homage (2:2, 8, 11) reinforces the point of the narrative: if God's people will not honor Jesus, former pagans will (Harrington 1982:17). Throughout this Gospel, homage to Jesus reflects some degree of recognition of his identity (as in 8:2; 9:18; 14:33; 15:25), climaxing in the ultimate homage of 28:9, 17, a context that declares Jesus' royal authority equivalent to the Father's (28:18-20). But such a hint may be present even in this Gospel's first example of homage: Matthew's audience may have expected Persians like the Magi to have intended more than merely human respect when they offered homage (compare Esther 3:2).That the Magi needed a supernatural revelation to warn them not to return by way of Jerusalem (2:12) suggests their innocent naivet)\x01. Even without Herod's unadmirable character (see comment on 2:16), few kings would be ready to surrender their own rule to a nonrelative some foreigners hailed as king! (For that matter, not only powerful people in society but many others today seem reluctant to acknowledge Jesus' right to direct their lives.) The Magi's innocence compared to Herod's murderous shrewdness again reminds Matthew's readers not to prejudge the appropriate recipients of the gospel (compare 13:3-23). Jesus is for all who will receive him, and God may provide Jesus' servants with allies in unexpected places if we have the wisdom to recognize them. IVP New Testament Commentaries are made available by the generosity of InterVarsity Press. Bible Gateway RecommendationsExploring the Old Testament, Volume 1: A Guide to the PentateuchRetail: $30.00Our Price: $19.99Save: $10.01 (33%)Buy nowJames: Tyndale New Testament Commentary [TNTC]Retail: $18.00Our Price: $11.99Save: $6.01 (33%)Buy nowThe Bible Speaks Today New Testament Commentary on CD-ROMRetail: $115.00Our Price: $65.99Save: $49.01 (43%)Buy nowView more titles
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3256
{"url": "http://www.biblegateway.com/resources/ivp-nt/First-Star-Trek", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.biblegateway.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:14:08Z", "digest": "sha1:D55KTSL6KOM47MVCAELC7PRLQMPRWNGZ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 9607, 9607.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 9607, 16494.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 9607, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 9607, 268.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 9607, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 9607, 283.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 9607, 0.3453271]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 9607, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 9607, 0.01714135]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 9607, 0.00659283]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 9607, 0.00857068]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 9607, 0.00474684]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 9607, 0.00593354]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 9607, 0.0046729]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 9607, 0.28971963]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 9607, 0.43142305]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 9607, 4.88345138]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 9607, 5.77569073]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 9607, 1553.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 80, 0.0], [80, 109, 0.0], [109, 9227, 1.0], [9227, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 80, 0.0], [80, 109, 0.0], [109, 9227, 0.0], [9227, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 39, 5.0], [39, 80, 5.0], [80, 109, 5.0], [109, 9227, 1492.0], [9227, 9607, 46.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.15151515], [39, 80, 0.17647059], [80, 109, 0.16666667], [109, 9227, 0.03435597], [9227, 9607, 0.12721893]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 80, 0.0], [80, 109, 0.0], [109, 9227, 0.0], [9227, 9607, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.61538462], [39, 80, 0.07317073], [80, 109, 0.13793103], [109, 9227, 0.02610222], [9227, 9607, 0.12368421]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 9607, 0.72492111]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 9607, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 9607, 0.39345765]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 9607, -615.64246916]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 9607, -180.72429888]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 9607, -164.32212331]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 9607, 85.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.biblegateway.com
Bible Book List WORD OF GOD Index of W » Previous / Match ALL words Match ANY word Match EXACT phrase A Not to be added to, or taken from (Deuteronomy 4:2;12:32; Revelation 22:18,19) Conviction of sin from reading (2 Kings 22:9-13; 2 Chronicles 17:7-10;) Fulfilled by Jesus (Matthew 5:17; Luke 24:27; John 19:24) Testify of Jesus ( John 5:39; Acts 10:43;18:28; 1 Corinthians 15:3) See JESUS, PROPHECIES CONCERNING Taught by the apostles (Acts 2;;8:32,35;13:27;17:2;18:24;28:23) The standard of the judgment ( 3 John 12:48; Romans 2:16) Not to be handled deceitfully (2 Corinthians 4:2) UNCLASSIFIED SCRIPTURES RELATING TO (Exodus 13:9;19:9;24:3,4; Deuteronomy 4:2,5,6,8,10,14;6:6-9;) INSPIRATION OF (Exodus 19:7;20:1;24:4,12;25:21;31:18;32:16;34:2) UNBELIEF IN (Psalms 50:16,17; Proverbs 1:29,30;13:13; Isaiah 5:24;28:9-14) Previous / 1 2 * More information on Topical Index Bible Gateway RecommendationsThe Role and Function of Repentance in Luke-ActsRetail: $32.95Our Price: $30.89Save: $2.06 (6%)Buy nowZondervan All-in-One Bible Reference GuideRetail: $24.99Our Price: $16.99Save: $8.00 (32%)Buy nowStrongest Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible, The: 21st Century EditionRetail: $34.99Our Price: $18.99Save: $16.00 (46%)Buy nowView more titles
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3257
{"url": "http://www.biblegateway.com/topical/Word-God/1/?letter=&offset=25&limit=25", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.biblegateway.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:49:14Z", "digest": "sha1:GNUKFPMUNBX62WROK3QNW3ZWA5MXWKZP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1256, 1256.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1256, 8217.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1256, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1256, 305.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1256, 0.58]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1256, 249.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1256, 0.06615776]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1256, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1256, 0.01064963]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1256, 0.01490948]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1256, 0.04834606]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1256, 0.65394402]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1256, 0.74233129]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1256, 5.7607362]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1256, 4.64031632]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1256, 163.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 41, 0.0], [41, 104, 0.0], [104, 183, 0.0], [183, 255, 0.0], [255, 313, 0.0], [313, 381, 0.0], [381, 414, 0.0], [414, 478, 0.0], [478, 536, 0.0], [536, 586, 0.0], [586, 684, 0.0], [684, 749, 0.0], [749, 824, 0.0], [824, 875, 0.0], [875, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 41, 0.0], [41, 104, 0.0], [104, 183, 0.0], [183, 255, 0.0], [255, 313, 0.0], [313, 381, 0.0], [381, 414, 0.0], [414, 478, 0.0], [478, 536, 0.0], [536, 586, 0.0], [586, 684, 0.0], [684, 749, 0.0], [749, 824, 0.0], [824, 875, 0.0], [875, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 28, 6.0], [28, 41, 4.0], [41, 104, 11.0], [104, 183, 12.0], [183, 255, 11.0], [255, 313, 9.0], [313, 381, 10.0], [381, 414, 4.0], [414, 478, 6.0], [478, 536, 10.0], [536, 586, 8.0], [586, 684, 8.0], [684, 749, 4.0], [749, 824, 8.0], [824, 875, 8.0], [875, 1256, 44.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 41, 0.0], [41, 104, 0.0], [104, 183, 0.17391304], [183, 255, 0.19047619], [255, 313, 0.22], [313, 381, 0.26315789], [381, 414, 0.0], [414, 478, 0.42857143], [478, 536, 0.15686275], [536, 586, 0.06521739], [586, 684, 0.28205128], [684, 749, 0.54166667], [749, 824, 0.38333333], [824, 875, 0.04347826], [875, 1256, 0.12094395]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 41, 0.0], [41, 104, 0.0], [104, 183, 0.0], [183, 255, 0.0], [255, 313, 0.0], [313, 381, 0.0], [381, 414, 0.0], [414, 478, 0.0], [478, 536, 0.0], [536, 586, 0.0], [586, 684, 0.0], [684, 749, 0.0], [749, 824, 0.0], [824, 875, 0.0], [875, 1256, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.42857143], [28, 41, 0.15384615], [41, 104, 0.25396825], [104, 183, 0.03797468], [183, 255, 0.04166667], [255, 313, 0.0862069], [313, 381, 0.07352941], [381, 414, 0.78787879], [414, 478, 0.03125], [478, 536, 0.05172414], [536, 586, 0.04], [586, 684, 0.34693878], [684, 749, 0.21538462], [749, 824, 0.17333333], [824, 875, 0.07843137], [875, 1256, 0.1023622]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1256, -9.06e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1256, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1256, 0.00020355]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1256, -354.13384447]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1256, -182.11826637]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1256, -133.34971807]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1256, 10.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.biblegateway.com
Bible VersionsNIVPhilippiansPhilippians 4Philippians 4:21-23 Philippians 4:21-23 (New International Version) Final Greetings Greet all the saints in Christ Jesus. The brothers who are with me1 send greetings. All the saints2 send you greetings, especially those who belong to Caesar's household. The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ3 be with your spirit.4 Amen.a << Philippians 4:20Philippians 4:21-23Colossians 1:1 >> Philippians 4:21-23 (NIV)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3258
{"url": "http://www.biblestudytools.com/bible/passage.aspx?q=Philippians+4:21-23", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.biblestudytools.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:05:05Z", "digest": "sha1:DZRXSBANEYBDSVD4EOJ5ATF4EJRTXUET"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 442, 442.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 442, 3640.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 442, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 442, 143.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 442, 0.74]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 442, 312.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 442, 0.22340426]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 442, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 442, 0.08938547]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 442, 0.0106383]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 442, 0.40425532]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 442, 0.74137931]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 442, 6.17241379]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 442, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 442, 3.63171591]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 442, 58.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 109, 0.0], [109, 125, 0.0], [125, 209, 1.0], [209, 296, 1.0], [296, 361, 0.0], [361, 417, 0.0], [417, 442, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 109, 0.0], [109, 125, 0.0], [125, 209, 0.0], [209, 296, 0.0], [296, 361, 0.0], [361, 417, 0.0], [417, 442, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 4.0], [61, 109, 5.0], [109, 125, 2.0], [125, 209, 15.0], [209, 296, 13.0], [296, 361, 12.0], [361, 417, 4.0], [417, 442, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.10344828], [61, 109, 0.11627907], [109, 125, 0.0], [125, 209, 0.01234568], [209, 296, 0.01204819], [296, 361, 0.03225806], [361, 417, 0.22222222], [417, 442, 0.23809524]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 109, 0.0], [109, 125, 0.0], [125, 209, 0.0], [209, 296, 0.0], [296, 361, 0.0], [361, 417, 0.0], [417, 442, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.13114754], [61, 109, 0.08333333], [109, 125, 0.125], [125, 209, 0.04761905], [209, 296, 0.02298851], [296, 361, 0.07692308], [361, 417, 0.05357143], [417, 442, 0.16]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 442, 0.00038141]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 442, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 442, -9.54e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 442, -57.55569275]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 442, -19.70842446]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 442, -6.69441192]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 442, 6.0]], "is_duplicate": false}
www.biblestudytools.com
Bible VersionsNIVDaniel 7; Daniel 8; Daniel 9 Daniel 7; Daniel 8; Daniel 9 (New International Version) Daniel 7 Daniel's Dream of Four Beasts In the first year of Belshazzar king of Babylon, Daniel had a dream, and visions passed through his mind as he was lying on his bed. He wrote down the substance of his dream. Daniel said: "In my vision at night I looked, and there before me were the four winds of heaven churning up the great sea. Four great beasts, each different from the others, came up out of the sea. "The first was like a lion, and it had the wings of an eagle. I watched until its wings were torn off and it was lifted from the ground so that it stood on two feet like a man, and the heart of a man was given to it. "And there before me was a second beast, which looked like a bear. It was raised up on one of its sides, and it had three ribs in its mouth between its teeth. It was told, 'Get up and eat your fill of flesh!' "After that, I looked, and there before me was another beast, one that looked like a leopard. And on its back it had four wings like those of a bird. This beast had four heads, and it was given authority to rule. "After that, in my vision at night I looked, and there before me was a fourth beast--terrifying and frightening and very powerful. It had large iron teeth; it crushed and devoured its victims and trampled underfoot whatever was left. It was different from all the former beasts, and it had ten horns. "While I was thinking about the horns, there before me was another horn, a little one, which came up among them; and three of the first horns were uprooted before it. This horn had eyes like the eyes of a man and a mouth that spoke boastfully. "As I looked, "thrones were set in place, and the Ancient of Days took his seat. His clothing was as white as snow; the hair of his head was white like wool. His throne was flaming with fire, and its wheels were all ablaze. A river of fire was flowing, coming out from before him. Thousands upon thousands attended him; ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him. The court was seated, and the books were opened. "Then I continued to watch because of the boastful words the horn was speaking. I kept looking until the beast was slain and its body destroyed and thrown into the blazing fire. (The other beasts had been stripped of their authority, but were allowed to live for a period of time.) "In my vision at night I looked, and there before me was one like a son of man, coming with the clouds of heaven. He approached the Ancient of Days and was led into his presence. He was given authority, glory and sovereign power; all peoples, nations and men of every language worshiped him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion that will not pass away, and his kingdom is one that will never be destroyed. The Interpretation of the Dream "I, Daniel, was troubled in spirit, and the visions that passed through my mind disturbed me. I approached one of those standing there and asked him the true meaning of all this. "So he told me and gave me the interpretation of these things: 'The four great beasts are four kingdoms that will rise from the earth. But the saints of the Most High will receive the kingdom and will possess it forever--yes, for ever and ever.' "Then I wanted to know the true meaning of the fourth beast, which was different from all the others and most terrifying, with its iron teeth and bronze claws--the beast that crushed and devoured its victims and trampled underfoot whatever was left. I also wanted to know about the ten horns on its head and about the other horn that came up, before which three of them fell--the horn that looked more imposing than the others and that had eyes and a mouth that spoke boastfully. As I watched, this horn was waging war against the saints and defeating them, until the Ancient of Days came and pronounced judgment in favor of the saints of the Most High, and the time came when they possessed the kingdom. "He gave me this explanation: 'The fourth beast is a fourth kingdom that will appear on earth. It will be different from all the other kingdoms and will devour the whole earth, trampling it down and crushing it. The ten horns are ten kings who will come from this kingdom. After them another king will arise, different from the earlier ones; he will subdue three kings. He will speak against the Most High and oppress his saints and try to change the set times and the laws. The saints will be handed over to him for a time, times and half a time. " 'But the court will sit, and his power will be taken away and completely destroyed forever. Then the sovereignty, power and greatness of the kingdoms under the whole heaven will be handed over to the saints, the people of the Most High. His kingdom will be an everlasting kingdom, and all rulers will worship and obey him.' "This is the end of the matter. I, Daniel, was deeply troubled by my thoughts, and my face turned pale, but I kept the matter to myself." Daniel's Vision of a Ram and a Goat In the third year of King Belshazzar's reign, I, Daniel, had a vision, after the one that had already appeared to me. In my vision I saw myself in the citadel of Susa in the province of Elam; in the vision I was beside the Ulai Canal. I looked up, and there before me was a ram with two horns, standing beside the canal, and the horns were long. One of the horns was longer than the other but grew up later. I watched the ram as he charged toward the west and the north and the south. No animal could stand against him, and none could rescue from his power. He did as he pleased and became great. As I was thinking about this, suddenly a goat with a prominent horn between his eyes came from the west, crossing the whole earth without touching the ground. He came toward the two-horned ram I had seen standing beside the canal and charged at him in great rage. I saw him attack the ram furiously, striking the ram and shattering his two horns. The ram was powerless to stand against him; the goat knocked him to the ground and trampled on him, and none could rescue the ram from his power. The goat became very great, but at the height of his power his large horn was broken off, and in its place four prominent horns grew up toward the four winds of heaven. Out of one of them came another horn, which started small but grew in power to the south and to the east and toward the Beautiful Land. It grew until it reached the host of the heavens, and it threw some of the starry host down to the earth and trampled on them. It set itself up to be as great as the Prince of the host; it took away the daily sacrifice from him, and the place of his sanctuary was brought low. Because of rebellion, the host [of the saints] and the daily sacrifice were given over to it. It prospered in everything it did, and truth was thrown to the ground. Then I heard a holy one speaking, and another holy one said to him, "How long will it take for the vision to be fulfilled--the vision concerning the daily sacrifice, the rebellion that causes desolation, and the surrender of the sanctuary and of the host that will be trampled underfoot?" He said to me, "It will take %"2,300 evenings and mornings; then the sanctuary will be reconsecrated." The Interpretation of the Vision While I, Daniel, was watching the vision and trying to understand it, there before me stood one who looked like a man. And I heard a man's voice from the Ulai calling, "Gabriel, tell this man the meaning of the vision." As he came near the place where I was standing, I was terrified and fell prostrate. "Son of man," he said to me, "understand that the vision concerns the time of the end." While he was speaking to me, I was in a deep sleep, with my face to the ground. Then he touched me and raised me to my feet. He said: "I am going to tell you what will happen later in the time of wrath, because the vision concerns the appointed time of the end. The two-horned ram that you saw represents the kings of Media and Persia. The shaggy goat is the king of Greece, and the large horn between his eyes is the first king. The four horns that replaced the one that was broken off represent four kingdoms that will emerge from his nation but will not have the same power. "In the latter part of their reign, when rebels have become completely wicked, a stern-faced king, a master of intrigue, will arise. He will become very strong, but not by his own power. He will cause astounding devastation and will succeed in whatever he does. He will destroy the mighty men and the holy people. He will cause deceit to prosper, and he will consider himself superior. When they feel secure, he will destroy many and take his stand against the Prince of princes. Yet he will be destroyed, but not by human power. "The vision of the evenings and mornings that has been given you is true, but seal up the vision, for it concerns the distant future." I, Daniel, was exhausted and lay ill for several days. Then I got up and went about the king's business. I was appalled by the vision; it was beyond understanding. Daniel's Prayer In the first year of Darius son of Xerxes (a Mede by descent), who was made ruler over the Babylonian kingdom-- in the first year of his reign, I, Daniel, understood from the Scriptures, according to the word of the LORD given to Jeremiah the prophet, that the desolation of Jerusalem would last seventy years. So I turned to the Lord God and pleaded with him in prayer and petition, in fasting, and in sackcloth and ashes. I prayed to the LORD my God and confessed: "O Lord, the great and awesome God, who keeps his covenant of love with all who love him and obey his commands, we have sinned and done wrong. We have been wicked and have rebelled; we have turned away from your commands and laws. We have not listened to your servants the prophets, who spoke in your name to our kings, our princes and our fathers, and to all the people of the land. "Lord, you are righteous, but this day we are covered with shame--the men of Judah and people of Jerusalem and all Israel, both near and far, in all the countries where you have scattered us because of our unfaithfulness to you. O LORD, we and our kings, our princes and our fathers are covered with shame because we have sinned against you. The Lord our God is merciful and forgiving, even though we have rebelled against him; we have not obeyed the LORD our God or kept the laws he gave us through his servants the prophets. All Israel has transgressed your law and turned away, refusing to obey you. "Therefore the curses and sworn judgments written in the Law of Moses, the servant of God, have been poured out on us, because we have sinned against you. You have fulfilled the words spoken against us and against our rulers by bringing upon us great disaster. Under the whole heaven nothing has ever been done like what has been done to Jerusalem. Just as it is written in the Law of Moses, all this disaster has come upon us, yet we have not sought the favor of the LORD our God by turning from our sins and giving attention to your truth. The LORD did not hesitate to bring the disaster upon us, for the LORD our God is righteous in everything he does; yet we have not obeyed him. "Now, O Lord our God, who brought your people out of Egypt with a mighty hand and who made for yourself a name that endures to this day, we have sinned, we have done wrong. O Lord, in keeping with all your righteous acts, turn away your anger and your wrath from Jerusalem, your city, your holy hill. Our sins and the iniquities of our fathers have made Jerusalem and your people an object of scorn to all those around us. "Now, our God, hear the prayers and petitions of your servant. For your sake, O Lord, look with favor on your desolate sanctuary. Give ear, O God, and hear; open your eyes and see the desolation of the city that bears your Name. We do not make requests of you because we are righteous, but because of your great mercy. O Lord, listen! O Lord, forgive! O Lord, hear and act! For your sake, O my God, do not delay, because your city and your people bear your Name." The Seventy "Sevens" While I was speaking and praying, confessing my sin and the sin of my people Israel and making my request to the LORD my God for his holy hill-- while I was still in prayer, Gabriel, the man I had seen in the earlier vision, came to me in swift flight about the time of the evening sacrifice. He instructed me and said to me, "Daniel, I have now come to give you insight and understanding. As soon as you began to pray, an answer was given, which I have come to tell you, for you are highly esteemed. Therefore, consider the message and understand the vision: "Seventy 'sevens' are decreed for your people and your holy city to finish transgression, to put an end to sin, to atone for wickedness, to bring in everlasting righteousness, to seal up vision and prophecy and to anoint the most holy. "Know and understand this: From the issuing of the decree to restore and rebuild Jerusalem until the Anointed One, the ruler, comes, there will be seven 'sevens,' and sixty-two 'sevens.' It will be rebuilt with streets and a trench, but in times of trouble. After the sixty-two 'sevens,' the Anointed One will be cut off and will have nothing. The people of the ruler who will come will destroy the city and the sanctuary. The end will come like a flood: War will continue until the end, and desolations have been decreed. He will confirm a covenant with many for one 'seven.' In the middle of the 'seven' he will put an end to sacrifice and offering. And on a wing [of the temple] he will set up an abomination that causes desolation, until the end that is decreed is poured out on him. " Daniel 7 (NIV)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3259
{"url": "http://www.biblestudytools.com/passage.aspx?q=Daniel+7:;Daniel+8:;Daniel+9:", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.biblestudytools.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:13:26Z", "digest": "sha1:A4HBAMAN3AAAPGTXTRK4VTVQVF4HIEN6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 13743, 13743.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 13743, 17071.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 13743, 92.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 13743, 303.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 13743, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 13743, 311.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 13743, 0.49749248]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 13743, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 13743, 0.02345713]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 13743, 0.0900121]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 13743, 0.0548264]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 13743, 0.03741972]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 13743, 0.02922833]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 13743, 0.02345713]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 13743, 0.01489342]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 13743, 0.00968072]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 13743, 0.00893605]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 13743, 0.02072885]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 13743, 0.13741224]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 13743, 0.24805599]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 13743, 4.17690513]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 13743, 5.39567897]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 13743, 2572.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 103, 0.0], [103, 112, 0.0], [112, 142, 0.0], [142, 317, 1.0], [317, 440, 1.0], [440, 515, 1.0], [515, 732, 1.0], [732, 941, 0.0], [941, 1154, 1.0], [1154, 1455, 1.0], [1455, 1699, 1.0], [1699, 1923, 1.0], [1923, 2118, 1.0], [2118, 2296, 1.0], [2296, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2579, 1.0], [2579, 2810, 1.0], [2810, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2936, 1.0], [2936, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3156, 1.0], [3156, 3267, 0.0], [3267, 3517, 1.0], [3517, 3747, 1.0], [3747, 3825, 0.0], [3825, 3972, 1.0], [3972, 4184, 1.0], [4184, 4342, 1.0], [4342, 4520, 1.0], [4520, 4614, 1.0], [4614, 4846, 0.0], [4846, 4984, 0.0], [4984, 5020, 0.0], [5020, 5138, 1.0], [5138, 5255, 1.0], [5255, 5428, 1.0], [5428, 5617, 1.0], [5617, 5776, 1.0], [5776, 5881, 1.0], [5881, 6110, 1.0], [6110, 6279, 1.0], [6279, 6415, 1.0], [6415, 6542, 1.0], [6542, 6692, 1.0], [6692, 6857, 1.0], [6857, 7146, 0.0], [7146, 7249, 0.0], [7249, 7282, 0.0], [7282, 7401, 1.0], [7401, 7502, 0.0], [7502, 7674, 0.0], [7674, 7799, 1.0], [7799, 7936, 1.0], [7936, 8010, 1.0], [8010, 8104, 1.0], [8104, 8252, 1.0], [8252, 8385, 1.0], [8385, 8566, 1.0], [8566, 8782, 1.0], [8782, 8917, 0.0], [8917, 9081, 1.0], [9081, 9097, 0.0], [9097, 9209, 0.0], [9209, 9408, 1.0], [9408, 9521, 1.0], [9521, 9676, 0.0], [9676, 9795, 1.0], [9795, 9948, 1.0], [9948, 10177, 1.0], [10177, 10290, 1.0], [10290, 10376, 0.0], [10376, 10475, 1.0], [10475, 10706, 1.0], [10706, 10900, 1.0], [10900, 11093, 1.0], [11093, 11235, 1.0], [11235, 11408, 1.0], [11408, 11658, 1.0], [11658, 11788, 1.0], [11788, 11977, 1.0], [11977, 12122, 0.0], [12122, 12143, 0.0], [12143, 12288, 0.0], [12288, 12436, 1.0], [12436, 12533, 1.0], [12533, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 12939, 1.0], [12939, 13197, 1.0], [13197, 13462, 1.0], [13462, 13729, 0.0], [13729, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 103, 0.0], [103, 112, 0.0], [112, 142, 0.0], [142, 317, 0.0], [317, 440, 0.0], [440, 515, 0.0], [515, 732, 0.0], [732, 941, 0.0], [941, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1455, 0.0], [1455, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2118, 0.0], [2118, 2296, 0.0], [2296, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2579, 0.0], [2579, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3156, 0.0], [3156, 3267, 0.0], [3267, 3517, 0.0], [3517, 3747, 0.0], [3747, 3825, 0.0], [3825, 3972, 0.0], [3972, 4184, 0.0], [4184, 4342, 0.0], [4342, 4520, 0.0], [4520, 4614, 0.0], [4614, 4846, 0.0], [4846, 4984, 0.0], [4984, 5020, 0.0], [5020, 5138, 0.0], [5138, 5255, 0.0], [5255, 5428, 0.0], [5428, 5617, 0.0], [5617, 5776, 0.0], [5776, 5881, 0.0], [5881, 6110, 0.0], [6110, 6279, 0.0], [6279, 6415, 0.0], [6415, 6542, 0.0], [6542, 6692, 0.0], [6692, 6857, 0.0], [6857, 7146, 0.0], [7146, 7249, 0.0], [7249, 7282, 0.0], [7282, 7401, 0.0], [7401, 7502, 0.0], [7502, 7674, 0.0], [7674, 7799, 0.0], [7799, 7936, 0.0], [7936, 8010, 0.0], [8010, 8104, 0.0], [8104, 8252, 0.0], [8252, 8385, 0.0], [8385, 8566, 0.0], [8566, 8782, 0.0], [8782, 8917, 0.0], [8917, 9081, 0.0], [9081, 9097, 0.0], [9097, 9209, 0.0], [9209, 9408, 0.0], [9408, 9521, 0.0], [9521, 9676, 0.0], [9676, 9795, 0.0], [9795, 9948, 0.0], [9948, 10177, 0.0], [10177, 10290, 0.0], [10290, 10376, 0.0], [10376, 10475, 0.0], [10475, 10706, 0.0], [10706, 10900, 0.0], [10900, 11093, 0.0], [11093, 11235, 0.0], [11235, 11408, 0.0], [11408, 11658, 0.0], [11658, 11788, 0.0], [11788, 11977, 0.0], [11977, 12122, 0.0], [12122, 12143, 0.0], [12143, 12288, 0.0], [12288, 12436, 0.0], [12436, 12533, 0.0], [12533, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 12939, 0.0], [12939, 13197, 0.0], [13197, 13462, 0.0], [13462, 13729, 0.0], [13729, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 46, 7.0], [46, 103, 9.0], [103, 112, 2.0], [112, 142, 5.0], [142, 317, 34.0], [317, 440, 24.0], [440, 515, 14.0], [515, 732, 49.0], [732, 941, 44.0], [941, 1154, 42.0], [1154, 1455, 52.0], [1455, 1699, 47.0], [1699, 1923, 44.0], [1923, 2118, 33.0], [2118, 2296, 32.0], [2296, 2400, 19.0], [2400, 2579, 36.0], [2579, 2810, 39.0], [2810, 2842, 5.0], [2842, 2936, 16.0], [2936, 3084, 28.0], [3084, 3156, 13.0], [3156, 3267, 20.0], [3267, 3517, 42.0], [3517, 3747, 44.0], [3747, 3825, 14.0], [3825, 3972, 27.0], [3972, 4184, 38.0], [4184, 4342, 28.0], [4342, 4520, 37.0], [4520, 4614, 16.0], [4614, 4846, 41.0], [4846, 4984, 27.0], [4984, 5020, 8.0], [5020, 5138, 22.0], [5138, 5255, 25.0], [5255, 5428, 35.0], [5428, 5617, 37.0], [5617, 5776, 28.0], [5776, 5881, 20.0], [5881, 6110, 43.0], [6110, 6279, 33.0], [6279, 6415, 27.0], [6415, 6542, 26.0], [6542, 6692, 31.0], [6692, 6857, 30.0], [6857, 7146, 50.0], [7146, 7249, 17.0], [7249, 7282, 5.0], [7282, 7401, 22.0], [7401, 7502, 19.0], [7502, 7674, 33.0], [7674, 7799, 28.0], [7799, 7936, 27.0], [7936, 8010, 13.0], [8010, 8104, 19.0], [8104, 8252, 27.0], [8252, 8385, 22.0], [8385, 8566, 33.0], [8566, 8782, 39.0], [8782, 8917, 25.0], [8917, 9081, 30.0], [9081, 9097, 2.0], [9097, 9209, 21.0], [9209, 9408, 34.0], [9408, 9521, 22.0], [9521, 9676, 31.0], [9676, 9795, 22.0], [9795, 9948, 30.0], [9948, 10177, 41.0], [10177, 10290, 21.0], [10290, 10376, 15.0], [10376, 10475, 20.0], [10475, 10706, 41.0], [10706, 10900, 34.0], [10900, 11093, 40.0], [11093, 11235, 28.0], [11235, 11408, 35.0], [11408, 11658, 46.0], [11658, 11788, 23.0], [11788, 11977, 37.0], [11977, 12122, 29.0], [12122, 12143, 3.0], [12143, 12288, 29.0], [12288, 12436, 29.0], [12436, 12533, 18.0], [12533, 12703, 31.0], [12703, 12939, 41.0], [12939, 13197, 44.0], [13197, 13462, 48.0], [13462, 13729, 52.0], [13729, 13743, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.06976744], [46, 103, 0.05769231], [103, 112, 0.125], [112, 142, 0.0], [142, 317, 0.0], [317, 440, 0.0], [440, 515, 0.0], [515, 732, 0.0], [732, 941, 0.0], [941, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1455, 0.0], [1455, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2118, 0.0], [2118, 2296, 0.0], [2296, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2579, 0.0], [2579, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3156, 0.0], [3156, 3267, 0.0], [3267, 3517, 0.0], [3517, 3747, 0.0], [3747, 3825, 0.0], [3825, 3972, 0.0], [3972, 4184, 0.0], [4184, 4342, 0.0], [4342, 4520, 0.0], [4520, 4614, 0.0], [4614, 4846, 0.0], [4846, 4984, 0.0], [4984, 5020, 0.0], [5020, 5138, 0.0], [5138, 5255, 0.0], [5255, 5428, 0.0], [5428, 5617, 0.0], [5617, 5776, 0.0], [5776, 5881, 0.0], [5881, 6110, 0.0], [6110, 6279, 0.0], [6279, 6415, 0.0], [6415, 6542, 0.0], [6542, 6692, 0.0], [6692, 6857, 0.0], [6857, 7146, 0.0], [7146, 7249, 0.04255319], [7249, 7282, 0.0], [7282, 7401, 0.0], [7401, 7502, 0.0], [7502, 7674, 0.0], [7674, 7799, 0.0], [7799, 7936, 0.0], [7936, 8010, 0.0], [8010, 8104, 0.0], [8104, 8252, 0.0], [8252, 8385, 0.0], [8385, 8566, 0.0], [8566, 8782, 0.0], [8782, 8917, 0.0], [8917, 9081, 0.0], [9081, 9097, 0.0], [9097, 9209, 0.0], [9209, 9408, 0.0], [9408, 9521, 0.0], [9521, 9676, 0.0], [9676, 9795, 0.0], [9795, 9948, 0.0], [9948, 10177, 0.0], [10177, 10290, 0.0], [10290, 10376, 0.0], [10376, 10475, 0.0], [10475, 10706, 0.0], [10706, 10900, 0.0], [10900, 11093, 0.0], [11093, 11235, 0.0], [11235, 11408, 0.0], [11408, 11658, 0.0], [11658, 11788, 0.0], [11788, 11977, 0.0], [11977, 12122, 0.0], [12122, 12143, 0.0], [12143, 12288, 0.0], [12288, 12436, 0.0], [12436, 12533, 0.0], [12533, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 12939, 0.0], [12939, 13197, 0.0], [13197, 13462, 0.0], [13462, 13729, 0.0], [13729, 13743, 0.08333333]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 103, 0.0], [103, 112, 0.0], [112, 142, 0.0], [142, 317, 0.0], [317, 440, 0.0], [440, 515, 0.0], [515, 732, 0.0], [732, 941, 0.0], [941, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1455, 0.0], [1455, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2118, 0.0], [2118, 2296, 0.0], [2296, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2579, 0.0], [2579, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3156, 0.0], [3156, 3267, 0.0], [3267, 3517, 0.0], [3517, 3747, 0.0], [3747, 3825, 0.0], [3825, 3972, 0.0], [3972, 4184, 0.0], [4184, 4342, 0.0], [4342, 4520, 0.0], [4520, 4614, 0.0], [4614, 4846, 0.0], [4846, 4984, 0.0], [4984, 5020, 0.0], [5020, 5138, 0.0], [5138, 5255, 0.0], [5255, 5428, 0.0], [5428, 5617, 0.0], [5617, 5776, 0.0], [5776, 5881, 0.0], [5881, 6110, 0.0], [6110, 6279, 0.0], [6279, 6415, 0.0], [6415, 6542, 0.0], [6542, 6692, 0.0], [6692, 6857, 0.0], [6857, 7146, 0.0], [7146, 7249, 0.0], [7249, 7282, 0.0], [7282, 7401, 0.0], [7401, 7502, 0.0], [7502, 7674, 0.0], [7674, 7799, 0.0], [7799, 7936, 0.0], [7936, 8010, 0.0], [8010, 8104, 0.0], [8104, 8252, 0.0], [8252, 8385, 0.0], [8385, 8566, 0.0], [8566, 8782, 0.0], [8782, 8917, 0.0], [8917, 9081, 0.0], [9081, 9097, 0.0], [9097, 9209, 0.0], [9209, 9408, 0.0], [9408, 9521, 0.0], [9521, 9676, 0.0], [9676, 9795, 0.0], [9795, 9948, 0.0], [9948, 10177, 0.0], [10177, 10290, 0.0], [10290, 10376, 0.0], [10376, 10475, 0.0], [10475, 10706, 0.0], [10706, 10900, 0.0], [10900, 11093, 0.0], [11093, 11235, 0.0], [11235, 11408, 0.0], [11408, 11658, 0.0], [11658, 11788, 0.0], [11788, 11977, 0.0], [11977, 12122, 0.0], [12122, 12143, 0.0], [12143, 12288, 0.0], [12288, 12436, 0.0], [12436, 12533, 0.0], [12533, 12703, 0.0], [12703, 12939, 0.0], [12939, 13197, 0.0], [13197, 13462, 0.0], [13462, 13729, 0.0], [13729, 13743, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.17391304], [46, 103, 0.10526316], [103, 112, 0.11111111], [112, 142, 0.13333333], [142, 317, 0.02857143], [317, 440, 0.02439024], [440, 515, 0.01333333], [515, 732, 0.00921659], [732, 941, 0.01913876], [941, 1154, 0.01877934], [1154, 1455, 0.01328904], [1455, 1699, 0.01229508], [1699, 1923, 0.02678571], [1923, 2118, 0.01538462], [2118, 2296, 0.01685393], [2296, 2400, 0.00961538], [2400, 2579, 0.02793296], [2579, 2810, 0.00865801], [2810, 2842, 0.09375], [2842, 2936, 0.0212766], [2936, 3084, 0.01351351], [3084, 3156, 0.01388889], [3156, 3267, 0.02702703], [3267, 3517, 0.008], [3517, 3747, 0.00434783], [3747, 3825, 0.02564103], [3825, 3972, 0.02721088], [3972, 4184, 0.01415094], [4184, 4342, 0.01265823], [4342, 4520, 0.02247191], [4520, 4614, 0.0106383], [4614, 4846, 0.01724138], [4846, 4984, 0.02898551], [4984, 5020, 0.11111111], [5020, 5138, 0.04237288], [5138, 5255, 0.05982906], [5255, 5428, 0.01156069], [5428, 5617, 0.01587302], [5617, 5776, 0.01257862], [5776, 5881, 0.01904762], [5881, 6110, 0.00873362], [6110, 6279, 0.00591716], [6279, 6415, 0.02205882], [6415, 6542, 0.00787402], [6542, 6692, 0.01333333], [6692, 6857, 0.01212121], [6857, 7146, 0.01038062], [7146, 7249, 0.01941748], [7249, 7282, 0.09090909], [7282, 7401, 0.02521008], [7401, 7502, 0.03960396], [7502, 7674, 0.02325581], [7674, 7799, 0.024], [7799, 7936, 0.01459854], [7936, 8010, 0.04054054], [8010, 8104, 0.0212766], [8104, 8252, 0.00675676], [8252, 8385, 0.0075188], [8385, 8566, 0.01657459], [8566, 8782, 0.01851852], [8782, 8917, 0.00740741], [8917, 9081, 0.0304878], [9081, 9097, 0.125], [9097, 9209, 0.04464286], [9209, 9408, 0.04522613], [9408, 9521, 0.03539823], [9521, 9676, 0.05806452], [9676, 9795, 0.00840336], [9795, 9948, 0.00653595], [9948, 10177, 0.01746725], [10177, 10290, 0.04424779], [10290, 10376, 0.03488372], [10376, 10475, 0.05050505], [10475, 10706, 0.02597403], [10706, 10900, 0.01546392], [10900, 11093, 0.04145078], [11093, 11235, 0.07042254], [11235, 11408, 0.02890173], [11408, 11658, 0.02], [11658, 11788, 0.03846154], [11788, 11977, 0.02645503], [11977, 12122, 0.06896552], [12122, 12143, 0.14285714], [12143, 12288, 0.05517241], [12288, 12436, 0.02027027], [12436, 12533, 0.03092784], [12533, 12703, 0.01764706], [12703, 12939, 0.00423729], [12939, 13197, 0.02325581], [13197, 13462, 0.02264151], [13462, 13729, 0.01123596], [13729, 13743, 0.28571429]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 13743, 0.9793309]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 13743, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 13743, 0.47040397]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 13743, 1020.80128845]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 13743, 365.43250563]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 13743, -235.16523147]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 13743, 126.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.biblestudytools.com
Bible VersionsRSVMarkMark 6Mark 6:24-34 Mark 6:24-34 (Revised Standard Version) And she went out, and said to her mother, "What shall I ask?" And she said, "The head of John the baptizer." And she came in immediately with haste to the king, and asked, saying, "I want you to give me at once the head of John the Baptist on a platter." And the king was exceedingly sorry; but because of his oaths and his guests he did not want to break his word to her. And immediately the king sent a soldier of the guard and gave orders to bring his head. He went and beheaded him in the prison, and brought his head on a platter, and gave it to the girl; and the girl gave it to her mother. When his disciples heard of it, they came and took his body, and laid it in a tomb. The apostles returned to Jesus, and told him all that they had done and taught. And he said to them, "Come away by yourselves to a lonely place, and rest a while." For many were coming and going, and they had no leisure even to eat. And they went away in the boat to a lonely place by themselves. Now many saw them going, and knew them, and they ran there on foot from all the towns, and got there ahead of them. As he went ashore he saw a great throng, and he had compassion on them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd; and he began to teach them many things. Mark 6:24-34 (RSV)
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3260
{"url": "http://www.biblestudytools.com/rsv/mark/passage.aspx?q=mark+6:24-34", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.biblestudytools.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:12:41Z", "digest": "sha1:JJQIX3XDTTV77ATLEBIXPA6W3WBAQVUW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1353, 1353.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1353, 4605.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1353, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1353, 158.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1353, 1.0]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1353, 237.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1353, 0.51713396]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1353, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1353, 0.03091787]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1353, 0.0173913]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1353, 0.02125604]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1353, 0.02512077]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1353, 0.00934579]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1353, 0.18068536]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1353, 0.48120301]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1353, 3.89097744]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1353, 4.36556735]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1353, 266.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 80, 0.0], [80, 189, 0.0], [189, 335, 0.0], [335, 453, 1.0], [453, 581, 0.0], [581, 677, 1.0], [677, 761, 1.0], [761, 841, 1.0], [841, 994, 1.0], [994, 1058, 1.0], [1058, 1174, 1.0], [1174, 1335, 1.0], [1335, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 80, 0.0], [80, 189, 0.0], [189, 335, 0.0], [335, 453, 0.0], [453, 581, 0.0], [581, 677, 0.0], [677, 761, 0.0], [761, 841, 0.0], [841, 994, 0.0], [994, 1058, 0.0], [1058, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1335, 0.0], [1335, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 40, 4.0], [40, 80, 5.0], [80, 189, 22.0], [189, 335, 30.0], [335, 453, 24.0], [453, 581, 25.0], [581, 677, 21.0], [677, 761, 18.0], [761, 841, 15.0], [841, 994, 31.0], [994, 1058, 13.0], [1058, 1174, 24.0], [1174, 1335, 31.0], [1335, 1353, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.16216216], [40, 80, 0.14285714], [80, 189, 0.0], [189, 335, 0.0], [335, 453, 0.0], [453, 581, 0.0], [581, 677, 0.0], [677, 761, 0.0], [761, 841, 0.0], [841, 994, 0.0], [994, 1058, 0.0], [1058, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1335, 0.0], [1335, 1353, 0.35714286]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 80, 0.0], [80, 189, 0.0], [189, 335, 0.0], [335, 453, 0.0], [453, 581, 0.0], [581, 677, 0.0], [677, 761, 0.0], [761, 841, 0.0], [841, 994, 0.0], [994, 1058, 0.0], [1058, 1174, 0.0], [1174, 1335, 0.0], [1335, 1353, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.2], [40, 80, 0.1], [80, 189, 0.05504587], [189, 335, 0.02739726], [335, 453, 0.00847458], [453, 581, 0.015625], [581, 677, 0.0], [677, 761, 0.01190476], [761, 841, 0.025], [841, 994, 0.01960784], [994, 1058, 0.015625], [1058, 1174, 0.00862069], [1174, 1335, 0.00621118], [1335, 1353, 0.22222222]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1353, 0.99914777]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1353, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1353, 0.23864645]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1353, 163.97257457]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1353, 49.60652361]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1353, -13.6140404]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1353, 14.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.biblestudytools.com
Cyprus in 2004 Area: 9,251 sq km (3,572 sq mi) for the entire island; the area of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), proclaimed unilaterally (1983) in the occupied northern third of the island, 3,355 sq km (1,295 sq mi)Population (2004 est.): island 937,000; TRNC only, 211,000 (including Turkish settlers and Turkish military)Capital: Lefkosia/Lefkosa (also known as Nicosia)Head(s) of state and government: President Tassos Papadopoulos; of the TRNC, President Rauf Denktash European Union membership dominated political events in Cyprus in 2004. UN-sponsored negotiations in the spring failed to produce a unification form
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3288
{"url": "http://www.britannica.com/print/topic/1003525", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.britannica.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:02:00Z", "digest": "sha1:AUQBFJVOAJ5DSPJ4MSEY5Y5FUMJJA7LO"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 638, 638.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 638, 687.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 638, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 638, 3.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 638, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 638, 237.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 638, 0.20143885]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 638, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 638, 0.02946955]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 638, 0.04715128]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 638, 0.02877698]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 638, 0.35971223]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 638, 0.65591398]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 638, 5.47311828]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 638, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 638, 3.90172225]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 638, 93.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 638, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 638, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 15, 3.0], [15, 638, 90.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.28571429], [15, 638, 0.06825939]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 638, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.06666667], [15, 638, 0.05778491]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 638, 0.28630787]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 638, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 638, 0.00774312]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 638, -69.73079826]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 638, -19.55074938]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 638, 30.01738906]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 638, 3.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.britannica.com
Akashic Books Presents EDWIDGE DANTICAT at the Brooklyn Public Library, 1/16 This Thursday (Jan 16th) acclaimed Haitian author EDWIDGE DANTICAT will appear at the Brooklyn Public Library (Dweck Center, 10 Grand Army Plaza) to celebrate the release of Haiti Noir 2: The Classics! Haiti Noir 2 is a follow-up to Haiti Noir, which received glowing reviews in the New York Times, Time Out, Daily Beast, L Magazine, LA Times, and others. Unlike the first volume, which was composed of all-new stories, Haiti Noir 2 represents Danticat's handpicked selection from the canon of Haitian literature-an "amazing literary party" she writes, that "thrills me to no end." Launched with the summer '04 award-winning best seller Brooklyn Noir, Akashic Books continues its groundbreaking series of original noir anthologies. Each book is comprised of all-new stories, each one set in a distinct neighborhood or location within the city of the book. Classic stories by: Danielle Legros Georges, Jacques Roumain, Ida Faubert, Jacques-Stephen Alexis, Jan J. Dominique, Paulette Poujol Oriol, Lyonel Trouillot, Emmelie Prophète, Ben Fountain, Dany Laferrière, Georges Anglade, Edwidge Danticat, Michèle Voltaire Marcelin, Èzili Dantò, Marie-Hélène Laforest, Nick Stone, Marilène Phipps-Kettlewell, Myriam J.A. Chancy, and Roxane Gay. The original best-selling Haiti Noir comprised all new stories by today's best Haitian authors. This new volume collects the true classics of Haitian literature-both short stories and excerpts from longer works-and will be an integral piece to the understanding of how Haitian culture has evolved over the past fifty years. Editor Edwidge Danticat, one of the most respected Haitian writers, has a well-deserved sterling reputation, and here she follows on the success of the original first volume. More On:
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3290
{"url": "http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwbooks/article/Akashic-Books-Presents-EDWIDGE-DANTICAT-at-the-Brooklyn-Public-Library-116-20140113", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.broadwayworld.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:18:26Z", "digest": "sha1:PXVZNLYOLKI2I4Y5CJTOXPEQICH2RWD7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1821, 1821.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1821, 5875.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1821, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1821, 82.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1821, 0.85]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1821, 263.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1821, 0.26038781]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1821, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1821, 0.03504043]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1821, 0.03032345]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1821, 0.02021563]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1821, 0.02560647]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1821, 0.02493075]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1821, 0.21883657]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1821, 0.65567766]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1821, 5.43589744]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1821, 4.91476055]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1821, 273.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 77, 0.0], [77, 279, 1.0], [279, 659, 0.0], [659, 933, 1.0], [933, 1314, 1.0], [1314, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 77, 0.0], [77, 279, 0.0], [279, 659, 0.0], [659, 933, 0.0], [933, 1314, 0.0], [1314, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 77, 11.0], [77, 279, 32.0], [279, 659, 62.0], [659, 933, 42.0], [933, 1314, 47.0], [1314, 1821, 79.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 77, 0.04054054], [77, 279, 0.0257732], [279, 659, 0.00555556], [659, 933, 0.0075188], [933, 1314, 0.0], [1314, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 77, 0.0], [77, 279, 0.0], [279, 659, 0.0], [659, 933, 0.0], [933, 1314, 0.0], [1314, 1821, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 77, 0.27272727], [77, 279, 0.15346535], [279, 659, 0.05526316], [659, 933, 0.02189781], [933, 1314, 0.12598425], [1314, 1821, 0.02564103]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1821, 0.17810363]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1821, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1821, 0.4592188]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1821, -79.14252812]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1821, -13.0074448]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1821, 28.32977279]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1821, 13.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.broadwayworld.com
Click Here for More Articles on NEW YORK CITY... Soprano Lisa Vroman Performs with National Children's Chorus in CANDLELIGHT in New York Tonight In a bi-coastal celebration of the season, internationally acclaimed soprano Lisa Vroman is performing with 150 members of the National Children's Chorus (NCC) and a chamber orchestra in two evening concerts themed "Candlelight" – Thursday, November 29 in Los Angeles and tonight, December 8 in New York. The New York concert is at The Church of St. Paul the Apostle. Tickets are $125 for VIP reserved seating, $65 for premier, $45 for section A, $35 for section B. NCC's artistic director Luke McEndarfer, along with associate artistic director Dr. Pamela Blackstone, leads the concerts featuring Antonio Vivaldi's Gloria followed by a combination of holiday music performed like no other this season – by a world-renowned opera singer with 150 children singing in harmony with her, accompanied by a chamber orchestra. Selections include Carol of the Bells, Dodi Li and a Nigerian piece entitled Betelehemu. Additionally, Vroman will solo on jazzy arrangements of Silent Night and Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, ending with a surprise encore announced from the stage. The NCC is America's leading treble chorus, with a set of ensembles in Los Angeles and New York. In residence at The Broad Stage in Santa Monica, the NCC is one of a few youth arts organizations in the world to have its entire concert season presented by a professional concert hall. This is the fourth season at the Broad Stage and the second in New York. The 2012/2013 season is entitled "Traditions," presenting an eclectic array of musical styles, drawing on American cultural roots. Students of the NCC in Los Angeles and New York are represented by more than 60 schools throughout both cities and meet weekly for rehearsal and musicianship study. Both chorus groups will travel to participate in each other's hometown concerts. McEndarfer, who is credited to taking the group bi-coastal in 2010 said, "This project provides an unprecedented opportunity for the NCC's mission to be realized, through the collaborative artistry of our students in both Los Angeles and New York. We're truly ecstatic with the educational experience it will bring our talented young vocalists." Vroman starred for several years on Broadway as Christine Daae in The Phantom of the Opera. As Christine, she garnered Theatre Critic's awards for the role in a record- breaking run in San Francisco, and did a return engagement at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles. Vroman starred as Rosabella in The Most Happy Fella, making her New York City Opera debut with Paul Sorvino in the title role. She played Charlotte in A Little Night Music with Michigan Opera Theatre, starring Leslie Uggams and Ron Raines and when she made her Carnegie Hall debut with the New York Pops, she starred as Lili Vanessi in Kiss Me Kate with Glimmerglass Opera. Lisa Vroman, Ahmanson Theatre, Paul Sorvino, Michigan Opera Theatre, Leslie Uggams, Ron Raines, Carnegie Hall, Herb Alpert, Los Angeles Opera. Comment & Share
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3291
{"url": "http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwopera/article/Soprano-Lisa-Vroman-to-Perform-with-National-Childrens-Chorus-in-CANDLELIGHT-in-LA-1129-New-York-Today-20121207", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.broadwayworld.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:14:48Z", "digest": "sha1:44E5XMXSYEUK3J2H3XZQU56LSSOKPUHS"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3103, 3103.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3103, 7295.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3103, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3103, 73.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3103, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3103, 172.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3103, 0.30653266]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3103, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3103, 0.02544732]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3103, 0.01749503]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3103, 0.027833]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3103, 0.01908549]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3103, 0.01789264]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3103, 0.02345059]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3103, 0.09090909]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3103, 0.15577889]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3103, 0.51683168]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3103, 4.98019802]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3103, 0.00167504]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3103, 5.07527088]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3103, 505.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 49, 1.0], [49, 145, 0.0], [145, 450, 1.0], [450, 611, 1.0], [611, 965, 1.0], [965, 1223, 1.0], [1223, 1711, 1.0], [1711, 1957, 1.0], [1957, 2303, 0.0], [2303, 2945, 1.0], [2945, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 145, 0.0], [145, 450, 0.0], [450, 611, 0.0], [611, 965, 0.0], [965, 1223, 0.0], [1223, 1711, 0.0], [1711, 1957, 0.0], [1957, 2303, 0.0], [2303, 2945, 0.0], [2945, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 49, 9.0], [49, 145, 14.0], [145, 450, 47.0], [450, 611, 31.0], [611, 965, 52.0], [965, 1223, 40.0], [1223, 1711, 85.0], [1711, 1957, 40.0], [1957, 2303, 53.0], [2303, 2945, 112.0], [2945, 3103, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 145, 0.0], [145, 450, 0.02040816], [450, 611, 0.06], [611, 965, 0.00869565], [965, 1223, 0.0], [1223, 1711, 0.01684211], [1711, 1957, 0.00826446], [1957, 2303, 0.0119403], [2303, 2945, 0.0], [2945, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 145, 0.0], [145, 450, 0.0], [450, 611, 0.0], [611, 965, 0.0], [965, 1223, 0.0], [1223, 1711, 0.0], [1711, 1957, 0.0], [1957, 2303, 0.0], [2303, 2945, 0.0], [2945, 3103, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.30612245], [49, 145, 0.21875], [145, 450, 0.0557377], [450, 611, 0.08695652], [611, 965, 0.03389831], [965, 1223, 0.0620155], [1223, 1711, 0.05327869], [1711, 1957, 0.03658537], [1957, 2303, 0.03179191], [2303, 2945, 0.08411215], [2945, 3103, 0.13924051]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3103, 0.2729978]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3103, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3103, 0.88229382]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3103, -100.59427767]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3103, 15.35043817]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3103, 74.64324164]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3103, 23.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.broadwayworld.com
February 27 6:02 PM Bay City Players will present 3 OF A KIND on Thursday, April 11 at 7:30 (with talkback session following), Friday & Saturday, April 12-13 at 7:30 p.m. (with wine and dessert reception - Afterglow, $15 ticket required) and Sunday, April 14 at 3 p.m. (with talkback). Internationally acclaimed pianist Kevin Cole, two time Grammy award winning vocalist Sylvia McNair and Broadway singing-dancing sensation Ryan VanDenBoom join musical forces for a sparkling new concert event featuring piano pyrotechnics, dazzling dances and songs that speak to your heart from songwriters Harold Arlen, Irving Berlin, Hoagy Carmichael, George & Ira Gershwin, Marvin Hamlisch, Jerome Kern, Lerner & Loewe, Cole Porter, Hugh Martin and Stephen Sondheim. To purchase tickets, starting at $30, click HERE.
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3292
{"url": "http://www.broadwayworld.com/detroit/article/Bay-City-Players-to-Present-3-OF-A-KIND-411-14-20130227", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.broadwayworld.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:30:33Z", "digest": "sha1:IQCAGARRT3AHXRVLQL7XKOGDNHHQMALX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 804, 804.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 804, 7541.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 804, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 804, 105.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 804, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 804, 322.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 804, 0.1626506]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 804, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 804, 0.015625]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 804, 0.03012048]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 804, 0.3253012]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 804, 0.84166667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 804, 5.33333333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 804, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 804, 4.52251138]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 804, 120.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 286, 1.0], [286, 755, 1.0], [755, 804, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 286, 0.0], [286, 755, 0.0], [755, 804, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 20, 4.0], [20, 286, 44.0], [286, 755, 64.0], [755, 804, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.27777778], [20, 286, 0.0746888], [286, 755, 0.0], [755, 804, 0.04444444]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 286, 0.0], [286, 755, 0.0], [755, 804, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.15], [20, 286, 0.06766917], [286, 755, 0.07036247], [755, 804, 0.10204082]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 804, 0.00197124]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 804, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 804, 0.05418491]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 804, -90.34897844]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 804, -41.88065582]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 804, -26.95826815]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 804, 7.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.broadwayworld.com
Kiyah Taylor performs during the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration at the Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd. Kiyah is part of The Gift mime team, which is composed of members of West Haven Baptist Church. - Corpus Christi, TX | Corpus Christi Caller-Times
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3305
{"url": "http://www.caller.com/photos/2013/jan/21/150057/?enlarge=0", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.caller.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T09:03:50Z", "digest": "sha1:XVYAT4PZR6YHKC7AAGBFDCLP6JELEREI"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 271, 271.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 271, 380.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 271, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 271, 7.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 271, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 271, 238.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 271, 0.22641509]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 271, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 271, 0.04587156]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 271, 0.01886792]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 271, 0.1509434]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 271, 0.75]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 271, 4.95454545]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 271, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 271, 3.37460266]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 271, 44.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 221, 1.0], [221, 271, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 221, 0.0], [221, 271, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 221, 38.0], [221, 271, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 221, 0.0], [221, 271, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 221, 0.0], [221, 271, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 221, 0.08144796], [221, 271, 0.16]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 271, 0.04329246]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 271, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 271, 4.113e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 271, -20.25757961]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 271, -4.6464355]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 271, 10.41858279]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 271, 4.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.caller.com
On this PageWhat is IBD?About Crohn’s DiseaseAbout Ulcerative ColitisEpidemiology of the IBDImpact of the IBD as a Chronic DiseaseReferencesWhat is IBD?Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBD) is a broad term that describes conditions with chronic or recurring immune response and inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. The two most common inflammatory bowel diseases are ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease.Both illnesses have one strong feature in common. They are marked by an abnormal response by the body’s immune system. Normally, the immune cells protect the body from infection. In people with IBD, however, the immune system mistakes food, bacteria, and other materials in the intestine for foreign substances and it attacks the cells of the intestines. In the process, the body sends white blood cells into the lining of the intestines where they produce chronic inflammation. When this happens, the patient experiences the symptoms of IBD.Neither ulcerative colitis nor Crohn's disease should be confused with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), a disorder that affects the motility (muscle contractions) of the colon. Sometimes called "spastic colon" or "nervous colitis," IBS is not characterized by intestinal inflammation. It is, therefore, a much less serious disease than ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease. IBS bears no direct relationship to either ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease.Top of pageAbout Crohn’s DiseaseCrohn’s disease is a condition of chronic inflammation potentially involving any location of the gastrointestinal tract, but it frequently affects the end of the small bowel and the beginning of the large bowel. In Crohn's disease, all layers of the intestine may be involved and there can be normal healthy bowel between patches of diseased bowel.Symptoms include persistent diarrhea (loose, watery, or frequent bowel movements), cramping abdominal pain, fever, and, at times, rectal bleeding. Loss of appetite and weight loss also may occur. However, the disease is not always limited to the gastrointestinal tract; it can also affect the joints, eyes, skin, an
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3334
{"url": "http://www.cdc.gov/ibd/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.cdc.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:33:06Z", "digest": "sha1:GJH3IIMQDLRVGER6M2QHGPL7CEPHH7ZN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2101, 2101.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2101, 2582.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2101, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2101, 11.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2101, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2101, 158.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2101, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2101, 0.35309278]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2101, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2101, 0.02886836]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2101, 0.04157044]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2101, 0.03002309]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2101, 0.02319588]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2101, 0.15721649]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2101, 0.55448718]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2101, 5.55128205]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2101, 4.73246518]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2101, 312.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 2101, 312.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 2101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 2101, 0.0342694]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2101, 0.93589944]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2101, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2101, 0.05822361]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2101, -72.80422446]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2101, 16.20478515]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2101, 1.76507152]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2101, 19.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.cdc.gov
www.chicagotribune.com/features/books/ct-prj-1223-jurji-zaydan-tree-of-pearls-queen-of-e-20121228,0,2507076.story In Jurji Zayden's 'Tree of Pearls,' the power of self-interest has repercussions By M. Lynx Qualey 4:19 PM CST, December 28, 2012 ‘Tree of Pearls, Queen of Egypt” by Jurji Zaydan opens “On a moonlit night long ago, two women of exceeding grace and beauty, though far apart in age, sat gazing at the silver waters of the Nile.” The year is 1250, the Ayyubid dynasty has just ended, and the Mamluk period is beginning. Shajar al-Durr, known as “Tree of Pearls,” has become the first Muslim woman to rule Egypt in her own name. Published by Zaydan in 1914, "Tree of Pearls, Queen of Egypt" recently was translated for the first time into English by Samah Selim, an assistant professor at Rutgers University in the department of African, Middle Eastern and South Asian languages and literatures. It is an enchanting book. This piece first ran in Printers Row Journal, delivered to Printers Row members with the Sunday Chicago Tribune and by digital edition via email. Click here to learn about joining Printers Row. When it was originally published, "Tree of Pearls, Queen of Egypt" was serialized, like the works of Charles Dickens and most of Zaydan's 22 other novels. Each chapter is a self-contained, fast-moving anecdote from 13th century Egypt or Iraq. The book focuses on the lives of the Tree of Pearls and her favorite slave, Shwaykar. But while both of these women are good-hearted, the book does not pit good against evil. Most of the book's characters struggle for power, their actions shaped by a mix of social ties and self-interest. The Tree of Pearls is helped in her ascent to leadership by her lover, the Mamluk prince 'Izz al-Din Aybak. But he, with some nudging by the powerful concubine Sallafa, betrays his beloved. The Tree of Pearls accepts defeat, but Sallafa has larger ambitions. She sets her sights on rule of the entire Islamic world and on Shwaykar's handsome fiance, Rukn al-Din Baybars. Rukn al-Din is one of the novel's most clear-sighted, steady characters. But he, too, considers throwing over his fiancee for Sallafa to grasp the crown. In "Tree of Pearls, Queen of Egypt," no character is fully immune to power's gravity. Love sometimes conquers, but not always. The book takes us through several big historical moments
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3357
{"url": "http://www.chicagotribune.com/features/books/ct-prj-1223-jurji-zaydan-tree-of-pearls-queen-of-e-20121228,0,5902154,print.story", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.chicagotribune.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T08:53:58Z", "digest": "sha1:DXH2CDHQLFP62FBXJVSCAGT5LGYQKEHT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2366, 2366.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2366, 2513.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2366, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2366, 14.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2366, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2366, 262.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2366, 0.3243762]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2366, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2366, 0.03821656]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2366, 0.03821656]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2366, 0.03397028]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2366, 0.04458599]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2366, 0.03184713]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2366, 0.00575816]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2366, 0.2168906]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2366, 0.60313316]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2366, 4.91906005]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2366, 4.99997005]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2366, 383.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 114, 0.0], [114, 195, 0.0], [195, 213, 0.0], [213, 244, 0.0], [244, 639, 1.0], [639, 932, 1.0], [932, 1126, 1.0], [1126, 1658, 1.0], [1658, 2183, 1.0], [2183, 2310, 1.0], [2310, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 114, 0.0], [114, 195, 0.0], [195, 213, 0.0], [213, 244, 0.0], [244, 639, 0.0], [639, 932, 0.0], [932, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1658, 0.0], [1658, 2183, 0.0], [2183, 2310, 0.0], [2310, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 114, 1.0], [114, 195, 12.0], [195, 213, 4.0], [213, 244, 6.0], [244, 639, 73.0], [639, 932, 47.0], [932, 1126, 32.0], [1126, 1658, 90.0], [1658, 2183, 88.0], [2183, 2310, 21.0], [2310, 2366, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 114, 0.21276596], [114, 195, 0.0], [195, 213, 0.0], [213, 244, 0.33333333], [244, 639, 0.0104712], [639, 932, 0.01408451], [932, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1658, 0.00782779], [1658, 2183, 0.0], [2183, 2310, 0.0], [2310, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 114, 0.0], [114, 195, 0.0], [195, 213, 0.0], [213, 244, 0.0], [244, 639, 0.0], [639, 932, 0.0], [932, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1658, 0.0], [1658, 2183, 0.0], [2183, 2310, 0.0], [2310, 2366, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 114, 0.0], [114, 195, 0.0617284], [195, 213, 0.22222222], [213, 244, 0.19354839], [244, 639, 0.04303797], [639, 932, 0.05802048], [932, 1126, 0.06185567], [1126, 1658, 0.03195489], [1658, 2183, 0.04380952], [2183, 2310, 0.04724409], [2310, 2366, 0.01785714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2366, 0.61585486]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2366, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2366, 0.70542032]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2366, -71.92510444]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2366, 11.99182645]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2366, 11.30324521]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2366, 25.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.chicagotribune.com
www.chicagotribune.com/topic/bs-sp-bayhawks-advance-0629-20130628,0,887523.story Bayhawks' John Grant Jr. still 'the best stick in the sport' Veteran attackman eager to face former team and coach By Aaron Kasinitz, The Baltimore Sun 10:32 PM CDT, June 28, 2013 While training with the Canadian national team for the World Lacrosse Championships in 1978, Dave Huntley noticed his teammate's son hanging around the squad during practices and workouts. "And he always had a stick in his hand," Huntley said of 4-year-old John Grant Jr. Flash-forward 35 years and Grant still doesn't put down his lacrosse stick often. As a two-time Most Valuable Player in the National Lacrosse League, he's a star in the indoor game for the Colorado Mammoth. When his season with the Mammoths ended in April, he rejoined the defending champion Bayhawks to start the season in Major League Lacrosse, where he's also been MVP twice. Huntley, meanwhile, has been able to enjoy Grant's success as a friend and coach — the attackman has played for Huntley in four World Lacrosse Championships as a member of the Canadian national team. But Saturday night when Huntley's Hamilton Nationals (6-2) host the Chesapeake Bayhawks (4-4), the coach will be on the opposite sideline. "It's more fun to have him on my team," Huntley said. "But whatever team he's on, John and [retired Canadian attackman] Gary Gait are the only two players I'd ever buy a ticket to watch. And this Saturday I'll get to watch him for free." Grant's ascent to the top of the sport began when he followed his dad, John Grant Sr., while he was starring for the Cana
2014-15/0000/en_head.json.gz/3358
{"url": "http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/bs-sp-bayhawks-advance-0629-20130628,0,1445253,print.story", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.chicagotribune.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T07:38:15Z", "digest": "sha1:J2AKX22EKM5BFMZCMUI6JLUUAVOMGA4X"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 1610, 1610.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1610, 1727.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1610, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1610, 15.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1610, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1610, 276.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1610, 0.35082873]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1610, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1610, 0.02119309]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1610, 0.01726845]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1610, 0.03610675]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1610, 0.01381215]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1610, 0.22928177]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1610, 0.57735849]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1610, 4.80754717]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1610, 4.69196948]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1610, 265.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 142, 0.0], [142, 196, 0.0], [196, 233, 0.0], [233, 261, 0.0], [261, 450, 1.0], [450, 533, 1.0], [533, 912, 1.0], [912, 1112, 1.0], [1112, 1251, 1.0], [1251, 1489, 0.0], [1489, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 142, 0.0], [142, 196, 0.0], [196, 233, 0.0], [233, 261, 0.0], [261, 450, 0.0], [450, 533, 0.0], [533, 912, 0.0], [912, 1112, 0.0], [1112, 1251, 0.0], [1251, 1489, 0.0], [1489, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 81, 1.0], [81, 142, 11.0], [142, 196, 9.0], [196, 233, 6.0], [233, 261, 6.0], [261, 450, 28.0], [450, 533, 16.0], [533, 912, 64.0], [912, 1112, 34.0], [1112, 1251, 21.0], [1251, 1489, 45.0], [1489, 1610, 24.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 81, 0.27941176], [81, 142, 0.0], [142, 196, 0.0], [196, 233, 0.0], [233, 261, 0.41666667], [261, 450, 0.02162162], [450, 533, 0.01315789], [533, 912, 0.00544959], [912, 1112, 0.0], [1112, 1251, 0.03100775], [1251, 1489, 0.0], [1489, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 142, 0.0], [142, 196, 0.0], [196, 233, 0.0], [233, 261, 0.0], [261, 450, 0.0], [450, 533, 0.0], [533, 912, 0.0], [912, 1112, 0.0], [1112, 1251, 0.0], [1251, 1489, 0.0], [1489, 1610, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 142, 0.06557377], [142, 196, 0.01851852], [196, 233, 0.16216216], [233, 261, 0.21428571], [261, 450, 0.03703704], [450, 533, 0.06024096], [533, 912, 0.05540897], [912, 1112, 0.035], [1112, 1251, 0.05035971], [1251, 1489, 0.04621849], [1489, 1610, 0.04132231]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1610, 0.92816579]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1610, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1610, 0.98014915]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1610, -49.63760559]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1610, 35.10663095]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1610, -8.54895259]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1610, 16.0]], "is_duplicate": true}
www.chicagotribune.com