raw_content
stringlengths
1.34k
50k
doc_id
stringlengths
30
34
meta
stringlengths
191
4.06k
quality_signals
stringlengths
2.11k
79.9k
Carmen-Helena Téllez, Conductor, Producer, Inter-Disciplinary Artist By Tim Munro | June 19, 2019 Carmen Helena Téllez is a conductor who specializes in the interpretation of new music and in the conceptualization and production of multidisciplinary music projects. In her career spanning more than 25 years she has commissioned, premiered and recorded dozens of works for instrumental and choral ensembles, symphony orchestras and opera companies in the US and internationally. She has pioneered new modes of presentation, as she researches, conceptualizes, curates, produces and conducts special interdisciplinary projects in contemporary music for ensembles and cultural organizations worldwide. She has been also very successful re-contextualizing historical repertoire to address current events and social experiences. Carmen-Helena Téllez works independently and with collaborators in the fields of visual design, stage movement and digital technologies, for individual productions in her ongoing interdisciplinary research project Kosmologia, based in Chicago. Over the years she has collaborated as a conductor for the University of Chicago (involving composer Shulamit Ran, the Contemporary Chamber Players and Eighth Blackbird), the new music ensemble Fulcrum Point, the Chicago Latino Music Festival, the Art Institute of Chicago Concert Series, and NON:Op Open Opera Works. She now focuses increasingly on immersive and interactive experiences as a way to engage with new audiences for contemporary classical music. Her work has been supported by major grants by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Rockefeller Foundations. Between 2012 and 2016, the Mellon Foundation supported four interdisciplinary music dramas conceptualized by Carmen-Helena Tellez for the University of Notre Dame, where she teaches, including a daring recreation of Dante’s Divine Comedy with a libretto by a Robin Kirkpatrick of the University of Cambridge, soundscapes by Chicago composer Christopher Preissing, and an oratorio by Oregon composer Robert Kyr. Her concerts have been characterized by The Washington Post as “immersive and thrilling.” Some of the composers commissioned and premiered by Carmen Helena Tellez include Shulamit Ran, John Eaton, Yehuda Yannay, Christophe Preissing, James MacMillan, Ingram Marshall, Robert Kyr, Michel Petrossian, Sven-David Sandstrom, Mario Lavista, Gabriela Ortiz, Gabriela Lena Frank, Hilda Paredes, Menachem Zur, Juan Orrego Salas, Lansing McLoskey, Jorge Muñiz, Elbio Barilari, and Eric Richards, among many others. She has also conducted the American Midwest premieres of several choral, orchestral and operatic works by John Adams, Philip Glass, Iannis Xenakis, Witold Lutoslawski, Karlheinz Stockhausen, Ralph Shapey, Stephen Hartke, Einojuhanni Rautavaara, Silvestre Revueltas, Osvaldo Golijov and Gregory Spears, among others. At the same time, has conducted many of oratorios, operas and symphonies of the classical repertoire, by Bach, Handel, Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Berlioz, Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Stravinsky, Revueltas, Ligeti, and Takemitsu, in the US, England, Spain, Israel, Mexico and most of Latin America. Carmen-Helena Tellez was for twenty years the director of the Latin American Music Center at Indiana University in Bloomington, where she was Professor of Music, giving her a specialized knowledge on Latin American classical repertoire. As a Latin American music expert, she has assisted as a conductor and scholar important projects by the Chicago Grant Park Festival, Chicago Latino Music Festival, Simón Bolívar Orchestra, Dorian Records, México City Philharmonic, Venezuela Symphony Orchestra, the Library of Congress, the Tomás Luis de Victoria Composition Prize of Spain, and the American Composers Orchestra. She recorded the 100 anniversary CD of Carlos Chavez unpublished music with the Mexican research institute CENIDIM; commissioned and recorded the award winning Missa ad Consolations Dominam Nostram by Mexican composer Mario Lavista; and conducted the premiere recording of Chilean composer Juan Orrego Salas’ choral-orchestral cantata La ciudad celeste for Indiana University’s Latin American Music Center. In 2008 she advised the composer, produced and conducted the world premiere of Mexican composer Gabriela Ortiz’s opera on drug trafficking and border culture ¡Únicamente la verdad! also at Indiana University. In 2018 she collaborated with stage director Chía Patiño and the Teatro Nacional Sucre of Ecuador in the conceptualization of an Andean version in Spanish of Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte, for which she completely revised and completed a torso by Ecuadorean musician Segundo Cóndor, adapting Mozart’s opera for an orchestra of Andean instruments. She conducted eight sold-out presentations of La Flauta Mágica de los Andes during the Teatro Sucre’s main season, and then again for the meeting of Opera Latinoamérica in October of 2018. Earlier in the season she conceptualized and conducted a staged production of Mozart’s a Requiem for the Teatro Sucre, for two sold-out performances. A third performance had to be added by popular demand. Trained as a composer by the Italian composer Primo Casale in Venezuela, and later working with Swedish composer Sven-David Sandstrom at Indiana University, Carmen-Helena Tellez has recently returned to composition as part of her interdisciplinary research. She is currently working on a series of violin etudes for Stacia Spencer and the Young Violinists Academy at Northwestern University, and on a cycle for soprano and instrumental ensemble on poems by the renowned Dante scholar Robin Kirkpatrick. She has lectured extensively on her experience on Latin American music and on new interdisciplinary modes of presentation at Northwestern University and at the universities of Cambridge, California, Indiana, Arizona, Notre Dame, Louisville, São Paulo, Católica de Chile, and UNAM of México, as well as for the College Music Society and the UK-based Performance Studies Network. Her most recent recording projects include the Oratorio Paradiso by Robert Kyr; and the Sor Juana Project by former University of Chicago composition professor John Eaton. Go to CarmenHelenaTellez.com for more information. Categories: Individuals Tags: Carmen Helena Téllez, conductor, contemporary music, new music
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/3132
{"url": "https://www.newmusicchicago.org/carmen-helena-tellez-conductor-producer-inter-disciplinary-artist/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newmusicchicago.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:21:57Z", "digest": "sha1:D5EOYYTOT2S5ZBLL5Z27HRDC4QCGQEBM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6344, 6344.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6344, 7746.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6344, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6344, 82.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6344, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6344, 219.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6344, 0.28976234]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6344, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6344, 0.00660377]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6344, 0.01358491]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6344, 0.00679245]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6344, 0.00731261]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6344, 0.15722121]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6344, 0.48844884]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6344, 5.83058306]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6344, 5.44353673]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6344, 909.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 98, 0.0], [98, 824, 1.0], [824, 2145, 1.0], [2145, 3180, 1.0], [3180, 3550, 0.0], [3550, 3903, 0.0], [3903, 4203, 1.0], [4203, 4923, 0.0], [4923, 5148, 1.0], [5148, 5515, 0.0], [5515, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 6201, 1.0], [6201, 6252, 1.0], [6252, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 98, 0.0], [98, 824, 0.0], [824, 2145, 0.0], [2145, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3550, 0.0], [3550, 3903, 0.0], [3903, 4203, 0.0], [4203, 4923, 0.0], [4923, 5148, 0.0], [5148, 5515, 0.0], [5515, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 6201, 0.0], [6201, 6252, 0.0], [6252, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 69, 6.0], [69, 98, 6.0], [98, 824, 99.0], [824, 2145, 191.0], [2145, 3180, 140.0], [3180, 3550, 57.0], [3550, 3903, 49.0], [3903, 4203, 40.0], [4203, 4923, 110.0], [4923, 5148, 37.0], [5148, 5515, 55.0], [5515, 5880, 52.0], [5880, 6201, 50.0], [6201, 6252, 6.0], [6252, 6276, 2.0], [6276, 6344, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 98, 0.24], [98, 824, 0.0027972], [824, 2145, 0.00616808], [2145, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3550, 0.0], [3550, 3903, 0.00862069], [3903, 4203, 0.0], [4203, 4923, 0.01114206], [4923, 5148, 0.01826484], [5148, 5515, 0.0], [5515, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 6201, 0.0], [6201, 6252, 0.0], [6252, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 69, 0.0], [69, 98, 0.0], [98, 824, 0.0], [824, 2145, 0.0], [2145, 3180, 0.0], [3180, 3550, 0.0], [3550, 3903, 0.0], [3903, 4203, 0.0], [4203, 4923, 0.0], [4923, 5148, 0.0], [5148, 5515, 0.0], [5515, 5880, 0.0], [5880, 6201, 0.0], [6201, 6252, 0.0], [6252, 6276, 0.0], [6276, 6344, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 69, 0.11594203], [69, 98, 0.13793103], [98, 824, 0.01101928], [824, 2145, 0.04996215], [2145, 3180, 0.09082126], [3180, 3550, 0.05675676], [3550, 3903, 0.09065156], [3903, 4203, 0.08333333], [4203, 4923, 0.04583333], [4923, 5148, 0.03111111], [5148, 5515, 0.05449591], [5515, 5880, 0.04383562], [5880, 6201, 0.09345794], [6201, 6252, 0.07843137], [6252, 6276, 0.08333333], [6276, 6344, 0.05882353]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6344, 0.33695555]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6344, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6344, 0.71013415]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6344, -227.55226413]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6344, 13.94901602]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6344, 147.59753615]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6344, 29.0]]}
Rogue Trader (film) Rogue Trader is a 1999 British biographical drama film written and directed by James Dearden and starring Ewan McGregor and Anna Friel. The film centers on the life of former derivatives broker Nick Leeson and the 1995 collapse of Barings Bank. It was based on Leeson's 1996 book Rogue Trader: How I Brought Down Barings Bank and Shook the Financial World. Rogue Trader Video-release poster James Dearden Based on Rogue Trader: How I Brought Down Barings Bank and Shook the Financial World by Nick Leeson Edward Whitley Janette Day Paul Raphael Narrated by Jean-François Robin Catherine Creed Richard Hartley Pathé Distribution 25 June 1999 (1999-06-25) (United Kingdom) £969,565 (UK sub-total) 1 Plot 3 Release and distribution PlotEdit Rogue Trader tells the true story of Nick Leeson, a young employee of Barings Bank who after a successful spell working for the firm's office in Indonesia is sent to Singapore as General Manager of the Trading Floor on the SIMEX exchange. The movie follows Leeson's rise as he soon becomes one of Barings' key traders. However, everything isn't as it appears – through the 88888 error account, Nick is hiding huge losses as he gambles away Barings' money with little more than the bat of an eyelid from the powers-that-be back in London. Eventually the losses mount up to well over £800 million and Nick, along with his wife Lisa, decide to leave Singapore and escape to Malaysia. Nick doesn't realise the severity of his losses until he reads in the newspaper that Barings has gone bankrupt. They then decide to return to London but Nick is arrested en route in Frankfurt. Nick is extradited to Singapore where he is sentenced to six and a half years in jail and is diagnosed with colon cancer. Because of this, he did not complete his sentence. Ewan McGregor as Nick Leeson Anna Friel as Lisa Leeson Pip Torrens as Simon Jones Tim McInnerny as Tony Hawes Nigel Lindsay as Ron Baker John Standing as Peter Baring Lee Ross as Danny Argyropoulos Yves Beneyton as Pierre Beaumarchais Betsy Brantley as Brenda Granger Caroline Langrishe as Ash Lewis Ivan Heng as The Bartender Rob Lemming as Trader #3 Release and distributionEdit Rogue Trader was released on 25 June 1999 in the United Kingdom and the United States. It was distributed by Pathé in the United Kingdom and Cinemax in the United States. It flopped at the box office, earning less than £1,000,000 in the UK.[1][2] MusicEdit During a bar scene, the Blur song "Song 2" is heard playing. This is an anachronism as the song was not released until three years after the scene was set. ReceptionEdit Rogue Trader was poorly received by critics, and the film holds a 30% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 23 reviews. ^ "Risky business", The Guardian, 8 June 1999, retrieved 23 February 2012 ^ Mink, Eric (25 June 1999), "Obi-Wan Dons Coat & Tie as 'Rogue Trader'", Daily News, retrieved 23 February 2012 Banks portal Rogue Trader at IMDb Rogue Trader at AllMovie Rogue Trader at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rogue_Trader_(film)&oldid=1134588275"
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/3835
{"url": "https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rogue_Trader_(film)", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.m.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:14:00Z", "digest": "sha1:RMZ7RFDOV2HVMCUKUIWC43TOINEAM4G6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3104, 3104.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3104, 3947.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3104, 48.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3104, 106.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3104, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3104, 289.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3104, 0.28684628]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3104, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3104, 0.0496994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3104, 0.06653307]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3104, 0.0496994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3104, 0.0496994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3104, 0.0496994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3104, 0.0496994]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3104, 0.05290581]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3104, 0.01202405]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3104, 0.01202405]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3104, 0.00792393]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3104, 0.19809826]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3104, 0.54296875]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3104, 4.87304688]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3104, 0.00158479]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3104, 5.17229931]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3104, 512.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 377, 1.0], [377, 390, 0.0], [390, 411, 0.0], [411, 425, 0.0], [425, 434, 0.0], [434, 510, 0.0], [510, 525, 0.0], [525, 540, 0.0], [540, 552, 0.0], [552, 565, 0.0], [565, 577, 0.0], [577, 597, 0.0], [597, 613, 0.0], [613, 629, 0.0], [629, 648, 0.0], [648, 691, 0.0], [691, 715, 0.0], [715, 722, 0.0], [722, 749, 0.0], [749, 758, 0.0], [758, 1296, 1.0], [1296, 1805, 1.0], [1805, 1834, 0.0], [1834, 1860, 0.0], [1860, 1887, 0.0], [1887, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 1942, 0.0], [1942, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2040, 0.0], [2040, 2073, 0.0], [2073, 2105, 0.0], [2105, 2132, 0.0], [2132, 2157, 0.0], [2157, 2186, 0.0], [2186, 2433, 0.0], [2433, 2443, 0.0], [2443, 2599, 1.0], [2599, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 2730, 1.0], [2730, 2804, 0.0], [2804, 2917, 0.0], [2917, 2930, 0.0], [2930, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2976, 0.0], [2976, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 377, 0.0], [377, 390, 0.0], [390, 411, 0.0], [411, 425, 0.0], [425, 434, 0.0], [434, 510, 0.0], [510, 525, 0.0], [525, 540, 0.0], [540, 552, 0.0], [552, 565, 0.0], [565, 577, 0.0], [577, 597, 0.0], [597, 613, 0.0], [613, 629, 0.0], [629, 648, 0.0], [648, 691, 0.0], [691, 715, 0.0], [715, 722, 0.0], [722, 749, 0.0], [749, 758, 0.0], [758, 1296, 0.0], [1296, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 1834, 0.0], [1834, 1860, 0.0], [1860, 1887, 0.0], [1887, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 1942, 0.0], [1942, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2040, 0.0], [2040, 2073, 0.0], [2073, 2105, 0.0], [2105, 2132, 0.0], [2132, 2157, 0.0], [2157, 2186, 0.0], [2186, 2433, 0.0], [2433, 2443, 0.0], [2443, 2599, 0.0], [2599, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 2730, 0.0], [2730, 2804, 0.0], [2804, 2917, 0.0], [2917, 2930, 0.0], [2930, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2976, 0.0], [2976, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 20, 3.0], [20, 377, 61.0], [377, 390, 2.0], [390, 411, 2.0], [411, 425, 2.0], [425, 434, 2.0], [434, 510, 13.0], [510, 525, 3.0], [525, 540, 2.0], [540, 552, 2.0], [552, 565, 2.0], [565, 577, 2.0], [577, 597, 2.0], [597, 613, 2.0], [613, 629, 2.0], [629, 648, 2.0], [648, 691, 6.0], [691, 715, 3.0], [715, 722, 2.0], [722, 749, 4.0], [749, 758, 1.0], [758, 1296, 94.0], [1296, 1805, 91.0], [1805, 1834, 5.0], [1834, 1860, 5.0], [1860, 1887, 5.0], [1887, 1915, 5.0], [1915, 1942, 5.0], [1942, 1972, 5.0], [1972, 2003, 5.0], [2003, 2040, 5.0], [2040, 2073, 5.0], [2073, 2105, 5.0], [2105, 2132, 5.0], [2132, 2157, 5.0], [2157, 2186, 3.0], [2186, 2433, 44.0], [2433, 2443, 1.0], [2443, 2599, 30.0], [2599, 2613, 1.0], [2613, 2730, 21.0], [2730, 2804, 11.0], [2804, 2917, 18.0], [2917, 2930, 2.0], [2930, 2951, 4.0], [2951, 2976, 4.0], [2976, 3008, 5.0], [3008, 3104, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 377, 0.03418803], [377, 390, 0.0], [390, 411, 0.0], [411, 425, 0.0], [425, 434, 0.0], [434, 510, 0.0], [510, 525, 0.0], [525, 540, 0.0], [540, 552, 0.0], [552, 565, 0.0], [565, 577, 0.0], [577, 597, 0.0], [597, 613, 0.0], [613, 629, 0.0], [629, 648, 0.0], [648, 691, 0.38888889], [691, 715, 0.31578947], [715, 722, 0.16666667], [722, 749, 0.03846154], [749, 758, 0.0], [758, 1296, 0.00954198], [1296, 1805, 0.00601202], [1805, 1834, 0.0], [1834, 1860, 0.0], [1860, 1887, 0.0], [1887, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 1942, 0.0], [1942, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2040, 0.0], [2040, 2073, 0.0], [2073, 2105, 0.0], [2105, 2132, 0.0], [2132, 2157, 0.04347826], [2157, 2186, 0.0], [2186, 2433, 0.06329114], [2433, 2443, 0.0], [2443, 2599, 0.00666667], [2599, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 2730, 0.03539823], [2730, 2804, 0.16666667], [2804, 2917, 0.12371134], [2917, 2930, 0.0], [2930, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2976, 0.0], [2976, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3104, 0.12820513]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 377, 0.0], [377, 390, 0.0], [390, 411, 0.0], [411, 425, 0.0], [425, 434, 0.0], [434, 510, 0.0], [510, 525, 0.0], [525, 540, 0.0], [540, 552, 0.0], [552, 565, 0.0], [565, 577, 0.0], [577, 597, 0.0], [597, 613, 0.0], [613, 629, 0.0], [629, 648, 0.0], [648, 691, 0.0], [691, 715, 0.0], [715, 722, 0.0], [722, 749, 0.0], [749, 758, 0.0], [758, 1296, 0.0], [1296, 1805, 0.0], [1805, 1834, 0.0], [1834, 1860, 0.0], [1860, 1887, 0.0], [1887, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 1942, 0.0], [1942, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2040, 0.0], [2040, 2073, 0.0], [2073, 2105, 0.0], [2105, 2132, 0.0], [2132, 2157, 0.0], [2157, 2186, 0.0], [2186, 2433, 0.0], [2433, 2443, 0.0], [2443, 2599, 0.0], [2599, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 2730, 0.0], [2730, 2804, 0.0], [2804, 2917, 0.0], [2917, 2930, 0.0], [2930, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2976, 0.0], [2976, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3104, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.1], [20, 377, 0.07843137], [377, 390, 0.15384615], [390, 411, 0.04761905], [411, 425, 0.14285714], [425, 434, 0.11111111], [434, 510, 0.14473684], [510, 525, 0.13333333], [525, 540, 0.13333333], [540, 552, 0.16666667], [552, 565, 0.15384615], [565, 577, 0.08333333], [577, 597, 0.15], [597, 613, 0.125], [613, 629, 0.125], [629, 648, 0.10526316], [648, 691, 0.06976744], [691, 715, 0.08333333], [715, 722, 0.14285714], [722, 749, 0.03703704], [749, 758, 0.22222222], [758, 1296, 0.04460967], [1296, 1805, 0.02750491], [1805, 1834, 0.17241379], [1834, 1860, 0.15384615], [1860, 1887, 0.14814815], [1887, 1915, 0.17857143], [1915, 1942, 0.14814815], [1942, 1972, 0.13333333], [1972, 2003, 0.12903226], [2003, 2040, 0.10810811], [2040, 2073, 0.12121212], [2073, 2105, 0.125], [2105, 2132, 0.14814815], [2132, 2157, 0.12], [2157, 2186, 0.06896552], [2186, 2433, 0.06882591], [2433, 2443, 0.2], [2443, 2599, 0.02564103], [2599, 2613, 0.14285714], [2613, 2730, 0.03418803], [2730, 2804, 0.06756757], [2804, 2917, 0.11504425], [2917, 2930, 0.07692308], [2930, 2951, 0.23809524], [2951, 2976, 0.16], [2976, 3008, 0.125], [3008, 3104, 0.03125]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3104, 0.25818694]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3104, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3104, 0.85619152]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3104, -152.44731674]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3104, -10.24640185]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3104, 58.67940328]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3104, 22.0]]}
‘X-Men: Apocalypse’ Post-Credits Scene Meant To Set Up Channing Tatum’s ‘Gambit’ Christian Hubbard Posted On May 27, 2020 The X-Men film series helped pave the way for the way the world views superhero films. Beginning with X-Men in 2000, the franchise spawned 12 films and created memorable moments featuring A-list actors like Hugh Jackman and Jennifer Lawerence. However, following the acquisition of 21st Century Fox by Disney, the series came to a screeching halt. Simon Kinberg, producer of the X-Men live-action films, recently revealed that the future of the series was being planned out up until the last moment. During a watch party for IGN, Kinberg talked about the polarizing 2016 film X-Men: Apocalypse. Kinberg revealed that the film’s stinger was originally meant to set up the fabled Gambit solo film starring Channing Tatum‘s Gambit. “We had a tease of it at the end of Apocalypse. The Essex Corp is something that you see in a tag at the end of Apocalypse,” Kinberg recently said during a watch party with IGN. “We had talked about doing something with him, and I won’t get into the specifics of it since it’s no longer a 20th Century Fox property and now it’s part of the MCU. I have no idea what the plan is. But Mister Sinister was going to be part of the Gambit movie starring Channing Tatum.” READ: Marvel Studios Considering Making Professor X & Magneto POC In ‘X-Men’ Reboot (Exclusive) The post-credits scene in question sees men in black suits visit the Weapon X facility to retrieve a blood sample marked “Weapon X”, for the Essex Corporation. Mister Sinister AKA Nathaniel Essex has long been a formidable opponent of the X-Men. Debuting in Marvel Comics in 1986, the character boasts the power of telepathy and telekinesis. He was ranked #29 in IGN‘s Top 100 Comic Book Villains of All Time. The star-and-stop production of Gambit is one of the most interesting stories in modern Hollywood. With Tatum attached to star from the very beginning, the film went through a bevy of directors including Rupert Wyatt, Doug Liman, and Gore Verbinski. Additionally, the film set a number of release dates and failed to meet them all. However, Disney inevitably canceled the film following the Fox merger. Many fans were eagerly awaiting Tatum’s iteration of the character. He even appeared alongside Stan Lee, Ryan Reynolds, and other X-Men actors at the 2015 San Diego Comic-Con. Next, Disney finally plans to release the upcoming film New Mutants on August 28, 2020. What do you think? Would you have liked to see Mister Sinister in Channing Tatum’s Gambit? Let us know in the comments below! 'Gintama' Spin-Off 'Class 3Z Ginpachi-Sensei' Anime Announced Where are (Spoilers) in the MCU’s Dimension 616 after Multiverse of Madness? ‘X-Men’ Animated Series Reportedly In The Works At Disney+ Exploring The Impact & Complicated Legacy Of The X-Men Film Franchise Henry Cavill In Talks To Return As Superman In Future DCEU Films Tye Sheridan In Talks To Join Ben Affleck In George Clooney’s ‘The Tender Bar’ Adaptation - Movies & TV Hits […] Sheridan continues to build his acting résumé following star-making roles in X-Men: Apocalypse and Ready Player One. Additionally, the actor touts a starring role in Netflix’s The Night Clerk […] Tye Sheridan In Talks To Join Ben Affleck In George Clooney’s ‘The Tender Bar’ Adaptation – Hilled News
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/3883
{"url": "https://fullcirclecinema.com/2020/05/27/x-men-apocalypse-post-credits-scene-meant-to-set-up-channing-tatums-gambit/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "fullcirclecinema.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:15:04Z", "digest": "sha1:CSWSYLLY6NUVPONBAPNVGB2OWOGD3P22"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3360, 3360.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3360, 5028.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3360, 18.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3360, 91.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3360, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3360, 281.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3360, 0.27722772]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3360, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3360, 0.05535055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3360, 0.05535055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3360, 0.05535055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3360, 0.05535055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3360, 0.05535055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3360, 0.05535055]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3360, 0.01476015]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3360, 0.0099631]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3360, 0.00885609]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3360, 0.03960396]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3360, 0.18387553]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3360, 0.57526882]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3360, 4.85663082]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3360, 0.00424328]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3360, 5.29141947]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3360, 558.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 122, 0.0], [122, 622, 1.0], [622, 851, 1.0], [851, 1316, 1.0], [1316, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1822, 1.0], [1822, 2225, 1.0], [2225, 2489, 1.0], [2489, 2615, 1.0], [2615, 2677, 0.0], [2677, 2754, 1.0], [2754, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 2883, 0.0], [2883, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 3057, 0.0], [3057, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 122, 0.0], [122, 622, 0.0], [622, 851, 0.0], [851, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1822, 0.0], [1822, 2225, 0.0], [2225, 2489, 0.0], [2489, 2615, 0.0], [2615, 2677, 0.0], [2677, 2754, 0.0], [2754, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 2883, 0.0], [2883, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 3057, 0.0], [3057, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 81, 11.0], [81, 122, 7.0], [122, 622, 81.0], [622, 851, 36.0], [851, 1316, 92.0], [1316, 1412, 13.0], [1412, 1822, 70.0], [1822, 2225, 65.0], [2225, 2489, 43.0], [2489, 2615, 23.0], [2615, 2677, 7.0], [2677, 2754, 12.0], [2754, 2813, 9.0], [2813, 2883, 10.0], [2883, 2948, 12.0], [2948, 3057, 18.0], [3057, 3257, 31.0], [3257, 3360, 18.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 122, 0.15384615], [122, 622, 0.01649485], [622, 851, 0.01793722], [851, 1316, 0.00437637], [1316, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1822, 0.0225], [1822, 2225, 0.0], [2225, 2489, 0.03937008], [2489, 2615, 0.0], [2615, 2677, 0.01818182], [2677, 2754, 0.04109589], [2754, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 2883, 0.0], [2883, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 3057, 0.0], [3057, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 122, 0.0], [122, 622, 0.0], [622, 851, 0.0], [851, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1822, 0.0], [1822, 2225, 0.0], [2225, 2489, 0.0], [2489, 2615, 0.0], [2615, 2677, 0.0], [2677, 2754, 0.0], [2754, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 2883, 0.0], [2883, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 3057, 0.0], [3057, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3360, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 81, 0.16049383], [81, 122, 0.12195122], [122, 622, 0.038], [622, 851, 0.05676856], [851, 1316, 0.0516129], [1316, 1412, 0.19791667], [1412, 1822, 0.07073171], [1822, 2225, 0.03722084], [2225, 2489, 0.06818182], [2489, 2615, 0.06349206], [2615, 2677, 0.14516129], [2677, 2754, 0.1038961], [2754, 2813, 0.16949153], [2813, 2883, 0.15714286], [2883, 2948, 0.23076923], [2948, 3057, 0.17431193], [3057, 3257, 0.06], [3257, 3360, 0.16504854]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3360, 0.31952107]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3360, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3360, 0.79423928]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3360, -263.8487088]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3360, 16.99795341]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3360, -79.75258743]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3360, 28.0]]}
There is no more truly American firearm than the lever-action rifle. After all, what’s more iconic than a cowboy with a six-shooter on his hip and a lever-action in his saddle’s rifle scabbard? The gun was developed more than a century and a half ago, in the late 1850s, when a young gunsmith by the name of Benjamin Tyler Henry was hired by Oliver Winchester of the New Haven Arms Company. Henry was tasked with improving an earlier design of one of Winchester’s repeating rifles. After three years of tinkering, testing and tweaking, in 1860 Henry produced and patented the rifle that retains his name yet today. Henry rifles first became popular during the Civil War; some 10,000 of the guns saw service, used mostly by Union soldiers. Of .44 caliber and holding 16 rimfire cartridges, firearms historian Herbert G. Houze claimed that one man armed with a Henry was the equivalent of 14 or 15 men equipped with single-shot muzzleloading rifles. One Confederate officer, Colonel John Mosby, became so exasperated upon first encountering Henrys in battle that he dubbed it, “That damned Yankee rifle that can be loaded on Sunday and fired all week.” After the war, Henry rifles became more ubiquitous as Americans headed west. The gun even played a role in the Battle of the Little Bighorn, when in 1876, Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer and his soldiers of the 7th Cavalry found themselves not only outnumbered but outgunned. They discovered too late that many of the Lakota, Dakota, Northern Cheyenne and Arapaho warriors opposing them had armed themselves with Henry rifles. The Henry rifle eventually evolved into the famous Winchester Model 1866 lever-action rifle. And with the introduction of the new Model 1866, the New Haven Arms Company was renamed the Winchester Repeating Arms Company. Today, Henry rifles and shotguns are manufactured by the Henry Repeating Arms Company located in Bayonne, New Jersey, with a second plant in Rice Lake, Wisconsin. The corporation is exceedingly proud of its American heritage, its logo stating: Henry: Made in America or not made at all. “We are a family-owned business and stand behind every firearm that leaves our plants,” said Anthony Imperato, president. “I personally guarantee 100-percent satisfaction for the life of the rifle or shotgun. No exceptions.” Henry Repeating Arms Company was started by Louis Imperato and his son, Anthony Imperato, in Brooklyn, New York, in 1996. There is no affiliation or lineage to Benjamin Tyler Henry or the New Haven Arms Company, who sold the original Henry rifle from 1862 to 1864. Imperato secured the trademark to the Henry name in 1996. The first model produced was the Henry H001 Classic Lever Action .22, and the first shipments were made in March 1997. In December of 2017, while celebrating its 20th Anniversary, Henry manufactured their millionth H001 rifle. One of the company’s most popular rifles is the award-winning, octagon-barreled Henry Golden Boy, available in .22, .22 Magnum, or .17 HMR calibers. The rifle gets its name from the highly-polished Brasslite receiver cover, Brasslite barrel band and solid-brass buttplate. The rifle is stocked with American walnut, as are all Henrys. But Henry rifles are not just for plinking or small game. One of their newest offerings is the Henry Big Boy All-Weather. Available in .45 Colt, .44 Mag and .357 Mag handgun-caliber chamberings, this lever-action makes a good deer rifle, especially as a brush gun. The barrel is chrome-plated steel, the receiver sporting a chrome-satin finish. Other popular Henry rifles include their many Tribute Editions saluting military, law enforcement, firefighters, farmers, truckers and others. To see all the many options available, you can order a free Henry catalog by sending an email request to [email protected] If you’d like to view an original Henry rifle, five are on display at the NRA National Firearms Museum in Fairfax, Virginia. Also on exhibit is Tom Selleck’s reproduction Henry from the movie Last Stand at Saber River. One special historic Henry, on exhibit at the Smithsonian in Washington D.C., was presented as a gift to President Abraham Lincoln. Richly engraved, gold-plated, and bearing serial number 6, the rifle is considered priceless and a national treasure. Original Henry rifles currently fetch anywhere from $50,000 to $250,000 at auction. Henry Repeating Arms, Henry Golden Boy, Anthony Imperato, Henry rifles, lever-action guns, lever guns, American history, Chip Gross, NRA National Firearms Museum, Henry Big Boy Henry Repeating Arms Raises 46K to Save Sami Henry Repeating Arms' Limited-Edition "Prayers For Preslie" Rifle Henry Repeating Arms' Guns for Great Causes Henry Repeating Arms Honors Distinguished Veterans NRA Women | Henry Repeating Arms Issues Recall Notice for Certain Lever-Action .45-70 Rifles First Look: Henry Homesteader 9mm Carbine | An Official Journal Of The NRA Henry Supports Fallen Firefighters Foundation | An Official Journal Of The NRA
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/4867
{"url": "https://www.nrafamily.org/content/henry-rifles-an-american-classic/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nrafamily.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:17:00Z", "digest": "sha1:P4TOYVDVYVOE5EH2Q22ALTT7KKGRNC4E"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4999, 4999.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4999, 15067.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4999, 21.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4999, 381.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4999, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4999, 278.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4999, 0.29268293]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4999, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4999, 0.02862784]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4999, 0.01233959]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4999, 0.01233959]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4999, 0.03553801]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4999, 0.01110563]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4999, 0.01321138]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4999, 0.19105691]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4999, 0.49874372]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4999, 5.09045226]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4999, 5.38324575]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4999, 796.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 194, 1.0], [194, 615, 1.0], [615, 1151, 1.0], [1151, 1589, 1.0], [1589, 1809, 1.0], [1809, 2096, 1.0], [2096, 2321, 1.0], [2321, 2871, 1.0], [2871, 3206, 1.0], [3206, 3551, 1.0], [3551, 3817, 0.0], [3817, 4036, 1.0], [4036, 4370, 1.0], [4370, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4592, 0.0], [4592, 4658, 0.0], [4658, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4753, 0.0], [4753, 4846, 0.0], [4846, 4921, 0.0], [4921, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 194, 0.0], [194, 615, 0.0], [615, 1151, 0.0], [1151, 1589, 0.0], [1589, 1809, 0.0], [1809, 2096, 0.0], [2096, 2321, 0.0], [2321, 2871, 0.0], [2871, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3551, 0.0], [3551, 3817, 0.0], [3817, 4036, 0.0], [4036, 4370, 0.0], [4370, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4592, 0.0], [4592, 4658, 0.0], [4658, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4753, 0.0], [4753, 4846, 0.0], [4846, 4921, 0.0], [4921, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 194, 33.0], [194, 615, 74.0], [615, 1151, 88.0], [1151, 1589, 70.0], [1589, 1809, 34.0], [1809, 2096, 47.0], [2096, 2321, 33.0], [2321, 2871, 92.0], [2871, 3206, 51.0], [3206, 3551, 56.0], [3551, 3817, 40.0], [3817, 4036, 38.0], [4036, 4370, 50.0], [4370, 4547, 25.0], [4547, 4592, 8.0], [4592, 4658, 8.0], [4658, 4702, 7.0], [4702, 4753, 6.0], [4753, 4846, 13.0], [4846, 4921, 12.0], [4921, 4999, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 194, 0.0], [194, 615, 0.01937046], [615, 1151, 0.02490421], [1151, 1589, 0.01165501], [1589, 1809, 0.0372093], [1809, 2096, 0.0], [2096, 2321, 0.01382488], [2321, 2871, 0.0635514], [2871, 3206, 0.01886792], [3206, 3551, 0.02134146], [3551, 3817, 0.0], [3817, 4036, 0.0], [4036, 4370, 0.03773585], [4370, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4592, 0.04545455], [4592, 4658, 0.0], [4658, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4753, 0.0], [4753, 4846, 0.04597701], [4846, 4921, 0.01408451], [4921, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 194, 0.0], [194, 615, 0.0], [615, 1151, 0.0], [1151, 1589, 0.0], [1589, 1809, 0.0], [1809, 2096, 0.0], [2096, 2321, 0.0], [2321, 2871, 0.0], [2871, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3551, 0.0], [3551, 3817, 0.0], [3817, 4036, 0.0], [4036, 4370, 0.0], [4370, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4592, 0.0], [4592, 4658, 0.0], [4658, 4702, 0.0], [4702, 4753, 0.0], [4753, 4846, 0.0], [4846, 4921, 0.0], [4921, 4999, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 194, 0.01546392], [194, 615, 0.03325416], [615, 1151, 0.03358209], [1151, 1589, 0.0456621], [1589, 1809, 0.06363636], [1809, 2096, 0.05923345], [2096, 2321, 0.02222222], [2321, 2871, 0.06181818], [2871, 3206, 0.04179104], [3206, 3551, 0.03768116], [3551, 3817, 0.02255639], [3817, 4036, 0.08219178], [4036, 4370, 0.03592814], [4370, 4547, 0.11864407], [4547, 4592, 0.15555556], [4592, 4658, 0.13636364], [4658, 4702, 0.13636364], [4702, 4753, 0.11764706], [4753, 4846, 0.15053763], [4846, 4921, 0.17333333], [4921, 4999, 0.16666667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4999, 0.83975095]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4999, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4999, 0.69151312]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4999, -180.52434056]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4999, -2.2126937]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4999, 65.72386631]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4999, 49.0]]}
AUDIBLE AND MERCURY STUDIOS JOIN FORCES FOR AN ORIGINAL ROM-COM SCRIPTED MUSICAL PODCAST WITH SOUNDTRACK AVAILABLE ON DECCA RECORDS The Audible Original will be released globally in November 2022 LONDON, UK – 3 November 2022: Audible, a world-wide leader of spoken-word entertainment, today announced a collaboration with Mercury Studios, a division of Universal Music Group (UMG), the world leader in music-based entertainment, for a scripted musical podcast, Crush Hour, launching globally this year. Crush Hour is the first scripted musical podcast venture from Mercury Studios and Audible’s first scripted musical podcast originating out of the U.K. This will be the first time Audible, Mercury Studios and Universal Music Group have collaborated on a joint venture, bringing the best in class music and audio entertainment together. Created and written by Freya Slipper, directed by Chris Foggin (Fisherman’s Friends, Traces), and composed by Chris Read, Crush Hour is a musical romantic comedy that presents a series of heart-warming and hilarious chance encounters between a group of connected strangers via London’s transport links. The musical podcast will be released in the run up to Christmas, with an all-star British cast to be announced soon. The full original soundtrack to the series will also be released by UMG’s Decca Records in line with the podcast’s November 17th launch date, with the full cast singing the original soundtrack recorded from Audible’s state of the art studios in London. Aurelie De Troyer, Head of Content UK & Canada at Audible, said: “It’s been a wonderful process to collaborate with the teams at Universal Music and Mercury Studios – combining both our expertise in this field has resulted in some exceptionally exciting audio entertainment. This is our first musical podcast coming out of the UK for a global release and is the perfect listen for the festive period. The cast is fantastic and the music is truly joyous. We can’t wait for you all to hear it!” Marc Robinson, Co-President at Mercury Studios, said: “It has been brilliant working with Audible in premiering a new musical in the audio podcast space. Crush Hour comes from the storytelling, songs & vision of a very talented team. Working with them and everyone at Audible has been a fantastic and inspiring journey. We are thrilled to be bringing Crush Hour in all its musical glory to the world this Christmas.” Audible, an Amazon company, is a leading creator and provider of premium audio storytelling, offering customers a new way to enhance and enrich their lives every day. Audible.co.uk content includes more than 700,000 audiobooks, podcasts, and Audible Originals. Audible has millions of members around the world who subscribe to one of 10 localised services designed for customers in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, India, Italy, Japan, Spain, the UK, and the US. Audible members download nearly 4 billion hours of content annually and listen across a wide range of supported devices. About Mercury Studios Mercury Studios is a full-service production studio originating, producing, selling, distributing, and investing in scripted, unscripted, and live content. Editorially independent, Mercury Studios is powered by Universal Music Group and represents the world’s leading catalogue of music-related content. Current projects include If These Walls Could Sing, the untold story of the world-famous Abbey Road Studios, directed by celebrated British photographer and filmmaker Mary McCartney for Disney+; Contact High: A Visual History of Hip-Hop, a feature documentary from Oscar-winning director/producer Joseph Patel (Summer of Soul), adapted from Vikki Tobak’s best-selling book; “My Life as a Rolling Stone,” a four-part docuseries of intimate portraits of Mick Jagger, Keith Richards, Ronnie Wood and Charlie Watts and Shania Twain: Not Just a Girl, a career documentary about the superstar that is available on Netflix; and Mars. Mercury Studios’ Miles Davis: Birth of The Cool was recently honored with two Emmys for Outstanding Arts and Culture Documentary and Outstanding Sound. ZZ Top: That Little Ol’ Band from Texas also received a 2021 Grammy Award nomination for Best Music Film. The feature documentaries are part of the Mercury Studios library, consisting of nearly 2,000 hours of programming. About Decca Records Decca is one of the world’s iconic record labels. The logo has been associated with some of recorded music’s defining acts: David Bowie, The Rolling Stones, Vera Lynn, Luciano Pavarotti and Ella Fitzgerald to name a few. From early Rodgers and Hammerstein to Hans Zimmer and James Horner; from hit movie musicals to high profile televised events such as the Olympics, TV series ‘Around the World in 80 Days’ and award-winning period drama ‘Downton Abbey’ – Decca has a strong association with soundtracks. The label has a long history of best-selling releases such as ‘Gladiator’, ‘Braveheart’, ‘Shine’, ‘The Hobbit’ trilogy and more recently the highest-charting Bond soundtrack ‘No Time To Die’, the Oscar-winning soundtrack to ‘The Shape of Water’, ‘Judy’ performed by Renée Zellweger, The National’s ‘Cyrano’, Jonny Greenwood’s ‘Spencer’ and ‘Minions 2’ featuring the acclaimed new single from Diana Ross (ft. Tame Impala) alongside a star-studded tracklisting. The label has also been instrumental in the launch of Mercury Classics Soundtrack & Score, a new boutique record label dedicated to supporting the careers of composer artists in the film world. Decca is home to such diverse and distinctive artists as Ludovico Einaudi, Aurora, Gregory Porter, Melody Gardot, Jacob Collier, Isobel Waller-Bridge, Sheku Kanneh-Mason and The Lumineers. About Universal Music Group At Universal Music Group, we exist to shape culture through the power of artistry. UMG is the world leader in music-based entertainment, with a broad array of businesses engaged in recorded music, music publishing, merchandising and audiovisual content. Featuring the most comprehensive catalogue of recordings and songs across every musical genre, UMG identifies and develops artists and produces and distributes the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful music in the world. Committed to artistry, innovation and entrepreneurship, UMG fosters the development of services, platforms, and business models in order to broaden artistic and commercial opportunities for our artists and create new experiences for fans. For more information, visit www.universalmusic.com.
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/5062
{"url": "https://www.universalmusic.com/audible-and-mercury-studios-join-forces-for-an-original-rom-com-scripted-musical-podcast-with-soundtrack-available-on-decca-records/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.universalmusic.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:38:03Z", "digest": "sha1:QFOUCMJLFWD336ES2YY2CD5HKRZFYTCD"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6514, 6514.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6514, 13531.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6514, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6514, 97.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6514, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6514, 210.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6514, 0.29620662]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6514, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6514, 0.01457671]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6514, 0.01457671]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6514, 0.02616333]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6514, 0.01775369]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6514, 0.00598019]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6514, 0.02905569]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6514, 0.17514124]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6514, 0.49949648]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6514, 5.38872105]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6514, 5.54277491]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6514, 993.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 132, 0.0], [132, 196, 0.0], [196, 503, 1.0], [503, 838, 1.0], [838, 1258, 1.0], [1258, 1511, 1.0], [1511, 2004, 1.0], [2004, 2421, 1.0], [2421, 3008, 1.0], [3008, 3030, 0.0], [3030, 3334, 1.0], [3334, 3961, 1.0], [3961, 4335, 1.0], [4335, 4355, 0.0], [4355, 4576, 1.0], [4576, 5321, 1.0], [5321, 5704, 1.0], [5704, 5732, 0.0], [5732, 6514, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 132, 0.0], [132, 196, 0.0], [196, 503, 0.0], [503, 838, 0.0], [838, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1511, 0.0], [1511, 2004, 0.0], [2004, 2421, 0.0], [2421, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3030, 0.0], [3030, 3334, 0.0], [3334, 3961, 0.0], [3961, 4335, 0.0], [4335, 4355, 0.0], [4355, 4576, 0.0], [4576, 5321, 0.0], [5321, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5732, 0.0], [5732, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 132, 19.0], [132, 196, 10.0], [196, 503, 44.0], [503, 838, 52.0], [838, 1258, 66.0], [1258, 1511, 42.0], [1511, 2004, 86.0], [2004, 2421, 69.0], [2421, 3008, 90.0], [3008, 3030, 3.0], [3030, 3334, 38.0], [3334, 3961, 94.0], [3961, 4335, 59.0], [4335, 4355, 3.0], [4355, 4576, 37.0], [4576, 5321, 111.0], [5321, 5704, 57.0], [5704, 5732, 4.0], [5732, 6514, 109.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 132, 0.0], [132, 196, 0.06349206], [196, 503, 0.01718213], [503, 838, 0.0], [838, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1511, 0.008], [1511, 2004, 0.0], [2004, 2421, 0.0], [2421, 3008, 0.0159292], [3008, 3030, 0.0], [3030, 3334, 0.0], [3334, 3961, 0.0], [3961, 4335, 0.02185792], [4335, 4355, 0.0], [4355, 4576, 0.0], [4576, 5321, 0.00413223], [5321, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5732, 0.0], [5732, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 132, 0.0], [132, 196, 0.0], [196, 503, 0.0], [503, 838, 0.0], [838, 1258, 0.0], [1258, 1511, 0.0], [1511, 2004, 0.0], [2004, 2421, 0.0], [2421, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 3030, 0.0], [3030, 3334, 0.0], [3334, 3961, 0.0], [3961, 4335, 0.0], [4335, 4355, 0.0], [4355, 4576, 0.0], [4576, 5321, 0.0], [5321, 5704, 0.0], [5704, 5732, 0.0], [5732, 6514, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 132, 0.84848485], [132, 196, 0.0625], [196, 503, 0.06514658], [503, 838, 0.04179104], [838, 1258, 0.03809524], [1258, 1511, 0.03557312], [1511, 2004, 0.03853955], [2004, 2421, 0.0383693], [2421, 3008, 0.03236797], [3008, 3030, 0.13636364], [3030, 3334, 0.02631579], [3334, 3961, 0.07496013], [3961, 4335, 0.0802139], [4335, 4355, 0.15], [4355, 4576, 0.05882353], [4576, 5321, 0.06040268], [5321, 5704, 0.06005222], [5704, 5732, 0.14285714], [5732, 6514, 0.02046036]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6514, 0.44835776]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6514, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6514, 0.96523345]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6514, -446.53780979]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6514, 2.49513183]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6514, -61.46312656]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6514, 41.0]]}
The Brief History Of Microsoft Corporation Mohibul Alam At The First The Gaming And Mobile Phone Markets Further Developments In Windows OS Microsoft vs. Google After Bill Gates Microsoft Corporation is an American multinational technology company with headquarters in Redmond, Washington. It develops, manufactures, licenses supports and sells computer software, consumer electronics, personal computers, and services. Its best-known software products are the Microsoft Windows line of operating systems.Today we explain about this company. Microsoft Corporation, leading developer of personal-computer software systems and applications. The company also publishes books and multimedia titles, produces its own line of hybrid tablet computers, offers e-mail services, and sells electronic game systems, computer peripherals, and portable media players. It has sales offices throughout the world. In addition to its main research and development center at its corporate headquarters in Redmond, Washington, U.S. Microsoft operates research labs in Cambridge, England (1997); Beijing, China (1998); Sadashivnagar, Bangalore, India (2005); Santa Barbara, California. Cambridge, Massachusetts (2008); New York, New York and Montreal, Canada. Childhood friends Paul Allen and Bill Gates sought to make a successful business utilizing their shared skills in computer programming. In 1972 they founded their first company, named Traf-O-Data. Which sold a rudimentary computer to track and analyze automobile traffic data. While Gates enrolled at Harvard, Allen pursued a degree in computer science at Washington State University, though he later dropped out of school to work at Honeywell. The January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics featured Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems’s (MITS) Altair 8800 microcomputer. Which inspired Allen to suggest that they could program a BASIC interpreter for the device. After a call from Gates claiming to have a working interpreter, MITS requested a demonstration. Since they didn’t yet have one, Allen worked on a simulator for the Altair while Gates developed the interpreter. Although they developed the interpreter on a simulator and not the actual device, it worked flawlessly when they (in March 1975) demonstrated the interpreter to MITS in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Microsoft dramatically expanded its electronic publishing division, created in 1985 and already notable for the success of its multimedia encyclopedia, Encarta. It also entered the information services and entertainment industries with a wide range of products and services, most notably the Microsoft Network and MSNBC (a joint venture with the National Broadcasting Company, a major American television network. In 2001 Microsoft released the Xbox, an electronic game console that quickly captured second place in the video gaming market. In 2002 it launched Xbox Live, a broadband gaming network for its consoles. A more powerful gaming console, the Xbox 360, was released in 2005. In an intensely competitive market, where the Xbox faced strong pressure from the Nintendo Wii and Sony PlayStation, Microsoft struggled through the years to make consistent profits from its console. For example, in 2009 the company cut the price of the Xbox 360 Elite by as much as 25 percent in order to pick up market share. The move was successful; by 2010 the Xbox 360 was the most-used game console in the American home. But at the same time, the price cuts also led to a 6 percent drop in revenue in Microsoft’s Entertainment and Devices Division (EDD). Microsoft began planning a major replacement for all of its operating systems in 2001. The project, code-named Longhorn, encountered numerous delays, in part because of efforts to address the public’s growing concern with computer security and consumers’ desire for PCs to have greater integration with a full range of entertainment equipment within the modern electronic home. The company started over, and the new operating system renamed Vista, was released to other software developers late in 2006 and to the general public in 2007. Like most new operating systems, Vista met with initial problems involving incompatibilities with older computer peripherals. More problematic for the new operating system was its “bloated” structure, which required a very fast microprocessor and large amounts of dedicated computer memory for proper functioning. Its high threshold for adequate system resources deterred many companies and individuals from upgrading systems from earlier, and perfectly serviceable, systems such as Windows XP (derived from the term Windows Experience). In addition, consumers were baffled by the numerous Vista options—Home (Basic or Premium), Ultimate, Business, and others—while business users (Microsoft’s core market) balked at its major change to the user interface and were unwilling to port their internal applications to the new system. Microsoft’s continued OS dominance and its quick recovery in the “browser wars” did not repeat itself in the search-engine market. Where Microsoft’s search engine, Live Search, trailed well behind those of Google Inc., the new industry giant, and Yahoo! Inc., the durable Internet portal site. Microsoft hoped to change the market dynamics with the release in 2009 of Bing, a “decision engine” designed to display more retrieved information in search pages than was typical, thus enabling better-informed decisions concerning what links to follow or, in some cases, displaying enough information to satisfy the original query. In 2000 company cofounder Gates relinquished his role as CEO of Microsoft to Steve Ballmer. Whom Gates had met during his brief tenure at Harvard University in the 1970s. He handed over the title of the chief software architect in 2006 to Ray Ozzie. A chief developer of the computer networking package Lotus Notes in the 1990s. In 2008 Gates left the day-to-day running of the company to Ballmer, Ozzie. And other managers, though he remained as chairman of the board. Ozzie stepped down in 2010, and longtime Microsoft executive Satya Nadella replaced Ballmer as CEO in 2014. Previous articleCargo Ships Must Cut Emissions Half By 2050 Next articleNano Technology About Datally App Connecting 100M People To The Internet By Internet.org Some Of The Popular Things That Go On Destruction Today
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/6355
{"url": "https://www.digitalworldhub.com/tech/brief-history-microsoft-corporation/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.digitalworldhub.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:07:53Z", "digest": "sha1:VEDHVYV6CCFPKKBQAACJVMFRT3NDJG3B"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6350, 6350.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6350, 9090.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6350, 26.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6350, 158.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6350, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6350, 201.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6350, 0.29447853]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6350, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6350, 0.00572519]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6350, 0.00572519]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6350, 0.01183206]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6350, 0.01489921]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6350, 0.1665206]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6350, 0.51828631]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6350, 5.4754441]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6350, 5.58364406]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6350, 957.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 56, 0.0], [56, 69, 0.0], [69, 105, 0.0], [105, 140, 0.0], [140, 161, 0.0], [161, 178, 0.0], [178, 542, 1.0], [542, 1012, 1.0], [1012, 1239, 1.0], [1239, 1684, 1.0], [1684, 2315, 1.0], [2315, 2729, 1.0], [2729, 3200, 1.0], [3200, 3561, 1.0], [3561, 4225, 1.0], [4225, 4929, 1.0], [4929, 5223, 1.0], [5223, 5556, 1.0], [5556, 5961, 1.0], [5961, 6134, 1.0], [6134, 6194, 0.0], [6194, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6240, 0.0], [6240, 6295, 0.0], [6295, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 56, 0.0], [56, 69, 0.0], [69, 105, 0.0], [105, 140, 0.0], [140, 161, 0.0], [161, 178, 0.0], [178, 542, 0.0], [542, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1239, 0.0], [1239, 1684, 0.0], [1684, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2729, 0.0], [2729, 3200, 0.0], [3200, 3561, 0.0], [3561, 4225, 0.0], [4225, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 5223, 0.0], [5223, 5556, 0.0], [5556, 5961, 0.0], [5961, 6134, 0.0], [6134, 6194, 0.0], [6194, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6240, 0.0], [6240, 6295, 0.0], [6295, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 43, 6.0], [43, 56, 2.0], [56, 69, 3.0], [69, 105, 6.0], [105, 140, 5.0], [140, 161, 3.0], [161, 178, 3.0], [178, 542, 45.0], [542, 1012, 64.0], [1012, 1239, 28.0], [1239, 1684, 68.0], [1684, 2315, 96.0], [2315, 2729, 58.0], [2729, 3200, 75.0], [3200, 3561, 69.0], [3561, 4225, 99.0], [4225, 4929, 101.0], [4929, 5223, 45.0], [5223, 5556, 50.0], [5556, 5961, 70.0], [5961, 6134, 28.0], [6134, 6194, 9.0], [6194, 6222, 3.0], [6222, 6240, 3.0], [6240, 6295, 8.0], [6295, 6350, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 56, 0.0], [56, 69, 0.0], [69, 105, 0.0], [105, 140, 0.0], [140, 161, 0.0], [161, 178, 0.0], [178, 542, 0.0], [542, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1239, 0.07843137], [1239, 1684, 0.0091954], [1684, 2315, 0.01944895], [2315, 2729, 0.00985222], [2729, 3200, 0.0326087], [3200, 3561, 0.04843305], [3561, 4225, 0.01840491], [4225, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 5223, 0.0], [5223, 5556, 0.01226994], [5556, 5961, 0.05050505], [5961, 6134, 0.04761905], [6134, 6194, 0.06779661], [6194, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6240, 0.0], [6240, 6295, 0.05660377], [6295, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 56, 0.0], [56, 69, 0.0], [69, 105, 0.0], [105, 140, 0.0], [140, 161, 0.0], [161, 178, 0.0], [178, 542, 0.0], [542, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1239, 0.0], [1239, 1684, 0.0], [1684, 2315, 0.0], [2315, 2729, 0.0], [2729, 3200, 0.0], [3200, 3561, 0.0], [3561, 4225, 0.0], [4225, 4929, 0.0], [4929, 5223, 0.0], [5223, 5556, 0.0], [5556, 5961, 0.0], [5961, 6134, 0.0], [6134, 6194, 0.0], [6194, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6240, 0.0], [6240, 6295, 0.0], [6295, 6350, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.13953488], [43, 56, 0.15384615], [56, 69, 0.23076923], [69, 105, 0.16666667], [105, 140, 0.17142857], [140, 161, 0.0952381], [161, 178, 0.17647059], [178, 542, 0.02747253], [542, 1012, 0.01914894], [1012, 1239, 0.08370044], [1239, 1684, 0.04044944], [1684, 2315, 0.06180666], [2315, 2729, 0.03381643], [2729, 3200, 0.03397028], [3200, 3561, 0.03878116], [3561, 4225, 0.01355422], [4225, 4929, 0.02130682], [4929, 5223, 0.04081633], [5223, 5556, 0.00600601], [5556, 5961, 0.05432099], [5961, 6134, 0.05202312], [6134, 6194, 0.13333333], [6194, 6222, 0.10714286], [6222, 6240, 0.16666667], [6240, 6295, 0.14545455], [6295, 6350, 0.18181818]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6350, 0.97616905]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6350, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6350, 0.80352974]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6350, -307.15970936]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6350, 53.63892376]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6350, 85.80735334]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6350, 52.0]]}
About Kushiro-shi, Japan Yokohama is the second largest city in Japan by population, and most populous municipality of Japan. It is the capital city of Kanagawa Prefecture. It lies on Tokyo Bay, south of Tokyo, in the Kantō region of the main island of Honshu. It is a major commercial hub of the Greater Tokyo Area. It’s also known for Sankei-en Garden, a botanical park containing preserved Japanese residences from different eras, and the seaside Minato Mirai district, site of the 296m Landmark Tower. Yokohama's population of 3.7 million makes it Japan's largest city after the Special Wards of Tokyo. Yokohama developed rapidly as Japan's prominent port city following the end of Japan's relative isolation in the mid-19th century, and is today one of its major ports along with Kobe, Osaka, Nagoya, Hakata, Tokyo, and Chiba. Kushiro-shi The City and Borough of Juneau is a unified municipality located on the Gastineau Channel in the panhandle of the U.S. state of Alaska. It has been the capital of Alaska since 1906, when the government of the then-District of Alaska was moved from Sitka as dictated by the U.S. Congress in 1900. Juneau is home to Perseverance Theatre, Alaska's only professional theater. The city hosts the annual Alaska Folk Festival and Juneau Jazz & Classics music festivals, and the biennial Celebration. The Juneau Symphony performs regularly. Downtown Juneau boasts dozens of art galleries, which participate in the monthly First Friday Gallery Walk and the enormously popular December Gallery Walk held in the first week of December. The Juneau Arts & Humanities Council coordinates events while fund-raising, distributing some grant money, and operating a gallery at its office in the Juneau Arts & Culture Center, 350 Whittier Street. On summer Friday evenings open-air music and dance performances are held at Marine Park. Vancouver is a coastal city located in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, Canada. It is one of the most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities in Canada; 52% of its residents have a first language other than English. Classed as a Beta global city, the city is well known for its majestic natural beauty, as it is nestled between the Coast Mountains and the Pacific Ocean. It is frequently ranked as one of the "best cities to live in" and is certainly a beautiful destination to visit. Ketchikan is an Alaskan city facing the Inside Passage, a popular cruise route along the state's southeastern coast. The city is named after Ketchikan Creek, which flows through the town, emptying into the Tongass Narrows a short distance southeast of its downtown. Civic boosters have dubbed the community the "Salmon Capital of the World". The Misty Fiords National Monument is one of the area's major attractions, and the Tongass National Forest has long been headquartered in Ketchikan, mostly in the city's historic Federal Building. Vancouver, San Francisco From Saint Croix Island Saint Croix Island, Saint John, Little San Salvador, Soufriere, Sandals Regency St Lucia, Fort Lauderdale, Guadeloupe, Key West, Grand Cayman, Havana From Justvik Justvik, Rotterdam, Stavanger, Flåm, Oslo From Admiral Street Police Station (Merseyside Police) Admiral Street Police Station (Merseyside Police), Klaipeda County, Stockholm, Helsinki, Guernsey, Belfast, Bornholm Island, Dublin South, St Petersburg, Aarhus, Ilfracombe, Antwerp, Oslo, Copenhagen, Dunmore East, Portree, The Convent Amsterdam From San Diego San Diego, Mazatlán, Cabo San Lucas, Puerto Vallarta San Diego, Mazatlán, Cabo San Lucas, Puerto Vallarta, North Lauderdale Netherlands, Oranjestad, Little San Salvador, Colon, Fort Lauderdale, Panama, Puerto Limón
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/6516
{"url": "https://www.lakewoodtravel.com/hollandamerica-ca-HAL-V685/asia", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.lakewoodtravel.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:26:05Z", "digest": "sha1:OL2LNT2D2QPPZU7OSRZT6KMYYOINVEXR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3681, 3681.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3681, 5118.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3681, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3681, 102.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3681, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3681, 154.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3681, 0.27552448]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3681, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3681, 0.05691329]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3681, 0.05691329]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3681, 0.02879143]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3681, 0.02879143]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3681, 0.01506528]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3681, 0.00803482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3681, 0.00669568]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3681, 0.00559441]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3681, 0.18461538]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3681, 0.55614035]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3681, 5.24035088]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3681, 5.22670351]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3681, 570.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 832, 1.0], [832, 844, 0.0], [844, 1861, 1.0], [1861, 2358, 1.0], [2358, 2897, 1.0], [2897, 2922, 0.0], [2922, 2946, 0.0], [2946, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3109, 0.0], [3109, 3151, 0.0], [3151, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3452, 0.0], [3452, 3467, 0.0], [3467, 3520, 0.0], [3520, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 832, 0.0], [832, 844, 0.0], [844, 1861, 0.0], [1861, 2358, 0.0], [2358, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 2922, 0.0], [2922, 2946, 0.0], [2946, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3109, 0.0], [3109, 3151, 0.0], [3151, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3452, 0.0], [3452, 3467, 0.0], [3467, 3520, 0.0], [3520, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 25, 3.0], [25, 832, 133.0], [832, 844, 1.0], [844, 1861, 159.0], [1861, 2358, 87.0], [2358, 2897, 84.0], [2897, 2922, 3.0], [2922, 2946, 4.0], [2946, 3096, 21.0], [3096, 3109, 2.0], [3109, 3151, 5.0], [3151, 3206, 7.0], [3206, 3452, 29.0], [3452, 3467, 3.0], [3467, 3520, 8.0], [3520, 3591, 10.0], [3591, 3681, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 832, 0.00896287], [832, 844, 0.0], [844, 1861, 0.01114488], [1861, 2358, 0.00412371], [2358, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 2922, 0.0], [2922, 2946, 0.0], [2946, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3109, 0.0], [3109, 3151, 0.0], [3151, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3452, 0.0], [3452, 3467, 0.0], [3467, 3520, 0.0], [3520, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 832, 0.0], [832, 844, 0.0], [844, 1861, 0.0], [1861, 2358, 0.0], [2358, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 2922, 0.0], [2922, 2946, 0.0], [2946, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3109, 0.0], [3109, 3151, 0.0], [3151, 3206, 0.0], [3206, 3452, 0.0], [3452, 3467, 0.0], [3467, 3520, 0.0], [3520, 3591, 0.0], [3591, 3681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.12], [25, 832, 0.04708798], [832, 844, 0.08333333], [844, 1861, 0.0560472], [1861, 2358, 0.03219316], [2358, 2897, 0.0445269], [2897, 2922, 0.12], [2922, 2946, 0.16666667], [2946, 3096, 0.14], [3096, 3109, 0.15384615], [3109, 3151, 0.11904762], [3151, 3206, 0.12727273], [3206, 3452, 0.11788618], [3452, 3467, 0.2], [3467, 3520, 0.1509434], [3520, 3591, 0.14084507], [3591, 3681, 0.12222222]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3681, 0.88686293]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3681, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3681, 0.62142086]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3681, -72.18584983]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3681, 40.46377216]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3681, 183.52535663]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3681, 29.0]]}
Michael Tell- Ex-husband of Patty Duke Who is Michael Tell? Michael Tell is an American rock promoter. He is also a writer and publisher of the news agency; The Las Vegas Israelite. He married the famous Hollywood actress Patty Duke turning into an overnight celebrity. Since the marriage ended as abruptly as it took place, people couldn’t stop questioning their relationship. But, his famous son Sean Austin brought him into the limelight. Let’s learn some less know interesting facts about Michael Tell. Patty Duke (ex-wife) Sean Astin (son) Is Michael Tell Sean Astin's father? The net worth of Michael Tell Full name Michael Tell Nickname Mike Sun sign Unknown Traits Unknown Birthplace Londonderry, New Hampshire, USA Currently residing Londonderry, New Hampshire, USA Parents No information Grandparents No information Siblings No information Marital status Divorced Spouse Patty Duke (ex-wife) Children Sean Astin Education No information Profession Event manager Net worth USD 1 million Social media None Height 5′ 9″ Michael Tell was born in 1950 in Londonderry, New Hampshire, USA. Tell discovered his love for rock music in high school. So, he decided that he wanted to get involved in rock music. As a result, he pursued his career as a rock promoter as he was not a good singer himself. Additionally, he was a writer and publisher of the news agency; The Las Vegas Israelite. Michael gained recognition only after his marriage to Patty. However, we know he completed high school and didn’t continue his schooling. Patty Duke married Michael Tell in June 1970. At the time of her marriage, Patty discovered that she was pregnant. However, her wedding to Michael lasted only for a few days. Patty Duke, ex-wife of Michael Tell Patty is a well-known American actor and writer. She is also a politician, advocate, and a fantastic mother. The ex-wife of Michael was born on December 14, 1946, in Manhattan, New York. Her mother, Frances Margaret (McMahon), worked as a cashier, and her father, John Patrick Duke, was a cab driver and handyman. Lauren Tom early life, relationships, career, and morePeople Also Read Patty had a break in her acting career when she portrayed the blind and deaf Helen Keller in the Broadway version of The Miracle Worker. The movie won her an Academy Award for the best supporting actor. Similarly, she also became the youngest actor to win the Oscar Award at 16. Similarly, Patty also starred in many films such as Billie, Valley of The Dolls, Me, Natalie, and others. In addition, Patty also won several prestigious awards like Emmy Awards, Primetime Awards, and Golden Globe Awards. Patty is also a political advocate for the ERA (Equal Rights Amendment), AIDS, and nuclear disarmament. Sadly, Patty passed away on March 29, 2016, in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, from sepsis from a ruptured intestine. Patty was married four times in her lifetime. She married Harry Falk on November 26, 1965, and divorced on March 24, 1970. Similarly, on June 26, 1970, her marriage with Michael was annulled on July 9, 1970. She had one son Sean Austin with Tell. Actress Patty Duke and Michael Later, she married John Astin on November 26, 1972. She had a son Mackenzie Astin but later divorced on November 3, 1985. Then, Duke tied her knot with Michael Pearce on March 15, 1986. Though they didn’t have any children together, they adopted a son named Kevin Pearce. Sean Astin, the biological son of Michael Tell Sean is an American actor, film producer, voice-over artist, and director. On February 25, 1971, he was born to Patty Duke in Santa Monica, California. The son of Michael Tell studied a B.A. in History and English from the University of California in 1993. Sean began his acting in the mid-1980s when he made his cinematic debut at the age of 13 in Steven Spielberg’s action-comedy The Goonies. However, he is most recognized for playing the hobbit Samwise Gamgee in the Lord of the Rings film series. Sean Astin has received many prestigious awards for his outstanding performances. Is Michael Tell Sean Astin’s father? Kazembe Ajamu Coleman: Incredible father of ZendayaPeople Also Read Patty then gave birth to Sean on February 25, 1971. She was in a relationship with two other men when she was pregnant with Sean. Patty claimed that John Astin was Sean’s biological father. She said they had kept their relationship private as John was married to Suzanne Hahn. Later, John divorced Suzanne and married Patty Duke when Sean was three years. So, Sean took John’s last name, and people considered Sean his son. But, things changed when Patty confessed to Sean that Desi Arnaz Jr., the very famous son of the popular parents Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, was his biological father. So, at 14, Sean started to work to improve his relationship with Arnaz. However, the confusion didn’t resolve there. When Sean was in his mid-20s, one of Michael’s relatives told Sean they were somehow related. So, finally, Sean decided to find out who his birth father was. For this, he did a DNA test on his three potential fathers. When the results were out, Michael was his biological father. So, after many years of Sean’s birth, Michael was known to be his biological father. Regarding his relationship with his fathers, Sean said, “Desi Arnaz Jr. loves me, and I love him. We are so close. Science tells me that he’s not my biological father. Science tells me that Mike Tell is. I can call any of them on the phone any time I want to. John, Desi, Mike, or Papa Mike … my four dads.” Michael Tell is an event manager primarily organizing rock concerts. In addition to that, he is also a writer and publisher of the news agency; The Las Vegas Israelite. Michael is doing well in his career. So, he has earned an impressive amount from his work as a rock promoter and newspaper publisher. Michael Tell net worth is estimated to be USD 1 million. Who is Sean Astin’s real biological father? Sean Astin’s biological father is Michael. However, he was raised as John Astin’s son, so he has taken John’s last name. Is Michael Tell still alive? Yes, Michael is still alive and in good health. How old is Michael Tell? Michael was born in 1950. So, he is in his early-70s as of 2021. How tall is Michael Tell? Thomas Wilson Brown: Bio, Family, Career, Net Worth & morePeople Also Read Michael Tell is 5’9″ tall. Did Michael Tell ever remarry after Patty Duke? Michael Tell married Patty Duke on June 26, 1970. However, they separated after only thirteen days of their marriage. Michael is not known to remarry after Patty Duke. How much is Michael Tell’s net worth? Michael’s net worth is estimated to be USD 1 million. His source of income is his career as a rock promoter. Biography celeb family Entrepreneur Mary Marquardt- Ex-wife of Harrison Ford Laryssa Farmiga- Sister of Vera Farmiga Seth Blackstock: Kelly Clarkson’s step-son, Bio, family, and net worth Ysabel Jordan biography- Twin daughter of Michael Jordan ByJeannette Connell Mary Lee Harvey- Second ex-wife of Steve Harvey Biography celeb family Entrepreneur Musician Chyna Tahjere Griffin – Faith Evans Daughter Biography
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/7132
{"url": "https://celebcritics.com/michael-tell/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "celebcritics.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:21:34Z", "digest": "sha1:7INHMCTQGUONPIDVVH5K3WSQWTEIOE5D"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7101, 7101.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7101, 8799.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7101, 84.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7101, 166.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7101, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7101, 238.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7101, 0.2983871]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7101, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7101, 0.03385049]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7101, 0.06276446]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7101, 0.05430183]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7101, 0.04583921]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7101, 0.04583921]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7101, 0.04583921]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7101, 0.04072638]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7101, 0.01375176]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7101, 0.01004937]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7101, 0.0094086]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7101, 0.19623656]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7101, 0.38916667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7101, 4.72666667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7101, 0.00067204]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7101, 5.4863387]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7101, 1200.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 60, 1.0], [60, 182, 1.0], [182, 270, 1.0], [270, 378, 1.0], [378, 442, 1.0], [442, 507, 1.0], [507, 528, 0.0], [528, 545, 0.0], [545, 582, 1.0], [582, 612, 0.0], [612, 635, 0.0], [635, 649, 0.0], [649, 666, 0.0], [666, 681, 0.0], [681, 724, 0.0], [724, 775, 0.0], [775, 798, 0.0], [798, 826, 0.0], [826, 850, 0.0], [850, 874, 0.0], [874, 902, 0.0], [902, 922, 0.0], [922, 947, 0.0], [947, 972, 0.0], [972, 996, 0.0], [996, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1093, 1.0], [1093, 1301, 1.0], [1301, 1390, 1.0], [1390, 1528, 1.0], [1528, 1703, 1.0], [1703, 1739, 0.0], [1739, 1848, 1.0], [1848, 2053, 1.0], [2053, 2124, 0.0], [2124, 2261, 1.0], [2261, 2403, 1.0], [2403, 2625, 1.0], [2625, 2729, 1.0], [2729, 2837, 1.0], [2837, 3084, 1.0], [3084, 3115, 0.0], [3115, 3237, 1.0], [3237, 3387, 1.0], [3387, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3586, 1.0], [3586, 3691, 1.0], [3691, 3936, 1.0], [3936, 4018, 1.0], [4018, 4055, 1.0], [4055, 4123, 0.0], [4123, 4253, 1.0], [4253, 4547, 1.0], [4547, 4788, 1.0], [4788, 4927, 1.0], [4927, 5113, 1.0], [5113, 5506, 1.0], [5506, 5675, 1.0], [5675, 5809, 1.0], [5809, 5866, 1.0], [5866, 5910, 1.0], [5910, 6031, 1.0], [6031, 6060, 1.0], [6060, 6108, 1.0], [6108, 6133, 1.0], [6133, 6198, 1.0], [6198, 6224, 1.0], [6224, 6299, 0.0], [6299, 6326, 1.0], [6326, 6374, 1.0], [6374, 6542, 1.0], [6542, 6580, 1.0], [6580, 6689, 1.0], [6689, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6766, 0.0], [6766, 6806, 0.0], [6806, 6877, 0.0], [6877, 6934, 0.0], [6934, 6954, 0.0], [6954, 7002, 0.0], [7002, 7047, 0.0], [7047, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 60, 0.0], [60, 182, 0.0], [182, 270, 0.0], [270, 378, 0.0], [378, 442, 0.0], [442, 507, 0.0], [507, 528, 0.0], [528, 545, 0.0], [545, 582, 0.0], [582, 612, 0.0], [612, 635, 0.0], [635, 649, 0.0], [649, 666, 0.0], [666, 681, 0.0], [681, 724, 0.0], [724, 775, 0.0], [775, 798, 0.0], [798, 826, 0.0], [826, 850, 0.0], [850, 874, 0.0], [874, 902, 0.0], [902, 922, 0.0], [922, 947, 0.0], [947, 972, 0.0], [972, 996, 0.0], [996, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1093, 0.0], [1093, 1301, 0.0], [1301, 1390, 0.0], [1390, 1528, 0.0], [1528, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1739, 0.0], [1739, 1848, 0.0], [1848, 2053, 0.0], [2053, 2124, 0.0], [2124, 2261, 0.0], [2261, 2403, 0.0], [2403, 2625, 0.0], [2625, 2729, 0.0], [2729, 2837, 0.0], [2837, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3115, 0.0], [3115, 3237, 0.0], [3237, 3387, 0.0], [3387, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3586, 0.0], [3586, 3691, 0.0], [3691, 3936, 0.0], [3936, 4018, 0.0], [4018, 4055, 0.0], [4055, 4123, 0.0], [4123, 4253, 0.0], [4253, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4788, 0.0], [4788, 4927, 0.0], [4927, 5113, 0.0], [5113, 5506, 0.0], [5506, 5675, 0.0], [5675, 5809, 0.0], [5809, 5866, 0.0], [5866, 5910, 0.0], [5910, 6031, 0.0], [6031, 6060, 0.0], [6060, 6108, 0.0], [6108, 6133, 0.0], [6133, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6224, 0.0], [6224, 6299, 0.0], [6299, 6326, 0.0], [6326, 6374, 0.0], [6374, 6542, 0.0], [6542, 6580, 0.0], [6580, 6689, 0.0], [6689, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6766, 0.0], [6766, 6806, 0.0], [6806, 6877, 0.0], [6877, 6934, 0.0], [6934, 6954, 0.0], [6954, 7002, 0.0], [7002, 7047, 0.0], [7047, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 39, 6.0], [39, 60, 4.0], [60, 182, 22.0], [182, 270, 13.0], [270, 378, 16.0], [378, 442, 11.0], [442, 507, 10.0], [507, 528, 3.0], [528, 545, 3.0], [545, 582, 6.0], [582, 612, 6.0], [612, 635, 4.0], [635, 649, 2.0], [649, 666, 3.0], [666, 681, 2.0], [681, 724, 5.0], [724, 775, 6.0], [775, 798, 3.0], [798, 826, 3.0], [826, 850, 3.0], [850, 874, 3.0], [874, 902, 4.0], [902, 922, 3.0], [922, 947, 3.0], [947, 972, 3.0], [972, 996, 5.0], [996, 1014, 3.0], [1014, 1027, 3.0], [1027, 1093, 11.0], [1093, 1301, 41.0], [1301, 1390, 15.0], [1390, 1528, 21.0], [1528, 1703, 31.0], [1703, 1739, 6.0], [1739, 1848, 18.0], [1848, 2053, 35.0], [2053, 2124, 10.0], [2124, 2261, 25.0], [2261, 2403, 26.0], [2403, 2625, 35.0], [2625, 2729, 16.0], [2729, 2837, 18.0], [2837, 3084, 45.0], [3084, 3115, 5.0], [3115, 3237, 22.0], [3237, 3387, 26.0], [3387, 3434, 8.0], [3434, 3586, 25.0], [3586, 3691, 19.0], [3691, 3936, 43.0], [3936, 4018, 11.0], [4018, 4055, 6.0], [4055, 4123, 9.0], [4123, 4253, 25.0], [4253, 4547, 49.0], [4547, 4788, 42.0], [4788, 4927, 22.0], [4927, 5113, 34.0], [5113, 5506, 76.0], [5506, 5675, 29.0], [5675, 5809, 24.0], [5809, 5866, 11.0], [5866, 5910, 7.0], [5910, 6031, 21.0], [6031, 6060, 5.0], [6060, 6108, 9.0], [6108, 6133, 5.0], [6133, 6198, 14.0], [6198, 6224, 5.0], [6224, 6299, 11.0], [6299, 6326, 5.0], [6326, 6374, 8.0], [6374, 6542, 28.0], [6542, 6580, 7.0], [6580, 6689, 21.0], [6689, 6725, 4.0], [6725, 6766, 6.0], [6766, 6806, 6.0], [6806, 6877, 10.0], [6877, 6934, 8.0], [6934, 6954, 2.0], [6954, 7002, 8.0], [7002, 7047, 5.0], [7047, 7101, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 60, 0.0], [60, 182, 0.0], [182, 270, 0.0], [270, 378, 0.0], [378, 442, 0.0], [442, 507, 0.0], [507, 528, 0.0], [528, 545, 0.0], [545, 582, 0.0], [582, 612, 0.0], [612, 635, 0.0], [635, 649, 0.0], [649, 666, 0.0], [666, 681, 0.0], [681, 724, 0.0], [724, 775, 0.0], [775, 798, 0.0], [798, 826, 0.0], [826, 850, 0.0], [850, 874, 0.0], [874, 902, 0.0], [902, 922, 0.0], [922, 947, 0.0], [947, 972, 0.0], [972, 996, 0.04347826], [996, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1027, 0.16666667], [1027, 1093, 0.06451613], [1093, 1301, 0.0], [1301, 1390, 0.0], [1390, 1528, 0.0], [1528, 1703, 0.02366864], [1703, 1739, 0.0], [1739, 1848, 0.0], [1848, 2053, 0.03141361], [2053, 2124, 0.0], [2124, 2261, 0.0], [2261, 2403, 0.01449275], [2403, 2625, 0.0], [2625, 2729, 0.0], [2729, 2837, 0.05940594], [2837, 3084, 0.09787234], [3084, 3115, 0.0], [3115, 3237, 0.09482759], [3237, 3387, 0.04166667], [3387, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3586, 0.04225352], [3586, 3691, 0.03960396], [3691, 3936, 0.0251046], [3936, 4018, 0.0], [4018, 4055, 0.0], [4055, 4123, 0.0], [4123, 4253, 0.04761905], [4253, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4788, 0.00862069], [4788, 4927, 0.01503759], [4927, 5113, 0.0], [5113, 5506, 0.0], [5506, 5675, 0.0], [5675, 5809, 0.0], [5809, 5866, 0.01818182], [5866, 5910, 0.0], [5910, 6031, 0.0], [6031, 6060, 0.0], [6060, 6108, 0.0], [6108, 6133, 0.0], [6133, 6198, 0.16666667], [6198, 6224, 0.0], [6224, 6299, 0.0], [6299, 6326, 0.08], [6326, 6374, 0.0], [6374, 6542, 0.03703704], [6542, 6580, 0.0], [6580, 6689, 0.00943396], [6689, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6766, 0.0], [6766, 6806, 0.0], [6806, 6877, 0.0], [6877, 6934, 0.0], [6934, 6954, 0.0], [6954, 7002, 0.0], [7002, 7047, 0.0], [7047, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 60, 0.0], [60, 182, 0.0], [182, 270, 0.0], [270, 378, 0.0], [378, 442, 0.0], [442, 507, 0.0], [507, 528, 0.0], [528, 545, 0.0], [545, 582, 0.0], [582, 612, 0.0], [612, 635, 0.0], [635, 649, 0.0], [649, 666, 0.0], [666, 681, 0.0], [681, 724, 0.0], [724, 775, 0.0], [775, 798, 0.0], [798, 826, 0.0], [826, 850, 0.0], [850, 874, 0.0], [874, 902, 0.0], [902, 922, 0.0], [922, 947, 0.0], [947, 972, 0.0], [972, 996, 0.0], [996, 1014, 0.0], [1014, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1093, 0.0], [1093, 1301, 0.0], [1301, 1390, 0.0], [1390, 1528, 0.0], [1528, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1739, 0.0], [1739, 1848, 0.0], [1848, 2053, 0.0], [2053, 2124, 0.0], [2124, 2261, 0.0], [2261, 2403, 0.0], [2403, 2625, 0.0], [2625, 2729, 0.0], [2729, 2837, 0.0], [2837, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3115, 0.0], [3115, 3237, 0.0], [3237, 3387, 0.0], [3387, 3434, 0.0], [3434, 3586, 0.0], [3586, 3691, 0.0], [3691, 3936, 0.0], [3936, 4018, 0.0], [4018, 4055, 0.0], [4055, 4123, 0.0], [4123, 4253, 0.0], [4253, 4547, 0.0], [4547, 4788, 0.0], [4788, 4927, 0.0], [4927, 5113, 0.0], [5113, 5506, 0.0], [5506, 5675, 0.0], [5675, 5809, 0.0], [5809, 5866, 0.0], [5866, 5910, 0.0], [5910, 6031, 0.0], [6031, 6060, 0.0], [6060, 6108, 0.0], [6108, 6133, 0.0], [6133, 6198, 0.0], [6198, 6224, 0.0], [6224, 6299, 0.0], [6299, 6326, 0.0], [6326, 6374, 0.0], [6374, 6542, 0.0], [6542, 6580, 0.0], [6580, 6689, 0.0], [6689, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6766, 0.0], [6766, 6806, 0.0], [6806, 6877, 0.0], [6877, 6934, 0.0], [6934, 6954, 0.0], [6954, 7002, 0.0], [7002, 7047, 0.0], [7047, 7101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.12820513], [39, 60, 0.14285714], [60, 182, 0.06557377], [182, 270, 0.04545455], [270, 378, 0.00925926], [378, 442, 0.046875], [442, 507, 0.04615385], [507, 528, 0.0952381], [528, 545, 0.11764706], [545, 582, 0.13513514], [582, 612, 0.1], [612, 635, 0.13043478], [635, 649, 0.14285714], [649, 666, 0.11764706], [666, 681, 0.13333333], [681, 724, 0.1627907], [724, 775, 0.1372549], [775, 798, 0.08695652], [798, 826, 0.07142857], [826, 850, 0.08333333], [850, 874, 0.08333333], [874, 902, 0.10714286], [902, 922, 0.15], [922, 947, 0.08], [947, 972, 0.08], [972, 996, 0.16666667], [996, 1014, 0.11111111], [1014, 1027, 0.07692308], [1027, 1093, 0.12121212], [1093, 1301, 0.01442308], [1301, 1390, 0.05617978], [1390, 1528, 0.02173913], [1528, 1703, 0.05142857], [1703, 1739, 0.11111111], [1739, 1848, 0.02752294], [1848, 2053, 0.06829268], [2053, 2124, 0.07042254], [2124, 2261, 0.05109489], [2261, 2403, 0.04225352], [2403, 2625, 0.07657658], [2625, 2729, 0.10576923], [2729, 2837, 0.05555556], [2837, 3084, 0.05668016], [3084, 3115, 0.12903226], [3115, 3237, 0.06557377], [3237, 3387, 0.05333333], [3387, 3434, 0.08510638], [3434, 3586, 0.05921053], [3586, 3691, 0.08571429], [3691, 3936, 0.04081633], [3936, 4018, 0.02439024], [4018, 4055, 0.13513514], [4055, 4123, 0.11764706], [4123, 4253, 0.03846154], [4253, 4547, 0.06122449], [4547, 4788, 0.05394191], [4788, 4927, 0.03597122], [4927, 5113, 0.04301075], [5113, 5506, 0.05343511], [5506, 5675, 0.04142012], [5675, 5809, 0.01492537], [5809, 5866, 0.0877193], [5866, 5910, 0.06818182], [5910, 6031, 0.05785124], [6031, 6060, 0.10344828], [6060, 6108, 0.04166667], [6108, 6133, 0.12], [6133, 6198, 0.03076923], [6198, 6224, 0.11538462], [6224, 6299, 0.14666667], [6299, 6326, 0.07407407], [6326, 6374, 0.10416667], [6374, 6542, 0.05357143], [6542, 6580, 0.07894737], [6580, 6689, 0.04587156], [6689, 6725, 0.05555556], [6725, 6766, 0.12195122], [6766, 6806, 0.125], [6806, 6877, 0.07042254], [6877, 6934, 0.0877193], [6934, 6954, 0.15], [6954, 7002, 0.125], [7002, 7047, 0.06666667], [7047, 7101, 0.12962963]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7101, 0.34683943]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7101, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7101, 0.91439676]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7101, -216.1947318]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7101, 74.92211992]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7101, 35.68992921]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7101, 91.0]]}
more about matt brubeck During his many years in San Francisco, Matt collaborated with various jazz and experimental musicians, including Ben Goldberg, Scott Amendola, Carla Kihlstedt, Myles Boisen, and Pamela Z. He was a founding member of Oranj Symphonette, which recorded two CD's for Rykodisc and went on to play many of the major jazz festivals, from Monterey to Montreal. Matt worked for several years as composer and cellist/bassist with Club Foot Orchestra, where he contributed to their pioneering live accompaniment of silent films and to Club Foot's soundtrack for the syndicated cartoon series The Twisted Tales of Felix the Cat. Additionally, Matt has had many eclectic musical adventures, including touring and/or recording with Tom Waits, Sheryl Crow, Dixie Chicks, Natalie McMaster, and Yo-Yo Ma. Presently residing near Toronto, Matt performs with an array of jazz and improvising artists. Projects include Stretch Orchestra, a trio with guitarist Kevin Breit and percussionist Jesse Stewart. Stretch Orchestra's' eponymous CD won a JUNO Award for Best Instrumental Album of the Year. Matt is also a member of Ugly Beauties (with pianist Marilyn Lerner and drummer Nick Fraser). This trio has released two recordings to critical acclaim. Additionally, Matt performs occasionally with jazz pianist David Braid as the duo Brubeck Braid. Their CD, twotet/deuxtet was nominated for both a JUNO award and a National Jazz award. Brubeck Braid has toured Canada, as well as Australia and China. Other collaborative activities include an EP with vocalist Caylie Staples, FR3Q co-compositions with electronic music producer Ken Harrison, improvisational outings with hurdy-gurdy genius Ben Grossman, and recordings/performances with Guelph’s own Silence Collective. In 2018 Matt completed his PhD in Music at York University, where he teaches a variety of courses including 20th century music, jazz strings, and contemporary improvisation. Matt is also on the faculty of the Bachelor of Music program at Humber College. (And, yes, he is the tallest son of Dave.) Even more?.......... Industry Tactics Podcast--Matt interviewed by Friendly Rich ||| home || about || audio/video || discography || events || contact |||
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/7474
{"url": "https://mattbrubeck.com/about2.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "mattbrubeck.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:04:04Z", "digest": "sha1:PNNS6AUZAX77E52BXZKHNXXXI4UHH43Q"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2224, 2224.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2224, 2247.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2224, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2224, 6.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2224, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2224, 253.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2224, 0.28640777]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2224, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2224, 0.0083426]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2224, 0.01112347]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2224, 0.01941748]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2224, 0.16747573]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2224, 0.64652568]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2224, 5.43202417]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2224, 0.00728155]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2224, 5.05894575]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2224, 331.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 813, 1.0], [813, 1505, 1.0], [1505, 2071, 0.0], [2071, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 813, 0.0], [813, 1505, 0.0], [1505, 2071, 0.0], [2071, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 24, 4.0], [24, 813, 121.0], [813, 1505, 108.0], [1505, 2071, 83.0], [2071, 2152, 9.0], [2152, 2224, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 813, 0.0], [813, 1505, 0.0], [1505, 2071, 0.01277372], [2071, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 813, 0.0], [813, 1505, 0.0], [1505, 2071, 0.0], [2071, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 813, 0.05956907], [813, 1505, 0.07369942], [1505, 2071, 0.05123675], [2071, 2152, 0.08641975], [2152, 2224, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2224, 0.41070241]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2224, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2224, 0.75251067]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2224, -89.09188282]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2224, -0.14516244]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2224, 76.42552503]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2224, 18.0]]}
The Handoff: Your Week in Rheumatology News – 10/28/16 As rheumatology evolves, it can be challenging to stay current with the latest research and treatments. The Handoff is a weekly roundup of the most important news and updates in rheumatic diseases. Keep your finger on the pulse of rheumatology with The Handoff. –The first US Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved infliximab biosimilar, infliximab-dyyb (Inflectra™, Pfizer), will begin shipping to US wholesalers in late November, Pfizer announced. Inflectra is approved for indications for which its primary reference product was approved, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, and plaque psoriasis. –Concerns surrounding the rare but serious side effects of bisphosphonates mean that more women are delaying osteoporosis treatment—and hip fracture rates are on the rise, writes Marlene Cimons in The Washington Post. –Investigators at the University of Gothenberg in Sweden have identified a possible link between childhood infections—including appendicitis and respiratory tract infections—and later development of ankylosing spondylitis, published in Arthritis Research & Therapy. –In a recently released health care analytics brief, the Institute for Patient Access (IfPA) has found that patients with RA who switch medications for financial—rather than medical—reasons experience poorer outcomes. Patients who switched medications once were more likely to have their treatment interrupted by a second switch over the course of the 2-year study, with higher rates of second switches for patients with RA. –Triathele, ironman, and aerial gymnist Reesa Partida was devastated by her RA diagnosis at the age of 25. Eight months later, she placed tenth in her age group at the Nautica Malibu Triathlon. Read more of her story in Self. –Research presented at the 2016 United European Gastroenterology (UEG) Week suggests that amylase-trypsin inhibitors (ATIs)—a group of protein identified in wheat—are linked to inflammatory markers that trigger chronic autoimmune conditions including RA, multiple sclerosis, and non-celiac gluten sensitivity. –Twenty-one clinical research grants for orphan drugs have been awarded by the FDA. Columbia University Health Sciences was among the lucky recipients, receiving $1.6 million for 4 years to conduct a phase 2b study of denosumab (Prolia®, Amgen), which prevents bone loss in premenopausal women with idiopathic osteoporosis. –The American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine (ASRA) has released a formal position statement requesting that the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) reschedule marijuana from Schedule I to Schedule II under the Controlled Substances Act. The official ASRA statement on marijuana summarizes evidence from clinical studies and systematic reviews, indicating the effectiveness of marijuana in relieving pain associated with conditions such as cancer, rheumatic diseases, and neuropathies. –The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) has its sights set on Washington, D.C., with preparations for the 2016 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting well underway. More than 16,000 rheumatology professionals are expected to attend. View the program preview and mark your calendars for November 11, 2016. Rheumatology Advisor will bring you live, on-site coverage. Close more info about The Handoff: Your Week in Rheumatology News – 10/28/16
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/8358
{"url": "https://www.rheumatologyadvisor.com/uncategorized/the-handoff-your-week-in-rheumatology-news-10-28-16/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.rheumatologyadvisor.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:05:36Z", "digest": "sha1:WXTGF6VNLUBMOUJMEHHQ6L2ZHXQLINPC"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3411, 3411.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3411, 6971.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3411, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3411, 146.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3411, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3411, 273.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3411, 0.29159802]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3411, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3411, 0.0303244]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3411, 0.0303244]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3411, 0.0303244]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3411, 0.0303244]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3411, 0.0303244]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3411, 0.01410437]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3411, 0.00987306]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3411, 0.01269394]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3411, 0.03294893]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3411, 0.19439868]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3411, 0.61934156]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3411, 5.83539095]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3411, 5.36297214]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3411, 486.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 55, 0.0], [55, 317, 1.0], [317, 706, 1.0], [706, 924, 1.0], [924, 1190, 1.0], [1190, 1615, 1.0], [1615, 1841, 1.0], [1841, 2151, 1.0], [2151, 2475, 1.0], [2475, 2981, 1.0], [2981, 3275, 1.0], [3275, 3335, 1.0], [3335, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 55, 0.0], [55, 317, 0.0], [317, 706, 0.0], [706, 924, 0.0], [924, 1190, 0.0], [1190, 1615, 0.0], [1615, 1841, 0.0], [1841, 2151, 0.0], [2151, 2475, 0.0], [2475, 2981, 0.0], [2981, 3275, 0.0], [3275, 3335, 0.0], [3335, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 55, 9.0], [55, 317, 43.0], [317, 706, 48.0], [706, 924, 32.0], [924, 1190, 31.0], [1190, 1615, 64.0], [1615, 1841, 40.0], [1841, 2151, 38.0], [2151, 2475, 48.0], [2475, 2981, 68.0], [2981, 3275, 44.0], [3275, 3335, 8.0], [3335, 3411, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 55, 0.11764706], [55, 317, 0.0], [317, 706, 0.0], [706, 924, 0.0], [924, 1190, 0.0], [1190, 1615, 0.00239808], [1615, 1841, 0.00913242], [1841, 2151, 0.01333333], [2151, 2475, 0.01277955], [2475, 2981, 0.0], [2981, 3275, 0.05338078], [3275, 3335, 0.0], [3335, 3411, 0.08219178]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 55, 0.0], [55, 317, 0.0], [317, 706, 1.0], [706, 924, 1.0], [924, 1190, 1.0], [1190, 1615, 1.0], [1615, 1841, 1.0], [1841, 2151, 1.0], [2151, 2475, 1.0], [2475, 2981, 1.0], [2981, 3275, 1.0], [3275, 3335, 0.0], [3335, 3411, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 55, 0.10909091], [55, 317, 0.02290076], [317, 706, 0.04627249], [706, 924, 0.02752294], [924, 1190, 0.02631579], [1190, 1615, 0.02823529], [1615, 1841, 0.04867257], [1841, 2151, 0.04193548], [2151, 2475, 0.0308642], [2475, 2981, 0.05928854], [2981, 3275, 0.07482993], [3275, 3335, 0.03333333], [3335, 3411, 0.09210526]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3411, 0.31738299]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3411, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3411, 0.34180677]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3411, -235.06037643]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3411, -17.31682344]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3411, 41.76365677]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3411, 25.0]]}
Honolulu International Forum featuring James A. Kelly, Ralph Cossa, and Satu Limaye The Year That Was and Will Be James A. Kelly is Chairman of the Board and President Emeritus of Pacific Forum, as well as a former assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs. President George W. Bush nominated him on April 3, 2001; he was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on April 26, 2001, and sworn in on May 1, 2001. From 1994 to 2001, Mr. Kelly was president of Pacific Forum CSIS. From 1989 to 1994, Mr. Kelly was president of EAP Associates, Inc., of Honolulu, which provided international business consulting services with an Asia/Pacific focus to private clients. Earlier, he served at the White House as special assistant for national security affairs to President Ronald Reagan and as senior director for Asian affairs for the National Security Council from 1986 to 1989 under Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush. From 1983 to 1986, Mr. Kelly was at the Pentagon as deputy assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs (East Asia and Pacific). He earned an M.B.A. from the Harvard School of Business Administration 1968. He is also a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy (B.S., 1959) and the National War College (1977). He served in the U.S. Navy from 1959 to 1982, concluding his active duty as a captain in the Supply Corps. Ralph Cossa is President Emeritus of Pacific Forum and WSD-Handa Chair in Peace Studies. He is a member of the ASEAN Regional Forum’s Experts and Eminent Persons Group and a founding member of the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific’s Steering Committee. Mr. Cossa is a political/military affairs and national security specialist with more than 50 years of experience in formulating, articulating, and implementing US security policy in the Asia-Pacific and Near East–South Asia regions. Mr. Cossa served in the U.S. Air Force from 1966 to 1993, achieving the rank of colonel and last serving as special assistant to the commander of the US Pacific Command. He previously served as Deputy Director for Strategic Studies at the National Defense University’s Institute for National Strategic Studies and earlier as a national security affairs fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. Mr. Cossa holds an MBA from Pepperdine University, an M.S. in strategic studies from the Defense Intelligence College, and a B.A. in international relations from Syracuse University. He also received an honorary PhD in international relations from the University of Cambodia. Dr. Satu P. Limaye is Vice President of the East-West Center and the Director of the East-West Center in Washington where he created and now directs the Asia Matters for America initiative and is the founding editor of the Asia Pacific Bulletin. He is also a Senior Advisor at CNA Corp (Center for Naval Analyses). He is a graduate of Georgetown University and received his doctorate from Oxford University (Magdalen College) where he was a George C. Marshall Scholar. He publishes and speaks widely on Indo-Pacific regional issues and supports various U.S. government, foundation, fellowship, and professional organizations. Among his current affiliations are Center for New American Security (CNAS) Task Force on the U.S.-Philippines Alliance, United States Institute of Peace (USIP) Senior Study Group on the North Pacific, Project 2049 Study Group on the U.S.-Australia Alliance, Korea Economic Institute (KEI) Advisory Council, and Global Taiwan Institute-Taiwan Asia Exchange Foundation project. Recent publications include: Southeast Asia’s choices: Economic, political, and geopolitical integration face complications, India in East Asia: Focused on the Quad and Border Disputes with China, and Maintaining the Technology Edge: Strengthening US and Indo-Pacific Alliances to Counter Chinese Technology Acquisition (with Rose Tenyotkin).
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/9291
{"url": "https://pacforum.org/events/honolulu-international-forum-feat-james-kelly-ralph-cossa-and-satu-limaye", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "pacforum.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:52:33Z", "digest": "sha1:WXNYGS3RR5EPSAMMXYDPOBZYK4FYH3RR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3895, 3895.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3895, 11371.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3895, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3895, 374.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3895, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3895, 62.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3895, 0.27894737]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3895, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3895, 0.03289058]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3895, 0.01265022]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3895, 0.01328273]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3895, 0.01644529]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3895, 0.05526316]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3895, 0.19210526]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3895, 0.44901316]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3895, 5.20065789]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3895, 5.04430096]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3895, 608.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 84, 0.0], [84, 114, 0.0], [114, 1360, 1.0], [1360, 2551, 1.0], [2551, 3895, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 84, 0.0], [84, 114, 0.0], [114, 1360, 0.0], [1360, 2551, 0.0], [2551, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 84, 12.0], [84, 114, 7.0], [114, 1360, 212.0], [1360, 2551, 183.0], [2551, 3895, 194.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 84, 0.0], [84, 114, 0.0], [114, 1360, 0.05690377], [1360, 2551, 0.00857633], [2551, 3895, 0.0030888]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 84, 0.0], [84, 114, 0.0], [114, 1360, 0.0], [1360, 2551, 0.0], [2551, 3895, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 84, 0.11904762], [84, 114, 0.2], [114, 1360, 0.07142857], [1360, 2551, 0.07472712], [2551, 3895, 0.09151786]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3895, 0.3401944]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3895, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3895, 0.96260023]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3895, -218.20708628]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3895, 38.16443171]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3895, 143.67608155]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3895, 60.0]]}
Akado Telecom picks Infinera for optical network in Moscow Infinera Corp. (NASDAQ: INFN) says it has helped Akado Telecom (trademark of KOMKOR, OJSC), a major multi-service cable network operator in the Moscow region, launch a high-speed metro fiber-optic network in Moscow and the surrounding region based on Infinera’s DTN and ATN platforms.With the new metro transport network using Infinera’s Digital Optical Network architecture, Akado will be one of the first fixed network operators in Russia to deploy a next-generation DWDM infrastructure able to support 100 Gigabit Ethernet (100GbE) services, according to the vendor.Russian service providers need to continue investing in their network infrastructure to keep up with growing bandwidth demands while ensuring scalability and maintaining a high level of service quality, says Infinera. These requirements are an important factor in securing customer loyalty, maintaining corporate reputation and intensifying competition for subscribers.Akado Telecom provides a full range of advanced communication services based on its own fiber-optic network, which extends more than 18,000 km. Akado's multi-service network provides high-speed residential Internet access, voice services, and cable TV services, as well as a broad range of enterprise services for businesses. Infinera says its DTN platform will provide a right-sized platform for the metropolitan core network and the ATN will provide a compact metro aggregation platform with a common network management system for end-to-end point-and-click transport services.With demand for bandwidth driving 10 Gigabit Ethernet services and emerging interest in 100GbE services coming from their customers, Akado Telecom needed a modern DWDM backbone network with integrated OTN switching capabilities. With its intelligent algorithms managing bandwidth utilization, Infinera says its DTN was chosen by Akado to ensure a higher level of network efficiency, at the same time providing a way to reduce operational and capital costs and ultimately lower total cost of ownership. "The new solution we implemented offers us a flexible next generation DWDM network and intelligent tools to rapidly deploy additional bandwidth resources,” said Vitaly Klishin, business development director at Akado Group. “As one of the first service providers in Russia to offer 100GbE services, we are committed to continuously satisfying the needs of over 3,500 enterprises, 350 service providers, and over 12,000 state organizations.” University of Utah, Utah Education Network pick Ciena for metro optical network Ciena Corp. (NASDAQ: CIEN) says the Utah Education Network (UEN) and the University of Utah have deployed Ciena’s 6500 Packet-Optical Platform to provide high-speed, high-capacity 100G connectivity between the university and its new downtown Salt Lake City data center, and to UEN member organizations.The University of Utah’s new metro fiber-optic network will connect the university to its Salt Lake City data center at speeds that will scale from 10 Gbps to 100 Gbps and beyond. This will allow the university to meet the advanced connectivity requirements of both research and general data traffic of the school, as well as UEN-connected institutions, on a converged network. In addition, extensions of the network to Provo and Logan are underway, to enable the network to serve Brigham Young University and Utah State University.Ciena’s technology will also provide high-performance optical transport to support UEN, which operates a statewide backbone for K-12 educational schools, Head Start organizations, higher education institutions, and public libraries. UEN facilitates interactive video and web conferencing, provides instructional support services, and operates a public television station (KUEN) on behalf of the Utah State Board of Regents.UEN also serves as the commercial Internet and provides connectivity between Internet2 and the state government and the Utah Telehealth Network, which connects health care providers across the state. UEN is an affiliate member of the U.S. Unified Community Anchor Network (U.S. UCAN) project that delivers network connectivity to more than 65,000 member organizations for the delivery of telemedicine, distance learning, and other applications to communities across the United States.Through a combination of grants from the National Science Foundation’s Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research (EPSCoR) and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act’s Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP), the University of Utah and UEN combined will serve 1084 K-12 schools, 10 colleges and universities, and approximately 866,000 Utah students and educators.“In our experience, research and education organizations are increasingly challenged in their efforts to acquire, manage and distribute vast amounts of data. High-speed networks are essential because the network is an enabler to local, regional, national, and international collaboration. By serving the University of Utah, the UEN and their constituencies with high-speed, high-capacity connectivity solutions that scale, Ciena is enabling the University and UEN to connect to the broader research community and meet bandwidth needs for years to come,” said Rod Wilson, senior director of external research, Ciena.“We selected Ciena as our infrastructure provider for two reasons: Ciena is an experienced technology provider to the R&E community that focuses on understanding our complex networking needs, and its industry-leading, coherent optical solutions provide a high-capacity, resilient, and scalable optical backbone to support innovative methods of enabling advanced research and innovation by our students and faculty,” added Steve Corbató, deputy CIO, University of Utah Ritter expands regional fiber network with packet-optical technologies from Ciena Ciena Corp. (NASDAQ: CIEN) says Ritter Communications, an Arkansas-based communications provider, has deployed Ciena’s packet networking and converged packet-optical technologies throughout its regional fiber-optic network serving over 25,000 Internet subscribers in Arkansas and west Tennessee.With the combination of packet networking and converged packet optical transport, the expanded network will carriers with advanced Ethernet service delivery and a cost-effective means to transport high-speed data services while also enabling cellular backhaul and business services, Ciena says.Ritter is a fifth-generation family business founded in 1886. Today, Ritter owns and operates two rural local exchange carriers (RLECs) in northeast and north central Arkansas, a competitive local exchange carrier (CLEC) and a fiber-optic network in Jonesboro, AR. In December 2012, Ritter completed its purchase of Millington Telephone Co., Inc. and Millington CATV, Inc. which represents approximately 20,000 business and residential customers in parts of Shelby, Tipton, Haywood, and Fayette counties in West Tennessee.Ciena says its packet networking platforms, including its 5150 Service Aggregation Switch and 3930 Service Delivery Switch, provide Ritter with increased scalability and protection of services needed to meet their growing end-user demands. The platforms support leading operations, administration, and maintenance (OAM) standards, and provide service level agreement (SLA) insights, allowing Ritter to ensure more accurate service management and fault isolation across a greater number of services.Ritter is also using Ciena’s 6500 Packet-Optical Platform to increase capacity and support the mobile backhaul demands of two Tier 1 U.S. wireless carriers and their migration to 4G services. The 6500 allows Ritter to scale capacity and program its network to deliver 10G and 40G wavelength services today, with the ability to scale to 100G in the future.Ritter will also leverage packet networking capabilities recently made available on the 6500 platform, which enable several Carrier Ethernet functions and provide Ritter with a cost-effective means to transport optical traffic and Ethernet services without the need to install additional Ethernet switches.Ritter’s expanded network will provide high-speed, low-latency broadband and business Ethernet services to businesses and residents in areas of Arkansas and west Tennessee which are currently faced with connectivity limitations due to a lack of resources and geographic challenges such as the divide caused by the Mississippi River.Ciena is also providing Ritter with its network management software and a range of professional services for this deployment via its Ciena Specialist Services portfolio, including installation, turn-up, and testing.“We are seeing a substantial increase in the demand for broadband connectivity as new innovations in the form of distance learning, telehealth and e-commerce take hold,” said Steve Smith, vice president of sales, Ritter Communications. “By deploying a combination of Ciena’s packet networking and converged packet optical portfolio solutions, we are ensuring that our customers across Arkansas and western Tennessee have a reliable network that has the intelligence to scale appropriately and efficiently to meet these requirements today, and in the future. Our customers are thrilled that we are bringing the benefits of a super direct, low-latency, high-speed broadband network to their doorstep.” ?This article reader also like:PacketLight Networks unveils universal transponder Previous: PacketLight Networks unveils universal transponder Next: Vodafone, Orange partner for FTTH in Spain
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/9546
{"url": "https://www.10gtek.com/new-863", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.10gtek.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:46:55Z", "digest": "sha1:E7J2GNFYMOXEPLSBMCK3ZLV42YG55S5B"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 9601, 9601.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 9601, 13214.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 9601, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 9601, 156.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 9601, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 9601, 280.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 9601, 0.29731343]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 9601, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 9601, 0.04263276]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 9601, 0.01022189]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 9601, 0.0113438]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 9601, 0.00997258]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 9601, 0.00710546]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 9601, 0.03164179]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 9601, 0.16119403]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 9601, 0.40946046]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 9601, 5.92904656]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 9601, 5.59500645]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 9601, 1353.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 2518, 1.0], [2518, 2598, 0.0], [2598, 5811, 0.0], [5811, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 9410, 1.0], [9410, 9492, 0.0], [9492, 9553, 0.0], [9553, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 2518, 0.0], [2518, 2598, 0.0], [2598, 5811, 0.0], [5811, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 9410, 0.0], [9410, 9492, 0.0], [9492, 9553, 0.0], [9553, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 59, 9.0], [59, 2518, 352.0], [2518, 2598, 12.0], [2598, 5811, 456.0], [5811, 5893, 10.0], [5893, 9410, 491.0], [9410, 9492, 9.0], [9492, 9553, 6.0], [9553, 9601, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 2518, 0.01290054], [2518, 2598, 0.0], [2598, 5811, 0.01086262], [5811, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 9410, 0.01369065], [9410, 9492, 0.0], [9492, 9553, 0.0], [9553, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 2518, 0.0], [2518, 2598, 0.0], [2598, 5811, 0.0], [5811, 5893, 0.0], [5893, 9410, 0.0], [9410, 9492, 0.0], [9492, 9553, 0.0], [9553, 9601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.06779661], [59, 2518, 0.03944693], [2518, 2598, 0.075], [2598, 5811, 0.04855275], [5811, 5893, 0.02439024], [5893, 9410, 0.03212966], [9410, 9492, 0.04878049], [9492, 9553, 0.06557377], [9553, 9601, 0.16666667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 9601, 0.63963854]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 9601, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 9601, 0.84553415]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 9601, -584.81974023]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 9601, 35.82620203]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 9601, -7.73710913]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 9601, 51.0]]}
Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss Had a Successful Career as Ellen DeGeneres’ DJ and More: See His Net Worth Life & Style Staff December 14, 2022, 5:20 AM ·2 min read Stephen ‘tWitch’ Boss, who was famous for working as Ellen DeGeneres’ former DJ on her talk show, left behind a large net worth prior to his untimely death. The choreographer and musician died at age 40 at a hotel/motel on Tuesday, December 13, Life & Style confirmed via the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner's online records. Keep reading to find out how much money tWitch made in his career. What Was tWitch’s Net Worth? Boss' net worth stands at $5 million, according to Celebrity Net Worth, and he had a salary of $1 million, per the outlet. How Did tWitch Make His Money? Prior to landing his famous DJ gig on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Boss made his way up the ladder in show business throughout the early 2000s. After studying dance performance at Southern Union State Community College in Alabama, Boss later attended Chapman University in California to continue his education. Stephen 'tWitch' Boss Death Aside from music, Boss was also known for starring on So You Think You Can Dance. He auditioned for the first time in 2007 in season 3 but didn’t end up in the top 20 finalists. However, he returned for season 4 and finished as the runner up. Throughout seasons 7, 8 and 9, Boss appeared as a recurring star to perform several memorable routines on the show. In season 12, Boss served as the team captain and was later announced to be a permanent judge in season 17. Aside from the highly acclaimed dance reality series, Boss also cohosted Disney’s Fairy Tale Weddings alongside his wife, Allison Holker. Boss was also a member of the dance troupes “Breed OCLA” and “Chill Factor Crew.” What Movies and TV Shows Did tWitch Star in? Boss starred in countless television and movie roles throughout his life, starting with his first uncredited role in 2006’s Blade of Glory as a dancer. In 2007, he also starred in Hairspray. As a skilled dancer and choreographer, Boss landed a role in the Step Up franchise as the character Jason Hardlerson in Step Up 3D, Step Up Revolution and Step Up: All In. In 2015, the Alabama native appeared in Magic Mike XXL. In addition to his reality TV roles, Boss also appeared in small roles in sitcoms such as Modern Family and Young & Hungry. How Long Did tWitch Star on ‘The Ellen DeGeneres Show’? Boss made his Ellen DeGeneres Show debut as a guest DJ in April 2014. Nearly six years later, the comedian made him a coexecutive producer of her former daytime talk show. During his early days as her guest DJ, Boss made a salary of $500,000, per Celebrity Net Worth, which was later increased to $1 million. If you or someone you know is in emotional distress or considering suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/10121
{"url": "https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/stephen-twitch-boss-had-successful-102013843.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.yahoo.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:32:36Z", "digest": "sha1:LBDFNC3VSJRC3IZJLCZYUBKQPS3ZBGAK"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2866, 2866.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2866, 123156.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2866, 23.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2866, 125.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2866, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2866, 199.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2866, 0.28855721]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2866, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2866, 0.02098819]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2866, 0.01661565]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2866, 0.0199005]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2866, 0.19900498]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2866, 0.516]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2866, 4.574]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2866, 5.09769373]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2866, 500.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 97, 0.0], [97, 116, 0.0], [116, 155, 0.0], [155, 312, 1.0], [312, 493, 1.0], [493, 560, 1.0], [560, 589, 1.0], [589, 712, 1.0], [712, 743, 1.0], [743, 1051, 1.0], [1051, 1079, 0.0], [1079, 1438, 1.0], [1438, 1546, 1.0], [1546, 1684, 1.0], [1684, 1766, 1.0], [1766, 1811, 1.0], [1811, 2002, 1.0], [2002, 2230, 1.0], [2230, 2354, 1.0], [2354, 2410, 1.0], [2410, 2582, 1.0], [2582, 2719, 1.0], [2719, 2866, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 97, 0.0], [97, 116, 0.0], [116, 155, 0.0], [155, 312, 0.0], [312, 493, 0.0], [493, 560, 0.0], [560, 589, 0.0], [589, 712, 0.0], [712, 743, 0.0], [743, 1051, 0.0], [1051, 1079, 0.0], [1079, 1438, 0.0], [1438, 1546, 0.0], [1546, 1684, 0.0], [1684, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 1811, 0.0], [1811, 2002, 0.0], [2002, 2230, 0.0], [2230, 2354, 0.0], [2354, 2410, 0.0], [2410, 2582, 0.0], [2582, 2719, 0.0], [2719, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 97, 17.0], [97, 116, 3.0], [116, 155, 8.0], [155, 312, 28.0], [312, 493, 27.0], [493, 560, 13.0], [560, 589, 5.0], [589, 712, 23.0], [712, 743, 6.0], [743, 1051, 49.0], [1051, 1079, 4.0], [1079, 1438, 68.0], [1438, 1546, 21.0], [1546, 1684, 20.0], [1684, 1766, 15.0], [1766, 1811, 9.0], [1811, 2002, 32.0], [2002, 2230, 42.0], [2230, 2354, 22.0], [2354, 2410, 10.0], [2410, 2582, 31.0], [2582, 2719, 25.0], [2719, 2866, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 97, 0.0], [97, 116, 0.0], [116, 155, 0.28571429], [155, 312, 0.0], [312, 493, 0.02325581], [493, 560, 0.0], [560, 589, 0.0], [589, 712, 0.0173913], [712, 743, 0.0], [743, 1051, 0.01320132], [1051, 1079, 0.0], [1079, 1438, 0.03142857], [1438, 1546, 0.03809524], [1546, 1684, 0.0], [1684, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 1811, 0.0], [1811, 2002, 0.04301075], [2002, 2230, 0.02262443], [2230, 2354, 0.0], [2354, 2410, 0.0], [2410, 2582, 0.02380952], [2582, 2719, 0.05426357], [2719, 2866, 0.07857143]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 97, 0.0], [97, 116, 0.0], [116, 155, 0.0], [155, 312, 0.0], [312, 493, 0.0], [493, 560, 0.0], [560, 589, 0.0], [589, 712, 0.0], [712, 743, 0.0], [743, 1051, 0.0], [1051, 1079, 0.0], [1079, 1438, 0.0], [1438, 1546, 0.0], [1546, 1684, 0.0], [1684, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 1811, 0.0], [1811, 2002, 0.0], [2002, 2230, 0.0], [2230, 2354, 0.0], [2354, 2410, 0.0], [2410, 2582, 0.0], [2582, 2719, 0.0], [2719, 2866, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 97, 0.16494845], [97, 116, 0.15789474], [116, 155, 0.07692308], [155, 312, 0.05095541], [312, 493, 0.06077348], [493, 560, 0.02985075], [560, 589, 0.17241379], [589, 712, 0.03252033], [712, 743, 0.19354839], [743, 1051, 0.06493506], [1051, 1079, 0.14285714], [1079, 1438, 0.03342618], [1438, 1546, 0.01851852], [1546, 1684, 0.05797101], [1684, 1766, 0.1097561], [1766, 1811, 0.17777778], [1811, 2002, 0.02617801], [2002, 2230, 0.10087719], [2230, 2354, 0.06451613], [2354, 2410, 0.17857143], [2410, 2582, 0.05232558], [2582, 2719, 0.05109489], [2719, 2866, 0.06122449]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2866, 0.47762388]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2866, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2866, 0.96713746]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2866, -162.17584473]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2866, 21.8975368]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2866, 32.91426208]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2866, 26.0]]}
Professor Loh Xian Jun Professor Loh completed his basic and postgraduate studies at the National University of Singapore. A polymer chemist by training, he is currently the Executive Director of the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE), A*STAR. As a pioneer in the area of biodegradable thermogels, he is highly knowledgeable in developing these materials for various applications spanning biomedical, engineering, cosmetics, personal care and food. His scientific contributions have earned him the position of Fellowship in Fitzwiliam College in the University of Cambridge. He holds multiple Fellowships in the Royal Society of Chemistry, Singapore National Institute of Chemistry, Institution of Engineering and Technology and The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining. With his extensive experience in authoring >250 journal papers, 38 patents and know-hows, >30 book chapters and 7 books, he currently sits on several editorial boards of international journals as an expert in his area. He is a multiple Highly Cited Researcher awardee by Clarivate Analytics. He has also successfully helped in the commercialization of 8 different products and is always interested in the translation of science to products. He is also a co-founder of a spin-off, Vitreogel Innovations, a company which looks at developing thermogels for retinal detachment treatment. Professor Lu Yixin Professor LU Yixin studied chemistry and received his B.Sc. from Fudan University and continued his graduate studies in Canada and obtained his Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry under the supervision of George Just from McGill University in 2000. He then carried out his postdoctoral research with Peter W. Schiller at Clinical Research Institute of Montreal, and subsequently worked as an RCMS fellow with Ryoji Noyori at Nagoya University. In September 2003, He started his independent career and joined the National University of Singapore (NUS) where he is now a Professor. Currently, he is Head of Department of Chemistry. His research focuses on asymmetric catalysis and synthesis. His group has developed a wide range of organocatalysts that can be readily derived from natural amino acids, which have been commercialized by Tokyo Chemical Industry (TCI) Co. Ltd. and Daicel Chiral Technologies Co. Ltd. He is currently an Editorial Advisory Board member for Accounts of Chemical Research, a flagship journal published by the American Chemical Society. He also won numerous awards, including an NRF Investigatorship Award in 20118, among others. Assoc Professor Zhao Yu Assoc Professor Zhao Yu obtained his B.S. in Chemistry at Peking University in 2002 where he carried out his undergraduate research with Prof Limin Qi on Surface Chemistry. In the same year, he went abroad to Boston College and obtained his Ph.D. in Organic Chemistry in 2008 under the guidance of Prof. Marc L.Snapper and Prof. Amir H. Hoveyda. After that he had the honor of working with Nobel laureate Prof. Richard R. Schrock at MIT as a postdoctoral associate in the field of organometallic chemistry. In 2011 he was awarded the prestigious NRF fellowship from singapore and joined Department of Chemistry at NUS as an assistant professor. In July 2017 he was promoted to associate professor of chemistry. Hon Treasurer Dr Ken Lee Chi Lik Dr Ken Lee has more than 15 years of R&D Project Management experience of which majority of his efforts are centred on sustainable technologies and diagnostics research and development. Dr Ken obtained his B.Sc (Hons) and Ph.D. degrees in Chemistry from the National University of Singapore and later spent 3 years working in a drug discovery and development company before his current appointment as a Centre Manager in Singapore Polytechnic's Centre for Biomedical and Life Sciences, and concurrently as a Senior Manager in Food Innovation and Resource Centre. His research focuses on broad areas of Organic Chemistry, Chemical Biology and Diagnostic Technology in both Environmental and Biomedical industries. As a Principal Investigator from the Centre of Biomedical and Life Sciences, Dr Ken leads a team of post-doctoral researchers and engineers, Polytechnic lecturers and full-time diploma students. As a Senior Manager from the Food Innovation and Resource Centre, he leads 2 full-time Principal Investigators and 7 researchers. He has published several papers in refereed journals and has 7 patent applications. Currently, the focus of his research is on the practical applications of near-infrared (NIR) dyes, Continuous Flow Chemistry and Point-of-Care Diagnostic Technology development. His teaching experience from NUS and SP focuses on Organic Chemistry, Analytical Chemistry and Chemical Biology. In his short academic career in Singapore Polytechnic, he has been awarded a total of >S$4.5mil from internal and external grants (supported by NRF, MOE, GSK, EDB and PUB) as a Principal Investigator; including his role as Co-Principal Investigator, his total funds have gathered >S$6.0mil. he enjoys strong networking with the biomedical, pharmaceutical, and research industries, and more importantly, he has strong links with the relevant government industries through collaborations and grant proposals writing. He also works very closely with new start-ups by providing consultancy services and he is also a Technical Assessor with Singapore Accreditation Council (SAC-Singlas) where he has obtained a Gold award in 2014. Hon Asst Secretary Dr Zong Yun Dr Zong Yun is the Head of the Department of Molecular Materials at the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering under the Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), Singapore. He was an Organometallic Chemist by training from Wuhan University and completed his PhD in Materials Science at the Max-Planck Institute of Polymer Research, Germany. He has been in various management positions and sits at in a number of committees which helped to manage research and innovation, industry and enterprise, space and procurement, as well as nurturing and development of talents. His major scientific achievements include a number of inventions, e.g. Optics-integrated Quartz Crystal Microbalance; A low-temperature method to producing white-light emitting nanocrystals; An approach for high-quality ternary and quaternary quantum dots to be produced in bulk cost-effectively; A low-cost UV-blocking materials system. In service, he was a founding member of A*STAR Chemistry Club, a Technical Advisor of Int-Mat Technologies Pte Ltd., and is the Vice President of Singapore National Institute of Chemistry (SNIC), an Associate Editor of Journal of Molecular and Engineering Materials (World Scientific Publishing), and an Editorial Board member of Translational Materials Research under IOP Publishing, United Kingdom. He has co-led the organising committees of a number of international conferences, represented by The 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and 5th Molecular Materials Meeting (M3)@Singapore, The 15th Asian Chemical Congress, and The 41st International Conference on Coordination Chemistry. As a Senior Scientist at IMRE, he concurrently heads the Science and Engineering Research Council (SERC)'s Advanced Energy Storage Research Programme, and his research mainly focuses on the development of new materials and systems for rechargeable Zinc-air and Lithium-Sulfur batteries. Hon Asst Treasurer Assoc Professor Lu Jiong Dr LU Jiong is an associate professor at Department of Chemistry and Institute for Functional Intelligent Materials at NUS. Dr. Lu received his bachelor degree from Fudan University (China) in 2007 and Ph.D. degree from National University of Singapore (NUS) in 2011. After that, he worked as a postdoc fellow in Graphene Research Centre at NUS, and then move to Department of Physics, UC Berkeley. His current research interests include atomic-scale materials design and investigation of atomic-scale nanoscience in low-dimensional electronic/magnetic materials and quantum materials towards next-generation solid-state devices and atomically precise catalysis. His group has published more than 100 peer-reviewed papers in top-tier journals including Nature Materials, Nature Nanotechnology, Nature Electronics, Nature Communications and Science Advances. His publications were highlighted in several Nature series journal, numerous media reports, and also selected as JACS Early Career Investigator 2021 virtual collection. Dr. Lu is a recipient of JMCA Emerging Investigators 2019 and NUS Faculty of Science Young Scientist Award (2021). Asst Professor Mihaiela Stuparu Asst Prof Mihaiela Stuparu is an Assistant Professor in Chemistry at NTU. She obtained her doctoral degree in the group of Prof. A. D. Schlüter from ETH-Zürich, Switzerland. In 2009, she received the Ambizione fellowship from the Swiss National Science Foundation. Her research focus is on the preparation of corannulene-based polymers differing in their chemical composition and architecture together with studying their properties. Dr Fung Fun Man Dr. Fung Fun Man is a Singaporean instructor of Chemistry at the National University of Singapore (NUS). He earned his post-graduate degrees from NUS and Technical University of Munich. Dr. Fung is the national representative of Singapore National Institute of Chemistry at IUPAC Committee on Chemical Education, and he serves as a member of the Editorial Advisory Board (2021—present) at the Journal of Chemical Education, ACS Publications. He was elected to serve on the International Chemistry Olympiad (IChO) steering committee for two terms (2014—2018) and as elected secretary of the International Younger Chemists Network (IYCN) (2019—2021). He is a recipient of the IUPAC Periodic Table of Younger Chemists award (Fluorine). Dr Liu Xiaogang Dr. Liu Xiaogang is an Assistant Professor at the Singapore University of Technology and Design (SUTD). He obtained his Ph.D. degree from the University of Cambridge in 2014. He began his independent research with Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART) as a SMART Scholar (2014—2016). After joining SUTD in 2017, he led the Fluorescence Research Group to conduct research on the structure-property relationships of organic dyes, as well as develop high-performance fluorescent products for a wide range of applications (i.e., fluorescence imaging and sensing). Xiaogang and his co-workers’ research has been voted as the #4 of Top 10 Breakthroughs in Physics for 2010 by Physics World, highlighted by ACS Noteworthy Chemistry (2014), and featured in Chemical & Engineering News (C&EN) of American Chemical Society (2020). Dr Wendy Leong Wendy is an Intellectual Property (IP) Specialist at ResMed, a medical device company that helps people with sleep apnea, COPD and other chronic diseases. Prior to joining ResMed, Wendy was at a boutique IP law firm where she advised clients on their patent filing strategy, drafted patent specifications and assisted in worldwide prosecution of patent applications. She is regularly invited to speak about IP and IP-related careers, thereby promoting IP awareness. Wendy obtained her PhD in Chemistry from the Nanyang Technological University and her BSc (Honours) in Chemistry from the National University of Singapore. She has been an active SNIC member since 2017 and was the co-Chairman of the SNIC Membership Committee (which was renamed to the SNIC Industry Chapter) from 2017-2020. During her tenure as co-Chairman, she regularly organized events to (i) connect academia and industry; (ii) connect students with industry professionals; (ii) spearheaded initiatives like the SNIC mentorship programme and collaborations between SNIC and the Royal Society of Chemistry (Singapore Chapter). In recognition of her commendable contributions, she was awarded the SNICMerit Service Award in 2019. In her free time, Wendy loves to “match make” her friends for networking and dating purposes. Co-op Council Member Professor Shunsuke Chiba Professor Shunsuke Chiba is a Professor at the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. He has been at NTU since April 2007 and was awarded tenure in 2012. Prof. Chiba received his M.Sc. and Ph.D. degrees from The University of Tokyo. His research interests include synthetic organic chemistry - the development of new synthetic reactions and synthesis of natural and unnatural products. He has received many awards such as the Thieme Chemistry Journal Award, Asian Core Program Lectureship Award, GSK-SNIC Award in Organic Chemistry, and the Chemical Society of Japan Award for Young Chemists. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and an Advisory Board Member of the Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry journal by RSC. Dr Xu Jianwei Dr Xu Jianwei is currently a Principal Scientist I at the Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE) , Agency for Science, Research and Technology (A*STAR), and he is also an Adjunct Research Associate Professor in the Department of Chemistry at the National University of Singapore (NUS). Dr Xu received his B.S. and his M.S. in Chemistry from Department of Chemistry, Nanjing University in China in 1988 and 1991, respectively. He graduated from NUS with a Ph.D. degree in 2000. Dr Xu joined IMRE in 2000. From 2011 to 2016, he was appointed as the Head of Synthesis and Integration Capability Group that is the largest research capability group in IMRE. Currently, he is a Strategic Research Councilor of IMRE, A*STAR. He is also program manager of A*STAR, Science and Engineering Research Council (SERC) hybrid thermoelectric program. In IMRE, his major research work is focusing on the development of functional polymer materials, hybrid materials, high-temperature lubrication materials, and liquid crystalline materials for various applications. In particular, he has been leading/participating numerous industry-funded projects since he joined IMRE. He has collaborated with many multinational companies including Seagate International Technology, Boeing Company, Procter & Gamble, Rolls Royce, SIA Engineering Company, Honeywell, Symrise, Sumitomo Bakelite, etc. He has published more than one hundred papers in refereed journals, filed more twenty patents and company know-hows, some of them have been licensed to the Singapore and US companies for commercialization. Since 2012, he has been elected as one of the SNIC council members. Professor JJ Vittal Professor JJ Vittal received his BSc from the University of Madras, MSc from Madurai University and PhD from Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore. While working as a postdoctoral fellow and a research associate at the University of Western Ontario, Canada, he was trained in X-ray crystallography by Prof. Nicholas C Payne. Later he managed the X-ray facility in the Department of Chemistry until he left for Singapore. JJ accepted a faculty position as a Senior Lecturer at the National University of Singapore (NUS) in 1997 and established Service Crystallography Laboratory in the Department of Chemistry for their central instrumentation facility. He is currently a Professor in the Department of Chemistry. He held a World Class University Chair Professorship at the Gyeongsang National University, Jinju, South Korea (2009-2013). JJ is interested in the design & synthesis of coordination polymers & metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), crystal engineering, solid-state chemistry, materials and reactivity. He co-authored ‘Crystal Engineering – A Textbook’ with G.R. Desiraju (IISc) and A. Ramanan (IIT-Delhi). He also co-edited two books on crystal engineering with E.R.T. Tiekink. He is a Fellow of Royal Society of Chemistry and Singapore National Institute of Chemistry. He holds editorial board membership in several journals including ACS Crystal Growth & Design and Nature Scientific Reports. He won several awards including Chemical Research Society of India, CRSI Medal (2020), Outstanding Chemist Award (2014), CRISP Award (2013), Outstanding Research Award (2011) and Best Scientist Award (2007). JJ was highlighted in Angewandte Author Profile (2014). He is the founder and an Organizing Committee member of Singapore National Crystal Growing Challenge (1997-2016). He is an international committee member of Worldwide IUCr Crystal Growing Competition for School Children since 2014. He extensively published over 500 original research papers, authoritative reviews and book chapters and over 250 opening, plenary, keynote and invited talks at national and international conferences. According to the recent Google Scholar his publications has been cited ~22,300 times with an h-index of 74. ORCID: 0000-0001-8302-0733 and Researcher ID: B-2541-2010 Dr Zhu Qiang Dr Zhu Qiang obtained his Ph.D. from the Department of Chemistry of National University of Singapore (NUS) in 2010. His Ph.D supervisor is Prof Lu Yixin at NUS. After graduation, he joined Albany Molecular Research Inc (AMRI, USA MNC) as a senior research scientist for 5 years, mainly working on contract research for various Pharm giants. In 2015, he joined The Institute of Materials Research and Engineering (IMRE, A*STAR) as a research scientist. Currently, he is the Department Head of Advanced Characterization and Instrumentation (ACI) and Head of Research Liaison Office (RLO) in IMRE, A*STAR. His research interests include phase change materials, functional polymers, and polymer nanocomposites. He has been researching chemical formulations for different industry partners in Buildings, Logistics, Machinery sectors, and others. 2022 Council Asst.Hon Secretary Asst Hon Treasurer Prof Loh Xian Jun Prof Lu Yixin Assoc Prof Zhao Yu Assoc Prof Lu Jiong Asst Prof Mihaiela Stuparu Prof Shunsuke Chiba Dr Xu Jian Wei Prof JJ Vittal Prof Tan Choon Hong Dr Dien Pandiman Dr Leong Lai Peng Prof Hardy Chan Sze On Assoc Prof Ling Xing Yi Assoc Prof Ang Wee Han Dr Zhao Yu Dr James Wang Jian Min Assoc Prof Yan Yaw Kai Asst Prof Mihaela Stuparu Asst. Hon Secretary Dr Li Xu Dr Ng Kai Ling Assoc Prof Loh Xian Jun
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/10967
{"url": "https://snic.org.sg/index.php/about-snic/the-council", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "snic.org.sg", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:35:26Z", "digest": "sha1:7KSC7NFYRALWMT3S32LUTHMQVXA7NU7P"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 18003, 18003.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 18003, 22278.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 18003, 60.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 18003, 284.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 18003, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 18003, 146.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 18003, 0.28027786]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 18003, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 18003, 0.00771521]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 18003, 0.08033297]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 18003, 0.0578641]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 18003, 0.03444775]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 18003, 0.02720628]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 18003, 0.01421224]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 18003, 0.01414456]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 18003, 0.01218192]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 18003, 0.01766378]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 18003, 0.04711568]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 18003, 0.17849592]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 18003, 0.33444692]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 18003, 5.48478099]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 18003, 0.00030202]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 18003, 5.76226172]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 18003, 2694.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 1382, 1.0], [1382, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 2547, 1.0], [2547, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 3282, 1.0], [3282, 3296, 0.0], [3296, 3315, 0.0], [3315, 5454, 1.0], [5454, 5473, 0.0], [5473, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7368, 1.0], [7368, 7387, 0.0], [7387, 7412, 0.0], [7412, 8554, 1.0], [8554, 8586, 0.0], [8586, 9020, 1.0], [9020, 9036, 0.0], [9036, 9769, 1.0], [9769, 9785, 0.0], [9785, 10366, 1.0], [10366, 10627, 1.0], [10627, 10642, 0.0], [10642, 11108, 1.0], [11108, 11934, 1.0], [11934, 11955, 0.0], [11955, 11980, 0.0], [11980, 12717, 1.0], [12717, 12731, 0.0], [12731, 14389, 1.0], [14389, 14409, 0.0], [14409, 15247, 1.0], [15247, 16675, 0.0], [16675, 16688, 0.0], [16688, 17529, 1.0], [17529, 17542, 0.0], [17542, 17561, 0.0], [17561, 17580, 0.0], [17580, 17598, 0.0], [17598, 17612, 0.0], [17612, 17631, 0.0], [17631, 17651, 0.0], [17651, 17678, 0.0], [17678, 17698, 0.0], [17698, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 17728, 0.0], [17728, 17748, 0.0], [17748, 17765, 0.0], [17765, 17783, 0.0], [17783, 17806, 0.0], [17806, 17830, 0.0], [17830, 17853, 0.0], [17853, 17864, 0.0], [17864, 17887, 0.0], [17887, 17910, 0.0], [17910, 17936, 0.0], [17936, 17956, 0.0], [17956, 17965, 0.0], [17965, 17980, 0.0], [17980, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 1382, 0.0], [1382, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 2547, 0.0], [2547, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 3282, 0.0], [3282, 3296, 0.0], [3296, 3315, 0.0], [3315, 5454, 0.0], [5454, 5473, 0.0], [5473, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7368, 0.0], [7368, 7387, 0.0], [7387, 7412, 0.0], [7412, 8554, 0.0], [8554, 8586, 0.0], [8586, 9020, 0.0], [9020, 9036, 0.0], [9036, 9769, 0.0], [9769, 9785, 0.0], [9785, 10366, 0.0], [10366, 10627, 0.0], [10627, 10642, 0.0], [10642, 11108, 0.0], [11108, 11934, 0.0], [11934, 11955, 0.0], [11955, 11980, 0.0], [11980, 12717, 0.0], [12717, 12731, 0.0], [12731, 14389, 0.0], [14389, 14409, 0.0], [14409, 15247, 0.0], [15247, 16675, 0.0], [16675, 16688, 0.0], [16688, 17529, 0.0], [17529, 17542, 0.0], [17542, 17561, 0.0], [17561, 17580, 0.0], [17580, 17598, 0.0], [17598, 17612, 0.0], [17612, 17631, 0.0], [17631, 17651, 0.0], [17651, 17678, 0.0], [17678, 17698, 0.0], [17698, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 17728, 0.0], [17728, 17748, 0.0], [17748, 17765, 0.0], [17765, 17783, 0.0], [17783, 17806, 0.0], [17806, 17830, 0.0], [17830, 17853, 0.0], [17853, 17864, 0.0], [17864, 17887, 0.0], [17887, 17910, 0.0], [17910, 17936, 0.0], [17936, 17956, 0.0], [17956, 17965, 0.0], [17965, 17980, 0.0], [17980, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 23, 4.0], [23, 1382, 199.0], [1382, 1401, 3.0], [1401, 2547, 176.0], [2547, 2571, 4.0], [2571, 3282, 119.0], [3282, 3296, 2.0], [3296, 3315, 5.0], [3315, 5454, 315.0], [5454, 5473, 3.0], [5473, 5485, 3.0], [5485, 7368, 268.0], [7368, 7387, 3.0], [7387, 7412, 4.0], [7412, 8554, 159.0], [8554, 8586, 4.0], [8586, 9020, 63.0], [9020, 9036, 4.0], [9036, 9769, 110.0], [9769, 9785, 3.0], [9785, 10366, 85.0], [10366, 10627, 40.0], [10627, 10642, 3.0], [10642, 11108, 71.0], [11108, 11934, 123.0], [11934, 11955, 3.0], [11955, 11980, 3.0], [11980, 12717, 116.0], [12717, 12731, 3.0], [12731, 14389, 246.0], [14389, 14409, 3.0], [14409, 15247, 127.0], [15247, 16675, 199.0], [16675, 16688, 3.0], [16688, 17529, 124.0], [17529, 17542, 2.0], [17542, 17561, 2.0], [17561, 17580, 3.0], [17580, 17598, 4.0], [17598, 17612, 3.0], [17612, 17631, 4.0], [17631, 17651, 4.0], [17651, 17678, 4.0], [17678, 17698, 3.0], [17698, 17713, 4.0], [17713, 17728, 3.0], [17728, 17748, 4.0], [17748, 17765, 3.0], [17765, 17783, 4.0], [17783, 17806, 5.0], [17806, 17830, 5.0], [17830, 17853, 5.0], [17853, 17864, 3.0], [17864, 17887, 5.0], [17887, 17910, 5.0], [17910, 17936, 4.0], [17936, 17956, 3.0], [17956, 17965, 3.0], [17965, 17980, 4.0], [17980, 18003, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 1382, 0.00678222], [1382, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 2547, 0.01162791], [2547, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 3282, 0.02305476], [3282, 3296, 0.0], [3296, 3315, 0.0], [3315, 5454, 0.00672753], [5454, 5473, 0.0], [5473, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7368, 0.00493963], [7368, 7387, 0.0], [7387, 7412, 0.0], [7412, 8554, 0.02075812], [8554, 8586, 0.0], [8586, 9020, 0.00943396], [9020, 9036, 0.0], [9036, 9769, 0.02824859], [9769, 9785, 0.0], [9785, 10366, 0.02872531], [10366, 10627, 0.06097561], [10627, 10642, 0.0], [10642, 11108, 0.0], [11108, 11934, 0.02], [11934, 11955, 0.0], [11955, 11980, 0.0], [11980, 12717, 0.01112656], [12717, 12731, 0.0], [12731, 14389, 0.01754386], [14389, 14409, 0.0], [14409, 15247, 0.01468788], [15247, 16675, 0.05375552], [16675, 16688, 0.0], [16688, 17529, 0.01116625], [17529, 17542, 0.33333333], [17542, 17561, 0.0], [17561, 17580, 0.0], [17580, 17598, 0.0], [17598, 17612, 0.0], [17612, 17631, 0.0], [17631, 17651, 0.0], [17651, 17678, 0.0], [17678, 17698, 0.0], [17698, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 17728, 0.0], [17728, 17748, 0.0], [17748, 17765, 0.0], [17765, 17783, 0.0], [17783, 17806, 0.0], [17806, 17830, 0.0], [17830, 17853, 0.0], [17853, 17864, 0.0], [17864, 17887, 0.0], [17887, 17910, 0.0], [17910, 17936, 0.0], [17936, 17956, 0.0], [17956, 17965, 0.0], [17965, 17980, 0.0], [17980, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 1382, 0.0], [1382, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 2547, 0.0], [2547, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 3282, 0.0], [3282, 3296, 0.0], [3296, 3315, 0.0], [3315, 5454, 0.0], [5454, 5473, 0.0], [5473, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7368, 0.0], [7368, 7387, 0.0], [7387, 7412, 0.0], [7412, 8554, 0.0], [8554, 8586, 0.0], [8586, 9020, 0.0], [9020, 9036, 0.0], [9036, 9769, 0.0], [9769, 9785, 0.0], [9785, 10366, 0.0], [10366, 10627, 0.0], [10627, 10642, 0.0], [10642, 11108, 0.0], [11108, 11934, 0.0], [11934, 11955, 0.0], [11955, 11980, 0.0], [11980, 12717, 0.0], [12717, 12731, 0.0], [12731, 14389, 0.0], [14389, 14409, 0.0], [14409, 15247, 0.0], [15247, 16675, 0.0], [16675, 16688, 0.0], [16688, 17529, 0.0], [17529, 17542, 0.0], [17542, 17561, 0.0], [17561, 17580, 0.0], [17580, 17598, 0.0], [17598, 17612, 0.0], [17612, 17631, 0.0], [17631, 17651, 0.0], [17651, 17678, 0.0], [17678, 17698, 0.0], [17698, 17713, 0.0], [17713, 17728, 0.0], [17728, 17748, 0.0], [17748, 17765, 0.0], [17765, 17783, 0.0], [17783, 17806, 0.0], [17806, 17830, 0.0], [17830, 17853, 0.0], [17853, 17864, 0.0], [17864, 17887, 0.0], [17887, 17910, 0.0], [17910, 17936, 0.0], [17936, 17956, 0.0], [17956, 17965, 0.0], [17965, 17980, 0.0], [17980, 18003, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.17391304], [23, 1382, 0.04120677], [1382, 1401, 0.15789474], [1401, 2547, 0.06893543], [2547, 2571, 0.16666667], [2571, 3282, 0.06891702], [3282, 3296, 0.14285714], [3296, 3315, 0.26315789], [3315, 5454, 0.05610098], [5454, 5473, 0.15789474], [5473, 5485, 0.25], [5485, 7368, 0.06956984], [7368, 7387, 0.15789474], [7387, 7412, 0.16], [7412, 8554, 0.06567426], [8554, 8586, 0.125], [8586, 9020, 0.06221198], [9020, 9036, 0.25], [9036, 9769, 0.0941337], [9769, 9785, 0.1875], [9785, 10366, 0.07745267], [10366, 10627, 0.07662835], [10627, 10642, 0.2], [10642, 11108, 0.05364807], [11108, 11934, 0.06900726], [11934, 11955, 0.14285714], [11955, 11980, 0.12], [11980, 12717, 0.08548168], [12717, 12731, 0.21428571], [12731, 14389, 0.08082027], [14389, 14409, 0.2], [14409, 15247, 0.07637232], [15247, 16675, 0.07492997], [16675, 16688, 0.23076923], [16688, 17529, 0.09869203], [17529, 17542, 0.07692308], [17542, 17561, 0.15789474], [17561, 17580, 0.15789474], [17580, 17598, 0.22222222], [17598, 17612, 0.21428571], [17612, 17631, 0.21052632], [17631, 17651, 0.2], [17651, 17678, 0.14814815], [17678, 17698, 0.15], [17698, 17713, 0.26666667], [17713, 17728, 0.26666667], [17728, 17748, 0.2], [17748, 17765, 0.17647059], [17765, 17783, 0.22222222], [17783, 17806, 0.2173913], [17806, 17830, 0.20833333], [17830, 17853, 0.2173913], [17853, 17864, 0.27272727], [17864, 17887, 0.2173913], [17887, 17910, 0.2173913], [17910, 17936, 0.15384615], [17936, 17956, 0.15], [17956, 17965, 0.33333333], [17965, 17980, 0.26666667], [17980, 18003, 0.2173913]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 18003, 0.31590551]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 18003, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 18003, 0.93241668]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 18003, -834.16812793]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 18003, -104.18735822]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 18003, 503.70233553]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 18003, 175.0]]}
Vietnam’s growing protest culture explained DemDigest August 12, 2016 February 8, 2019 The Formosa scandal in Vietnam has recently made international headlines and offered the international community a rare glimpse into the fringe, but steadily growing, culture of protest and activism in the authoritarian state, notes analyst Arthur Beaufort. The ecological catastrophe, which saw millions of fish die in central Vietnam due to improper waste disposal by a Taiwanese-owned steel factory, triggered demonstrations around the country — an unusual occurrence in Vietnam, he writes for The Diplomat: Stark socio-economic inequalities and aspirations for fairer living conditions have also come to the forefront. In mid-2015, a staggering 17,000 employees working for footwear manufacturer Pou Chen Group went on a three-day strike in a plant in Dong Nai Province, southern Vietnam, to resist the implementation of new benefits regulation. Likewise, the previously latent frustration with the ho khau system has progressively become more vocal. This permit of residence, in effect an institutionalized form of urban apartheid, limits internal relocation and has created an estimated 5.6 million second-class citizens who have limited access to public schools or pay more for government-subsidized electricity and water. “Evidently the absence of democratic institutions and human rights concerns are central problems for many citizens,” Beaufort adds. “There are numerous examples of political dissidents and bloggers who have taken it upon themselves to defy the state and inform the international community of this darker aspect of life in Vietnam.” The Vietnam Committee on Human Rights, with the co-sponsorship of the Center for Religious Freedom of the Hudson Institute, cordially invites you to the Conference: “Religious Freedom in Vietnam: Its Importance for Regional and Global Security” Monday 12th September 2016 12.00 to 2.00pm at the Center for Religious Freedom, Hudson Institute 1201 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W., Suite 400 Washington, DC 20004 Speakers include Elliott Abrams, Former US Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights [and a National Endowment for Democracy board member]; Katrina Arriaga de Bucholz, Executive Director of the Becket Fund for Religious Freedom and USCIRF Commissioner; Nina Shea, Director of the Hudson Institute’s Center for Religious Freedom; Vo Van Ai, President of the Vietnam Committee on Human Rights and representatives of Vietnamese religious communities. The Conference will feature a panel discussion on “Religious Freedom and American Policy in the Next Administration”, and a panel on “Violations of the right to freedom of religion or belief in Vietnam” with testimonies from Buddhists, Catholics, Hmong Christians, Montagnards, Khmer Krom Buddhists. A roundtable session on strategies and best practices for interfaith coalition building to promote and protect freedom of religion or belief in Vietnam and South East Asia will be held from 2.00pm to 4.00pm. A light lunch will be served at 11.30am. Please reply to Vietnam Committee on Human Rights (name and email contact) – vietnam.committee@gmail.com or Penelope Faulkner: penelope.faulkner@gmail.com. Analysis, Asia, Authoritarianism, Civil Society, Communist regimes, Democratic Governance, Democratic institutions, Dictatorships, dissent, Human rights, National Endowment for Democracy, religious freedom, Vietnam National Endowment for Democracy, religious freedom, religious freedom in Vietnam, Vietnam Democracy in China: It’s in the eye of the beholder? Failing the democracy test: Venezuela
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/11291
{"url": "https://www.demdigest.org/vietnams-growing-protest-culture-explained/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.demdigest.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:28:25Z", "digest": "sha1:TP5POKQH5NOPC4CBBTVFNJS7IVOK5XJO"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3607, 3607.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3607, 12930.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3607, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3607, 125.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3607, 0.89]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3607, 276.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3607, 0.27838258]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3607, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3607, 0.09776443]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3607, 0.06940274]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3607, 0.01167835]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3607, 0.02535869]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3607, 0.02302302]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3607, 0.01088647]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3607, 0.18973561]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3607, 0.58494208]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3607, 5.78571429]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3607, 5.19898406]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3607, 518.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 87, 0.0], [87, 598, 0.0], [598, 937, 1.0], [937, 1317, 1.0], [1317, 1649, 1.0], [1649, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1894, 1.0], [1894, 2054, 0.0], [2054, 2506, 1.0], [2506, 3014, 1.0], [3014, 3055, 1.0], [3055, 3211, 1.0], [3211, 3517, 0.0], [3517, 3570, 1.0], [3570, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 87, 0.0], [87, 598, 0.0], [598, 937, 0.0], [937, 1317, 0.0], [1317, 1649, 0.0], [1649, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1894, 0.0], [1894, 2054, 0.0], [2054, 2506, 0.0], [2506, 3014, 0.0], [3014, 3055, 0.0], [3055, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3517, 0.0], [3517, 3570, 0.0], [3570, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 44, 5.0], [44, 87, 7.0], [87, 598, 75.0], [598, 937, 50.0], [937, 1317, 54.0], [1317, 1649, 50.0], [1649, 1814, 25.0], [1814, 1894, 11.0], [1894, 2054, 24.0], [2054, 2506, 65.0], [2506, 3014, 78.0], [3014, 3055, 8.0], [3055, 3211, 18.0], [3211, 3517, 33.0], [3517, 3570, 10.0], [3570, 3607, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 87, 0.275], [87, 598, 0.0], [598, 937, 0.02735562], [937, 1317, 0.00539084], [1317, 1649, 0.0], [1649, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1894, 0.0], [1894, 2054, 0.16556291], [2054, 2506, 0.0], [2506, 3014, 0.01204819], [3014, 3055, 0.10526316], [3055, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3517, 0.0], [3517, 3570, 0.0], [3570, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 87, 0.0], [87, 598, 0.0], [598, 937, 0.0], [937, 1317, 0.0], [1317, 1649, 0.0], [1649, 1814, 0.0], [1814, 1894, 0.0], [1894, 2054, 0.0], [2054, 2506, 0.0], [2506, 3014, 0.0], [3014, 3055, 0.0], [3055, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3517, 0.0], [3517, 3570, 0.0], [3570, 3607, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.02272727], [44, 87, 0.09302326], [87, 598, 0.02152642], [598, 937, 0.02654867], [937, 1317, 0.00526316], [1317, 1649, 0.01204819], [1649, 1814, 0.06666667], [1814, 1894, 0.1], [1894, 2054, 0.09375], [2054, 2506, 0.1039823], [2506, 3014, 0.04527559], [3014, 3055, 0.02439024], [3055, 3211, 0.04487179], [3211, 3517, 0.06535948], [3517, 3570, 0.05660377], [3570, 3607, 0.05405405]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3607, 0.42426628]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3607, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3607, 0.53481221]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3607, -185.02896967]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3607, 14.2976624]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3607, -24.67492892]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3607, 26.0]]}
Home > Trading > Lifestyle of Tomi Lahren Lifestyle of Tomi Lahren On August 11, 1992, Tomi Rae Augustus Lahren was born. Tomi Lahren is a conservative political commentator and television host from the United States. She hosted Tomi on TheBlaze, where she rose to prominence with her short video segments called “final thoughts,” in which she regularly criticized liberal politics. Many of her videos departed viral, and she was dubbed a “rising media star” by The New York Times. She began employed for Great America Alliance, a support organization supporting Donald Trump. In August 2017, she united Fox News as a contributor, appearing on several different shows across the Fox News and Fox Corporate networks. She is a semi-regular co-host on Outnumbered and currently hosts a Fox Nation talk show, No Interruption. In June 2022, she remained named host of the OutKick reality tv Tomi Lahren Is Fearless. Education Of Tomi Lahren Tomi Lahren was raised in Rapid City, South Dakota, and attended Central High School before graduating in 2010. She is of German and Norwegian descent. Lahren earned a B.A. in program journalism and political science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, in 2014. She hosted and co-produced The Ascent, the university’s political roundtable show. In addition, Lahren worked as the first intern in Republican Congresswoman Kristi Noem’s Rapid City office. Tomi Lahren’s Career Lahren applied to Single America News Network (OANN) in an exploration of an internship in political commentary, received an interview, and remained instead offered the opportunity to host her show. She relocated to San Diego and began working for OANN. In August of 2014, On Opinion with Tomi Lahren premiered. Although, A video of her commentary proceeding the 2015 Chattanooga shootings departed viral in July 2015. Lahren announced on August 19 that she remain required to finish her concluding show with OANN. In November 2015, she repositioned to Texas and began a new show with TheBlaze. She became known for concluding her performances with three-minute segments called “final thoughts,” in which she babbled. Also, These segments quickly went viral on social media. Tomi Lahren Political Opinions Lahren identifies as a “constitutional conservative.” She has stated that she is a commentator, not a journalist and that her shows are not about neutrally presenting news but commentary and “making[ing] the news.” In 2018, The Daily Beast labeled her a “right-wing provocateur.” Lahren has remain labeled an “anti-feminist who admires strong women.” Lahren has remain stated that, while she does not consider herself a feminist, she believes in women’s empowerment and looks up to women on both the political left and right. Also, Tomi Lahren declared her support for abortion rights in March 2017, drawing criticism from several anti-abortion writers. Glenn Beck, the owner of TheBlaze, and others pointed out that Lahren had publicly stated that she was anti-abortion. Although, Lahren described the “highlight” of her Thanksgiving as watching the U.S. Border Patrol fire tear gas at migrants attempting to cross the Mexico–United States border illegally. In addition, she aired a Fox Nation segment. Also, In December 2018, focusing on how members of a Central American migrant caravan that had been stopped in Mexico that year were carrying diseases. Lifestyle of Tomi Lahren Also read: How To Get Bitcoin Price From Google Finance Review Lifestyle of Tomi Lahren. Cancel reply Rapido Run Full Plan 0.03 Eth Guide To USD Coin: An Ethereum-Based Stablecoin Fantasy Trade Value Chart – Analysis of Trade Values Trading Card Database – Everything You Want To Know About It Mystic Nails – Mystic Salon Form
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/11436
{"url": "https://www.justbuffer.com/lifestyle-of-tomi-lahren/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.justbuffer.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:55:40Z", "digest": "sha1:5U75G33QTAUNVQBKM6N6LF7CIVG75PLX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3727, 3727.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3727, 5368.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3727, 20.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3727, 106.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3727, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3727, 298.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3727, 0.27769986]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3727, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3727, 0.02560735]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3727, 0.02560735]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3727, 0.02560735]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3727, 0.03611293]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3727, 0.01969796]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3727, 0.02757715]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3727, 0.01262272]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3727, 0.17251052]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3727, 0.52791878]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3727, 5.15397631]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3727, 5.22606101]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3727, 591.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 67, 0.0], [67, 482, 1.0], [482, 911, 1.0], [911, 936, 0.0], [936, 1393, 1.0], [1393, 1414, 0.0], [1414, 1726, 1.0], [1726, 2189, 1.0], [2189, 2220, 0.0], [2220, 2500, 1.0], [2500, 2992, 1.0], [2992, 3401, 0.0], [3401, 3457, 0.0], [3457, 3503, 0.0], [3503, 3533, 0.0], [3533, 3581, 0.0], [3581, 3634, 0.0], [3634, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 67, 0.0], [67, 482, 0.0], [482, 911, 0.0], [911, 936, 0.0], [936, 1393, 0.0], [1393, 1414, 0.0], [1414, 1726, 0.0], [1726, 2189, 0.0], [2189, 2220, 0.0], [2220, 2500, 0.0], [2500, 2992, 0.0], [2992, 3401, 0.0], [3401, 3457, 0.0], [3457, 3503, 0.0], [3503, 3533, 0.0], [3533, 3581, 0.0], [3581, 3634, 0.0], [3634, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 42, 6.0], [42, 67, 4.0], [67, 482, 68.0], [482, 911, 69.0], [911, 936, 4.0], [936, 1393, 71.0], [1393, 1414, 3.0], [1414, 1726, 50.0], [1726, 2189, 72.0], [2189, 2220, 4.0], [2220, 2500, 43.0], [2500, 2992, 77.0], [2992, 3401, 64.0], [3401, 3457, 10.0], [3457, 3503, 7.0], [3503, 3533, 6.0], [3533, 3581, 7.0], [3581, 3634, 9.0], [3634, 3695, 11.0], [3695, 3727, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 67, 0.0], [67, 482, 0.01481481], [482, 911, 0.01918465], [911, 936, 0.0], [936, 1393, 0.01809955], [1393, 1414, 0.0], [1414, 1726, 0.01320132], [1726, 2189, 0.03097345], [2189, 2220, 0.0], [2220, 2500, 0.01476015], [2500, 2992, 0.0083682], [2992, 3401, 0.01002506], [3401, 3457, 0.0], [3457, 3503, 0.0], [3503, 3533, 0.10714286], [3533, 3581, 0.0], [3581, 3634, 0.0], [3634, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 67, 0.0], [67, 482, 0.0], [482, 911, 0.0], [911, 936, 0.0], [936, 1393, 0.0], [1393, 1414, 0.0], [1414, 1726, 0.0], [1726, 2189, 0.0], [2189, 2220, 0.0], [2220, 2500, 0.0], [2500, 2992, 0.0], [2992, 3401, 0.0], [3401, 3457, 0.0], [3457, 3503, 0.0], [3503, 3533, 0.0], [3533, 3581, 0.0], [3581, 3634, 0.0], [3634, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3727, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.11904762], [42, 67, 0.12], [67, 482, 0.04578313], [482, 911, 0.06526807], [911, 936, 0.16], [936, 1393, 0.06564551], [1393, 1414, 0.14285714], [1414, 1726, 0.07051282], [1726, 2189, 0.03887689], [2189, 2220, 0.12903226], [2220, 2500, 0.02142857], [2500, 2992, 0.02235772], [2992, 3401, 0.05378973], [3401, 3457, 0.16071429], [3457, 3503, 0.10869565], [3503, 3533, 0.16666667], [3533, 3581, 0.20833333], [3581, 3634, 0.13207547], [3634, 3695, 0.16393443], [3695, 3727, 0.15625]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3727, 0.61946732]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3727, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3727, 0.73340499]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3727, -160.28939783]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3727, 45.60440202]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3727, 53.78421564]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3727, 38.0]]}
February 3, 2023 195 views0 U.S. Brings Dairy Action Against Canada The U.S. has established a second U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) dispute panel with Canada over their application of tariff-rate quotas for dairy products, saying they do not follow the decision in the case won by the U.S. in December 2021. The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) had previously requested further consultations with Canada over their dairy import program changes. Canada had submitted proposed changes to their dairy import program to comply with the December 2021 dispute panel ruling. USTR rejected these proposals for not following the decision, against Canada, that the implementation of their Tariff Rate Quota (TRQ) program did not allow the increased access for U.S. dairy products that was included in the USMCA. Canada moved to finalize their program changes and the U.S. reacted by requesting consultations, the beginning of a second dispute process. The May 2022 request from USTR for consultations, under USMCA dispute settlement procedures, challenged Canada’s dairy (TRQ) allocation measures for denying access to eligible U.S. applicants. The December 2021 USMCA dispute settlement panel decided in favor of the U.S. in the case against Canada over dairy imports. The panel ruled that Canada violated the terms of the USMCA by improperly restricting access to its market for U.S. dairy products by the administration of its dairy tariff-rate quota commitments. USTR’s new panel request outlines several aspects of Canada’s policies that violate USMCA provisions. It maintains that Canada’s methodology for calculating market share differs depending on the type of applicant, whether a processor, distributor, or further processor. USTR claims that Canada’s implementation of the dairy (TRQ)s unfairly protects Canadian firms and limits the ability of U.S. products to enter Canadian markets. The request also charges that Canada’s failure to fully allocate its annual dairy (TRQ) undermines the market access that it agreed to provide in the USMCA. Farm Bureau supports using the enforcement measures in USMCA to reach the negotiated access to Canadian markets for U.S. dairy products. USDA Launches Cattle Contract Library Pilot Program The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2022 established the pilot Cattle Contract Library within USDA AMS. Under this pilot, AMS will collect, maintain, and report aggregated information on contracts between cattle producers and packers for purchases of fed cattle. The library will include different types of contracts and contract terms. This includes premium schedules, discount schedules, delivery and transportation, terms and payments, financing, risk sharing, and other financial arrangements. Additionally, AMS will also report on the number of head of cattle purchased under the terms of a contract. AMS will be conducting a series of stakeholder webinars to inform producers how to use this new tool. The live dashboard will begin on February 6, 2023. Nebraska Senator Deb Fischer’s recently reintroduced Cattle Price Discover and Transparency Act of 2023 permanently authorizes the program. Nebraska Senator Deb Fischer Reintroduces Cattle Market Reform Legislation U.S. Senators Deb Fischer (R-Neb.), Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), and Jon Tester (D-Mont.) introduced the bipartisan Cattle Price Discovery and Transparency Act of 2023. The legislation aims to restore transparency and accountability in the cattle market by establishing regional cash minimums and equipping producers with more market information, including permanently authorizing a cattle contract library. “I continue to hear from Nebraska family farmers and ranchers about the need for robust price discovery and transparency in our cattle markets. Support for our bill is stronger than ever, with a long list of cosponsors representing a diverse set of agricultural communities from across the country. I look forward to working with them all to build on the strong momentum we had last year,” said Senator Fischer, a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee. Following the introduction of the legislation, Nebraska Farm Bureau President Mark McHargue said, “the farm and ranch member families of the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation once again stand firmly behind Nebraska Senator Deb Fischer’s efforts to provide more price discovery and transparency to the cattle marketplace. Nebraska is ‘The Beef State’ and Sen. Fischer’s tireless leadership trying to address the many challenges surrounding how cattle are marketed in the United States is vital to the economic future of our state. Now is the time to move this legislation through Congress and onto President Biden’s desk.” In addition to Sens. Fischer, Wyden, Grassley, and Tester, the legislation is cosponsored by U.S. Senators Joni Ernst (R-Iowa), Mike Braun (R-Ind.), Tina Smith (D-Minn.), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.), Steve Daines (R-Mont.), Bill Cassidy (R-La.), Ben Ray Lujan (D-N.M.), Richard Durbin (D-Ill.), Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Raphael Warnock (D-Ga.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Josh Hawley (R-Mo.), Sherrod Brown (R-Ohio), Mike Rounds (R-S.D.), John Kennedy (R-La.), and Pete Ricketts (R-Neb.). Eleven of the cosponsors are members of the Senate Agriculture Committee. The Cattle Price Discovery and Transparency Act of 2023 will: Require the Secretary of Agriculture to establish 5-7 regions encompassing the entire continental U.S. and then establish minimum levels of fed cattle purchases made through approved pricing mechanisms. Approved pricing mechanisms are fed cattle purchases made through negotiated cash, negotiated grid, at a stockyard, and through trading systems that multiple buyers and sellers regularly can make and accept bids. These pricing mechanisms will ensure robust price discovery and are transparent. Establish a maximum penalty for covered packers of $90,000 for mandatory minimum violations. Covered packers are defined as those packers that during the immediately preceding five years have slaughtered five percent or more of the number of fed cattle nationally. Create a publicly available library of marketing contracts, mandating box beef reporting to ensure transparency, expediting the reporting of cattle carcass weights, and requiring a packer to report the number of cattle scheduled to be delivered for slaughter each day for the next 14 days. The contract library would be permanently authorized and specify key details about the contents that must be included in the library like the duration of the contract and provisions in the contract that may impact price such as schedules, premiums and discounts, and transportation arrangements. Tax Reform Discussion Underway at State Capitol
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/11501
{"url": "https://www.nefb.org/02/03/2023/policy-watch-68/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nefb.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:14:35Z", "digest": "sha1:T2UZYZXU6T3EHVNJNSMTH5OFHPT6L47G"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6811, 6811.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6811, 13234.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6811, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6811, 384.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6811, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6811, 288.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6811, 0.28337237]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6811, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6811, 0.04170412]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6811, 0.0158188]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6811, 0.0158188]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6811, 0.0158188]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6811, 0.00988675]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6811, 0.01527953]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6811, 0.02085206]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6811, 0.06635441]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6811, 0.17954723]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6811, 0.47128713]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6811, 5.50792079]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6811, 5.53126284]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6811, 1010.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 68, 0.0], [68, 2203, 1.0], [2203, 2255, 0.0], [2255, 3157, 1.0], [3157, 3232, 0.0], [3232, 5354, 1.0], [5354, 5416, 0.0], [5416, 5913, 1.0], [5913, 6178, 1.0], [6178, 6764, 1.0], [6764, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 68, 0.0], [68, 2203, 0.0], [2203, 2255, 0.0], [2255, 3157, 0.0], [3157, 3232, 0.0], [3232, 5354, 0.0], [5354, 5416, 0.0], [5416, 5913, 0.0], [5913, 6178, 0.0], [6178, 6764, 0.0], [6764, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 28, 5.0], [28, 68, 6.0], [68, 2203, 323.0], [2203, 2255, 7.0], [2255, 3157, 132.0], [3157, 3232, 9.0], [3232, 5354, 311.0], [5354, 5416, 10.0], [5416, 5913, 70.0], [5913, 6178, 40.0], [6178, 6764, 90.0], [6764, 6811, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.34615385], [28, 68, 0.0], [68, 2203, 0.00771456], [2203, 2255, 0.0], [2255, 3157, 0.01473923], [3157, 3232, 0.0], [3232, 5354, 0.00201511], [5354, 5416, 0.06666667], [5416, 5913, 0.00410678], [5913, 6178, 0.01923077], [6178, 6764, 0.00346021], [6764, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 68, 0.0], [68, 2203, 0.0], [2203, 2255, 0.0], [2255, 3157, 0.0], [3157, 3232, 0.0], [3232, 5354, 0.0], [5354, 5416, 0.0], [5416, 5913, 0.0], [5913, 6178, 0.0], [6178, 6764, 0.0], [6764, 6811, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.03571429], [28, 68, 0.175], [68, 2203, 0.06135831], [2203, 2255, 0.19230769], [2255, 3157, 0.0421286], [3157, 3232, 0.12], [3232, 5354, 0.07210179], [5354, 5416, 0.09677419], [5416, 5913, 0.01408451], [5913, 6178, 0.00754717], [6178, 6764, 0.00341297], [6764, 6811, 0.12765957]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6811, 0.2751385]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6811, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6811, 0.85549772]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6811, -457.01868438]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6811, 59.35197028]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6811, 41.62732801]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6811, 93.0]]}
THE NORDEX GROUP IN BRAZIL As of October 2022 2458 MW TOTAL COMMISSIONED MORE THAN 1400 Brazil offers excellent wind conditions, with wind energy now one of the country’s most important sources of energy. In June 2021, The national wind energy association ABEEólica announced that the installed capacity in Brazil had reached more than 21.5 GW. This represents a significant rise in recent years and has seen the wind energy sector become an increasingly important element of the Brazilian electricity market. After hydroelectric power, wind energy is now the second-largest component of the Brazilian electricity generation mix, placing the largest country in South America among the global leaders in the field of renewable energy. Geographical Footprint The Nordex Group has been active on the Brazilian market since 2013, with its headquarters situated in the commercial capital, São Paulo. Since entering the market, the company has erected turbines with a total installed capacity of 2.4 GW, and has a further 2258 MW currently under construction. The Nordex Group assembles the nacelles and produces concrete towers for its turbines locally at its own factories. The company also utilizes rotor blades manufactured locally within Brazil. This makes it possible to meet local value-creation requirements, which, in turn, offer better financing options for clients. The Nordex Group in numbers (EN) Click the button below to load the content from YouTube. Always allow YouTube The Nordex Group is one of the world´s leading manufacturers and service providers for highly-efficient onshore wind turbines with more than 35 years of experience. A wind turbine can generate significantly more electricity under Brazilian conditions than in many other countries. In fact, due to the excellent wind conditions, the average capacity factor of a wind power station in Brazil can exceed 50 percent – significantly above the global average. By way of comparison, in other countries, this figure is as low as 25 percent (Source: ABEEólica). Medium wind speeds, which are highly favorable for the generation of onshore wind energy, can be found in the northeast region of Brazil in particular, where the terrain by the coast is flat. In addition, the interior of the country and its plateaus likewise offer significant potential for large-scale projects. As the market shifts towards larger rotors with higher towers, the Group offers competitive turbines to their Brazilian customers in the form of the Delta4000 series. This includes the N163/5.X, which features a rotor diameter of 163 meters with a swept area in excess of 20,000m², providing high sales potential and of which the Nordex Group has already sold 1677.7 MW in Brazil alone The N163 turbines in the Delta4000 series feature different operating modes, thus offering maximum flexibility within the 5 MW range. Their operation can be optimized in line with various customer-specific requirements, such as annual yield, service life, and noise level requirements. This year, the N163/5.X won the gold medal for “Turbine of the Year” in the category of onshore turbines with a 4.7 MW + rating, awarded by Windpower Monthly. The N163/5.X N163/5.X | Delta4000 Series (EN) …from the Delta4000 Series The optimal solution for Brazilian wind conditions Learn more ABOUT THE N163/5.X Your contacts & locations Felipe Ferreira Ramalho VP Region Brazil, Country Manager SalesBrazil@nordex-online.com Nordex Energy Brasil – Comércio e Indústria de Equipamentos Ltda Edifício Atrium VI, Rua Gomes de Carvalho, 1510 – 4º andar, Cj. 41/42, Vila Olímpia, São Paulo, Brazil, CEP 04547-005 Federico Bianchi Sales Director Brazil THE NORDEX GROUP
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/11517
{"url": "https://www.nordex-online.com/en/brazil/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nordex-online.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:12:16Z", "digest": "sha1:SACOXDDCOZ6ZM3D2VIDMAS5YQDTLEITX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3685, 3685.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3685, 5265.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3685, 28.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3685, 140.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3685, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3685, 270.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3685, 0.28530259]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3685, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3685, 0.02080581]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3685, 0.0323646]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3685, 0.01056803]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3685, 0.05475504]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3685, 0.18731988]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3685, 0.52189142]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3685, 5.30297723]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3685, 0.00144092]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3685, 5.13426856]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3685, 571.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 46, 0.0], [46, 54, 0.0], [54, 73, 0.0], [73, 88, 0.0], [88, 734, 1.0], [734, 757, 0.0], [757, 1371, 1.0], [1371, 1404, 0.0], [1404, 1461, 1.0], [1461, 1482, 0.0], [1482, 1647, 1.0], [1647, 3179, 1.0], [3179, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3225, 0.0], [3225, 3252, 0.0], [3252, 3303, 0.0], [3303, 3333, 0.0], [3333, 3359, 0.0], [3359, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3417, 0.0], [3417, 3447, 0.0], [3447, 3512, 0.0], [3512, 3583, 0.0], [3583, 3630, 0.0], [3630, 3647, 0.0], [3647, 3669, 0.0], [3669, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 46, 0.0], [46, 54, 0.0], [54, 73, 0.0], [73, 88, 0.0], [88, 734, 0.0], [734, 757, 0.0], [757, 1371, 0.0], [1371, 1404, 0.0], [1404, 1461, 0.0], [1461, 1482, 0.0], [1482, 1647, 0.0], [1647, 3179, 0.0], [3179, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3225, 0.0], [3225, 3252, 0.0], [3252, 3303, 0.0], [3303, 3333, 0.0], [3333, 3359, 0.0], [3359, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3417, 0.0], [3417, 3447, 0.0], [3447, 3512, 0.0], [3512, 3583, 0.0], [3583, 3630, 0.0], [3630, 3647, 0.0], [3647, 3669, 0.0], [3669, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 27, 5.0], [27, 46, 4.0], [46, 54, 2.0], [54, 73, 2.0], [73, 88, 3.0], [88, 734, 98.0], [734, 757, 2.0], [757, 1371, 94.0], [1371, 1404, 6.0], [1404, 1461, 10.0], [1461, 1482, 3.0], [1482, 1647, 25.0], [1647, 3179, 245.0], [3179, 3192, 2.0], [3192, 3225, 4.0], [3225, 3252, 4.0], [3252, 3303, 7.0], [3303, 3333, 5.0], [3333, 3359, 3.0], [3359, 3383, 3.0], [3383, 3417, 5.0], [3417, 3447, 1.0], [3447, 3512, 10.0], [3512, 3583, 13.0], [3583, 3630, 7.0], [3630, 3647, 2.0], [3647, 3669, 3.0], [3669, 3685, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 46, 0.22222222], [46, 54, 0.57142857], [54, 73, 0.0], [73, 88, 0.28571429], [88, 734, 0.01100629], [734, 757, 0.0], [757, 1371, 0.01666667], [1371, 1404, 0.0], [1404, 1461, 0.0], [1461, 1482, 0.0], [1482, 1647, 0.01234568], [1647, 3179, 0.02680965], [3179, 3192, 0.4], [3192, 3225, 0.30769231], [3225, 3252, 0.15384615], [3252, 3303, 0.0], [3303, 3333, 0.14814815], [3333, 3359, 0.0], [3359, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3417, 0.0], [3417, 3447, 0.0], [3447, 3512, 0.0], [3512, 3583, 0.13846154], [3583, 3630, 0.18181818], [3630, 3647, 0.0], [3647, 3669, 0.0], [3669, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 46, 0.0], [46, 54, 0.0], [54, 73, 0.0], [73, 88, 0.0], [88, 734, 0.0], [734, 757, 0.0], [757, 1371, 0.0], [1371, 1404, 0.0], [1404, 1461, 0.0], [1461, 1482, 0.0], [1482, 1647, 0.0], [1647, 3179, 0.0], [3179, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3225, 0.0], [3225, 3252, 0.0], [3252, 3303, 0.0], [3303, 3333, 0.0], [3333, 3359, 0.0], [3359, 3383, 0.0], [3383, 3417, 0.0], [3417, 3447, 0.0], [3447, 3512, 0.0], [3512, 3583, 0.0], [3583, 3630, 0.0], [3630, 3647, 0.0], [3647, 3669, 0.0], [3669, 3685, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.81481481], [27, 46, 0.10526316], [46, 54, 0.25], [54, 73, 0.89473684], [73, 88, 0.53333333], [88, 734, 0.02631579], [734, 757, 0.08695652], [757, 1371, 0.0276873], [1371, 1404, 0.15151515], [1404, 1461, 0.05263158], [1461, 1482, 0.14285714], [1482, 1647, 0.01818182], [1647, 3179, 0.02610966], [3179, 3192, 0.23076923], [3192, 3225, 0.18181818], [3225, 3252, 0.07407407], [3252, 3303, 0.03921569], [3303, 3333, 0.36666667], [3333, 3359, 0.03846154], [3359, 3383, 0.125], [3383, 3417, 0.17647059], [3417, 3447, 0.06666667], [3447, 3512, 0.10769231], [3512, 3583, 0.11267606], [3583, 3630, 0.17021277], [3630, 3647, 0.11764706], [3647, 3669, 0.13636364], [3669, 3685, 0.875]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3685, 0.63288969]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3685, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3685, 0.4054361]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3685, -181.7986344]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3685, 2.72095555]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3685, 72.76673557]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3685, 32.0]]}
Harry Clark Weighs in on Replacement of SEC Payment Disclosure Rule for Oil, Gas and Mining Companies Harry Clark, Chair of Orrick’s International Trade & Compliance Group in Washington, D.C., recently spoke with The Wall Street Journal [subscription required] regarding the decision by U.S. lawmakers to gut and replace a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rule requiring oil, gas, and mining companies to disclose payments made to foreign governments. Harry recommended that companies not stop efforts to document payments to foreign governments until it’s certain the reporting requirements are definitively eliminated. A federal statute requires the SEC to issue a replacement rule within a year; however, it is likely that any rule put forward under the Trump administration will be “more straightforward and less onerous” on oil, gas, and mining companies. Harry concluded, “They’re unlikely to make things more challenging.” Harry Clark Partner, International Trade and Investment, Mergers & Acquisitions Technology & Innovation Sector Harry Clark Partner Harry Clark is leader of Orrick’s International Trade & Investment team. He advises major companies and industry associations on a variety of international trade and investment rules. Harry is experienced in areas such as CFIUS/Exon-Florio examinations of foreign investment, military and “dual use” export control regulations (ITAR/EAR), economic sanctions administered by the U.S. Treasury Department (OFAC), customs regulations, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, anti-money laundering rules, anti-boycott requirements and defense industrial security requirements. He executes internal corporate investigations regarding trade and investment rules and advises on such rules in the context of corporate transactions. Additionally, Harry has extensive experience with government contracting matters. His government contracting work has included, for example, design and implementation of U.S. Defense Department renewable energy projects. He also represents broad industry coalitions on major trade litigations and international negotiations. His experience in these areas includes a leading role in what is often considered the largest-ever international trade dispute: the controversy regarding unfair softwood lumber imports from Canada. It has involved myriad administrative proceedings before federal agencies, NAFTA panel appeals, WTO dispute proceedings, judicial proceedings and international settlement agreements. Harry has represented a coalition of major U.S. oil companies in antidumping and countervailing duty litigation. As a related matter, he pursues policy issues with congressional and executive branch officials and advises on international trade rules (e.g., GATT, WTO agreements and NAFTA). Chambers 2022 recognizes Harry as a leader in the field of export controls and economic sanctions (Chambers Global and Chambers USA), as well as CFIUS (Chambers USA). Previous editions have also recognized Harry’s achievements regarding his work related to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Clients note that Harry provides “accurate, straightforward guidance incredibly efficiently” and “he has an ability to translate complex legal requirements and rules into business-friendly jargon.”
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/11533
{"url": "https://www.orrick.com/en/Insights/2017/02/Harry-Clark-Weighs-in-on-Replacement-of-SEC-Payment-Disclosure-Rule-for-Oil-Gas-and-Mining-Companies", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.orrick.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:38:00Z", "digest": "sha1:MY36T42NSBABWATNMR7J43MJ4FXP2SJJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3273, 3273.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3273, 8011.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3273, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3273, 208.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3273, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3273, 233.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3273, 0.26211849]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3273, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3273, 0.0511509]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3273, 0.02119109]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3273, 0.03945926]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3273, 0.00986482]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3273, 0.01644136]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3273, 0.04667864]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3273, 0.16696589]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3273, 0.54809843]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3273, 6.12304251]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3273, 5.11782798]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3273, 447.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 460, 1.0], [460, 938, 1.0], [938, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1049, 0.0], [1049, 1069, 0.0], [1069, 1253, 1.0], [1253, 1788, 1.0], [1788, 2494, 1.0], [2494, 2784, 1.0], [2784, 3273, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 460, 0.0], [460, 938, 0.0], [938, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1049, 0.0], [1049, 1069, 0.0], [1069, 1253, 0.0], [1253, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 2494, 0.0], [2494, 2784, 0.0], [2784, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 102, 17.0], [102, 460, 51.0], [460, 938, 71.0], [938, 1018, 9.0], [1018, 1049, 3.0], [1049, 1069, 3.0], [1069, 1253, 26.0], [1253, 1788, 67.0], [1788, 2494, 89.0], [2494, 2784, 42.0], [2784, 3273, 69.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 460, 0.0], [460, 938, 0.0], [938, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1049, 0.0], [1049, 1069, 0.0], [1069, 1253, 0.0], [1253, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 2494, 0.0], [2494, 2784, 0.0], [2784, 3273, 0.00835073]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 102, 0.0], [102, 460, 0.0], [460, 938, 0.0], [938, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1049, 0.0], [1049, 1069, 0.0], [1069, 1253, 0.0], [1253, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 2494, 0.0], [2494, 2784, 0.0], [2784, 3273, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 102, 0.1372549], [102, 460, 0.06424581], [460, 938, 0.0167364], [938, 1018, 0.1], [1018, 1049, 0.09677419], [1049, 1069, 0.15], [1069, 1253, 0.03804348], [1253, 1788, 0.05233645], [1788, 2494, 0.02691218], [2494, 2784, 0.05517241], [2784, 3273, 0.05112474]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3273, 0.25687772]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3273, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3273, 0.1054346]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3273, -220.80657377]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3273, 25.57155718]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3273, -12.86471113]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3273, 30.0]]}
ROCKBANDREVIEWS.COM Concert Annoucements Bill Hernandez THE LORDS OF 52ND STREET TO PLAY THE LILLIAN S. WELLS HALL THIS SATURDAY NIGHT IN FT. LAUDERDALE COME OUT TO SEE THE LEGENDARY MUSICIANS THAT HAVE TOURED THE WORLD WITH BILLY JOEL. HEAR ALL OF YOUR FAVORITE SONGS FROM THE ALBUMS "THE STRANGER", "TURNSTILES", 52ND STREET", "GLASS HOUSES", AND "SONGS IN THE ATTIC". EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH RICHIE CANNATA Richie Cannata, Russell Javors, and Liberty DeVitto This is truly one music event you will not want to miss. The legendary band that has helped create Billy Joel's sound and fame is coming to the Lillian S. Wells Hall (Parker Playhouse) in Fort Lauderdale this Saturday night for an unbelievable concert experience full of real and raw talent. Producer, saxophonist, keyboardist, and studio owner Richie Cannata took time out of his busy touring schedule to talk with Rockbandreviews.com. In this interview Richie talks about 45 years of friendship and making music, his prized saxophone, and parmesan cheese. To hear the interview, click on the YouTube box below In 1975 Billy Joel started looking for a new band. He had already released two studio albums with minimal success and was looking for a New York sound for his next record “Turnstiles”. His first choice to start to build the band was a fellow long islander and bass player, Doug Stegmeyer. He asked Doug if he knew some musicians to help round out the band, Doug replied “You know them already”. Doug suggested former band mates Liberty Devitto and Russell Javors, two guys that Billy had known well from his Long Island Music scene, and the band began to rehearse and truly become a unit. Doug Stegmeyer, Liberty DeVitto and Russell Javors joined Billy Joel in studio to record his 1976 album “Turnstiles.” Billy Joel was also looking specifically for a saxophone player who could play keyboards. Al Stegmeyer, Doug Stegmeyer’s brother, was a sound engineer on the album, and recommended Richie Cannata to play saxophone and keyboards on the album. Cannata walked into Ultrasonic Studios in Hempstead, New York, and heard for the first time the legendary hit, “Angry Young Man.” Joel, Stegmeyer, DeVitto and Javors recorded the tune a day earlier, and Cannata was blown away by their experienced playing and speed. Cannata went into the studio and immediately recorded the unforgettable Empire State love song, “New York State of Mind.” What made the music on this album so special, were the dedicated and loyal New York musicians behind its creation. The Turnstiles album was a huge success because Joel and his new recording and touring band performed the songs with such a fresh, and young driven beat. DeVitto, Javors and Cannata blew away audiences with their playing, and helped Joel sell millions of albums. The band went from playing local colleges and universities across the nation to performing at the world’s most famous arena, Madison Square Garden. After the success of the Turnstiles album, Joel and the band began looking for a music producer for their next album. George Martin, the legendary Beatles record producer, offered Billy Joel a record deal, but he informed Joel he wanted to record with studio musicians. Joel would not create this new album without The Lords of 52nd Street, so he told Martin, “Love me. Love my band.” Joel turned down The Beatles’ record producer, George Martin, and was pleased to work with the legendary, Phil Ramone. Phil Ramone and Joel coined DeVitto, Cannata, Javors and Stegmeyer as The Lords of 52nd Street, and went into Columbia Studios to record, “The Stranger.” The album was a commercial success, it holds a RIAA diamond certification (10x platinum), and several #1 singles including, Only The Good Die Young and Just The Way You Are. The Lords of 52nd Street, along side the Piano Man, led an international tour, and performed at famous arenas including, Wembley Stadium, Royal Albert Hall, the Sydney Opera House, Nassau Coliseum, Madison Square Garden, Carnegie Hall, Budokan, the LA Forum and many others. The band also performed on NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” and on the BBC’s “The Old Grey Whistle Test” television program back in 1978. The Lords of 52nd Street helped Joel establish a popular music career, and the opportunity to perform and record in the most prestigious settings. Joel and The Lords of 52nd Street returned to the studio, and recorded Grammy award winning albums including, 52nd Street, Glass Houses, and The Nylon Curtain. The band recorded and toured with Joel for over a decade, and it wasn’t until their induction into the Long Island Music Hall of Fame where they decided to reunite after a 30-year separation. After their 2014 hall of fame induction, The Lords of 52nd Street picked up their instruments yet again, and began performing in front of live audiences together. The Lords finally returned to the stage to a sold out crowd at The Space at Westbury in February 2016. Critics adored the band, and their performance blew away fans of all ages. The Lords of 52nd Street are touring regularly since their return in early 2016, and they do not plan on stopping anytime soon. Fans declared that The Lords’ live performances sound just like the original recordings with Billy Joel, if not better. The Lords of 52nd Street perform regularly for live audiences in public and private events, and continue to awe fans from around the world. They are New York’s favorite band, they sold more than 150 million records, they helped establish Billy Joel’s formidable sound, and they continue to perform their legendary hits still to this day. Look no further; The Lords of 52nd Street are here! ROCKBANDREVIEWS.COM / 2023 WHEATUS SUMMERLAND TOUR D SCHOOL SQUARE PAVILLION ORIDA GUITAR LEGEND ERIC JOHNSON TO PLAY THE LILLIAN S. HALL (PARKER PLAYHOUSE) ON 3/15/2023 INTERVIEW WITH RICK ALLEN OF DEF LEPPARD IN ADVANCE OF HIS WENTWORTH GALLERY APPEARANCE David Libert New Music Bio - Rock And Roll Warrior.
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/11593
{"url": "https://www.rockbandreviews.com/post/thelordsof52ndstreettoplaythelillians-wellshallthissaturdaynightinft-lauderdale", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.rockbandreviews.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:24:15Z", "digest": "sha1:Q2CTBKBDH7OQ7Q55KEONUGOJMW2V7YTI"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5965, 5965.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5965, 6617.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5965, 28.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5965, 71.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5965, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5965, 247.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5965, 0.29432014]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5965, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5965, 0.07805383]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5965, 0.00952381]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5965, 0.02484472]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5965, 0.02070393]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5965, 0.02898551]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5965, 0.08864028]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5965, 0.14974182]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5965, 0.43522267]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5965, 4.88866397]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5965, 0.00086059]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5965, 5.39076832]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5965, 988.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 41, 0.0], [41, 56, 0.0], [56, 153, 0.0], [153, 371, 1.0], [371, 411, 0.0], [411, 463, 0.0], [463, 755, 1.0], [755, 1021, 1.0], [1021, 1075, 0.0], [1075, 1664, 1.0], [1664, 2154, 1.0], [2154, 2527, 1.0], [2527, 2938, 1.0], [2938, 3442, 1.0], [3442, 4045, 1.0], [4045, 4325, 1.0], [4325, 4840, 1.0], [4840, 5406, 1.0], [5406, 5656, 1.0], [5656, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 5707, 0.0], [5707, 5733, 0.0], [5733, 5739, 0.0], [5739, 5826, 0.0], [5826, 5914, 0.0], [5914, 5965, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 41, 0.0], [41, 56, 0.0], [56, 153, 0.0], [153, 371, 0.0], [371, 411, 0.0], [411, 463, 0.0], [463, 755, 0.0], [755, 1021, 0.0], [1021, 1075, 0.0], [1075, 1664, 0.0], [1664, 2154, 0.0], [2154, 2527, 0.0], [2527, 2938, 0.0], [2938, 3442, 0.0], [3442, 4045, 0.0], [4045, 4325, 0.0], [4325, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 5406, 0.0], [5406, 5656, 0.0], [5656, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 5707, 0.0], [5707, 5733, 0.0], [5733, 5739, 0.0], [5739, 5826, 0.0], [5826, 5914, 0.0], [5914, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 20, 1.0], [20, 41, 2.0], [41, 56, 2.0], [56, 153, 18.0], [153, 371, 36.0], [371, 411, 5.0], [411, 463, 7.0], [463, 755, 51.0], [755, 1021, 39.0], [1021, 1075, 10.0], [1075, 1664, 106.0], [1664, 2154, 77.0], [2154, 2527, 61.0], [2527, 2938, 67.0], [2938, 3442, 86.0], [3442, 4045, 98.0], [4045, 4325, 47.0], [4325, 4840, 87.0], [4840, 5406, 99.0], [5406, 5656, 42.0], [5656, 5683, 2.0], [5683, 5691, 1.0], [5691, 5707, 2.0], [5707, 5733, 4.0], [5733, 5739, 1.0], [5739, 5826, 14.0], [5826, 5914, 14.0], [5914, 5965, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 41, 0.0], [41, 56, 0.0], [56, 153, 0.0212766], [153, 371, 0.00990099], [371, 411, 0.0], [411, 463, 0.0], [463, 755, 0.0], [755, 1021, 0.0077821], [1021, 1075, 0.0], [1075, 1664, 0.00690846], [1664, 2154, 0.0083682], [2154, 2527, 0.0], [2527, 2938, 0.0], [2938, 3442, 0.00408998], [3442, 4045, 0.01211073], [4045, 4325, 0.02173913], [4325, 4840, 0.02385686], [4840, 5406, 0.02158273], [5406, 5656, 0.02057613], [5656, 5683, 0.17391304], [5683, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 5707, 0.0], [5707, 5733, 0.0], [5733, 5739, 0.0], [5739, 5826, 0.08641975], [5826, 5914, 0.0], [5914, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 41, 0.0], [41, 56, 0.0], [56, 153, 0.0], [153, 371, 0.0], [371, 411, 0.0], [411, 463, 0.0], [463, 755, 0.0], [755, 1021, 0.0], [1021, 1075, 0.0], [1075, 1664, 0.0], [1664, 2154, 0.0], [2154, 2527, 0.0], [2527, 2938, 0.0], [2938, 3442, 0.0], [3442, 4045, 0.0], [4045, 4325, 0.0], [4325, 4840, 0.0], [4840, 5406, 0.0], [5406, 5656, 0.0], [5656, 5683, 0.0], [5683, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 5707, 0.0], [5707, 5733, 0.0], [5733, 5739, 0.0], [5739, 5826, 0.0], [5826, 5914, 0.0], [5914, 5965, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.9], [20, 41, 0.0952381], [41, 56, 0.13333333], [56, 153, 0.77319588], [153, 371, 0.75688073], [371, 411, 0.875], [411, 463, 0.13461538], [463, 755, 0.04452055], [755, 1021, 0.02255639], [1021, 1075, 0.05555556], [1075, 1664, 0.03904924], [1664, 2154, 0.05510204], [2154, 2527, 0.04289544], [2527, 2938, 0.02919708], [2938, 3442, 0.04563492], [3442, 4045, 0.08955224], [4045, 4325, 0.06785714], [4325, 4840, 0.04271845], [4840, 5406, 0.03180212], [5406, 5656, 0.036], [5656, 5683, 0.66666667], [5683, 5691, 0.875], [5691, 5707, 0.875], [5707, 5733, 0.84615385], [5733, 5739, 0.83333333], [5739, 5826, 0.70114943], [5826, 5914, 0.84090909], [5914, 5965, 0.17647059]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5965, 0.71029806]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5965, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5965, 0.95908993]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5965, -173.01265604]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5965, 50.06038117]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5965, 22.71372328]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5965, 49.0]]}
626 714 812 912 1015 1110 1221 1315 1412 1512 168 1711 1814 1914 Holidays Calendar for June 10, 2021 Public Holidays → Portugal Portugal Day Portugal Day is observed annually on June 10 in Portugal and the Portuguese Communities. This is an official holiday only in Portugal, but the Portuguese citizens and emigrants also celebrate this holiday worldwide. Public Holidays → French Guiana Abolition Day in French Guiana Many former colonies have a public holiday named Abolition Day or Emancipation Day that commemorates the abolition of slavery. For instance, Abolition Day in French Guiana is celebrated on June 10. It was first observed in 2012. Public Holidays → Republic of the Congo Reconciliation Day in the Republic of the Congo Reconciliation Day is a public holiday in the Republic of the Congo that commemorates the Congo's national conference. The conference held in 1991 ended a long history of single-party Marxist rule. Ascension Day in Eastern Christianity Eastern Christianity celebrates Ascension Day on the 40th day after Easter. The holiday celebrates the ascension of Jesus Christ. World Art Nouveau Day World Art Nouveau Day is an annual observance dedicated to an international style of art, architecture and applied art that was popular in the late 19th and early 20th century. It has been celebrated on June 10 since 2013. International Heraldry Day International Heraldry Day is celebrated annually on June 10. It is dedicated to the art and science of devising, displaying, and granting armorial insignia, as well as tracing and recording genealogies. The inaugural International Heraldry Day, which united heraldry enthusiasts across the world, was held on June 10, 2013. AA Founders’ Day AA Founders’ Day, referred to as simply Founders’ Day within Alcoholics Anonymous, is observed by Alcoholics Anonymous chapters across the world on June 10 to commemorate AA’s anniversary. Professional Days → Jordan Army Day in Jordan On June 10, Jordan celebrates Army Day. It commemorates the anniversary of the beginning of the Great Arab Revolt in the Ottoman Empire in 1916. Professional Days → Italy Navy Day in Italy Italian Navy Day (Festa della Marina) is observed annually on June 10. Unlike in many countries where Navy Day commemorates the anniversary of the foundation of the Navy, Italian Navy Day is dedicated to one of the most significant victories of the Royal Navy during World War I. Professional Days → Moldova Border Police Day in Moldova Border Police Day, also referred to as Border Guard Day, is an official professional holiday in the Republic of Moldova celebrated annually on June 10. It was established by a presidential decree in 1995 to celebrate the country’s border guards and has been observed every year since then. National Iced Tea Day Set aside your business to celebrate National Iced Tea Day, that falls on June 10. This is the best summer refreshing drink, that is enjoyed across the world. National Egg Roll Day National Egg Roll Day is one of the many unofficial and semi-official food days celebrated in the United States. Launched by Van’s Kitchen in 2019 to celebrate the company’s founding anniversary, it is observed annually on June 10. National Herbs and Spices Day National Herbs and Spices Day is a food holiday for everyone who is not afraid to add a little flavor to their food. Observed every year on June 10, it celebrates the diversity of herbs and spices that are an essential part of practically any cuisine. National Black Cow Day National Black Cow Day is celebrated annually on June 10. This unofficial holiday doesn’t have anything to do with actual cows; it was established in honor of an ice cream float beverage known as a root beer float and sometimes also referred to as a black cow. Other Observances → Haiti National Children Day in Haiti Every year all children of Haiti celebrate National Children Day on June 10. This holiday was created to remind children, that they also have rights. Festivals on June 10, 2021 International Diaghilev Festival in Perm, Russia Encounters South African International Documentary Festival in Johannesburg, South Africa Encounters South African International Documentary Festival in Cape Town, South Africa Lajkonik Festival in Krakow in Krakow, Poland Zlín Film Festival in Zlín, Czech Republic Tribeca Film Festival in New York, USA Berlin International Film Festival (Berlinale) in Berlin, Germany WHITE SQUARE International Advertising and Marketing Festival in Minsk, Belarus Diagonale Film Festival in Graz, Austria Animafest Zagreb in Zagreb, Croatia Apple Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in San Jose, USA Cincinnati Fringe Festival (Cincy Fringe) in Cincinnati, USA Odessa Classics in Odessa, Ukraine Beat Film Festival in Moscow, Russia Festival St-Ambroise Fringe de Montréal in Montreal, Canada 2008 Died: Chinghiz Aitmatov, Kyrgyzstani author, the most influential figure in modern Kyrgyzstan literature, the first ambassador for the Soviet Union and later for Kyrgyzstan to the European Union, NATO, UNESCO and the Benelux countries. 2004 Died: Ray Charles, American singer-songwriter, pianist, and actor, sometimes referred to as The Genius. He pioneered the genre of soul music by combining rhythm and blues, gospel and blues styles. 2003 A robotic rover Spirit was launched to Mars in the course of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover mission. 1982 Died: Gala Dalí, wife of first Paul Éluard and then Salvador Dalí. She inspired them and many other writers and artists. 1977 One of the first personal computers, Apple II, went on sale. 1976 Died: Adolph Zukor, Hungarian-American film producer, remembered as the co-founder of Paramount Pictures. 1967 Died: Spencer Tracy, American actor and singer, one of the major Hollywood stars of the Golden Age, nine-time nominee for Academy Awards for Best Actor and two-times winner. 1967 The Six-Day War ended, when Israel and Syria agreed to a cease-fire. 1965 Born: Elizabeth Hurley, English model and actress. She is usually associated with the cosmetics company Estée Lauder, since she was its model. She played in Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery and Bedazzled. 1964 Born: Vincent Pérez, Swiss actor and director, best known for playing the title character in The Crow: City of Angels, for starring in Queen of the Damned. 1949 Died: Sigrid Undset, Norwegian author. Her work and partly her four-volume The Master of Hestviken brought her Nobel Prize in Literature in 1928. 1944 German Waffen-SS company destroyed the village Oradour-sur-Glane, France. 642 men, women and children were killed. The original village is maintained as a permanent memorial and museum. 1940 World War II: Italy declared war on France and the United Kingdom. 1930 Born: Aranka Siegal, Czech-American author, Holocaust survivor, recipient of Newbery Honor Boston Globe-Horn Book Award. She's best known for the book Upon the Head of the Goat: A Childhood in Hungary 1930-1944. Her books are translated into several different languages and sold worldwide. 1926 Died: Antoni Gaudí, Spanish architect, whose works enjoy global popularity. Most of this works are located in Barcelona, Spain, including the Sagrada Família. 1922 Born: Judy Garland, American actress and singer, best known for her vocals. She's much respected for her versatility and she received a Juvenile Academy Award and won a Golden Globe Award as well as Grammy Awards and a Special Tony Award. 1915 Born: Saul Bellow, Canadian-American author, Pulitzer Prize recipient and Nobel Prize laureate, the only writer to win the National Book Award for Fiction three times. 1886 153 people died due to eruption of Mount Tarawera in New Zealand. Eruption also destroyed Pink and White Terraces, natural wonders of New Zealand. It continued for 3 months, creating a 17-kilometer long fissure across the mountain peak. 1864 Battle of Brice's Crossroads, American Civil War: Confederate troops under Nathan Bedford Forrest defeated a much larger Union force led by General Samuel D. Sturgis in Mississippi. 1863 Born: Louis Couperus, Dutch author and poet, considered to be one of the foremost figures in Dutch literature. 1858 Died: Robert Brown, Scottish botanist and palaeobotanist. He made important contributions to botany through pioneering us of the microscope. He was the first to describe in detail the cell nucleus and cytoplasmic streaming and observe Brownian motion. 1836 Died: André-Marie Ampère, French physicist and mathematician, one of the founders of the science of classical electromagnetism. The ampere, the SI unit of measurement of electric current, is named after him. 1825 Born: Sondre Norheim, Norwegian skier and pioneer of modern skiing, he is known as the father of Telemark skiing. 1819 Born: Gustave Courbet, French painter, leader of the Realist movement in the 19th-century France. He was one of the most important figures in the 19th-centurty French painting and he set an example important to later artist of Impressionism and Cubism. 1805 Yusuf Karamanli, Pasha of Tripolitania (present-day Libya) signed a treaty ending hostilities between the United States and Tripolitania. 1803 Born: Henry Darcy, French engineer, known for important contributions to hydraulics, he improved the design of the Pitot tube into the form, that is still in use today. 1793 Born: Chauncey Jerome, American clockmaker, who made a fortune selling his clocks. He made historic contributions to clock industry and considered to be the most influential and creative person in the American clock business. 1793 The botanical garden the Jardin des Planetes opened in Paris, a year later it became the first public zoo. Nowadays the Jardin des Planetes is the main botanical garden in France. 1786 A landslide dam created on the Dadu River, Sichuan province, China, by an earthquake ten days later collapsed. 100,000 people were killed. 1580 Died: Luís de Camões, considered to be the best Portuguese poet. He is best remembered for epic work Os Lusíadas (The Lusiads).
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/11953
{"url": "https://anydayguide.com/calendar/10-06-2021", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "anydayguide.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:42:19Z", "digest": "sha1:KJ4OXAKLQIV6OOZCRUVYHUXHMREIASO4"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10012, 10012.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10012, 11131.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10012, 86.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10012, 140.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10012, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10012, 157.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10012, 0.28465215]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10012, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10012, 0.07195211]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10012, 0.04642072]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10012, 0.0212558]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10012, 0.01343758]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10012, 0.01465917]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10012, 0.01172734]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10012, 0.01115242]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10012, 0.1826872]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10012, 0.44591195]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10012, 5.14842767]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10012, 5.78800216]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10012, 1590.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 65, 0.0], [65, 101, 0.0], [101, 128, 0.0], [128, 141, 0.0], [141, 357, 1.0], [357, 389, 0.0], [389, 420, 0.0], [420, 649, 1.0], [649, 689, 0.0], [689, 737, 0.0], [737, 935, 1.0], [935, 973, 0.0], [973, 1103, 1.0], [1103, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1348, 1.0], [1348, 1375, 0.0], [1375, 1700, 1.0], [1700, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 1906, 1.0], [1906, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1952, 0.0], [1952, 2097, 1.0], [2097, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2421, 1.0], [2421, 2449, 0.0], [2449, 2478, 0.0], [2478, 2768, 1.0], [2768, 2790, 0.0], [2790, 2949, 1.0], [2949, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3203, 1.0], [3203, 3233, 0.0], [3233, 3485, 1.0], [3485, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 3769, 1.0], [3769, 3795, 0.0], [3795, 3826, 0.0], [3826, 3976, 1.0], [3976, 4003, 0.0], [4003, 4052, 0.0], [4052, 4142, 0.0], [4142, 4229, 0.0], [4229, 4275, 0.0], [4275, 4318, 0.0], [4318, 4357, 0.0], [4357, 4423, 0.0], [4423, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4544, 0.0], [4544, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4642, 0.0], [4642, 4703, 0.0], [4703, 4738, 0.0], [4738, 4775, 0.0], [4775, 4835, 0.0], [4835, 5076, 1.0], [5076, 5278, 1.0], [5278, 5383, 1.0], [5383, 5509, 1.0], [5509, 5575, 1.0], [5575, 5686, 1.0], [5686, 5865, 1.0], [5865, 5939, 1.0], [5939, 6160, 1.0], [6160, 6321, 1.0], [6321, 6472, 1.0], [6472, 6663, 1.0], [6663, 6735, 1.0], [6735, 7030, 1.0], [7030, 7194, 1.0], [7194, 7438, 1.0], [7438, 7611, 1.0], [7611, 7853, 1.0], [7853, 8040, 1.0], [8040, 8156, 1.0], [8156, 8413, 1.0], [8413, 8626, 1.0], [8626, 8745, 1.0], [8745, 9003, 1.0], [9003, 9146, 1.0], [9146, 9320, 1.0], [9320, 9551, 1.0], [9551, 9736, 1.0], [9736, 9880, 1.0], [9880, 10012, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 65, 0.0], [65, 101, 0.0], [101, 128, 0.0], [128, 141, 0.0], [141, 357, 0.0], [357, 389, 0.0], [389, 420, 0.0], [420, 649, 0.0], [649, 689, 0.0], [689, 737, 0.0], [737, 935, 0.0], [935, 973, 0.0], [973, 1103, 0.0], [1103, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1348, 0.0], [1348, 1375, 0.0], [1375, 1700, 0.0], [1700, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 1906, 0.0], [1906, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1952, 0.0], [1952, 2097, 0.0], [2097, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2421, 0.0], [2421, 2449, 0.0], [2449, 2478, 0.0], [2478, 2768, 0.0], [2768, 2790, 0.0], [2790, 2949, 0.0], [2949, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3233, 0.0], [3233, 3485, 0.0], [3485, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 3769, 0.0], [3769, 3795, 0.0], [3795, 3826, 0.0], [3826, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 4003, 0.0], [4003, 4052, 0.0], [4052, 4142, 0.0], [4142, 4229, 0.0], [4229, 4275, 0.0], [4275, 4318, 0.0], [4318, 4357, 0.0], [4357, 4423, 0.0], [4423, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4544, 0.0], [4544, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4642, 0.0], [4642, 4703, 0.0], [4703, 4738, 0.0], [4738, 4775, 0.0], [4775, 4835, 0.0], [4835, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 5278, 0.0], [5278, 5383, 0.0], [5383, 5509, 0.0], [5509, 5575, 0.0], [5575, 5686, 0.0], [5686, 5865, 0.0], [5865, 5939, 0.0], [5939, 6160, 0.0], [6160, 6321, 0.0], [6321, 6472, 0.0], [6472, 6663, 0.0], [6663, 6735, 0.0], [6735, 7030, 0.0], [7030, 7194, 0.0], [7194, 7438, 0.0], [7438, 7611, 0.0], [7611, 7853, 0.0], [7853, 8040, 0.0], [8040, 8156, 0.0], [8156, 8413, 0.0], [8413, 8626, 0.0], [8626, 8745, 0.0], [8745, 9003, 0.0], [9003, 9146, 0.0], [9146, 9320, 0.0], [9320, 9551, 0.0], [9551, 9736, 0.0], [9736, 9880, 0.0], [9880, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 31, 7.0], [31, 65, 7.0], [65, 101, 6.0], [101, 128, 4.0], [128, 141, 2.0], [141, 357, 33.0], [357, 389, 5.0], [389, 420, 5.0], [420, 649, 37.0], [649, 689, 7.0], [689, 737, 8.0], [737, 935, 31.0], [935, 973, 5.0], [973, 1103, 19.0], [1103, 1125, 4.0], [1125, 1348, 39.0], [1348, 1375, 3.0], [1375, 1700, 49.0], [1700, 1717, 3.0], [1717, 1906, 28.0], [1906, 1933, 4.0], [1933, 1952, 4.0], [1952, 2097, 25.0], [2097, 2123, 4.0], [2123, 2141, 4.0], [2141, 2421, 48.0], [2421, 2449, 4.0], [2449, 2478, 5.0], [2478, 2768, 48.0], [2768, 2790, 4.0], [2790, 2949, 28.0], [2949, 2971, 4.0], [2971, 3203, 38.0], [3203, 3233, 5.0], [3233, 3485, 46.0], [3485, 3508, 4.0], [3508, 3769, 47.0], [3769, 3795, 4.0], [3795, 3826, 5.0], [3826, 3976, 25.0], [3976, 4003, 5.0], [4003, 4052, 6.0], [4052, 4142, 10.0], [4142, 4229, 11.0], [4229, 4275, 7.0], [4275, 4318, 7.0], [4318, 4357, 7.0], [4357, 4423, 8.0], [4423, 4503, 10.0], [4503, 4544, 6.0], [4544, 4580, 5.0], [4580, 4642, 9.0], [4642, 4703, 8.0], [4703, 4738, 5.0], [4738, 4775, 6.0], [4775, 4835, 8.0], [4835, 5076, 35.0], [5076, 5278, 31.0], [5278, 5383, 18.0], [5383, 5509, 22.0], [5509, 5575, 12.0], [5575, 5686, 14.0], [5686, 5865, 29.0], [5865, 5939, 13.0], [5939, 6160, 34.0], [6160, 6321, 28.0], [6321, 6472, 24.0], [6472, 6663, 27.0], [6663, 6735, 13.0], [6735, 7030, 44.0], [7030, 7194, 24.0], [7194, 7438, 42.0], [7438, 7611, 26.0], [7611, 7853, 39.0], [7853, 8040, 28.0], [8040, 8156, 19.0], [8156, 8413, 38.0], [8413, 8626, 32.0], [8626, 8745, 20.0], [8745, 9003, 41.0], [9003, 9146, 19.0], [9146, 9320, 29.0], [9320, 9551, 35.0], [9551, 9736, 32.0], [9736, 9880, 23.0], [9880, 10012, 23.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.8], [31, 65, 0.81818182], [65, 101, 0.17647059], [101, 128, 0.0], [128, 141, 0.0], [141, 357, 0.00943396], [357, 389, 0.0], [389, 420, 0.0], [420, 649, 0.02678571], [649, 689, 0.0], [689, 737, 0.0], [737, 935, 0.02072539], [935, 973, 0.0], [973, 1103, 0.01574803], [1103, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1348, 0.0456621], [1348, 1375, 0.0], [1375, 1700, 0.02539683], [1700, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 1906, 0.01081081], [1906, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1952, 0.0], [1952, 2097, 0.04255319], [2097, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2421, 0.00729927], [2421, 2449, 0.0], [2449, 2478, 0.0], [2478, 2768, 0.02105263], [2768, 2790, 0.0], [2790, 2949, 0.01298701], [2949, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3203, 0.02643172], [3203, 3233, 0.0], [3233, 3485, 0.00806452], [3485, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 3769, 0.0077821], [3769, 3795, 0.0], [3795, 3826, 0.0], [3826, 3976, 0.01369863], [3976, 4003, 0.24], [4003, 4052, 0.0], [4052, 4142, 0.0], [4142, 4229, 0.0], [4229, 4275, 0.0], [4275, 4318, 0.0], [4318, 4357, 0.0], [4357, 4423, 0.0], [4423, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4544, 0.0], [4544, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4642, 0.0], [4642, 4703, 0.0], [4703, 4738, 0.0], [4738, 4775, 0.0], [4775, 4835, 0.0], [4835, 5076, 0.01716738], [5076, 5278, 0.02083333], [5278, 5383, 0.03921569], [5383, 5509, 0.03225806], [5509, 5575, 0.06451613], [5575, 5686, 0.03846154], [5686, 5865, 0.02339181], [5865, 5939, 0.05797101], [5939, 6160, 0.01869159], [6160, 6321, 0.02580645], [6321, 6472, 0.05517241], [6472, 6663, 0.03846154], [6663, 6735, 0.05797101], [6735, 7030, 0.04255319], [7030, 7194, 0.02531646], [7194, 7438, 0.01687764], [7438, 7611, 0.02409639], [7611, 7853, 0.04255319], [7853, 8040, 0.02209945], [8040, 8156, 0.03603604], [8156, 8413, 0.01593625], [8413, 8626, 0.01941748], [8626, 8745, 0.03508772], [8745, 9003, 0.032], [9003, 9146, 0.02919708], [9146, 9320, 0.0239521], [9320, 9551, 0.01777778], [9551, 9736, 0.02209945], [9736, 9880, 0.0729927], [9880, 10012, 0.03100775]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 65, 0.0], [65, 101, 0.0], [101, 128, 0.0], [128, 141, 0.0], [141, 357, 0.0], [357, 389, 0.0], [389, 420, 0.0], [420, 649, 0.0], [649, 689, 0.0], [689, 737, 0.0], [737, 935, 0.0], [935, 973, 0.0], [973, 1103, 0.0], [1103, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1348, 0.0], [1348, 1375, 0.0], [1375, 1700, 0.0], [1700, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 1906, 0.0], [1906, 1933, 0.0], [1933, 1952, 0.0], [1952, 2097, 0.0], [2097, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2421, 0.0], [2421, 2449, 0.0], [2449, 2478, 0.0], [2478, 2768, 0.0], [2768, 2790, 0.0], [2790, 2949, 0.0], [2949, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3233, 0.0], [3233, 3485, 0.0], [3485, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 3769, 0.0], [3769, 3795, 0.0], [3795, 3826, 0.0], [3826, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 4003, 0.0], [4003, 4052, 0.0], [4052, 4142, 0.0], [4142, 4229, 0.0], [4229, 4275, 0.0], [4275, 4318, 0.0], [4318, 4357, 0.0], [4357, 4423, 0.0], [4423, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 4544, 0.0], [4544, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4642, 0.0], [4642, 4703, 0.0], [4703, 4738, 0.0], [4738, 4775, 0.0], [4775, 4835, 0.0], [4835, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 5278, 0.0], [5278, 5383, 0.0], [5383, 5509, 0.0], [5509, 5575, 0.0], [5575, 5686, 0.0], [5686, 5865, 0.0], [5865, 5939, 0.0], [5939, 6160, 0.0], [6160, 6321, 0.0], [6321, 6472, 0.0], [6472, 6663, 0.0], [6663, 6735, 0.0], [6735, 7030, 0.0], [7030, 7194, 0.0], [7194, 7438, 0.0], [7438, 7611, 0.0], [7611, 7853, 0.0], [7853, 8040, 0.0], [8040, 8156, 0.0], [8156, 8413, 0.0], [8413, 8626, 0.0], [8626, 8745, 0.0], [8745, 9003, 0.0], [9003, 9146, 0.0], [9146, 9320, 0.0], [9320, 9551, 0.0], [9551, 9736, 0.0], [9736, 9880, 0.0], [9880, 10012, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 65, 0.0], [65, 101, 0.08333333], [101, 128, 0.11111111], [128, 141, 0.15384615], [141, 357, 0.04166667], [357, 389, 0.125], [389, 420, 0.12903226], [420, 649, 0.05240175], [649, 689, 0.1], [689, 737, 0.08333333], [737, 935, 0.03535354], [935, 973, 0.10526316], [973, 1103, 0.06153846], [1103, 1125, 0.18181818], [1125, 1348, 0.02690583], [1348, 1375, 0.11111111], [1375, 1700, 0.03076923], [1700, 1717, 0.23529412], [1717, 1906, 0.06878307], [1906, 1933, 0.11111111], [1933, 1952, 0.15789474], [1952, 2097, 0.07586207], [2097, 2123, 0.11538462], [2123, 2141, 0.16666667], [2141, 2421, 0.06428571], [2421, 2449, 0.10714286], [2449, 2478, 0.13793103], [2478, 2768, 0.03448276], [2768, 2790, 0.18181818], [2790, 2949, 0.04402516], [2949, 2971, 0.18181818], [2971, 3203, 0.04310345], [3203, 3233, 0.13333333], [3233, 3485, 0.02380952], [3485, 3508, 0.17391304], [3508, 3769, 0.02298851], [3769, 3795, 0.11538462], [3795, 3826, 0.12903226], [3826, 3976, 0.04666667], [3976, 4003, 0.07407407], [4003, 4052, 0.10204082], [4052, 4142, 0.1], [4142, 4229, 0.11494253], [4229, 4275, 0.10869565], [4275, 4318, 0.13953488], [4318, 4357, 0.20512821], [4357, 4423, 0.10606061], [4423, 4503, 0.2125], [4503, 4544, 0.12195122], [4544, 4580, 0.11111111], [4580, 4642, 0.20967742], [4642, 4703, 0.14754098], [4703, 4738, 0.11428571], [4738, 4775, 0.13513514], [4775, 4835, 0.11666667], [4835, 5076, 0.08713693], [5076, 5278, 0.03465347], [5278, 5383, 0.0952381], [5383, 5509, 0.06349206], [5509, 5575, 0.06060606], [5575, 5686, 0.06306306], [5686, 5865, 0.06145251], [5865, 5939, 0.08108108], [5939, 6160, 0.06334842], [6160, 6321, 0.0621118], [6321, 6472, 0.07284768], [6472, 6663, 0.04188482], [6663, 6735, 0.11111111], [6735, 7030, 0.07118644], [7030, 7194, 0.05487805], [7194, 7438, 0.06557377], [7438, 7611, 0.07514451], [7611, 7853, 0.04545455], [7853, 8040, 0.0855615], [8040, 8156, 0.04310345], [8156, 8413, 0.02723735], [8413, 8626, 0.03755869], [8626, 8745, 0.04201681], [8745, 9003, 0.03875969], [9003, 9146, 0.05594406], [9146, 9320, 0.02873563], [9320, 9551, 0.02597403], [9551, 9736, 0.04324324], [9736, 9880, 0.03472222], [9880, 10012, 0.06818182]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10012, 0.74016726]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10012, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10012, 0.50969559]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10012, -442.08753819]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10012, -31.74658828]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10012, 260.70630402]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10012, 83.0]]}
Art Monk, Dave Casper joining HOF Tagged: espn, Football, NFL, Sports Before they were Super Bowl champions and Pro Football Hall of Fame members, Art Monk and Dave Casper had successful college football careers. College Football Hall of Fame Profiles Former UCLA and Ravens offensive tackle Jonathan Ogden is among players and coaches who will be enshrined into the College Football Hall of Fame this year. Click here to more about the Hall’s newest members. Blog On Tuesday, Monk, who led Syracuse in receiving three times, and Casper, a consensus All-American on Notre Dame‘s 1973 national championship team, were named to the College Football Hall of Fame. Monk, who starred for three Washington Redskins Super Bowl winners, began his Syracuse career as a running back and shifted to wide receiver. He holds the school record for most receptions in a game with 14, against Navy in 1977. Casper, who won a pair of Super Bowls with the Oakland Raiders, played his first two seasons in South Bend on the offensive line before moving to tight end. He was a co-captain of the 1973 Fighting Irish team that beat Alabama in the Sugar Bowl and claimed the AP national title. Quarterbacks Steve Bartkowski of California and Tommy Kramer of Rice were also among the 17 players and coaches announced as part of the Hall of Fame’s Class of 2012. They joined former BYU quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Ty Detmer, whose inclusion in the Hall was announced Monday. Bartkowski led all Division I quarterbacks in passing yards in 1974, with 182 completions for 2,580 yards, while Kramer led the nation in total offense in 1976 with 297.5 yards per game. Both went on to successful NFL careers, with Bartkowski starring for the Atlanta Falcons and Kramer for the Minnesota Vikings. Coaches being enshrined into the Hall of Fame include Phillip Fulmer of Tennessee, Jimmy Johnson of Oklahoma State and Miami and R.C. Slocum of Texas A&M. Fulmer led the Volunteers to the first-ever BCS Championship Game title in 1998, and Johnson’s Hurricanes went undefeated in the 1986 and 1987 regular seasons and won the 1987 national championship. Running backs Charles Alexander of LSU and Otis Armstrong of Purdue, tight end Hal Bedsole of USC, offensive tackle Jonathan Ogden of UCLA and offensive guard John Wooten of Colorado rounded out the offensive players announced Tuesday as Hall of Famers. Defensive players named to the Hall of Fame included former Kansas State linebacker Mark Simoneau, former Texas Tech defensive tackle Gabe Rivera, former Colorado State defensive back Greg Myers and former Air Force defensive back Scott Thomas. “Art Monk, Dave Casper joining HOF” – ESPN TEAM – 5/15/12 View original article at ESPN.com: http://espn.go.com/college-football/story/_/id/7932615/art-monk-dave-casper-lead-college-football-hall-fame-class-2012 Previous Post: Researchers generate electricity with viruses Next Post: Kyrie Irving Runs Away with Rookie of the Year
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/13020
{"url": "https://www.goodworldnews.org/index.php/2012/05/15/art-monk-dave-casper-joining-hof/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.goodworldnews.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:41:40Z", "digest": "sha1:DZKXO4WB6G6ZRH42GZROPOBSBL3OO5ZN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2957, 2957.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2957, 3831.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2957, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2957, 63.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2957, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2957, 222.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2957, 0.27986348]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2957, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2957, 0.03362391]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2957, 0.02324616]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2957, 0.01992528]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2957, 0.0249066]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2957, 0.02988792]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2957, 0.03242321]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2957, 0.18430034]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2957, 0.53518124]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2957, 5.13646055]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2957, 5.10266927]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2957, 469.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 70, 0.0], [70, 213, 1.0], [213, 252, 0.0], [252, 465, 0.0], [465, 661, 1.0], [661, 891, 1.0], [891, 1171, 1.0], [1171, 1460, 1.0], [1460, 1774, 1.0], [1774, 1929, 1.0], [1929, 2128, 1.0], [2128, 2382, 1.0], [2382, 2627, 1.0], [2627, 2685, 0.0], [2685, 2720, 0.0], [2720, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 2900, 0.0], [2900, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 70, 0.0], [70, 213, 0.0], [213, 252, 0.0], [252, 465, 0.0], [465, 661, 0.0], [661, 891, 0.0], [891, 1171, 0.0], [1171, 1460, 0.0], [1460, 1774, 0.0], [1774, 1929, 0.0], [1929, 2128, 0.0], [2128, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2627, 0.0], [2627, 2685, 0.0], [2685, 2720, 0.0], [2720, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 2900, 0.0], [2900, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 34, 6.0], [34, 70, 5.0], [70, 213, 23.0], [213, 252, 6.0], [252, 465, 36.0], [465, 661, 31.0], [661, 891, 40.0], [891, 1171, 52.0], [1171, 1460, 48.0], [1460, 1774, 52.0], [1774, 1929, 26.0], [1929, 2128, 31.0], [2128, 2382, 41.0], [2382, 2627, 37.0], [2627, 2685, 11.0], [2685, 2720, 5.0], [2720, 2839, 1.0], [2839, 2900, 7.0], [2900, 2957, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 70, 0.0], [70, 213, 0.0], [213, 252, 0.0], [252, 465, 0.0], [465, 661, 0.0212766], [661, 891, 0.02678571], [891, 1171, 0.01459854], [1171, 1460, 0.02105263], [1460, 1774, 0.0620915], [1774, 1929, 0.0], [1929, 2128, 0.08205128], [2128, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2627, 0.0], [2627, 2685, 0.09259259], [2685, 2720, 0.0], [2720, 2839, 0.11578947], [2839, 2900, 0.0], [2900, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 70, 0.0], [70, 213, 0.0], [213, 252, 0.0], [252, 465, 0.0], [465, 661, 0.0], [661, 891, 0.0], [891, 1171, 0.0], [1171, 1460, 0.0], [1460, 1774, 0.0], [1774, 1929, 0.0], [1929, 2128, 0.0], [2128, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2627, 0.0], [2627, 2685, 0.0], [2685, 2720, 0.0], [2720, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 2900, 0.0], [2900, 2957, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 34, 0.20588235], [34, 70, 0.16666667], [70, 213, 0.07692308], [213, 252, 0.12820513], [252, 465, 0.07042254], [465, 661, 0.06632653], [661, 891, 0.03478261], [891, 1171, 0.05357143], [1171, 1460, 0.06920415], [1460, 1774, 0.04458599], [1774, 1929, 0.10967742], [1929, 2128, 0.04522613], [2128, 2382, 0.1023622], [2382, 2627, 0.07755102], [2627, 2685, 0.25862069], [2685, 2720, 0.14285714], [2720, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 2900, 0.04918033], [2900, 2957, 0.14035088]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2957, 0.90626508]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2957, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2957, 0.98716658]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2957, -182.37128177]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2957, 3.64194392]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2957, 24.40514544]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2957, 23.0]]}
CHRISTOPHER NOLAN AND EMMA THOMAS TO RECEIVE “NATO SPIRIT OF THE INDUSTRY AWARD” AT CINEMACON® UNIVERSAL PICTURES’ OPPENHEIMER ARRIVES EXCLUSIVELY IN THEATRES ON JULY 21, 2023 WASHINGTON D.C. and LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA (February 23, 2023) – The National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) will honor Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas with the NATO Spirit of the Industry Award during this year’s CinemaCon, Mitch Neuhauser, Managing Director of CinemaCon, announced today. CinemaCon, the official convention of NATO, will be held April 24-27, 2023, at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas. Nolan and Thomas will be presented with this special honor at the Big Screen Achievement Awards ceremony taking place on the evening of Thursday, April 27, at The Colosseum at Caesars Palace and hosted by official presenting sponsor The Coca-Cola Company. “I am deeply honored to present the Spirit of the Industry Award to our good friends Chris and Emma as my last official act as President of NATO,” noted NATO President and CEO John Fithian. “No one has done more to advance the theatrical experience than these two champions of cinema.” Christopher Nolan and Emma Thomas’ films shatter the limits of what cinematic storytelling can achieve, maintaining a shared passion and commitment to the theatrical filmgoing experience that is unwavering and unparalleled. Nolan and Thomas’ films, including Tenet, Dunkirk, Interstellar, Inception and The Dark Knight trilogy, have earned more than $5 billion at the global box office and have been awarded 11 Oscars and 36 nominations, including two Best Picture nominations. Nolan and Thomas’ work can be seen this summer in Universal Pictures’ Oppenheimer, their first film with the studio, arriving exclusively in theaters on July 21, 2023. Written and directed by Nolan, Oppenheimer is an IMAX®-shot epic thriller that thrusts audiences into the pulse-pounding paradox of the enigmatic man who must risk destroying the world in order to save it. Oppenheimer stars Cillian Murphy as J. Robert Oppenheimer, Emily Blunt as Katherine “Kitty” Oppenheimer, Matt Damon as General Leslie Groves Jr. and Robert Downey, Jr. as Lewis Strauss. Oppenheimer also stars Florence Pugh, Benny Safdie, Michael Angarano, Josh Hartnett, Rami Malek and reunites Nolan with actor, writer and filmmaker Kenneth Branagh. Additional cast includes Dane DeHaan, Dylan Arnold, David Krumholtz, Alden Ehrenreich and Matthew Modine. The film is based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning book American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer by Kai Bird and the late Martin J. Sherwin. The film is produced by Emma Thomas, Atlas Entertainment’s Charles Roven and Christopher Nolan. Oppenheimer is filmed in a combination of IMAX® 65mm and 65mm large-format film photography including, for the first time ever, sections in IMAX® black and white analogue photography. CinemaCon attracts upwards of 6,000 motion picture professionals from all facets of the industry – from exhibition and distribution, to the equipment and concession areas – all on hand to celebrate the movie-going experience and the cinema industry. CinemaCon is delighted to have both the International Cinema Technology Association (ICTA) and National Association of Concessionaires (NAC) as its tradeshow partners. CinemaCon is also thrilled to have The Coca-Cola Company – one of the industry’s most highly regarded and respected partners in the world of the movies – as its official presenting sponsor. About NATO The National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) is the largest exhibition trade organization in the world, representing more than 35,000 movie screens in all 50 states, and more than 32,000 screens in 100 countries worldwide. NATO’s membership includes the largest cinema chains in the world as well as hundreds of independent theatre owners. Additional information on CinemaCon, as well as an application to apply for press credentials, can be found at www.cinemacon.com. Heather Lewandoski Hlewandoski@me.com
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/15405
{"url": "https://cinemacon.com/christopher-nolan-and-emma-thomas-to-receive-nato-spirit-of-the-industry-award-at-cinemacon", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "cinemacon.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:49:36Z", "digest": "sha1:HUMHJLXTGHJWSFHLXKKATO3NZIYSPO4N"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4013, 4013.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4013, 4862.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4013, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4013, 55.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4013, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4013, 200.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4013, 0.288]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4013, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4013, 0.05693519]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4013, 0.02483343]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4013, 0.02483343]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4013, 0.01059964]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4013, 0.01574803]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4013, 0.02089643]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4013, 0.064]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4013, 0.18933333]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4013, 0.53583062]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4013, 5.37785016]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4013, 5.27329114]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4013, 614.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 0.0], [176, 840, 1.0], [840, 1126, 1.0], [1126, 1564, 0.0], [1564, 1604, 1.0], [1604, 2435, 1.0], [2435, 2698, 1.0], [2698, 2882, 1.0], [2882, 3132, 1.0], [3132, 3490, 1.0], [3490, 3501, 0.0], [3501, 3846, 1.0], [3846, 3976, 1.0], [3976, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 0.0], [176, 840, 0.0], [840, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1564, 0.0], [1564, 1604, 0.0], [1604, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2698, 0.0], [2698, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 3132, 0.0], [3132, 3490, 0.0], [3490, 3501, 0.0], [3501, 3846, 0.0], [3846, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 95, 15.0], [95, 176, 11.0], [176, 840, 103.0], [840, 1126, 51.0], [1126, 1564, 65.0], [1564, 1604, 5.0], [1604, 2435, 125.0], [2435, 2698, 42.0], [2698, 2882, 28.0], [2882, 3132, 38.0], [3132, 3490, 54.0], [3490, 3501, 2.0], [3501, 3846, 53.0], [3846, 3976, 19.0], [3976, 3995, 2.0], [3995, 4013, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 0.07594937], [176, 840, 0.024961], [840, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1564, 0.01168224], [1564, 1604, 0.0], [1604, 2435, 0.00745342], [2435, 2698, 0.0], [2698, 2882, 0.02234637], [2882, 3132, 0.01632653], [3132, 3490, 0.0], [3490, 3501, 0.0], [3501, 3846, 0.04464286], [3846, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 0.0], [176, 840, 0.0], [840, 1126, 0.0], [1126, 1564, 0.0], [1564, 1604, 0.0], [1604, 2435, 0.0], [2435, 2698, 0.0], [2698, 2882, 0.0], [2882, 3132, 0.0], [3132, 3490, 0.0], [3490, 3501, 0.0], [3501, 3846, 0.0], [3846, 3976, 0.0], [3976, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4013, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 95, 0.81052632], [95, 176, 0.7654321], [176, 840, 0.13253012], [840, 1126, 0.07692308], [1126, 1564, 0.03196347], [1564, 1604, 0.05], [1604, 2435, 0.07340554], [2435, 2698, 0.09505703], [2698, 2882, 0.04891304], [2882, 3132, 0.008], [3132, 3490, 0.06145251], [3490, 3501, 0.45454545], [3501, 3846, 0.03768116], [3846, 3976, 0.02307692], [3976, 3995, 0.10526316], [3995, 4013, 0.05555556]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4013, 0.37379766]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4013, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4013, 0.92416584]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4013, -262.70097717]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4013, 6.24935978]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4013, -13.68654475]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4013, 32.0]]}
Mexican Military Finds 72 Bodies Near Border Filed under: Afghanistan, CIA, civilian casualties, cocaine, corruption, crack, death squads, dictatorship, drug cartel, drug smuggling, drug trafficking, drug war, drugs, empire, gangsters, heroin, illegal immigration, Iran Contra, los zetas, mercenaries, mexico, Military, Military Industrial Complex, Pakistan, scandal, south america, special ops, Taliban, Troops, war on drugs | Tags: army, government drug smuggling, United States Army School of the Americas Factoid: The U.S. and Mexican government are highly implicated in supporting drug cartels. Los Zetas drug cartel, one of the most sophisticated and violent groups were originally trained by the United States Army School of the Americas (SOA). http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tNoJOQ-QMw Gunmen from a drug cartel appear to have massacred 72 migrants from Central and South America who were on their way to the U.S., a grisly event that marks the single biggest killing in Mexico’s war on organized crime. Mexican marines discovered the 72 bodies—58 men and 14 women —on Tuesday after the lone survivor of the massacre, a wounded migrant from Ecuador, stumbled into a Navy checkpoint the previous day and told of being shot on Monday at a nearby ranch, Mexican officials said on Wednesday. When the marines went to investigate, they were met with a hail of gunfire from cartel gunmen holed up at the ranch, which sits 90 miles from the U.S. border. One marine and three alleged gunmen died during a two-hour battle, which ended when the gunmen fled in a fleet of SUVs, leaving behind a cache of weapons. The Ecuadorean migrant told investigators that his captors identified themselves as members of the Zetas drug gang, said Vice Adm. Jose Luis Vergara, a spokesman for the Mexican navy. Mexican Massacre Investigator Found Dead London Guardian The body of an official investigating the massacre of 72 Central and South American migrants killed in a ranch in the northeastern Mexican state of Tamaulipas was found today dumped beside a nearby road alongside another unidentified victim, according to local media. Earlier, two cars exploded outside the studios of the national TV network Televisa in the state capital, Ciudad Victoria. There were no casualties, but the blasts added to a growing sense of fear in the aftermath of the worst single act of violence in the country’s raging drug wars. Meanwhile, investigators under armed guard continued the process of identifying the victims, with 20 named by midday on Friday, local officials said. The migrants, 14 of them women, came from at least four countries, including Honduras, El Salvador, Brazil and Ecuador. They were found bound and blindfolded by the wall of a barn after navy personnel stormed the ranch on Tuesday. CRACK THE CIA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYOVQezWaCY Is the CIA behind Mexico’s Bloody Drug War? Clinton, Bush and the CIA: The Mena Connection Are America’s Mercenary Armies Really Drug Cartels? Blackwater, US Military Working For Taliban Drug Lords Afghan drug trafficking brings U.S. $50 billion a year Leave a Comment so far
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/15624
{"url": "https://infolution.wordpress.com/2010/08/29/mexican-military-finds-72-bodies-near-border/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "infolution.wordpress.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:22:49Z", "digest": "sha1:WNRGZQOJGPQFKNOP4R3IIQFT7N5EJSXL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3117, 3117.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3117, 5744.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3117, 22.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3117, 113.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3117, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3117, 261.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3117, 0.28084416]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3117, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3117, 0.02773376]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3117, 0.02773376]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3117, 0.02773376]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3117, 0.01386688]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3117, 0.01267829]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3117, 0.01743265]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3117, 0.0275974]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3117, 0.18831169]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3117, 0.57084189]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3117, 5.18275154]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3117, 5.15897161]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3117, 487.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 509, 0.0], [509, 752, 1.0], [752, 795, 0.0], [795, 1013, 1.0], [1013, 1297, 1.0], [1297, 1611, 1.0], [1611, 1795, 1.0], [1795, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 1852, 0.0], [1852, 2120, 1.0], [2120, 2404, 1.0], [2404, 2554, 1.0], [2554, 2785, 1.0], [2785, 2799, 0.0], [2799, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2886, 1.0], [2886, 2933, 0.0], [2933, 2985, 1.0], [2985, 3040, 0.0], [3040, 3095, 0.0], [3095, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 509, 0.0], [509, 752, 0.0], [752, 795, 0.0], [795, 1013, 0.0], [1013, 1297, 0.0], [1297, 1611, 0.0], [1611, 1795, 0.0], [1795, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 1852, 0.0], [1852, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2554, 0.0], [2554, 2785, 0.0], [2785, 2799, 0.0], [2799, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2886, 0.0], [2886, 2933, 0.0], [2933, 2985, 0.0], [2985, 3040, 0.0], [3040, 3095, 0.0], [3095, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 7.0], [45, 509, 59.0], [509, 752, 38.0], [752, 795, 1.0], [795, 1013, 39.0], [1013, 1297, 48.0], [1297, 1611, 58.0], [1611, 1795, 29.0], [1795, 1836, 5.0], [1836, 1852, 2.0], [1852, 2120, 42.0], [2120, 2404, 49.0], [2404, 2554, 22.0], [2554, 2785, 39.0], [2785, 2799, 3.0], [2799, 2842, 1.0], [2842, 2886, 8.0], [2886, 2933, 8.0], [2933, 2985, 7.0], [2985, 3040, 8.0], [3040, 3095, 9.0], [3095, 3117, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.04545455], [45, 509, 0.0], [509, 752, 0.0], [752, 795, 0.03030303], [795, 1013, 0.00938967], [1013, 1297, 0.02150538], [1297, 1611, 0.00657895], [1611, 1795, 0.0], [1795, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 1852, 0.0], [1852, 2120, 0.00754717], [2120, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2554, 0.0137931], [2554, 2785, 0.00896861], [2785, 2799, 0.0], [2799, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2886, 0.0], [2886, 2933, 0.0], [2933, 2985, 0.0], [2985, 3040, 0.0], [3040, 3095, 0.03921569], [3095, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 509, 0.0], [509, 752, 0.0], [752, 795, 0.0], [795, 1013, 0.0], [1013, 1297, 0.0], [1297, 1611, 0.0], [1611, 1795, 0.0], [1795, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 1852, 0.0], [1852, 2120, 0.0], [2120, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2554, 0.0], [2554, 2785, 0.0], [2785, 2799, 0.0], [2799, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2886, 0.0], [2886, 2933, 0.0], [2933, 2985, 0.0], [2985, 3040, 0.0], [3040, 3095, 0.0], [3095, 3117, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.13333333], [45, 509, 0.04310345], [509, 752, 0.0617284], [752, 795, 0.13953488], [795, 1013, 0.03211009], [1013, 1297, 0.02464789], [1297, 1611, 0.02229299], [1611, 1795, 0.04891304], [1795, 1836, 0.12195122], [1836, 1852, 0.125], [1852, 2120, 0.02238806], [2120, 2404, 0.02464789], [2404, 2554, 0.01333333], [2554, 2785, 0.03463203], [2785, 2799, 0.78571429], [2799, 2842, 0.18604651], [2842, 2886, 0.18181818], [2886, 2933, 0.17021277], [2933, 2985, 0.13461538], [2985, 3040, 0.16363636], [3040, 3095, 0.05454545], [3095, 3117, 0.09090909]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3117, 0.85827428]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3117, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3117, 0.69574237]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3117, -144.18841674]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3117, 42.22420787]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3117, 29.78680863]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3117, 31.0]]}
María Magdalena Campos-Pons combines and crosses diverse artistic practices, including photography, painting, sculpture, film, video, and performance. Her work addresses issues of history, memory, gender, and religion; it investigates how each one of these themes informs identity formation. Born in 1959 in La Vega, a town in the province of Matanzas, Cuba, Campos-Pons is a descendant of Nigerians who had been brought to the island as enslaved people in the 19th century. She grew up learning firsthand about the legacy of slavery along with the beliefs of Santeria, a Yoruba-derived religion. Directly informed by the traditions, rituals, and practices of her ancestors, her work is deeply autobiographical. Often using herself and her Afro-Cuban relatives as subjects, she creates historical narratives that illuminate the spirit of people and places, past and present, and renders universal relevance from personal history and persona. Her imagery and performances recall dark narratives of the Middle Passage and the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. They honor the labor of Black bodies on indigo and sugar plantations, renew Catholic and Santeria religious practices, and celebrate revolutionary uprisings in the Americas. As she writes, “I…collect and tell stories of forgotten people in order to foster a dialogue to better understand and propose a poetic, compassionate reading of our time.” Campos-Pons has had solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Indianapolis Museum of Art, the Peabody Essex Museum, and the National Gallery of Canada, among other distinguished institutions. She has participated in the Venice Biennale (2013, 2001), the Dakar Biennale, the Johannesburg Biennial, Documenta 14, the Guangzhou Triennial, three editions of the Havana Biennial, and the Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA and Prospect.4 Triennial. She has presented over 30 solo performances commissioned by institutions including the Guggenheim Museum and the Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery. Every element that appears in María Magdalena Campos-Pons’ performance work is something that the artist herself has created. She designs her own costumes. She writes the texts that she or her collaborators will speak or chant. She fabricates the physical items that she will deploy and constructs the sonic features by which she will be accompanied. The power of her performances—unprecedented actions that immerse contemporary viewers in ancient practices and unremembered narratives—is derived precisely from her commitment to and investment in every aspect of her work. Campos-Pons’ performances tend to unfold as processions. They are ritualistic spectacles that physically and spiritually embody the spaces in which they take place while asserting themselves outward and beyond the boundaries of those spaces. They are simultaneously immanent and transcendent. Operating within the museum institution, they kick open its doors and reinscribe within its halls identities that have been institutionally excluded, thereby transforming both the institution and the visitor. Incorporating incantations, religious rituals, and celebrations, Campos-Pons’ performances challenge viewers to participate by virtue of their presence while providing opportunities for all present to reflect, to call forth energies, and to heal. In the late 1980s, Campos-Pons taught at the prestigious Instituto Superior de Arte in Havana and gained an international reputation as an exponent of the New Cuban Art movement that arose in opposition to Communist repression on the island. In 1991, she immigrated to Boston and taught at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University, where she received numerous prizes and honors for both her teaching and her artistic practice. In 2017, she was awarded the Vanderbilt Chair at Vanderbilt University and moved to Nashville, TN, where she currently resides. Campos-Pons’ works are in over 30 museum collections, including the Smithsonian Institution; the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Art Institute of Chicago; the National Gallery of Canada; the Victoria and Albert Museum; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Perez Art Museum, Miami; and the Fogg Art Museum. Okwui Okpokwasili is a Brooklyn-based performing artist working at the intersection of theater, dance, and installation. Her work considers the dynamics of interiority and psychic space in shaping relationships, sociality, and memory grounded in the body and perspective of the Afro-femme. With Director/Designer Peter Born, Okpokwasili creates collaborative multidisciplinary projects including the Bessie Award-winning Pent-Up: A Revenge Dance, Bessie Award-winning Bronx Gothic, and Bronx Gothic: The Oval, Poor People’s TV Room, Poor People’s TV Room Solo, When I Return Who Will Receive Me, and Adaku’s Revolt. Over the last few years, Okpokwasili has been working on Sitting On A Man’s Head, a collaborative, improvisational sonic praxis with multiple artists inspired by the precolonial embodied protest practices of Southeastern Nigerian women called Sitting On A Man. The last iteration of this practice was an anchoring event in the Danspace Platform: Utterances from the Chorus, which she co-curated along with the team lead by Judy Hussie-Taylor at Danspace Project in NYC. As a performer, Okpokwasili frequently collaborates with award-winning director Ralph Lemon. She is a 2018 MacArthur Fellow, a 2015–2017 Randjelovic/Stryker New York Live Arts Resident Commissioned Artist, a 2018 Princeton University Hodder Fellow, and is currently a UNC Chapel Hill CPA fellow. She is the recipient of numerous awards including a Doris Duke Artist Award, United States Artist Fellowship, Herb Alpert Award, and Foundation for Contemporary Art Award. Her performance work has been commissioned and presented by the Walker Art Center, Danspace Project, Performance Space New York, Center for the Art of Performance at UCLA, MCA Chicago, ICA Boston, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, the 10th Annual Berlin Biennale, The Young Vic (London), Jacob’s Pillow, and New York Live Arts. LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs A writer, vocalist, and performance/sound artist, she is the author of TwERK (Belladonna, 2013). Diggs has presented and performed at California Institute of the Arts, El Museo del Barrio, The Museum of Modern Art, the Walker Art Center, and at festivals including Explore the North Festival, Leeuwarden, Netherlands; Hekayeh Festival, Abu Dhabi; International Poetry Festival of Copenhagen; Ocean Space, Venice; International Poetry Festival of Romania; Question of Will, Slovakia; Poesiefestival, Berlin; and the 2015 Venice Biennale. As an independent curator, artistic director, and producer, Diggs has presented events for BAMCafé, Black Rock Coalition, El Museo del Barrio, Lincoln Center Out of Doors, and the David Rubenstein Atrium. Diggs has received a 2020 C.D. Wright Award for Poetry from the Foundation of Contemporary Art, a Whiting Award (2016), and a National Endowment for the Arts Literature Fellowship (2015), as well as grants and fellowships from Cave Canem, Creative Capital, New York Foundation for the Arts, and the US-Japan Friendship Commission, among others. Lisa E. Harris is an interdisciplinary artist, filmmaker, creative soprano, performer, composer, improviser, writer, singer/songwriter, and educator from Houston, Texas. Recognized by the Huffington Post as “one of fourteen artists transforming Opera,” Harris focuses on the energetic relationships between body, land, spirit, and place. Using voice, theremin, movement, meditation, and new media to explore spatial awareness, relationality, panoptical surveillance, and sonic profiling, she maintains a focused concentration on healing in performance and living. She is the founder and creative director of Studio Enertia, an arts collective and production company in Houston. Studio Enertia is the producer of Harris’ recently completed ten-year durational work, Cry of the Third Eye, a new opera film in Three Acts that archives the effects of gentrification on her Houston neighborhood. She recently created and curated Houston’s inaugural Free Time Flow Festival at MacGregor Park, celebrating the intersections of basketball, electro-acoustic music, and improvisational performance. She can be heard on her much-anticipated release EarthSeed, a live performance album based on the writings of Octavia Butler, composed with Nicole Mitchell on FPE records. Harris is also often featured as the lead singer with Jason Moran’s Fats Waller Dance Party. She has performed at numerous jazz festivals, including the Monterey Jazz Festival and Newport Jazz Festival, among others. Samita Sinha is a vocalist, performer, composer, and educator who creates multidisciplinary performance works that investigate origins of voice. She synthesizes Indian vocal traditions and embodied energetic practices to create a decolonized, multivalent language of vibration and transformation. Sinha’s works have been commissioned by Asia Society, Performance Space 122, Invisible Dog Art Center, Danspace Project, Rubin Museum, Queens Museum, Gibney, and Onassis Foundation, and presented by The Kitchen, Wexner Center for the Arts, REDCAT, PICA, National Sawdust, and others. She has received awards from National Endowment for the Arts, Fulbright Foundation, National Performance Network, New York State Council on the Arts, and the Ucross/Alpert Residency Prize, and collaborated across disciplines with artists including Okwui Okpokwasili and Peter Born, Ralph Lemon, Sunny Jain, and Grey Mcmurray, Sunil Bald, and Sekou Sundiata. Sinha teaches voice through many channels, recently through Danspace, Princeton University, Swarthmore College, Movement Research, Centro Nacional de las Artes in Mexico City, and New York Asian Women’s Center. Jana Harper (Mackinac Bands of Chippewa and Ottawa Indians) is an interdisciplinary artist of mixed settler and Indigenous ancestry. Her work explores the themes and tensions between materiality and transcendence, chance encounters and human willfulness, relationships and connectivity, and human acts of meaning-making. With a background in somatic practices, Harper works both individually and collaboratively towards establishing conditions for healing. Recent performance projects include Cargas, the closing event for Intermittent Rivers at the 2019 Havana Biennial, and This Holding, which was supported by a National Endowment for the Arts award. Harper is Associate Professor of the practice in the Department of Art at Vanderbilt University. Dell Marie Hamilton is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and independent curator who has performed and presented extensively in and around New England, including at Boston University, the Museum of Fine Arts/Boston, ICA/Boston, and at Dartmouth College’s Hood Museum of Art. She has also appeared in collaborative performances with Afro-Cuban artist María Magdalena Campos-Pons at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the National Portrait Gallery. In 2019, Dell presented her first solo show, All Languages Welcomed HERE, at Salem State University, which was reviewed by NKA: Journal of Contemporary African Art. She also became the first visual artist to present a performance artwork at the Clark Art Institute. Last summer, she participated in the 13th Havana Biennial as part of Campos-Pons’s curatorial project Intermittent Rivers. Her most recent curatorial project Nine Moments for Now was ranked by Hyperallergic as one of 2018’s top 20 exhibitions in the U.S. Codie Elaine Oliver is a CEO and co-founder of Black Love, Inc., a growing media company comprised of BlackLove.com, Black Love’s social and digital platforms, and live and virtual events that include the annual Black Love Summit. She is the director and co-creator of the groundbreaking docuseries, Black Love, which premiered as the most-viewed unscripted series in OWN’s history and is set to return for its fifth season in 2021. Oliver is also a partner at Confluential Content, a company she shares with her husband Tommy Oliver, and the production company behind the recent HBO Documentary 40 Years A Prisoner and the upcoming Netflix film The Perfect Find, starring Gabrielle Union. Prior to Black Love, Oliver had stints at Film Independent, Fox Searchlight, and Creative Artists Agency. Oliver received her master’s degree from the Peter Stark Producing Program at USC and is a proud Howard University alum, a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, and mama to three boys four and under, practicing every day to find balance between entrepreneurship and family. Meg Neville is a costume designer, visual artist, and writer. She has collaborated with María Magdalena Campos-Pons on costumes for performances including If I were a poet with Wendi Norris Gallery in San Francisco. As a theatrical costume designer, she has worked with venues including BAM, The Public, Second Stage, Oregon Shakespeare Theater Festival, Yale Repertory Theater, Hartford Stage, Center Stage, The Guthrie, and The Kirk Douglas Theater, Los Angeles. Nelville has had long fruitful collaborations with Bay Area theaters, including Berkeley Repertory Theater, The Magic, and California Shakespeare Theater. With Berkeley Repertory Theater, she has designed costumes for many plays, including the premiere of Sarah Ruhl’s Becky Nurse of Salem, directed by Anne Kaufman, which will open at Lincoln Center in 2021. Other productions include Party People directed by Liesl Tommy (also at The Public), the US premiere of Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice with Les Waters (Yale Rep and Second Stage), MacBeth directed by Daniel Sullivan starring Frances McDormand, among others. As a creative consultant, Neville has done historical costume research for the de Young Museum’s costume and textile departments and for independent film documentaries. She is a graduate of Brown University and the Yale School of Drama. She is a recipient of a Bay Area costume design award.
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/17061
{"url": "https://creativetime.org/when-we-gather-mmcp-artists/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "creativetime.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:53:18Z", "digest": "sha1:I23TXJY6BJ4MAH6W4DVAZRIEHLG7RN7E"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 14030, 14030.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 14030, 14987.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 14030, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 14030, 63.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 14030, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 14030, 163.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 14030, 0.28755365]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 14030, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 14030, 0.02015397]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 14030, 0.00484387]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 14030, 0.00778479]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 14030, 0.00570885]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 14030, 0.00441138]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 14030, 0.01521654]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 14030, 0.17245416]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 14030, 0.43584815]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 14030, 5.55550216]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 14030, 0.00039017]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 14030, 5.92618421]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 14030, 2081.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 292, 1.0], [292, 1052, 1.0], [1052, 1398, 1.0], [1398, 2010, 1.0], [2010, 2584, 1.0], [2584, 3333, 1.0], [3333, 3905, 1.0], [3905, 4251, 1.0], [4251, 5337, 1.0], [5337, 6132, 1.0], [6132, 7243, 1.0], [7243, 8721, 1.0], [8721, 9871, 1.0], [9871, 10622, 1.0], [10622, 11595, 1.0], [11595, 12665, 1.0], [12665, 14030, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 292, 0.0], [292, 1052, 0.0], [1052, 1398, 0.0], [1398, 2010, 0.0], [2010, 2584, 0.0], [2584, 3333, 0.0], [3333, 3905, 0.0], [3905, 4251, 0.0], [4251, 5337, 0.0], [5337, 6132, 0.0], [6132, 7243, 0.0], [7243, 8721, 0.0], [8721, 9871, 0.0], [9871, 10622, 0.0], [10622, 11595, 0.0], [11595, 12665, 0.0], [12665, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 292, 38.0], [292, 1052, 118.0], [1052, 1398, 53.0], [1398, 2010, 88.0], [2010, 2584, 86.0], [2584, 3333, 101.0], [3333, 3905, 94.0], [3905, 4251, 56.0], [4251, 5337, 159.0], [5337, 6132, 121.0], [6132, 7243, 165.0], [7243, 8721, 210.0], [8721, 9871, 159.0], [9871, 10622, 105.0], [10622, 11595, 147.0], [11595, 12665, 172.0], [12665, 14030, 209.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 292, 0.0], [292, 1052, 0.00810811], [1052, 1398, 0.0], [1398, 2010, 0.02199662], [2010, 2584, 0.0], [2584, 3333, 0.0], [3333, 3905, 0.02139037], [3905, 4251, 0.0060423], [4251, 5337, 0.0], [5337, 6132, 0.02340702], [6132, 7243, 0.01885014], [7243, 8721, 0.0], [8721, 9871, 0.0027027], [9871, 10622, 0.00544218], [10622, 11595, 0.01265823], [11595, 12665, 0.00574713], [12665, 14030, 0.00300978]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 292, 0.0], [292, 1052, 0.0], [1052, 1398, 0.0], [1398, 2010, 0.0], [2010, 2584, 0.0], [2584, 3333, 0.0], [3333, 3905, 0.0], [3905, 4251, 0.0], [4251, 5337, 0.0], [5337, 6132, 0.0], [6132, 7243, 0.0], [7243, 8721, 0.0], [8721, 9871, 0.0], [9871, 10622, 0.0], [10622, 11595, 0.0], [11595, 12665, 0.0], [12665, 14030, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 292, 0.01712329], [292, 1052, 0.02631579], [1052, 1398, 0.02023121], [1398, 2010, 0.07189542], [2010, 2584, 0.01567944], [2584, 3333, 0.01068091], [3333, 3905, 0.0472028], [3905, 4251, 0.09537572], [4251, 5337, 0.06629834], [5337, 6132, 0.10943396], [6132, 7243, 0.090009], [7243, 8721, 0.03856563], [8721, 9871, 0.0773913], [9871, 10622, 0.03861518], [10622, 11595, 0.0729702], [11595, 12665, 0.05981308], [12665, 14030, 0.07545788]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 14030, 0.33858567]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 14030, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 14030, 0.83944505]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 14030, -484.83503126]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 14030, 5.29991245]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 14030, 271.26327786]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 14030, 87.0]]}
Hurricane Dorian How many people lost power when Hurricane Dorian hit Saint Croix? From August 26 to 29, Dorian produced damaging winds and heavy rain across the eastern Caribbean. In Barbados, winds reached 55 mph (89 km/h), downing trees and power lines. Isolated interruptions to power occurred on St. Lucia; no damage occurred otherwise in the nation. In Martinique, heavy rains—peaking at 102 mm (4.0 in) in Rivière-Pilote—and winds up to 61 mph (98 km/h) caused some damage, though overall damage was negligible. Heavy showers in Dominica left multiple communities without power and water. Rainfall extended north to Guadeloupe were accumulations reached 121 mm (4.8 in) in Matouba. Striking the Virgin Islands as an intensifying hurricane, Dorian brought strong winds and heavy rains to the region. Buck Island, just south of Saint Thomas, experienced sustained winds of 82 mph (132 km/h) and a peak gust of 111 mph (179 km/h). Wind gusts on Saint Thomas reached 75 mph (121 km/h). Island-wide blackouts occurred on Saint Thomas and Saint John, while 25,000 customers lost power on Saint Croix. The high winds downed trees across the islands. Along the coast, multiple boats broke from their moorings and washed ashore. Some flooding occurred on Tortola in the British Virgin Islands. Downed trees knocked out power to some residences on Virgin Gorda. Because the hurricane moved farther northeast than initially anticipated, its effects in Puerto Rico were relatively limited. A man in Bayamón died when he fell off his roof trying to clean drains in advance of the storm. When did Hurricane Irma and Maria hit Puerto Rico? Prior to Dorian's arrival in the Lesser Antilles, local governments issued various tropical cyclone warnings and watches across the islands. LIAT cancelled multiple flights across the Lesser Antilles due to the storm and airports across the Virgin Islands temporarily suspended operations. Many of the threatened islands suffered devastating impacts in 2017 from Hurricanes Irma and Maria, lending to greater vigilance. In Barbados, thirty-eight shelters opened island-wide, with 103 residents seeking refuge in them. All public services were suspended for the duration of the storm. Homeless persons were transported to shelter by emergency personnel. On August 26, St. Lucia prime minister Allen Chastanet announced that the nation would "shut down" for the duration of Dorian. In Dominica, Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit ordered all public sector workers to remain home and prepare for the storm. The Ministry of Public Works mobilized heavy machinery and the police were placed on high alert. In what month and year did the Chinese buy three houses in Vancouver? Andy Yan, an urban planning researcher and adjunct professor at the University of British Columbia, studied real estate sales in Vancouver—also thought to be affected by foreign purchasers—found that 18% of the transactions in Vancouver's most expensive neighborhoods were cash purchases, and 66% of the owners appeared to be Chinese nationals or recent arrivals from China. Calls for more data on foreign investors have been rejected by the provincial government. Chinese nationals accounted for 70% of 2014 Vancouver home sales for more than CA$3 million. On June 24, 2016 China CITIC Bank Corp filed suit in Canada against a Chinese citizen who borrowed CN¥50 million for his lumber business in China, but then withdrew roughly CA$7.5 million from the line of credit and left the country. He bought three houses in Vancouver and Surrey, British Columbia together valued at CA$7.3 million during a three-month period in June 2014. When did Florida Governor DeSantis issue a state of emergency for 26 counties ahead of Hurricane Dorian? On August 28, Florida governor Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for 26 counties in the hurricane's expected path. This later expanded to the entire state on August 29. First responders distributed sandbags in many counties. Residents began stocking up on supplies throughout the state. In Brevard County, locals worked to trim large tree branches to protect power lines. The University of Central Florida, Stetson University, Rollins College, and Daytona State College cancelled classes between August 30 and September 3. In addition, the Florida Institute of Technology, University of North Florida, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Florida Atlantic University, University of South Florida, Florida International University and the University of Miami cancelled classes for at least one day on top of the three-day Labor Day weekend. In what country did Roosevelt Skerrit make that announcement?
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/18597
{"url": "https://answers.hoxly.com/question/8a7d7be11d9625f8e4ba3dc42.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "answers.hoxly.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:44:01Z", "digest": "sha1:MKILGGIM4IVGB52NC6VLVEB4JMNCNDHP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4650, 4650.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4650, 6046.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4650, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4650, 27.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4650, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4650, 169.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4650, 0.27853881]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4650, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4650, 0.01576044]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4650, 0.01576044]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4650, 0.01576044]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4650, 0.00788022]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4650, 0.01182033]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4650, 0.00840557]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4650, 0.00799087]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4650, 0.18835616]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4650, 0.52689655]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4650, 5.25103448]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4650, 5.43085622]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4650, 725.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 83, 1.0], [83, 1581, 1.0], [1581, 1632, 1.0], [1632, 2631, 1.0], [2631, 2701, 1.0], [2701, 3634, 1.0], [3634, 3739, 1.0], [3739, 4589, 1.0], [4589, 4650, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 83, 0.0], [83, 1581, 0.0], [1581, 1632, 0.0], [1632, 2631, 0.0], [2631, 2701, 0.0], [2701, 3634, 0.0], [3634, 3739, 0.0], [3739, 4589, 0.0], [4589, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 17, 2.0], [17, 83, 11.0], [83, 1581, 242.0], [1581, 1632, 9.0], [1632, 2631, 149.0], [2631, 2701, 13.0], [2701, 3634, 148.0], [3634, 3739, 17.0], [3739, 4589, 125.0], [4589, 4650, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 83, 0.0], [83, 1581, 0.02973721], [1581, 1632, 0.0], [1632, 2631, 0.00921187], [2631, 2701, 0.0], [2701, 3634, 0.02963776], [3634, 3739, 0.01941748], [3739, 4589, 0.01086957], [4589, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 17, 0.0], [17, 83, 0.0], [83, 1581, 0.0], [1581, 1632, 0.0], [1632, 2631, 0.0], [2631, 2701, 0.0], [2701, 3634, 0.0], [3634, 3739, 0.0], [3739, 4589, 0.0], [4589, 4650, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 17, 0.11764706], [17, 83, 0.07575758], [83, 1581, 0.03404539], [1581, 1632, 0.11764706], [1632, 2631, 0.03703704], [2631, 2701, 0.04285714], [2701, 3634, 0.04180064], [3634, 3739, 0.06666667], [3739, 4589, 0.05882353], [4589, 4650, 0.04918033]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4650, 0.90178639]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4650, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4650, 0.64370507]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4650, -186.07488963]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4650, 29.43036304]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4650, 107.46777791]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4650, 48.0]]}
Thursday Workshops Armstrong Browning Library While in Waco BWWA Dr. Carolyn Day Talk Title: ‘”A Tale of Domestic and Uncommon Parental Barbarity’: Marriage, Incarceration and the Illness of Ann[e] Wainhouse” Carolyn Day is an Associate Professor of history at Furman University and the author of Consumptive Chic: A History of Beauty, Fashion & Disease (Bloomsbury, 2017). She is the co-editor of the Peculiar Bodies series with University of Virginia Press and her monograph, A Tale of Uncommon Parental Barbarity?, which looks as the social uses of illness in eighteenth-century Britain, is under contract with University of Toronto Press. Dr. Betty Joseph Talk Title: “Margaret Cavendish and Interdisciplinarity: Knowledge Lessons for Our STEM-driven Times” Betty Joseph is Professor of English at Rice University, with affiliations in Women and Gender Studies, Asian Studies, and the interdisciplinary graduate Center for Critical and Cultural Theory (3CT). She is a literary scholar who draws from British social history, traditions of the novel, political economy, postcolonial discourse, and globalization theory to illuminate contemporary predicaments. Her abiding interest in the intersections of literature and history drives her research on the archival materials of empire. She is the author of Reading the East India Company, 1720-1840: Colonial Currencies of Gender (2004), a book that analyzes the role of archives and archiving in British colonialism and ways in which the archives can be read for the presence of women in that history. The book was reprinted in 2006 by Orient Longman for Asia. Her recently-completed monograph From Empire to Anthropocene: Fiction in a Time of an Uncommon World (forthcoming from Johns Hopkins, 2022) focuses on the chronopolitics of globalization and how writers such as Jamaica Kincaid, Mohsin Hamid, Don DeLillo, Barbara Kingsolver, among others, have responded to the representational crises of globality. She has also co-edited recently with Elizabeth Sauer, World-making and Other Worlds: Restoration to Romantic, to be published as a special feature of 1650-1850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era by Bucknell University Press. Recent essays on Enlightenment feminism and religious tolerance have appeared or are forthcoming in Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation, and Postcolonial Studies, respectively. Betty Joseph has taught at Rice’s English Department since 1995, where she has directed its undergraduate and graduate programs. She is also interim director of The Center for Cultural and Critical Theory for 2021-2022. In 2016, she co-chaired the Race and Empire Studies Caucus of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and in 2020-21, she chaired the Executive Committee of the MLA Forum for Restoration and Early-18th-Century English. Plenary Roundtable Participants Dr. Alison Booth Talk Title: “Why Transatlantic?” Alison Booth, Professor of English and Academic Director, Scholars’ Lab at the University of Virginia, specializes in feminist studies of life writing, nineteenth-century British and American literature, and digital humanities. She directs Collective Biographies of Women, a database project emerging from her book How to Make It as a Woman (U. Chicago Press, 2004). Booth’s other books include Greatness Engendered: George Eliot and Virginia Woolf and most recently, Homes and Haunts: Touring Writers’ Shrines and Countries. Dr. Karen Fang Talk Title: “Project-based vs. Discipline-based Research” Karen Fang is the author of Romantic Writing and the Empire of Signs: Periodical Culture and Post-Napoleonic Authorship (Virginia 2010) and Arresting Cinema: Surveillance in Hong Kong Film​ (Stanford 2017). Her cross-disciplinary work, which encompasses imperial and postcolonial culture, nineteenth-century British literature and twenty- and twenty-first century film global media, also informs her contributions to the nationally broadcast public radio series, The Engines of Our Ingenuity​, where Fang’s stories always focus on the visual arts. She is currently at work on a book about Chinese American artist and Disney Legend Tyrus Wong. Dr. Jessie Reeder Talk Title: “South America and the Borders of Victorian Studies” Jessie Reeder is Associate Professor of English at Binghamton University, specializing in nineteenth-century British literature, imperialism, and form. Her first book, The Forms of Informal Empire: Britain, Latin America, and Nineteenth-Century Literature (Johns Hopkins 2020), asks how authors responded to British-Latin American relations in the nineteenth century by writing new narratives of transnational contact. Her work can also be found in Victorian Literature and Culture, Studies in English Literature, Studies in Romanticism, and Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies. Jessie is also an organizing member of Anglophone Chile, a project to digitize the newspapers printed by anglophone settlers in mid-nineteenth-century Chile. Dr. César L. Soto Talk Title: “Criollas and Literary Culture in Mexican Independence” César L. Soto is an Assistant Professor of World Literature at Grace College & Theological Seminary in Winona Lake (Indiana) in the Department of Humanities and is an affiliate of the Institute for Global Studies. His research interests include eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English, Irish, and Mexican Literature; wherein he examines the interplay between religion and revolution in fiction and memoir. His first article was published in Symbiosis and is titled “Mexico in the Revolutionary Atlantic: Catholicism and the Arts of Resistance in Fray Sevando Teresa de Mier’s Carta de un Americano al Español and Memorias”. He also has an article forthcoming in a special issue of the Keats-Shelley Journal. Titled “Why the English Romantics? An Ambivalent Report”, it charts his path, as a man of color, toward the study of the English Romantic writers. César has been selected as an alternate for a research Fulbright to Ireland; has won two Ford Foundation Fellowships, and most recently was awarded an Irish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship (declined) to research and write his book manuscript, which compares the literary production of Spanish American criollos and the Hibernal-English in Ireland. He is currently researching an article for a forthcoming Cambridge Companion that will examine the discursive strand constituted by romanticism, race, and religion. He is also working on a project that, in light of the scarcity of research on Spanish American criollas during the Age of Independence, will explore the oral contributions made by criollas to literary and revolutionary writings via tertulias (akin to European salons). Baylor Office of the Provost Baylor College of Arts and Sciences Baylor Department of English Baylor Department of History Baylor Campus Diversity Committee
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/19327
{"url": "https://sites.baylor.edu/bwwc2022/speakers/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "sites.baylor.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:16:30Z", "digest": "sha1:POEWE676DFJXOM33DDIPDGNUFGNDYXAE"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6881, 6881.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6881, 7373.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6881, 29.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6881, 58.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6881, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6881, 227.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6881, 0.29653505]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6881, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6881, 0.00878735]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6881, 0.00579965]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6881, 0.00702988]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6881, 0.00805802]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6881, 0.17647059]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6881, 0.47164179]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6881, 5.66169154]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6881, 5.47192996]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6881, 1005.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 46, 0.0], [46, 60, 0.0], [60, 65, 0.0], [65, 81, 0.0], [81, 209, 1.0], [209, 643, 1.0], [643, 660, 0.0], [660, 762, 1.0], [762, 2397, 1.0], [2397, 2848, 1.0], [2848, 2880, 0.0], [2880, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 2930, 1.0], [2930, 3456, 1.0], [3456, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3529, 1.0], [3529, 4172, 1.0], [4172, 4190, 0.0], [4190, 4255, 1.0], [4255, 4990, 1.0], [4990, 5008, 0.0], [5008, 5076, 1.0], [5076, 6725, 1.0], [6725, 6754, 0.0], [6754, 6790, 0.0], [6790, 6819, 0.0], [6819, 6848, 0.0], [6848, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 46, 0.0], [46, 60, 0.0], [60, 65, 0.0], [65, 81, 0.0], [81, 209, 0.0], [209, 643, 0.0], [643, 660, 0.0], [660, 762, 0.0], [762, 2397, 0.0], [2397, 2848, 0.0], [2848, 2880, 0.0], [2880, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 2930, 0.0], [2930, 3456, 0.0], [3456, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3529, 0.0], [3529, 4172, 0.0], [4172, 4190, 0.0], [4190, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4990, 0.0], [4990, 5008, 0.0], [5008, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6754, 0.0], [6754, 6790, 0.0], [6790, 6819, 0.0], [6819, 6848, 0.0], [6848, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 19, 2.0], [19, 46, 3.0], [46, 60, 3.0], [60, 65, 1.0], [65, 81, 3.0], [81, 209, 18.0], [209, 643, 67.0], [643, 660, 3.0], [660, 762, 12.0], [762, 2397, 240.0], [2397, 2848, 68.0], [2848, 2880, 3.0], [2880, 2897, 3.0], [2897, 2930, 4.0], [2930, 3456, 76.0], [3456, 3471, 3.0], [3471, 3529, 6.0], [3529, 4172, 92.0], [4172, 4190, 3.0], [4190, 4255, 10.0], [4255, 4990, 98.0], [4990, 5008, 4.0], [5008, 5076, 9.0], [5076, 6725, 251.0], [6725, 6754, 5.0], [6754, 6790, 6.0], [6790, 6819, 4.0], [6819, 6848, 4.0], [6848, 6881, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 46, 0.0], [46, 60, 0.0], [60, 65, 0.0], [65, 81, 0.0], [81, 209, 0.0], [209, 643, 0.00956938], [643, 660, 0.0], [660, 762, 0.0], [762, 2397, 0.01825047], [2397, 2848, 0.05479452], [2848, 2880, 0.0], [2880, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 2930, 0.0], [2930, 3456, 0.00787402], [3456, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3529, 0.0], [3529, 4172, 0.01284109], [4172, 4190, 0.0], [4190, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4990, 0.0056338], [4990, 5008, 0.0], [5008, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6754, 0.0], [6754, 6790, 0.0], [6790, 6819, 0.0], [6819, 6848, 0.0], [6848, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 46, 0.0], [46, 60, 0.0], [60, 65, 0.0], [65, 81, 0.0], [81, 209, 0.0], [209, 643, 0.0], [643, 660, 0.0], [660, 762, 0.0], [762, 2397, 0.0], [2397, 2848, 0.0], [2848, 2880, 0.0], [2880, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 2930, 0.0], [2930, 3456, 0.0], [3456, 3471, 0.0], [3471, 3529, 0.0], [3529, 4172, 0.0], [4172, 4190, 0.0], [4190, 4255, 0.0], [4255, 4990, 0.0], [4990, 5008, 0.0], [5008, 5076, 0.0], [5076, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6754, 0.0], [6754, 6790, 0.0], [6790, 6819, 0.0], [6819, 6848, 0.0], [6848, 6881, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 19, 0.10526316], [19, 46, 0.11111111], [46, 60, 0.14285714], [60, 65, 0.8], [65, 81, 0.1875], [81, 209, 0.1015625], [209, 643, 0.06682028], [643, 660, 0.17647059], [660, 762, 0.12745098], [762, 2397, 0.0470948], [2397, 2848, 0.06873614], [2848, 2880, 0.09375], [2880, 2897, 0.17647059], [2897, 2930, 0.12121212], [2930, 3456, 0.06844106], [3456, 3471, 0.2], [3471, 3529, 0.0862069], [3529, 4172, 0.05132193], [4172, 4190, 0.16666667], [4190, 4255, 0.10769231], [4255, 4990, 0.05578231], [4990, 5008, 0.22222222], [5008, 5076, 0.10294118], [5076, 6725, 0.04730139], [6725, 6754, 0.10344828], [6754, 6790, 0.11111111], [6790, 6819, 0.10344828], [6819, 6848, 0.10344828], [6848, 6881, 0.12121212]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6881, 0.53449661]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6881, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6881, 0.85927385]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6881, -319.07901163]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6881, -6.50518938]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6881, 126.97143692]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6881, 45.0]]}
Naples Players Announce New Outdoor Cultural Arts Season August 23, 2020, NAPLES, FLA. – Discover Culture in Collier, a 7-month outdoor entertainment season presented by The Naples Players (TNP), is the latest development in an effort to continue safely providing arts and culture programming while coronavirus concerns still linger. The season will feature live music, theatre, art and other monthly events utilizing a number of Collier County parks and outdoor attractions as the backdrop, the first of which are Drive-In Movies in downtown Naples starting in September. TNP Drive-In Movie Nights will feature two movies each month projected onto a 33-foot screen using a state-of-the-art projection system. The events, sponsored by The Inn on 5th, are hosted in the newly refinished 50-car lot located at 300 8th Street South, just one block north of the iconic 5th Avenue South home of The Naples Players community theatre. The movie soundtracks will be broadcast over short-range FM radio to the cars in attendance. The series begins with a 2-night screening of the musical movie Grease, on September 8th and 9th, followed by Jurassic Park on September 22nd and 23rd. Movies begin promptly at 8 p.m. Concessions and non-alcoholic refreshments are available for purchase. Due to space, ticketing is required in advance. A full schedule and tickets are available online at: naplesplayers.org/drive-in-movies/ General admission is $45 per vehicle; but Current TNP season ticket holders receive free admission on select “Season Ticket Holder Nights.” Additionally, current members of The Naples Players or Season Ticket Holders who want to attend the other movie evenings can purchase tickets for $20. Additional outdoor entertainment events as part of the Discover Culture in Collier series are slated for announcement in early September. Information about the full season of events will be found at: naplesplayers.org/discover-culture/ “This shift in our season will not replace the revenue lost, nor will these experiences replace the joys of live theatre. But it’s most important to us to keep the arts, and our community’s spirits, alive by providing opportunities for people to safely experience culture together,” said TNP Executive Artistic Director, Bryce Alexander. The Naples Players temporarily closed their doors on March 12th in response to COVID-19. Since then, the non-profit theatre had endured losses of more than $1.25m in lost revenue, ticket refunds, and season ticket sales. Even so, TNP has maintained its full staff and has been working to provide critical arts education and community building throughout this difficult time. For more information visit NaplesPlayers.org or call the box office at (239) 263-7990.
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/19668
{"url": "https://www.fifthavenuesouth.com/avenue_news/naples-players-announce-new-outdoor-cultural-arts-season/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.fifthavenuesouth.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:02:48Z", "digest": "sha1:3T33TEKEVU4GGYMR6PWIXF7PGSRY622N"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2738, 2738.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2738, 5574.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2738, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2738, 176.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2738, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2738, 264.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2738, 0.29678639]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2738, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2738, 0.02903082]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2738, 0.02858419]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2738, 0.02143814]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2738, 0.01890359]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2738, 0.1852552]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2738, 0.58669834]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2738, 5.31828979]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2738, 5.13410116]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2738, 421.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 334, 1.0], [334, 573, 1.0], [573, 1021, 1.0], [1021, 1173, 1.0], [1173, 1276, 1.0], [1276, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1703, 1.0], [1703, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2277, 1.0], [2277, 2652, 1.0], [2652, 2738, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 334, 0.0], [334, 573, 0.0], [573, 1021, 0.0], [1021, 1173, 0.0], [1173, 1276, 0.0], [1276, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2277, 0.0], [2277, 2652, 0.0], [2652, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 57, 8.0], [57, 334, 41.0], [334, 573, 38.0], [573, 1021, 74.0], [1021, 1173, 26.0], [1173, 1276, 14.0], [1276, 1412, 18.0], [1412, 1703, 45.0], [1703, 1939, 32.0], [1939, 2277, 53.0], [2277, 2652, 59.0], [2652, 2738, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 334, 0.02631579], [334, 573, 0.0], [573, 1021, 0.02304147], [1021, 1173, 0.04761905], [1173, 1276, 0.01020408], [1276, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1703, 0.01408451], [1703, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2277, 0.0], [2277, 2652, 0.01928375], [2652, 2738, 0.12345679]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 334, 0.0], [334, 573, 0.0], [573, 1021, 0.0], [1021, 1173, 0.0], [1173, 1276, 0.0], [1276, 1412, 0.0], [1412, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2277, 0.0], [2277, 2652, 0.0], [2652, 2738, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.14035088], [57, 334, 0.06859206], [334, 573, 0.0334728], [573, 1021, 0.04464286], [1021, 1173, 0.03947368], [1173, 1276, 0.01941748], [1276, 1412, 0.01470588], [1412, 1703, 0.05498282], [1703, 1939, 0.02542373], [1939, 2277, 0.0295858], [2277, 2652, 0.03733333], [2652, 2738, 0.03488372]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2738, 0.7565214]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2738, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2738, 0.74020296]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2738, -195.71562472]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2738, -15.70071009]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2738, -35.89664164]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2738, 24.0]]}
PRISM with The Crossing Choir, Month of Moderns III PRISM joins The Crossing Choir to perform the world premiere of Gavin Bryars’ The Fifth Century, commissioned by The Crossing for their annual Month of Moderns Festival. Known for evocative texts in sparse, pensive settings, Bryars’ music has been praised for its “integrity and lucidity.” (The Guardian). The Fifth Century is a series of reflections on eternity set to texts by the 17th-century metaphysical author Thomas Traherne. This concert is presented by The Crossing with support from The Knight Foundation. Gavin Bryars: The Fifth Century (2014, world premiere, composed for The Crossing and PRISM) Stratis Minakakis: Monteverdi Responsories (2008) Tonu Korvits: Hymns from the Western Coast (2009) REHEARSAL VIDEO Post by The Crossing. The Crossing is a twenty-four-member professional chamber choir conducted by Donald Nally dedicated to new music. Originally formed by a group of friends in 2005, the ensemble has since grown exponentially and “has made a name for itself in recent years as a champion of new music.” (The New York Times 2/14). Highly sought-after for collaborative projects, The Crossing was the resident choir of the Spoleto Festival, Italy in 2007; appeared at Miller Theatre of Columbia University (in the American premiere of James Dillon’s Nine Rivers) with the International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE); performed during Bang on a Can’s first Philadelphia Marathon; and has appeared with Network for New Music, Lyric Fest, Piffaro, red fish blue fish, Tempesta di Mare Baroque Chamber Orchestra, PRISM Saxophone Quartet, Toshimaru Nakamura, Dolce Suono; and in the summer of 2013, The Rolling Stones. The Crossing frequently commissions works and has presented over 40 world premieres. Current projects include commissions with John Luther Adams, Ted Hearne, Joel Puckett, Toivo Tulev, and Gavin Bryars. The ensemble recently released two recordings on the Innova label: Christmas Daybreak – with world premiere recordings of James MacMillan and Gabriel Jackson—and I want to live with the complete choral works for women by David Lang. In January of 2014, The Crossing made its Carnegie Hall debut with The American Composers Orchestra, and in April of 2014, its Disney Hall debut with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Donald Nally is conductor of The Crossing, director of choral organizations at Northwestern University, and chorus master of The Chicago Bach Project. He has held distinguished tenures as chorus master for Lyric Opera of Chicago, Welsh National Opera, Opera Philadelphia, Spoleto USA, and for many seasons at the Spoleto Festival in Italy. He has served as artistic director of the Vocal Arts Ensemble of Cincinnati and the Choral Arts Society of Philadelphia, recipient of the Margaret Hillis Award for Excellence in Choral Music. Among the many ensembles Donald has guest conducted are the Latvian State Choir in Riga, the Grant Park Symphony Chorus in Chicago, the Philharmonic Chorus of London, and the Santa Fe Desert Chorale, His ensembles have sung with the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Pennsylvania Ballet, Spoleto USA, the BBC Symphony Orchestra, Sinfonia Cymru, RAI National Symphony Orchestra, and I.C.E.; his work is heard on numerous recordings on the Chandos, Navona, and Innova record labels. In 2012 Donald received both the alumni merit award from Westminster Choir College and the Louis Botto Award for Innovative Action and Entrepreneurial Zeal from Chorus America. His book, Conversations with Joseph Flummerfelt, was published in 2011. To learn more about the composers, visit their websites: Gavin Bryars (b. 1943); Schott Music news release with his reflections on The Fifth Century Stratis Minakakis (b. 1979) Tonu Korvits (b. 1969) Crane Art's Icebox 1400 North American Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122 27 general admission; $18 students/seniors Get Ticket(s)
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/19912
{"url": "https://www.prismquartet.com/concerts/prism-crossing-choir-month-moderns-iii/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.prismquartet.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:25:50Z", "digest": "sha1:DEQR7DBJ3KWDBNPZ2CM4EATA44AEWOHE"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3886, 3886.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3886, 7072.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3886, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3886, 70.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3886, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3886, 210.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3886, 0.25514403]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3886, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3886, 0.03813426]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3886, 0.01890955]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3886, 0.01008509]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3886, 0.02331962]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3886, 0.19067215]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3886, 0.52006689]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3886, 5.30602007]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3886, 5.20058761]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3886, 598.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 485, 1.0], [485, 568, 1.0], [568, 660, 0.0], [660, 710, 0.0], [710, 760, 0.0], [760, 776, 0.0], [776, 798, 1.0], [798, 1688, 1.0], [1688, 2304, 1.0], [2304, 3560, 1.0], [3560, 3617, 0.0], [3617, 3709, 0.0], [3709, 3737, 0.0], [3737, 3760, 0.0], [3760, 3779, 0.0], [3779, 3830, 0.0], [3830, 3873, 0.0], [3873, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 485, 0.0], [485, 568, 0.0], [568, 660, 0.0], [660, 710, 0.0], [710, 760, 0.0], [760, 776, 0.0], [776, 798, 0.0], [798, 1688, 0.0], [1688, 2304, 0.0], [2304, 3560, 0.0], [3560, 3617, 0.0], [3617, 3709, 0.0], [3709, 3737, 0.0], [3737, 3760, 0.0], [3760, 3779, 0.0], [3779, 3830, 0.0], [3830, 3873, 0.0], [3873, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 52, 9.0], [52, 485, 67.0], [485, 568, 13.0], [568, 660, 14.0], [660, 710, 5.0], [710, 760, 8.0], [760, 776, 2.0], [776, 798, 4.0], [798, 1688, 138.0], [1688, 2304, 96.0], [2304, 3560, 193.0], [3560, 3617, 9.0], [3617, 3709, 15.0], [3709, 3737, 4.0], [3737, 3760, 4.0], [3760, 3779, 3.0], [3779, 3830, 7.0], [3830, 3873, 5.0], [3873, 3886, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 485, 0.00473934], [485, 568, 0.0], [568, 660, 0.04651163], [660, 710, 0.08695652], [710, 760, 0.08695652], [760, 776, 0.0], [776, 798, 0.0], [798, 1688, 0.01744186], [1688, 2304, 0.01658375], [2304, 3560, 0.00653595], [3560, 3617, 0.0], [3617, 3709, 0.04597701], [3709, 3737, 0.16666667], [3737, 3760, 0.21052632], [3760, 3779, 0.0], [3779, 3830, 0.1875], [3830, 3873, 0.1025641], [3873, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 485, 0.0], [485, 568, 0.0], [568, 660, 0.0], [660, 710, 0.0], [710, 760, 0.0], [760, 776, 0.0], [776, 798, 0.0], [798, 1688, 0.0], [1688, 2304, 0.0], [2304, 3560, 0.0], [3560, 3617, 0.0], [3617, 3709, 0.0], [3709, 3737, 0.0], [3737, 3760, 0.0], [3760, 3779, 0.0], [3779, 3830, 0.0], [3830, 3873, 0.0], [3873, 3886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 52, 0.25], [52, 485, 0.06235566], [485, 568, 0.07228916], [568, 660, 0.13043478], [660, 710, 0.08], [710, 760, 0.1], [760, 776, 0.875], [776, 798, 0.13636364], [798, 1688, 0.06629213], [1688, 2304, 0.06818182], [2304, 3560, 0.08359873], [3560, 3617, 0.01754386], [3617, 3709, 0.07608696], [3709, 3737, 0.07142857], [3737, 3760, 0.08695652], [3760, 3779, 0.15789474], [3779, 3830, 0.11764706], [3830, 3873, 0.0], [3873, 3886, 0.15384615]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3886, 0.83551741]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3886, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3886, 0.83458179]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3886, -178.07563155]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3886, -7.02273836]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3886, 101.39219639]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3886, 27.0]]}
Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) Extends R&D Collaboration with Varian Medical Systems and Expands Capacity for Clinical Research and Patient Treatments | Varian { "pageType": "news-article", "title": "Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) Extends R&D Collaboration with Varian Medical Systems and Expands Capacity for Clinical Research and Patient Treatments", "articleDate": "31 de March de 2014", "introText": "", "category": "Oncology" } Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) Extends R&D Collaboration with Varian Medical Systems and Expands Capacity for Clinical Research and Patient Treatments BERGISCH GLADBACH, Germany, March 31, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- Varian Medical Systems (NYSE: VAR) and the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) are announcing an extension of their existing collaboration in the field of proton therapy to offer patients more precise cancer treatments using intensity modulated proton therapy (IMPT). Under the agreement, Varian will also supply technology and equipment to help meet a growing demand for clinical research and treatments at PSI. Proton therapy targets tumors with concentrated doses of radiation while offering superior protection of surrounding healthy tissue. IMPT, which was pioneered using pencil-beam scanning at the Paul Scherrer Institute and made commercially available by Varian Medical Systems, is a radiation delivery technique that enables clinicians to optimize precision when treating tumors. "This multi-year R&D collaboration will enable Varian and PSI to continue their productive research activities in the areas of advanced pencil beam scanning delivery systems, on-board imaging, clinical workflow optimization, and accelerator technology to further develop proton treatment technology over the coming years," says Moataz Karmalawy, head of Varian's Particle Therapy group. "Our original collaboration led to the commercialization of IMPT and we are delighted to expand our partnership to develop more revolutionary technologies." "Over the past ten years we have developed scanning techniques for the treatment of tumors with intensity-modulated proton therapy," adds Prof. Dr. Joel Mesot, director of the Paul Scherrer Institute. "We are looking forward to the new collaboration as it will help us to develop more tools for treating more patients with even greater precision while making our technology more widely available to the clinical and scientific community." The value of the equipment portion of the contract is approximately $10 million and it will be booked in the second quarter of fiscal 2014. Varian's scanning beam IMPT technology is already being used at the Scripps Proton Therapy Center in San Diego, U.S., and the Rinecker Proton Therapy Center in Munich, Germany. Varian also has contracts to install ProBeam systems at six additional sites in the U.S., Saudi Arabia, and Russia. *CE mark and international registrations pending for ProBeam. Not available for sale in all markets. About Varian Medical Systems Varian Medical Systems, Inc., of Palo Alto, California, is the world's leading manufacturer of medical devices and software for treating cancer and other medical conditions with radiotherapy, radiosurgery, and brachytherapy. The company supplies informatics software for managing comprehensive cancer clinics, radiotherapy centers and medical oncology practices. Varian is a premier supplier of tubes, digital detectors, and image processing workstations for X-ray imaging in medical, scientific, and industrial applications and also supplies high-energy X-ray devices for cargo screening and non-destructive testing applications. Varian Medical Systems employs approximately 6,400 people who are located at manufacturing sites in North America, Europe, and China and approximately 70 sales and support offices around the world. For more information, visit http://www.varian.com or follow us on Twitter. About Paul Scherrer Institute PSI operates the first compact scanning gantry worldwide for proton radiation therapy of deep-seated tumors. The spot-scanning technique developed at PSI enables malignant tumors to be targeted with high precision deep inside in the body without damaging healthy tissue around the target area. By end of 2011, the PSI compact Gantry 1 had been used to treat nearly 1000 patients suffering from brain, skull-base or spinal cord tumors as well as abdominal sarcomas. Among the patients were more than 350 children and young people under the age of 20. PSI has treated children since 1999. Except for historical information, this news release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Statements concerning industry outlook, including growth drivers; the company's future orders, revenues or other financial performance; the ability of the company's technology and products to treat cancer; and any statements using the terms "will," "plan," "expect," "estimated," or similar statements are forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties that could cause the company's actual results to differ materially from those anticipated. Such risks and uncertainties include the effect of global economic conditions; demand for the company's products; the company's ability to develop, commercialize, and deploy new products; the company's ability to meet legal and regulatory requirements; changes in the legal or regulatory environment; and the other risks listed from time to time in the company's filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which by this reference are incorporated herein. The company assumes no obligation to update or revise the forward-looking statements in this release because of new information, future events, or otherwise. Neil Madle, +44 7786 526068 neil.madle@varian.com SOURCE Varian Medical Systems
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/20054
{"url": "https://www.varian.com/es-xl/node/7656", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.varian.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:48:00Z", "digest": "sha1:LIYN63KAJCMVS5GWOHSZQYJV32NN6CVJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5820, 5820.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5820, 6082.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5820, 18.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5820, 23.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5820, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5820, 232.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5820, 0.00034364]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5820, 0.2972973]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5820, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5820, 0.07949092]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5820, 0.09117463]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5820, 0.07949092]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5820, 0.07949092]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5820, 0.07949092]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5820, 0.07949092]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5820, 0.0244106]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5820, 0.03755477]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5820, 0.02503651]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5820, 0.03281853]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5820, 0.18243243]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5820, 0.47342995]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5820, 5.78864734]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5820, 5.39333011]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5820, 828.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 159, 0.0], [159, 431, 0.0], [431, 581, 0.0], [581, 1047, 1.0], [1047, 1425, 1.0], [1425, 1969, 0.0], [1969, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2548, 1.0], [2548, 2841, 1.0], [2841, 2942, 1.0], [2942, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3875, 1.0], [3875, 3905, 0.0], [3905, 4492, 1.0], [4492, 5741, 1.0], [5741, 5769, 0.0], [5769, 5791, 0.0], [5791, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 159, 0.0], [159, 431, 0.0], [431, 581, 0.0], [581, 1047, 0.0], [1047, 1425, 0.0], [1425, 1969, 0.0], [1969, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2548, 0.0], [2548, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2942, 0.0], [2942, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3875, 0.0], [3875, 3905, 0.0], [3905, 4492, 0.0], [4492, 5741, 0.0], [5741, 5769, 0.0], [5769, 5791, 0.0], [5791, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 159, 21.0], [159, 431, 32.0], [431, 581, 20.0], [581, 1047, 68.0], [1047, 1425, 51.0], [1425, 1969, 74.0], [1969, 2408, 68.0], [2408, 2548, 25.0], [2548, 2841, 47.0], [2841, 2942, 15.0], [2942, 2971, 4.0], [2971, 3875, 120.0], [3875, 3905, 4.0], [3905, 4492, 95.0], [4492, 5741, 174.0], [5741, 5769, 5.0], [5769, 5791, 1.0], [5791, 5820, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 159, 0.0], [159, 431, 0.02575107], [431, 581, 0.0], [581, 1047, 0.01342282], [1047, 1425, 0.0], [1425, 1969, 0.0], [1969, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2548, 0.04379562], [2548, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2942, 0.0], [2942, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3875, 0.00688073], [3875, 3905, 0.0], [3905, 4492, 0.03125], [4492, 5741, 0.00331675], [5741, 5769, 0.48], [5769, 5791, 0.0], [5791, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 159, 0.0], [159, 431, 0.0], [431, 581, 0.0], [581, 1047, 0.0], [1047, 1425, 0.0], [1425, 1969, 0.0], [1969, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2548, 0.0], [2548, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2942, 0.0], [2942, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3875, 0.0], [3875, 3905, 0.0], [3905, 4492, 0.0], [4492, 5741, 0.0], [5741, 5769, 0.0], [5769, 5791, 0.0], [5791, 5820, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 159, 0.12578616], [159, 431, 0.08823529], [431, 581, 0.12666667], [581, 1047, 0.09871245], [1047, 1425, 0.02910053], [1425, 1969, 0.03125], [1969, 2408, 0.02050114], [2408, 2548, 0.00714286], [2548, 2841, 0.09215017], [2841, 2942, 0.04950495], [2942, 2971, 0.13793103], [2971, 3875, 0.02212389], [3875, 3905, 0.13333333], [3905, 4492, 0.02725724], [4492, 5741, 0.00960769], [5741, 5769, 0.07142857], [5769, 5791, 0.0], [5791, 5820, 0.31034483]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5820, 0.36741]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5820, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5820, 0.71062428]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5820, -264.82010282]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5820, -24.57925161]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5820, -5.04490393]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5820, 39.0]]}
Barbara Rossi featured in group show, Meanwhile in Lonesome Valley at Loudhailer Gallery LOS ANGELES – LOUDHAILER is pleased to present Meanwhile in Lonesome Valley, organized by Sayre Gomez–featuring works by Liz Craft, Heather Guertin, Orion Martin, Barbara Rossi and Chanel Von Habsburg-Lothringen. The exhibition opens with a public reception on Saturday, June 20 from 6-9 PM and continues through August 1. Meanwhile in Lonesome Valley takes its name from the 1981 Barbara Rossi painting Double Crossing Lonesome Valley, which was made while teaching at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she has taught since the early 1970’s. Rossi is part of the seminal Chicago Imagists movement, known for their grotesque and indulgent approach to pop figuration. Many of the Imagists are known for creating labor intensive, yet garish paintings that draw inspiration from comic books and other post-war pop ephemera. Rossi stands out from her peers by drawing inspiration not only from these sources but also from her past experiences as a Catholic nun and her extensive travels through India and Asia. Her works possess a sophistication and subtlety that defy many of the characteristics generally associated with the artists of the Imagist movement. The artists presented in this exhibition span generations yet share similar attitudes towards their respective practices. A central theme tying these diverse artists work together is an exaggerated portrayal of the human figure or lack thereof. Barbara Rossi’s painting uses what she has called ‘sandal-trumpet forms’ and considers the painting to be a picture of two sandals making their way through the desert. Chanel Von Habsburg-Lothringen’s work uses the figure in a more literal, yet comedic way and references a history of caricature as well as the role of representation in contemporary photography. Liz Craft will present a new ceramic wall work that recalls the mosaic facades adorning Venice beach bungalows and the whimsy of Mr.Men and Little Miss children’s books authored by Roger Hargreaves. Heather Guertin’s new series of lusciously developed oil paintings hover between abstracted landscapes and candid alien-like portraits. Gradating color shifts created from short gestural brushstrokes loosely spell out the head and eyes of a sexless figure peering back at its viewers. Orion Martin’s sculpture uses a digital process in which an image is suspended in water and used to wrap around a three dimensional object, resulting in an uncanny distorted version of its original. His painting of a lone analog telephone is rendered in a mannerist Chicago Imagist style complete with trompe l’oeil beads of sweat and a matching frame. Martin places himself in an interesting position, flattening his use of materials, technology and historical styles. Liz Craft was born in Los Angeles and received her BA from Otis Parsons and her MFA from The University of California. She has had solo exhibitions at Truth and Consequences (Geneva); Jenny’s (Los Angeles); Patrick Painter (Santa Monica); Alison Jacques (London); Sadie Coles HQ (London) and Marianne Boesky (New York). Her work was in numerous museum exhibitions including the Wexner Center (Columbus, OH); Hammer Museum (Los Angeles); Migros Museum (Zurich) and the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York). Craft lives and works in Los Angeles. Heather Guertin earned her MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. She has performed in New York, Chicago and Los Angeles, most recently at 303 Gallery (New York), White Columns (New York) and in conjunction with the Carnegie International (Pittsburgh). Recent solo exhibitions include Agustina Ferreyra (Puerto Rico); Brennan & Griffin (New York); Proyectos Monclova (Mexico City) and Interstate (Brooklyn). Group exhibitions include Hussenot (Paris); Thomas Duncan Gallery (Los Angeles); Hagiwara Projects (Tokyo) and Jack Hanley Gallery (New York). Hassla recently published Development, a monograph of her paintings and writing. Her novella, Model Turned Comedian, was published in 2013. Guertin is currently working on her second book, Not Yet Titled, Cambodia, to be published later this year. She lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Orion Martin was born in Sonoma, California and earned his BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Solo exhibitions include Favorite Goods (Los Angeles) and Important Projects (Oakland). His work has been included in group exhibitions at Secret Recipe (Los Angeles); Human Resources (Los Angeles); Manifest Exhibitions (Chicago); Horton Gallery (Berlin) and Bodega Gallery (Philadelphia). He lives and works in Los Angeles. Barbara Rossi earned her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she serves as a professor of painting and drawing. She was the focus of a retrospective at the Renaissance Society, University of Chicago, in 1991. Rossi had six solo exhibitions with Phyllis Kind Gallery (Chicago/New York) between 1975 and 1983. Her work has been included in numerous important museum exhibitions including Chicago Imagist Art (Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago/ New York Cultural Center, 1972); XII Bienal de Sao Paolo: Made in Chicago (Numerous locations in South America1973-74); 1975 Biennial Exhibition (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York); and Who Chicago? An Exhibition of Contemporary Imagists (Venues included theICA, Boston and Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, 1980-1982). She has forthcoming solo exhibitions at Corbett vs. Dempsey (Chicago) and the New Museum (New York). Rossi lives and works in Chicago. Chanel Von Habsburg-Lothringen was born in Detroit and received her MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art. Her work has been exhibited at the Detroit Design Festival, Detroit Independent Film Festival, and Royal Albert Hall. She is the recipient of the Toby Devin Lewis Award, Mercedes-Benz Emerging Artist Award Finalist, the Warren and Margot Coville Scholarship Recipient and has curated projects at Los Angeles Museum of Art (LAMOA), Detroit Design Festival, the Mike Kelley Mobile Homestead and Cranbrook Museum of Art. She lives and works in Los Angeles. Please visit the Loudhailer website here for images.
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/20437
{"url": "https://corbettvsdempsey.com/news/barbara-rossi-featured-in-group-show-meanwhile-in-lonesome-valley-at-loudhailer-gallery/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "corbettvsdempsey.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:01:28Z", "digest": "sha1:BHXGBBTAP3Q2Z7XRTX4EAW6PUL3NSPNN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6215, 6215.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6215, 6485.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6215, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6215, 14.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6215, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6215, 164.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6215, 0.28732639]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6215, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6215, 0.03018942]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6215, 0.07813733]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6215, 0.06570639]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6215, 0.05090766]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6215, 0.03788477]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6215, 0.03788477]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6215, 0.02565114]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6215, 0.01282557]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6215, 0.01479874]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6215, 0.01388889]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6215, 0.16579861]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6215, 0.47439916]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6215, 5.29571578]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6215, 5.47161432]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6215, 957.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 89, 0.0], [89, 412, 1.0], [412, 1261, 1.0], [1261, 2823, 1.0], [2823, 3372, 1.0], [3372, 4222, 1.0], [4222, 4659, 1.0], [4659, 5606, 1.0], [5606, 6163, 1.0], [6163, 6215, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 89, 0.0], [89, 412, 0.0], [412, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 2823, 0.0], [2823, 3372, 0.0], [3372, 4222, 0.0], [4222, 4659, 0.0], [4659, 5606, 0.0], [5606, 6163, 0.0], [6163, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 89, 13.0], [89, 412, 49.0], [412, 1261, 136.0], [1261, 2823, 241.0], [2823, 3372, 87.0], [3372, 4222, 126.0], [4222, 4659, 65.0], [4659, 5606, 145.0], [5606, 6163, 87.0], [6163, 6215, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 89, 0.0], [89, 412, 0.01597444], [412, 1261, 0.00954654], [1261, 2823, 0.0], [2823, 3372, 0.0], [3372, 4222, 0.00871731], [4222, 4659, 0.0], [4659, 5606, 0.03748622], [5606, 6163, 0.0], [6163, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 89, 0.0], [89, 412, 0.0], [412, 1261, 0.0], [1261, 2823, 0.0], [2823, 3372, 0.0], [3372, 4222, 0.0], [4222, 4659, 0.0], [4659, 5606, 0.0], [5606, 6163, 0.0], [6163, 6215, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 89, 0.07865169], [89, 412, 0.13312693], [412, 1261, 0.02826855], [1261, 2823, 0.01664533], [2823, 3372, 0.10746812], [3372, 4222, 0.08470588], [4222, 4659, 0.09153318], [4659, 5606, 0.08342133], [5606, 6163, 0.10771993], [6163, 6215, 0.03846154]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6215, 0.26580453]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6215, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6215, 0.79617959]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6215, -368.67873447]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6215, -30.15794438]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6215, 139.07735948]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6215, 47.0]]}
Coalition contributions exceed $US 1 million! The Coalition’s third strategic goal aims to support the global architecture needed to address the supplies challenge. This means forging partnerships and building commitment, but also ensuring that the Coalition’s role within the global architecture remains relevant, sustainable, and worthy of stakeholder support. In 2007, the role of the Coalition was wholeheartedly re-affirmed by major financial commitments to our work and by a dramatic expansion in our membership. Last year, stakeholder contributions to the Coalition rose to more than $US 1.3 million–an amount almost equivalent to the annual allocation under the Secretariat's grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. These new funds supported the development of tools and research, the implementation of key Coalition activities, and the enabling of key Secretariat functions such as representation. But this financial support was also matched by the dramatic institutional buy-in of the reproductive health (RH) community as a whole. In the three-month period following the decision to open membership, more than 35 new institutions joined the Coalition as full members. In doing so, they committed themselves to furthering the Coalition’s goals and objectives, engaging in Coalition initiatives, and, potentially, providing the means needed to ensure the partnership’s long-term sustainability. Contact the Secretariat for more information. Coalition on the scene Launch of Global Fund Round 8 RH/HIV Integration Initiative The first goal of the Coalition's Strategic Plan aims to increase resource flows for RH supplies. This includes resources from traditional multi- and bi-lateral donor agencies, as well as a host of other non-traditional RH funding partnerships such as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, a Coalition member. This month, Coalition members IPPF, PAI, and Interact Worldwide, along with the Global AIDS Alliance and the International HIV/AIDS Alliance, launched a new initiative to better integrate RH and HIV/AIDS in proposals for submission to the Global Fund’s Round 8 grant cycle. Round 8 is scheduled to begin on March 3. Steve Kinzett represented the Secretariat at the initiative’s launch meeting, which was held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia from February 26–29. The meeting brought together civil society representatives from 10 focus countries in an effort to assist them to develop their Round 8 proposals. The countries included Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Ghana, Madagascar, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Zambia. Contact Suzanne Ehlers, Vice President, International Advocacy, PAI, for more information. Coalition reaches 50 members! Four new members joined the Coalition in February, bringing the total number of members to 50. The new members are: Famy Care: Incorporated in India in 1987, Famy Care is a major manufacturer of RH supplies and an approved supplier of PAHO and Crown Agents. It also supplies to UNFPA, the World Bank, DKT, and ministries of health worldwide. Helm Pharmaceuticals GmbH: Part of the world's largest privately owned chemicals marketing and distribution company (with a turnover of US €7 billion), Helm Pharmaceuticals GmbH focuses on generic drugs and medical equipment. It is the largest trading company for the generic Depot Medroxyprogesterone Acetate (DMPA) injectable contraceptive. Sima: Formed in 1994, Sima is registered with the Government of Kenya to lobby for better and more sustainable community development programmes. USAID | DELIVER PROJECT: Implemented by JSI, the USAID | DELIVER PROJECT works with national and international partners to increase the availability of essential health supplies, including contraceptives and condoms, to clients and customers around the world. The project focuses on supply chain management, commodity security, and procurement services. To apply for membership in the Coalition, click here. Topics sought for May membership meeting The Secretariat has begun the process of identifying key issues to be addressed at the Coalition's upcoming membership meeting, which will be hosted by the European Commission in Brussels on May 22-23, 2008. Coalition members are cordially invited to forward to the Secretariat any topics they would like to see addressed during the two-day event. Please send comments to the Secretariat by April 4. Gedeon Richter welcomes the Coalition This month, Coalition Director John Skibiak visited the offices of Gedeon Richter, a pioneer in the development of hormonal contraception and currently the world’s leading manufacturer of emergency contraception pills. The Budapest-based firm is the most recent pharmaceutical manufacturer to express an interest in joining the Coalition. During the visit, which included tours of their production, packing, and dispatch facilities, Richter representatives echoed many concerns frequently raised by Coalition members. They spoke of the need to focus on the total market, and the negative consequences that can arise when free public-sector supplies seep into the commercial market. They also highlighted the importance of good supply chain management–not just for the end user, but also so that country programmes can engage more effectively with industry in a timely and cost-efficient manner. Finally, they praised efforts to ensure unified standards of quality, safety, and efficacy. Poor quality, they said, harms us all. Apart from the obvious individual health risks, it can undermine confidence in the method, and ultimately all those who produce it. PATH holds regional workshops on WHO Prequalification Programme This month PATH, in partnership with WHO and UNFPA, concluded a series of workshops to address WHO Prequalification Programme requirements for supplying essential RH medicines. With funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the initiative aims to expedite progress toward contraceptive and RH supply security in low- and middle-income countries by expanding the participation of manufacturers in the programme. The regional workshops focused on two priority areas: prequalification within public-sector procurement and prequalification of condom manufacturers. The procurement workshops addressed the benefits of prequalification and how to effectively recommend or access the programme. The condom manufacturer workshops introduced and solicited input on the new prequalification programme for male latex condoms with the aim of increasing participation of manufacturers. The workshop series ended in February 2008 with a condom workshop in New Delhi, India. Workshops were also held in Nicaragua, China, and Thailand in January, and a West African workshop took place in Senegal in December. The sponsors will also convene a half-day workshop for large-scale procurers and donors on May 21 in conjunction with the Coalition’s May membership meeting. For more information about the workshop series, contact PATH Senior Programme Officer Janet Vail. European journalists visit Tanzania As part of the Countdown 2015 Europe project, Coalition member DSW accompanied European journalists from February 16-23 to various locations within Tanzania to give them a first-hand appreciation of the gaps between the availability and demand for supplies. The journalists visited the USAID | DELIVER PROJECT and the PSI warehouse in Dar es Salaam. Countdown 2015 Europe campaigns for universal access to and increased donor support for RH supplies. For more details, click here or contact Maike Schliebs, Advocacy Officer at DSW. Highlights from the Working Groups Systems Strengthening Working Group (SSWG) Countries at Risk (CAR): This month, El Salvador, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe were featured on the agenda of the CAR. As a result of the meeting, UNFPA and USAID sent shipments to Kenya, and Crown Agents resolved the stock shortages in Zimbabwe. Other shipments prevented stockouts in Ghana and Mozambique. Crown Agents is now a full member of the CAR, along with USAID, UNFPA, KfW, the World Bank, and IPPF. Both RHInterchange (RHI) and the USAID | DELIVER PROJECT also attend as providers of essential data. RHI: RHI management has chosen UNFPA to be the next operator of the RHI. As of 2009, UNFPA will lead the management of the RHI website, with ongoing direction and guidance from the SSWG. In February, UNFPA and JSI undertook a joint mission to Burkina Faso, an RHI focus country, to introduce the website and gather feedback for improvements. The team, Mimi Whitehouse of JSI and Ingegerd Nordin of UNFPA's Procurement Services Branch, met with the Ministry of Health, donor partners, and non-governmental agencies. This joint mission looked at the types of changes required of the website, and anticipated support needs. As a result of the mission, Burkina Faso's central procurement agency, La Centrale d’Achat des Médicaments Essentiels Génériques (CAMEG), and KfW-funded social marketing project, Projet de Marketing Social des Condoms (PROMACO), will share their contraceptive purchasing information with the RHI. Contact SSWG Head, Alan Bornbusch, for more information on the SSWG. Resource Mobilization and Awareness Working Group (RMA WG) The national-level activities of Project RMA have recently focused on building national networks and secretariats to advocate for increased financial and political commitment to RH supplies. These will be based in six IPPF Member Associations in Bangladesh, Ghana, Mexico, Nicaragua, Tanzania, and Uganda. IPPF plans to use the Country Global Pathways advocacy model as a means to further the Project RMA campaign. This involves creating national networks, researching and mapping relevant policy and budget processes, developing evidence-based messages, and recruiting champions to communicate messages and garner high-level support. Tanzania and Mexico have been working with this model of advocacy for some time. In February, a meeting was held with the Tanzanian Member Association UMATI to develop a plan for integrating Project RMA with their existing strategy. Meanwhile, IPPF is coordinating with its regional offices to arrange visits to the other countries to develop work plans and identify advocacy opportunities on supplies. For more information on these national-level activities, contact RMA Officer Sarah Shaw at IPPF, or view the Project RMA page on the Coalition website and IPPF's website. 10-17 March PSP-One Online Social Marketing Conference (see http://www.psp-one.com/) 12 March Countries at Risk (CAR) group meeting 21-23 May Coalition Membership and Executive Committee Meetings; Brussels, Belgium 18-20 June Reproductive Health in Emergencies Conference 2008; Kampala, Uganda (see www.raiseinitiative.org/conference/#welcome for more details) Reproductive Health Supplies Coalition Rue Marie-Th�r�se, 21 � 1000 Brussels, Belgium � Tel: +32 (0)2 210.02.22 � Fax: +32 (0)2 219.33.63 www.rhsupplies.org � rhsccommunications@path.org
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/21621
{"url": "https://www.rhsupplies.org/fileadmin/uploads/rhsc/Newsletters/February_2008.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.rhsupplies.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:25:31Z", "digest": "sha1:EMAMCYMWDSSRBGT6GKFWMNL3S5DOI5CB"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10996, 10996.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10996, 11127.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10996, 45.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10996, 49.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10996, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10996, 297.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10996, 0.29344016]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10996, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10996, 0.01035813]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10996, 0.00727273]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10996, 0.0077135]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10996, 0.00991736]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10996, 0.00727273]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10996, 0.0460691]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10996, 0.18427641]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10996, 0.42591445]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10996, 5.62616243]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10996, 0.00050075]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10996, 5.74660579]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10996, 1613.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 46, 1.0], [46, 519, 1.0], [519, 1458, 1.0], [1458, 1481, 0.0], [1481, 1541, 0.0], [1541, 1870, 1.0], [1870, 2186, 1.0], [2186, 2690, 1.0], [2690, 2720, 1.0], [2720, 2836, 0.0], [2836, 3062, 1.0], [3062, 3405, 1.0], [3405, 3550, 1.0], [3550, 3904, 1.0], [3904, 3958, 1.0], [3958, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4399, 1.0], [4399, 4437, 0.0], [4437, 4776, 1.0], [4776, 5595, 1.0], [5595, 5659, 0.0], [5659, 6078, 1.0], [6078, 6761, 1.0], [6761, 7017, 1.0], [7017, 7053, 0.0], [7053, 7403, 1.0], [7403, 7585, 1.0], [7585, 7620, 0.0], [7620, 7663, 0.0], [7663, 7991, 1.0], [7991, 8194, 1.0], [8194, 8815, 1.0], [8815, 9112, 1.0], [9112, 9181, 1.0], [9181, 9240, 0.0], [9240, 9546, 1.0], [9546, 10108, 1.0], [10108, 10449, 1.0], [10449, 10534, 0.0], [10534, 10581, 0.0], [10581, 10664, 0.0], [10664, 10810, 0.0], [10810, 10849, 0.0], [10849, 10948, 0.0], [10948, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 519, 0.0], [519, 1458, 0.0], [1458, 1481, 0.0], [1481, 1541, 0.0], [1541, 1870, 0.0], [1870, 2186, 0.0], [2186, 2690, 0.0], [2690, 2720, 0.0], [2720, 2836, 0.0], [2836, 3062, 0.0], [3062, 3405, 0.0], [3405, 3550, 0.0], [3550, 3904, 0.0], [3904, 3958, 0.0], [3958, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4399, 0.0], [4399, 4437, 0.0], [4437, 4776, 0.0], [4776, 5595, 0.0], [5595, 5659, 0.0], [5659, 6078, 0.0], [6078, 6761, 0.0], [6761, 7017, 0.0], [7017, 7053, 0.0], [7053, 7403, 0.0], [7403, 7585, 0.0], [7585, 7620, 0.0], [7620, 7663, 0.0], [7663, 7991, 0.0], [7991, 8194, 0.0], [8194, 8815, 0.0], [8815, 9112, 0.0], [9112, 9181, 0.0], [9181, 9240, 0.0], [9240, 9546, 0.0], [9546, 10108, 0.0], [10108, 10449, 0.0], [10449, 10534, 0.0], [10534, 10581, 0.0], [10581, 10664, 0.0], [10664, 10810, 0.0], [10810, 10849, 0.0], [10849, 10948, 0.0], [10948, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 46, 6.0], [46, 519, 68.0], [519, 1458, 134.0], [1458, 1481, 4.0], [1481, 1541, 9.0], [1541, 1870, 51.0], [1870, 2186, 51.0], [2186, 2690, 69.0], [2690, 2720, 4.0], [2720, 2836, 20.0], [2836, 3062, 39.0], [3062, 3405, 47.0], [3405, 3550, 22.0], [3550, 3904, 47.0], [3904, 3958, 9.0], [3958, 3999, 6.0], [3999, 4399, 64.0], [4399, 4437, 5.0], [4437, 4776, 47.0], [4776, 5595, 124.0], [5595, 5659, 8.0], [5659, 6078, 59.0], [6078, 6761, 96.0], [6761, 7017, 38.0], [7017, 7053, 4.0], [7053, 7403, 53.0], [7403, 7585, 28.0], [7585, 7620, 5.0], [7620, 7663, 5.0], [7663, 7991, 52.0], [7991, 8194, 35.0], [8194, 8815, 101.0], [8815, 9112, 40.0], [9112, 9181, 11.0], [9181, 9240, 8.0], [9240, 9546, 43.0], [9546, 10108, 83.0], [10108, 10449, 52.0], [10449, 10534, 9.0], [10534, 10581, 8.0], [10581, 10664, 10.0], [10664, 10810, 15.0], [10810, 10849, 4.0], [10849, 10948, 17.0], [10948, 10996, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.02325581], [46, 519, 0.00862069], [519, 1458, 0.00438116], [1458, 1481, 0.0], [1481, 1541, 0.01724138], [1541, 1870, 0.0], [1870, 2186, 0.00980392], [2186, 2690, 0.01446281], [2690, 2720, 0.07142857], [2720, 2836, 0.01785714], [2836, 3062, 0.01834862], [3062, 3405, 0.003003], [3405, 3550, 0.02836879], [3550, 3904, 0.0], [3904, 3958, 0.0], [3958, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4399, 0.0230179], [4399, 4437, 0.0], [4437, 4776, 0.0], [4776, 5595, 0.0], [5595, 5659, 0.0], [5659, 6078, 0.0], [6078, 6761, 0.00596125], [6761, 7017, 0.008], [7017, 7053, 0.0], [7053, 7403, 0.02339181], [7403, 7585, 0.02259887], [7585, 7620, 0.0], [7620, 7663, 0.0], [7663, 7991, 0.0], [7991, 8194, 0.0], [8194, 8815, 0.00664452], [8815, 9112, 0.0], [9112, 9181, 0.0], [9181, 9240, 0.0], [9240, 9546, 0.0], [9546, 10108, 0.0], [10108, 10449, 0.0], [10449, 10534, 0.05479452], [10534, 10581, 0.04545455], [10581, 10664, 0.05063291], [10664, 10810, 0.05925926], [10810, 10849, 0.0], [10849, 10948, 0.3373494], [10948, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 519, 0.0], [519, 1458, 0.0], [1458, 1481, 0.0], [1481, 1541, 0.0], [1541, 1870, 0.0], [1870, 2186, 0.0], [2186, 2690, 0.0], [2690, 2720, 0.0], [2720, 2836, 0.0], [2836, 3062, 0.0], [3062, 3405, 0.0], [3405, 3550, 0.0], [3550, 3904, 0.0], [3904, 3958, 0.0], [3958, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4399, 0.0], [4399, 4437, 0.0], [4437, 4776, 0.0], [4776, 5595, 0.0], [5595, 5659, 0.0], [5659, 6078, 0.0], [6078, 6761, 0.0], [6761, 7017, 0.0], [7017, 7053, 0.0], [7053, 7403, 0.0], [7403, 7585, 0.0], [7585, 7620, 0.0], [7620, 7663, 0.0], [7663, 7991, 0.0], [7991, 8194, 0.0], [8194, 8815, 0.0], [8815, 9112, 0.0], [9112, 9181, 0.0], [9181, 9240, 0.0], [9240, 9546, 0.0], [9546, 10108, 0.0], [10108, 10449, 0.0], [10449, 10534, 0.0], [10534, 10581, 0.0], [10581, 10664, 0.0], [10664, 10810, 0.0], [10810, 10849, 0.0], [10849, 10948, 0.0], [10948, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.06521739], [46, 519, 0.01268499], [519, 1458, 0.02342918], [1458, 1481, 0.04347826], [1481, 1541, 0.18333333], [1541, 1870, 0.05775076], [1870, 2186, 0.12658228], [2186, 2690, 0.06150794], [2690, 2720, 0.03333333], [2720, 2836, 0.03448276], [2836, 3062, 0.11061947], [3062, 3405, 0.05539359], [3405, 3550, 0.03448276], [3550, 3904, 0.12146893], [3904, 3958, 0.03703704], [3958, 3999, 0.04878049], [3999, 4399, 0.03], [4399, 4437, 0.07894737], [4437, 4776, 0.02949853], [4776, 5595, 0.00976801], [5595, 5659, 0.140625], [5659, 6078, 0.06443914], [6078, 6761, 0.02489019], [6761, 7017, 0.0546875], [7017, 7053, 0.05555556], [7053, 7403, 0.1], [7403, 7585, 0.06593407], [7585, 7620, 0.08571429], [7620, 7663, 0.18604651], [7663, 7991, 0.10365854], [7991, 8194, 0.24137931], [8194, 8815, 0.09822866], [8815, 9112, 0.1010101], [9112, 9181, 0.17391304], [9181, 9240, 0.16949153], [9240, 9546, 0.06535948], [9546, 10108, 0.04982206], [10108, 10449, 0.07331378], [10449, 10534, 0.10588235], [10534, 10581, 0.12765957], [10581, 10664, 0.09638554], [10664, 10810, 0.04794521], [10810, 10849, 0.1025641], [10849, 10948, 0.07070707], [10948, 10996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10996, 0.32830554]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10996, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10996, 0.4633168]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10996, -565.33974986]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10996, 29.21146758]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10996, 84.47306339]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10996, 85.0]]}
East Bay Science Project (EBSP) 2000-present The East Bay Science Project (previously the BEST Institute) was formed in 2000 and has been continuously funded by the California Science Project (CSP). The CSP is a network of 18 regional sites that provide university-based professional development programs for K-12 teachers of science. The EBSP, in partnership with the CSP, is a provider of services to schools and districts in the east San Francisco Bay area seeking to strengthen their science programs and science instruction aligned with the Next Generation Science Standards. Collaborative Projects. We have been fortunate to have been awarded over $20 million to support K-12 science education. The lead institutions for all of these grants were Cal State East Bay and the Alameda County Office of Education. Elementary Science Partnership (ESP) 2018-2020 ESP supports preparation and continued learning in the area of science education, increases the number of credentialed principals and science certificated teachers, advances teachers as leaders and supports retention of effective principals and classroom teachers. This project serves as a developmental model that enhances the principal induction program and teacher leadership development. We are focusing on the principal as an agent of change, equipping them with the knowledge and understanding to re-envision instruction and see their role through a systems lens. Teachers in grades 3-5 were selected to be site level teacher leaders, to deepen their science content knowledge, understanding of the innovations of the NGSS, and develop new pedagogies that support diverse learners. Principals and teachers will follow a parallel path through a contextualized learning experience. This model includes intensive science and pedagogical content knowledge development, lesson study, site level practicum focused on an equity issue in science, and leadership institutes to develop a coherent vision and plan for elementary science. Science Communities of Practice Partnership (SCOPP) 2018-2023 SCOPP is funded by the National Science Foundation Discovery Research K-12 program (DRK12) for $3.4 million. This project will study implementation of an effective professional learning model for elementary science teachers that includes teacher leaders, administrators and university educators, taking a systems approach to improving science instruction in ways that make it sustainable. The working model involves reciprocal communities of practice, which are groups of teachers, leaders and administrators that focus on practical tasks and how to achieve them in ways that involve multiple stakeholder perspectives. The project will provide evidence about the specific components of the professional development model that support sustainable improvement in science teaching, will test the ways that teacher ownership and organizational conditions mediate instructional change, and will develop four tools for facilitating the teacher learning and the accompanying capacity building. In this way, the project will produce practical knowledge and tools necessary for other school districts nationwide to create professional learning that is tailored to their contexts and builds organizational capacity, therefore supporting sustainable improvement in science teaching. Science Partnership for Instructional Innovation (SPFII) 2015-17 SPFII was a project funded by the California Department of Education Math-Science Partnership program (2015-17) for $2 million. SPFII collaborated wih 7 school districts to transform science teaching and learning in grades 3-8. During intensive professional learning opportunties CSUEB science faculty supported teachers as they developed a deep understanding of the science described in the NGSS. Faculty and ACOE coaches modeled effective science pedagogy to provide explicit training on best practices for science teaching and learning. Intensive professional development consists of summer institutes, Saturday workshops during the school year and online modules. Participants engaged in a Cycle of Inquiry where they collaborated with teachers in their district and SPFII staff to examine their own practice as California transitioned to the NGSS. The goal of the Cycle of Inquiry is to build a strong collaborative community focused on improving instructional practices and supporting students as they engage in a NGSS classroom. Integrated Middle School Science Partnership (IMSS) 2010-16 The IMSS Partnership was a projected funded by the National Science Foundation Math-Science Partnership for $11.9 million (2010-16). IMSS was a collaborative project between Cal State East Bay, the Alameda County Office of Education, the Santa Clara County Office of Education, local school districts and other community partners (such as the Exploratorium). We developed and studied a comprehensive teacher professional development model designed to transform science teaching and learning in underperforming middle schools serving predominately low-income, underrepresented minority students. The Partnership prepared 51 middle school science master teachers and five regional science leaders/coaches who are impacting approximately 562 teachers and 153,000 students over the life of the project. Partnering districts began to examine high quality science instruction and their preparedness to transition to the Next Generation Science Standards in both elementary and high school resulting in a coherent plan for K-12 science instruction. Some of the goals of the IMSS Partnership were to (1) increase the quality of middle school science teachers by increasing their science content knowledge and stimulating their sustained use of inquiry-based pedagogies; (2) create, assess, and refine exemplary investigative science instructional case modules; and (3) to rigorously study the impact of inquiry-based learning and teacher professional development on student achievement in middle school science. NASA Lift Off NASA LIFT OFF was a collaborative project between the Alameda County Office of Education, Cal State East Bay, San Jose State University and Cal Poly Pomona and was funded for $1.4 million (2009-11). Funded by NASA, the project featured NASA science and mission data and targeted high school teachers and pre-service single subject science teachers. The heart of the project was problem-based learning; a student-centered instructional strategy. The main product of the summer institute was the development of online instructional cases based on NASA content. LIFT OFF piloted at CSUEB during 2009 and expanded to San Jose State University and Cal Poly Pomona in 2010.
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/21633
{"url": "https://www.sciencepartnership.org/projects", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.sciencepartnership.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:35:25Z", "digest": "sha1:5P5LTFOALF4MLMXDXUAA2PBJSKB2C3ZV"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6675, 6675.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6675, 6851.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6675, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6675, 25.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6675, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6675, 257.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6675, 0.28558559]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6675, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6675, 0.09497407]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6675, 0.05812914]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6675, 0.02754427]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6675, 0.01359327]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6675, 0.00894294]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6675, 0.00786979]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6675, 0.01645502]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6675, 0.03513514]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6675, 0.15315315]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6675, 0.37631027]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6675, 5.860587]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6675, 5.18465481]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6675, 954.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 581, 1.0], [581, 605, 1.0], [605, 815, 1.0], [815, 862, 0.0], [862, 1995, 1.0], [1995, 2057, 0.0], [2057, 3329, 1.0], [3329, 3394, 0.0], [3394, 4430, 1.0], [4430, 4490, 0.0], [4490, 5994, 1.0], [5994, 6008, 0.0], [6008, 6675, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 581, 0.0], [581, 605, 0.0], [605, 815, 0.0], [815, 862, 0.0], [862, 1995, 0.0], [1995, 2057, 0.0], [2057, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3394, 0.0], [3394, 4430, 0.0], [4430, 4490, 0.0], [4490, 5994, 0.0], [5994, 6008, 0.0], [6008, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 6.0], [45, 581, 83.0], [581, 605, 2.0], [605, 815, 36.0], [815, 862, 5.0], [862, 1995, 162.0], [1995, 2057, 7.0], [2057, 3329, 173.0], [3329, 3394, 7.0], [3394, 4430, 150.0], [4430, 4490, 7.0], [4490, 5994, 208.0], [5994, 6008, 3.0], [6008, 6675, 105.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.09756098], [45, 581, 0.01526718], [581, 605, 0.0], [605, 815, 0.0195122], [815, 862, 0.18604651], [862, 1995, 0.00179372], [1995, 2057, 0.13793103], [2057, 3329, 0.00478851], [3329, 3394, 0.09836066], [3394, 4430, 0.00979432], [4430, 4490, 0.10714286], [4490, 5994, 0.01701838], [5994, 6008, 0.0], [6008, 6675, 0.02461538]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 581, 0.0], [581, 605, 0.0], [605, 815, 0.0], [815, 862, 0.0], [862, 1995, 0.0], [1995, 2057, 0.0], [2057, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3394, 0.0], [3394, 4430, 0.0], [4430, 4490, 0.0], [4490, 5994, 0.0], [5994, 6008, 0.0], [6008, 6675, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.17777778], [45, 581, 0.06716418], [581, 605, 0.08333333], [605, 815, 0.05238095], [815, 862, 0.12765957], [862, 1995, 0.01059135], [1995, 2057, 0.14516129], [2057, 3329, 0.01415094], [3329, 3394, 0.13846154], [3394, 4430, 0.0511583], [4430, 4490, 0.15], [4490, 5994, 0.02992021], [5994, 6008, 0.42857143], [6008, 6675, 0.08995502]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6675, 0.26014954]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6675, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6675, 0.17033321]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6675, -392.33939567]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6675, -26.51094455]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6675, 89.2734367]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6675, 38.0]]}
Dobutamine for NEOnatal CIRCulatory failure defined by novel biomarkers Paediatric trials for dobutamine safety Neonatal circulatory failure in the first two days after birth impairs blood flow, resulting in brain injury and decreased neurodevelopment. A European consortium is addressing the efficacy and safety of the drug dobutamine in treating infants. Dobutamine is used to treat infants with abnormally low blood pressure (hypotension) after birth. Preliminary data indicates that dobutamine treatment is beneficial. However, the current formulation is not certified for safe use in infants and it is being used off-label. The EU-funded NEO-CIRC (Dobutamine for neonatal circulatory failure defined by novel biomarkers) project will conduct clinical trials to determine the safety and efficacy of age-appropriate formulation of dobutamine for infants. Other areas of focus include potential genetic polymorphisms that may influence drug response in infants and determining a standardised definition for circulatory failure in infants. Project members revised their paediatric investigation plan and obtained approval for a series of three clinical trials. These studies will test dobutamine efficacy in preterm neonates using a new age-appropriate neonatal drug formulation. During the second project phase, significant progress was achieved towards launching the clinical trials. NEO-CIRC finalised experimental studies on animal models to determine dobutamine pharmacokinetics (PK) and pharmacodynamics (PD). Analysis of PK/PD in tissue and blood samples is ongoing. Requisite manuals and standard operating protocols were also finalised. Project findings were published in several peer-reviewed journals, and communicated in nine oral conference presentations and one poster presentation. Moreover, one publication is currently under review and another two are being prepared. Staff training as well as preparatory work for clinical trial, sample and data management, regulatory framework and pilot batch of trial medicines has been completed. The pilot batch of medicines has already been distributed to two clinical study sites. Overall, the NEO-CIRC trials will provide important information on the kinetics, dynamics and safety of administering dobutamine in infants as treatment for hypotension. Importantly, the adapted drug formulation for infants, alongside the improved consensus definition of neonatal circulatory failure, will improve the clinical outcome of affected babies. Dobutamine, neonatal circulatory failure, infants, hypotension, biomarkers NEO-CIRC Start date 1 October 2011 End date 30 September 2018 FP7-HEALTH BRIGHTON AND SUSSEX UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS NHS TRUST A COMPOSITION OBTAINED FROM A PIGMENT BELONGING TO THE FAMILY OF ANTHOCYANINS FOR THE TREATMENT OF TYPE 1 DIABETES DISEASE Neurons in spinal-cord injuries are reconnected in vivo by means of carbon nanotube sponges CARE FOSTERS SCIENTIFIC COOPERATION BETWEEN THE EU AND RUSSIA Last update: 30 September 2015 Permalink: https://cordis.europa.eu/article/id/92340-paediatric-trials-for-dobutamine-safety
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/22101
{"url": "https://cordis.europa.eu/article/id/92340-paediatric-trials-for-dobutamine-safety", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "cordis.europa.eu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:15:27Z", "digest": "sha1:HG3LY4RND7IAGFQGAATJ6NUWO2JSHO7E"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3095, 3095.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3095, 5206.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3095, 15.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3095, 95.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3095, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3095, 287.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3095, 0.26862745]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3095, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3095, 0.04834996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3095, 0.04834996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3095, 0.04834996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3095, 0.04834996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3095, 0.04834996]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3095, 0.04144282]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3095, 0.04988488]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3095, 0.02455871]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3095, 0.1]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3095, 0.14705882]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3095, 0.5547619]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3095, 6.2047619]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3095, 5.03440246]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3095, 420.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 112, 0.0], [112, 357, 1.0], [357, 2496, 1.0], [2496, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2606, 0.0], [2606, 2633, 0.0], [2633, 2644, 0.0], [2644, 2695, 0.0], [2695, 2818, 0.0], [2818, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2972, 0.0], [2972, 3003, 0.0], [3003, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 112, 0.0], [112, 357, 0.0], [357, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2606, 0.0], [2606, 2633, 0.0], [2633, 2644, 0.0], [2644, 2695, 0.0], [2695, 2818, 0.0], [2818, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2972, 0.0], [2972, 3003, 0.0], [3003, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 72, 9.0], [72, 112, 5.0], [112, 357, 36.0], [357, 2496, 294.0], [2496, 2571, 7.0], [2571, 2580, 1.0], [2580, 2606, 5.0], [2606, 2633, 5.0], [2633, 2644, 1.0], [2644, 2695, 7.0], [2695, 2818, 20.0], [2818, 2910, 14.0], [2910, 2972, 9.0], [2972, 3003, 5.0], [3003, 3095, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 112, 0.0], [112, 357, 0.0], [357, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2606, 0.2], [2606, 2633, 0.23076923], [2633, 2644, 0.11111111], [2644, 2695, 0.0], [2695, 2818, 0.00819672], [2818, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2972, 0.0], [2972, 3003, 0.20689655], [3003, 3095, 0.06410256]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 112, 0.0], [112, 357, 0.0], [357, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2571, 0.0], [2571, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2606, 0.0], [2606, 2633, 0.0], [2633, 2644, 0.0], [2644, 2695, 0.0], [2695, 2818, 0.0], [2818, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2972, 0.0], [2972, 3003, 0.0], [3003, 3095, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.11111111], [72, 112, 0.025], [112, 357, 0.0122449], [357, 2496, 0.02244039], [2496, 2571, 0.01333333], [2571, 2580, 0.77777778], [2580, 2606, 0.07692308], [2606, 2633, 0.07407407], [2633, 2644, 0.72727273], [2644, 2695, 0.8627451], [2695, 2818, 0.82926829], [2818, 2910, 0.01086957], [2910, 2972, 0.85483871], [2972, 3003, 0.06451613], [3003, 3095, 0.01086957]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3095, 0.2521407]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3095, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3095, 0.18637478]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3095, -163.31724111]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3095, -39.02532889]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3095, -2.15391738]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3095, 22.0]]}
Corinth man sentenced to 14 years for gun trafficking February 3, 2023 February 3, 2023 Bob Bakken 0 Comments booneville, chicago, clay joyner, corinth, firearms, galvin dwayne davis, gun trafficking, tnt pawn Credit: U.S. Attorney’s Office – Northern District/Mississippi news release A Corinth man was sentenced to 14 years in prison for burglarizing a gun store, possessing stolen firearms, and transporting those firearms. According to court documents, Galvin Dwayne Davis, 39, was involved in the Aug. 1, 2019 burglary of TNT Pawn in Booneville. Davis and his co-defendants stole 49 firearms and transported those guns to Chicago. The group sold those guns on the street in Chicago. A number of those guns have been involved in shootings in Chicago and recovered by Chicago Police. Davis was also ordered to pay restitution to TNT Pawn over $42,000 for the value of the stolen firearms and damage to the property. “The crimes committed by this defendant had a far-reaching effect and the guns illegally transferred were used to victimize others,” remarked U.S. Attorney Clay Joyner. “The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Mississippi will continue to prioritize the prosecution of violent crimes and gun crimes and we hope that the 14-year sentence imposed in this case will serve as a deterrent to others who might consider engaging in illegal firearms sales and trafficking.” “In our effort to disrupt violent gun crime in our community, ATF will continue to focus efforts on prohibited individuals, like this repeat offender, who steal firearms and unlawfully possess firearms,” said ATF New Orleans Special Agent in Charge Kurt Thielhorn. “The sentence imposed today sends a message to individuals who are prohibited from possessing firearms that we will continue to work to keep our neighborhoods safe as the top priority for ATF.” Davis’s co-defendant, Marquis McCray, is set to be sentenced for his role on Feb. 16. The case was investigated by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) Oxford Resident Agency, Booneville Police Department, Corinth Police Department, and the Chicago Police Department. Assistant U.S. Attorney Parker S. King prosecuted the case. This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results. Alabama man sentenced to 17 years for gun trafficking Booneville man sentenced in drug trafficking case Shannon man sentenced on drug trafficking and firearm… First degree murder charge for Corinth man after missing man… Corinth area hard hit by Wednesday storms Tull Brothers expanding Corinth manufacturing operations ← Heart health topic of Southaven Chamber luncheon Senate Weekly Report →
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/22138
{"url": "https://desotocountynews.com/mississippi-news/corinth-man-sentenced-to-14-years-for-gun-trafficking/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "desotocountynews.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:46:44Z", "digest": "sha1:LNCFQOBI4W3P2TZ374OXXZ4INEQU33A3"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3203, 3203.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3203, 4762.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3203, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3203, 68.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3203, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3203, 292.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3203, 0.28474576]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3203, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3203, 0.02086495]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3203, 0.01593323]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3203, 0.01365706]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3203, 0.03220339]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3203, 0.10526316]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3203, 0.17457627]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3203, 0.53036437]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3203, 5.33603239]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3203, 0.00338983]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3203, 5.14976518]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3203, 494.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 210, 0.0], [210, 286, 0.0], [286, 427, 1.0], [427, 787, 1.0], [787, 919, 1.0], [919, 1401, 1.0], [1401, 1860, 1.0], [1860, 1946, 1.0], [1946, 2213, 1.0], [2213, 2810, 1.0], [2810, 2864, 0.0], [2864, 2914, 0.0], [2914, 2969, 0.0], [2969, 3031, 0.0], [3031, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3130, 0.0], [3130, 3181, 0.0], [3181, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 210, 0.0], [210, 286, 0.0], [286, 427, 0.0], [427, 787, 0.0], [787, 919, 0.0], [919, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 1860, 0.0], [1860, 1946, 0.0], [1946, 2213, 0.0], [2213, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2864, 0.0], [2864, 2914, 0.0], [2914, 2969, 0.0], [2969, 3031, 0.0], [3031, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3130, 0.0], [3130, 3181, 0.0], [3181, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 54, 9.0], [54, 210, 23.0], [210, 286, 9.0], [286, 427, 22.0], [427, 787, 61.0], [787, 919, 24.0], [919, 1401, 75.0], [1401, 1860, 73.0], [1860, 1946, 15.0], [1946, 2213, 37.0], [2213, 2810, 87.0], [2810, 2864, 9.0], [2864, 2914, 7.0], [2914, 2969, 8.0], [2969, 3031, 10.0], [3031, 3073, 7.0], [3073, 3130, 6.0], [3130, 3181, 8.0], [3181, 3203, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.03773585], [54, 210, 0.07534247], [210, 286, 0.0], [286, 427, 0.01459854], [427, 787, 0.02578797], [787, 919, 0.0390625], [919, 1401, 0.00423729], [1401, 1860, 0.0], [1860, 1946, 0.025], [1946, 2213, 0.0], [2213, 2810, 0.0102916], [2810, 2864, 0.03773585], [2864, 2914, 0.0], [2914, 2969, 0.0], [2969, 3031, 0.0], [3031, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3130, 0.0], [3130, 3181, 0.0], [3181, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 210, 0.0], [210, 286, 0.0], [286, 427, 0.0], [427, 787, 0.0], [787, 919, 0.0], [919, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 1860, 0.0], [1860, 1946, 0.0], [1946, 2213, 0.0], [2213, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2864, 0.0], [2864, 2914, 0.0], [2914, 2969, 0.0], [2969, 3031, 0.0], [3031, 3073, 0.0], [3073, 3130, 0.0], [3130, 3181, 0.0], [3181, 3203, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.01851852], [54, 210, 0.03205128], [210, 286, 0.10526316], [286, 427, 0.0141844], [427, 787, 0.05], [787, 919, 0.03787879], [919, 1401, 0.02904564], [1401, 1860, 0.03921569], [1860, 1946, 0.05813953], [1946, 2213, 0.10486891], [2213, 2810, 0.02177554], [2810, 2864, 0.01851852], [2864, 2914, 0.02], [2914, 2969, 0.01818182], [2969, 3031, 0.03225806], [3031, 3073, 0.04761905], [3073, 3130, 0.05263158], [3130, 3181, 0.05882353], [3181, 3203, 0.13636364]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3203, 0.32560384]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3203, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3203, 0.67550701]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3203, -166.44345401]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3203, 54.95312945]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3203, 6.9121438]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3203, 27.0]]}
Welcome to Wikipedia the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit. 6,632,677 articles in English From today's featured article Harold Perrineau, who played Michael Dawson "Meet Kevin Johnson" is the eighth episode of the fourth season of Lost and first aired March 20, 2008, on ABC in the United States. It was written by Elizabeth Sarnoff and Brian K. Vaughan, and directed by Stephen Williams. Most of the narrative is a flashback centering on Michael Dawson, played by Harold Perrineau (pictured), in the month preceding the show's present day. The writers completed the episode on the first day of the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike. ABC pledged to air the episode regardless of the strike's resolution even though the writers felt that its cliffhanger was unsuitable as a potential season finale. Thirteen million Americans watched the episode. Its climax was criticized for its placement in the story and its focus on secondary characters. Critics responded well to Michael's emotional journey but complained that his physical journey conflicted with Lost's timeline. The episode was given the fourth season's only Primetime Emmy Award for its sound mixing. (Full article...) Recently featured: Branford Steam Railroad Wiley Rutledge Did you know ... EBSD map of duplex stainless steel microstructure orientation ... that electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) is used to characterise polycrystalline materials at the micro and nano-scale (example pictured)? ... that Alex Mivedor, who had been seen as the number two in the ruling RPT party in Togo, was purged from the party leadership in 1983? ... that the jazz collective West Coast Get Down once recorded around 190 songs over the course of a month? ... that Abdul Ghani Azhari wrote Qadim Tarikh-e-Gujjar in Urdu, detailing the ancient history of Gujjars in India? ... that the 2022 essay and short story collection Kilometer 101 was published shortly after the author fled Russia due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine? ... that at 23, Roman Mejia reached the rank of principal dancer at the New York City Ballet, where his father had also danced? ... that director Kunihiko Ikuhara created the anime series Revolutionary Girl Utena after becoming frustrated by his lack of creative control as a director of the anime series Sailor Moon? ... that Rancho Obi-Wan contains more than 500,000 Star Wars collectibles? Start a new article Nominate an article The International Criminal Court issues arrest warrants for Russian president Vladimir Putin (pictured) and Russian official Maria Lvova-Belova for the abduction of children from Ukraine. At the Academy Awards, Everything Everywhere All at Once wins seven awards, including Best Picture. Iran and Saudi Arabia agree to re-establish diplomatic relations, seven years after they were severed. Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank both collapse over the span of three days, becoming the second- and third-largest bank failures in US history. Ongoing: Recent deaths: Jacqueline Gold Antje Vollmer Joe Pepitone Marek Kopelent Vera Selby March 20: Nowruz (2023) 1852 – Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin, which had a profound effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the United States, was published. 1923 – The Arts Club of Chicago hosted the opening of Pablo Picasso's first solo United States showing, entitled Original Drawings by Pablo Picasso. 1939 – Germany issued an ultimatum to Lithuania, demanding the return of the Klaipėda Region under threat of invasion. 1942 – World War II: After being forced to flee the Philippines for Australia, U.S. Army general Douglas MacArthur (pictured) announced: "I came through and I shall return." 1993 – The Troubles: Two children were killed by the second of two bomb attacks by the Provisional Irish Republican Army in Warrington, England. Wareru (b. 1253) Elisabeth Geleerd (b. 1909) Zillur Rahman (d. 2013) More anniversaries: List of days of the year From today's featured list The earliest recordings of Little Walter, an American blues artist, were as a sideman, when he contributed harmonica to songs by Chicago blues musicians such as Jimmy Rogers and Muddy Waters. As the featured artist, Little Walter recorded the instrumental "Juke" in 1952. The single reached number one on Billboard's Rhythm and Blues chart and launched his career as a solo artist. A string of popular singles followed, including "Mean Old World", "Blues with a Feeling", and "Key to the Highway". His "My Babe" was one of the biggest R&B sellers of 1955. In addition to his solo career, Little Walter continued to record harmonica for songs by other artists. He recorded at a time when blues musicians were primarily singles artists. His records were released on Checker Records, run by the Chess brothers, Leonard and Phil. The one album released during his lifetime is a compilation issued by Chess Records, titled The Best of Little Walter (1958). Rolling Stone ranked it at number 198 in its list of the "500 Greatest Albums of All Time". (Full list...) Norfolk Wildlife Trust Defunct and relocated National Hockey League teams More featured lists Today's featured picture The blue-throated macaw (Ara glaucogularis) is a species of macaw that is endemic to a small area of north-central Bolivia, known as the Llanos de Moxos. Recent population and range estimates suggest that about 350 to 400 individuals remain in the wild. Its demise was brought on by nesting competition, avian predation, and a small native range, exacerbated by indigenous hunting and capture for the pet trade. Although plentiful in captivity, it is critically endangered in the wild and protected by trading prohibitions. In 2014, the species was designated a natural patrimony of Bolivia. This blue-throated macaw in flight was photographed at Loro Parque, on the Spanish island of Tenerife in the Canary Islands. Photograph credit: Carsten Steger Margaret Harwood Saung Dark Hedges More featured pictures Other areas of Wikipedia Community portal – The central hub for editors, with resources, links, tasks, and announcements. Village pump – Forum for discussions about Wikipedia itself, including policies and technical issues. Site news – Sources of news about Wikipedia and the broader Wikimedia movement. Teahouse – Ask basic questions about using or editing Wikipedia. Help desk – Ask questions about using or editing Wikipedia. Reference desk – Ask research questions about encyclopedic topics. Content portals – A unique way to navigate the encyclopedia. Wikipedia's sister projects Wikipedia is written by volunteer editors and hosted by the Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit organization that also hosts a range of other volunteer projects: Free media repository Wiki software development Wikimedia project coordination Free textbooks and manuals Free knowledge base Free-content news Collection of quotations Free-content library Directory of species Free learning tools Dictionary and thesaurus Wikipedia languages This Wikipedia is written in English. Many other Wikipedias are available; some of the largest are listed below. 1,000,000+ articles 250,000+ articles فارسی‎ 50,000+ articles Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Main_Page&oldid=1114291180" This page was last edited on 5 October 2022, at 19:27 (UTC).
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/22182
{"url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "en.wikipedia.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:10:44Z", "digest": "sha1:NBGE2JXM4YUCUIXQBH7KNSNV2CCMQALJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7312, 7312.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7312, 10215.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7312, 84.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7312, 292.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7312, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7312, 221.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7312, 0.28808664]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7312, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7312, 0.01247261]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7312, 0.01247261]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7312, 0.00842744]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7312, 0.00606776]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7312, 0.00573066]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7312, 0.01227437]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7312, 0.01190476]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7312, 0.19494585]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7312, 0.56088889]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7312, 5.27377778]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7312, 0.00794224]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7312, 5.86188945]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7312, 1125.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 1.0], [65, 95, 0.0], [95, 125, 0.0], [125, 169, 0.0], [169, 1189, 0.0], [1189, 1208, 0.0], [1208, 1232, 0.0], [1232, 1247, 0.0], [1247, 1264, 1.0], [1264, 1326, 0.0], [1326, 1473, 1.0], [1473, 1611, 1.0], [1611, 1719, 1.0], [1719, 1835, 1.0], [1835, 1991, 1.0], [1991, 2119, 1.0], [2119, 2309, 1.0], [2309, 2384, 1.0], [2384, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 1.0], [2612, 2712, 1.0], [2712, 2815, 1.0], [2815, 2965, 1.0], [2965, 2974, 0.0], [2974, 2989, 0.0], [2989, 3005, 0.0], [3005, 3019, 0.0], [3019, 3032, 0.0], [3032, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3058, 0.0], [3058, 3082, 0.0], [3082, 3253, 1.0], [3253, 3402, 1.0], [3402, 3521, 1.0], [3521, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3840, 1.0], [3840, 3857, 0.0], [3857, 3885, 0.0], [3885, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 3929, 0.0], [3929, 3954, 0.0], [3954, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 5040, 0.0], [5040, 5063, 0.0], [5063, 5114, 0.0], [5114, 5134, 0.0], [5134, 5159, 0.0], [5159, 5876, 1.0], [5876, 5910, 0.0], [5910, 5927, 0.0], [5927, 5933, 0.0], [5933, 5945, 0.0], [5945, 5968, 0.0], [5968, 5993, 0.0], [5993, 6090, 1.0], [6090, 6192, 1.0], [6192, 6272, 1.0], [6272, 6337, 1.0], [6337, 6397, 1.0], [6397, 6464, 1.0], [6464, 6525, 1.0], [6525, 6553, 0.0], [6553, 6714, 0.0], [6714, 6736, 0.0], [6736, 6762, 0.0], [6762, 6793, 0.0], [6793, 6820, 0.0], [6820, 6840, 0.0], [6840, 6858, 0.0], [6858, 6883, 0.0], [6883, 6904, 0.0], [6904, 6925, 0.0], [6925, 6945, 0.0], [6945, 6970, 0.0], [6970, 6990, 0.0], [6990, 7103, 1.0], [7103, 7123, 0.0], [7123, 7141, 0.0], [7141, 7148, 0.0], [7148, 7165, 0.0], [7165, 7252, 0.0], [7252, 7312, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 95, 0.0], [95, 125, 0.0], [125, 169, 0.0], [169, 1189, 0.0], [1189, 1208, 0.0], [1208, 1232, 0.0], [1232, 1247, 0.0], [1247, 1264, 0.0], [1264, 1326, 0.0], [1326, 1473, 0.0], [1473, 1611, 0.0], [1611, 1719, 0.0], [1719, 1835, 0.0], [1835, 1991, 0.0], [1991, 2119, 0.0], [2119, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2384, 0.0], [2384, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2712, 0.0], [2712, 2815, 0.0], [2815, 2965, 0.0], [2965, 2974, 0.0], [2974, 2989, 0.0], [2989, 3005, 0.0], [3005, 3019, 0.0], [3019, 3032, 0.0], [3032, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3058, 0.0], [3058, 3082, 0.0], [3082, 3253, 0.0], [3253, 3402, 0.0], [3402, 3521, 0.0], [3521, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3840, 0.0], [3840, 3857, 0.0], [3857, 3885, 0.0], [3885, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 3929, 0.0], [3929, 3954, 0.0], [3954, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 5040, 0.0], [5040, 5063, 0.0], [5063, 5114, 0.0], [5114, 5134, 0.0], [5134, 5159, 0.0], [5159, 5876, 0.0], [5876, 5910, 0.0], [5910, 5927, 0.0], [5927, 5933, 0.0], [5933, 5945, 0.0], [5945, 5968, 0.0], [5968, 5993, 0.0], [5993, 6090, 0.0], [6090, 6192, 0.0], [6192, 6272, 0.0], [6272, 6337, 0.0], [6337, 6397, 0.0], [6397, 6464, 0.0], [6464, 6525, 0.0], [6525, 6553, 0.0], [6553, 6714, 0.0], [6714, 6736, 0.0], [6736, 6762, 0.0], [6762, 6793, 0.0], [6793, 6820, 0.0], [6820, 6840, 0.0], [6840, 6858, 0.0], [6858, 6883, 0.0], [6883, 6904, 0.0], [6904, 6925, 0.0], [6925, 6945, 0.0], [6945, 6970, 0.0], [6970, 6990, 0.0], [6990, 7103, 0.0], [7103, 7123, 0.0], [7123, 7141, 0.0], [7141, 7148, 0.0], [7148, 7165, 0.0], [7165, 7252, 0.0], [7252, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 21, 3.0], [21, 65, 7.0], [65, 95, 4.0], [95, 125, 4.0], [125, 169, 6.0], [169, 1189, 163.0], [1189, 1208, 2.0], [1208, 1232, 3.0], [1232, 1247, 2.0], [1247, 1264, 3.0], [1264, 1326, 8.0], [1326, 1473, 18.0], [1473, 1611, 26.0], [1611, 1719, 19.0], [1719, 1835, 17.0], [1835, 1991, 25.0], [1991, 2119, 23.0], [2119, 2309, 29.0], [2309, 2384, 10.0], [2384, 2404, 4.0], [2404, 2424, 3.0], [2424, 2612, 25.0], [2612, 2712, 15.0], [2712, 2815, 15.0], [2815, 2965, 24.0], [2965, 2974, 1.0], [2974, 2989, 2.0], [2989, 3005, 2.0], [3005, 3019, 2.0], [3019, 3032, 2.0], [3032, 3047, 2.0], [3047, 3058, 2.0], [3058, 3082, 4.0], [3082, 3253, 27.0], [3253, 3402, 24.0], [3402, 3521, 19.0], [3521, 3695, 28.0], [3695, 3840, 24.0], [3840, 3857, 3.0], [3857, 3885, 4.0], [3885, 3909, 4.0], [3909, 3929, 2.0], [3929, 3954, 6.0], [3954, 3981, 4.0], [3981, 5040, 178.0], [5040, 5063, 3.0], [5063, 5114, 7.0], [5114, 5134, 3.0], [5134, 5159, 3.0], [5159, 5876, 114.0], [5876, 5910, 4.0], [5910, 5927, 2.0], [5927, 5933, 1.0], [5933, 5945, 2.0], [5945, 5968, 3.0], [5968, 5993, 4.0], [5993, 6090, 14.0], [6090, 6192, 14.0], [6192, 6272, 13.0], [6272, 6337, 10.0], [6337, 6397, 10.0], [6397, 6464, 9.0], [6464, 6525, 10.0], [6525, 6553, 3.0], [6553, 6714, 24.0], [6714, 6736, 3.0], [6736, 6762, 3.0], [6762, 6793, 3.0], [6793, 6820, 4.0], [6820, 6840, 3.0], [6840, 6858, 2.0], [6858, 6883, 3.0], [6883, 6904, 2.0], [6904, 6925, 3.0], [6925, 6945, 3.0], [6945, 6970, 3.0], [6970, 6990, 2.0], [6990, 7103, 18.0], [7103, 7123, 2.0], [7123, 7141, 2.0], [7141, 7148, 1.0], [7148, 7165, 2.0], [7165, 7252, 3.0], [7252, 7312, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 95, 0.25925926], [95, 125, 0.0], [125, 169, 0.0], [169, 1189, 0.01212121], [1189, 1208, 0.0], [1208, 1232, 0.0], [1232, 1247, 0.0], [1247, 1264, 0.0], [1264, 1326, 0.0], [1326, 1473, 0.0], [1473, 1611, 0.03076923], [1611, 1719, 0.02941176], [1719, 1835, 0.0], [1835, 1991, 0.04666667], [1991, 2119, 0.01666667], [2119, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2384, 0.08955224], [2384, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2712, 0.0], [2712, 2815, 0.0], [2815, 2965, 0.0], [2965, 2974, 0.0], [2974, 2989, 0.0], [2989, 3005, 0.0], [3005, 3019, 0.0], [3019, 3032, 0.0], [3032, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3058, 0.0], [3058, 3082, 0.3], [3082, 3253, 0.02424242], [3253, 3402, 0.02758621], [3402, 3521, 0.03418803], [3521, 3695, 0.02453988], [3695, 3840, 0.02836879], [3840, 3857, 0.30769231], [3857, 3885, 0.16666667], [3885, 3909, 0.2], [3909, 3929, 0.0], [3929, 3954, 0.0], [3954, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 5040, 0.01771654], [5040, 5063, 0.0], [5063, 5114, 0.0], [5114, 5134, 0.0], [5134, 5159, 0.0], [5159, 5876, 0.01432665], [5876, 5910, 0.0], [5910, 5927, 0.0], [5927, 5933, 0.0], [5933, 5945, 0.0], [5945, 5968, 0.0], [5968, 5993, 0.0], [5993, 6090, 0.0], [6090, 6192, 0.0], [6192, 6272, 0.0], [6272, 6337, 0.0], [6337, 6397, 0.0], [6397, 6464, 0.0], [6464, 6525, 0.0], [6525, 6553, 0.0], [6553, 6714, 0.0], [6714, 6736, 0.0], [6736, 6762, 0.0], [6762, 6793, 0.0], [6793, 6820, 0.0], [6820, 6840, 0.0], [6840, 6858, 0.0], [6858, 6883, 0.0], [6883, 6904, 0.0], [6904, 6925, 0.0], [6925, 6945, 0.0], [6945, 6970, 0.0], [6970, 6990, 0.0], [6990, 7103, 0.0], [7103, 7123, 0.4375], [7123, 7141, 0.4], [7141, 7148, 0.0], [7148, 7165, 0.35714286], [7165, 7252, 0.14084507], [7252, 7312, 0.16363636]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 95, 0.0], [95, 125, 0.0], [125, 169, 0.0], [169, 1189, 0.0], [1189, 1208, 0.0], [1208, 1232, 0.0], [1232, 1247, 0.0], [1247, 1264, 0.0], [1264, 1326, 0.0], [1326, 1473, 0.0], [1473, 1611, 0.0], [1611, 1719, 0.0], [1719, 1835, 0.0], [1835, 1991, 0.0], [1991, 2119, 0.0], [2119, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2384, 0.0], [2384, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2712, 0.0], [2712, 2815, 0.0], [2815, 2965, 0.0], [2965, 2974, 0.0], [2974, 2989, 0.0], [2989, 3005, 0.0], [3005, 3019, 0.0], [3019, 3032, 0.0], [3032, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3058, 0.0], [3058, 3082, 0.0], [3082, 3253, 0.0], [3253, 3402, 0.0], [3402, 3521, 0.0], [3521, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3840, 0.0], [3840, 3857, 0.0], [3857, 3885, 0.0], [3885, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 3929, 0.0], [3929, 3954, 0.0], [3954, 3981, 0.0], [3981, 5040, 0.0], [5040, 5063, 0.0], [5063, 5114, 0.0], [5114, 5134, 0.0], [5134, 5159, 0.0], [5159, 5876, 0.0], [5876, 5910, 0.0], [5910, 5927, 0.0], [5927, 5933, 0.0], [5933, 5945, 0.0], [5945, 5968, 0.0], [5968, 5993, 0.0], [5993, 6090, 0.0], [6090, 6192, 0.0], [6192, 6272, 0.0], [6272, 6337, 0.0], [6337, 6397, 0.0], [6397, 6464, 0.0], [6464, 6525, 0.0], [6525, 6553, 0.0], [6553, 6714, 0.0], [6714, 6736, 0.0], [6736, 6762, 0.0], [6762, 6793, 0.0], [6793, 6820, 0.0], [6820, 6840, 0.0], [6840, 6858, 0.0], [6858, 6883, 0.0], [6883, 6904, 0.0], [6904, 6925, 0.0], [6925, 6945, 0.0], [6945, 6970, 0.0], [6970, 6990, 0.0], [6990, 7103, 0.0], [7103, 7123, 0.0], [7123, 7141, 0.0], [7141, 7148, 0.0], [7148, 7165, 0.0], [7165, 7252, 0.0], [7252, 7312, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0952381], [21, 65, 0.0], [65, 95, 0.03333333], [95, 125, 0.03333333], [125, 169, 0.09090909], [169, 1189, 0.04019608], [1189, 1208, 0.05263158], [1208, 1232, 0.125], [1232, 1247, 0.13333333], [1247, 1264, 0.05882353], [1264, 1326, 0.06451613], [1326, 1473, 0.02721088], [1473, 1611, 0.04347826], [1611, 1719, 0.03703704], [1719, 1835, 0.07758621], [1835, 1991, 0.02564103], [1991, 2119, 0.046875], [2119, 2309, 0.03684211], [2309, 2384, 0.06666667], [2384, 2404, 0.05], [2404, 2424, 0.05], [2424, 2612, 0.06382979], [2612, 2712, 0.09], [2712, 2815, 0.02912621], [2815, 2965, 0.04666667], [2965, 2974, 0.11111111], [2974, 2989, 0.06666667], [2989, 3005, 0.125], [3005, 3019, 0.14285714], [3019, 3032, 0.15384615], [3032, 3047, 0.13333333], [3047, 3058, 0.18181818], [3058, 3082, 0.08333333], [3082, 3253, 0.05847953], [3253, 3402, 0.08053691], [3402, 3521, 0.03361345], [3521, 3695, 0.0862069], [3695, 3840, 0.06206897], [3840, 3857, 0.05882353], [3857, 3885, 0.07142857], [3885, 3909, 0.08333333], [3909, 3929, 0.05], [3929, 3954, 0.04], [3954, 3981, 0.03703704], [3981, 5040, 0.0509915], [5040, 5063, 0.13043478], [5063, 5114, 0.07843137], [5114, 5134, 0.05], [5134, 5159, 0.04], [5159, 5876, 0.0237099], [5876, 5910, 0.08823529], [5910, 5927, 0.11764706], [5927, 5933, 0.16666667], [5933, 5945, 0.16666667], [5945, 5968, 0.04347826], [5968, 5993, 0.08], [5993, 6090, 0.02061856], [6090, 6192, 0.02941176], [6192, 6272, 0.05], [6272, 6337, 0.04615385], [6337, 6397, 0.05], [6397, 6464, 0.02985075], [6464, 6525, 0.03278689], [6525, 6553, 0.03571429], [6553, 6714, 0.01863354], [6714, 6736, 0.04545455], [6736, 6762, 0.03846154], [6762, 6793, 0.03225806], [6793, 6820, 0.03703704], [6820, 6840, 0.05], [6840, 6858, 0.05555556], [6858, 6883, 0.04], [6883, 6904, 0.04761905], [6904, 6925, 0.04761905], [6925, 6945, 0.05], [6945, 6970, 0.04], [6970, 6990, 0.05], [6990, 7103, 0.04424779], [7103, 7123, 0.0], [7123, 7141, 0.0], [7141, 7148, 0.0], [7148, 7165, 0.0], [7165, 7252, 0.03448276], [7252, 7312, 0.08333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7312, 0.6312626]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7312, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7312, 0.84679025]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7312, -336.51554326]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7312, -6.80740438]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7312, 225.29329261]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7312, 67.0]]}
Protesting the G-20 Summit A photo essay from Pittsburgh’s streets. Christopher Moraff September 26, 2009 World leaders pretend: A scene from outside the G-20 summit held in Pittsburgh, Pa., September 24-25. (All photos by Christopher Moraff) PITTSBURGH – On September 24 and 25, thousands of activists from around the world gathered in Pittsburgh, Pa., to protest the G-20 meeting bringing together leaders of the ​“Group of Twenty” nations, which together account for about 85 percent of the world economy. The City of Pittsburgh had prepared for the worst. Authorities trucked in thousands of police reserves from across Pennsylvania, and members of the U.S. Coast Guard, the Border Patrol and the National Guard were all in attendance. In most parts of the city, police outnumbered protesters. One non-sanctioned protest in the city’s Lawrenceville section on Thursday afternoon saw about 1,000 mostly black-clad protesters face off with several hundred police in riot gear. After scattering, protesters regrouped, and as the sun began to set, damage to some local businesses drew a heavy police response. Authorities employed rubber bullets, pepper spray (OC gas) and a newly purchased Long-Range Acoustic Device (LRAD) to disperse crowds. Clashes continued intermittently throughout the night, with a total of approximately 60 people arrested Thursday, according to a statement released Saturday by the Pittsburgh G-20 Resistance Project (PGRP). Earlier Thursday, 14 Greenpeace activists were arrested after they rappelled off the city’s West End Bridge, unfurling a large banner that warned of ​“climate destruction ahead” due to global warming. Elsewhere in the city, residents and journalists wandered a nearly deserted downtown that had been mostly shut down for the summit. Below are a dozen photographs taken Thursday and Friday on Pittsburgh’s streets. Thursday morning, a small group of Burmese activists, led by about a dozen Buddhists monks, prays facing the David L. Lawrence Convention Center – the site of the G-20 summit. About a thousand protesters, mostly anarchist youth, took to the streets Thursday in a non-sanctioned march starting in Arsenal Park, in the city’s Lawrenceville section. The protesters had planned to march to the David L. Lawrence Convention Center, where the G-20 was getting underway, but were blocked by police. Police in full riot gear eye activists at the start Thursday’s non-sanctioned march in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville section. A neighbor watches anarchists run from police in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville neighborhood on Thursday afternoon. Police from Harrisburg, Pa., await the start of a non-sanctioned protest in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville section on Thursday afternoon. Black clad protesters wheel a dumpster to the top of a street in Pittsburgh’s Lawrenceville district. The aim was to block an intersection to police access, according to one protester. The City of Pittsburgh had prepared for the worst. On Friday, a large protest sponsored by the Thomas Merton Center’s Antiwar Committee drew several thousand peaceful protesters. There were reports of clashes between police and anarchist youth Friday night, in the city’s Oakland section. As of Saturday, September 26, authorities had reported 181 arrests during the two-day period, not including the 14 Greenpeace activists. PGRP spokesman Jesse Ericson said Saturday that ​“jail officials have been generally uncooperative and have harassed legal workers over the phones.” A member of the U.S. Coast Guard mans a 50-caliber machine gun during a patrol of the Ohio River. Pittsburgh shut down all river traffic during the two-day G-20 summit, and waterways were heavily monitored. Police line sidewalks during Friday afternoon’s rally. The city of Pittsburgh reportedly shelled out nearly $20 million on security, with the federal government providing $10 million, and Pennsylvania $4.3 million. On Friday, several thousand activists from around the world marched from the city’s Oakland neighborhood to a rally in front of the City County Building in downtown Pittsburgh. The protest was sponsored by the Thomas Merton Center’s Antiwar Committee and featured music and speeches by leading activists. Tibetan activists protesting the Chinese occupation of their country chanted and carried U.S. and Tibetan flags at Friday’s march in downtown Pittsburgh. “Our first protest.” Youth were heavily represented at both Thursday’s and Friday’s G-20 protests in Pittsburgh. A young couple documents the moment for posterity. Protesters wearing masks of British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Chinese President Hu Jintao, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, U.S. President Barack Obama, and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, at Friday’s rally in front of Pittsburgh’s City-County Building. All images by Christopher Moraff. Christopher Moraff writes about national politics, social justice and culture for a number of publications, including The American Prospect online, Design Bureau and The Philadelphia Tribune. His columns appear weekly on Philadelphia magazine’s blog The Philly Post. Moraff, who lives in Philadelphia, is a member of the In These Times Board of Editors. More articles by Christopher Moraff One Man in Search of a District How Rep. Kucinich was almost pushed off the map in Ohio. America’s Blue Chip Tax Cheats The country's largest corporations avoid their fair share. US Uncut is on the case. Stopping Frisky Business Eight men of color sue the City of Brotherly Love over its "stop-and-frisk" policy—the latest in a group of federal civil rights cases. These Three Candidates Worked Together to Bring "Sidewalk Socialism" to Their City Council In spite of India Walton's loss in Buffalo, N.Y., Election Day 2021 still showed promise for socialism on the local level. Rebecca Burns LaborDispatch Workers Resist Pandemic-Era Disaster Capitalism in Ecuador The Ecuador government took advantage of the pandemic to slash workers’ rights. Kimberley Brown A Win Against Voter Suppression in the South While Republicans have purged voter rolls and suppressed Black turnout in the South, voting rights organizers just showed how to win. Casey Williams
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/22347
{"url": "https://inthesetimes.com/article/protesting-the-g-20-summit", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "inthesetimes.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:38:28Z", "digest": "sha1:LCGXDUOBPHBCAM67P57NV7YIXTTDKNT4"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6208, 6208.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6208, 8491.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6208, 44.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6208, 104.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6208, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6208, 268.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6208, 0.28486395]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6208, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6208, 0.08920188]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6208, 0.0485133]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6208, 0.0356025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6208, 0.0356025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6208, 0.01604069]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6208, 0.00978091]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6208, 0.00704225]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6208, 0.01115023]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6208, 0.02721088]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6208, 0.18197279]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6208, 0.48827292]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6208, 5.44989339]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6208, 5.50751019]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6208, 938.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 68, 1.0], [68, 106, 0.0], [106, 243, 0.0], [243, 509, 1.0], [509, 798, 1.0], [798, 1110, 1.0], [1110, 1452, 1.0], [1452, 1785, 1.0], [1785, 1866, 1.0], [1866, 2042, 1.0], [2042, 2358, 1.0], [2358, 2481, 1.0], [2481, 2593, 1.0], [2593, 2727, 1.0], [2727, 2912, 1.0], [2912, 2963, 1.0], [2963, 3201, 1.0], [3201, 3487, 1.0], [3487, 3694, 1.0], [3694, 3909, 1.0], [3909, 4214, 1.0], [4214, 4368, 1.0], [4368, 4532, 1.0], [4532, 4829, 1.0], [4829, 4863, 1.0], [4863, 5217, 1.0], [5217, 5253, 0.0], [5253, 5285, 0.0], [5285, 5342, 1.0], [5342, 5373, 0.0], [5373, 5457, 1.0], [5457, 5482, 0.0], [5482, 5618, 1.0], [5618, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5832, 1.0], [5832, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5860, 0.0], [5860, 5919, 0.0], [5919, 5999, 1.0], [5999, 6015, 0.0], [6015, 6060, 0.0], [6060, 6194, 1.0], [6194, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 68, 0.0], [68, 106, 0.0], [106, 243, 0.0], [243, 509, 0.0], [509, 798, 0.0], [798, 1110, 0.0], [1110, 1452, 0.0], [1452, 1785, 0.0], [1785, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2042, 0.0], [2042, 2358, 0.0], [2358, 2481, 0.0], [2481, 2593, 0.0], [2593, 2727, 0.0], [2727, 2912, 0.0], [2912, 2963, 0.0], [2963, 3201, 0.0], [3201, 3487, 0.0], [3487, 3694, 0.0], [3694, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 4214, 0.0], [4214, 4368, 0.0], [4368, 4532, 0.0], [4532, 4829, 0.0], [4829, 4863, 0.0], [4863, 5217, 0.0], [5217, 5253, 0.0], [5253, 5285, 0.0], [5285, 5342, 0.0], [5342, 5373, 0.0], [5373, 5457, 0.0], [5457, 5482, 0.0], [5482, 5618, 0.0], [5618, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5832, 0.0], [5832, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5860, 0.0], [5860, 5919, 0.0], [5919, 5999, 0.0], [5999, 6015, 0.0], [6015, 6060, 0.0], [6060, 6194, 0.0], [6194, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 27, 4.0], [27, 68, 6.0], [68, 106, 5.0], [106, 243, 21.0], [243, 509, 43.0], [509, 798, 46.0], [798, 1110, 47.0], [1110, 1452, 47.0], [1452, 1785, 51.0], [1785, 1866, 12.0], [1866, 2042, 30.0], [2042, 2358, 49.0], [2358, 2481, 17.0], [2481, 2593, 14.0], [2593, 2727, 18.0], [2727, 2912, 30.0], [2912, 2963, 9.0], [2963, 3201, 35.0], [3201, 3487, 41.0], [3487, 3694, 35.0], [3694, 3909, 30.0], [3909, 4214, 47.0], [4214, 4368, 22.0], [4368, 4532, 24.0], [4532, 4829, 40.0], [4829, 4863, 5.0], [4863, 5217, 53.0], [5217, 5253, 5.0], [5253, 5285, 7.0], [5285, 5342, 11.0], [5342, 5373, 5.0], [5373, 5457, 14.0], [5457, 5482, 3.0], [5482, 5618, 23.0], [5618, 5709, 13.0], [5709, 5832, 21.0], [5832, 5846, 2.0], [5846, 5860, 1.0], [5860, 5919, 7.0], [5919, 5999, 12.0], [5999, 6015, 2.0], [6015, 6060, 8.0], [6060, 6194, 21.0], [6194, 6208, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.08], [27, 68, 0.0], [68, 106, 0.16666667], [106, 243, 0.04724409], [243, 509, 0.03100775], [509, 798, 0.0], [798, 1110, 0.01320132], [1110, 1452, 0.01219512], [1452, 1785, 0.00611621], [1785, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2042, 0.01183432], [2042, 2358, 0.00655738], [2358, 2481, 0.0], [2481, 2593, 0.0], [2593, 2727, 0.0], [2727, 2912, 0.0], [2912, 2963, 0.0], [2963, 3201, 0.0], [3201, 3487, 0.02508961], [3487, 3694, 0.02020202], [3694, 3909, 0.02912621], [3909, 4214, 0.0], [4214, 4368, 0.0], [4368, 4532, 0.01257862], [4532, 4829, 0.0], [4829, 4863, 0.0], [4863, 5217, 0.0], [5217, 5253, 0.0], [5253, 5285, 0.0], [5285, 5342, 0.0], [5342, 5373, 0.0], [5373, 5457, 0.0], [5457, 5482, 0.0], [5482, 5618, 0.0], [5618, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5832, 0.03448276], [5832, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5860, 0.0], [5860, 5919, 0.0], [5919, 5999, 0.0], [5999, 6015, 0.0], [6015, 6060, 0.0], [6060, 6194, 0.0], [6194, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 68, 0.0], [68, 106, 0.0], [106, 243, 0.0], [243, 509, 0.0], [509, 798, 0.0], [798, 1110, 0.0], [1110, 1452, 0.0], [1452, 1785, 0.0], [1785, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2042, 0.0], [2042, 2358, 0.0], [2358, 2481, 0.0], [2481, 2593, 0.0], [2593, 2727, 0.0], [2727, 2912, 0.0], [2912, 2963, 0.0], [2963, 3201, 0.0], [3201, 3487, 0.0], [3487, 3694, 0.0], [3694, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 4214, 0.0], [4214, 4368, 0.0], [4368, 4532, 0.0], [4532, 4829, 0.0], [4829, 4863, 0.0], [4863, 5217, 0.0], [5217, 5253, 0.0], [5253, 5285, 0.0], [5285, 5342, 0.0], [5342, 5373, 0.0], [5373, 5457, 0.0], [5457, 5482, 0.0], [5482, 5618, 0.0], [5618, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5832, 0.0], [5832, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5860, 0.0], [5860, 5919, 0.0], [5919, 5999, 0.0], [5999, 6015, 0.0], [6015, 6060, 0.0], [6060, 6194, 0.0], [6194, 6208, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.11111111], [27, 68, 0.04878049], [68, 106, 0.07894737], [106, 243, 0.06569343], [243, 509, 0.06390977], [509, 798, 0.04844291], [798, 1110, 0.01282051], [1110, 1452, 0.06432749], [1452, 1785, 0.02102102], [1785, 1866, 0.04938272], [1866, 2042, 0.05113636], [2042, 2358, 0.03797468], [2358, 2481, 0.03252033], [2481, 2593, 0.03571429], [2593, 2727, 0.04477612], [2727, 2912, 0.02162162], [2912, 2963, 0.05882353], [2963, 3201, 0.04201681], [3201, 3487, 0.03846154], [3487, 3694, 0.04347826], [3694, 3909, 0.02325581], [3909, 4214, 0.04262295], [4214, 4368, 0.04545455], [4368, 4532, 0.04268293], [4532, 4829, 0.11111111], [4829, 4863, 0.08823529], [4863, 5217, 0.06214689], [5217, 5253, 0.08333333], [5253, 5285, 0.125], [5285, 5342, 0.07017544], [5342, 5373, 0.16129032], [5373, 5457, 0.04761905], [5457, 5482, 0.12], [5482, 5618, 0.02941176], [5618, 5709, 0.12087912], [5709, 5832, 0.06504065], [5832, 5846, 0.14285714], [5846, 5860, 0.14285714], [5860, 5919, 0.11864407], [5919, 5999, 0.025], [5999, 6015, 0.125], [6015, 6060, 0.13333333], [6060, 6194, 0.02985075], [6194, 6208, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6208, 0.76067287]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6208, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6208, 0.57203108]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6208, -361.44488271]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6208, 132.29514058]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6208, 68.72949909]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6208, 66.0]]}
2014 Ozone Hole Update Oct 30, 2014: The Antarctic ozone hole reached its annual peak size on Sept. 11, according to scientists from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The size of this year’s hole was 24.1 million square kilometers (9.3 million square miles) — an area roughly the size of North America. This image shows ozone concentrations above Antarctica on Sept. 11, 2014. Image Credit: NASA. See also NASA's Ozone Hole Watch website The single-day maximum area was similar to that in 2013, which reached 24.0 million square kilometers (9.3 million square miles). The largest single-day ozone hole ever recorded by satellite was 29.9 million square kilometers (11.5 million square miles) on Sept. 9, 2000. Overall, the 2014 ozone hole is smaller than the large holes of the 1998–2006 period, and is comparable to 2010, 2012, and 2013. With the increased atmospheric chlorine levels present since the 1980s, the Antarctic ozone hole forms and expands during the Southern Hemisphere spring (August and September). The ozone layer helps shield life on Earth from potentially harmful ultraviolet radiation that can cause skin cancer and damage plants. The Montreal Protocol agreement beginning in 1987 regulated ozone depleting substances, such as chlorine-containing chlorofluorocarbons and bromine-containing halons. The 2014 level of these substances over Antarctica has declined about 9 percent below the record maximum in 2000. “Year-to-year weather variability significantly impacts Antarctica ozone because warmer stratospheric temperatures can reduce ozone depletion,” said Paul A. Newman, chief scientist for atmospheres at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “The ozone hole area is smaller than what we saw in the late-1990s and early 2000s, and we know that chlorine levels are decreasing. However, we are still uncertain about whether a long-term Antarctic stratospheric temperature warming might be reducing this ozone depletion.” The graphs above show the progress of the 2014 ozone hole. The gray shading indicates the highest and lowest values measured since 1979. The red numbers are the maximum or minimum observed values. The stratospheric temperature and the amount of sunlight reaching the south polar region control the depth and size of the Antarctic ozone hole. [more] Scientists are working to determine if the ozone hole trend over the last decade is a result of temperature increases or chorine declines. An increase of stratospheric temperature over Antarctica would decrease the ozone hole’s area. Satellite and ground-based measurements show that chlorine levels are declining, but stratospheric temperature analyses in that region are less reliable for determining long-term trends. Scientists also found that the minimum thickness of ozone layer this year was recorded at 114 Dobson units on Sept. 30, compared to 250-350 Dobson units during the 1960s. Over the last 50 years satellite and ground-based records over Antarctica show ozone column amounts ranging from 100 to 400 Dobson units, which translates to about 1 millimeter (1/25 inch) to 5 millimeters (1/6 inch) of ozone in a layer if all of the ozone were brought down to the surface. The ozone data come from the Dutch-Finnish Ozone Monitoring Instrument on NASA’s Aura satellite and the Ozone Monitoring and Profiler Suite instrument on the NASA-NOAA Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership satellite. NOAA measurements at South Pole station monitor the ozone layer above that location by means of Dobson spectrophotometer and regular ozone-sonde balloon launches that record the thickness of the ozone layer and its vertical distribution. Chlorine amounts are estimated using NOAA and NASA ground measurements and observations from the Microwave Limb Sounder aboard NASA’s Aura satellite. NASA and NOAA are mandated under the Clean Air Act to monitor ozone-depleting gases and stratospheric depletion of ozone. Scientists from NASA and NOAA have been monitoring the ozone layer and the concentrations of ozone-depleting substances and their breakdown products from the ground and with a variety of instruments on satellites and balloons since the 1970s. These observations allow us to provide a continuous long-term record to track the long-term and year-to-year evolution of ozone amounts. Production editor: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA This Planet Smells Funny Earth's Fidgeting Climate The Mysterious Rumble of Thundersnow Active Mercury Radical New Lab Fights Disease Using Satellites Chesapeake Water Watch - Volunteers... Ham Radio Operators, We Need Your Help... Are Wildfires Getting Worse? – We Asked... New Webinar Series on Citizen Science...
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/22645
{"url": "https://science.nasa.gov/science-news/science-at-nasa/2014/30oct_ozonehole", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "science.nasa.gov", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:31:54Z", "digest": "sha1:5XDVF5PV3N4OZVTSY2YW5ALWGBAYCU6Z"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4721, 4721.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4721, 16151.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4721, 22.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4721, 589.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4721, 0.89]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4721, 293.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4721, 0.27816092]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4721, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4721, 0.02213642]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4721, 0.02213642]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4721, 0.02213642]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4721, 0.02316602]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4721, 0.01338481]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4721, 0.01621622]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4721, 0.02068966]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4721, 0.18181818]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4721, 0.19310345]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4721, 0.5021097]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4721, 5.46413502]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4721, 0.0045977]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4721, 5.29283419]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4721, 711.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 338, 1.0], [338, 473, 0.0], [473, 874, 1.0], [874, 1187, 1.0], [1187, 1468, 1.0], [1468, 2003, 1.0], [2003, 2352, 0.0], [2352, 2773, 1.0], [2773, 3235, 1.0], [3235, 3844, 1.0], [3844, 4346, 1.0], [4346, 4406, 0.0], [4406, 4431, 0.0], [4431, 4457, 0.0], [4457, 4494, 0.0], [4494, 4509, 0.0], [4509, 4557, 0.0], [4557, 4596, 1.0], [4596, 4638, 1.0], [4638, 4681, 1.0], [4681, 4721, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 338, 0.0], [338, 473, 0.0], [473, 874, 0.0], [874, 1187, 0.0], [1187, 1468, 0.0], [1468, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2352, 0.0], [2352, 2773, 0.0], [2773, 3235, 0.0], [3235, 3844, 0.0], [3844, 4346, 0.0], [4346, 4406, 0.0], [4406, 4431, 0.0], [4431, 4457, 0.0], [4457, 4494, 0.0], [4494, 4509, 0.0], [4509, 4557, 0.0], [4557, 4596, 0.0], [4596, 4638, 0.0], [4638, 4681, 0.0], [4681, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 23, 4.0], [23, 338, 52.0], [338, 473, 21.0], [473, 874, 65.0], [874, 1187, 46.0], [1187, 1468, 37.0], [1468, 2003, 75.0], [2003, 2352, 57.0], [2352, 2773, 60.0], [2773, 3235, 80.0], [3235, 3844, 86.0], [3844, 4346, 76.0], [4346, 4406, 7.0], [4406, 4431, 4.0], [4431, 4457, 3.0], [4457, 4494, 5.0], [4494, 4509, 2.0], [4509, 4557, 7.0], [4557, 4596, 4.0], [4596, 4638, 7.0], [4638, 4681, 7.0], [4681, 4721, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.18181818], [23, 338, 0.04304636], [338, 473, 0.046875], [473, 874, 0.11578947], [874, 1187, 0.01302932], [1187, 1468, 0.04727273], [1468, 2003, 0.01538462], [2003, 2352, 0.02339181], [2352, 2773, 0.0], [2773, 3235, 0.06696429], [3235, 3844, 0.0], [3844, 4346, 0.00813008], [4346, 4406, 0.0], [4406, 4431, 0.0], [4431, 4457, 0.0], [4457, 4494, 0.0], [4494, 4509, 0.0], [4509, 4557, 0.0], [4557, 4596, 0.0], [4596, 4638, 0.0], [4638, 4681, 0.0], [4681, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 338, 0.0], [338, 473, 0.0], [473, 874, 0.0], [874, 1187, 0.0], [1187, 1468, 0.0], [1468, 2003, 0.0], [2003, 2352, 0.0], [2352, 2773, 0.0], [2773, 3235, 0.0], [3235, 3844, 0.0], [3844, 4346, 0.0], [4346, 4406, 0.0], [4406, 4431, 0.0], [4431, 4457, 0.0], [4457, 4494, 0.0], [4494, 4509, 0.0], [4509, 4557, 0.0], [4557, 4596, 0.0], [4596, 4638, 0.0], [4638, 4681, 0.0], [4681, 4721, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.13043478], [23, 338, 0.06031746], [338, 473, 0.12592593], [473, 874, 0.00997506], [874, 1187, 0.02555911], [1187, 1468, 0.01779359], [1468, 2003, 0.03364486], [2003, 2352, 0.01432665], [2352, 2773, 0.00950119], [2773, 3235, 0.01515152], [3235, 3844, 0.08374384], [3844, 4346, 0.04183267], [4346, 4406, 0.16666667], [4406, 4431, 0.16], [4431, 4457, 0.11538462], [4457, 4494, 0.10810811], [4494, 4509, 0.13333333], [4509, 4557, 0.14583333], [4557, 4596, 0.1025641], [4596, 4638, 0.16666667], [4638, 4681, 0.13953488], [4681, 4721, 0.125]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4721, 0.60113508]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4721, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4721, 0.91671544]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4721, -289.9282333]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4721, -11.23338157]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4721, -4.30238579]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4721, 46.0]]}
Child Actor And ‘Lassie’ Writer James Douglass West Dead At Age 93 Child actor and writer James Douglass West, known best for being a writer on “Lassie,” died of natural causes in his home in Studio City on Sunday at the age of 93. West began his career in the entertainment industry as a child actor. He worked alongside Roddy McDowall and Natalie Wood, then shifted his focus to writing. He spent a decade as a writer on “Lassie” and also worked as a story editor for writer-producer Charles Marquis Warren on NBC’s “The Virginian,” according to The Hollywood Reporter. His death was confirmed by his son, Daniel West. James Douglass West, Child Actor Turned ‘Lassie’ Writer, Dies at 93 https://t.co/i8QYaMKCbj — The Hollywood Reporter (@THR) March 8, 2023 West’s longstanding career as a writer included the 1963 Western “California,” starring Jock Mahoney, and he was credited for writing the original screenplay for the Keely Smith-Louis Prima musical “Hey Boy! Hey Girl!” according to The Hollywood Reporter. West joined the writing staff at CBS in 1963 as the writer for the classic “Lassie” and nestled into the job he would devote his energy to for several years. The famous collie was an instant hit and families tuned in routinely to follow the dog’s numerous adventures. The famous television family was portrayed by June Lockhart, Hugh Reilly and Jon Provost, according to The Hollywood Reporter. The writer remained with the show through two final seasons in syndication, up until 1973. (RELATED: Tom Sizemore Dead At Age 61) As a child actor, he appeared in movies beginning at the tender age of eight. He appeared in “The Way of All Flesh” in 1940, “On the Sunny Side” in 1942, and “Happy Land” in 1943. West served in the U.S. Army in Korea for two years and returned to acting in 1950 with “Our Very Own.” Other credits include script writing for “Battles of Chief Pontiac,” and a two-part episode of NBC’s The Wonderful World of Disney, titled, “Two Against the Arctic,” according to The Hollywood Reporter. West retired from TV writing in 1980 and started a medical transmission business, where he worked well into his 80s. No Bets Barred: Can Petr Yan rebound vs. Merab Dvalishvili? Plus, whoops! Jed lost all his money Video: Merab Dvalishvili confronts Petr Yan in awkward UFC Las Vegas hotel encounter Sean Strickland Says Paulo Costa’s Contract Complaints Are His Fault Makhachev casts doubt on Volkanovski fight in Australia
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/24126
{"url": "https://mmanewshubb.com/2023/03/09/child-actor-and-lassie-writer-james-douglass-west-dead-at-age-93/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "mmanewshubb.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:55:39Z", "digest": "sha1:AHEUAQMWOTZBOFAJOHFM5GQRFUL344GU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2450, 2450.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2450, 3573.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2450, 15.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2450, 63.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2450, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2450, 208.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2450, 0.2800789]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2450, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2450, 0.08185953]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2450, 0.0353714]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2450, 0.02526529]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2450, 0.05053057]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2450, 0.04648813]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2450, 0.01775148]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2450, 0.19329389]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2450, 0.57038835]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2450, 4.80339806]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2450, 5.01266418]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2450, 412.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 67, 0.0], [67, 232, 1.0], [232, 621, 1.0], [621, 713, 0.0], [713, 759, 0.0], [759, 1015, 1.0], [1015, 1540, 0.0], [1540, 1720, 1.0], [1720, 1824, 1.0], [1824, 2027, 1.0], [2027, 2144, 1.0], [2144, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 2326, 0.0], [2326, 2395, 0.0], [2395, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 67, 0.0], [67, 232, 0.0], [232, 621, 0.0], [621, 713, 0.0], [713, 759, 0.0], [759, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1540, 0.0], [1540, 1720, 0.0], [1720, 1824, 0.0], [1824, 2027, 0.0], [2027, 2144, 0.0], [2144, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 2326, 0.0], [2326, 2395, 0.0], [2395, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 67, 12.0], [67, 232, 32.0], [232, 621, 65.0], [621, 713, 12.0], [713, 759, 8.0], [759, 1015, 38.0], [1015, 1540, 89.0], [1540, 1720, 36.0], [1720, 1824, 21.0], [1824, 2027, 31.0], [2027, 2144, 20.0], [2144, 2241, 17.0], [2241, 2326, 13.0], [2326, 2395, 10.0], [2395, 2450, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 67, 0.03030303], [67, 232, 0.01242236], [232, 621, 0.0], [621, 713, 0.03571429], [713, 759, 0.12195122], [759, 1015, 0.01606426], [1015, 1540, 0.01945525], [1540, 1720, 0.06896552], [1720, 1824, 0.04], [1824, 2027, 0.0], [2027, 2144, 0.05263158], [2144, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 2326, 0.0], [2326, 2395, 0.0], [2395, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 67, 0.0], [67, 232, 0.0], [232, 621, 0.0], [621, 713, 0.0], [713, 759, 0.0], [759, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1540, 0.0], [1540, 1720, 0.0], [1720, 1824, 0.0], [1824, 2027, 0.0], [2027, 2144, 0.0], [2144, 2241, 0.0], [2241, 2326, 0.0], [2326, 2395, 0.0], [2395, 2450, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 67, 0.1641791], [67, 232, 0.04848485], [232, 621, 0.05912596], [621, 713, 0.15217391], [713, 759, 0.15217391], [759, 1015, 0.0625], [1015, 1540, 0.0552381], [1540, 1720, 0.06111111], [1720, 1824, 0.07692308], [1824, 2027, 0.08374384], [2027, 2144, 0.02564103], [2144, 2241, 0.10309278], [2241, 2326, 0.11764706], [2326, 2395, 0.14492754], [2395, 2450, 0.05454545]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2450, 0.41223603]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2450, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2450, 0.99408156]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2450, -144.93352658]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2450, 46.40966829]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2450, -2.39089696]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2450, 24.0]]}
Germany Wins Grand Prize for Panasonic Kid Witness News Global Contest 2014 Osaka, Japan - Panasonic Corporation today announced that Immanuel-Kant-School Bremerhaven of Germany won the Grand Prize for its video "Stumbling" in the Panasonic Kid Witness News (KWN) Global Contest 2014. Students from Immanuel-Kant-School Bremerhaven were honored at the award ceremony held at Panasonic Corporation of North America headquarters in Newark, New Jersey. Students from other finalist schools also attended the ceremony, where they were recognized with category awards, including "Best Concept." The seven finalist videos focused on topics ranging from global environmental issues to strong friendships. The Grand Prize-winning video dealt with a serious theme: the fate of Holocaust victims during World War II. In the video, the students brilliantly expressed their feelings on this theme and delivered a message that we must all learn from the past. KWN is a hands-on video education program that Panasonic operates as part of its efforts to support education. The company provides video cameras and other production equipment to elementary and middle schools participating in the program. Currently, some 10,000 children and teachers around the world are taking part in the program. Since the program began in the United States in 1989, more than 170,000 children have participated. To commemorate the 25th anniversary of the KWN Program, the global awards ceremony was held in the U.S., where it originated. In his remarks opening the awards ceremony, Panasonic Corporation of North America Chairman & CEO Joseph M. Taylor pointed to the far-reaching impact of Kid Witness News. "When the program began 25 years ago, I don't think anyone could have imagined that it would grow to touch the lives of so many children in so many countries around the world," Mr. Taylor said. "I'm very proud to honor the students who created such outstanding video stories. I have no doubt that, with their creativity, positive attitude and communications skills, they will become the leaders of tomorrow." The KWN program honors the video works created by children every year. To produce videos, students choose a theme on their own and then handle all aspects of video-making, from planning and scripting to filming and editing. This year's KWN Global Contest saw 548 schools from 23 countries and regions take part in the competition by submitting five-minute videos themed about either ecology or communication. This year's Grand Prize winner and six finalist videos can be viewed on the official website for the KWN Global Contest 2014 at http://panasonic.net/kwn/contest2014/ Download KWN Global Awards Ceremony 2014 photos and videos: http://mm.gettyimages.com/mm/nicePath/gyipa_public?nav=pr248391616 [Videos] https://vimeo.com/kwnglobal [Related URLs] General information on KWN program: http://panasonic.net/kwn/ Panasonic's activities to support the next generation: http://panasonic.net/citizenship/education/ Summary of the seven award-winning videos Country/Name of School Video Title/Synopsis Grand Prize & The Global Citizen Award <Germany> Immanuel-Kant-School Bremerhaven (Secondary School) Stumbling So-called stumbling blocks bear the names of Holocaust victims. There are many of them laid in the streets of the town where the students live. With eloquent video images, the film shows the history they looked into and thoughts provoked by the stones. Best Cinematography Award <Thailand> Montfort College School (Secondary School) "Value" of Immensely Pig farming is one of the major industries in the village where a young boy lives. The village has been plagued by nasty smells from pig manure. The film shows the village's efforts to address the problem and promote the development of the village, in cooperation with a local university, by turning pig manure into environmentally friendly gas. Best Witness Award <Japan> Nakoso 1st Junior High School (Secondary School) There Once Was War Here This film focuses on huge "balloon bombs" Japan used during World War II in its attack on America. Through visits to a site which used to have such bombs and interviews with people who know those days, the film appeals for peace. Best Storytelling Award <New Zealand> Mount Aspiring College (Secondary School) Searching for Summer Sixteen-year-old Summer was raised by foster parents. In search of her identify and a place where she belongs, Summer sets out on a journey to find her real mother. Best Friendship Award <Czech Republic> Primary School of Josef Bublik, Banov (Primary School) Kamil and Me In the wake of a pool accident, a boy meets another boy named Kamil who has disabilities. This film depicts the deep and precious friendship that develops between them, following the accident. The K-Factor Award <Panama> Victoria D'Spinay Elementary School (Primary School) I Can Children try to emulate adults whom they admire. This film conveys the message that despite hardships, dreams can come true through inspiration from the adults children look up to. Best Concept Award <U.S.A.> Lincoln Park Academy (Secondary School) Fighting World Hunger Hunger is an international problem. This film reports on the hunger situation in countries including developed nations. It also proposes ways of helping people suffering from hunger through support associations. About Panasonic Kid Witness News KWN got its start in 1989 in the U.S. as a hands-on video education program supported by Panasonic North America, which supplied video cameras and editing equipment to public elementary and middle schools to make news programs from the perspective of children. The program was subsequently expanded on a global scale. At present, 548 schools from 23 countries and regions are participants in the program. KWN is designed to foster creativity and presentation skills among young students. Supervising teachers cite further merits of the program such as a heightened awareness of the environment and the community as well as development of team skills among participants through the process of creating videos. The expanding network of KWN schools also provides a platform fo international exchange among KWN students. 24 countries and regions participating in KWN Chile, Panama Austria, Czech Republic, Germany, Italy, Russia, Slovakia, Ukraine Middle and Near East Iraq, Lebanon, United Arab Emirates China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam *Countries are listed alphabetically Panasonic Corporation is a worldwide leader in the development and engineering of electronic technologies and solutions for customers in residential, non-residential, mobility and personal applications. Since its founding in 1918, the company has expanded globally and now operates over 500 consolidated companies worldwide, recording consolidated net sales of 7.74 trillion yen for the year ended March 31, 2014. Committed to pursuing new value through innovation across divisional lines, the company strives to create a better life and a better world for its customers. For more information about Panasonic, please visit the company's website at http://panasonic.net/. Public Relations Group Tel:+81-(0)3-3574-5664 Fax:+81-(0)3-3574-5699 Panasonic News Bureau
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/24157
{"url": "https://news.panasonic.com/global/press/en141016-2", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "news.panasonic.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:31:29Z", "digest": "sha1:KCTTL3CYOTFX5EP767PFT25D7ANRNXLT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7272, 7272.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7272, 11223.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7272, 61.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7272, 247.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7272, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7272, 276.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7272, 0.28738147]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7272, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7272, 0.04777124]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7272, 0.0117746]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7272, 0.0117746]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7272, 0.01093356]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7272, 0.00941968]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7272, 0.01160639]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7272, 0.02188184]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7272, 0.18526623]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7272, 0.46296296]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7272, 5.50462963]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7272, 5.60298588]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7272, 1080.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 590, 0.0], [590, 947, 1.0], [947, 1381, 1.0], [1381, 2087, 0.0], [2087, 2496, 1.0], [2496, 2662, 0.0], [2662, 2722, 0.0], [2722, 2789, 0.0], [2789, 2798, 0.0], [2798, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 2903, 0.0], [2903, 2958, 0.0], [2958, 3002, 0.0], [3002, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3067, 0.0], [3067, 3088, 0.0], [3088, 3137, 0.0], [3137, 3170, 0.0], [3170, 3199, 0.0], [3199, 3452, 1.0], [3452, 3489, 0.0], [3489, 3513, 0.0], [3513, 3553, 0.0], [3553, 3899, 1.0], [3899, 3926, 0.0], [3926, 3956, 0.0], [3956, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4229, 1.0], [4229, 4267, 0.0], [4267, 4290, 0.0], [4290, 4330, 0.0], [4330, 4495, 1.0], [4495, 4534, 0.0], [4534, 4572, 0.0], [4572, 4602, 0.0], [4602, 4795, 1.0], [4795, 4823, 0.0], [4823, 4859, 0.0], [4859, 4882, 0.0], [4882, 5063, 1.0], [5063, 5091, 0.0], [5091, 5112, 0.0], [5112, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5365, 1.0], [5365, 5398, 0.0], [5398, 5803, 1.0], [5803, 6215, 1.0], [6215, 6261, 0.0], [6261, 6275, 0.0], [6275, 6342, 0.0], [6342, 6363, 0.0], [6363, 6399, 0.0], [6399, 6474, 0.0], [6474, 6511, 0.0], [6511, 7182, 1.0], [7182, 7205, 0.0], [7205, 7251, 0.0], [7251, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 590, 0.0], [590, 947, 0.0], [947, 1381, 0.0], [1381, 2087, 0.0], [2087, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2662, 0.0], [2662, 2722, 0.0], [2722, 2789, 0.0], [2789, 2798, 0.0], [2798, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 2903, 0.0], [2903, 2958, 0.0], [2958, 3002, 0.0], [3002, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3067, 0.0], [3067, 3088, 0.0], [3088, 3137, 0.0], [3137, 3170, 0.0], [3170, 3199, 0.0], [3199, 3452, 0.0], [3452, 3489, 0.0], [3489, 3513, 0.0], [3513, 3553, 0.0], [3553, 3899, 0.0], [3899, 3926, 0.0], [3926, 3956, 0.0], [3956, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4229, 0.0], [4229, 4267, 0.0], [4267, 4290, 0.0], [4290, 4330, 0.0], [4330, 4495, 0.0], [4495, 4534, 0.0], [4534, 4572, 0.0], [4572, 4602, 0.0], [4602, 4795, 0.0], [4795, 4823, 0.0], [4823, 4859, 0.0], [4859, 4882, 0.0], [4882, 5063, 0.0], [5063, 5091, 0.0], [5091, 5112, 0.0], [5112, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5365, 0.0], [5365, 5398, 0.0], [5398, 5803, 0.0], [5803, 6215, 0.0], [6215, 6261, 0.0], [6261, 6275, 0.0], [6275, 6342, 0.0], [6342, 6363, 0.0], [6363, 6399, 0.0], [6399, 6474, 0.0], [6474, 6511, 0.0], [6511, 7182, 0.0], [7182, 7205, 0.0], [7205, 7251, 0.0], [7251, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 76, 12.0], [76, 590, 70.0], [590, 947, 57.0], [947, 1381, 67.0], [1381, 2087, 116.0], [2087, 2496, 65.0], [2496, 2662, 24.0], [2662, 2722, 9.0], [2722, 2789, 1.0], [2789, 2798, 1.0], [2798, 2826, 1.0], [2826, 2841, 2.0], [2841, 2877, 5.0], [2877, 2903, 1.0], [2903, 2958, 7.0], [2958, 3002, 1.0], [3002, 3044, 6.0], [3044, 3067, 3.0], [3067, 3088, 2.0], [3088, 3137, 7.0], [3137, 3170, 2.0], [3170, 3199, 3.0], [3199, 3452, 43.0], [3452, 3489, 4.0], [3489, 3513, 3.0], [3513, 3553, 5.0], [3553, 3899, 58.0], [3899, 3926, 4.0], [3926, 3956, 5.0], [3956, 3999, 7.0], [3999, 4229, 42.0], [4229, 4267, 5.0], [4267, 4290, 3.0], [4290, 4330, 5.0], [4330, 4495, 29.0], [4495, 4534, 5.0], [4534, 4572, 6.0], [4572, 4602, 5.0], [4602, 4795, 32.0], [4795, 4823, 4.0], [4823, 4859, 4.0], [4859, 4882, 4.0], [4882, 5063, 29.0], [5063, 5091, 4.0], [5091, 5112, 3.0], [5112, 5153, 5.0], [5153, 5365, 30.0], [5365, 5398, 5.0], [5398, 5803, 65.0], [5803, 6215, 62.0], [6215, 6261, 7.0], [6261, 6275, 2.0], [6275, 6342, 8.0], [6342, 6363, 4.0], [6363, 6399, 5.0], [6399, 6474, 9.0], [6474, 6511, 4.0], [6511, 7182, 95.0], [7182, 7205, 3.0], [7205, 7251, 2.0], [7251, 7272, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 76, 0.05333333], [76, 590, 0.00809717], [590, 947, 0.0], [947, 1381, 0.03537736], [1381, 2087, 0.00589102], [2087, 2496, 0.0125], [2496, 2662, 0.05095541], [2662, 2722, 0.06896552], [2722, 2789, 0.16363636], [2789, 2798, 0.0], [2798, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 2903, 0.0], [2903, 2958, 0.0], [2958, 3002, 0.0], [3002, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3067, 0.0], [3067, 3088, 0.0], [3088, 3137, 0.0], [3137, 3170, 0.0], [3170, 3199, 0.0], [3199, 3452, 0.0], [3452, 3489, 0.0], [3489, 3513, 0.0], [3513, 3553, 0.0], [3553, 3899, 0.0], [3899, 3926, 0.0], [3926, 3956, 0.03448276], [3956, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4229, 0.0], [4229, 4267, 0.0], [4267, 4290, 0.0], [4290, 4330, 0.0], [4330, 4495, 0.0], [4495, 4534, 0.0], [4534, 4572, 0.0], [4572, 4602, 0.0], [4602, 4795, 0.0], [4795, 4823, 0.0], [4823, 4859, 0.0], [4859, 4882, 0.0], [4882, 5063, 0.0], [5063, 5091, 0.0], [5091, 5112, 0.0], [5112, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5365, 0.0], [5365, 5398, 0.0], [5398, 5803, 0.02272727], [5803, 6215, 0.0], [6215, 6261, 0.04444444], [6261, 6275, 0.0], [6275, 6342, 0.0], [6342, 6363, 0.0], [6363, 6399, 0.0], [6399, 6474, 0.0], [6474, 6511, 0.0], [6511, 7182, 0.02457757], [7182, 7205, 0.0], [7205, 7251, 0.77419355], [7251, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 590, 0.0], [590, 947, 0.0], [947, 1381, 0.0], [1381, 2087, 0.0], [2087, 2496, 0.0], [2496, 2662, 0.0], [2662, 2722, 0.0], [2722, 2789, 0.0], [2789, 2798, 0.0], [2798, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2841, 0.0], [2841, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 2903, 0.0], [2903, 2958, 0.0], [2958, 3002, 0.0], [3002, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3067, 0.0], [3067, 3088, 0.0], [3088, 3137, 0.0], [3137, 3170, 0.0], [3170, 3199, 0.0], [3199, 3452, 0.0], [3452, 3489, 0.0], [3489, 3513, 0.0], [3513, 3553, 0.0], [3553, 3899, 0.0], [3899, 3926, 0.0], [3926, 3956, 0.0], [3956, 3999, 0.0], [3999, 4229, 0.0], [4229, 4267, 0.0], [4267, 4290, 0.0], [4290, 4330, 0.0], [4330, 4495, 0.0], [4495, 4534, 0.0], [4534, 4572, 0.0], [4572, 4602, 0.0], [4602, 4795, 0.0], [4795, 4823, 0.0], [4823, 4859, 0.0], [4859, 4882, 0.0], [4882, 5063, 0.0], [5063, 5091, 0.0], [5091, 5112, 0.0], [5112, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5365, 0.0], [5365, 5398, 0.0], [5398, 5803, 0.0], [5803, 6215, 0.0], [6215, 6261, 0.0], [6261, 6275, 0.0], [6275, 6342, 0.0], [6342, 6363, 0.0], [6363, 6399, 0.0], [6399, 6474, 0.0], [6474, 6511, 0.0], [6511, 7182, 0.0], [7182, 7205, 0.0], [7205, 7251, 0.0], [7251, 7272, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 76, 0.13157895], [76, 590, 0.07003891], [590, 947, 0.0280112], [947, 1381, 0.02073733], [1381, 2087, 0.03966006], [2087, 2496, 0.02689487], [2496, 2662, 0.04819277], [2662, 2722, 0.11666667], [2722, 2789, 0.01492537], [2789, 2798, 0.11111111], [2798, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2841, 0.26666667], [2841, 2877, 0.11111111], [2877, 2903, 0.0], [2903, 2958, 0.01818182], [2958, 3002, 0.0], [3002, 3044, 0.02380952], [3044, 3067, 0.13043478], [3067, 3088, 0.14285714], [3088, 3137, 0.14285714], [3137, 3170, 0.12121212], [3170, 3199, 0.10344828], [3199, 3452, 0.01581028], [3452, 3489, 0.10810811], [3489, 3513, 0.125], [3513, 3553, 0.1], [3553, 3899, 0.00867052], [3899, 3926, 0.14814815], [3926, 3956, 0.13333333], [3956, 3999, 0.1627907], [3999, 4229, 0.03478261], [4229, 4267, 0.13157895], [4267, 4290, 0.13043478], [4290, 4330, 0.1], [4330, 4495, 0.02424242], [4495, 4534, 0.12820513], [4534, 4572, 0.13157895], [4572, 4602, 0.13333333], [4602, 4795, 0.01554404], [4795, 4823, 0.17857143], [4823, 4859, 0.13888889], [4859, 4882, 0.17391304], [4882, 5063, 0.01104972], [5063, 5091, 0.21428571], [5091, 5112, 0.14285714], [5112, 5153, 0.12195122], [5153, 5365, 0.01415094], [5365, 5398, 0.15151515], [5398, 5803, 0.02469136], [5803, 6215, 0.02669903], [6215, 6261, 0.06521739], [6261, 6275, 0.14285714], [6275, 6342, 0.11940299], [6342, 6363, 0.14285714], [6363, 6399, 0.13888889], [6399, 6474, 0.12], [6474, 6511, 0.02702703], [6511, 7182, 0.01043219], [7182, 7205, 0.13043478], [7205, 7251, 0.04347826], [7251, 7272, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7272, 0.65795189]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7272, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7272, 0.81158894]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7272, -461.86893339]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7272, -45.41291795]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7272, 23.93969186]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7272, 64.0]]}
Peter Tiehuis FRAPEAR 3HANDSCLAPPING LIVE IMPROS One of Holland’s leading guitarplayers of the last decades is Peter Tiehuis, born in Almelo on June 15, 1956. At the age of nine he started to play classical guitar, which got succeeded some years later by the electric. While playing in various rock- and soul-bands he finished a classical study at the Twents Conservatory in Enschede and a jazz study at the Royal Conservatory in The Hague. His versatility has enabled him to play almost any kind of music and has led to many recording dates, also in Belgium, Germany and England, for records and broadcasting. Next to playing in the local jazz clubs he joined internationally well known groups, such as: The Skymasters, Peter Herbolzheimers Rhythm Combination and Brass, Batida, Till Brönner’s ‘Ballad Joint’, The Wolfgang Haffner Band, The Chris Hinze Combination, Het Metropole Orkest (which he’s joining since 1996 as a regular member). The list of great artists he worked with is still expanding. Over the years he played with every big star in the Netherlands like Trijntje Oosterhuis, Lee Towers, Ilse DeLange, Rob de Nijs, Hans Vermeulen, Humphrey Campbell and many more. The list of international greats is also impressive, containing names like Toots Thielemans, Benny Goodman, Dizzy Gillespie, Freddie Hubbard, Stan Getz, Tania Maria, Al Jarreau, Tina Turner, Chaka Khan, Constantin Wecker, Charlie Mariano, Vince Mendoza, Mike Stern, Bob Mintzer, The Yellow Jackets, Jasper van ‘t Hof, Elvis Costello, Gino Vannelli, The Brecker Brothers, Pat Metheny, Randy Crawford, George Duke, John Scofield, Herbie Hancock, Steve Vai, Ivan Linz, Laura Mvula, Lizz Wright, Gregory Porter, and many others. Tiehuis has been a teacher for about 10 years at the conservatory of Amsterdam where he’s still connected as guest teacher giving workshops every year. Presently he regularly performs with the Paul Berner Band, the Toon Roos Group, the Fay Claassen Band. In 2007 he recorded with bassguitar player Theo de Jong and percussionist Bart Fermie the cd Shaman Dance. It was the birth of the trio 3HandsClapping, an ideal combination for intimate chamber music. Tiehuis formed in 2008 the power-impro-trio Frapear – with contrabass player Frans van der Hoeven and drummer Arno van Nieuwenhuize. In this setup they are experimenting with totally improvised concerts based on electronics, effects and soundscapes. In 2012 Tiehuis was collaborating with the dutch flugelhorn player Ack van Rooyen and the New York poet/writer Edward Field for an album called ‘Standing Up Together’, a recording where poems and music are mixed. Lately he’s working with his quintet T5 on own compositions towards the release of a new album. His fellow players in this challenging combination are Karel Boehlee on keys, Theo de Jong on bass, Jasper van Hulten on drums and Martin Verdonk playing percussion. Peter Tiehuis, Theo de Jong, Karel Boehlee, Jasper van Hulten en Martin Verdonk Theo de Jong is an allround bass guitar player living in both The Netherlands and Belgium. He works with/has worked with a lot of well-known national and international artists like Toots Thielemans, Trijntje Oosterhuis, Batida, Ekseption, Ilse DeLange and Gino Vannelli. Presently Theo is involved in the following projects: Peter Hertmans Quartet, Anne Wolf Trio, Fay Claassen, Catharsis. Theo is teaching bass guitar and ensemble at the conservatories of Amsterdam and Utrecht since 1985 and regularly travels around Europe to do workshops and masterclasses. foto Jeanschoubs From his youngest years Karel Boehlee (1960), pianist and composer, was a revelation in the Dutch jazz scene. His first records were an immediate success, especially in Japan. He has been playing for over twenty years as a pianist with such great artists as Toots Thielemans and Philip Catherine. He also plays regularly with famous Dutch artists such as Toon Roos, Fay Claasen and Trijntje Oosterhuis. Additionally, he is much in demand as a session musician with pop artists like Gino Vanelli and many others. His recognizable piano playing and compositions are increasingly popular in Japan and Korea, where Karel Boehlee increasingly performs as a solo artist. In addition to his career as a pianist Karel Boehlee is a principal subject teacher at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam. foto Willem de Rhoter Jasper van Hulten (1981) graduates in 2002 as a bachelor in music at the Rotterdam Conservatory. While studying drums and music, he starts building up his network on numerous jamsessions, and already plays frequently with Eric Vloeimans ‘Gatecrash’ and Wouter Hamel. Jasper played with great musicians like Harmen Fraanje, Michiel Borstlap, Jeroen van Vliet, Gino Vannelli, Steve Swallow, Carla Bley, amongst many others. Martin Verdonk (1959) studied percussion at the Rotterdam conservatory from 1982-1984. Also studied at the Conjunto Folklorico Nacional de Cuba in 1986, 1987 and 1988. As an allround percussionist Martin worked with many of the leading bands and artists in the Netherlands such as: Ilse DeLange, Nick & Simon, OG3NE, Nueva Manteca, but also recorded or performed as guest with Steve Winwood, Incognito, Prince, George Benson, George Duke, WDR big band. Verdonk teaches at the World Music Department of the Rotterdam Conservatory and at the ArtEZ Popacademy in Enschede. Martin hosts his own popular internet music program ‘Martin Verdonk Master Sessions’, recorded live on YouTube. – Peter Tiehuis, Frans van der Hoeven en Arno van Nieuwenhuize – Avant-garde, scenic, free jazz, world and rock.. some keywords that could be used to describe the music of Frapear – the Peter Tiehuis Trio. Then again, since there are no rules or set parameters, another concert might ask for a different description of the music that originates. The use of electronics and effects adds an extra dimension to the completely improvised music. Frans van der Hoeven is one of the most tasteful bass players in the European jazz scene. He can be heard on more than 30 albums: The Toon Roos Quartet, Jesse van Ruller, Rob Madna Trio & Bigband, the Diederik Wissels/David Linx Quartet , Art Farmer &the European Jazz Trio, Charlie Mariano, the Dutch Jazz Orchestra and others. As a sideman he accompanied many people like Clark Terry, Ronnie Cuber, Lee Konitz , Dee Dee Bridgewater and Toots Thielemans. The talented drummer Arno van Nieuwenhuize was discovered at a young age through a regional music competition. He gained wider recognition as a member of several high profile pop groups in the eighties. Being a member of the Metrople Orchestra since the very beginning required Arno to be able to express himself in virtually every music style imaginable. He performs regularly in the middle-east with singer Fairouz and is working on different projects, for instance with vocalist/percussionist Mola Sylla from Senegal. Select a photo for a Lightbox presentation (Quit with ESC). FOR BOOKINGS, INFORMATION OR A QUOTE FOR YOUR PROJECT. Peter works with © 2023 Peter Tiehuis
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/24213
{"url": "https://petertiehuis.nl/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "petertiehuis.nl", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:37:59Z", "digest": "sha1:IAIBIT3CBKG35EH6DVWKM2IXAEPXULXZ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7026, 7026.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7026, 7382.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7026, 47.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7026, 79.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7026, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7026, 299.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7026, 0.29068887]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7026, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7026, 0.00960531]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7026, 0.00698568]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7026, 0.00890674]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7026, 0.01286904]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7026, 0.16426949]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7026, 0.48561151]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7026, 5.14928058]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7026, 5.70671806]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7026, 1112.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 22, 0.0], [22, 37, 0.0], [37, 49, 0.0], [49, 269, 1.0], [269, 441, 1.0], [441, 611, 1.0], [611, 941, 1.0], [941, 1705, 1.0], [1705, 1857, 1.0], [1857, 1960, 1.0], [1960, 2161, 1.0], [2161, 2411, 1.0], [2411, 2624, 1.0], [2624, 2886, 1.0], [2886, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3057, 1.0], [3057, 3237, 1.0], [3237, 3356, 1.0], [3356, 3527, 1.0], [3527, 3544, 0.0], [3544, 3720, 1.0], [3720, 3947, 1.0], [3947, 4330, 1.0], [4330, 4352, 0.0], [4352, 4449, 1.0], [4449, 4619, 1.0], [4619, 4774, 1.0], [4774, 4796, 0.0], [4796, 4861, 1.0], [4861, 4942, 1.0], [4942, 5227, 1.0], [5227, 5344, 1.0], [5344, 5456, 1.0], [5456, 5521, 0.0], [5521, 5802, 1.0], [5802, 5897, 1.0], [5897, 5987, 1.0], [5987, 6226, 1.0], [6226, 6353, 1.0], [6353, 6464, 1.0], [6464, 6556, 1.0], [6556, 6874, 1.0], [6874, 6934, 1.0], [6934, 6989, 1.0], [6989, 7006, 0.0], [7006, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 22, 0.0], [22, 37, 0.0], [37, 49, 0.0], [49, 269, 0.0], [269, 441, 0.0], [441, 611, 0.0], [611, 941, 0.0], [941, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 1960, 0.0], [1960, 2161, 0.0], [2161, 2411, 0.0], [2411, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 2886, 0.0], [2886, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3057, 0.0], [3057, 3237, 0.0], [3237, 3356, 0.0], [3356, 3527, 0.0], [3527, 3544, 0.0], [3544, 3720, 0.0], [3720, 3947, 0.0], [3947, 4330, 0.0], [4330, 4352, 0.0], [4352, 4449, 0.0], [4449, 4619, 0.0], [4619, 4774, 0.0], [4774, 4796, 0.0], [4796, 4861, 0.0], [4861, 4942, 0.0], [4942, 5227, 0.0], [5227, 5344, 0.0], [5344, 5456, 0.0], [5456, 5521, 0.0], [5521, 5802, 0.0], [5802, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 5987, 0.0], [5987, 6226, 0.0], [6226, 6353, 0.0], [6353, 6464, 0.0], [6464, 6556, 0.0], [6556, 6874, 0.0], [6874, 6934, 0.0], [6934, 6989, 0.0], [6989, 7006, 0.0], [7006, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 14, 2.0], [14, 22, 1.0], [22, 37, 1.0], [37, 49, 2.0], [49, 269, 39.0], [269, 441, 29.0], [441, 611, 29.0], [611, 941, 49.0], [941, 1705, 116.0], [1705, 1857, 25.0], [1857, 1960, 17.0], [1960, 2161, 33.0], [2161, 2411, 36.0], [2411, 2624, 35.0], [2624, 2886, 44.0], [2886, 2966, 13.0], [2966, 3057, 16.0], [3057, 3237, 25.0], [3237, 3356, 17.0], [3356, 3527, 26.0], [3527, 3544, 2.0], [3544, 3720, 28.0], [3720, 3947, 38.0], [3947, 4330, 61.0], [4330, 4352, 4.0], [4352, 4449, 16.0], [4449, 4619, 25.0], [4619, 4774, 22.0], [4774, 4796, 3.0], [4796, 4861, 8.0], [4861, 4942, 14.0], [4942, 5227, 45.0], [5227, 5344, 18.0], [5344, 5456, 16.0], [5456, 5521, 12.0], [5521, 5802, 47.0], [5802, 5897, 15.0], [5897, 5987, 17.0], [5987, 6226, 39.0], [6226, 6353, 20.0], [6353, 6464, 17.0], [6464, 6556, 16.0], [6556, 6874, 48.0], [6874, 6934, 10.0], [6934, 6989, 9.0], [6989, 7006, 3.0], [7006, 7026, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 22, 0.0], [22, 37, 0.07142857], [37, 49, 0.0], [49, 269, 0.02803738], [269, 441, 0.0], [441, 611, 0.0], [611, 941, 0.01253918], [941, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1857, 0.01333333], [1857, 1960, 0.0], [1960, 2161, 0.02538071], [2161, 2411, 0.01639344], [2411, 2624, 0.01913876], [2624, 2886, 0.00389105], [2886, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3057, 0.0], [3057, 3237, 0.0], [3237, 3356, 0.0], [3356, 3527, 0.02366864], [3527, 3544, 0.0], [3544, 3720, 0.02380952], [3720, 3947, 0.0], [3947, 4330, 0.0], [4330, 4352, 0.0], [4352, 4449, 0.08602151], [4449, 4619, 0.0], [4619, 4774, 0.0], [4774, 4796, 0.21052632], [4796, 4861, 0.12903226], [4861, 4942, 0.15384615], [4942, 5227, 0.00369004], [5227, 5344, 0.0], [5344, 5456, 0.0], [5456, 5521, 0.0], [5521, 5802, 0.0], [5802, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 5987, 0.0], [5987, 6226, 0.00888889], [6226, 6353, 0.0], [6353, 6464, 0.0], [6464, 6556, 0.0], [6556, 6874, 0.0], [6874, 6934, 0.0], [6934, 6989, 0.0], [6989, 7006, 0.0], [7006, 7026, 0.2]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 22, 0.0], [22, 37, 0.0], [37, 49, 0.0], [49, 269, 0.0], [269, 441, 0.0], [441, 611, 0.0], [611, 941, 0.0], [941, 1705, 0.0], [1705, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 1960, 0.0], [1960, 2161, 0.0], [2161, 2411, 0.0], [2411, 2624, 0.0], [2624, 2886, 0.0], [2886, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3057, 0.0], [3057, 3237, 0.0], [3237, 3356, 0.0], [3356, 3527, 0.0], [3527, 3544, 0.0], [3544, 3720, 0.0], [3720, 3947, 0.0], [3947, 4330, 0.0], [4330, 4352, 0.0], [4352, 4449, 0.0], [4449, 4619, 0.0], [4619, 4774, 0.0], [4774, 4796, 0.0], [4796, 4861, 0.0], [4861, 4942, 0.0], [4942, 5227, 0.0], [5227, 5344, 0.0], [5344, 5456, 0.0], [5456, 5521, 1.0], [5521, 5802, 0.0], [5802, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 5987, 0.0], [5987, 6226, 0.0], [6226, 6353, 0.0], [6353, 6464, 0.0], [6464, 6556, 0.0], [6556, 6874, 0.0], [6874, 6934, 0.0], [6934, 6989, 0.0], [6989, 7006, 0.0], [7006, 7026, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.14285714], [14, 22, 0.875], [22, 37, 0.86666667], [37, 49, 0.83333333], [49, 269, 0.03181818], [269, 441, 0.04651163], [441, 611, 0.02352941], [611, 941, 0.07272727], [941, 1705, 0.10078534], [1705, 1857, 0.01315789], [1857, 1960, 0.09708738], [1960, 2161, 0.04975124], [2161, 2411, 0.028], [2411, 2624, 0.05164319], [2624, 2886, 0.04198473], [2886, 2966, 0.125], [2966, 3057, 0.05494505], [3057, 3237, 0.06666667], [3237, 3356, 0.09243697], [3356, 3527, 0.02339181], [3527, 3544, 0.05882353], [3544, 3720, 0.03409091], [3720, 3947, 0.05726872], [3947, 4330, 0.03394256], [4330, 4352, 0.09090909], [4352, 4449, 0.04123711], [4449, 4619, 0.03529412], [4619, 4774, 0.08387097], [4774, 4796, 0.09090909], [4796, 4861, 0.01538462], [4861, 4942, 0.0617284], [4942, 5227, 0.0877193], [5227, 5344, 0.09401709], [5344, 5456, 0.0625], [5456, 5521, 0.09230769], [5521, 5802, 0.02135231], [5802, 5897, 0.01052632], [5897, 5987, 0.03333333], [5987, 6226, 0.10878661], [6226, 6353, 0.09448819], [6353, 6464, 0.02702703], [6464, 6556, 0.01086957], [6556, 6874, 0.02830189], [6874, 6934, 0.1], [6934, 6989, 0.8], [6989, 7006, 0.05882353], [7006, 7026, 0.1]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7026, 0.40504378]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7026, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7026, 0.81793344]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7026, -227.74955492]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7026, 32.56598279]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7026, 165.3308517]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7026, 50.0]]}
Home/Air Conditioners/Lithium-based mining companies are increasing because demand for Lithium-Ion batteries for EVs continues to increase. | Rare Techy Lithium-based mining companies are increasing because demand for Lithium-Ion batteries for EVs continues to increase. | Rare Techy Rare TechyNovember 2, 2022 FinancialNewsMedia.com Read Talk PALM BEACH, Fla., November 2, 2022 /PRNewswire/ — One thing that all experts agree on is that the demand for lithium will continue to increase in the coming years. A recent report by Fairfield Market Research predicts how the increased use of lithium in batteries, steel, petroleum, and aluminum products will provide a profitable opportunity for the global lithium mining market in forecast period. The global lithium mining market took off US$829.73 Mn in 2019 and hopefully it will US$ 1,630.30 Mn in 2025, registering a CAGR of 26.3% from 2020 to 2025. Another research firm, Emergen Research reported that the increasing use of lithium-ion batteries in grid storage is a major factor driving the growth of the lithium mining market. They added: “The battery segment will be the largest revenue segment in 2021. The increasing popularity of Lithium-ion batteries is expected to drive the growth of this segment. In comparison compared to acid-acid and other lithium batteries, lithium iron phosphate batteries provide many advantages, such as better discharge and cost efficiency, longer life, and ability to deep cycle while maintaining power. need to be maintained, to ensure long-term reliability. Compared to lead-acid batteries, lithium batteries can last up to ten times longer, even after 2,000 cycles, but they still retain 80% of their original capacity. Most lithium-ion batteries last at least five years, but in most cases, they only last lead acid batteries for two years.” The strongest companies in the mining industry this week are Scotch Creek Ventures Inc. (OTCPK: SCVFF) (CSE: SCV), Albemarle Corporation (NYSE: ALB), Lithium Americas Corp. (NYSE: LAC) (TSX: LAC), Surge Battery Metals Inc. (OTCPK: NILIF) (TSX-V: NILI), American Lithium Corp. (OTCQB: LIACF) (TSX-V: LI). The Fairfield The report also stated: “Demand for lithium is driven by thermal conductivity, high performance standards, and the unique optical properties it offers. Its properties make it ideal for renewable energy applications such as safety equipment, submarines and miners, and spacecraft to remove carbon. Lithium is used in air conditioning, heating and cooling. Hospitals, shopping malls, and other buildings Organizations often prepare integrated solutions for air conditioning, which should lead to strong demand for lithium. Therefore, the increase in demand for lithium-ion batteries in cars and other end-user industries. demand for lithium is expected to increase the global lithium mining market in the coming years. to opt for these vehicles to improve travel by taking responsibility for climate change By 2030, EV sales are expected to double. By 2025, these vehicles will displace electric vehicles. increase by 10%, it will provide a great opportunity for lithium mining operations to prove their performance.” Scotch Creek Ventures Inc. (OTCPK: SCVFF) (CSE: SCV) BREAKING NEWS: Scotch Creek Begins First Phase Drilling at Highlands West Lithium Project, North America’s Only Mining License Issuer – Scotch Creek Ventures Inc. (FSE: 7S2) (www.scotch-creek.com (the “Company”) (“Scotch Creek” or the “Company”), is pleased to announce the commencement of the Phase I disclosure program on the 100% Highlands West Lithium Project (“Highlands”). The Highlands project is adjacent to Albemarle’s Silver Peak lithium mine, North America’s only active lithium producer. Recent good geological results from seismic, seismic, and Hybrid-Source Audio-Magnetotellurics (HSAMT) surveys have revealed key subsurface features in the central Highlands. , the company later decided to expand the Highlands claims by an additional 400 acres. and designing the first phase trial program. The cumulative results of a comprehensive geological survey carried out in the Highlands reveal a subsurface that contains layer-fill units. These sedimentary rocks are mainly composed of claystone, mudstone and volcaniclastic beds accumulated in a series of faulted basins below the property. “We are very pleased to begin the first training program for our Highlands lithium project,” said Mr. David Ryan, Scotch Creek CEO “This is the first exploratory project in the west part of Clayton Valley. The exploratory objectives are to drill a large wide core, through a series of fine layers of basin fill stratigraphy, as found in our previously collected seismic data. The core has been collected. then groundwater samples will be taken and analyzed in hopes of finding a large lithium deposit.” STILL… Read this and more about Scotch Creek Ventures at: https://www.financialnewsmedia.com/scv-news In other developments in the mining markets: Albemarle Corporation (NYSE: ALB) recently announced that its subsidiary, Albemarle Lithium UK Limited, has completed the acquisition of Guangxi Tianyuan New Energy Materials Co., Ltd. (“Tianyuan”) for $200 million. It announced in September 2021 a definitive agreement to receive all the real money from Tianyuan shareholders. Located near Qinzhou Port in Guangxi, Tianyuan’s operations include a lithium conversion plant with an annual conversion capacity designed to handle up to 25,000 metric tons LCE and can produce lithium carbonate and lithium hydroxide. Lithium Americas Corp. (NYSE: LAC) (TSX: LAC) recently announced that it has entered into a Strategic Partnership Agreement (“Cooperation Agreement“) and Green Technology Metals Ltd. (ASX:GT1) (“GT1“) to advance the common goal of developing an internal lithium chemical supply chain North America. The main ones are: The Joint Venture Agreement was entered into with GT1, a North American lithium exploration and development company with hard rock spodumene resources in the Northwest. Ontario, Canada; It builds on Lithium Americas’ previous strategic equity investment in GT1 of US$10 million and collaborative framework; It provides special rights to work cooperatively between the two parties; and establishing a Strategic Steering Committee for joint exploration and development opportunities and focus on them Canada and the US “As we prepare to begin construction at Thacker Pass, we see an opportunity to further strengthen our efforts to develop a North American lithium supply chain,” it said. Jonathan Evans, President and CEO of Lithium Americas. “After the passage of the Emissions Reduction Act (“IRA“) by the United States Congress, we are increasingly partner and customer focused North America.” Jonathan Evansadded, “Partnering with GT1 will allow us to leverage our US-focused chemistry team and GT1’s extensive experience in solid rock exploration and development.” Surge Battery Metals Inc. (OTCPK: NILIF) (TSXV: NILI) It recently announced an expansion of its holdings as well as an update on exploration progress this summer for its 100% owned Nevada North Lithium Project (NNLP), Elko County, Nevada. Prior to the start of the eight-hole back-to-back training program (see Press Release on 19th October 2022), activities this summer include the expansion of the soil grid and the collection of another 472 sites in addition to the previously announced 1,026 sample project (see News Release 14th September 2022). The new grid was designed to test for anomalous lithium exposures in soil currents to the south, southeast and north of the previous grid. Samples were collected above 100m space on space lines to each other 100m or 200m period. Samples were sent to the ALS Global sample preparation laboratory i Elko, Nevada and a compilation of these results will be announced in an upcoming newsletter. American Lithium Corp. (OTCQB: LIACF) (TSX-V: LI) recently announced that it has begun an Environmental Impact Assessment (“EIA”) drilling project (designed by SRK Peru and EDASI SAC) at its fully owned Falchani lithium project in Peru to the south. The Company also announced that it has joined DRA Global and Stantec Inc. to jointly produce a new Preliminary Economic Assessment (“PEA”) for Falcani. The updated PEA will focus on the introduction of Sulphate of Potash (“SOP”) and Cesium (“Cs”) by-products, the increase in the supply of lithium carbonate (“LCE”) and products of the current excavation. DISCLAIMER: FN Media Group LLC (FNM), which owns and operates FinancialNewsMedia.com and MarketNewsUpdates.com, is a third-party publisher and news service provider, providing electronic news through multiple of online media channels. FNM is not affiliated with any company mentioned here. FNM and its affiliated companies are information technology providers and are not registered brokers/dealers/analysts/consultants, do not have manufacturing licenses and may not sell, offer to sell or offer to buy a security. FNM’s market updates, newsletters and company information are not solicitations or advice to buy, sell or hold securities. The information contained in this release is purely informational and should not be construed or interpreted as research material. All readers are strongly encouraged to do their own research and due diligence and consult with a licensed financial professional before considering any level of investment in stocks. All information contained herein is published information and information previously disseminated by the companies mentioned in this release. FNM is not responsible for the investment decisions of its readers or subscribers. Investors are warned that they may lose all or part of their investment when investing in stocks. For current services the FNM has been paid forty six hundred dollars for information on the press release issued by Scotch Creek Ventures Inc. by the Company. No shares of the FNM company are named in this release. This release contains “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. forward looking information on safe harbor. The provisions of the Special Securities Amendments Act of 1995. “Forward-looking statements” describe future expectations, plans, results or strategies generally with words such as ” and”, “future”, “plan” or “plan” , “will” or “must”, “expect,” “expect”, “imagine”, “eventually” or “think”. You are cautioned that these statements are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that may cause conditions, events and results to differ materially from those contemplated in the forward-looking statements, including risks actual results may differ from those anticipated. in forward-looking statements due to various circumstances and other risks disclosed in a company’s annual report on Form 10-K or 10-KSB or other documents made by that company to the Securities and Exchange Commission. You should consider these factors when evaluating any forward-looking statements contained herein and should not place undue reliance on such statements. The forward-looking statements in this release are made as of the date hereof and FNM undertakes no obligation to update such statements. ISSUE Financialnewsmedia.com batteries companies continues demand EVs increase increasing Lithiumbased LithiumIon mining Rare Techy Our Sustainable City – Hot water heat pump price reduction (and cost savings) | Rare Techy APERC allows discoms to promote EE equipment | Rare Techy Prattville County residents to vote on property tax increase for school funding | Rare Techy Over 160-200 million Indians experience deadly heat waves every year. | Rare Techy
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/24250
{"url": "https://raretechy.com/lithium-based-mining-companies-are-increasing-because-demand-for-lithium-ion-batteries-for-evs-continues-to-increase-rare-techy-2/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "raretechy.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:04:34Z", "digest": "sha1:APDMTZEYKVVB7TLO54MF25SOTMDHWFZG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 11746, 11746.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 11746, 15307.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 11746, 29.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 11746, 83.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 11746, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 11746, 299.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 11746, 0.29494766]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 11746, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 11746, 0.02014538]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 11746, 0.06458982]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 11746, 0.05628245]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 11746, 0.05005192]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 11746, 0.03613707]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 11746, 0.02014538]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 11746, 0.00623053]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 11746, 0.00986501]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 11746, 0.00913811]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 11746, 0.04415112]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 11746, 0.19208011]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 11746, 0.44754846]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 11746, 5.49030787]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 11746, 0.00045517]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 11746, 5.94762196]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 11746, 1754.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 153, 0.0], [153, 284, 0.0], [284, 311, 0.0], [311, 344, 0.0], [344, 2139, 1.0], [2139, 3169, 1.0], [3169, 3601, 1.0], [3601, 4029, 1.0], [4029, 4323, 1.0], [4323, 4928, 0.0], [4928, 4973, 0.0], [4973, 5301, 1.0], [5301, 5536, 1.0], [5536, 5835, 1.0], [5835, 6371, 0.0], [6371, 6750, 1.0], [6750, 6923, 1.0], [6923, 7162, 1.0], [7162, 7864, 1.0], [7864, 8114, 1.0], [8114, 8470, 1.0], [8470, 9962, 1.0], [9962, 11290, 1.0], [11290, 11319, 0.0], [11319, 11422, 0.0], [11422, 11513, 0.0], [11513, 11571, 0.0], [11571, 11664, 0.0], [11664, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 153, 0.0], [153, 284, 0.0], [284, 311, 0.0], [311, 344, 0.0], [344, 2139, 0.0], [2139, 3169, 0.0], [3169, 3601, 0.0], [3601, 4029, 0.0], [4029, 4323, 0.0], [4323, 4928, 0.0], [4928, 4973, 0.0], [4973, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5536, 0.0], [5536, 5835, 0.0], [5835, 6371, 0.0], [6371, 6750, 0.0], [6750, 6923, 0.0], [6923, 7162, 0.0], [7162, 7864, 0.0], [7864, 8114, 0.0], [8114, 8470, 0.0], [8470, 9962, 0.0], [9962, 11290, 0.0], [11290, 11319, 0.0], [11319, 11422, 0.0], [11422, 11513, 0.0], [11513, 11571, 0.0], [11571, 11664, 0.0], [11664, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 153, 18.0], [153, 284, 17.0], [284, 311, 4.0], [311, 344, 3.0], [344, 2139, 281.0], [2139, 3169, 153.0], [3169, 3601, 62.0], [3601, 4029, 59.0], [4029, 4323, 42.0], [4323, 4928, 95.0], [4928, 4973, 7.0], [4973, 5301, 46.0], [5301, 5536, 35.0], [5536, 5835, 42.0], [5835, 6371, 79.0], [6371, 6750, 59.0], [6750, 6923, 24.0], [6923, 7162, 38.0], [7162, 7864, 115.0], [7864, 8114, 39.0], [8114, 8470, 56.0], [8470, 9962, 222.0], [9962, 11290, 194.0], [11290, 11319, 2.0], [11319, 11422, 12.0], [11422, 11513, 15.0], [11513, 11571, 9.0], [11571, 11664, 14.0], [11664, 11746, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 153, 0.0], [153, 284, 0.0], [284, 311, 0.2], [311, 344, 0.0], [344, 2139, 0.02633119], [2139, 3169, 0.00996016], [3169, 3601, 0.01234568], [3601, 4029, 0.00724638], [4029, 4323, 0.0], [4323, 4928, 0.0], [4928, 4973, 0.0], [4973, 5301, 0.02229299], [5301, 5536, 0.02164502], [5536, 5835, 0.0070922], [5835, 6371, 0.00759013], [6371, 6750, 0.0], [6750, 6923, 0.01183432], [6923, 7162, 0.01333333], [7162, 7864, 0.04081633], [7864, 8114, 0.0], [8114, 8470, 0.0], [8470, 9962, 0.0], [9962, 11290, 0.0154321], [11290, 11319, 0.0], [11319, 11422, 0.0], [11422, 11513, 0.0], [11513, 11571, 0.0], [11571, 11664, 0.0], [11664, 11746, 0.07692308]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 153, 0.0], [153, 284, 0.0], [284, 311, 0.0], [311, 344, 0.0], [344, 2139, 0.0], [2139, 3169, 0.0], [3169, 3601, 0.0], [3601, 4029, 0.0], [4029, 4323, 0.0], [4323, 4928, 0.0], [4928, 4973, 0.0], [4973, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5536, 0.0], [5536, 5835, 0.0], [5835, 6371, 0.0], [6371, 6750, 0.0], [6750, 6923, 0.0], [6923, 7162, 0.0], [7162, 7864, 0.0], [7864, 8114, 0.0], [8114, 8470, 0.0], [8470, 9962, 0.0], [9962, 11290, 0.0], [11290, 11319, 0.0], [11319, 11422, 0.0], [11422, 11513, 0.0], [11513, 11571, 0.0], [11571, 11664, 0.0], [11664, 11746, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 153, 0.06535948], [153, 284, 0.05343511], [284, 311, 0.11111111], [311, 344, 0.15151515], [344, 2139, 0.07075209], [2139, 3169, 0.01262136], [3169, 3601, 0.15509259], [3601, 4029, 0.04439252], [4029, 4323, 0.01020408], [4323, 4928, 0.03966942], [4928, 4973, 0.02222222], [4973, 5301, 0.07621951], [5301, 5536, 0.03404255], [5536, 5835, 0.11371237], [5835, 6371, 0.04850746], [6371, 6750, 0.06596306], [6750, 6923, 0.05202312], [6923, 7162, 0.14225941], [7162, 7864, 0.02279202], [7864, 8114, 0.156], [8114, 8470, 0.08146067], [8470, 9962, 0.03686327], [9962, 11290, 0.02259036], [11290, 11319, 0.20689655], [11319, 11422, 0.06796117], [11422, 11513, 0.06593407], [11513, 11571, 0.15517241], [11571, 11664, 0.04301075], [11664, 11746, 0.04878049]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 11746, 0.49022472]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 11746, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 11746, 0.4300223]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 11746, -854.19826061]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 11746, -51.03988862]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 11746, -176.72651785]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 11746, 98.0]]}
Kaley O’Kelley Bio, Age, Family, Photos, ABC 15, Salary, Net Worth, Husband, Instagram, Twitter Kaley O’Kelley Biography Kaley O’Kelley is an award-winning news anchor, reporter, and host who has worked for a number of networks in her life. She has anchored Breakfast Show Good Morning Arizona and Local news on CBS 11, KTVT and done much more in her career. She won the title of Miss Teen Washington USA 1992 and represented the state in the Miss Teen USA 1992 contest. Her sister originally registered her as a joke, but she took her dare and emerged victorious. Kaley O’kelley Age There is no confirmed information regarding her age yet. Kaley O’kelley Family|Education Kaley was born in East Wenatchee, Washington. Her family included her parents, a sister and four foster siblings, She was a shy tomboy in school who played for her school softball team. She graduated from Pepperdine University with a Bachelor of Arts in Telecommunications with Business Emphasis in 1999. Kaley O’kelley Photos Kaley’s Career After graduation, Kaley started work as a morning anchor, weather presenter and investigative reporter for KYMA-TV for 1 year. She then transferred to KEYT-TV in Santa Barbara for a similar role for 3 years. While she was there she often car-pooled to her workplace with TV anchor, Tess Rafols. She was then employed by XETV-Fox San Diego for 5 months as a general assignment reporter and weekend freelancer. In 2003, she joined KNXV-TV in Phoenix as a weather reporter and TV Host for 6 years. While she was there, she was a fill-in weather reporter for ABC News’ Good Morning America Weekend Edition. Kaley then joined the Belo Corporation in September 2009 & the CBS 11 team in Jan 2015. In early 2018, she announced an extended medical leave from the station. She is a member of the Native American Journalists Association, The American Meteorological Society and the National Weather Association. Kaley O’kelley Net Worth|Salary Her current net worth is still under review. This information will be updated soon. Kaley O’kelley Husband|Children Kaley is married to her husband Paul, They got married on September 10, 2010, at the rooftop of the penthouse suite in Sorrento Hotel, Seattle. Their original plan was to tie the knot in Sorrento, Italy, but logistics and other issues kept on pushing the plan back. They settled on the Sorrento Hotel after discovering it by accident. Their wedding was attended by a small group of 18 consisting of family and close friends. Kaley and Paul have 2 kids: Paul (born November 2, 2011) and Karsen York (born May 29, 2013). Kaley O’kelley ABC15 O’Kelley went on to work at KEYT (ABC) Santa Barbara, XETV (FOX) San Diego, and Phoenix to co-host Sonoran Living Live and forecast the weather for ABC15 Arizona. O’Kelley later joined 3TV in Phoenix where she was voted Best News Personality in 2013 and 2014. In 2015, She was offered an opportunity to anchor the evening news at CBS in Dallas/Fort Worth, and while she was in Texas, she was invited to Los Angeles to guest co-host The Talk on CBS. After three and a half busy years, a few health scares and starting a business in emerging web-streaming technologies, O’Kelley made the move back to Arizona. In August 2018, She returned to ABC15 Arizona to co-anchor the morning news. Kaley’s Twitter Tweets by kaleyokelley Joshua Malina Biography, Age, Net Worth, Podcast, Twitter Hannah Adamson Bio, Age, Early Life, Education, KCAU, Career and Twitter Vivienne Marcheline Jolie Biography, Age, Height, Family And Malificient
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/25749
{"url": "https://instantbios.com/kaley-okelley-3/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "instantbios.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:06:26Z", "digest": "sha1:TBK2IH7VMXN3ZZYXABCKLKC7L6WVADDN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3532, 3532.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3532, 4140.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3532, 23.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3532, 41.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3532, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3532, 220.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3532, 0.27830832]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3532, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3532, 0.01688951]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3532, 0.01688951]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3532, 0.04116819]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3532, 0.01161154]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3532, 0.01125968]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3532, 0.053206]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3532, 0.19781719]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3532, 0.49059829]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3532, 4.85811966]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3532, 5.1621201]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3532, 585.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 96, 0.0], [96, 121, 0.0], [121, 359, 1.0], [359, 565, 1.0], [565, 584, 0.0], [584, 641, 1.0], [641, 673, 0.0], [673, 978, 1.0], [978, 1000, 0.0], [1000, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1424, 1.0], [1424, 1917, 1.0], [1917, 1949, 0.0], [1949, 2033, 1.0], [2033, 2065, 0.0], [2065, 2584, 1.0], [2584, 2605, 0.0], [2605, 3290, 1.0], [3290, 3306, 0.0], [3306, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3387, 0.0], [3387, 3460, 0.0], [3460, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 96, 0.0], [96, 121, 0.0], [121, 359, 0.0], [359, 565, 0.0], [565, 584, 0.0], [584, 641, 0.0], [641, 673, 0.0], [673, 978, 0.0], [978, 1000, 0.0], [1000, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1424, 0.0], [1424, 1917, 0.0], [1917, 1949, 0.0], [1949, 2033, 0.0], [2033, 2065, 0.0], [2065, 2584, 0.0], [2584, 2605, 0.0], [2605, 3290, 0.0], [3290, 3306, 0.0], [3306, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3387, 0.0], [3387, 3460, 0.0], [3460, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 96, 14.0], [96, 121, 3.0], [121, 359, 43.0], [359, 565, 37.0], [565, 584, 3.0], [584, 641, 9.0], [641, 673, 3.0], [673, 978, 49.0], [978, 1000, 3.0], [1000, 1015, 2.0], [1015, 1424, 68.0], [1424, 1917, 82.0], [1917, 1949, 4.0], [1949, 2033, 14.0], [2033, 2065, 3.0], [2065, 2584, 92.0], [2584, 2605, 3.0], [2605, 3290, 120.0], [3290, 3306, 2.0], [3306, 3329, 3.0], [3329, 3387, 8.0], [3387, 3460, 11.0], [3460, 3532, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 96, 0.02325581], [96, 121, 0.0], [121, 359, 0.00865801], [359, 565, 0.03960396], [565, 584, 0.0], [584, 641, 0.0], [641, 673, 0.0], [673, 978, 0.01342282], [978, 1000, 0.0], [1000, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1424, 0.00755668], [1424, 1917, 0.03966597], [1917, 1949, 0.0], [1949, 2033, 0.0], [2033, 2065, 0.0], [2065, 2584, 0.04], [2584, 2605, 0.1], [2605, 3290, 0.03172205], [3290, 3306, 0.0], [3306, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3387, 0.0], [3387, 3460, 0.0], [3460, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 96, 0.0], [96, 121, 0.0], [121, 359, 0.0], [359, 565, 0.0], [565, 584, 0.0], [584, 641, 0.0], [641, 673, 0.0], [673, 978, 0.0], [978, 1000, 0.0], [1000, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1424, 0.0], [1424, 1917, 0.0], [1917, 1949, 0.0], [1949, 2033, 0.0], [2033, 2065, 0.0], [2065, 2584, 0.0], [2584, 2605, 0.0], [2605, 3290, 0.0], [3290, 3306, 0.0], [3306, 3329, 0.0], [3329, 3387, 0.0], [3387, 3460, 0.0], [3460, 3532, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 96, 0.16666667], [96, 121, 0.16], [121, 359, 0.07142857], [359, 565, 0.0631068], [565, 584, 0.15789474], [584, 641, 0.01754386], [641, 673, 0.125], [673, 978, 0.04590164], [978, 1000, 0.13636364], [1000, 1015, 0.13333333], [1015, 1424, 0.07334963], [1424, 1917, 0.0851927], [1917, 1949, 0.15625], [1949, 2033, 0.02380952], [2033, 2065, 0.125], [2065, 2584, 0.04046243], [2584, 2605, 0.23809524], [2605, 3290, 0.0919708], [3290, 3306, 0.125], [3306, 3329, 0.04347826], [3329, 3387, 0.13793103], [3387, 3460, 0.17808219], [3460, 3532, 0.125]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3532, 0.66936976]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3532, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3532, 0.78847957]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3532, -182.86525449]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3532, 5.65512828]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3532, 43.23687632]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3532, 30.0]]}
Music Warner Bros. pulls 'The Batman' from theatrical release in Russia Warner Bros. pulls 'The Batman' from theatrical release in Russia (L-R) Andy Serkis, Robert Pattinson, Zoe Kravitz, Paul Dano, and Jeffrey Wright at "The Batman" special screening, February 23, 2022, London, England Photo credit Getty Images By Eric Davidson, Audacy Media giant Warner Bros. announced this week that it will be pulling all theatrical film releases from Russia in response to the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. As The Hollywood Reporter noted, the studio released a statement explaining their decision, specifically regarding the imminent release of its latest, hotly anticipated blockbuster, “The Batman.” “In light of the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine,” said the statement, “WarnerMedia is pausing the release of its feature film ‘The Batman’ in Russia. We will continue to monitor the situation as it evolves. We hope for a swift and peaceful resolution to this tragedy.” As the New York Post reported, the latest, much-hyped Batman reboot, starring Robert Pattinson and Zoë Kravitz, was to be released in Russia on March 1. (The film opens in the United States on March 4.) Other Warner Bros. titles that were slated for theatrical release in Russia include “Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore” (April 14) and the cartoon, “DC League of Super-Pets” (May 19). WATCH: Robert Pattinson flirts and fights with Zoë Kravitz's Catwoman in new 'The Batman' trailer Disney had already started making Russian release decisions, recently pulling the Pixar film, “Turning Red,” among other upcoming features. Their press statement on the matter read: “We will make future business decisions based on the evolving situation. In the meantime, given the scale of the emerging refugee crisis. We are working with our NGO partners to provide urgent aid and other humanitarian assistance to refugees.” As the Post previously reported, Sony Pictures followed Disney in pausing theatrical releases of its productions in Russia, including the upcoming vampire thriller, “Morbius.” The Hollywood Reporter noted that Russia is one of the top box office markets in the world. Sony’s recent massive hit, “Spider-Man: No Way Home” has brought in more than $44.5 million since opening in Russia in December. PHOTOS: Michael Douglas, Tyler Perry, other stars wore pro-Ukraine accessories at 2022 SAG Awards Yahoo Entertainment also reported that Paramount Pictures has followed suit by yanking Russian distribution of two highly anticipated upcoming features – the adventure comedy, “The Lost City," starring Sandra Bullock and Channing Tatum, and the animated sequel, “Sonic the Hedgehog 2.” Paramount’s press release about the decision echoed the other studio’s concerns. “As we witness the ongoing tragedy in Ukraine,” said the statement, “we have decided to pause the theatrical release of our upcoming films in Russia, including ‘The Lost City,’ and ‘Sonic the Hedgehog 2.’ We stand by all those impacted by the humanitarian crisis across Ukraine, Russia, and our international markets and will continue to monitor the situation as it unfolds.” Yahoo further reported that the Motion Picture Association as a whole condemned the Russian attack. Blake Lively and Ryan Reynolds pledge to match Ukrainian refugee donations up to $1M These film world responses to the invasion have followed on the heels of similar reactions from across the pop culture spectrum. Last weekend's SAG Awards ceremony was filled with artists making statements or wearing colors in support of the Ukrainian people -- right after the SAG-AFTRA union (Screen Actors Guild - American Federation of Television and Radio Artists) expressed their support for Ukraine and condemnation of the invasion. FIFA (Fédération Internationale de Football Association) and UEFA (Union of European Football Associations) indefinitely banned Russian football teams from international play, including this year’s World Cup. VIDEO: NYC Ukrainian chorus performs on 'Saturday Night Live' LISTEN on the Audacy App Sign up and follow Audacy Audacy Entertainment News Featured Image Photo Credit: Getty Images
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/26274
{"url": "https://www.audacy.com/national/music/warner-bros-pulls-the-batman-from-release-in-russia", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.audacy.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:17:14Z", "digest": "sha1:4XP57ICXNSGFT3XJ7AQDWOWJ2IJFEFX2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4144, 4144.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4144, 7160.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4144, 26.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4144, 243.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4144, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4144, 287.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4144, 0.26794872]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4144, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4144, 0.03117647]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4144, 0.06823529]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4144, 0.05294118]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4144, 0.05294118]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4144, 0.05294118]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4144, 0.03117647]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4144, 0.01882353]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4144, 0.01676471]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4144, 0.02205882]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4144, 0.02051282]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4144, 0.18717949]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4144, 0.54344392]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4144, 5.37124803]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4144, 5.36533354]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4144, 633.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 138, 0.0], [138, 314, 0.0], [314, 339, 0.0], [339, 505, 1.0], [505, 701, 1.0], [701, 970, 1.0], [970, 1367, 1.0], [1367, 1465, 0.0], [1465, 1605, 1.0], [1605, 1892, 1.0], [1892, 2068, 1.0], [2068, 2289, 1.0], [2289, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2673, 1.0], [2673, 3130, 1.0], [3130, 3230, 1.0], [3230, 3315, 0.0], [3315, 3444, 1.0], [3444, 3755, 1.0], [3755, 3964, 1.0], [3964, 4026, 0.0], [4026, 4051, 0.0], [4051, 4077, 0.0], [4077, 4103, 0.0], [4103, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 138, 0.0], [138, 314, 0.0], [314, 339, 0.0], [339, 505, 0.0], [505, 701, 0.0], [701, 970, 0.0], [970, 1367, 0.0], [1367, 1465, 0.0], [1465, 1605, 0.0], [1605, 1892, 0.0], [1892, 2068, 0.0], [2068, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2673, 0.0], [2673, 3130, 0.0], [3130, 3230, 0.0], [3230, 3315, 0.0], [3315, 3444, 0.0], [3444, 3755, 0.0], [3755, 3964, 0.0], [3964, 4026, 0.0], [4026, 4051, 0.0], [4051, 4077, 0.0], [4077, 4103, 0.0], [4103, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 72, 11.0], [72, 138, 10.0], [138, 314, 26.0], [314, 339, 4.0], [339, 505, 27.0], [505, 701, 26.0], [701, 970, 45.0], [970, 1367, 66.0], [1367, 1465, 15.0], [1465, 1605, 19.0], [1605, 1892, 46.0], [1892, 2068, 24.0], [2068, 2289, 38.0], [2289, 2387, 14.0], [2387, 2673, 41.0], [2673, 3130, 72.0], [3130, 3230, 15.0], [3230, 3315, 14.0], [3315, 3444, 21.0], [3444, 3755, 45.0], [3755, 3964, 26.0], [3964, 4026, 9.0], [4026, 4051, 5.0], [4051, 4077, 5.0], [4077, 4103, 3.0], [4103, 4144, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 138, 0.0], [138, 314, 0.03703704], [314, 339, 0.0], [339, 505, 0.0], [505, 701, 0.0], [701, 970, 0.0], [970, 1367, 0.01583113], [1367, 1465, 0.0], [1465, 1605, 0.0], [1605, 1892, 0.0], [1892, 2068, 0.0], [2068, 2289, 0.01408451], [2289, 2387, 0.04301075], [2387, 2673, 0.00358423], [2673, 3130, 0.00223714], [3130, 3230, 0.0], [3230, 3315, 0.01204819], [3315, 3444, 0.0], [3444, 3755, 0.0], [3755, 3964, 0.0], [3964, 4026, 0.0], [4026, 4051, 0.0], [4051, 4077, 0.0], [4077, 4103, 0.0], [4103, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 138, 0.0], [138, 314, 0.0], [314, 339, 0.0], [339, 505, 0.0], [505, 701, 0.0], [701, 970, 0.0], [970, 1367, 0.0], [1367, 1465, 0.0], [1465, 1605, 0.0], [1605, 1892, 0.0], [1892, 2068, 0.0], [2068, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2387, 0.0], [2387, 2673, 0.0], [2673, 3130, 0.0], [3130, 3230, 0.0], [3230, 3315, 0.0], [3315, 3444, 0.0], [3444, 3755, 0.0], [3755, 3964, 0.0], [3964, 4026, 0.0], [4026, 4051, 0.0], [4051, 4077, 0.0], [4077, 4103, 0.0], [4103, 4144, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.08333333], [72, 138, 0.07575758], [138, 314, 0.11363636], [314, 339, 0.16], [339, 505, 0.03614458], [505, 701, 0.03061224], [701, 970, 0.03345725], [970, 1367, 0.07808564], [1367, 1465, 0.12244898], [1465, 1605, 0.03571429], [1605, 1892, 0.02439024], [1892, 2068, 0.03977273], [2068, 2289, 0.05429864], [2289, 2387, 0.15306122], [2387, 2673, 0.04895105], [2673, 3130, 0.02625821], [3130, 3230, 0.05], [3230, 3315, 0.07058824], [3315, 3444, 0.00775194], [3444, 3755, 0.07395498], [3755, 3964, 0.09090909], [3964, 4026, 0.19354839], [4026, 4051, 0.32], [4051, 4077, 0.07692308], [4077, 4103, 0.11538462], [4103, 4144, 0.14634146]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4144, 0.90300924]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4144, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4144, 0.99719387]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4144, -244.33230601]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4144, 70.63436948]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4144, -44.49024289]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4144, 29.0]]}
PRESS RELEASE June 4, 2021 DRC: The World Bank Approves $250 million to Expand Socioeconomic Opportunities and Address Persistent Needs of Vulnerable Communities WASHINGTON, D.C., June 4, 2021 – The World Bank Group today approved $250 million for the DRC Eastern Recovery Project (STEP 3) to help improve access to livelihoods and socioeconomic infrastructure in vulnerable communities in the country. “This new financing provides a unique opportunity to invest in human capital in an integrated manner, encompassing education, health, and social protection, to ensure the well-being of refugees and host communities. Complementing its successful social safety net model, the project will leverage its reputation, experience, and resources to address social infrastructure needs in vulnerable communities by increasing access to health and education services and enhancing policy dialogue on the integration of refugees into national systems,” explains Jean-Christophe Carret, World Bank Country Director for the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, Angola and São Tomé and Príncipe. This financing from the International Development Association* (IDA) for STEP 3 will provide additional support to the government of the DRC to address the combined impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and a new influx of refugees. Financed through the IDA19 Window for Host Communities and Refugees (WHR), the project will be expanded to protect human capital in communities that are hosting large numbers of refugees, are recovering from the 2018-2020 Ebola crisis, and/or engaged in the post-conflict rebuilding of physical and human capital. The immediate focus is to strengthen the project in North Ubangui and expand it to South Ubangui, two extremely poor provinces where large numbers of refugees from the Central African Republic (CAR) have recently arrived. These refugee-hosting areas also have pre-existing vulnerabilities compounded by the COVID-19 crisis. STEP is the main sustained social protection instrument backed by the World Bank to respond to the overlapping crises in the country. Since its inception in 2014, the project has rehabilitated more than 870 community infrastructures, equipped 45,000 households with improved agropastoral technologies, and provided capacity building to nearly 5,000 members of local development committees. It has also provided work opportunities for vulnerable people by creating more than 1.3 million person-days of temporary employment. * The World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA), established in 1960, helps the world’s poorest countries by providing grants and low to zero-interest loans for projects and programs that boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and improve poor people’s lives. IDA is one of the largest sources of assistance for the world’s 76 poorest countries, 39 of which are in Africa. Resources from IDA bring positive change to the 1.6 billion people who live in IDA countries. Since 1960, IDA has supported development work in 113 countries. Annual commitments have averaged about $21 billion over the last three years, with about 61 percent going to Africa. PRESS RELEASE NO: 2021/171/AFR Franck Bitemo fbitemo@worldbank.org STEP Third Additional Financing The World Bank in DRC The World Bank in Africa
2023-14/0002/en_head.json.gz/26834
{"url": "https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2021/06/04/drc-the-world-bank-approves-250-million-to-expand-socioeconomic-opportunities-and-address-persistent-needs-of-vulnerable", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.worldbank.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:21:41Z", "digest": "sha1:QKQJQFDQX5URY2GLCUGWD53RU3UPIXRC"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3285, 3285.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3285, 10000.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3285, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3285, 477.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3285, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3285, 188.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3285, 0.29222973]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3285, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3285, 0.01763409]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3285, 0.02204262]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3285, 0.01102131]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3285, 0.0472973]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3285, 0.19594595]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3285, 0.52892562]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3285, 5.62396694]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3285, 5.07290978]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3285, 484.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 162, 0.0], [162, 403, 1.0], [403, 1087, 1.0], [1087, 1953, 1.0], [1953, 2476, 1.0], [2476, 3140, 1.0], [3140, 3171, 0.0], [3171, 3185, 0.0], [3185, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3239, 0.0], [3239, 3261, 0.0], [3261, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 162, 0.0], [162, 403, 0.0], [403, 1087, 0.0], [1087, 1953, 0.0], [1953, 2476, 0.0], [2476, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3171, 0.0], [3171, 3185, 0.0], [3185, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3239, 0.0], [3239, 3261, 0.0], [3261, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 27, 5.0], [27, 162, 18.0], [162, 403, 37.0], [403, 1087, 95.0], [1087, 1953, 130.0], [1953, 2476, 74.0], [2476, 3140, 104.0], [3140, 3171, 4.0], [3171, 3185, 2.0], [3185, 3207, 1.0], [3207, 3239, 4.0], [3239, 3261, 5.0], [3261, 3285, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.2], [27, 162, 0.02272727], [162, 403, 0.03896104], [403, 1087, 0.0], [1087, 1953, 0.01779359], [1953, 2476, 0.03515625], [2476, 3140, 0.0326087], [3140, 3171, 0.25925926], [3171, 3185, 0.0], [3185, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3239, 0.0], [3239, 3261, 0.0], [3261, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 162, 0.0], [162, 403, 0.0], [403, 1087, 0.0], [1087, 1953, 0.0], [1953, 2476, 0.0], [2476, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3171, 0.0], [3171, 3185, 0.0], [3185, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3239, 0.0], [3239, 3261, 0.0], [3261, 3285, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 27, 0.48148148], [27, 162, 0.11111111], [162, 403, 0.1120332], [403, 1087, 0.0248538], [1087, 1953, 0.05542725], [1953, 2476, 0.01529637], [2476, 3140, 0.03915663], [3140, 3171, 0.5483871], [3171, 3185, 0.14285714], [3185, 3207, 0.0], [3207, 3239, 0.21875], [3239, 3261, 0.27272727], [3261, 3285, 0.16666667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3285, 0.34869617]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3285, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3285, 0.45442247]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3285, -204.13446656]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3285, 1.02641211]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3285, 12.82688107]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3285, 21.0]]}
Around Idaho: Economic Activity in October 2021 Information provided in these news updates is from professional sources, news releases, weekly and daily newspapers, television and other media. North Central Idaho Southwestern Idaho South Central Idaho Eastern Idaho NORTHERN IDAHO – Benewah, Bonner, Boundary, Kootenai & Shoshone counties The state of Idaho has taken ownership of the Central Treatment Plant in Kellogg under the direction of the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ). The plant has been responsible for cleaning up mine pollution in the Coeur d’Alene Basin since it began operations 50 years ago. Under new ownership, the plant is expected to overcome the facility’s former water capacity restrictions and lower the amount of heavy metals from the nearby mine before it flows into the South Fork of the Coeur d’Alene River. Source: Shoshone News-Press Lanzce G. Douglass Inc. has started work on a $73.3 million housing project in the Spokane-Coeur d’Alene area. The River’s Edge Apartments in Coeur d’Alene will account for $45.2 million of the total project. With 12 apartment buildings and 384 residential units, River’s Edge will be one of the largest multifamily complexes in the region. The apartments will be located in the Atlas District, part of Coeur d’Alene’s urban renewal district along the north side of the Spokane River, in west Coeur d’Alene. Source: Spokane Journal of Business The Priest Lake wetland is set to be subdivided for land development and housing construction. Local residents have expressed concerns about the permanent loss of several ecosystem functions and their benefits to humans such as flood control, water filtration and aquifer recharge. Source: Spokesman-Review Amazon Air has launched daily flights from a 30,750-square-foot cargo facility at the Spokane Airport. The $5.4 million facility will transport packages from the airport to the Amazon Fulfillment Center, located a few miles southwest of the new Amazon Air station at 10010 W. Geiger Blvd. Source: Spokane Journal of Business Corwin Automotive Group purchased Gus Johnson Ford in Spokane Valley and plans to work with Mike White Ford of Coeur d’Alene to grow its presence in the area. Corwin Auto is based in North Dakota. Source: The Spokesman-Review Rajshri Suresh@labor.idaho.gov, regional economist NORTH CENTRAL IDAHO – Clearwater, Idaho, Latah, Lewis and Nez Perce counties The Grangeville City Council adopted a 29% increase in its total budget for the fiscal year 2022, amounting to $8,684,442. Nearly $2 million of this sum is set aside for new water and sewer infrastructure projects. While funding for recreation and medical insurance has grown by 20% and 11%, the general fund and the street fund are set to decline by 20% and 16%, respectively. The city is also continuing to implement a standard 3% increase in its total property taxes. Source: Idaho County Free Press The city of Moscow approved the establishment of an open-container entertainment district in downtown Moscow. In addition to the Downtown Revitalization Project on Main Street, the city wants to build other facilities such as a restaurant row and incorporate local business communities in its operations. Source: Idaho Business Review The Woodbury Subdivision development project, which aims to transform 82 acres of farmland into low-density residential homes, was approved by the Moscow City Council. Officials also informed the media the project will take major steps to reduce its water footprint in response to public concerns about water conservation. Source: Moscow-Pullman Daily News The University of Idaho (U of I) received an $18.9 million research grant for the Deep Soil Ecotron facility, which will offer funding for scientists to study how environmental conditions and farming practices affect soil systems and how well soil systems absorb carbon. The research project involves a collaboration of the U of I with the University of Colorado, the University of Delaware, the University of Hawaii, North Dakota State University, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and the University of Wyoming. Source: Idaho Education News The University of Idaho launched the first phase of its fundraising initiative — “Brave. Bold. A Promise to Idaho’s Students” — which will fund scholarships for medical students in Idaho. Thanks to a $12 million donation from an Idaho resident and other substantial donations, these funds are intended to bridge the $5,000 gap in costs that prevent students from enrolling in medical school. Source: Idaho Press The Idaho Workforce Development Council awarded Lewis-Clark State College a $1.3 million grant to expand its diesel and collision repair programs. The funds will be used to renovate the Wittman Complex and the Mechanical Technical Building, allowing more students to attend the programs and expand the welding program. Source: Idaho Education News Events and openings: The Idaho Department of Labor’s Orofino and Salmon offices transitioned to remote service delivery on Oct. 4, along with the addition of two new offices at Challis and Wieppe. The mobile offices are part of a statewide effort to increase access to rural communities. The office will continue to provide appointments, walk-in hours and access to the agency’s traditional employment services and some business services. Locations and operating hours can be found at labor.idaho.gov/officedirectory The 3rd annual BrewersFest in Moscow, canceled in 2020, returned to the Latah County Events Center on Oct. 9, 2021. The event featured beverages from six Lewis and Clark Valley breweries. The Pullman School District inaugurated its new transportation facility. The Whitman County Transportation Cooperative will serve schools in Pullman, Colfax, Palouse and Garfield. After being forced to close due to COVID-19, the Latah County Division of Motor Vehicles reopened during the last week of September. The office is open to the public Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The University of Idaho’s newly completed, $51 million mass timber Idaho Central Credit Union arena was inaugurated on Nov. 9 during an exhibition basketball game. Rajshri Suresh@labor.idaho.gov , regional economist SOUTHWESTERN IDAHO – Ada, Adams, Boise, Canyon, Elmore, Gem, Owyhee, Payette, Valley & Washington Counties Columbia Bank and Umpqua Bank announced a merger creating one bank with more than $43 billion in deposits. Upon approval, the newly formed bank will trade publicly on the NASDAQ stock exchange under the ticker COLB. Going forward, the banks will operate under the Umpqua name. There are branches of both banks sprinkled throughout southwestern Idaho. Columbia operates 15 branches in Boise, Nampa, Caldwell, Payette and Weiser. Umpqua’s branding is currently on 11 branches in Boise, Meridian, Cascade and McCall. Source: Idaho Statesman Walgreens has purchased Bi-Mart’s pharmacy business in Emmett, Weiser and Star. The files and prescriptions will transfer to Walgreens, but in some cases Walgreens will operate the pharmacy within the Bi-Mart store. The affected staff will be absorbed by the Bi-Mart, except for pharmacists and pharmacy techs who will interview with Walgreens for positions. Source: Idaho Business Review Micron announced its 10-year plan to invest $150 billion to expand its global markets. Plan details were not released but it is believed Boise will be a key player with its research and development facilities. In 2009, large-scale production of semi-conductor chips in Boise ceased and transitioned into a research and development hub housed at the corporate headquarters campus. Source: Idaho Statesman Alaska Airlines is adding daily flights between Boise and Idaho Falls in addition to flights between Boise and the Pullman-Moscow area. The last time Alaska offered a daily flight to Idaho Falls was 2010. The airline also announced daily service to Las Vegas with departure times that synchronize with the Idaho Falls flights. Alaska also is changing its daily Phoenix service from seasonal, to year-round. Alaska’s Boise airport is the eighth largest departure airport among the 120 airports served by the commercial airline. Source: Idaho Statesman The Warehouse Foodhall, a 29,000-square-foot food and drink facility currently under construction at in Boise’s BoDo district, announced four new tenants. Caffe d’Arte has operated in BoDo since 2008. The other three include Freshie’s Lobster Co., CAMP Cocktail Bar and Totally Toasted. All signed on to join tenants Paddles Up Poke, Rush Bowls and the Loading Dock. The Foodhall anticipates a 2022 opening. Source: Idaho Business Review According to Zumper, an apartment listing service, Boise’s one-bedroom median rental prices rose by 37% from the same period last year to $1,500. The data was sourced to Oct. 16 and shows 72 apartments posted. Two-bedroom apartments grew by 35% to $1,650 with 79 apartment postings. Source: https://www.zumper.com/rent-research/boise-city-id The Boise Airport broke passenger records for both July and August with July reporting 419,211 passengers, while August reported 378,000. Recent enhancements include lactation stations and pet relief areas. Expanding routes with several commercial airlines has added to the passenger count while the Boyd Group, an industry tracker, reported Boise as one of the top 10 fastest growing airports nationally. The Federal Aviation Administration will move Boise’s classification from a small hub to a medium hub in the next few years. Source: Idaho Statesman Ridenbaugh Place, a long-standing apartment complex near Boise State University is set to be razed and all trees removed to make way for a modern student housing complex. Residents have been offered reimbursement for moving expenses after given six months advance eviction notice. The complex has contributed to affordable housing, which is a thorny subject in Boise with rising housing costs setting apartments out of reach for those on the lower end of the income spectrum. Boise State is short on housing for students and the project has experienced various delays for more than two years. Source: Idaho Press The International Rescue Committee welcomed 58 refugees from Afghanistan in October. The nonprofit group reported that since 2000, the Treasure Valley has welcomed 844 refugees from Afghanistan. The refugee office in Twin Falls welcomed another 50 refugees, also from Afghanistan. Source: KTVB News Crouch voters are deciding whether to apply a local option tax to visitors’ short-term rentals, food and alcohol sold by the drink. It will provide some seed capital for the city to enhance its amenities or for bigger investments. The infrastructure needs of the city are not supported by a broad tax base due to its small population and lack of major industry. The city attracts visitors to its theatre and golf course along with the attraction of recreation in the surrounding mountains. Sixteen other Idaho cities have voted in favor of local option taxes to support their communities. Source: KTVB News The College of Idaho announced record enrollment this fall, the fourth consecutive growth year. The 1,145 student enrollment is the highest in the school’s 130-year history. The most recent record was set in 2014 at 1,144. The college freshmen class is the school’s second largest at 296 while the group of new students is its third largest at 333. Source: Idaho Press The Nampa Development Company and Adler Industrial LLC are collaborating on a 194-acre industrial park in northern Nampa to be built over the next several years. The industrial park will consist of 16 buildings with 2.5 million square feet. Construction will start in 2022. Source: Idaho Press The Darigold plant in Caldwell has been shut down due to fire. All 80 employees working when fire broke out were safely evacuated from the powdered milk facility. The company indicated workers will be offered employment opportunities at other plants throughout the area. Source: KTVB Tamarack Resort, near Donnelly, plans to restore the Osprey Meadows Golf Course formerly closed in 2015 following financial pressures. The company negotiated to repurchase the 15 holes sold to an investor group. That transaction closes later this year. Consolidating the purchase with the three holes retained will bring the course back to a full 18-hole course with the driving range scheduled to open in 2022. The golf course is scheduled to be playable in 2023, after renovation. Source: Idaho Statesman Idaho Central Credit Union opened a new branch in Boise, its 43rd in Idaho. Source: Idaho Statesman Jersey Mike’s Subs opened a restaurant in Kuna. Source: Idaho Business Review Ada County opened a second Department of Motor Vehicles office in Meridian to meet public demand. The office will take appointments only. Source: Idaho Statesman Roberts Stephens Wealth Management opened an office in Boise. The company is headquartered in San Francisco with offices in Sun Valley and seven other cities nationally. The company has approximately $2.5 billion in assets under management. Source: Idaho Statesman Western Aircraft completed its new 53,000-square-foot hangar near the Boise Airport. The company has a multi-phase expansion in progress, investing $17 million with Phase 2 consisting of administrative offices, avionics and interior shops. The company has clients from the U.S. and Canada boasting expertise with myriad aircrafts. Source: Idaho Business Review Cluck’s Nashville Hot Chicken, a local diner, opened in Meridian with plans for five more restaurants in Idaho. Source: Idaho Statesman Country Club Reel will reopen after one year of closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The six-screen movie theatre offers second-run films and is one of five Reel theatres across the Treasure Valley. Source: Idaho Statesman SOUTH CENTRAL IDAHO – Blaine, Camas, Cassia, Gooding, Jerome, Lincoln, Minidoka and Twin Falls counties St. Luke’s Wood River in Ketchum broke ground on four houses for employees. In total, there will be 12 employee housing units built in the next year – eight in Hailey and four in Bellevue. The hospital, the St. Luke’s Wood River Foundation and ARCH, a community housing trust, are working together on the project. Source: Idaho Mountain Express The Ketchum City Council approved an affordable housing project that add 51 apartments in the city center. The Bluebird Village rentals will range from studios to three-bedroom apartments in two adjacent downtown buildings. The project will target people making between 50% and 70% of the area median income. Depending on income levels, rent for a one-bedroom apartment would cost between approximately $660 and $980. Source: Idaho Mountain Express Snake River Holdings completed the purchase of Kodiak America, a Burley-based company that designs and manufactures industrial and commercial snow removable equipment. Snake River Holdings also owns Apache River LLC and Double L Manufacturing in Heyburn. Kodiak America is planning to merge with Double L and increase employment to about 230 within the next year. Snake River Holdings will also seek to maximize Kodiak’s manufacturing potential and fulfill the need for a significant line of new products. Source: Times-News Yankum Ropes is expanding from Paul to a new 17,000-square-foot building in Burley. The company specializes in double-braided nylon kinetic energy recovery ropes used by motorists, off-road enthusiasts and businesses to recover stuck vehicles and in large agricultural operations. At the new building the company will have equipment to manufacture the rope in-house and open a storefront for local customers. Source: Times-News Shell Oil Products U.S. announced plans to construct a dairy manure-to-renewable natural gas (RNG) facility at the Bettencourt Dairies in Wendell. Once operational, the facility is expected to produce approximately 400,000 MMBtu of negative carbon intensity RNG per year using cow manure from the dairy. Source: Times-News The College of Southern Idaho (CSI) partnered with Top Gun Driving Academy to create an accelerated training program for semitruck drivers. The program will allow students to complete all the required training in just four weeks. The first two weeks are online through CSI. During the last two weeks of the program, students gain hands-on experience. CSI also has funding available, which could offset 70% to 90% of the cost for students. Source: Times-News Holiday Inn – Burley Circle 5 – Buhl Bonang.Seoela@labor.idaho.gov, regional economist SOUTHEASTERN IDAHO – Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Caribou, Franklin, Oneida & Power counties The city of Chubbuck is planning to build a new fire station to go with its new city hall and police station. The new construction is as part of the city’s long-term plan to upgrade some of its outdated facilities. The details have not yet been finalized, but the plan is to have the project finished in about 2 ½ years. – Idaho State Journal​ SkyWest Airlines plans to cut a pair of daily flights from the Pocatello Regional Airport’s schedule, which will leave the city with a single daily departure to Salt Lake City. According to airport manager Alan Evans, the airline is looking to cut costs during its slower winter months and will restore one or both flights next spring. Idaho State Journal​ Idaho State University saw an increase in student enrollment for the 2021 fall semester. Enrollment reached 12,157, an increase of 3.15 percent over 2020. For the first time in almost a decade, total undergraduate enrollment at the university increased from the prior year. The number of new, first-time undergraduate students is up 10.7 percent from fall 2020, or 144 students. Just 4 Kids – Chubbuck Craftology Company – Pocatello EASTERN IDAHO – Bonneville, Butte, Clark, Custer, Fremont, Jefferson, Lemhi, Madison & Teton counties Idaho National Laboratory has been named one of the top places to work for women by DiversityMBA, one of the nation’s leading leadership organizations that integrates diversity and inclusion with talent management. INL ranked 13th in the nation for Best Places to Work for Women and Diverse Managers. This is the second year INL has won best in class for accountability. Source: Idaho Mountain Express Alaska Airlines reinstated direct flights from Idaho Falls to Boise. The Idaho Falls regional airport also increased the number of terminals from three to six. The airport also remodeled its facility and restaurant. Source: KPVI Food Shed Idaho – Victor This entry was posted in Employment News, Uncategorized and tagged Bonang Seoela, economic roundup, idaho department of labor, idaho economy, Jan Roeser on November 26, 2021 by Idaho Department of Labor. ← Machine Operator Apprenticeship Opens Doors for Four Magic Valley Students Governor Little Appoints Commissioners to Serve Idaho →
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/523
{"url": "https://idahoatwork.com/2021/11/26/around-idaho-economic-activity-in-october-2021/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "idahoatwork.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:47:36Z", "digest": "sha1:4PNOXHN4TIVVRMZHDJNNGT4IFOWVNCA4"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 18886, 18886.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 18886, 24209.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 18886, 71.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 18886, 320.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 18886, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 18886, 289.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 18886, 0.29200561]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 18886, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 18886, 0.01304657]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 18886, 0.01776142]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 18886, 0.01291739]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 18886, 0.00807337]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 18886, 0.01318373]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 18886, 0.18120617]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 18886, 0.40505464]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 18886, 5.28790984]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 18886, 6.11673951]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 18886, 2928.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 193, 1.0], [193, 213, 0.0], [213, 232, 0.0], [232, 252, 0.0], [252, 266, 0.0], [266, 339, 0.0], [339, 880, 0.0], [880, 1424, 0.0], [1424, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2056, 0.0], [2056, 2282, 0.0], [2282, 2333, 0.0], [2333, 2410, 0.0], [2410, 2913, 0.0], [2913, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3605, 0.0], [3605, 4152, 0.0], [4152, 4564, 0.0], [4564, 4912, 0.0], [4912, 4933, 0.0], [4933, 5429, 0.0], [5429, 5617, 1.0], [5617, 5797, 1.0], [5797, 6007, 1.0], [6007, 6171, 1.0], [6171, 6223, 0.0], [6223, 6330, 0.0], [6330, 6868, 0.0], [6868, 7257, 0.0], [7257, 7661, 0.0], [7661, 8212, 0.0], [8212, 8650, 0.0], [8650, 8992, 0.0], [8992, 9547, 0.0], [9547, 10160, 0.0], [10160, 10459, 0.0], [10459, 11066, 0.0], [11066, 11435, 0.0], [11435, 11729, 0.0], [11729, 12013, 0.0], [12013, 12520, 0.0], [12520, 12620, 0.0], [12620, 12698, 0.0], [12698, 12860, 0.0], [12860, 13125, 0.0], [13125, 13486, 0.0], [13486, 13622, 0.0], [13622, 13846, 0.0], [13846, 13950, 0.0], [13950, 14295, 0.0], [14295, 14744, 0.0], [14744, 15269, 0.0], [15269, 15697, 0.0], [15697, 16020, 0.0], [16020, 16478, 0.0], [16478, 16499, 0.0], [16499, 16515, 0.0], [16515, 16565, 0.0], [16565, 16658, 0.0], [16658, 17002, 0.0], [17002, 17359, 0.0], [17359, 17738, 1.0], [17738, 17761, 0.0], [17761, 17792, 0.0], [17792, 17894, 0.0], [17894, 18296, 0.0], [18296, 18525, 0.0], [18525, 18550, 0.0], [18550, 18754, 1.0], [18754, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 193, 0.0], [193, 213, 0.0], [213, 232, 0.0], [232, 252, 0.0], [252, 266, 0.0], [266, 339, 0.0], [339, 880, 0.0], [880, 1424, 0.0], [1424, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2056, 0.0], [2056, 2282, 0.0], [2282, 2333, 0.0], [2333, 2410, 0.0], [2410, 2913, 0.0], [2913, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3605, 0.0], [3605, 4152, 0.0], [4152, 4564, 0.0], [4564, 4912, 0.0], [4912, 4933, 0.0], [4933, 5429, 0.0], [5429, 5617, 0.0], [5617, 5797, 0.0], [5797, 6007, 0.0], [6007, 6171, 0.0], [6171, 6223, 0.0], [6223, 6330, 0.0], [6330, 6868, 0.0], [6868, 7257, 0.0], [7257, 7661, 0.0], [7661, 8212, 0.0], [8212, 8650, 0.0], [8650, 8992, 0.0], [8992, 9547, 0.0], [9547, 10160, 0.0], [10160, 10459, 0.0], [10459, 11066, 0.0], [11066, 11435, 0.0], [11435, 11729, 0.0], [11729, 12013, 0.0], [12013, 12520, 0.0], [12520, 12620, 0.0], [12620, 12698, 0.0], [12698, 12860, 0.0], [12860, 13125, 0.0], [13125, 13486, 0.0], [13486, 13622, 0.0], [13622, 13846, 0.0], [13846, 13950, 0.0], [13950, 14295, 0.0], [14295, 14744, 0.0], [14744, 15269, 0.0], [15269, 15697, 0.0], [15697, 16020, 0.0], [16020, 16478, 0.0], [16478, 16499, 0.0], [16499, 16515, 0.0], [16515, 16565, 0.0], [16565, 16658, 0.0], [16658, 17002, 0.0], [17002, 17359, 0.0], [17359, 17738, 0.0], [17738, 17761, 0.0], [17761, 17792, 0.0], [17792, 17894, 0.0], [17894, 18296, 0.0], [18296, 18525, 0.0], [18525, 18550, 0.0], [18550, 18754, 0.0], [18754, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 48, 7.0], [48, 193, 20.0], [193, 213, 3.0], [213, 232, 2.0], [232, 252, 3.0], [252, 266, 2.0], [266, 339, 9.0], [339, 880, 88.0], [880, 1424, 88.0], [1424, 1731, 44.0], [1731, 2056, 51.0], [2056, 2282, 38.0], [2282, 2333, 4.0], [2333, 2410, 12.0], [2410, 2913, 86.0], [2913, 3248, 49.0], [3248, 3605, 52.0], [3605, 4152, 84.0], [4152, 4564, 66.0], [4564, 4912, 52.0], [4912, 4933, 3.0], [4933, 5429, 74.0], [5429, 5617, 31.0], [5617, 5797, 23.0], [5797, 6007, 38.0], [6007, 6171, 25.0], [6171, 6223, 4.0], [6223, 6330, 14.0], [6330, 6868, 83.0], [6868, 7257, 58.0], [7257, 7661, 62.0], [7661, 8212, 86.0], [8212, 8650, 67.0], [8650, 8992, 48.0], [8992, 9547, 84.0], [9547, 10160, 99.0], [10160, 10459, 43.0], [10459, 11066, 102.0], [11066, 11435, 62.0], [11435, 11729, 47.0], [11729, 12013, 45.0], [12013, 12520, 80.0], [12520, 12620, 17.0], [12620, 12698, 12.0], [12698, 12860, 25.0], [12860, 13125, 39.0], [13125, 13486, 51.0], [13486, 13622, 21.0], [13622, 13846, 36.0], [13846, 13950, 15.0], [13950, 14295, 59.0], [14295, 14744, 68.0], [14744, 15269, 79.0], [15269, 15697, 62.0], [15697, 16020, 47.0], [16020, 16478, 74.0], [16478, 16499, 4.0], [16499, 16515, 4.0], [16515, 16565, 3.0], [16565, 16658, 12.0], [16658, 17002, 65.0], [17002, 17359, 60.0], [17359, 17738, 60.0], [17738, 17761, 5.0], [17761, 17792, 4.0], [17792, 17894, 13.0], [17894, 18296, 65.0], [18296, 18525, 35.0], [18525, 18550, 5.0], [18550, 18754, 31.0], [18754, 18886, 19.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.08695652], [48, 193, 0.0], [193, 213, 0.0], [213, 232, 0.0], [232, 252, 0.0], [252, 266, 0.0], [266, 339, 0.0], [339, 880, 0.0037594], [880, 1424, 0.02083333], [1424, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2056, 0.03821656], [2056, 2282, 0.0], [2282, 2333, 0.0], [2333, 2410, 0.0], [2410, 2913, 0.04752066], [2913, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3605, 0.00573066], [3605, 4152, 0.00561798], [4152, 4564, 0.01492537], [4564, 4912, 0.00588235], [4912, 4933, 0.0], [4933, 5429, 0.00206186], [5429, 5617, 0.05524862], [5617, 5797, 0.0], [5797, 6007, 0.01980198], [6007, 6171, 0.01886792], [6171, 6223, 0.0], [6223, 6330, 0.0], [6330, 6868, 0.01149425], [6868, 7257, 0.0], [7257, 7661, 0.02284264], [7661, 8212, 0.012939], [8212, 8650, 0.03073286], [8650, 8992, 0.05696203], [8992, 9547, 0.02573529], [9547, 10160, 0.0], [10160, 10459, 0.03767123], [10459, 11066, 0.0], [11066, 11435, 0.05849582], [11435, 11729, 0.03832753], [11729, 12013, 0.00716846], [12013, 12520, 0.03225806], [12520, 12620, 0.02083333], [12620, 12698, 0.0], [12698, 12860, 0.0], [12860, 13125, 0.00775194], [13125, 13486, 0.02305476], [13486, 13622, 0.0], [13622, 13846, 0.00921659], [13846, 13950, 0.0], [13950, 14295, 0.00598802], [14295, 14744, 0.02752294], [14744, 15269, 0.00581395], [15269, 15697, 0.01204819], [15697, 16020, 0.01935484], [16020, 16478, 0.00902935], [16478, 16499, 0.0], [16499, 16515, 0.06666667], [16515, 16565, 0.0], [16565, 16658, 0.0], [16658, 17002, 0.00591716], [17002, 17359, 0.0], [17359, 17738, 0.07103825], [17738, 17761, 0.04545455], [17761, 17792, 0.0], [17792, 17894, 0.0], [17894, 18296, 0.00505051], [18296, 18525, 0.0], [18525, 18550, 0.0], [18550, 18754, 0.03061224], [18754, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 193, 0.0], [193, 213, 0.0], [213, 232, 0.0], [232, 252, 0.0], [252, 266, 0.0], [266, 339, 0.0], [339, 880, 0.0], [880, 1424, 0.0], [1424, 1731, 0.0], [1731, 2056, 0.0], [2056, 2282, 0.0], [2282, 2333, 0.0], [2333, 2410, 0.0], [2410, 2913, 0.0], [2913, 3248, 0.0], [3248, 3605, 0.0], [3605, 4152, 0.0], [4152, 4564, 0.0], [4564, 4912, 0.0], [4912, 4933, 0.0], [4933, 5429, 0.0], [5429, 5617, 0.0], [5617, 5797, 0.0], [5797, 6007, 0.0], [6007, 6171, 0.0], [6171, 6223, 0.0], [6223, 6330, 0.0], [6330, 6868, 0.0], [6868, 7257, 0.0], [7257, 7661, 0.0], [7661, 8212, 0.0], [8212, 8650, 0.0], [8650, 8992, 0.0], [8992, 9547, 0.0], [9547, 10160, 0.0], [10160, 10459, 0.0], [10459, 11066, 0.0], [11066, 11435, 0.0], [11435, 11729, 0.0], [11729, 12013, 0.0], [12013, 12520, 0.0], [12520, 12620, 0.0], [12620, 12698, 0.0], [12698, 12860, 0.0], [12860, 13125, 0.0], [13125, 13486, 0.0], [13486, 13622, 0.0], [13622, 13846, 0.0], [13846, 13950, 0.0], [13950, 14295, 0.0], [14295, 14744, 0.0], [14744, 15269, 0.0], [15269, 15697, 0.0], [15697, 16020, 0.0], [16020, 16478, 0.0], [16478, 16499, 0.0], [16499, 16515, 0.0], [16515, 16565, 0.0], [16565, 16658, 0.0], [16658, 17002, 0.0], [17002, 17359, 0.0], [17359, 17738, 0.0], [17738, 17761, 0.0], [17761, 17792, 0.0], [17792, 17894, 0.0], [17894, 18296, 0.0], [18296, 18525, 0.0], [18525, 18550, 0.0], [18550, 18754, 0.0], [18754, 18886, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.10416667], [48, 193, 0.00689655], [193, 213, 0.15], [213, 232, 0.10526316], [232, 252, 0.15], [252, 266, 0.14285714], [266, 339, 0.24657534], [339, 880, 0.04990758], [880, 1424, 0.05330882], [1424, 1731, 0.0228013], [1731, 2056, 0.05230769], [2056, 2282, 0.09292035], [2282, 2333, 0.03921569], [2333, 2410, 0.2987013], [2410, 2913, 0.02385686], [2913, 3248, 0.03880597], [3248, 3605, 0.03361345], [3605, 4152, 0.05667276], [4152, 4564, 0.03640777], [4564, 4912, 0.0545977], [4912, 4933, 0.04761905], [4933, 5429, 0.02419355], [5429, 5617, 0.06914894], [5617, 5797, 0.07222222], [5797, 6007, 0.07142857], [6007, 6171, 0.04878049], [6171, 6223, 0.03846154], [6223, 6330, 0.26168224], [6330, 6868, 0.06319703], [6868, 7257, 0.04884319], [7257, 7661, 0.01980198], [7661, 8212, 0.04355717], [8212, 8650, 0.08219178], [8650, 8992, 0.02046784], [8992, 9547, 0.03603604], [9547, 10160, 0.02120718], [10160, 10459, 0.06688963], [10459, 11066, 0.01976936], [11066, 11435, 0.02439024], [11435, 11729, 0.05102041], [11729, 12013, 0.03521127], [12013, 12520, 0.02761341], [12520, 12620, 0.09], [12620, 12698, 0.1025641], [12698, 12860, 0.0617284], [12860, 13125, 0.05283019], [13125, 13486, 0.03878116], [13486, 13622, 0.06617647], [13622, 13846, 0.06696429], [13846, 13950, 0.25], [13950, 14295, 0.06376812], [14295, 14744, 0.02895323], [14744, 15269, 0.0552381], [15269, 15697, 0.02102804], [15697, 16020, 0.06501548], [16020, 16478, 0.05021834], [16478, 16499, 0.14285714], [16499, 16515, 0.125], [16515, 16565, 0.04], [16565, 16658, 0.2688172], [16658, 17002, 0.02034884], [17002, 17359, 0.04201681], [17359, 17738, 0.01583113], [17738, 17761, 0.13043478], [17761, 17792, 0.09677419], [17792, 17894, 0.20588235], [17894, 18296, 0.05970149], [18296, 18525, 0.06113537], [18525, 18550, 0.16], [18550, 18754, 0.05882353], [18754, 18886, 0.11363636]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 18886, 0.27920645]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 18886, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 18886, 0.71940345]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 18886, -1263.32745402]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 18886, 59.84623213]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 18886, 176.78742834]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 18886, 184.0]]}
CONFERENCE PHOTOS RNA epigenetics in human disease The organisers are delighted to confirm the following speakers will be presenting at the conference. Shankar Balasubramanian Storm 2019 Herchel Smith Professor of Medicinal Chemistry Sir Shankar Balasubramanian is the Herchel Smith Professor of Medicinal Chemistry at the University of Cambridge and senior group leader at the Cambridge Institute. He works on the chemistry, structure and function of nucleic acids. He is a co-inventor of the leading next generation DNA sequencing methodology, Solexa sequencing (now Illumina) that has made routine, accurate, low-cost sequencing of human genomes a reality and has revolutionised biology. He has worked on the identification, elucidation and manipulation of non-coding genetic elements, particularly four-stranded structures called G-quadruplexes. His work on the intervention of nucleic acid function using small molecules has revealed a number of molecular mechanisms that can be exploited, e.g. to modulate the biology of cancer. His more recent contributions include the development of methods for sequencing the epigenetic DNA bases 5-methylcytosine, 5-hydroxymethylcytosine and 5-formylcytosine at single base resolution, as part of a broader investigation of the importance of wider, natural DNA alphabet. His collective contributions span fundamental chemistry and its application to the biological and medical sciences. Sir Shankar was knighted in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours in 2017 for his services to science and medicine and awarded the Royal Society’s Royal Medal in 2018. Thomas Carell Professor for Chemistry LMU Munich Thomas Carell (Ph. D) was raised in Bad-Salzuflen (Germany). He studied chemistry at the Universities of Münster and Heidelberg. In 1993 he obtained his doctorate with Prof. H. A. Staab at the Max Planck Institute of Medical Research in Heidelberg. After postdoctoral training with Prof. J. Rebek at MIT (Cambridge, USA) in 1993-1995, Thomas Carell moved to the ETH Zürich (Switzerland) as an assistant professor to start independent research. He obtained his habilitation (tenure) in 2000. He subsequently accepted a full professor position for Organic Chemistry at the Philipps-Universität in Marburg (Germany). In 2004 Thomas Carell moved to the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) in Munich (Germany), where he is heading a research group centered around chemical biology. The current focus is to analyze the chemistry of epigenetic programming in DNA and RNA. Thomas Carell founded the company Baseclick GmBH in 2008. He is a member of the National German Academy, Leopoldina and of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is a recipient of the Cross of Merit from the Federal Republic of Germany. Thomas Carell obtained the Leibniz award from the DFG in 2003 (comparable to an HHMI investigator in the USA) and an ERC advanced grant in 2017. Thomas Carell is the speaker of the Excellence Cluster (EXC114) on protein chemistry and of the collaborative research center (SFB749) on Chemical Dynamics. Pierre Close University of Liege During my PhD with Pr Alain Chariot at the University of Liege (Belgium), my work focused on understanding molecular and cellular functions of Elongator, a six subunits complex (Elp1 to Elp6), which harbors an atypical acetyltransferase activity involved in cancer cell migration as well as in neuronal migration and development 1–3. I was awarded with an EMBO fellowship and I joined the lab of Pr Jesper Svejstrup at London Research Institute (Cancer Research UK, Clare Hall Laboratories), with the ambition to establish connections between gene transcription - mRNA biology and proteome expression. We biochemically purified nascent, chromatin-associated mRNP particles and we identified a novel protein complex that acts at the interface between mRNP particles and RNAPII, integrating transcript elongation to alternative splicing and proteome expression 4. Since 2013, I established my lab at the GIGA- Institute of the University of Liege. Our work is dedicated to understanding the mechanisms underlying cancer development through changes in proteome expression, mRNA translation and tRNA regulation. Using a combination of classical biochemistry, proteomics analysis, in vivo models of cancer, and patient-derived material, our goal is to uncover crucial regulation mechanisms supporting cancer cell adaptation during disease progression and resistance to therapy. Over the last years, my lab uncovered the essential role of wobble uridine tRNA modification in cancer by regulating specific mRNA translation. We found that wobble uridine tRNA modification is crucial for tumor initiation in the intestine 5, metastasis formation in breast cancer 6 through regulation of the synthesis of specific oncoproteins 7. More recently, we discovered that wobble tRNA modification promotes codon-specific translation reprogramming in melanoma and is one such mechanism promoting resistance to targeted therapy 8-9. Close P. et al, Molecular Cell 2006 Creppe C. et al, Cell 2009 Close P. et al, Journal of Biological Chemistry 2012 Close P. et al, Nature 2012 Ladang A. et al, Journal of Experimental Medicine 2015 Delaunay S. et al, Journal of Experimental Medicine 2016 Rapino et al, Trends in Cancer 2017 Rapino et al, Nature 2018 Rapino & Close, Molecular and Cellular Oncology 2018 Robert Copeland Robert A. Copeland President, Chief Scientific Officer & Co-founder Accent Therapeutics, Inc. Robert A. Copeland, Ph.D. is President, Chief Scientific Officer and Co-Founder of Accent Therapeutics and also President of the independent consulting firm, Ki Consultant, LLC. He was formerly President of Research and Chief Scientific Officer of Epizyme, Inc. and before that, Vice President of Cancer Biology, Oncology Center of Excellence in Drug Discovery, GlaxoSmithKline. Dr. Copeland received his doctorate in chemistry from Princeton University and did postdoctoral studies as the Chaim Weizmann Fellow at the California Institute of Technology. He has contributed to drug discovery and development efforts leading to 18 investigational new drugs entering human clinical trials. These include the cancer drugs foretinib, afuresertib, pinometostat, tazemetostat, Tafinlar (dabrafenib) and Mekinist (trametinib) and the antibiotic Altabax (retapamulin). Dr. Copeland has contributed more than 200 publications to the scientific literature, holds 14 issued U.S. patents and has authored 5 books in the areas of protein science and enzymology. His most recent book, Evaluation of Enzyme Inhibitors in Drug Discovery: A Guide for Medicinal Chemists and Pharmacologists, 2nd Edition (Wiley, Hoboken, NJ), published in March 2013. In 2016 Dr. Copeland was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Valérie de Crécy-Lagard After a PhD in microbial genetics at the Pasteur Institute (Paris), Valérie de Crécy-Lagard worked in academic and industrial settings using the power of bacterial genetics to study primary and secondary metabolism as well as mechanisms of regulation by proteolysis. In the past 20 years, her work has focused on combining comparative genomic analysis with experimental methods to discover the function of the many ‘unknowns’ found in sequenced genomes, first at the Scripps Research Institute and then, since 2004, in the Microbiology and Cell Science Department at the University of Florida. This led to solving many long-standing mysteries, particularly in the fields of coenzyme metabolism and transfer RNA (tRNA) modification. In parallel, she collaborates with biotech groups on using long-term cultures to evolve microorganisms with specific traits. Full Bibliography: 136 peer reviewed publications, h-index 45 Google Scholar Profile Michaela Frye German Cancer Research Center - DKFZ Michaela Frye completed her PhD in Frankfurt/Main in Germany in 2000 studying the role of epithelial defensins in Cystic Fibrosis. In 2001, she joined Cancer Research UK (CR-UK) in London as a Postdoctoral Fellow, where she developed her fascination for the question how stem cells form and maintain adult tissues. In 2007, Michaela started her independent research group at the Wellcome Trust – Medical Research Council Cambridge Stem Cell Institute. She received a CR-UK Career Development Fellowship in 2007 and a CR-UK Senior Fellowship and an ERC Consolidator Grant in 2013 to study how dysregulation of stem cell function contributes to human diseases and cancer. In 2019 she has accepted a Professorship at the DKFZ in Heidelberg Germany. Francois Fuks ULB – University of Brussels and EPICS Therapeuticss François Fuks received a postgraduate degree in molecular biology at University of Brussels (ULB), Belgium, and performed his PhD thesis at the DKFZ in Heidelberg, Germany. Next, F. Fuks joined the laboratory of Prof. Tony Kouzarides at the Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge, UK, where he initiated his work on epigenetics. He then established his own laboratory at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Brussels. Currently, François is the Director of the Laboratory of Cancer Epigenetics and Full Professor at the Faculty of Medicine, ULB, Brussels. He is also the Director of the ULB-Cancer Research Center (Brussels). Dr. Fuks’ research focuses on understanding the mechanisms underlying epigenetic alterations in cancer, with a particular interest in the study of DNA modifications. His recent research concerns RNA modifications in health and disease. François also founded with Jean Combalbert Epics Therapeutics, a drug discovery company that aims to develop small molecule drugs targeting RNA epigenetics. Richard Gregory Richard I. Gregory. Ph.D. is Professor in the Departments of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, and Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, and Principal Investigator in The Stem Cell Program in the Division of Hematology/Oncology at Boston Children’s Hospital. He is also co-Director and executive committee member of the Harvard Initiative for RNA Medicine, and Principal faculty member of The Harvard Stem Cell Institute. His undergraduate studies were at the University of Liverpool, UK, and he received a Ph.D. from Cambridge University in 2001, for research performed at the Babraham Institute, Cambridge. He did his postdoctoral work at the Fox Chase Cancer Center and the Wistar Institute, Philadelphia. His postdoctoral research focused on mechanisms of microRNA biogenesis, and was supported by a Jane Coffin Childs Research Fellowship. Since its establishment in 2006 research in the Gregory laboratory has focused on understanding molecular and cellular mechanisms of RNA regulation and the relevance of these pathways in stem cell biology, development, and human diseases including cancer. Chuan He Dr. He is the John T. Wilson Distinguished Service Professor in the Department of Chemistry and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Chicago. He received his bachelor of science degree in 1994 from the University of Science and Technology of China and his Ph.D. in chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2000, studying under professor Stephen J. Lippard. After training as a Damon-Runyon postdoctoral fellow with professor Gregory L. Verdine at Harvard University, he joined the University of Chicago as an assistant professor, rising to associate professor in 2008 and full professor in 2010. He was selected as an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in 2013. Dr. He’s research spans a broad range of fields including chemical biology, RNA biology, epigenetics, biochemistry, molecular biology, cell biology, and genomics. His recent research concerns reversible RNA and DNA methylation in biological regulation. His laboratory has spearheaded the development of enabling technologies to study the biology of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC) in mammalian genomes. In 2011, his group discovered reversible RNA methylation as a new mechanism of gene expression regulation. Stacy Horner Dr. Stacy M. Horner is currently an Assistant Professor in the departments of Molecular Genetics & Microbiology and Medicine at the Duke University School of Medicine, where she is also the Co-director for the Duke Center for RNA Biology. Stacy received her Ph.D. in 2007 from Yale University, where she studied human papillomaviruses under the mentorship of Dr. Daniel DiMaio. Her postdoctoral research, sponsored by Irvington Institute Fellowship Program of the Cancer Research Institute, was with Dr. Michael Gale at the University of Washington, and focused on hepatitis C virus regulation of antiviral innate immunity. She started her independent lab at Duke in 2013. Research in her laboratory is defining the virus-host interactions that control the outcome of infection to hepatitis C virus and other viruses in the Flaviviridae family. She and her team are also identifying the molecular mechanisms of how these viruses activate and evade host innate immune defenses, as well as deciphering how the RNA modification N6-methyladeonsine regulates Flaviviridae virus infection and antiviral innate immunity. Stacy has received the Ann Palmenberg Junior Investigator Award from the American Society for Virology, the ASM Microbe Junior Investigator Award, and both the Milstein Young Investigator Award and the Christina Fleischmann Award from the Cytokines Society. She is also currently a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Investigator in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease. Samie Jaffrey Weill Medical College, Cornell University Dr. Samie Jaffrey is the Greenberg-Starr Professor in the Department of Pharmacology at the Weill Cornell Medical College. He received an M.D. and Ph.D. in 1999 from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine where he studied mechanisms of nitric oxide signaling with Dr. Solomon H. Snyder and started his own laboratory at Weill Cornell Medical College in 2001. Dr. Jaffrey’s work has fundamentally advanced our understanding of RNA biology and gene regulation. His lab developed genetically encoded fluorescent RNAs for imaging RNA localization and trafficking in live cells, including the Spinach-tagged RNAs. He has extended this technology to create a new class of genetically encoded biosensors composed of RNA that allows signaling molecules to be imaged in living cells. Most recently, he has helped to launch the field of “epitranscriptomics,” which relates to the diverse nucleotide modifications that impact the fate and function of mRNA and long noncoding RNAs in cells. Dr. Jaffrey’s transcriptome-wide mapping of N6-methyladenosine (m6A) in 2012 revealed that m6A is a pervasive modification in the transcriptome, thereby identifying this modification as a fundamentally novel form post-transcriptional mRNA regulation. Since this seminal study, Dr. Jaffrey mapped dimethyladenosine (m6Am) and established functions of m6A and m6Am as well as m6A and m6Am reader, writer, and eraser proteins. Narry Kim Institute for Basic Science and Seoul National University Narry Kim has made major contributions to RNA biology. She has been studying how microRNAs and mRNAs are made and regulated, and what microRNAs and mRNAs do to modulate cell signaling in cancer and embryonic stem cells. Her research group found and investigated several key factors in the microRNA pathway including Drosha, DGCR8, and Lin28, and discovered many pluripotent stem cell-specific microRNAs. More recently, Kim uncovered new gene regulatory mechanisms through RNA tailing such as uridylation and adenylation, and identified the factors and biological functions of RNA tailing. Narry Kim currently serves as the Director of RNA Research Center at Institute for Basic Science and a Professor of Biological Sciences at Seoul National University. She received her Ph.D. in 1998 from Oxford University, UK, where she studied the functions of retroviral proteins in the construction of gene transfer vectors in the Kingsman lab. She then carried out her postdoctoral research on mRNA surveillance in the laboratory of Gideon Dreyfuss at the University of Pennsylvania, USA. She set up her own research group at Seoul National University in 2001. Narry Kim received L’Oreal-UNESCO Women in Science Award (2008), the Ho-Am Prize in Medicine (2009), the S-Oil Fellowship (2013), the Korea S&T Award (2013), Chen Award (2017) and Asan Awards in Medicine (2019), and was elected as Foreign Associate of European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO, 2013), Foreign Associate of National Academy of Science (NAS, 2014), and Member of Korean Academy of Science and Technology (KAST, 2014). Tony Kouzarides Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge and STORM Therapeutics Tony Kouzarides is professor of Cancer Biology at the University of Cambridge. He is a senior group leader at the Gurdon Institute and founder/director of the Milner Therapeutics Institute. Tony did his PhD at the University of Cambridge and postdoctoral work at MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology and at New York University Medical Center. His research group at the Gurdon Institute is focused on epigenetic modifications and their involvement in cancer. Tony is founder/director of Cambridge Gravity, Cambridge University science fundraising organisation, and founder (ex-director) of Conquer Cancer ("Vencer el Cancer") a cancer charity in Spain. Tony is a co-founder and ex-director of Abcam plc, a publicly trading research reagents company in Cambridge, a co-founder and ex-director of Chroma Therapeutics, of a drug discovery company based in Oxford and a co-founder and director of STORM Therapeutics, a drug discovery company based in Cambridge. Tony is a member of the European Molecular Biology organization, a Fellow of the British Academy of Medical Sciences (FMedSci), Fellow of the Royal Society (FRS), Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Cancer Research UK Gibbs Fellow. He has been awarded the Wellcome Trust medal for research in biochemistry related to medicine (UK), the Tenovus Medal (UK), the Bodossaki Foundation prize in Biology (Greece), the Bijvoet Medal (Holland), the Biochemical Society Award Novartis Medal and Prize (UK) and the Heinrich Wieland Prize (Germany). Kamil Kranc Chair of Haematology Barts Cancer Institute, Queen Mary University of London Professor Kamil Kranc is Chair of Haematology and Deputy Lead of Centre for Haemato-Oncology in the Barts Cancer Institute (Queen Mary University of London). He received an M.D. in 2000 from Medical University of Silesia and a D.Phil. in Biochemistry from University of Oxford (Lincoln College) in 2003. He next obtained postdoctoral training in immunology and haematology at the Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine (University of Oxford; 2003-2007) and started his own laboratory in the MRC Molecular Haematology Unit at Oxford in 2008. His current laboratory in London is funded by CRUK Senior Fellowship, CRUK Program Grant (in collaboration with Donal O’Carroll), and grants from Bloodwise, Barts Charity and the MRC. The Kranc laboratory has revealed key molecular mechanisms (including m6A-dependent RNA metabolic pathways) controlling haematopoietic stem cell behaviour and leukaemic transformation. Their central aim is to harness this knowledge to provide therapeutic targets for normal stem cell expansion for transplantation purposes and specific cancer/leukaemic stem cell eradication. Jeannie Lee Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital Jeannie T. Lee Is a Professor of Genetics (and Pathology) at Harvard Medical School, the Blavatnik Institute, and the Massachusetts General Hospital. Dr. Lee specializes in the study of epigenetic regulation by long noncoding RNAs and uses X-chromosome inactivation as a model system. Growing knowledge of X-inactivation mechanisms and RNA biology is currently being translated to treat various human diseases, including Rett, Fragile X, and CDKL5 Syndromes. As a champion of translational science, she played a major role in the founding of Translate Bio and Fulcrum Therapeutics with technology and know-how from the lab. She is a Member of the National Academy of Sciences, the 2016 recipient of the Lurie Prize from the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, a 2016 awardee of the Centennial Prize from the Genetics Society of America, the 2010 recipient of the Molecular Biology Prize from the National Academy of Sciences, U.S.A, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Dr. Lee was also named a Distinguished Graduate of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 2013 and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. From 2013-2018, she co-launched the Epigenetics Initiative at Harvard Medical School and served as its Co-Director. Serving on the Board of Directors of the Genetics Society of America (GSA), Dr. Lee spearheaded the TAGC (The All-Genetics) Conference in 2016. As GSA's President, Dr. Lee established a Strategic Plan and a Development strategy for the society in 2018. She received her A.B. in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology from Harvard University and obtained M.D.-Ph.D degrees from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Dr. Lee then carried out postdoctoral work at the Whitehead Institute & MIT and became Chief Resident of Clinical Pathology at the Massachusetts General Hospital prior to joining the Faculty at Harvard Medical School. As a new investigator, she received the Basil O’Connor Scholar Award from the March of Dimes and the Pew Scholars Award. Michal Minczuk MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, University of Cambridge Dr. Michal Minczuk is a Programme Leader at the MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, University of Cambridge, leading the Mitochondrial Genetics programme. Michal holds a PhD from the University of Warsaw. He has joined the Mitochondrial Biology Unit following post-doctoral training at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge. His work is focused on discovering the genetic links between mitochondrial dysfunction and human disease. In particular, his group develops methods for editing of the mammalian mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) using programmable nucleases. Michal’s group is also interested in investigating how mitochondrial gene expression is regulated, with the main focus on epitranscriptomic regulation, mitoribosome biogenies and mtRNA polyadenylation. Michal’s laboratory has been making important contribution to establishing genetic basis and molecular mechanisms of mitochondrial disorders resulting from defects of mitochondrial gene expression. The long-term aim of these efforts is to contribute to understanding of the involvement of mitochondria in human health and disease and to develop mechanism-based therapies of mitochondrial diseases. Gerhard Müller Chief Scientific Officer Gotham Therapeutics Gerhard Mueller is Chief Scientific Officer at Gotham Therapeutics, a transatlantic biotech company located in New York City, US, and Munich, Germany, focusing on epitranscriptomic drug discovery. Prior to his appointment at Gotham Therapeutics, he held several research management positions at biotech companies such as Axxima Pharmaceuticals, Munich, and GPC Biotech, Munich and Boston. Most recently, he built from scratch the Medicinal Chemistry business unit at Mercachem, a chemistry service provider in Nijmegen, The Netherlands. Before his career within the biotech industry, Gerhard held a number of senior research and project management positions within the pharmaceutical industry, i.e. at Glaxo Group Research in Verona, Italy, at Bayer AG, Leverkusen, Germany, and he headed the medicinal chemistry unit at Organon N.V. in Oss, NL. Gerhard obtained his PhD from the Technical University Munich, under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Horst Kessler establishing the research field of antiadhesive integrin antagonists. During his career, Gerhard has worked on several disease areas prosecuting different target families, among them protein kinases, proteases, GPCRs, integrins, protein-protein interaction targets and epigenetic enzymes and receptors. From this work, close to 10 clinical candidates emerged, and Gerhard is co-author of more than 75 scientific publications and numerous patents. Yunsun Nam Cecil H. and Ida Green Center for Reproductive Biology Sciences Yunsun Nam, PhD, is currently an Assistant Professor in the Departments of Biophysics and Obstetrics / Gynecology at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. She is also a Southwestern Medical Foundation Scholar in Biomedical Research. Her undergraduate degree was in Biochemical Sciences, from Harvard College. She received her PhD in Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School, for her work on the structure and function of intracellular Notch and its transcription complexes. Her postdoctoral work continued on mechanistic investigation of nucleic acid/protein complexes, focusing on Lin28 and let-7 microRNAs. For postdoctral training, she received Damon Runyon Cancer Research Fellowship and Charles A. King Trust Fellowship. As an independent investigator, she has received Pew Scholarship and Packard Fellowship. Since 2013, the Nam lab has been focusing on the mechanisms of noncoding RNAs using structural biology and biochemistry, with particular emphasis on processing and modification of RNAs relevant to human diseases including cancer. Oliver Rausch Storm Therapeutics Oliver Rausch is Chief Scientific Officer at Storm Therapeutics Ltd. Storm is a spin-out from Cambridge University targeting RNA modification pathways for the development of a new class of anti-cancer treatments. As CSO, Oliver has overall responsibility for developing Storm’s target discovery platform, and for delivering small molecule drugs from its emerging drug discovery pipeline. Oliver worked closely with Storm’s scientific founders, Profs Tony Kouzarides and Eric Miska, to establish Storm, and joined Storm full time in October 2016. Prior to Storm, Oliver was Programme Director at the UK’s National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) where he developed and led a number of high profile industry collaboration programmes in clinical translational research and experimental medicine. Oliver has over twenty years of drug discovery and development experience in Inflammation, Neurology and Oncology, including from organisations such as GlaxoSmithKline, UCB Celltech and Cellzome. He holds a degree in Biochemistry from the Free University in Berlin and a PhD in Biochemistry and Cell Biology from the Institute of Cancer Research in London. Gidi Rechavi Head, Sheba Cancer Research Center Sheba Medical Center Schraga Schwartz Weizmann Institute of Science Dr. Schwartz received his PhD from Tel Aviv University in Israel in 2010, working on mRNA splicing under the supervision of Prof. Gil Ast. Dr. Schwartz then conducted his post-doctorate at the Broad Institute of MIT & Harvard under the joint supervision of Aviv Regev and Eric Lander, where his work focused on mRNA modifications, and he established his independent laboratory at the Weizmann Institute in 2015. Dr. Schwartz has pioneered some of the key approaches for systematically detecting and quantifying RNA modifications at a transcriptome-wide scale. His lab bridges experimental and computational approaches, and developed the first approaches for systematically mapping N6-methyladenosine (m6A), pseudouridine, and the first approach for obtaining single-nucleotide resolution mappings of N1-methyladenosine (m1A). His lab aims to unravel the functions and mechanisms of actions through which diverse RNA modification modulate the fate of RNA, and understand how this in turns shapes cellular decision-making. Dr. Schwartz obtained an ERC starting grant in 2016, and is a member of the EMBO Young Investigator Program. Tom Suzuki Tom Suzuki’s research centres on RNA biochemistry, especially on the biogenesis and function of RNA modifications, and molecular mechanisms of protein synthesis. His group has developed their platform technologies for isolating individual RNAs, and for highly sensitive analysis of RNA modifications by mass spectrometry. His group discovered several novel modifications and dozens of RNA-modifying enzymes. His group also reported the first instance of human disease caused by disrupted RNA modification, and is now studying the molecular pathogenesis of this disease. © Copyright -STORM Therapeutics
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/2564
{"url": "https://stormtxconference2019.com/speakers", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "stormtxconference2019.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:51:51Z", "digest": "sha1:F7LUCXJT55RTAP5SZB4DEKAUG6AQFIWS"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 28510, 28510.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 28510, 29983.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 28510, 80.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 28510, 185.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 28510, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 28510, 160.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 28510, 0.29584499]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 28510, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 28510, 0.00482744]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 28510, 0.0881643]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 28510, 0.04353165]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 28510, 0.02464535]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 28510, 0.01693839]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 28510, 0.00897734]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 28510, 0.00825746]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 28510, 0.00952784]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 28510, 0.00647893]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 28510, 0.03595685]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 28510, 0.15781063]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 28510, 0.2919151]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 28510, 5.63200572]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 28510, 5.93075077]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 28510, 4193.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 51, 0.0], [51, 152, 1.0], [152, 176, 0.0], [176, 187, 0.0], [187, 234, 0.0], [234, 1592, 1.0], [1592, 1606, 0.0], [1606, 1630, 0.0], [1630, 1641, 0.0], [1641, 3063, 1.0], [3063, 3076, 0.0], [3076, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 5009, 1.0], [5009, 5045, 0.0], [5045, 5072, 0.0], [5072, 5125, 0.0], [5125, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5208, 0.0], [5208, 5265, 0.0], [5265, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5327, 0.0], [5327, 5380, 0.0], [5380, 5396, 0.0], [5396, 5415, 0.0], [5415, 5464, 0.0], [5464, 5490, 1.0], [5490, 6832, 1.0], [6832, 6856, 0.0], [6856, 7798, 0.0], [7798, 7812, 0.0], [7812, 7849, 0.0], [7849, 8595, 1.0], [8595, 8609, 0.0], [8609, 8662, 0.0], [8662, 9686, 1.0], [9686, 9702, 0.0], [9702, 10817, 1.0], [10817, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 12066, 1.0], [12066, 12079, 0.0], [12079, 13555, 1.0], [13555, 13569, 0.0], [13569, 13611, 0.0], [13611, 15008, 1.0], [15008, 15018, 0.0], [15018, 15076, 0.0], [15076, 16665, 1.0], [16665, 16681, 0.0], [16681, 16746, 0.0], [16746, 18263, 1.0], [18263, 18275, 0.0], [18275, 18296, 0.0], [18296, 18352, 0.0], [18352, 19457, 1.0], [19457, 19469, 0.0], [19469, 19524, 0.0], [19524, 21592, 1.0], [21592, 21607, 0.0], [21607, 21663, 0.0], [21663, 22835, 1.0], [22835, 22850, 0.0], [22850, 22875, 0.0], [22875, 22895, 0.0], [22895, 24300, 1.0], [24300, 24311, 0.0], [24311, 24375, 0.0], [24375, 25464, 1.0], [25464, 25478, 0.0], [25478, 25497, 0.0], [25497, 26652, 1.0], [26652, 26665, 0.0], [26665, 26700, 0.0], [26700, 26721, 0.0], [26721, 26738, 0.0], [26738, 26768, 0.0], [26768, 27898, 1.0], [27898, 27909, 0.0], [27909, 28479, 1.0], [28479, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 51, 0.0], [51, 152, 0.0], [152, 176, 0.0], [176, 187, 0.0], [187, 234, 0.0], [234, 1592, 0.0], [1592, 1606, 0.0], [1606, 1630, 0.0], [1630, 1641, 0.0], [1641, 3063, 0.0], [3063, 3076, 0.0], [3076, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 5009, 0.0], [5009, 5045, 0.0], [5045, 5072, 0.0], [5072, 5125, 0.0], [5125, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5208, 0.0], [5208, 5265, 0.0], [5265, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5327, 0.0], [5327, 5380, 0.0], [5380, 5396, 0.0], [5396, 5415, 0.0], [5415, 5464, 0.0], [5464, 5490, 0.0], [5490, 6832, 0.0], [6832, 6856, 0.0], [6856, 7798, 0.0], [7798, 7812, 0.0], [7812, 7849, 0.0], [7849, 8595, 0.0], [8595, 8609, 0.0], [8609, 8662, 0.0], [8662, 9686, 0.0], [9686, 9702, 0.0], [9702, 10817, 0.0], [10817, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 12066, 0.0], [12066, 12079, 0.0], [12079, 13555, 0.0], [13555, 13569, 0.0], [13569, 13611, 0.0], [13611, 15008, 0.0], [15008, 15018, 0.0], [15018, 15076, 0.0], [15076, 16665, 0.0], [16665, 16681, 0.0], [16681, 16746, 0.0], [16746, 18263, 0.0], [18263, 18275, 0.0], [18275, 18296, 0.0], [18296, 18352, 0.0], [18352, 19457, 0.0], [19457, 19469, 0.0], [19469, 19524, 0.0], [19524, 21592, 0.0], [21592, 21607, 0.0], [21607, 21663, 0.0], [21663, 22835, 0.0], [22835, 22850, 0.0], [22850, 22875, 0.0], [22875, 22895, 0.0], [22895, 24300, 0.0], [24300, 24311, 0.0], [24311, 24375, 0.0], [24375, 25464, 0.0], [25464, 25478, 0.0], [25478, 25497, 0.0], [25497, 26652, 0.0], [26652, 26665, 0.0], [26665, 26700, 0.0], [26700, 26721, 0.0], [26721, 26738, 0.0], [26738, 26768, 0.0], [26768, 27898, 0.0], [27898, 27909, 0.0], [27909, 28479, 0.0], [28479, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 18, 2.0], [18, 51, 5.0], [51, 152, 15.0], [152, 176, 2.0], [176, 187, 2.0], [187, 234, 6.0], [234, 1592, 195.0], [1592, 1606, 2.0], [1606, 1630, 3.0], [1630, 1641, 2.0], [1641, 3063, 222.0], [3063, 3076, 2.0], [3076, 3096, 3.0], [3096, 5009, 274.0], [5009, 5045, 7.0], [5045, 5072, 6.0], [5072, 5125, 9.0], [5125, 5153, 6.0], [5153, 5208, 9.0], [5208, 5265, 9.0], [5265, 5301, 7.0], [5301, 5327, 5.0], [5327, 5380, 7.0], [5380, 5396, 2.0], [5396, 5415, 3.0], [5415, 5464, 5.0], [5464, 5490, 3.0], [5490, 6832, 192.0], [6832, 6856, 3.0], [6856, 7798, 138.0], [7798, 7812, 2.0], [7812, 7849, 5.0], [7849, 8595, 118.0], [8595, 8609, 2.0], [8609, 8662, 8.0], [8662, 9686, 152.0], [9686, 9702, 2.0], [9702, 10817, 163.0], [10817, 10826, 2.0], [10826, 12066, 183.0], [12066, 12079, 2.0], [12079, 13555, 219.0], [13555, 13569, 2.0], [13569, 13611, 5.0], [13611, 15008, 208.0], [15008, 15018, 2.0], [15018, 15076, 8.0], [15076, 16665, 244.0], [16665, 16681, 2.0], [16681, 16746, 8.0], [16746, 18263, 231.0], [18263, 18275, 2.0], [18275, 18296, 3.0], [18296, 18352, 8.0], [18352, 19457, 158.0], [19457, 19469, 2.0], [19469, 19524, 6.0], [19524, 21592, 322.0], [21592, 21607, 2.0], [21607, 21663, 7.0], [21663, 22835, 159.0], [22835, 22850, 2.0], [22850, 22875, 3.0], [22875, 22895, 2.0], [22895, 24300, 199.0], [24300, 24311, 2.0], [24311, 24375, 10.0], [24375, 25464, 152.0], [25464, 25478, 2.0], [25478, 25497, 2.0], [25497, 26652, 169.0], [26652, 26665, 2.0], [26665, 26700, 5.0], [26700, 26721, 3.0], [26721, 26738, 2.0], [26738, 26768, 4.0], [26768, 27898, 165.0], [27898, 27909, 2.0], [27909, 28479, 80.0], [28479, 28510, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 51, 0.0], [51, 152, 0.0], [152, 176, 0.0], [176, 187, 0.4], [187, 234, 0.0], [234, 1592, 0.00828937], [1592, 1606, 0.0], [1606, 1630, 0.0], [1630, 1641, 0.0], [1641, 3063, 0.02765648], [3063, 3076, 0.0], [3076, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 5009, 0.00747065], [5009, 5045, 0.12121212], [5045, 5072, 0.16666667], [5072, 5125, 0.08], [5125, 5153, 0.16], [5153, 5208, 0.07692308], [5208, 5265, 0.07407407], [5265, 5301, 0.11764706], [5301, 5327, 0.16666667], [5327, 5380, 0.08163265], [5380, 5396, 0.0], [5396, 5415, 0.0], [5415, 5464, 0.0], [5464, 5490, 0.0], [5490, 6832, 0.01313756], [6832, 6856, 0.0], [6856, 7798, 0.01193059], [7798, 7812, 0.0], [7812, 7849, 0.0], [7849, 8595, 0.03283174], [8595, 8609, 0.0], [8609, 8662, 0.0], [8662, 9686, 0.0], [9686, 9702, 0.0], [9702, 10817, 0.00734619], [10817, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 12066, 0.0214876], [12066, 12079, 0.0], [12079, 13555, 0.00621547], [13555, 13569, 0.0], [13569, 13611, 0.0], [13611, 15008, 0.01468429], [15008, 15018, 0.0], [15018, 15076, 0.0], [15076, 16665, 0.03061889], [16665, 16681, 0.0], [16681, 16746, 0.0], [16746, 18263, 0.0], [18263, 18275, 0.0], [18275, 18296, 0.0], [18296, 18352, 0.0], [18352, 19457, 0.01951673], [19457, 19469, 0.0], [19469, 19524, 0.0], [19524, 21592, 0.01641791], [21592, 21607, 0.0], [21607, 21663, 0.0], [21663, 22835, 0.0], [22835, 22850, 0.0], [22850, 22875, 0.0], [22875, 22895, 0.0], [22895, 24300, 0.00294118], [24300, 24311, 0.0], [24311, 24375, 0.0], [24375, 25464, 0.0065666], [25464, 25478, 0.0], [25478, 25497, 0.0], [25497, 26652, 0.00352734], [26652, 26665, 0.0], [26665, 26700, 0.0], [26700, 26721, 0.0], [26721, 26738, 0.0], [26738, 26768, 0.0], [26768, 27898, 0.01457195], [27898, 27909, 0.0], [27909, 28479, 0.0], [28479, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 18, 0.0], [18, 51, 0.0], [51, 152, 0.0], [152, 176, 0.0], [176, 187, 0.0], [187, 234, 0.0], [234, 1592, 0.0], [1592, 1606, 0.0], [1606, 1630, 0.0], [1630, 1641, 0.0], [1641, 3063, 0.0], [3063, 3076, 0.0], [3076, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 5009, 0.0], [5009, 5045, 0.0], [5045, 5072, 0.0], [5072, 5125, 0.0], [5125, 5153, 0.0], [5153, 5208, 0.0], [5208, 5265, 0.0], [5265, 5301, 0.0], [5301, 5327, 0.0], [5327, 5380, 0.0], [5380, 5396, 0.0], [5396, 5415, 0.0], [5415, 5464, 0.0], [5464, 5490, 0.0], [5490, 6832, 0.0], [6832, 6856, 0.0], [6856, 7798, 0.0], [7798, 7812, 0.0], [7812, 7849, 0.0], [7849, 8595, 0.0], [8595, 8609, 0.0], [8609, 8662, 0.0], [8662, 9686, 0.0], [9686, 9702, 0.0], [9702, 10817, 0.0], [10817, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 12066, 0.0], [12066, 12079, 0.0], [12079, 13555, 0.0], [13555, 13569, 0.0], [13569, 13611, 0.0], [13611, 15008, 0.0], [15008, 15018, 0.0], [15018, 15076, 0.0], [15076, 16665, 0.0], [16665, 16681, 0.0], [16681, 16746, 0.0], [16746, 18263, 0.0], [18263, 18275, 0.0], [18275, 18296, 0.0], [18296, 18352, 0.0], [18352, 19457, 0.0], [19457, 19469, 0.0], [19469, 19524, 0.0], [19524, 21592, 0.0], [21592, 21607, 0.0], [21607, 21663, 0.0], [21663, 22835, 0.0], [22835, 22850, 0.0], [22850, 22875, 0.0], [22875, 22895, 0.0], [22895, 24300, 0.0], [24300, 24311, 0.0], [24311, 24375, 0.0], [24375, 25464, 0.0], [25464, 25478, 0.0], [25478, 25497, 0.0], [25497, 26652, 0.0], [26652, 26665, 0.0], [26665, 26700, 0.0], [26700, 26721, 0.0], [26721, 26738, 0.0], [26738, 26768, 0.0], [26768, 27898, 0.0], [27898, 27909, 0.0], [27909, 28479, 0.0], [28479, 28510, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 18, 0.88888889], [18, 51, 0.09090909], [51, 152, 0.00990099], [152, 176, 0.08333333], [176, 187, 0.09090909], [187, 234, 0.10638298], [234, 1592, 0.02945508], [1592, 1606, 0.14285714], [1606, 1630, 0.08333333], [1630, 1641, 0.36363636], [1641, 3063, 0.08157525], [3063, 3076, 0.15384615], [3076, 3096, 0.1], [3096, 5009, 0.04129639], [5009, 5045, 0.11111111], [5045, 5072, 0.11111111], [5072, 5125, 0.09433962], [5125, 5153, 0.10714286], [5153, 5208, 0.09090909], [5208, 5265, 0.0877193], [5265, 5301, 0.08333333], [5301, 5327, 0.07692308], [5327, 5380, 0.09433962], [5380, 5396, 0.125], [5396, 5415, 0.15789474], [5415, 5464, 0.10204082], [5464, 5490, 0.11538462], [5490, 6832, 0.06482861], [6832, 6856, 0.125], [6856, 7798, 0.03397028], [7798, 7812, 0.14285714], [7812, 7849, 0.21621622], [7849, 8595, 0.07908847], [8595, 8609, 0.14285714], [8609, 8662, 0.20754717], [8662, 9686, 0.07128906], [9686, 9702, 0.125], [9702, 10817, 0.06726457], [10817, 10826, 0.22222222], [10826, 12066, 0.05], [12066, 12079, 0.15384615], [12079, 13555, 0.0596206], [13555, 13569, 0.14285714], [13569, 13611, 0.11904762], [13611, 15008, 0.05153901], [15008, 15018, 0.2], [15018, 15076, 0.10344828], [15076, 16665, 0.08495909], [16665, 16681, 0.125], [16681, 16746, 0.15384615], [16746, 18263, 0.07317073], [18263, 18275, 0.16666667], [18275, 18296, 0.0952381], [18296, 18352, 0.125], [18352, 19457, 0.06696833], [19457, 19469, 0.16666667], [19469, 19524, 0.10909091], [19524, 21592, 0.07930368], [21592, 21607, 0.13333333], [21607, 21663, 0.14285714], [21663, 22835, 0.03583618], [22835, 22850, 0.13333333], [22850, 22875, 0.12], [22875, 22895, 0.1], [22895, 24300, 0.04911032], [24300, 24311, 0.18181818], [24311, 24375, 0.125], [24375, 25464, 0.06152433], [25464, 25478, 0.14285714], [25478, 25497, 0.10526316], [25497, 26652, 0.06147186], [26652, 26665, 0.15384615], [26665, 26700, 0.14285714], [26700, 26721, 0.14285714], [26721, 26738, 0.11764706], [26738, 26768, 0.1], [26768, 27898, 0.05309735], [27898, 27909, 0.18181818], [27909, 28479, 0.04035088], [28479, 28510, 0.22580645]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 28510, 0.41698319]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 28510, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 28510, 0.91727793]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 28510, -1259.15711096]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 28510, -31.96419642]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 28510, 685.84847503]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 28510, 252.0]]}
BEAUTIFUL – THE CAROLE KING MUSICAL ANNOUNCES FULL CASTING AND SCHEDULE FOR 2019-2020 NORTH AMERICAN TOURING SEASON Matthew Herzog Producers Paul Blake and Sony/ATV Music Publishing have announced the North American tour of the Tony and Grammy Award-winning hit musical Beautiful – The Carole King Musical will welcome Kennedy Caughell (Carole King), James D. Gish (Gerry Goffin), Kathryn Boswell (Cynthia Weil), James Michael Lambert (Barry Mann), Matt Loehr (Don Kirshner) and Rachel Coloff (Genie Klein) to the Company beginning September 20 in Utica, NY. “I am thrilled that Beautiful continues to delight and entertain audiences around the globe, in England, Japan and Australia and that we are entering our fifth amazing year of touring the U.S.,” producer Paul Blake said. “We are so grateful that over five million audience members worldwide have been entertained by our celebration of Carole’s story and her timeless music.” The ensemble of Beautiful includes Matthew Amira, Isaiah Bailey, Edwin Bates, Danielle Bowen, Antoinette Comer, Kevin Hack, Torrey Linder, Nick Moulton, Nya, Eliza Palasz, Ben Toomer, Nazarria Workman and Hailee Wright. Since the tour’s launch September 2015, Beautiful has played 1,442 performances in 94 cities over 182 weeks to nearly 2.5 million patrons. Beautiful will play 105 markets in the 2019-20 touring season, including premiere engagements in Worcester, MA, Midland, MI, Wallingford, CT, Thousand Oaks, CA, Folsom, CA and many more. Beautiful will be the first show to play the brand-new Steven Tanger Center for the Performing Arts in Greensboro, NC and will play return engagements in Greenville, SC, Tempe, AZ, Fort Worth, TX, Orlando, FL and more. The 2019-20 touring schedule is available here. Kennedy Caughell credits include: Natasha, Pierre, and the Great Comet of 1812 and the Broadway production of Beautiful- The Carole King Story. James D. Gish (Gerry Goffin) was part of the national tour of Les Misérables in the role of Feuilly. Kathryn Boswell was part of the Broadway productions of Anastasia and the recent revival of Gigi. Beautiful touring veteran James Michael Lambert will move from being a swing to playing Barry Man. Long before she was Carole King, chart-topping music legend, she was Carol Klein, Brooklyn girl with passion and chutzpah. She fought her way into the record business as a teenager and, by the time she reached her twenties, had the husband of her dreams and a flourishing career writing hits for the biggest acts in rock ‘n’ roll. But it wasn’t until her personal life began to crack that she finally managed to find her true voice. Beautiful tells the inspiring true story of King’s remarkable rise to stardom, from being part of a hit songwriting team with her husband Gerry Goffin, to her relationship with fellow writers and best friends Cynthia Weil and Barry Mann, to becoming one of the most successful solo acts in popular music history. Along the way, she made more than beautiful music, she wrote the soundtrack to a generation. Beautiful features a stunning array of beloved songs written by Gerry Goffin/Carole King and Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil, including “I Feel The Earth Move,” “One Fine Day,” “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman,” “You’ve Got A Friend” and the title song. The current Broadway production is scheduled to close October 27 at the Stephen Sondheim Theatre.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/4290
{"url": "https://tourstoyou.org/2019/08/09/beautiful-the-carole-king-musical-announces-full-casting-and-schedule-for-2019-2020-north-american-touring-season/amp/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "tourstoyou.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:08:02Z", "digest": "sha1:3A7RO42OC7IFUQG5R742VKKU3NEHWEOA"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3379, 3379.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3379, 3661.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3379, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3379, 18.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3379, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3379, 251.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3379, 0.26666667]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3379, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3379, 0.03734896]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3379, 0.02196997]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3379, 0.01830831]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3379, 0.01428048]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3379, 0.01391432]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3379, 0.05185185]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3379, 0.19703704]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3379, 0.59926471]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3379, 5.02022059]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3379, 5.33872163]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3379, 544.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 116, 0.0], [116, 131, 0.0], [131, 559, 1.0], [559, 934, 1.0], [934, 1154, 1.0], [1154, 1293, 1.0], [1293, 1747, 1.0], [1747, 2189, 1.0], [2189, 3282, 1.0], [3282, 3379, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 116, 0.0], [116, 131, 0.0], [131, 559, 0.0], [559, 934, 0.0], [934, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1293, 0.0], [1293, 1747, 0.0], [1747, 2189, 0.0], [2189, 3282, 0.0], [3282, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 116, 17.0], [116, 131, 2.0], [131, 559, 65.0], [559, 934, 60.0], [934, 1154, 31.0], [1154, 1293, 22.0], [1293, 1747, 72.0], [1747, 2189, 73.0], [2189, 3282, 187.0], [3282, 3379, 15.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 116, 0.07017544], [116, 131, 0.0], [131, 559, 0.00492611], [559, 934, 0.0], [934, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1293, 0.1119403], [1293, 1747, 0.03496503], [1747, 2189, 0.00928074], [2189, 3282, 0.0], [3282, 3379, 0.02083333]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 116, 0.0], [116, 131, 0.0], [131, 559, 0.0], [559, 934, 0.0], [934, 1154, 0.0], [1154, 1293, 0.0], [1293, 1747, 0.0], [1747, 2189, 0.0], [2189, 3282, 0.0], [3282, 3379, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 116, 0.76724138], [116, 131, 0.13333333], [131, 559, 0.11682243], [559, 934, 0.02933333], [934, 1154, 0.12272727], [1154, 1293, 0.02158273], [1293, 1747, 0.08810573], [1747, 2189, 0.07013575], [2189, 3282, 0.042086], [3282, 3379, 0.06185567]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3379, 0.63426989]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3379, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3379, 0.91784763]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3379, -178.50036554]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3379, 8.62514478]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3379, -22.32944651]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3379, 24.0]]}
S. Epatha Merkerson – Executive Producer, Co-Director Ms. Merkerson is best known for her portrayal of Lieutenant Anita Van Buren on NBC’s Law & Order (2006/2010/2011 NAACP Image Award). She received an Emmy, Golden Globe, SAG and Image Award for her performance as Nanny Crosby in the HBO movie Lackwanna Blues, and can be seen in Steven Spielberg's LINCOLN and in the comedy PEEPLES to be released May 2013. In theatre, Ms. Merkerson has received one Helen Hayes Award, two Obie Awards, two Lucille Lortel Award nominations, and two Tony Award nominations. She has appeared in numerous television movies, made guest appearances in a variety of television series as well as appearing as a regular on Peewee's Playhouse. Ms. Merkerson earned a BFA degree from Wayne State University where she was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in 2009. The Contradictions of Fair Hope is Ms. Merkerson first feature film project. Rockell Metcalf – Executive Producer, Co-Director, Writer Vice President and Chief Counsel at Amerprise Financial, Inc., where he concentrates on broker- dealer, marketing and banking law, Mr. Metcalf received his LL.M from Columbia Law School and his J.D. from William Mitchell College of Law, where he was Executive Editor of the Law Review. Mr. Metcalf served as federal clerk to Chief Judge U.W. Clemon in the Northern District of Alabama. He received his B.A., with distinction, from Talladega College. He is co-author of the "Practical Guide to Broker-Dealer Regulation", and he obtained a 2008 U.S. Patent for a "System and Method for Dividing a Remittance and Distributing a Portion of the Funds to Multiple Investment Products." Mr. Metcalf serves on the boards of Bird, Bonnette & Stauderman Worldwide, Inc. and Complexions Contemporary Ballet. The Contradictions of Fair Hope is Mr. Metcalf's first feature film project. Kelly Glover – Producer A graduate of the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana with a B.A. in Rhetoric, Kelly Glover is a freelance writer and has spent over a decade working on the production side of the television & film industry on such acclaimed series as Law & Order and fan-favorite The Rachael Ray Show. Kelly was a finalist in NBC Universal’s 2008 Writer’s on the Verge program and more recently, she served as a researcher and creating contestant questions for Discovery Science Channel’s game show Head Games! The Contradictions of Fair Hope is Ms. Glover first feature film project as Producer. Whoopi Goldberg – Narrator In 2002, Whoopi Goldberg became one of a very elite group of artists who have won the Grammy (“Whoopi Goldberg,” 1985), the Academy Award (“Ghost,” 1991), the Golden Globe (“The Color Purple,” 1985 and “Ghost,” 1991), the Emmy (as host of AMC’s “Beyond Tara: The Extraordinary Life of Hattie McDaniel,” 2002 and a Daytime Emmy for “The View” in 2009) and a Tony (Producer of “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” 2002). She is equally well-known for her humanitarian efforts on behalf of children, the homeless, human rights, education, substance abuse and the battle against AIDS, as well as many other causes and charities. Among her many charitable activities, Whoopi is a Goodwill Ambassador to the United Nations. Christian McBride – Composer Christian McBride, winner of the 2012 Grammy Award for his big band album, The Good Feeling, has continued to be an omnipresent force in the jazz world since his arrival in New York City in 1989 as a 17-year-old prodigy in saxophonist Bobby Watson's group, Horizon. Since then, he's appeared on close to 300 recordings as a sideman, easily making him one of the most recorded musicians of his generation. In 1998 McBride composed, “The Movement Revisited”, a four-movement suite dedicated to four of the major figures of the civil rights movement - Rosa Parks, Malcolm X, Muhammad Ali and the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commissioned by the Portland (ME) Arts Society and the National Endowment of the Arts the piece was expanded, re-written and re-vamped in 2008 and performed in Los Angeles at the Walt Disney Concert Hall. McBride has blazed a trail as a bandleader with the Christian McBride band and in 2009, released his quintet CD “Christian McBride and Inside Straight”. For over 20 years, McBride has appeared in numerous musical settings with just about any musician imaginable in the jazz as well as R&B and pop worlds. From playing with the likes of Milt Jackson, Roy Haynes, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, and Pat Metheny; to playing with and/or arranging for the likes of Isaac Hayes, Chaka Khan, Lalah Hathaway, Sting and the legendary James Brown. Christian McBride appears courtesy of Mack Records/The McBride Company Arielle Amsalem – Editor Arielle Amsalem is an Emmy Award winning editor of documentary films. Arielle started her career working on Spike Lee’s critically acclaimed documentary “When the Levees Broke” (2006). She has since been the editor of several feature documentaries including “By the People: The Election of Barack Obama” (2009) for which she won the Primetime Emmy for Picture Editing for Nonfiction Programming and “The Education of Dee Dee Ricks” (2011) recently shown by HBO. Arielle has also worked on television shows for MTV, the Food Network and the Travel Channel. Arielle is a graduate of NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts film program. Chris Scarafile – Director of Photography From feature narrative and documentary to aerial, underwater, and time lapse photography, Chris’s passions cover all aspects of cinematography. He shot "Gowanus, Brooklyn", the Grand Jury Prize-winning short at Sundance 2004, and has won several awards for his work on the festival circuit, including Best Cinematography for the feature "Black Days", effects-driven "Cycle", and urban drama "The Tested". In 2006, Chris signed on with Getty Images to represent his extensive library of nature and time lapse photography. He lives in Brooklyn.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/4473
{"url": "https://www.contradictionsoffairhope.com/bios.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.contradictionsoffairhope.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:42:47Z", "digest": "sha1:76L6KZRABMANE7KNFHT2ZD4EUXTDAIPT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5897, 5897.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5897, 6085.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5897, 32.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5897, 40.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5897, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5897, 120.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5897, 0.29620253]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5897, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5897, 0.0191458]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5897, 0.0191458]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5897, 0.01304439]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5897, 0.01157164]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5897, 0.00504944]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5897, 0.01451715]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5897, 0.02700422]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5897, 0.2]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5897, 0.51640212]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5897, 5.02962963]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5897, 5.56261015]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5897, 945.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 187, 1.0], [187, 410, 1.0], [410, 559, 1.0], [559, 721, 1.0], [721, 836, 1.0], [836, 913, 1.0], [913, 971, 0.0], [971, 1257, 1.0], [1257, 1421, 1.0], [1421, 1651, 0.0], [1651, 1768, 1.0], [1768, 1845, 1.0], [1845, 1869, 0.0], [1869, 2160, 1.0], [2160, 2369, 1.0], [2369, 2455, 1.0], [2455, 2482, 0.0], [2482, 3191, 1.0], [3191, 3220, 0.0], [3220, 3625, 1.0], [3625, 4055, 1.0], [4055, 4208, 1.0], [4208, 4591, 1.0], [4591, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4687, 0.0], [4687, 5149, 1.0], [5149, 5243, 1.0], [5243, 5313, 1.0], [5313, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5876, 1.0], [5876, 5897, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 187, 0.0], [187, 410, 0.0], [410, 559, 0.0], [559, 721, 0.0], [721, 836, 0.0], [836, 913, 0.0], [913, 971, 0.0], [971, 1257, 0.0], [1257, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 1651, 0.0], [1651, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1845, 0.0], [1845, 1869, 0.0], [1869, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2369, 0.0], [2369, 2455, 0.0], [2455, 2482, 0.0], [2482, 3191, 0.0], [3191, 3220, 0.0], [3220, 3625, 0.0], [3625, 4055, 0.0], [4055, 4208, 0.0], [4208, 4591, 0.0], [4591, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4687, 0.0], [4687, 5149, 0.0], [5149, 5243, 0.0], [5243, 5313, 0.0], [5313, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5876, 0.0], [5876, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 54, 7.0], [54, 187, 21.0], [187, 410, 40.0], [410, 559, 23.0], [559, 721, 26.0], [721, 836, 19.0], [836, 913, 12.0], [913, 971, 7.0], [971, 1257, 46.0], [1257, 1421, 26.0], [1421, 1651, 37.0], [1651, 1768, 16.0], [1768, 1845, 12.0], [1845, 1869, 4.0], [1869, 2160, 48.0], [2160, 2369, 33.0], [2369, 2455, 14.0], [2455, 2482, 4.0], [2482, 3191, 115.0], [3191, 3220, 4.0], [3220, 3625, 70.0], [3625, 4055, 70.0], [4055, 4208, 25.0], [4208, 4591, 65.0], [4591, 4662, 9.0], [4662, 4687, 4.0], [4687, 5149, 72.0], [5149, 5243, 16.0], [5243, 5313, 13.0], [5313, 5355, 6.0], [5355, 5876, 77.0], [5876, 5897, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 187, 0.09677419], [187, 410, 0.01843318], [410, 559, 0.0], [559, 721, 0.0], [721, 836, 0.03571429], [836, 913, 0.0], [913, 971, 0.0], [971, 1257, 0.0], [1257, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 1651, 0.01826484], [1651, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1845, 0.0], [1845, 1869, 0.0], [1869, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2369, 0.01941748], [2369, 2455, 0.0], [2455, 2482, 0.0], [2482, 3191, 0.04726736], [3191, 3220, 0.0], [3220, 3625, 0.03316327], [3625, 4055, 0.01937046], [4055, 4208, 0.02666667], [4208, 4591, 0.00542005], [4591, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4687, 0.0], [4687, 5149, 0.02660754], [5149, 5243, 0.0], [5243, 5313, 0.0], [5313, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5876, 0.01609658], [5876, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 187, 0.0], [187, 410, 0.0], [410, 559, 0.0], [559, 721, 0.0], [721, 836, 0.0], [836, 913, 0.0], [913, 971, 0.0], [971, 1257, 0.0], [1257, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 1651, 0.0], [1651, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1845, 0.0], [1845, 1869, 0.0], [1869, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2369, 0.0], [2369, 2455, 0.0], [2455, 2482, 0.0], [2482, 3191, 0.0], [3191, 3220, 0.0], [3220, 3625, 0.0], [3625, 4055, 0.0], [4055, 4208, 0.0], [4208, 4591, 0.0], [4591, 4662, 0.0], [4662, 4687, 0.0], [4687, 5149, 0.0], [5149, 5243, 0.0], [5243, 5313, 0.0], [5313, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5876, 0.0], [5876, 5897, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.12962963], [54, 187, 0.13533835], [187, 410, 0.14798206], [410, 559, 0.08724832], [559, 721, 0.01851852], [721, 836, 0.08695652], [836, 913, 0.07792208], [913, 971, 0.12068966], [971, 1257, 0.08741259], [1257, 1421, 0.09146341], [1421, 1651, 0.0826087], [1651, 1768, 0.08547009], [1768, 1845, 0.07792208], [1845, 1869, 0.125], [1869, 2160, 0.05498282], [2160, 2369, 0.05741627], [2369, 2455, 0.08139535], [2455, 2482, 0.11111111], [2482, 3191, 0.06629055], [3191, 3220, 0.13793103], [3220, 3625, 0.03703704], [3625, 4055, 0.07674419], [4055, 4208, 0.07843137], [4208, 4591, 0.06527415], [4591, 4662, 0.12676056], [4662, 4687, 0.12], [4687, 5149, 0.06709957], [5149, 5243, 0.08510638], [5243, 5313, 0.1], [5313, 5355, 0.0952381], [5355, 5876, 0.03838772], [5876, 5897, 0.0952381]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5897, 0.73237014]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5897, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5897, 0.97398412]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5897, -285.22716366]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5897, 43.13205296]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5897, 127.71464353]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5897, 58.0]]}
Unions Virtually Alone in Love with California High-Speed Rail Kevin Dayton by Kevin Dayton Even close observers of the California High-Speed Rail Authority have struggled to track developments for the state’s planned bullet train. The debacle began in November 2008, when 52.7% of California voters approved Proposition 1A and triggered serious planning for what could be the most expensive construction project in human history. With that kind of money at stake, unions were obviously inspired to be part of this boondoggle. The California High-Speed Rail Authority has become justly notorious for backroom deals, secretive administrative actions, and lack of transparency. But most Californians are at least vaguely aware that the project has been mismanaged and misrepresented. Proposition 1A – placed on the ballot by the California State Legislature – authorized the State of California to borrow $9.95 billion to begin design and construction of a $45 billion complete high-speed rail system linking San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diego, and Sacramento. Including interest payments, the Proposition 1A commitment was estimated to be $19.4 billion to $23.2 billion for bonds to be paid back over 30 years. According to Proposition 1A, that money borrowed by the state was supposed to be supplemented with significant funding from the federal government, private investors, and municipal governments. Proposition 1A also promised that the bullet train would be able to travel non-stop from San Francisco to Los Angeles in 2 hours, 40 minutes. Presumably many Californians who voted for it – including the 78.4% of San Francisco voters who approved it – imagined a fast train speeding between two world-class cities along the median of Interstate 5. They were wrong. Here’s the current appalling status of California High-Speed Rail: 1. The California High-Speed Rail Authority has spent $587 million on consultants as of September 30, 2013. The California State Treasurer has sold at least $703 million worth of bonds (Buy America Bonds and perhaps others) for California High-Speed Rail as of May 13, 2013. 2. The estimated cost has been dramatically revised. Instead of being $45 billion for the entire system, it is now $68 billion just for the line between San Francisco and Los Angeles, and the high-speed rail will be “blended” with other commuter rail lines at the beginning and end of the route. One group has estimated that the entire system may exceed $200 billion if bond interest is included and the federal government does not provide additional grants. 3. The California State Treasurer cannot sell the Proposition 1A state bonds because a judge determined in November 2013 that the California High-Speed Rail Authority failed to comply with the law. While the California High-Speed Rail Authority has already obtained $2,942,000,000 from the federal government, possibly under false pretenses of a commitment to matching funds, the Republican majority in the U.S. House of Representatives is intent on stopping further grants until the Authority gets its act together. No private investors have emerged – corporations want to GET money from the Authority through contracts, not give it money to be squandered. Cities in the San Joaquin Valley where the line will be built first have no money to invest in it – Fresno is nearly bankrupt. 4. Governor Jerry Brown desperately included $250 million in his 2014-15 budget for California High-Speed Rail to be obtained from “Cap and Trade” allowances paid by emitters of greenhouse gases as part of the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 (Assembly Bill 32 or AB 32). But the project is expected to increase greenhouse gas emissions during four years of initial construction. The Authority claims it will earn the Cap and Trade funds because offsets from its tree planting program (as well as other activities such as “cleaner school buses and water pumps in Central Valley communities”) will allow it to produce “zero net emissions.” 5. With the “blended” plan, there are serious challenges to achieving the 2 hour 40 minute travel time required in law. An analysis claiming that the time can be met includes the train going over the Tehachapi mountain range (north of Los Angeles) at 150+ miles per hour. There is idle talk about digging a long tunnel for the bullet train through the seismically-active San Gabriel Mountains from Palmdale to Los Angeles, but this is probably to lull citizens of Santa Clarita into believing the rail won’t go through their town. 6. To the surprise and confusion of hipster high-speed rail supporters in San Francisco and Los Angeles, this bullet train will be a local, with stops at least in Merced, Fresno, Hanford or Visalia, Bakersfield, and Palmdale. In June 2013, the Authority awarded a $970 million contract (with provisions for an additional $55 million) to Tutor Perini/Zachry/Parsons (a joint venture) to design and build the first 29-miles of the high-speed rail between Madera and Fresno by February 2018. People are supposed to be able to ride the high-speed rail between Merced and Palmdale by 2022. 7. The California High-Speed Rail Authority erred by awarding the first design-build contract for a 29-mile stretch that includes 25 miles in one segment assigned for environmental review (Merced to Fresno) and four miles in another segment assigned for a different environmental review (Fresno to Bakersfield). While it received full environmental clearance for the 25-mile stretch, it has not received clearance for the 4-mile stretch. In December 2013, the federal Surface Transportation Board rejected a secretive request from the Authority for an exemption to environmental review. If it can’t get the federal exemption, the Authority’s design-build contract is in jeopardy. 8. Owners of 370 parcels that the California High-Speed Rail Authority needs for the first 29-mile stretch are apparently resisting or holding out on selling their property. At last report in mid-December, the Authority had allegedly closed escrow on five parcels. The Authority has now received authorization from the California Public Works Board to possess two parcels through eminent domain. Based on these eight points alone, who would still be eager to proceed with this project besides Governor Jerry Brown, the corporations seeking contracts, and a scattering of citizens committed to various leftist causes related to urban planning and environmentalism? Unions. Union supporters at California High-Speed Rail Congressional field hearing in Madera on May 31, 2013. In a backroom deal, without any public deliberation or vote, the board of the California High-Speed Rail Authority negotiated and executed a Project Labor Agreement (called a “Community Benefit Agreement”) with the State Building and Construction Trades Council of California. This agreement gives unions a monopoly on construction trade work and certain construction-related professional services. In a January 16, 2013 email about the Project Labor Agreement to the former chairman of Fresno County Economic Opportunities Commission, the Small Business Advocate of the California High Speed Rail Authority stated the following: The Community Benefits Agreemeent (CBA) is an internal administrative document that was not necessarily intended to be circulated for public comment, however, that doesn’t mean you cannot provide me your input. The document was added to Construction Package #1 and Addendum 8 and I’ve attached it herein for your convenience. It includes regulatory compliance and is being reviewed by the Federal Rail (sic) Administration. There is no evidence available to show that the Federal Railroad Administration approved the Project Labor Agreement, as required by law. But the final version of the agreement was signed in August 2013. No board member or administrator of the California High-Speed Rail Authority has commented in a public meeting about the agreement that will give unions control of most of the claimed 100,000 job-years of employment over a five-year period. When State Senator Andy Vidak, with Congressman David Valadao, held a press conference critical of California High-Speed Rail on January 17, 2014 at the site of the eventually-to-be-demolished Fresno Rescue Mission, there were protesters: construction union leaders, lobbyists, public relations officials, and activists. The Fresno Bee reported this about the press conference: In a news release prior to the announcement, Vidak indicated that his goal is to kill the bullet train. He tempered his in-person remarks, however, as he faced a crowd that included both high-speed rail critics from his home area in Kings County and a couple dozen representatives of labor unions who support the project…Rail supporters, some clad in hard hats and safety vests, booed Vidak as they wielded their own signs proclaiming high-speed rail as “good for the local economy, good for air quality and good for jobs.” The Fresno Business Journal reported this about the press conference: Dillon Savory, an advocate representing several local unions, commented after the event that high-speed rail would not only provide needed jobs, but it would help improve the Valley’s air, which has been heavily polluted this winter. Also, the cost of roadwork in the area is about double the cost of high-speed rail, making road construction less cost effective, Savory said. Savory criticized the anti-high-speed rail forced for trying to pit rail against water. He said the greater issue is putting people back to work with decent paying jobs. He said many union workers are only finding temporary work for about two weeks at a time. That is not putting food on the table, he said. In 2013, Savory was the manager for the successful union-backed campaign to defeat a ballot measure (Measure G) supported by the Mayor of Fresno that would have allowed the city to outsource garbage collection. The political professionals are getting involved. When the groundbreaking ceremony occurs for California High-Speed Rail, perhaps in an abandoned Madera County cornfield seized through eminent domain by the Authority, expect thousands of construction union workers to be bused in to block and neutralize any protesters. Governor Brown cannot suffer any more embarrassment over this boondoggle and debacle. Bullet train path through Kings County farmland. California Streets and Highway Code Section 2704.09 (implemented by California voters in November 2008 as Proposition 1A, as authorized by Assembly Bill 3034 (Safe, Reliable High-Speed Passenger Train Bond Act for the 21st Century) Top-40 Donors to Campaign to Convince California Voters to Borrow $10 Billion to Start Building High-Speed Rail Election Results by County: Proposition 1A (2008) May 7, 2008 Senate Appropriations Committee legislative analysis for Assembly Bill 3034 (source of estimated costs of bonds, including interest payments) American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) High Speed Rail Awards July 2012 – California’s High-Speed Rail Realities: Briefly Assessing the Project’s Construction Cost, Debt Prospects, and Funding (“The Realistic – No Additional Federal Funding scenario results in a total debt burden of $203 billion between 201 3 and 2058.”) February 11, 2013 California High-Speed Rail Authority memo “Phase 1 Blended Travel Time” A Preliminary Timeline of Activity Concerning What Will Be $9.95 Billion Borrowed through Proposition 1A Bond Sales for California High-Speed Rail June 2013 – Contribution of the High-Speed Rail Program to Reducing California’s Greenhouse Gas Emission Levels (includes “plans to plant thousands of new trees across the Central Valley” and “cleaner school buses and water pumps in Central Valley communities”) November 15, 2013 – Project Update Report to the California State Legislature (source of report that $587 million was spent on consultants) November 25, 2013 California High Speed Rail Authority Bond Validation Lawsuit Ruling November 25, 2013 – Tos Fukuda Kings County v California High-Speed Rail Prop 1A Part 1 Ruling November 25, 2013 Tos Fukuda Kings County v California High-Speed Rail Prop 1A Part 2 Ruling California High-Speed Rail – Fresno to Bakersfield Surface Transportation Board Exemption Letters Project Labor Agreement (Community Benefits Agreement) for California High-Speed Rail – Addendum 8 in Bid Specifications – December 26, 2012 Project Labor Agreement (Community Benefits Agreement) for California High-Speed Rail – Final – August 13, 2013 February 27, 2013 Fresno County Economic Opportunities Commission Chairman Wonders Why No Input Into California High-Speed Rail Authority Project Labor Agreement Vidak Rails Against Bullet-Train Plan, Met by Bipartisan Crowd at Fresno Event – Fresno Bee – January 17, 2014 Vidak Calls for High-Speed Rail Revote – Fresno Business Journal – January 17, 2014 California High-Speed Rail Scam Past Articles in www.UnionWatch.org on Unions and California High-Speed Rail Unions Creep Closer to Monopolizing California High-Speed Rail Construction – December 6, 2012 Watch Union Official’s Rude Antics at California High-Speed Rail Conference – January 15, 2013 Unions Await Fantastic Return on High-Speed Rail Political Investments – January 22, 2013 Exposing the Plot Behind Project Labor Agreement for California Bullet Train – April 30, 2013 Unions Defend California High-Speed Rail Project at Congressional Hearing – June 4, 2013 California Construction Unions Circumvent Public Scrutiny of Project Labor Agreements – September 17, 2013 Kevin Dayton is the President & CEO of Labor Issues Solutions, LLC, and is the author of frequent postings about generally unreported California state and local policy issues at www.laborissuessolutions.com. Follow him on Twitter at @DaytonPubPolicy.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/5264
{"url": "https://californiapolicycenter.org/unions-virtually-alone-in-love-with-california-high-speed-rail/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "californiapolicycenter.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:51:37Z", "digest": "sha1:Y5FJJNAP7WSZWPLH4Z2BYE3YMU7YYUTX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 13840, 13840.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 13840, 14971.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 13840, 57.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 13840, 108.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 13840, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 13840, 236.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 13840, 0.28809616]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 13840, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 13840, 0.03285024]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 13840, 0.08651735]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 13840, 0.06587615]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 13840, 0.03285024]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 13840, 0.03285024]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 13840, 0.03285024]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 13840, 0.04909969]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 13840, 0.05858586]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 13840, 0.03091787]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 13840, 0.00853044]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 13840, 0.19503684]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 13840, 0.38385734]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 13840, 5.34256218]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 13840, 0.00077549]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 13840, 5.85230356]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 13840, 2131.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 76, 0.0], [76, 92, 0.0], [92, 527, 1.0], [527, 782, 1.0], [782, 1407, 1.0], [1407, 1772, 1.0], [1772, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 2114, 1.0], [2114, 2573, 1.0], [2573, 3358, 1.0], [3358, 4012, 1.0], [4012, 4543, 1.0], [4543, 5128, 1.0], [5128, 5808, 1.0], [5808, 6204, 1.0], [6204, 6480, 1.0], [6480, 6582, 1.0], [6582, 6981, 1.0], [6981, 7212, 0.0], [7212, 7636, 1.0], [7636, 8081, 1.0], [8081, 8459, 0.0], [8459, 8983, 1.0], [8983, 9053, 0.0], [9053, 9738, 1.0], [9738, 9999, 1.0], [9999, 10355, 1.0], [10355, 10404, 1.0], [10404, 10636, 0.0], [10636, 10748, 0.0], [10748, 10798, 0.0], [10798, 10952, 0.0], [10952, 11029, 0.0], [11029, 11290, 0.0], [11290, 11380, 1.0], [11380, 11527, 0.0], [11527, 11789, 0.0], [11789, 11929, 0.0], [11929, 12015, 0.0], [12015, 12110, 0.0], [12110, 12203, 0.0], [12203, 12301, 0.0], [12301, 12442, 0.0], [12442, 12554, 0.0], [12554, 12716, 0.0], [12716, 12827, 0.0], [12827, 12911, 0.0], [12911, 12943, 0.0], [12943, 13020, 0.0], [13020, 13115, 0.0], [13115, 13210, 0.0], [13210, 13300, 0.0], [13300, 13394, 0.0], [13394, 13483, 0.0], [13483, 13590, 0.0], [13590, 13840, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 76, 0.0], [76, 92, 0.0], [92, 527, 0.0], [527, 782, 0.0], [782, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1772, 0.0], [1772, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 2114, 0.0], [2114, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 4012, 0.0], [4012, 4543, 0.0], [4543, 5128, 0.0], [5128, 5808, 0.0], [5808, 6204, 0.0], [6204, 6480, 0.0], [6480, 6582, 0.0], [6582, 6981, 0.0], [6981, 7212, 0.0], [7212, 7636, 0.0], [7636, 8081, 0.0], [8081, 8459, 0.0], [8459, 8983, 0.0], [8983, 9053, 0.0], [9053, 9738, 0.0], [9738, 9999, 0.0], [9999, 10355, 0.0], [10355, 10404, 0.0], [10404, 10636, 0.0], [10636, 10748, 0.0], [10748, 10798, 0.0], [10798, 10952, 0.0], [10952, 11029, 0.0], [11029, 11290, 0.0], [11290, 11380, 0.0], [11380, 11527, 0.0], [11527, 11789, 0.0], [11789, 11929, 0.0], [11929, 12015, 0.0], [12015, 12110, 0.0], [12110, 12203, 0.0], [12203, 12301, 0.0], [12301, 12442, 0.0], [12442, 12554, 0.0], [12554, 12716, 0.0], [12716, 12827, 0.0], [12827, 12911, 0.0], [12911, 12943, 0.0], [12943, 13020, 0.0], [13020, 13115, 0.0], [13115, 13210, 0.0], [13210, 13300, 0.0], [13300, 13394, 0.0], [13394, 13483, 0.0], [13483, 13590, 0.0], [13590, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 63, 9.0], [63, 76, 2.0], [76, 92, 3.0], [92, 527, 67.0], [527, 782, 35.0], [782, 1407, 96.0], [1407, 1772, 62.0], [1772, 1839, 9.0], [1839, 2114, 45.0], [2114, 2573, 78.0], [2573, 3358, 125.0], [3358, 4012, 106.0], [4012, 4543, 91.0], [4543, 5128, 95.0], [5128, 5808, 100.0], [5808, 6204, 60.0], [6204, 6480, 41.0], [6480, 6582, 15.0], [6582, 6981, 55.0], [6981, 7212, 35.0], [7212, 7636, 64.0], [7636, 8081, 71.0], [8081, 8459, 52.0], [8459, 8983, 89.0], [8983, 9053, 10.0], [9053, 9738, 115.0], [9738, 9999, 40.0], [9999, 10355, 51.0], [10355, 10404, 7.0], [10404, 10636, 34.0], [10636, 10748, 17.0], [10748, 10798, 7.0], [10798, 10952, 21.0], [10952, 11029, 12.0], [11029, 11290, 39.0], [11290, 11380, 13.0], [11380, 11527, 21.0], [11527, 11789, 39.0], [11789, 11929, 22.0], [11929, 12015, 12.0], [12015, 12110, 17.0], [12110, 12203, 16.0], [12203, 12301, 12.0], [12301, 12442, 20.0], [12442, 12554, 16.0], [12554, 12716, 21.0], [12716, 12827, 19.0], [12827, 12911, 14.0], [12911, 12943, 4.0], [12943, 13020, 10.0], [13020, 13115, 13.0], [13115, 13210, 14.0], [13210, 13300, 13.0], [13300, 13394, 15.0], [13394, 13483, 13.0], [13483, 13590, 14.0], [13590, 13840, 35.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 76, 0.0], [76, 92, 0.0], [92, 527, 0.01877934], [527, 782, 0.0], [782, 1407, 0.02640264], [1407, 1772, 0.02247191], [1772, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 2114, 0.07224335], [2114, 2573, 0.01785714], [2573, 3358, 0.02083333], [3358, 4012, 0.02803738], [4012, 4543, 0.01346154], [4543, 5128, 0.03565062], [5128, 5808, 0.01815431], [5808, 6204, 0.01550388], [6204, 6480, 0.0], [6480, 6582, 0.06122449], [6582, 6981, 0.0], [6981, 7212, 0.02643172], [7212, 7636, 0.00484262], [7636, 8081, 0.02293578], [8081, 8459, 0.01652893], [8459, 8983, 0.0], [8983, 9053, 0.0], [9053, 9738, 0.0], [9738, 9999, 0.01574803], [9999, 10355, 0.0], [10355, 10404, 0.0], [10404, 10636, 0.07589286], [10636, 10748, 0.03703704], [10748, 10798, 0.10869565], [10798, 10952, 0.06040268], [10952, 11029, 0.05405405], [11029, 11290, 0.05952381], [11290, 11380, 0.08045977], [11380, 11527, 0.02797203], [11527, 11789, 0.01550388], [11789, 11929, 0.06666667], [11929, 12015, 0.07142857], [12015, 12110, 0.08695652], [12110, 12203, 0.08888889], [12203, 12301, 0.0], [12301, 12442, 0.05147059], [12442, 12554, 0.05607477], [12554, 12716, 0.03773585], [12716, 12827, 0.05607477], [12827, 12911, 0.07407407], [12911, 12943, 0.0], [12943, 13020, 0.0], [13020, 13115, 0.05434783], [13115, 13210, 0.06521739], [13210, 13300, 0.06896552], [13300, 13394, 0.06521739], [13394, 13483, 0.05813953], [13483, 13590, 0.05714286], [13590, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 76, 0.0], [76, 92, 0.0], [92, 527, 0.0], [527, 782, 0.0], [782, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1772, 0.0], [1772, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 2114, 0.0], [2114, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 4012, 0.0], [4012, 4543, 0.0], [4543, 5128, 0.0], [5128, 5808, 0.0], [5808, 6204, 0.0], [6204, 6480, 0.0], [6480, 6582, 0.0], [6582, 6981, 0.0], [6981, 7212, 0.0], [7212, 7636, 0.0], [7636, 8081, 0.0], [8081, 8459, 0.0], [8459, 8983, 0.0], [8983, 9053, 0.0], [9053, 9738, 0.0], [9738, 9999, 0.0], [9999, 10355, 0.0], [10355, 10404, 0.0], [10404, 10636, 0.0], [10636, 10748, 0.0], [10748, 10798, 0.0], [10798, 10952, 0.0], [10952, 11029, 0.0], [11029, 11290, 0.0], [11290, 11380, 0.0], [11380, 11527, 0.0], [11527, 11789, 0.0], [11789, 11929, 0.0], [11929, 12015, 0.0], [12015, 12110, 0.0], [12110, 12203, 0.0], [12203, 12301, 0.0], [12301, 12442, 0.0], [12442, 12554, 0.0], [12554, 12716, 0.0], [12716, 12827, 0.0], [12827, 12911, 0.0], [12911, 12943, 0.0], [12943, 13020, 0.0], [13020, 13115, 0.0], [13115, 13210, 0.0], [13210, 13300, 0.0], [13300, 13394, 0.0], [13394, 13483, 0.0], [13483, 13590, 0.0], [13590, 13840, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 63, 0.12698413], [63, 76, 0.15384615], [76, 92, 0.125], [92, 527, 0.02758621], [527, 782, 0.03137255], [782, 1407, 0.032], [1407, 1772, 0.03287671], [1772, 1839, 0.07462687], [1839, 2114, 0.06909091], [2114, 2573, 0.01525054], [2573, 3358, 0.0433121], [3358, 4012, 0.0382263], [4012, 4543, 0.02636535], [4543, 5128, 0.04102564], [5128, 5808, 0.02794118], [5808, 6204, 0.03787879], [6204, 6480, 0.01811594], [6480, 6582, 0.07843137], [6582, 6981, 0.04761905], [6981, 7212, 0.07792208], [7212, 7636, 0.03773585], [7636, 8081, 0.03370787], [8081, 8459, 0.05026455], [8459, 8983, 0.01335878], [8983, 9053, 0.05714286], [9053, 9738, 0.01313869], [9738, 9999, 0.02681992], [9999, 10355, 0.02808989], [10355, 10404, 0.06122449], [10404, 10636, 0.0862069], [10636, 10748, 0.11607143], [10748, 10798, 0.1], [10798, 10952, 0.03896104], [10952, 11029, 0.15584416], [11029, 11290, 0.07662835], [11290, 11380, 0.11111111], [11380, 11527, 0.12244898], [11527, 11789, 0.0610687], [11789, 11929, 0.05], [11929, 12015, 0.11627907], [12015, 12110, 0.13684211], [12110, 12203, 0.13978495], [12203, 12301, 0.1122449], [12301, 12442, 0.09929078], [12442, 12554, 0.10714286], [12554, 12716, 0.12345679], [12716, 12827, 0.12612613], [12827, 12911, 0.11904762], [12911, 12943, 0.15625], [12943, 13020, 0.11688312], [13020, 13115, 0.10526316], [13115, 13210, 0.11578947], [13210, 13300, 0.11111111], [13300, 13394, 0.10638298], [13394, 13483, 0.11235955], [13483, 13590, 0.09345794], [13590, 13840, 0.072]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 13840, 0.43149328]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 13840, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 13840, 0.68417287]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 13840, -1030.35292268]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 13840, -22.73731758]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 13840, -79.92846724]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 13840, 85.0]]}
MOBILE VERSION CALENDAR CARDS QUOTES & WISHES SUBSCRIBE CONTACT US HOLIDAY CALENDAR WIDGETS Remind me of calendar occasions ⌂ Calendar → October in 2020 → 24 → United Nations Day (UN Day) ← October 22 Events October 24 Events October 25 Events → United Nations Day (UN Day) Calendars of different countries: Norway, US Holidays Calendar topics: United Nations Holidays UN Day marks the anniversary of the entry into force in 1945 of the UN Charter. With the ratification of this founding document by the majority of its signatories, including the five permanent members of the Security Council, the United Nations officially came into being. 24 October has been celebrated as United Nations Day since 1948. In 1971, the United Nations General Assembly recommended that the day be observed by Member States as a public holiday (A/RES/168 (II) (A/RES/2782 (XXVI)). The United Nations (UN) is an intergovernmental organization to promote international co-operation. A replacement for the ineffective League of Nations, the organization was established on 24 October 1945 after World War II in order to prevent another such conflict. At its founding, the UN had 51 member states; there are now 193. The headquarters of the United Nations is in Manhattan, New York City, and experiences extraterritoriality. Further main offices are situated in Geneva, Nairobi and Vienna. The organization is financed by assessed and voluntary contributions from its member states. Its objectives include maintaining international peace and security, promoting human rights, fostering social and economic development, protecting the environment, and providing humanitarian aid in cases of famine, natural disaster, and armed conflict. During the Second World War, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt initiated talks on a successor agency to the League of Nations, and the United Nations Charter was drafted at a conference in April–June 1945; this charter took effect 24 October 1945, and the UN began operation. The UN’s mission to preserve world peace was complicated in its early decades by the Cold War between the US and Soviet Union and their respective allies. The organization participated in major actions in Korea and the Congo, as well as approving the creation of the state of Israel in 1947. The organization’s membership grew significantly following widespread decolonization in the 1960s, and by the 1970s its budget for economic and social development programmes far outstripped its spending on peacekeeping. After the end of the Cold War, the UN took on major military and peacekeeping missions across the world with varying degrees of success. The UN has six principal organs: the General Assembly (the main deliberative assembly); the Security Council (for deciding certain resolutions for peace and security); the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) (for promoting international economic and social co-operation and development); the Secretariat (for providing studies, information, and facilities needed by the UN); the International Court of Justice (the primary judicial organ); and the United Nations Trusteeship Council (inactive since 1994). UN System agencies include the World Bank Group, the World Health Organization, the World Food Programme, UNESCO, and UNICEF. The UN’s most prominent officer is the Secretary-General. Non-governmental organizations may be granted consultative status with ECOSOC and other agencies to participate in the UN’s work. Source: un.org | wikipedia.org Current United Nations Day (UN Day) in 2023, United Nations Day (UN Day) in 2024 see also: 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 calendar January February March April May June July August September October November December Free Holiday Calendar widgets for websites and blogs → Disarmament Week The annual observance of Disarmament Week, which begins on the anniversary of the founding of the United Nations, was called for in the Final Document of the General Asse..→ Remind me of this day British police officers carry a teddy bear in their cars to help comfort kids who are scared after an accident. That’s really awesome! If you’re a police officer in India..→ quotes & wishes → World Development Information Day The General Assembly in 1972 instituted World Development Information Day to draw the attention of world public opinion to development problems and the need to strengthen..→ Back to 2020 Calendar → Copyright © webplus.info
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/6020
{"url": "https://webplus.info/index.php?page=340&holiday=993&year=2020", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "webplus.info", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:13:33Z", "digest": "sha1:52SI3YXGMQD6II4ME3DYE4MUFCVIUOMN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4435, 4435.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4435, 4768.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4435, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4435, 40.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4435, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4435, 160.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4435, 0.2876377]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4435, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4435, 0.02479339]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4435, 0.02479339]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4435, 0.04655647]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4435, 0.03085399]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4435, 0.01983471]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4435, 0.05385557]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4435, 0.19461444]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4435, 0.47870778]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4435, 5.33039648]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4435, 5.12891822]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4435, 681.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 92, 0.0], [92, 124, 0.0], [124, 188, 0.0], [188, 208, 0.0], [208, 226, 0.0], [226, 246, 0.0], [246, 274, 0.0], [274, 328, 0.0], [328, 369, 0.0], [369, 642, 1.0], [642, 863, 1.0], [863, 1714, 1.0], [1714, 2640, 1.0], [2640, 3461, 1.0], [3461, 3492, 0.0], [3492, 3633, 0.0], [3633, 3662, 0.0], [3662, 3683, 0.0], [3683, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3762, 0.0], [3762, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 3791, 0.0], [3791, 3965, 0.0], [3965, 3987, 0.0], [3987, 4161, 0.0], [4161, 4179, 0.0], [4179, 4213, 0.0], [4213, 4387, 0.0], [4387, 4411, 0.0], [4411, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 92, 0.0], [92, 124, 0.0], [124, 188, 0.0], [188, 208, 0.0], [208, 226, 0.0], [226, 246, 0.0], [246, 274, 0.0], [274, 328, 0.0], [328, 369, 0.0], [369, 642, 0.0], [642, 863, 0.0], [863, 1714, 0.0], [1714, 2640, 0.0], [2640, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3492, 0.0], [3492, 3633, 0.0], [3633, 3662, 0.0], [3662, 3683, 0.0], [3683, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3762, 0.0], [3762, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 3791, 0.0], [3791, 3965, 0.0], [3965, 3987, 0.0], [3987, 4161, 0.0], [4161, 4179, 0.0], [4179, 4213, 0.0], [4213, 4387, 0.0], [4387, 4411, 0.0], [4411, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 46, 6.0], [46, 92, 6.0], [92, 124, 5.0], [124, 188, 14.0], [188, 208, 4.0], [208, 226, 3.0], [226, 246, 4.0], [246, 274, 5.0], [274, 328, 7.0], [328, 369, 5.0], [369, 642, 45.0], [642, 863, 35.0], [863, 1714, 122.0], [1714, 2640, 150.0], [2640, 3461, 114.0], [3461, 3492, 3.0], [3492, 3633, 25.0], [3633, 3662, 4.0], [3662, 3683, 4.0], [3683, 3719, 4.0], [3719, 3762, 6.0], [3762, 3774, 3.0], [3774, 3791, 2.0], [3791, 3965, 29.0], [3965, 3987, 5.0], [3987, 4161, 30.0], [4161, 4179, 3.0], [4179, 4213, 4.0], [4213, 4387, 26.0], [4387, 4411, 5.0], [4411, 4435, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 92, 0.0], [92, 124, 0.0], [124, 188, 0.09836066], [188, 208, 0.10526316], [208, 226, 0.11764706], [226, 246, 0.10526316], [246, 274, 0.0], [274, 328, 0.0], [328, 369, 0.0], [369, 642, 0.01492537], [642, 863, 0.08252427], [863, 1714, 0.01328502], [1714, 2640, 0.02412281], [2640, 3461, 0.00508259], [3461, 3492, 0.0], [3492, 3633, 0.28125], [3633, 3662, 0.0], [3662, 3683, 0.0], [3683, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3762, 0.0], [3762, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 3791, 0.0], [3791, 3965, 0.0], [3965, 3987, 0.0], [3987, 4161, 0.0], [4161, 4179, 0.0], [4179, 4213, 0.0], [4213, 4387, 0.02339181], [4387, 4411, 0.17391304], [4411, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 92, 0.0], [92, 124, 0.0], [124, 188, 0.0], [188, 208, 0.0], [208, 226, 0.0], [226, 246, 0.0], [246, 274, 0.0], [274, 328, 0.0], [328, 369, 0.0], [369, 642, 0.0], [642, 863, 0.0], [863, 1714, 0.0], [1714, 2640, 0.0], [2640, 3461, 0.0], [3461, 3492, 0.0], [3492, 3633, 0.0], [3633, 3662, 0.0], [3662, 3683, 0.0], [3683, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3762, 0.0], [3762, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 3791, 0.0], [3791, 3965, 0.0], [3965, 3987, 0.0], [3987, 4161, 0.0], [4161, 4179, 0.0], [4179, 4213, 0.0], [4213, 4387, 0.0], [4387, 4411, 0.0], [4411, 4435, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.82608696], [46, 92, 0.86956522], [92, 124, 0.03125], [124, 188, 0.125], [188, 208, 0.1], [208, 226, 0.11111111], [226, 246, 0.1], [246, 274, 0.21428571], [274, 328, 0.09259259], [328, 369, 0.09756098], [369, 642, 0.04029304], [642, 863, 0.11312217], [863, 1714, 0.03407756], [1714, 2640, 0.04211663], [2640, 3461, 0.07795371], [3461, 3492, 0.03225806], [3492, 3633, 0.09219858], [3633, 3662, 0.13793103], [3662, 3683, 0.19047619], [3683, 3719, 0.11111111], [3719, 3762, 0.06976744], [3762, 3774, 0.0], [3774, 3791, 0.11764706], [3791, 3965, 0.05172414], [3965, 3987, 0.04545455], [3987, 4161, 0.02298851], [4161, 4179, 0.0], [4179, 4213, 0.11764706], [4213, 4387, 0.04022989], [4387, 4411, 0.08333333], [4411, 4435, 0.04166667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4435, 0.33226722]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4435, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4435, 0.14124715]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4435, -266.79313645]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4435, 3.47515062]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4435, 117.73984328]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4435, 30.0]]}
Somag News Home Entertainment Frightened Rabbit Announced The Reissue of “Pedestrian Verse” for The 10th Anniversary Frightened Rabbit Announced The Reissue of “Pedestrian Verse” for The 10th Anniversary Adam Woods Frightened Rabbit has announced the release of their fourth studio album “Pedestrian Verse”, dedicated to the 10th anniversary. See below for details. Released back in 2013, produced by Leo Abrahams, the project hit the Scottish indie band in the top ten in the UK albums chart. NME gave the album four stars, calling it “life-affirming”. The ten-year reissue of “Pedestrian Verse” will be released on various vinyl records on March 17 via Atlantic label. In addition, fans will be able to purchase a reissue of the original lyrical notebook of the late vocalist Scott Hutchison since the creation of the record. The singer committed suicide in 2018. “Pedestrian Verse has always been the album we were most proud of as a band. It was written collectively, and I think it was the best and most mature example of Scott’s songwriting,” Frightened Rabbit said in a joint statement. “That’s why we wanted people to see his lyrical notes here and understand how he works on the song from beginning to end. We are immensely proud of this album and will be forever grateful for where it has taken us.” The group added: “Celebrate his 10th birthday with us and collect the drama. It’s appropriate to have a drink at a 10th anniversary party, right?!” “Pedestrian Verse” will be available in the following formats: 12-inch vinyl album “Pedestrian Verse” — all retailers (transparent vinyl) 12-inch vinyl album “Pedestrian Verse” — exclusively for indie (blue/black marble vinyl) 12-inch vinyl album “Pedestrian Verse” — exclusive for D2C (recycled vinyl) 7-inch vinyl singles of the tracks “The Woodpile”, “Backyard Skulls” and “Late March, Death March” are also available. In 2021, Hutchison’s family and staff collected the lyrics and illustrations of the late frontman for the first time in a book called The Work. The surviving members of Frightened Rabbit described it as “a tribute to Scott’s unrestrained creativity.” Last October, Frightened Rabbit celebrated World Mental Health Day (October 10) by reminding people to reach out and “talk to someone” if they feel overwhelmed or depressed. Tiny Changes, a charity set up in memory of Hutchison, also posted a message. “Trying to be an example” — Jaylen Brown on Why He Chose Kanye West’s Donda Sports As His Representative Real Madrid Enters The Fight to Sign Manchester United Target Harry Kane Toph Demonstrates His Incredible Earth Magic Skills in This Short Film “Avatar: The Last Airbender” by The Netflix Crew. Kate Middleton and Her Shamrock Story on St. Patrick’s Day The Famous Son of Liverpool Returned With a Double, But U18 Defeated 5-2 “I can’t wait to see them in full flight” — That’s Who Ryan Reynolds Is Rooting For at The Racetrack How Many Seasons of The TV Series “Below Deck”? Chelsea Held a Secret Transfer Meeting With Manchester United Player Romeo Lavia Bad Bunny and Devin Booker’s Quarrel Over Kendall Jenner Caused a Violent Reaction From Fans on Twitter Fred Again.., Skrillex and Four Tet Have Teamed Up to Record a New Track “Baby Again..” Somag News is an online international news platform that founded in 2019 with a dynamic news team.Our news team includes reporters that has a speciality in different fields from each other. Far Cry 6: DLC Brings Iconic Villain Vaas Next Week Ryan Gosling Responds after ‘hacking] The Internet’s Viral Barbie on the...
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/6550
{"url": "https://www.somagnews.com/frightened-rabbit-announced-the-reissue-of-pedestrian-verse-for-the-10th-anniversary/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.somagnews.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:25:27Z", "digest": "sha1:T3B2T6R2ROKUICUAILZILQNMKYKWNNOW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3553, 3553.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3553, 5191.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3553, 32.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3553, 119.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3553, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3553, 268.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3553, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3553, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3553, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3553, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3553, 0.28792135]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3553, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3553, 0.05167069]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3553, 0.09025146]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3553, 0.09025146]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3553, 0.07853944]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3553, 0.05167069]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3553, 0.05167069]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3553, 0.04684809]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3553, 0.03031347]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3553, 0.02686876]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3553, 0.01123596]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3553, 0.03125]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3553, 0.17837079]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3553, 0.59348199]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3553, 4.97941681]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3553, 0.00140449]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3553, 5.38187433]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3553, 583.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 11, 0.0], [11, 117, 0.0], [117, 204, 0.0], [204, 215, 0.0], [215, 366, 1.0], [366, 554, 1.0], [554, 671, 1.0], [671, 866, 1.0], [866, 1094, 1.0], [1094, 1310, 1.0], [1310, 1458, 1.0], [1458, 1521, 0.0], [1521, 1596, 0.0], [1596, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1761, 0.0], [1761, 1880, 1.0], [1880, 2024, 1.0], [2024, 2131, 1.0], [2131, 2383, 1.0], [2383, 2488, 0.0], [2488, 2561, 0.0], [2561, 2682, 1.0], [2682, 2741, 0.0], [2741, 2814, 0.0], [2814, 2915, 0.0], [2915, 2963, 1.0], [2963, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3148, 0.0], [3148, 3236, 1.0], [3236, 3426, 1.0], [3426, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3553, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 11, 0.0], [11, 117, 0.0], [117, 204, 0.0], [204, 215, 0.0], [215, 366, 0.0], [366, 554, 0.0], [554, 671, 0.0], [671, 866, 0.0], [866, 1094, 0.0], [1094, 1310, 0.0], [1310, 1458, 0.0], [1458, 1521, 0.0], [1521, 1596, 0.0], [1596, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1761, 0.0], [1761, 1880, 0.0], [1880, 2024, 0.0], [2024, 2131, 0.0], [2131, 2383, 0.0], [2383, 2488, 0.0], [2488, 2561, 0.0], [2561, 2682, 0.0], [2682, 2741, 0.0], [2741, 2814, 0.0], [2814, 2915, 0.0], [2915, 2963, 0.0], [2963, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3148, 0.0], [3148, 3236, 0.0], [3236, 3426, 0.0], [3426, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3553, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 11, 2.0], [11, 117, 14.0], [117, 204, 12.0], [204, 215, 2.0], [215, 366, 22.0], [366, 554, 33.0], [554, 671, 19.0], [671, 866, 33.0], [866, 1094, 40.0], [1094, 1310, 41.0], [1310, 1458, 25.0], [1458, 1521, 9.0], [1521, 1596, 10.0], [1596, 1685, 12.0], [1685, 1761, 11.0], [1761, 1880, 18.0], [1880, 2024, 25.0], [2024, 2131, 15.0], [2131, 2383, 41.0], [2383, 2488, 19.0], [2488, 2561, 12.0], [2561, 2682, 19.0], [2682, 2741, 10.0], [2741, 2814, 13.0], [2814, 2915, 20.0], [2915, 2963, 9.0], [2963, 3044, 12.0], [3044, 3148, 17.0], [3148, 3236, 16.0], [3236, 3426, 31.0], [3426, 3478, 10.0], [3478, 3553, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 11, 0.0], [11, 117, 0.01904762], [117, 204, 0.02325581], [204, 215, 0.0], [215, 366, 0.01360544], [366, 554, 0.02209945], [554, 671, 0.01754386], [671, 866, 0.02094241], [866, 1094, 0.0], [1094, 1310, 0.0], [1310, 1458, 0.02816901], [1458, 1521, 0.0], [1521, 1596, 0.02816901], [1596, 1685, 0.02380952], [1685, 1761, 0.04166667], [1761, 1880, 0.00877193], [1880, 2024, 0.02836879], [2024, 2131, 0.0], [2131, 2383, 0.00819672], [2383, 2488, 0.0], [2488, 2561, 0.0], [2561, 2682, 0.0], [2682, 2741, 0.0], [2741, 2814, 0.05714286], [2814, 2915, 0.0], [2915, 2963, 0.0], [2963, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3148, 0.0], [3148, 3236, 0.0], [3236, 3426, 0.02139037], [3426, 3478, 0.02], [3478, 3553, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 11, 0.0], [11, 117, 0.0], [117, 204, 0.0], [204, 215, 0.0], [215, 366, 0.0], [366, 554, 0.0], [554, 671, 0.0], [671, 866, 0.0], [866, 1094, 0.0], [1094, 1310, 0.0], [1310, 1458, 0.0], [1458, 1521, 0.0], [1521, 1596, 0.0], [1596, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1761, 0.0], [1761, 1880, 0.0], [1880, 2024, 0.0], [2024, 2131, 0.0], [2131, 2383, 0.0], [2383, 2488, 0.0], [2488, 2561, 0.0], [2561, 2682, 0.0], [2682, 2741, 0.0], [2741, 2814, 0.0], [2814, 2915, 0.0], [2915, 2963, 0.0], [2963, 3044, 0.0], [3044, 3148, 0.0], [3148, 3236, 0.0], [3236, 3426, 0.0], [3426, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3553, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 11, 0.18181818], [11, 117, 0.10377358], [117, 204, 0.10344828], [204, 215, 0.18181818], [215, 366, 0.03311258], [366, 554, 0.04787234], [554, 671, 0.04273504], [671, 866, 0.02051282], [866, 1094, 0.03070175], [1094, 1310, 0.00925926], [1310, 1458, 0.02027027], [1458, 1521, 0.03174603], [1521, 1596, 0.02666667], [1596, 1685, 0.02247191], [1685, 1761, 0.05263158], [1761, 1880, 0.06722689], [1880, 2024, 0.02777778], [2024, 2131, 0.03738318], [2131, 2383, 0.04761905], [2383, 2488, 0.12380952], [2488, 2561, 0.15068493], [2561, 2682, 0.14049587], [2682, 2741, 0.13559322], [2741, 2814, 0.1369863], [2814, 2915, 0.0990099], [2915, 2963, 0.1875], [2963, 3044, 0.13580247], [3044, 3148, 0.13461538], [3148, 3236, 0.14772727], [3236, 3426, 0.01578947], [3426, 3478, 0.21153846], [3478, 3553, 0.09333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3553, 0.27638704]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3553, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3553, 0.97575074]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3553, -335.7401201]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3553, 63.6575618]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3553, -151.89946564]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3553, 26.0]]}
MC 17 – Roberta Alexander and Jin Hwan Hyun *Roberta Alexander* Among the most compelling singing actresses of our time, the admired black American soprano, Roberta Alexander, enjoys international renown for her riveting, incisive characterizations, miraculous vocal and dramatic range. She was reared in a musical family. She studied at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor from 1969 to 1971, receiving M. Music in 1971, and with Herman Woltman at the Royal Conservatory of Music at The Hague. Roberta Alexander appeared as Pamina at the Houston Grand Opera in 1980, as Daphne in Santa Fe in 1981, and as Elettra in Idomeneo in Zürich in 1982. Following a tour of Europe, she made a successful debut at the Metropolitan Opera in New York as Zerlina in November 1983. Among the operatic heroines she has unforgettably portrayed are the title role of Janacek’s Jenufa (a Glyndebourne production), Mimì in Puccini’s La Bohème, and especially the great Mozart heroines: Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte, Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni and Vitellia in Mozart’s La Clemenza di Tito. In January 1999, Roberta Alexander sang concert performances of Jenufa, Act 2 with Sir Simon Rattle and the Philadelphia Orchestra, in Philadelphia and at New York’s Carnegie Hall. Other recent North American highlights includes a Washington, D.C. recital on the distinguished Vocal Arts Society series and Britten’s War Requiem with the Utah Symphony under its Music Director Keith Lockhart, both receiving rapturous critical acclaim. She has also performed with the Vienna, London and Royal Philharmonics; Royal Concertgebouw, Philadelphia, Cleveland and Bavarian Radio Orchestras; Cincinnati, Atlanta and Dallas Symphonies; and collaborated with such distinguished conductors as Vladimir Ashkenazy, Andrew Litton, Bernard Haitink, Sir Colin Davis, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, James Levine, Zubin Mehta, Carlo Maria Giulini, Leonard Slatkin, Jesus Lopez-Cobos, Edo De Waart and David Zinman. She recently reunited with Seiji Ozawa and the Boston Symphony Orchestra for Mendelssohn’s Midsummer Night’s Dream and Tchaikovsky’s Romeo & Juliet and the rapturously-received world premiere of Kirchner’s Of things exactly as they are. In addition she sang Copland’s In the Beginning with Michael Tilson Thomas conducting the San Francisco Symphony. An uncommonly communicative recitalist, Roberta Alexander has offered acclaimed programs at New York’s Carnegie Recital Hall, the Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, the Vienna Musikverein, London’s Wigmore Hall and the Amsterdam Concertgebouw. An especially ardent and persuasive interpreter of American masterworks, her latest recordings include Songs My Mother Taught Me and With You (the latter an anthology of Broadway songs). [“www.robertaalexander.com”:http://www.robertaalexander.com]
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/7857
{"url": "https://www.cultuur247.nl/mc-17-roberta-alexander-and-jin-hwan-hyun/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.cultuur247.nl", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:45:05Z", "digest": "sha1:5DDWNSOJ36LVPQUWZ6AT6DWDR5BBLOAT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2808, 2808.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2808, 3911.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2808, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2808, 95.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2808, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2808, 149.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2808, 0.25968992]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2808, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2808, 0.04125483]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2808, 0.00945423]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2808, 0.01633004]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2808, 0.00775194]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2808, 0.1879845]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2808, 0.63814181]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2808, 5.68948655]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2808, 5.1405834]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2808, 409.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 64, 0.0], [64, 498, 1.0], [498, 1513, 1.0], [1513, 2316, 1.0], [2316, 2748, 1.0], [2748, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 64, 0.0], [64, 498, 0.0], [498, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 2316, 0.0], [2316, 2748, 0.0], [2748, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 44, 9.0], [44, 64, 2.0], [64, 498, 68.0], [498, 1513, 161.0], [1513, 2316, 109.0], [2316, 2748, 59.0], [2748, 2808, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.04651163], [44, 64, 0.0], [64, 498, 0.02843602], [498, 1513, 0.02106319], [1513, 2316, 0.0], [2316, 2748, 0.0], [2748, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 64, 0.0], [64, 498, 0.0], [498, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 2316, 0.0], [2316, 2748, 0.0], [2748, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.15909091], [44, 64, 0.1], [64, 498, 0.0437788], [498, 1513, 0.07487685], [1513, 2316, 0.08592777], [2316, 2748, 0.06712963], [2748, 2808, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2808, 0.55575734]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2808, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2808, 0.88353205]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2808, -144.72929428]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2808, 2.8673657]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2808, 4.70343286]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2808, 21.0]]}
Dairy Foods & BeveragesDairy Processor NewsTop 100Sales Data Largest dairy processor Nestle tops annual Dairy 100 With Danone acquiring WhiteWave, the new dairy processing company lands at No. 4 on our 24th annual Dairy 100. This detailed dossier includes brands, products made and plant locations for the largest processors of fluid milk, ice cream, cheese, butter, cultured dairy products, dairy ingredients and other dairy-derived foods and beverages. By James Carper View the Dairy 100 The state of North America’s dairy industry is constantly in motion. Since our last report, dairies have been on an acquisition spree. And the deals kept happening even after we finished tabulating the 2016 revenues of the 100 largest dairy processing companies based in Canada, the United States and Mexico. The biggest deal in the last year was Danone’s purchase of WhiteWave. The new company, called DanoneWave, combines yogurt maker Dannon (last year ranked No. 15) with the organic milk and plant-based drinks maker WhiteWave (No. 14). The new company jumps to No. 4 on this year’s list. The top three spots in the Dairy 100 remained unchanged from last year. In order, they belong to Nestle USA, Dean Foods and Saputo. No. 5 is Kraft Heinz Co. (last year No. 13), No. 6 Schreiber Foods (No. 4), No. 7 Agropur (No. 5), No. 8 Dairy Farmers of America (No. 7), No. 9 Lactalis American Group (not listed) and No. 10 Land O’Lakes Inc. (No. 6). Half of the top 10 are U.S. companies, the others are owned by Canadians or have French or Swiss parents. One could make the case that Kraft Heinz is under foreign control because of the investment by 3G Capital, which has ties to Brazil. When Danone purchased WhiteWave, the yogurt maker acquired a portfolio of nondairy beverages, positioning the dairy processor for long-term success as sales of plant-based “milks” continue to climb. As part of an agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice, Danone had to sell its interest in Stonyfield organic yogurt (with $370 million in sales in 2016). Lactalis bought the business for $875 million in July. Dean Foods acquired an organic juice company called Uncle Matt’s Organic in late June. That deal came with two benefits: it gives the milk processor access to customers for nondairy beverages, and it allows the dairy company to play in the growing organic foods space. It’s a move other fluid milk processors might want to emulate. No. 15 Prairie Farms, the Midwest dairy cooperative known for its milk and ice cream brands, positioned itself for growth by acquiring Swiss Valley Farms, a co-op based in Iowa (and ranked No. 60 last year). The deal gives Prairie Farms access to cheese, a dairy category it was lacking. Swiss Valley Farms brings to the table a wide variety of cheese products and dairy ingredients, not to mention an established list of export customers. (Swiss Valley Farms was the 2016 Tom Camerlo Exporter of the Year. Chris Hoeger, former CEO of Swiss Valley, is now president of the newly formed Prairie Farms Cheese Division.) Prairie Farms CEO Ed Mullins said in a statement, “Consumption of fluid milk, our core product, has been declining for years, while cheese consumption has increased nearly 150% since 1975. The complementary nature of Swiss Valley’s product line will help counter this major shift. At the same time, Swiss Valley is looking to grow their export business, and with the merger, they will gain access to many Prairie Farms products, such as extended shelf life milk and cream,” he added. This year Parmalat, an Italian firm controlled by French giant Lactalis (parent to a New York-based subsidiary), acquired Karoun Dairies, a maker of ethnic cheeses and cultured dairy products based in the Los Angeles area, along with its processing plant in Turlock, Calif. (See our March 2014 and March 2015 issues.) Hochland, another European-based dairy, acquired cream cheese maker Franklin Foods. Franklin, with processing plants in Arizona and Vermont, fell just outside the Dairy 100. How we compiled the list Dairy Foods compiled the list by soliciting information from company officers. For some publicly held companies, we turned to their annual reports and filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. We drew upon a number of other sources, including the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service, the Federal Drug Administration’s Interstate Milk Shippers list, the AtoZ Databases, ReferenceUSA, Forbes and other published reports. Some companies provided estimates of their annual revenues. Dairy Foods estimated revenues for other dairy processors if we believed they were large enough. An asterisk next to a revenue figure denotes an estimate. The online version of this report includes links to company websites and, for publicly held corporations, links to annual reports and other financial data. Go to www.dairyfoods.com to find links to previous Dairy 100 rankings. Partnerships among the Dairy 100 The past year saw a penchant for partnering. Dairy Farmers of America is teaming up with No. 86 Arla Foods USA. DFA will make Cheddar cheese in a plant it’s building in western New York and Arla will be responsible for selling it under its own brands. In January, No. 23 Irish dairy giant Glanbia plc said it is in “advanced discussions” to create a stand-alone joint venture to build and operate a cheese and whey production facility in Michigan. Glanbia would own 50% of the joint venture, with the remainder held by Dairy Farmers of America, No. 28 Foremost Farms USA and No. 68 Michigan Milk Producers Association. The plant is projected to process 8 million pounds (3.6 million liters) of milk daily. DFA, MMPA and Foremost Farms would supply all milk. Though based in North America, some of the Dairy 100 work abroad, and their investments in property, plant and equipment continued unabated. Last year Schreiber opened a new facility in Mexico and Schreiber Dynamix launched the second aseptic food processing and packaging manufacturing facility in Fazilka, India. The facility will help consolidate the company’s position further in the fast growing aseptic beverages and cheese market. Back in the United States, Foremost Farms expanded its cheese-shredding operations and drying capacities to serve its human and animal feed customers. In June, No. 22 HP Hood bought a yogurt plant in New York from DFA, which had acquired it from Muller-Quaker, the original owners. Hood plans to outfit the facility to make beverages. No. 47 Milk Specialties Global acquired a whey protein manufacturing facility in Monroe, Wis. No. 55 Winona Foods is building a re-distribution and cheese converting facility with direct rail access. The company said the facility will help it grow foodservice, chain account and specialty cheese business. Construction is estimated at $30 million and projected to generate 120 jobs. The facility will be built on a 22-acre site in Howard, Wis. Sustainability is built-in The Dairy 100’s construction projects incorporate features supporting sustainable buildings and dairy processing. For example, Schreiber’s plant in Mexico has solar panels and there is the potential to harness wind energy. No. 21 Darigold is making more drinking water available in Lynden, Wash., where it has a plant. Water left over from Darigold’s powdered milk production process is piped to a point where Lynden draws in water from the Nooksack River. The city sends the water to a treatment plant to produce water for domestic use. The project is funded by a grant from the Washington state legislature. In April, Dairy Farmers of America joined Walmart in the retailer’s Project Gigaton, which aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by one gigaton by 2030. Awards and anniversaries North America’s top dairies were recognized for their product quality. For example, No. 41 Emmi Roth took home all three awards in the Smear Ripened Hard Cheese category at the 2017 United States Championship Cheese Contest. At the World Cheese Awards in Spain the cheesemaker earned 14 awards. Seattle-based Darigold moved its corporate headquarters to the city’s Georgetown neighborhood. Nestle USA made a big move, relocating its headquarters from Glendale, Calif., to Arlington, Va. No. 84 Clover Sonoma is the new name for the former Clover Stornetta. The dairy wanted to play up its association with Sonoma County, known for its vineyards and high-quality foods. Finally, No. 94 Schwan’s Co. is celebrating its 65th anniversary this year. The company was founded on March 18, 1952, when 23-year-old Marvin Schwan loaded up 14 gallons of ice cream from the family dairy into a Dodge panel van and began selling it to customers in rural Minnesota. Today, Schwan’s has national distribution of its pizzas (including Red Baron, Tony’s, Bon Appétit and Freschetta pizza), desserts (Mrs. Smith’s and Edwards) and other frozen foods. No doubt there will be more mergers and acquisitions before the year is out. But for now, this 24th annual report of North America’s largest dairy processors renders the best image of the dairy processing industry. KEYWORDS: Dairy 100 dairy processors Jim Carper is the former editor-in-chief of Dairy Foods. Dean, Nestle, Saputo retain top spots on the Dairy 100 Nestlé USA takes the top spot on the Dairy 100 Nestle, Dean, Saputo are North America’s largest dairies
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/7864
{"url": "https://www.dairyfoods.com/articles/92388-largest-dairy-processor-nestle-tops-annual-dairy-100", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.dairyfoods.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:27:23Z", "digest": "sha1:2DE6767MIFTO324VH4DZGHOLEMTIYLV3"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 9379, 9379.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 9379, 14242.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 9379, 40.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 9379, 202.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 9379, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 9379, 287.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 9379, 0.2893319]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 9379, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 9379, 0.0060622]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 9379, 0.01265156]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 9379, 0.0101476]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 9379, 0.01107011]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 9379, 0.01239224]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 9379, 0.19073276]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 9379, 0.4314888]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 9379, 4.99868248]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 9379, 5.73487443]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 9379, 1518.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 114, 0.0], [114, 455, 1.0], [455, 471, 0.0], [471, 490, 0.0], [490, 799, 1.0], [799, 1083, 1.0], [1083, 1435, 1.0], [1435, 1674, 1.0], [1674, 2088, 1.0], [2088, 2420, 1.0], [2420, 3038, 0.0], [3038, 3522, 1.0], [3522, 3840, 0.0], [3840, 4014, 1.0], [4014, 4039, 0.0], [4039, 4512, 1.0], [4512, 4727, 1.0], [4727, 4954, 1.0], [4954, 4987, 0.0], [4987, 5239, 1.0], [5239, 5745, 1.0], [5745, 6183, 1.0], [6183, 6612, 1.0], [6612, 6962, 1.0], [6962, 6989, 0.0], [6989, 7212, 1.0], [7212, 7599, 1.0], [7599, 7754, 1.0], [7754, 7779, 0.0], [7779, 8074, 1.0], [8074, 8266, 1.0], [8266, 8448, 1.0], [8448, 8912, 1.0], [8912, 9127, 1.0], [9127, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9221, 1.0], [9221, 9276, 0.0], [9276, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 114, 0.0], [114, 455, 0.0], [455, 471, 0.0], [471, 490, 0.0], [490, 799, 0.0], [799, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1435, 0.0], [1435, 1674, 0.0], [1674, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2420, 0.0], [2420, 3038, 0.0], [3038, 3522, 0.0], [3522, 3840, 0.0], [3840, 4014, 0.0], [4014, 4039, 0.0], [4039, 4512, 0.0], [4512, 4727, 0.0], [4727, 4954, 0.0], [4954, 4987, 0.0], [4987, 5239, 0.0], [5239, 5745, 0.0], [5745, 6183, 0.0], [6183, 6612, 0.0], [6612, 6962, 0.0], [6962, 6989, 0.0], [6989, 7212, 0.0], [7212, 7599, 0.0], [7599, 7754, 0.0], [7754, 7779, 0.0], [7779, 8074, 0.0], [8074, 8266, 0.0], [8266, 8448, 0.0], [8448, 8912, 0.0], [8912, 9127, 0.0], [9127, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9276, 0.0], [9276, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 7.0], [61, 114, 8.0], [114, 455, 51.0], [455, 471, 3.0], [471, 490, 4.0], [490, 799, 50.0], [799, 1083, 48.0], [1083, 1435, 68.0], [1435, 1674, 44.0], [1674, 2088, 65.0], [2088, 2420, 56.0], [2420, 3038, 105.0], [3038, 3522, 80.0], [3522, 3840, 51.0], [3840, 4014, 24.0], [4014, 4039, 5.0], [4039, 4512, 66.0], [4512, 4727, 33.0], [4727, 4954, 35.0], [4954, 4987, 5.0], [4987, 5239, 47.0], [5239, 5745, 86.0], [5745, 6183, 65.0], [6183, 6612, 69.0], [6612, 6962, 56.0], [6962, 6989, 3.0], [6989, 7212, 31.0], [7212, 7599, 67.0], [7599, 7754, 25.0], [7754, 7779, 3.0], [7779, 8074, 48.0], [8074, 8266, 26.0], [8266, 8448, 31.0], [8448, 8912, 75.0], [8912, 9127, 36.0], [9127, 9164, 5.0], [9164, 9221, 9.0], [9221, 9276, 10.0], [9276, 9323, 10.0], [9323, 9379, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.05172414], [61, 114, 0.05769231], [114, 455, 0.01823708], [455, 471, 0.0], [471, 490, 0.16666667], [490, 799, 0.02310231], [799, 1083, 0.01851852], [1083, 1435, 0.05047319], [1435, 1674, 0.01293103], [1674, 2088, 0.02506266], [2088, 2420, 0.0], [2420, 3038, 0.01337793], [3038, 3522, 0.01489362], [3522, 3840, 0.02622951], [3840, 4014, 0.01807229], [4014, 4039, 0.0], [4039, 4512, 0.0], [4512, 4727, 0.0], [4727, 4954, 0.01363636], [4954, 4987, 0.09375], [4987, 5239, 0.00809717], [5239, 5745, 0.02249489], [5745, 6183, 0.00697674], [6183, 6612, 0.00963855], [6612, 6962, 0.02654867], [6962, 6989, 0.0], [6989, 7212, 0.01369863], [7212, 7599, 0.00529101], [7599, 7754, 0.02649007], [7754, 7779, 0.0], [7779, 8074, 0.02768166], [8074, 8266, 0.0], [8266, 8448, 0.01136364], [8448, 8912, 0.03146067], [8912, 9127, 0.00947867], [9127, 9164, 0.08571429], [9164, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9276, 0.05769231], [9276, 9323, 0.06382979], [9323, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 114, 0.0], [114, 455, 0.0], [455, 471, 0.0], [471, 490, 0.0], [490, 799, 0.0], [799, 1083, 0.0], [1083, 1435, 0.0], [1435, 1674, 0.0], [1674, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2420, 0.0], [2420, 3038, 0.0], [3038, 3522, 0.0], [3522, 3840, 0.0], [3840, 4014, 0.0], [4014, 4039, 0.0], [4039, 4512, 0.0], [4512, 4727, 0.0], [4727, 4954, 0.0], [4954, 4987, 0.0], [4987, 5239, 0.0], [5239, 5745, 0.0], [5745, 6183, 0.0], [6183, 6612, 0.0], [6612, 6962, 0.0], [6962, 6989, 0.0], [6989, 7212, 0.0], [7212, 7599, 0.0], [7599, 7754, 0.0], [7754, 7779, 0.0], [7779, 8074, 0.0], [8074, 8266, 0.0], [8266, 8448, 0.0], [8448, 8912, 0.0], [8912, 9127, 0.0], [9127, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9276, 0.0], [9276, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9379, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.14754098], [61, 114, 0.05660377], [114, 455, 0.02052786], [455, 471, 0.1875], [471, 490, 0.10526316], [490, 799, 0.02912621], [799, 1083, 0.04929577], [1083, 1435, 0.10511364], [1435, 1674, 0.05020921], [1674, 2088, 0.03140097], [2088, 2420, 0.02409639], [2420, 3038, 0.05339806], [3038, 3522, 0.03305785], [3522, 3840, 0.05031447], [3840, 4014, 0.04597701], [4014, 4039, 0.04], [4039, 4512, 0.06553911], [4512, 4727, 0.01860465], [4727, 4954, 0.01321586], [4954, 4987, 0.06060606], [4987, 5239, 0.06746032], [5239, 5745, 0.06126482], [5745, 6183, 0.02739726], [6183, 6612, 0.05827506], [6612, 6962, 0.02285714], [6962, 6989, 0.03703704], [6989, 7212, 0.02242152], [7212, 7599, 0.03100775], [7599, 7754, 0.0516129], [7754, 7779, 0.04], [7779, 8074, 0.06779661], [8074, 8266, 0.05729167], [8266, 8448, 0.04395604], [8448, 8912, 0.04525862], [8912, 9127, 0.01860465], [9127, 9164, 0.24324324], [9164, 9221, 0.07017544], [9221, 9276, 0.07272727], [9276, 9323, 0.10638298], [9323, 9379, 0.08928571]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 9379, 0.7766121]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 9379, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 9379, 0.9297604]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 9379, -603.81605664]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 9379, 68.80681606]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 9379, -7.66349063]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 9379, 123.0]]}
By David B. Rivkin, Jr. February 27, 2023, in the Wall Street Journal Your editorial “Putin Buries Nuclear Arms Control” (Feb. 22) correctly discounts the significance of Vladimir Putin’s withdrawal from the New Start Treaty, explaining that nuclear deterrence is buttressed by U.S. nuclear force deployments and not by arms-control treaties, particularly given Moscow’s frequent noncompliance. Given America’s demanding extended deterrence commitments to defend numerous allies from conventional and nuclear attacks, however, Washington should take several additional deterrence-enhancing steps. First, deterrence is bolstered by a nuclear-use policy, targeting enemy assets based on the enemy’s own values and weaknesses. This is why the U.S. moved from a “assured mutual destruction” policy, targeting Soviet cities in the 1960s, toward hitting the Soviets where it mattered to them the most. The final iteration of this strategy, adopted during Jimmy Carter’s presidency, targeted Communist Party headquarters and railways linking European Russia with Siberia. Given Mr. Putin’s highly personalized regime, the U.S. contingency plan should be to target Russian leaders and their close associates, as well as the key transportation facilities connecting Russia proper with restive Muslim and Asian regions. Second, robust U.S. declaratory policy, describing how we view nuclear weapons, enhances deterrence. Unfortunately, visions of a nuke-free world have been overly embraced by numerous administrations of both parties. Given Russia’s embrace of its ability to prevail in a nuclear war, the U.S. must give up on nuclear abolitionism and refocus on a credible nuclear war-fighting strategy. Today’s challenges require the U.S. to re-emphasize the first-use policy (already embraced by Russian military doctrine) and stress that a properly prosecuted nuclear war can be won. We need to respond robustly to Mr. Putin’s nuclear taunts, stating that any use of Russian nuclear weapons against Ukraine would so malignantly change the post-World War II global security environment that it would be met by a vigorous U.S. response. Facilitating Russian defeat in Ukraine would also discourage Beijing’s attack on Taiwan. China is rapidly building its nuclear forces but won’t approach nuclear parity with the U.S. until 2030 at the earliest (it’s during these years that U.S. conventional force vulnerabilities in any conflict with China loom largest.) Discounting Mr. Putin’s nuclear threats, abandoning self-deterrence and returning the U.S. to a muscular nuclear policy would bolster deterrence of Beijing, too. Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/new-us-nuclear-weapons-deterrence-russia-china-643649ab The Iran Deal Violates U.S. Law Obama let Tehran get into the medical-isotope business, contrary to the intent of Congress. By David B. Rivkin Jr. and James L. Connaughton Oct. 12, 2017, in the Wall Street Journal As President Trump decides whether to certify his predecessor’s nuclear deal with Iran, here’s another wrinkle he should keep in mind: The deal’s implementation violates federal law, namely the American Medical Isotopes Production Act of 2012. That statute seeks to end the nuclear-proliferation risk associated with foreign production of radioactive substances for medical use using weapons-grade highly enriched uranium. U.S. doctors use a molybdenum isotope, moly-99, in 20 million procedures annually to detect early cancer, heart disease and other lethal illnesses. But the U.S. has no domestic production capability, relying instead on foreign suppliers who obtain the necessary highly enriched uranium from the U.S. government. In enacting the 2012 law, Congress sought to end exports of highly enriched uranium while ramping up sufficient domestic production of moly-99 to satisfy U.S. needs. Since America uses roughly half of the world’s moly-99, robust U.S. production would cramp the ability of foreign isotope suppliers to control the market and sell their wares globally. Under the 2012 law, the National Nuclear Security Administration is supposed to implement programs to encourage U.S. entrepreneurs to develop ways of making moly-99 without using highly enriched uranium, with the goal of making enough of it to justify permanently ending U.S. exports of highly enriched uranium. The Obama administration conspicuously failed to fulfill the law’s requirements. Moly-99 is not being produced in the U.S. and the U.S. government continues to export weapons-grade uranium overseas. The Iran deal makes matters worse. It specifically permits Tehran an unlimited right to generate highly enriched uranium for use in medical isotope production. Iran is free to join with other producers to control supply and price. Earlier this year Ali Akbar Salehi, Iran’s former lead nuclear negotiator and now head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, declared Iran’s intention to become a major supplier of medical isotopes. Most significantly, the Iran deal’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action commits the U.S. and other parties to assist Iranian medical isotope development with technology transfer, project finance, export credits and other forms of investment. The European Union has established a joint nuclear cooperation working group with Iran. The U.S. cannot in good faith implement these obligations without evading its obligation under the American Medical Isotopes Production Act to curtail such foreign medical isotope production. Under U.S. law, there is no question which obligation prevails. The Obama administration, knowing the Senate would never ratify the JCPOA as a treaty, made it an “executive agreement” instead. Such agreements can have the force of law, but under our Constitution the president cannot unilaterally repeal a statute. It’s another reason the administration should declare the Iran deal null and void. Mr. Rivkin, a Washington-based constitutional lawyer, served at the Justice Department and White House Counsel’s Office in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations. Mr. Connaughton served as chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, 2001-09. Source: https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-iran-deal-violates-u-s-law-1507847288 How Congress Can Use Its Leverage on Iran By DAVID B. RIVKIN JR. And LEE A. CASEY, Jan. 20, 2015 Nuclear talks between Iran and the U.S. recommenced Jan. 14, ahead of full international talks with senior officials from the U.S., U.K., France, Russia, China and Germany two days later. A final agreement is to be reached no later than June 30. Nothing less than Middle Eastern and global security hangs in the balance. That security depends on verifiable elimination of Iran’s nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs. Unfortunately, the Obama administration is likely to accept a deal leaving in place a substantial Iranian nuclear-weapons infrastructure, including uranium-enrichment capability, long-range ballistic missiles and the ability to deploy a rudimentary nuclear force on short notice. A course correction that only Congress can effect is urgently needed. It is difficult for Congress to stop a president determined to sign an agreement with foreign leaders. And as this newspaper pointed out in a recent editorial, President Obama has threatened to veto any legislation to impose further sanctions on Iran if the June 30 deadline is not met. Still, Tehran’s insistence that existing U.S. sanctions be lifted as part of a nuclear-weapons agreement gives U.S. lawmakers substantial leverage. The collapse of oil prices, which dealt a heavy blow to the already weakened Iranian economy, has further increased this leverage. Here is what Congress should do: First, Congress should insist that any Iranian agreement take the form of a treaty. The Constitution requires that treaties be made only with the advice and consent of the Senate. At the time it was adopted, and throughout most of U.S. history, agreements fundamentally ordering the relationship between the U.S. and foreign nations took the form of treaties, not executive orders. A mere executive agreement, which Mr. Obama may use to evade congressional constraints here, would be constitutionally insufficient. Read more »
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/8359
{"url": "http://davidbrivkin.com/tag/nuclear-policy/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "davidbrivkin.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:03:23Z", "digest": "sha1:JAKXG25ZBHBYCI77EB2HATKDXPA3POA5"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8218, 8218.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8218, 10107.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8218, 26.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8218, 112.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8218, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8218, 232.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8218, 0.29195259]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8218, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8218, 0.03498369]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8218, 0.01719538]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8218, 0.0111177]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8218, 0.01867773]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8218, 0.00622591]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8218, 0.04803493]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8218, 0.19401123]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8218, 0.49338843]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8218, 5.57520661]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8218, 5.73342582]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8218, 1210.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 24, 1.0], [24, 70, 0.0], [70, 597, 1.0], [597, 1310, 1.0], [1310, 1696, 1.0], [1696, 2130, 1.0], [2130, 2613, 1.0], [2613, 2706, 0.0], [2706, 2738, 0.0], [2738, 2830, 1.0], [2830, 2878, 0.0], [2878, 2920, 0.0], [2920, 3164, 1.0], [3164, 3655, 1.0], [3655, 4006, 1.0], [4006, 4517, 1.0], [4517, 5281, 1.0], [5281, 5871, 1.0], [5871, 6140, 1.0], [6140, 6219, 0.0], [6219, 6261, 0.0], [6261, 6316, 0.0], [6316, 6637, 1.0], [6637, 7093, 1.0], [7093, 7692, 0.0], [7692, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 70, 0.0], [70, 597, 0.0], [597, 1310, 0.0], [1310, 1696, 0.0], [1696, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 2706, 0.0], [2706, 2738, 0.0], [2738, 2830, 0.0], [2830, 2878, 0.0], [2878, 2920, 0.0], [2920, 3164, 0.0], [3164, 3655, 0.0], [3655, 4006, 0.0], [4006, 4517, 0.0], [4517, 5281, 0.0], [5281, 5871, 0.0], [5871, 6140, 0.0], [6140, 6219, 0.0], [6219, 6261, 0.0], [6261, 6316, 0.0], [6316, 6637, 0.0], [6637, 7093, 0.0], [7093, 7692, 0.0], [7692, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 24, 5.0], [24, 70, 8.0], [70, 597, 66.0], [597, 1310, 106.0], [1310, 1696, 57.0], [1696, 2130, 68.0], [2130, 2613, 70.0], [2613, 2706, 2.0], [2706, 2738, 6.0], [2738, 2830, 14.0], [2830, 2878, 9.0], [2878, 2920, 8.0], [2920, 3164, 36.0], [3164, 3655, 69.0], [3655, 4006, 55.0], [4006, 4517, 75.0], [4517, 5281, 116.0], [5281, 5871, 89.0], [5871, 6140, 38.0], [6140, 6219, 2.0], [6219, 6261, 8.0], [6261, 6316, 12.0], [6316, 6637, 54.0], [6637, 7093, 59.0], [7093, 7692, 96.0], [7692, 8218, 82.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 70, 0.13953488], [70, 597, 0.00389864], [597, 1310, 0.00576369], [1310, 1696, 0.0], [1696, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2613, 0.00856531], [2613, 2706, 0.07792208], [2706, 2738, 0.0], [2738, 2830, 0.0], [2830, 2878, 0.0], [2878, 2920, 0.15789474], [2920, 3164, 0.0167364], [3164, 3655, 0.00843882], [3655, 4006, 0.02352941], [4006, 4517, 0.01619433], [4517, 5281, 0.0], [5281, 5871, 0.0], [5871, 6140, 0.0233463], [6140, 6219, 0.15873016], [6219, 6261, 0.0], [6261, 6316, 0.125], [6316, 6637, 0.01311475], [6637, 7093, 0.0], [7093, 7692, 0.00342466], [7692, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 70, 0.0], [70, 597, 0.0], [597, 1310, 0.0], [1310, 1696, 0.0], [1696, 2130, 0.0], [2130, 2613, 0.0], [2613, 2706, 0.0], [2706, 2738, 0.0], [2738, 2830, 0.0], [2830, 2878, 0.0], [2878, 2920, 0.0], [2920, 3164, 0.0], [3164, 3655, 0.0], [3655, 4006, 0.0], [4006, 4517, 0.0], [4517, 5281, 0.0], [5281, 5871, 0.0], [5871, 6140, 0.0], [6140, 6219, 0.0], [6219, 6261, 0.0], [6261, 6316, 0.0], [6316, 6637, 0.0], [6637, 7093, 0.0], [7093, 7692, 0.0], [7692, 8218, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.20833333], [24, 70, 0.08695652], [70, 597, 0.0341556], [597, 1310, 0.03225806], [1310, 1696, 0.02072539], [1696, 2130, 0.03456221], [2130, 2613, 0.03519669], [2613, 2706, 0.01075269], [2706, 2738, 0.21875], [2738, 2830, 0.0326087], [2830, 2878, 0.16666667], [2878, 2920, 0.0952381], [2920, 3164, 0.04098361], [3164, 3655, 0.01629328], [3655, 4006, 0.02279202], [4006, 4517, 0.03131115], [4517, 5281, 0.03664921], [5281, 5871, 0.03898305], [5871, 6140, 0.07806691], [6140, 6219, 0.01265823], [6219, 6261, 0.16666667], [6261, 6316, 0.47272727], [6316, 6637, 0.05607477], [6637, 7093, 0.01535088], [7093, 7692, 0.02838063], [7692, 8218, 0.02851711]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8218, 0.42386985]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8218, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8218, 0.6436826]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8218, -608.52579454]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8218, 151.55998052]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8218, -84.39744711]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8218, 136.0]]}
RiaSTAP® - Additional Resources American Thrombosis & Hemostasis Network The American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network (ATHN) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the lives of people affected by bleeding and clotting disorders. World Federation of Hemophilia (WFH) For over 50 years, the World Federation of Hemophilia (WFH) has worked globally to achieve treatment for all people with hemophilia and other inherited bleeding disorders, no matter where they live in the world. Foundation for Women & Girls With Bleeding Disorders The Foundation for Women & Girls With Blood Disorders works to ensure all women and girls with blood disorders are correctly diagnosed and optimally managed at every life stage. National Hemophilia Foundation The National Hemophilia Foundation (NHF) is dedicated to finding better treatments and cures for inheritable bleeding disorders and to preventing the complications of these disorders through education, advocacy, and research. American Society of Hematology With more than 18,000 members from nearly 100 countries, the ASH is the world's largest professional society serving both clinicians and scientists around the world who are working to conquer blood diseases. International Society on Thrombosis and Hemostasis The International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH) advances the understanding, prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of conditions related to thrombosis and hemostasis. Hemophilia Federation of America Hemophilia Federation of America is a national nonprofit organization that assists, educates, and advocates for the bleeding disorders community. Anticoagulation Forum The Anticoagulation Forum is a nonprofit organization of multidisciplinary health care professionals improving the quality of care for patients taking antithrombotic medications. American Association of Blood Banks The AABB is an international, not-for-profit Association representing individuals and institutions involved in the fields of transfusion medicine and biotherapies. ClinicalTrials.gov is a database of privately and publicly funded clinical studies conducted around the world. Pubmed.gov PubMed® comprises more than 33 million citations for biomedical literature from MEDLINE, life science journals, and online books. Citations may include links to full text content from PubMed Central and publisher web sites. Important Safety Information for RiaSTAP RiaSTAP®, Fibrinogen Concentrate (Human), is contraindicated in patients with known anaphylactic or severe systemic reactions to human plasma-derived products. Monitor patients for early signs of anaphylaxis or hypersensitivity reactions and if necessary, discontinue administration and institute appropriate treatment. Thrombotic events have been reported in patients receiving RiaSTAP; weigh the benefits of administration versus the risks of thrombosis. RiaSTAP is made from human blood. The risk of transmission of infectious agents, including viruses and, theoretically, the Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) agent and its variant (vCJD), cannot be completely eliminated. The most serious adverse reactions observed are thrombotic episodes (pulmonary embolism, myocardial infarction, deep vein thrombosis) and anaphylactic reactions. The most common adverse reactions observed in clinical studies (frequency >1%) were fever and headache. Indications for RiaSTAP RIASTAP is indicated for the treatment of acute bleeding episodes in pediatric and adult patients with congenital fibrinogen deficiency, including afibrinogenemia and hypofibrinogenemia. Please see full prescribing information for RiaSTAP.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/8982
{"url": "https://medicalaffairs.cslbehring.com/products/hematology/riastap/additional-resources", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "medicalaffairs.cslbehring.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:22:55Z", "digest": "sha1:6DXIIWM2VKCFC2N6KDIYCRK6EXKAN6SN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3621, 3621.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3621, 7878.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3621, 30.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3621, 207.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3621, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3621, 225.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3621, 0.28521127]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3621, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3621, 0.06018973]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3621, 0.02126268]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3621, 0.02257115]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3621, 0.01570167]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3621, 0.01760563]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3621, 0.14788732]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3621, 0.53319502]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3621, 6.34232365]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3621, 5.06056102]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3621, 482.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 73, 0.0], [73, 243, 1.0], [243, 280, 0.0], [280, 492, 1.0], [492, 545, 0.0], [545, 723, 1.0], [723, 754, 0.0], [754, 980, 1.0], [980, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1219, 1.0], [1219, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1450, 1.0], [1450, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1629, 1.0], [1629, 1651, 0.0], [1651, 1830, 1.0], [1830, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2030, 1.0], [2030, 2141, 1.0], [2141, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2376, 1.0], [2376, 2417, 0.0], [2417, 2577, 1.0], [2577, 2874, 1.0], [2874, 3092, 1.0], [3092, 3358, 1.0], [3358, 3382, 0.0], [3382, 3569, 1.0], [3569, 3621, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 73, 0.0], [73, 243, 0.0], [243, 280, 0.0], [280, 492, 0.0], [492, 545, 0.0], [545, 723, 0.0], [723, 754, 0.0], [754, 980, 0.0], [980, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1629, 0.0], [1629, 1651, 0.0], [1651, 1830, 0.0], [1830, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2376, 0.0], [2376, 2417, 0.0], [2417, 2577, 0.0], [2577, 2874, 0.0], [2874, 3092, 0.0], [3092, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3382, 0.0], [3382, 3569, 0.0], [3569, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 32, 3.0], [32, 73, 4.0], [73, 243, 24.0], [243, 280, 5.0], [280, 492, 34.0], [492, 545, 7.0], [545, 723, 28.0], [723, 754, 3.0], [754, 980, 30.0], [980, 1011, 4.0], [1011, 1219, 32.0], [1219, 1270, 6.0], [1270, 1450, 22.0], [1450, 1483, 4.0], [1483, 1629, 19.0], [1629, 1651, 2.0], [1651, 1830, 22.0], [1830, 1866, 5.0], [1866, 2030, 20.0], [2030, 2141, 15.0], [2141, 2152, 1.0], [2152, 2376, 33.0], [2376, 2417, 5.0], [2417, 2577, 19.0], [2577, 2874, 38.0], [2874, 3092, 30.0], [3092, 3358, 34.0], [3358, 3382, 3.0], [3382, 3569, 23.0], [3569, 3621, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 73, 0.0], [73, 243, 0.0], [243, 280, 0.0], [280, 492, 0.00970874], [492, 545, 0.0], [545, 723, 0.0], [723, 754, 0.0], [754, 980, 0.0], [980, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1219, 0.03940887], [1219, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1629, 0.0], [1629, 1651, 0.0], [1651, 1830, 0.0], [1830, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2376, 0.00913242], [2376, 2417, 0.0], [2417, 2577, 0.0], [2577, 2874, 0.0], [2874, 3092, 0.0], [3092, 3358, 0.00392157], [3358, 3382, 0.0], [3382, 3569, 0.0], [3569, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 73, 0.0], [73, 243, 0.0], [243, 280, 0.0], [280, 492, 0.0], [492, 545, 0.0], [545, 723, 0.0], [723, 754, 0.0], [754, 980, 0.0], [980, 1011, 0.0], [1011, 1219, 0.0], [1219, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1483, 0.0], [1483, 1629, 0.0], [1629, 1651, 0.0], [1651, 1830, 0.0], [1830, 1866, 0.0], [1866, 2030, 0.0], [2030, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2152, 0.0], [2152, 2376, 0.0], [2376, 2417, 0.0], [2417, 2577, 0.0], [2577, 2874, 0.0], [2874, 3092, 0.0], [3092, 3358, 0.0], [3358, 3382, 0.0], [3382, 3569, 0.0], [3569, 3621, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.21875], [32, 73, 0.09756098], [73, 243, 0.05294118], [243, 280, 0.16216216], [280, 492, 0.03301887], [492, 545, 0.11320755], [545, 723, 0.03932584], [723, 754, 0.09677419], [754, 980, 0.03097345], [980, 1011, 0.09677419], [1011, 1219, 0.01923077], [1219, 1270, 0.07843137], [1270, 1450, 0.05], [1450, 1483, 0.09090909], [1483, 1629, 0.02054795], [1629, 1651, 0.09090909], [1651, 1830, 0.01675978], [1830, 1866, 0.11111111], [1866, 2030, 0.03658537], [2030, 2141, 0.01801802], [2141, 2152, 0.09090909], [2152, 2376, 0.05803571], [2376, 2417, 0.19512195], [2417, 2577, 0.05], [2577, 2874, 0.02356902], [2874, 3092, 0.06422018], [3092, 3358, 0.0075188], [3358, 3382, 0.25], [3382, 3569, 0.03743316], [3569, 3621, 0.11538462]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3621, 0.45344788]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3621, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3621, 0.53245628]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3621, -176.92226031]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3621, -22.64143561]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3621, 22.84948377]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3621, 23.0]]}
A Closer Look at Iran and North Korea’s Missile Cooperation How Iran and North Korea cooperate in their twin quests to develop better missiles. By Samuel Ramani for The Diplomat Credit: Global Security On May 2, 2017, the Iranian military conducted a missile test from a Ghadir-class submarine in the Strait of the Hormuz. Even though the missile test failed, the close similarities between Iran’s Ghadir-class submarine and North Korea’s Yono-class miniature submarine alarmed Western policymakers. Many U.S. defense experts have argued that Iran’s missile test was proof of continued Tehran-Pyongyang military cooperation, despite repeated attempts by the United States to isolate the DPRK regime. Even though there was considerable optimism that the July 2015 ratification of the Iran nuclear deal would halt Tehran’s long-standing military cooperation with North Korea, Iran’s ballistic missile program continues to rely on North Korean military technology. Iran’s ongoing cooperation with North Korea can be explained by a shared distrust of U.S. diplomatic overtures and the common belief that countries have a right to develop self-defense mechanisms without external interference. Technology Sharing between Iran and North Korea since the 2015 Nuclear Deal While media coverage on Iran-North Korea military cooperation has focused principally on technician exchanges between the two countries and nuclear cooperation, ballistic missile development has been the most consistent area of Tehran-Pyongyang technological cooperation since the Iran nuclear deal was signed in 2015. This collaboration explains the striking similarities between Iranian EMAD and North Korean Rodong missiles. Even though parallel missile developments are powerful indicators of collaboration between Iran and North Korea, American and Israeli analysts have intensely debated the nature of the Tehran-Pyongyang partnership. Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton has been one of the most outspoken proponents of the view that Iran-North Korea cooperation is largely transactional. In a recent interview, Bolton declared that if North Korea gets nuclear missiles, “Iran could have that capability the next day” because of Tehran’s long-standing defense contracts with the DPRK and Pyongyang’s desperate need for hard currency. While the DPRK’s dire economic situation can explain some dimensions of the Iran-North Korea military partnership, there is compelling evidence that Tehran-Pyongyang ballistic missile technology cooperation is a more mutual exchange than many U.S. policymakers have assumed. Israeli defense analyst Tal Inbar recently noted that Iran purchased North Korea’s technical know-how on ballistic missile production, upgraded the DPRK missiles’ forward section, and distributed these advancements back to North Korea. The similarities between North Korean missiles launched during recent tests and Iranian technology suggests that Iran is a possible contributor to North Korea’s nuclear buildup, rather than a mere transactional partner. Even though Iran’s technology-sharing partnership with North Korea is widely stigmatized, there is a compelling strategic rationale for Tehran’s continued military exchange with Pyongyang. Should Iran successfully test a missile on a North Korean-style miniature submarine, Tehran’s ability to threaten U.S. ships in the Strait of Hormuz would increase greatly. The Yono-class submarine’s undetectability helped the DPRK sink South Korea’s ROKS Cheonan ship in 2010. Iran’s possession of similar naval capabilities strengthened by sophisticated ballistic missiles would greatly increase the costs of a U.S. military confrontation with Tehran. Iran’s successful utilization of North Korea’s BM-25 Musudan missile system could also profoundly impact the regional balance of power. As the head of the U.S. military in the Pacific, Admiral Harry Harris, recently noted, Washington’s adherence to the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty prevents it from developing short- and medium-range missile deterrents to neutralize Iran’s missile developments. Should Iran resolve the problems that unraveled its July 2016 test of North Korean missile technology and gain a 2,500-mile strike range, Tehran’s ability to militarily challenge Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the United States will strengthen considerably. This prospect explains why Iran views its partnership with North Korea as an integral component of its broader strategy to reshape the balance of power in the Middle East. Normative Solidarity Between Iran and North Korea In addition to the strategic benefits of aligning with Pyongyang, Iran’s continued military cooperation with North Korea is founded in deep-rooted normative solidarity between the two countries. This solidarity is rooted in the shared belief that countries have the right to decide what level of defensive capacity is appropriate for them, without external interference or aggressive deterrence. The synergy between Iran and the DPRK on national self-defense rights is rooted in both countries’ shared perception of the United States as a security threat. On February 3, Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif defended Iran’s ballistic missile program, by insisting that it was a defensive reaction to aggressive threats from the United States. Iranian diplomats also frequently cite the United States’ military support for Saddam Hussein’s Iraq during the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War as proof that Iran needs defensive capabilities of unassailable strength to maintain its sovereignty. North Korea has framed its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs in similarly defensive terms. In a January 2016 public statement from the DPRK’s official news agency, KCNA, the North Korean government defended its nuclear test as a necessary measure to prevent its leaders from succumbing to the fates of Iraq’s Saddam Hussein and Libya’s Muammar al-Gaddafi. The North Korean state media has also justified its weapons buildup by arguing that the presence of U.S. troops in South Korea is a compelling indicator of an imminent joint U.S.-ROK invasion of Pyongyang. In addition to invoking their national rights to self-defense, the Iranian and DPRK governments have also highlighted double standards in the international community’s responses to states possessing nuclear weapons. In particular, Iran and North Korea have been stridently critical of Washington’s willingness to accept Israel’s possession of nuclear weapons, even though many world leaders argue that Israel’s nuclear arsenal poses a threat to regional and international stability. Even though the 2015 Iran nuclear deal initially sparked optimism in the United States about the viability of a grand bargain to denuclearize North Korea, recent actions by the Iranian and DPRK militaries have effectively extinguished this prospect. If Iran-United States relations continue to worsen under Trump and Iran continues to upgrade its ballistic missile capabilities with DPRK technology, the Tehran-Pyongyang military nexus will remain an intractable security challenge for U.S. policymakers for years to come. Samuel Ramani is a DPhil candidate in International Relations at St. Antony’s College, University of Oxford. He is also a journalist who contributes regularly to the Washington Post and Huffington Post. He can be followed on Twitter at samramani2 and on Facebook at Samuel Ramani. Iran-North Korea missile development Iran-North Korea nuclear cooperation Iran-North Korea relations Nodong Missiles Yono-class submarines US Strike on Iran Could Have Consequences in North Korea The U.S. strike that killed Iran’s top military commander may have had an indirect casualty: a diplomatic solution to denuclearizing North Korea. The Myth of a 'Special' North Korea-Iran Relationship By Luciano Arvin Iran-North Korea relations aren't as deep or important as Western observers sometimes assume. Iran Tour Strengthens South Korea’s Middle Power Grab Making friends with North Korea’s allies could pry loose Pyongyang’s grip. Why North Korea Won't Have Its ICBM Anytime Soon By 38 North / John Schilling Evidence indicates North Korea is actively developing a true ICBM. But when will it be ready?
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/9260
{"url": "https://thediplomat.com/2017/05/a-closer-look-at-iran-and-north-koreas-missile-cooperation/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thediplomat.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:19:51Z", "digest": "sha1:OFJXFTYM5J3CW3F3XT4PBOREU2OP54R7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8238, 8238.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8238, 15104.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8238, 36.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8238, 285.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8238, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8238, 254.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8238, 0.2982337]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8238, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8238, 0.0200116]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8238, 0.02610209]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8238, 0.01044084]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8238, 0.01232599]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8238, 0.02853261]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8238, 0.13790761]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8238, 0.41687552]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8238, 5.76106934]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8238, 5.50000423]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8238, 1197.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 144, 1.0], [144, 178, 0.0], [178, 202, 0.0], [202, 700, 1.0], [700, 1189, 1.0], [1189, 1265, 0.0], [1265, 1693, 1.0], [1693, 2327, 1.0], [2327, 2602, 1.0], [2602, 3058, 1.0], [3058, 3701, 1.0], [3701, 4115, 1.0], [4115, 4540, 1.0], [4540, 4590, 0.0], [4590, 4986, 1.0], [4986, 5569, 1.0], [5569, 6144, 1.0], [6144, 6627, 1.0], [6627, 7150, 1.0], [7150, 7431, 1.0], [7431, 7468, 0.0], [7468, 7505, 0.0], [7505, 7532, 0.0], [7532, 7548, 0.0], [7548, 7570, 0.0], [7570, 7627, 0.0], [7627, 7773, 1.0], [7773, 7827, 0.0], [7827, 7844, 0.0], [7844, 7938, 1.0], [7938, 7992, 0.0], [7992, 8067, 1.0], [8067, 8116, 0.0], [8116, 8145, 0.0], [8145, 8238, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 144, 0.0], [144, 178, 0.0], [178, 202, 0.0], [202, 700, 0.0], [700, 1189, 0.0], [1189, 1265, 0.0], [1265, 1693, 0.0], [1693, 2327, 0.0], [2327, 2602, 0.0], [2602, 3058, 0.0], [3058, 3701, 0.0], [3701, 4115, 0.0], [4115, 4540, 0.0], [4540, 4590, 0.0], [4590, 4986, 0.0], [4986, 5569, 0.0], [5569, 6144, 0.0], [6144, 6627, 0.0], [6627, 7150, 0.0], [7150, 7431, 0.0], [7431, 7468, 0.0], [7468, 7505, 0.0], [7505, 7532, 0.0], [7532, 7548, 0.0], [7548, 7570, 0.0], [7570, 7627, 0.0], [7627, 7773, 0.0], [7773, 7827, 0.0], [7827, 7844, 0.0], [7844, 7938, 0.0], [7938, 7992, 0.0], [7992, 8067, 0.0], [8067, 8116, 0.0], [8116, 8145, 0.0], [8145, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 60, 10.0], [60, 144, 14.0], [144, 178, 6.0], [178, 202, 3.0], [202, 700, 72.0], [700, 1189, 70.0], [1189, 1265, 12.0], [1265, 1693, 57.0], [1693, 2327, 92.0], [2327, 2602, 37.0], [2602, 3058, 63.0], [3058, 3701, 88.0], [3701, 4115, 57.0], [4115, 4540, 66.0], [4540, 4590, 7.0], [4590, 4986, 57.0], [4986, 5569, 87.0], [5569, 6144, 91.0], [6144, 6627, 67.0], [6627, 7150, 76.0], [7150, 7431, 45.0], [7431, 7468, 4.0], [7468, 7505, 4.0], [7505, 7532, 3.0], [7532, 7548, 2.0], [7548, 7570, 2.0], [7570, 7627, 10.0], [7627, 7773, 22.0], [7773, 7827, 8.0], [7827, 7844, 3.0], [7844, 7938, 13.0], [7938, 7992, 8.0], [7992, 8067, 11.0], [8067, 8116, 9.0], [8116, 8145, 5.0], [8145, 8238, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 144, 0.0], [144, 178, 0.0], [178, 202, 0.0], [202, 700, 0.01033058], [700, 1189, 0.00831601], [1189, 1265, 0.05333333], [1265, 1693, 0.00947867], [1693, 2327, 0.0], [2327, 2602, 0.0], [2602, 3058, 0.0], [3058, 3701, 0.0063593], [3701, 4115, 0.005], [4115, 4540, 0.01918465], [4540, 4590, 0.0], [4590, 4986, 0.0], [4986, 5569, 0.01219512], [5569, 6144, 0.0071048], [6144, 6627, 0.0], [6627, 7150, 0.0077821], [7150, 7431, 0.00363636], [7431, 7468, 0.0], [7468, 7505, 0.0], [7505, 7532, 0.0], [7532, 7548, 0.0], [7548, 7570, 0.0], [7570, 7627, 0.0], [7627, 7773, 0.0], [7773, 7827, 0.0], [7827, 7844, 0.0], [7844, 7938, 0.0], [7938, 7992, 0.0], [7992, 8067, 0.0], [8067, 8116, 0.0], [8116, 8145, 0.07692308], [8145, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 144, 0.0], [144, 178, 0.0], [178, 202, 0.0], [202, 700, 0.0], [700, 1189, 0.0], [1189, 1265, 0.0], [1265, 1693, 0.0], [1693, 2327, 0.0], [2327, 2602, 0.0], [2602, 3058, 0.0], [3058, 3701, 0.0], [3701, 4115, 0.0], [4115, 4540, 0.0], [4540, 4590, 0.0], [4590, 4986, 0.0], [4986, 5569, 0.0], [5569, 6144, 0.0], [6144, 6627, 0.0], [6627, 7150, 0.0], [7150, 7431, 0.0], [7431, 7468, 0.0], [7468, 7505, 0.0], [7505, 7532, 0.0], [7532, 7548, 0.0], [7548, 7570, 0.0], [7570, 7627, 0.0], [7627, 7773, 0.0], [7773, 7827, 0.0], [7827, 7844, 0.0], [7844, 7938, 0.0], [7938, 7992, 0.0], [7992, 8067, 0.0], [8067, 8116, 0.0], [8116, 8145, 0.0], [8145, 8238, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 60, 0.13333333], [60, 144, 0.04761905], [144, 178, 0.14705882], [178, 202, 0.125], [202, 700, 0.0502008], [700, 1189, 0.02862986], [1189, 1265, 0.09210526], [1265, 1693, 0.03738318], [1693, 2327, 0.04731861], [2327, 2602, 0.04363636], [2602, 3058, 0.04166667], [3058, 3701, 0.04976672], [3701, 4115, 0.0531401], [4115, 4540, 0.04], [4540, 4590, 0.12], [4590, 4986, 0.01515152], [4986, 5569, 0.04802744], [5569, 6144, 0.0573913], [6144, 6627, 0.02691511], [6627, 7150, 0.04780115], [7150, 7431, 0.0747331], [7431, 7468, 0.08108108], [7468, 7505, 0.08108108], [7505, 7532, 0.11111111], [7532, 7548, 0.125], [7548, 7570, 0.04545455], [7570, 7627, 0.15789474], [7627, 7773, 0.04109589], [7773, 7827, 0.12962963], [7827, 7844, 0.17647059], [7844, 7938, 0.04255319], [7938, 7992, 0.14814815], [7992, 8067, 0.05333333], [8067, 8116, 0.24489796], [8116, 8145, 0.13793103], [8145, 8238, 0.08602151]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8238, 0.56537586]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8238, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8238, 0.8284902]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8238, -674.50971644]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8238, 183.09439719]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8238, -33.43936488]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8238, 65.0]]}
Famous People from Mauritius Meet some famous people from Mauritius. Our island has produced talented novelists, poets, musicians and our beloved father of the nation, Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam. Enjoy the short biographies. Artists, novelists ... Famous people from Mauritius: Malcolm de Chazal Malcolm de Chazal: 1902 -1981 was a writer, poet, philosopher and artist. His well-known books include 'Sens Plastique' and 'Petrusmok'. His works are studied at PhD level in African, American and European Universities. He is also famous for his colourful landscapes and still life paintings in a delightful primitive style. Malcolm de Chazal qualified as a sugar engineer and chemist at Baton Rouge University in Louisiana and worked in the sugar industry in Cuba. He returned to Mauritius in 1932 and published a ‘Nouvel Essai d’Economie Politique’ which is a strong criticism on the economics and methods of the sugar industry in Mauritius - to the consternation of his family who was involved in the sugar industry … He then dedicated his life to writing and painting. He led a frugal life living in an attic and never learned how to drive. Famous people from Mauritius: Dev Virahsawmy Dev Virahsawmy born 1942 is a poet and playwright. He studied English and French at Edinburgh University and specialized in Applied Linguistics. He is famous for promoting our Creole language. Dev Virahsawmy has translated several of Shakespeare plays into Creole as well as poems from Baudelaire, Keats, Khalil Gibran, La Fontaine, Blake. Works by Hans Christian Andersen, Kafta, Grimm, and Voltaire. Sacred texts such as the Bhagavad Gita … He is in the process of producing a translation of the New Testament and the Book of Psalms in cooperation with the Mauritius Bible Society You can download translations of his works for private reading from his website at www.boukiebanane.orange.mu/ Famous people from Mauritius: Carl de Souza Carl de Souza born 1949 is a well-known novelist. He was a national badminton player and it’s only in his thirties that he decided to become a writer. His first short story ‘La Comete de Halley’ won the Mauritian Prix Pierre Renaudin 1986. His first novel 'Le Sang de l’Anglais' won the prize from the ACCT (Agence de co-operation Culturelle et Technique) in 1989. Another novel ‘La maison qui marchait vers le large’ won the regional Prix des Mascareignes. Famous people from Mauritius: Marcel Cabon Marcel Cabon 1912 - 1972 was a novelist and poet. He wrote the novel “Namaste” (1965) which is about Indo Mauritian peasant life. He also wrote the biography of Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam. Other Famous People from Mauritius ... Ananda Devi Ananda Devi born 1957 has published numerous novels, short stories and poetry. She won her first literary prize at 15 for a short story in a Radio France International Competition. Her work has been translated into several languages. Ananda received a doctoral thesis at the School for Oriental and African Studies in London and was made the “Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres “ by the French Government in 2010. She speaks Telegu, Creole, French, English, Bhojpuri and Hindi. She lives in Switzerland. Her literary prizes include: 2001 Prix Radio France du Livre de l’Ocean Indien ‘Moi, l’interdite’ 2006 Prix des Cinq Continents de la Francophonie ‘Eve de ses decombres’ 2007 Certificat d’Honneur Maurice Cagnon du Conseil International d’Etudes Francophones 2007 Prix Television Suisse Romande ‘Eve de ses decombres’ 2010 Prix Louis-Guilloux ‘ Le sari vert’ Two of her novels ‘les enfants de Troumaron’ et ‘Eve et ses decombres’ were brought to the screen. Famous people from Mauritius: Khal Torabully Khal Torabully born 1965 is a novelist, poet and film maker who has won movie awards. He has over twenty published collections of poetry. His film ‘La Memoire Maritime des Arabes’ won the Golden Award du Cairo Arab Media Festival. Famous people from Mauritius: Neel Burton Neel Burton: born 1978 is a philosopher, psychiatrist, writer and wine-lover. Neel has received numerous awards for his books on psychiatry, schizophrenia and ‘best in the word Gourmand Award’ for the Concise Guide to Wine and Blind Tasting. Famous people from Mauritius - Musicians "Ti Frere" "Ti Frere" or Jean Alphonse Ravaton 1900 - 1992 . His nickname means ‘small brother’ in creole. He was ‘crowned’ the king of Mauritius sega in 1964 when he became well known in Reunion, Seychelles and Rodrigues islands. Despite his popularity Ti Frere was very poor and became blind towards the end of his life. This illiterate man could improvise a song in no time at all. His sega was typical ‘sega typic’. Typical Mauritian sega players When our sega took on a modern twist in the eighties, "Ti Frere" was sadly forgotten mostly by the new generation of Mauritians. Ti Frere was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire. Famous people from Mauritius: Kaya "Kaya" or Joseph Reginald Topize 1960 – 1999 Kaya was a musician and creator of seggae which is a fusion of reggae and Mauritian sega. Famous people from Mauritius: Lelou Menwar Lelou Menwar or Stephano Honore born 1955 is a musician, songwriter, composer, singer and a pioneer of modern sega music. The ravanne which is a type of drum used in sega features prominently in his music. He was named Artist of the Year by Radio France Internationale, a French radio Station. Famous people from Mauritius: Ernest Wiehe Ernest Wiehe: 1944 - 2010 was a musician, composer, architect and painter. Ernest studied at the Berklee school of music in Boston and founded the Boston Jazz Orchestra. He returned to Mauritius in 1978 where he worked as an architect and sold his paintings to support his great love for music. Ernest Wiehe started the Ten Piece Big Band in Mauritius. His unique jazz style was influenced by European, Creole, African and Indian elements. He has produced several albums and composed the music for the film ‘Benares’. The Ernest Wiehe Jazz Festival or EWJF started in 2012 as a tribute to this great musician. The concert takes place once a year and lasts for three days. Poster for the Ernest Wiehe Jazz Festival designed by our very talented illustrator Evan Sohun The most famous person from Mauritius Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam: 1900 - 1985. Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam or SSR for short was our first prime minister and the founding father of independent Mauritius. He has played such an important role in shaping our island that I have dedicated a special page to this remarkable man. Other writers and musicians such as Roger Charoux, Edouard Maunick, Jean Paul Maunick, Henri le Sidaner, Joseph Tsang Mang Kin and Yusuf Kadel have also contributed to our rich cultural heritage. A list including other writers, scientists and politicians can be found on Wikipedia or Worldatlas. Mauritius creole language Population statistics Race Languages Home < Mauritius People < Famous people from Mauritius
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/13130
{"url": "https://www.mauritiusinsideout.com/famous-people-from-mauritius.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.mauritiusinsideout.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:53:41Z", "digest": "sha1:4IGAQC6GIX4YSNYHXXJLLEWIXFNRIXAV"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6917, 6917.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6917, 10220.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6917, 56.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6917, 137.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6917, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6917, 265.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6917, 0.29034691]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6917, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6917, 0.01741294]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6917, 0.03464819]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6917, 0.039801]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6917, 0.06218905]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6917, 0.00377074]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6917, 0.07142857]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6917, 0.16892911]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6917, 0.45462633]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6917, 5.00711744]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6917, 0.00301659]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6917, 5.59757948]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6917, 1124.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 224, 1.0], [224, 247, 1.0], [247, 295, 0.0], [295, 620, 1.0], [620, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1140, 1.0], [1140, 1185, 0.0], [1185, 1378, 1.0], [1378, 1628, 0.0], [1628, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1879, 0.0], [1879, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2074, 1.0], [2074, 2381, 1.0], [2381, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 1.0], [2612, 2651, 1.0], [2651, 2663, 0.0], [2663, 2897, 1.0], [2897, 3166, 1.0], [3166, 3195, 0.0], [3195, 3264, 0.0], [3264, 3336, 0.0], [3336, 3424, 0.0], [3424, 3483, 0.0], [3483, 3524, 0.0], [3524, 3623, 1.0], [3623, 3668, 0.0], [3668, 3899, 1.0], [3899, 3941, 0.0], [3941, 4183, 1.0], [4183, 4224, 0.0], [4224, 4235, 0.0], [4235, 4644, 1.0], [4644, 4675, 0.0], [4675, 4804, 1.0], [4804, 4867, 1.0], [4867, 4902, 0.0], [4902, 5037, 1.0], [5037, 5080, 0.0], [5080, 5374, 1.0], [5374, 5417, 0.0], [5417, 5587, 1.0], [5587, 5712, 1.0], [5712, 5935, 1.0], [5935, 6089, 1.0], [6089, 6184, 0.0], [6184, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6384, 1.0], [6384, 6504, 1.0], [6504, 6700, 1.0], [6700, 6800, 1.0], [6800, 6826, 0.0], [6826, 6863, 0.0], [6863, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 224, 0.0], [224, 247, 0.0], [247, 295, 0.0], [295, 620, 0.0], [620, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1185, 0.0], [1185, 1378, 0.0], [1378, 1628, 0.0], [1628, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1879, 0.0], [1879, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2074, 0.0], [2074, 2381, 0.0], [2381, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2663, 0.0], [2663, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 3166, 0.0], [3166, 3195, 0.0], [3195, 3264, 0.0], [3264, 3336, 0.0], [3336, 3424, 0.0], [3424, 3483, 0.0], [3483, 3524, 0.0], [3524, 3623, 0.0], [3623, 3668, 0.0], [3668, 3899, 0.0], [3899, 3941, 0.0], [3941, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4224, 0.0], [4224, 4235, 0.0], [4235, 4644, 0.0], [4644, 4675, 0.0], [4675, 4804, 0.0], [4804, 4867, 0.0], [4867, 4902, 0.0], [4902, 5037, 0.0], [5037, 5080, 0.0], [5080, 5374, 0.0], [5374, 5417, 0.0], [5417, 5587, 0.0], [5587, 5712, 0.0], [5712, 5935, 0.0], [5935, 6089, 0.0], [6089, 6184, 0.0], [6184, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6384, 0.0], [6384, 6504, 0.0], [6504, 6700, 0.0], [6700, 6800, 0.0], [6800, 6826, 0.0], [6826, 6863, 0.0], [6863, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 4.0], [29, 224, 28.0], [224, 247, 2.0], [247, 295, 7.0], [295, 620, 50.0], [620, 1016, 67.0], [1016, 1140, 24.0], [1140, 1185, 6.0], [1185, 1378, 30.0], [1378, 1628, 39.0], [1628, 1768, 25.0], [1768, 1879, 15.0], [1879, 1923, 7.0], [1923, 2074, 28.0], [2074, 2381, 51.0], [2381, 2424, 6.0], [2424, 2612, 31.0], [2612, 2651, 5.0], [2651, 2663, 2.0], [2663, 2897, 38.0], [2897, 3166, 45.0], [3166, 3195, 4.0], [3195, 3264, 11.0], [3264, 3336, 12.0], [3336, 3424, 10.0], [3424, 3483, 9.0], [3483, 3524, 7.0], [3524, 3623, 18.0], [3623, 3668, 6.0], [3668, 3899, 40.0], [3899, 3941, 6.0], [3941, 4183, 38.0], [4183, 4224, 5.0], [4224, 4235, 2.0], [4235, 4644, 71.0], [4644, 4675, 4.0], [4675, 4804, 23.0], [4804, 4867, 13.0], [4867, 4902, 5.0], [4902, 5037, 25.0], [5037, 5080, 6.0], [5080, 5374, 51.0], [5374, 5417, 6.0], [5417, 5587, 27.0], [5587, 5712, 23.0], [5712, 5935, 36.0], [5935, 6089, 29.0], [6089, 6184, 15.0], [6184, 6222, 6.0], [6222, 6384, 24.0], [6384, 6504, 22.0], [6504, 6700, 31.0], [6700, 6800, 15.0], [6800, 6826, 3.0], [6826, 6863, 4.0], [6863, 6917, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 224, 0.0], [224, 247, 0.0], [247, 295, 0.0], [295, 620, 0.02580645], [620, 1016, 0.01020408], [1016, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1185, 0.0], [1185, 1378, 0.02116402], [1378, 1628, 0.0], [1628, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1879, 0.0], [1879, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2074, 0.02721088], [2074, 2381, 0.02684564], [2381, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 0.06666667], [2612, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2663, 0.0], [2663, 2897, 0.02620087], [2897, 3166, 0.01532567], [3166, 3195, 0.0], [3195, 3264, 0.05970149], [3264, 3336, 0.05633803], [3336, 3424, 0.04597701], [3424, 3483, 0.06896552], [3483, 3524, 0.1025641], [3524, 3623, 0.0], [3623, 3668, 0.0], [3668, 3899, 0.01769912], [3899, 3941, 0.0], [3941, 4183, 0.01709402], [4183, 4224, 0.0], [4224, 4235, 0.0], [4235, 4644, 0.03030303], [4644, 4675, 0.0], [4675, 4804, 0.0], [4804, 4867, 0.0], [4867, 4902, 0.0], [4902, 5037, 0.0610687], [5037, 5080, 0.0], [5080, 5374, 0.01398601], [5374, 5417, 0.0], [5417, 5587, 0.04938272], [5587, 5712, 0.03252033], [5712, 5935, 0.0], [5935, 6089, 0.02649007], [6089, 6184, 0.0], [6184, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6384, 0.05128205], [6384, 6504, 0.0], [6504, 6700, 0.0], [6700, 6800, 0.0], [6800, 6826, 0.0], [6826, 6863, 0.0], [6863, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 224, 0.0], [224, 247, 0.0], [247, 295, 0.0], [295, 620, 0.0], [620, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1185, 0.0], [1185, 1378, 0.0], [1378, 1628, 0.0], [1628, 1768, 0.0], [1768, 1879, 0.0], [1879, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2074, 0.0], [2074, 2381, 0.0], [2381, 2424, 0.0], [2424, 2612, 0.0], [2612, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2663, 0.0], [2663, 2897, 0.0], [2897, 3166, 0.0], [3166, 3195, 0.0], [3195, 3264, 0.0], [3264, 3336, 0.0], [3336, 3424, 0.0], [3424, 3483, 0.0], [3483, 3524, 0.0], [3524, 3623, 0.0], [3623, 3668, 0.0], [3668, 3899, 0.0], [3899, 3941, 0.0], [3941, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4224, 0.0], [4224, 4235, 0.0], [4235, 4644, 0.0], [4644, 4675, 0.0], [4675, 4804, 0.0], [4804, 4867, 0.0], [4867, 4902, 0.0], [4902, 5037, 0.0], [5037, 5080, 0.0], [5080, 5374, 0.0], [5374, 5417, 0.0], [5417, 5587, 0.0], [5587, 5712, 0.0], [5712, 5935, 0.0], [5935, 6089, 0.0], [6089, 6184, 0.0], [6184, 6222, 0.0], [6222, 6384, 0.0], [6384, 6504, 0.0], [6504, 6700, 0.0], [6700, 6800, 0.0], [6800, 6826, 0.0], [6826, 6863, 0.0], [6863, 6917, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.10344828], [29, 224, 0.03589744], [224, 247, 0.04347826], [247, 295, 0.08333333], [295, 620, 0.04307692], [620, 1016, 0.03535354], [1016, 1140, 0.01612903], [1140, 1185, 0.08888889], [1185, 1378, 0.05699482], [1378, 1628, 0.084], [1628, 1768, 0.05714286], [1768, 1879, 0.00900901], [1879, 1923, 0.09090909], [1923, 2074, 0.01986755], [2074, 2381, 0.07491857], [2381, 2424, 0.09302326], [2424, 2612, 0.05319149], [2612, 2651, 0.1025641], [2651, 2663, 0.16666667], [2663, 2897, 0.03418803], [2897, 3166, 0.07434944], [3166, 3195, 0.03448276], [3195, 3264, 0.10144928], [3264, 3336, 0.06944444], [3336, 3424, 0.09090909], [3424, 3483, 0.08474576], [3483, 3524, 0.09756098], [3524, 3623, 0.03030303], [3623, 3668, 0.08888889], [3668, 3899, 0.06060606], [3899, 3941, 0.0952381], [3941, 4183, 0.04132231], [4183, 4224, 0.07317073], [4224, 4235, 0.18181818], [4235, 4644, 0.0391198], [4644, 4675, 0.06451613], [4675, 4804, 0.03100775], [4804, 4867, 0.0952381], [4867, 4902, 0.08571429], [4902, 5037, 0.04444444], [5037, 5080, 0.09302326], [5080, 5374, 0.04421769], [5374, 5417, 0.09302326], [5417, 5587, 0.04705882], [5587, 5712, 0.016], [5712, 5935, 0.06278027], [5935, 6089, 0.06493506], [6089, 6184, 0.07368421], [6184, 6222, 0.05263158], [6222, 6384, 0.0617284], [6384, 6504, 0.01666667], [6504, 6700, 0.08163265], [6700, 6800, 0.03], [6800, 6826, 0.03846154], [6826, 6863, 0.08108108], [6863, 6917, 0.09259259]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6917, 0.4747172]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6917, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6917, 0.80201501]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6917, -223.27913599]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6917, -2.48140454]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6917, 84.27322677]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6917, 66.0]]}
With a tone and musicality described as “pure chocolate,” Patrick Hughes has soloed in recitals throughout the US, at yearly regional horn conferences, and IHS International Horn Symposia. In 2006 he performed the Asian premiere of Kazimierz Machala’s Concerto for Horn, Winds and Percussion in Bangkok, Thailand. He has also been a featured soloist with various groups at the University of Texas, (most recently performing the Hamburg Concerto by György Ligeti), the Northwestern University Percussion Ensemble, the St. Olaf Orchestra, and the Dallas Wind Symphony. The Dallas Morning News described Hughes as “…a dream soloist…His tone was warm and honeyed, his virtuosity and legato both apparently effortless.” Patrick Hughes serves as Associate Professor of Horn, Head of the Brass, Wind and Percussion Division, and director of the award-winning UT Horn Choir at the University of Texas at Austin. He enjoys an active freelance career, playing principal horn with La Follia Austin Baroque (valveless horn), and playing extra with the Austin Symphony Orchestra, Ballet Austin, Austin Lyric Opera, San Antonio Symphony, Fort Worth Symphony, and Opera Piccola of San Antonio. He also plays with touring Broadway Musicals, and enjoys playing behind popular performers who frequent Austin. Summer teaching has included the Hot Springs Music Festival, the Round Top Music Festival, and Kendall Betts Horn Camp. Mr. Hughes is a frequent guest lecturer/performer/teacher giving masterclasses and recitals across the US and abroad. In May of 2013, he traveled to Australia to teach, perform recitals, and give the Australian premier of three of his compositions for horn choir at the Queensland (Brisbane) and Sydney Conservatories of Music. Mr. Hughes also enjoys arranging and composing works for horn and horn choir. Both Dancing on the Hill and From Hildegard were premiered at International Horn Symposia (Denton, TX and San Francisco). Dancing on the Hill won an Honorable Mention award in the virtuoso division of the International Horn Society’s 2015 Composition Competition. His latest output includes Pange Lingua for two horns and piano, and a new (2021) work for horn choir: Climbin’. His music is published through BrownWood Publishing. Mr. Hughes hosted the 2005 and 2014 Mid-South Regional Horn Workshops at the University of Texas, has adjudicated for the International Horn Competition of America, served on the Reviewing Committee of the IHS (International Horn Society) Meir Rimon Commissioning Assistance Fund, and was an elected member of the IHS Advisory Council from 2015-2021, where he served as Scholarship Coordinator. Prior to his appointment at UT, Mr. Hughes taught horn and theory at the University of New Mexico from 1995-2001, played principal horn with both the Santa Fe Symphony and Santa Fe Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra, and performed throughout the US and in China with the New Mexico Brass Quintet. He has held other teaching appointments at Ithaca College and SUNY Fredonia and has performed with a number of notable groups in the past including the Santa Fe Opera, Minnesota Opera, New Mexico Symphony, Erie Philharmonic, Duluth-Superior Symphony, Cedar Rapids Symphony, and the New Columbian Brass Band. Mr. Hughes earned degrees from St. Olaf College and the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He can be heard as a contributing artist on a variety of recordings including Conspirare: Choral Works by Samuel Barber; Thoughtful Wanderings…compositions by Douglas Hill; MidWinter (with Minnesotan singer/songwriter Peter Mayer); New Mexico Winds; Devisadero, works by Christopher Shultis; and Russel Pinkston Balancing Acts. His new CD, Crossroads, will feature works for horn with piano, horn choir, and electronica, and is slated to be released soon! Mr. Hughes plays on a Custom Patterson Horn.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/13920
{"url": "https://horncamp.org/faculty/patrick-hughes/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "horncamp.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:44:18Z", "digest": "sha1:X32YRUN52QAEVXNO5CEGRTUKLJCAWBLG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3830, 3830.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3830, 4855.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3830, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3830, 68.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3830, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3830, 235.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3830, 0.28208745]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3830, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3830, 0.0210325]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3830, 0.01529637]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3830, 0.02390057]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3830, 0.02166985]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3830, 0.01551481]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3830, 0.16784203]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3830, 0.48892675]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3830, 5.34582624]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3830, 0.00423131]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3830, 5.08426713]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3830, 587.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 715, 1.0], [715, 1411, 1.0], [1411, 2247, 1.0], [2247, 2642, 1.0], [2642, 3330, 1.0], [3330, 3830, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 715, 0.0], [715, 1411, 0.0], [1411, 2247, 0.0], [2247, 2642, 0.0], [2642, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 715, 107.0], [715, 1411, 107.0], [1411, 2247, 130.0], [2247, 2642, 59.0], [2642, 3330, 110.0], [3330, 3830, 74.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 715, 0.00573066], [715, 1411, 0.0], [1411, 2247, 0.01477833], [2247, 2642, 0.04166667], [2642, 3330, 0.01195815], [3330, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 715, 0.0], [715, 1411, 0.0], [1411, 2247, 0.0], [2247, 2642, 0.0], [2642, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3830, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 715, 0.06153846], [715, 1411, 0.08189655], [1411, 2247, 0.05382775], [2247, 2642, 0.0835443], [2642, 3330, 0.0872093], [3330, 3830, 0.068]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3830, 0.40119404]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3830, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3830, 0.86113292]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3830, -107.05300846]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3830, 7.34293689]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3830, 102.22130596]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3830, 30.0]]}
2023 Super Bowl Classic Rock Commercials Roundup Matthew Wilkening Matthew Wilkening Updated: February 10, 2023 YouTube / Getty Images Classic rock's biggest stars and some of their most popular songs once again turned up in this year's Super Bowl commercials. You can see all of the ads and learn more about the songs heard during the big game below. Workday: Paul Stanley, Joan Jett, Billy Idol and Ozzy Osbourne "Hey, corporate types, would you stop calling each other rock stars?" Kiss frontman Paul Stanley demands at the start of Workday's Super Bowl commercial. Ozzy Osbourne, Joan Jett, a chainsaw-wielding Billy Idol and Gary Clark Jr. all chime in to demonstrate the difference between being excellent at cloud-based business solution software and being awesome at guitar playing. The spot ends with Stanley shaming an executive who was once again about to incorrectly use the term. Read More: Kiss and Ozzy Rebuke Corporate 'Rock Star' Lingo in Super Bowl Ad Michelob Ultra: Kenny Loggins' "I'm Alright" Michelob Ultra's Super Bowl commercial recreates the climactic golf duel from 1980's Caddyshack, with sports stars such as Serena Williams and Tony Romo doing their best impressions of Michael O'Keefe and Bill Murray. Kenny Loggins' original version of "I'm Alright" remains on the soundtrack. Rock's longtime soundtrack king is on a hot streak, with his song "Danger Zone" appearing in the opening scene of last year's billion-dollar-grossing sequel Top Gun: Maverick. Read More: Watch Michelob's 'Caddyshack'-Themed Super Bowl Commercial Doritos: Elton John Elton John steals the show, and the "triangle player of the year" award, from rapper Jack Harlow in Doritos' new Super Bowl spot. The commercial begins with Harlow in the studio seeking a new element for his sound. He decides the triangle is the missing ingredient, launching a worldwide craze that sees the easily forgotten percussion instrument replacing the pound as Britain's official currency. But when award season comes around Harlow is unexpectedly upstaged by John. Read More: Elton John Out-Triangles Jack Harlow in Doritos Super Bowl Ad Crown Royal: Dave Grohl "Today, let's thank Canada," Dave Grohl begins in this Super Bowl spot for the Canadian whiskey brand Crown Royal. The Foo Fighters frontman then thanks the Great White North for everything from "legends of music" -- Rush, Joni Mitchell, etc. -- to "heroes of comedy" -- Martin Short, Seth Rogen, etc. Grohl also gives kudos to Canada for a long list of inventions, ranging from peanut butter to the ironing board and even football. Read More: Dave Grohl Gives Thanks to Canada in Super Bowl Ad NFL: Joan Jett & the Blackhearts, “Real Wild Child” Joan Jett & the Blackhearts’ rendition of “Real Wild Child” was featured in a Super Bowl commercial for the NFL. Airing immediately following Rihanna’s halftime show performance, the spot began with what appeared to be a sideline interview, as reporter Erin Andrews chatted with Diana Flores, the team quarterback of Mexico Women’s National Flag Football team. Things quickly took a turn as Andrews tried to grab Flores’ flag, sending the athlete sprinting away as a cavalcade of NFL players, celebrities and media influencers all tried to stop the elusive runner. “Real Wild Child” played throughout the spot. Jett’s rendition of the tune, originally recorded by Australian rocker Johnny O’Keefe, was released in 1993 on her compilation album Flashback. Pringles: Tina Turner, “The Best” Pringles opted to use a classic tune from the Queen of Rock, Tina Turner, for their Super Bowl spot. In the commercial, a teenager gets his hand caught in a Pringles canister, only to have his grandfather tell him it happens to everybody. The old man then rattles through all types of people who have been stuck in such a predicament, including surgeons, judges and gameshow contestants. All of them are seen handling their respective duties with a Pringles can at the end of their hand. Throughout the spot, Tuner’s beloved 1989 hit “The Best” plays in the background. Turbo Tax: Spandau Ballet, “True”; Men Without Hats, “Safety Dance” Turbo Tax opted to use a pair of classic tunes in two separate commercials. In the first, Spandau Ballet’s 1983 hit “True” plays as a man gives intricate care to plants in his shop. In their second spot, the familiar refrain of Men Without Hats’ “Safety Dance” is heard as a man wearing headphones displays some of his best moves in front of a fountain. Both commercials feature a voiceover explaining that the tax preparation service can do taxes for you, leaving you time to do “anything else.” Air: Dire Straits, “Money for Nothing” It only makes sense that a movie set in the ‘80s would feature one of the era’s most identifiable guitar riffs. Air, the film starring Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, which tells the story of Nike's industry-revolutionizing Air Jordan shoe brand, utilized Dire Straits’ "Money for Nothing" in its Super Bowl trailer. It’s the second time the film has featured a classic ‘80s track in one of its spots. We’ve highlighted the other in our “Also of Interest” section below. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3: Rainbow, “Since You Been Gone” A new trailer for the upcoming film Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 debuted during the Super Bowl, featuring Rainbow’s 1979 single “Since You Been Gone.” The track plays throughout the spot, as fans hear from Star-Lord (Chris Pratt) as he updates people on the Guardians’ adventures and prepares for “one last ride.” The track ranks among Rainbow’s most successful commercial hits, reaching No. 57 on the Billboard Hot 100 and peaking at No. 6 in the U.K. 'Air' Movie Trailer: Night Ranger's "Sister Christian" Every year, film studios spend millions of dollars to promote their upcoming movies during the Super Bowl. Night Ranger fans might want to be on the lookout for the newly released trailer for Air, which stars Ben Affleck and Matt Damon in the story of Nike's industry-revolutionizing Air Jordan shoe brand. The ad features a pumped-up version of the band's 1984 hit "Sister Christian." Acura Electric: Jimi Hendrix and Motley Crue Acura has been running a commercial throughout the NFL playoffs touting the upcoming arrival of a new electric car with help from Jimi Hendrix's "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)." Another spot from the same campaign makes good use of Motley Crue's "Live Wire." 'Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies' Trailer The origin of Rizzo and Frenchy's Pink Ladies gang from 1978's Grease will be explored in the upcoming TV series Grease: Rise of the Pink Ladies. The trailer includes updated versions of several songs from John Travolta and Olivia Newton-John's hit film. 30 Rock Stars and the Sports They Love A look at rock stars who have a passion for sports. Next: 2022 Super Bowl Classic Rock Commercials Roundup Source: 2023 Super Bowl Classic Rock Commercials Roundup Filed Under: Super Bowl I Vote For Chris Stapleton To Sing The National Anthem At Every Big Event, Forever Why Do Super Bowl Commercials Use So Many Classic Rock Songs? 7 Fun Bozeman Area Things To Do This Weekend: Super Bowl Edition 2023 Super Bowl Commercials: See the Star-Studded, Viral Ads This Year 10 Best Party Foods For Super Bowl Gatherings 2022 Super Bowl Halftime Show Was an All-Star Hip-Hop Spectacle — See How Celebrities & Viewers Reacted Wolverine From ZooMontana Makes Prediction For Super Bowl Winner Who’s Montana Cheering For To Win? The Rams Or The Bengals? Celebrities Tune In to 2021 Super Bowl: See Their Tweets and Reactions
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/14086
{"url": "https://mooseradio.com/2023-super-bowl-classic-rock-commercials/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "mooseradio.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:34:03Z", "digest": "sha1:DW547GEE2W7CMOMKYVWI4WA2XMGYFVVF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7536, 7536.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7536, 9656.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7536, 47.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7536, 155.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7536, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7536, 297.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7536, 0.28070175]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7536, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7536, 0.061893]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7536, 0.05465021]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7536, 0.03226337]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7536, 0.01843621]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7536, 0.01843621]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7536, 0.03703704]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7536, 0.01251029]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7536, 0.00987654]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7536, 0.00909682]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7536, 0.18128655]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7536, 0.48421053]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7536, 4.91902834]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7536, 5.77405879]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7536, 1235.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 67, 0.0], [67, 112, 0.0], [112, 135, 0.0], [135, 352, 1.0], [352, 415, 0.0], [415, 893, 1.0], [893, 970, 0.0], [970, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1485, 1.0], [1485, 1555, 0.0], [1555, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 2050, 1.0], [2050, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2147, 0.0], [2147, 2580, 1.0], [2580, 2642, 0.0], [2642, 2694, 1.0], [2694, 3449, 1.0], [3449, 3483, 1.0], [3483, 4053, 1.0], [4053, 4121, 1.0], [4121, 4618, 1.0], [4618, 4657, 1.0], [4657, 5124, 1.0], [5124, 5187, 1.0], [5187, 5642, 1.0], [5642, 5697, 0.0], [5697, 6083, 0.0], [6083, 6128, 0.0], [6128, 6386, 0.0], [6386, 6428, 0.0], [6428, 6683, 1.0], [6683, 6722, 0.0], [6722, 6774, 1.0], [6774, 6829, 0.0], [6829, 6886, 0.0], [6886, 6910, 0.0], [6910, 6993, 0.0], [6993, 7055, 1.0], [7055, 7120, 0.0], [7120, 7191, 0.0], [7191, 7237, 0.0], [7237, 7341, 0.0], [7341, 7406, 0.0], [7406, 7466, 1.0], [7466, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 67, 0.0], [67, 112, 0.0], [112, 135, 0.0], [135, 352, 0.0], [352, 415, 0.0], [415, 893, 0.0], [893, 970, 0.0], [970, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1485, 0.0], [1485, 1555, 0.0], [1555, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 2050, 0.0], [2050, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2147, 0.0], [2147, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2642, 0.0], [2642, 2694, 0.0], [2694, 3449, 0.0], [3449, 3483, 0.0], [3483, 4053, 0.0], [4053, 4121, 0.0], [4121, 4618, 0.0], [4618, 4657, 0.0], [4657, 5124, 0.0], [5124, 5187, 0.0], [5187, 5642, 0.0], [5642, 5697, 0.0], [5697, 6083, 0.0], [6083, 6128, 0.0], [6128, 6386, 0.0], [6386, 6428, 0.0], [6428, 6683, 0.0], [6683, 6722, 0.0], [6722, 6774, 0.0], [6774, 6829, 0.0], [6829, 6886, 0.0], [6886, 6910, 0.0], [6910, 6993, 0.0], [6993, 7055, 0.0], [7055, 7120, 0.0], [7120, 7191, 0.0], [7191, 7237, 0.0], [7237, 7341, 0.0], [7341, 7406, 0.0], [7406, 7466, 0.0], [7466, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 49, 7.0], [49, 67, 2.0], [67, 112, 6.0], [112, 135, 3.0], [135, 352, 40.0], [352, 415, 10.0], [415, 893, 75.0], [893, 970, 14.0], [970, 1015, 6.0], [1015, 1485, 71.0], [1485, 1555, 8.0], [1555, 1575, 3.0], [1575, 2050, 76.0], [2050, 2123, 12.0], [2123, 2147, 4.0], [2147, 2580, 71.0], [2580, 2642, 12.0], [2642, 2694, 8.0], [2694, 3449, 117.0], [3449, 3483, 5.0], [3483, 4053, 99.0], [4053, 4121, 10.0], [4121, 4618, 88.0], [4618, 4657, 6.0], [4657, 5124, 80.0], [5124, 5187, 11.0], [5187, 5642, 78.0], [5642, 5697, 7.0], [5697, 6083, 64.0], [6083, 6128, 7.0], [6128, 6386, 42.0], [6386, 6428, 7.0], [6428, 6683, 42.0], [6683, 6722, 8.0], [6722, 6774, 11.0], [6774, 6829, 8.0], [6829, 6886, 8.0], [6886, 6910, 4.0], [6910, 6993, 15.0], [6993, 7055, 11.0], [7055, 7120, 12.0], [7120, 7191, 11.0], [7191, 7237, 8.0], [7237, 7341, 16.0], [7341, 7406, 9.0], [7406, 7466, 11.0], [7466, 7536, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.08333333], [49, 67, 0.0], [67, 112, 0.14285714], [112, 135, 0.0], [135, 352, 0.0], [352, 415, 0.0], [415, 893, 0.0], [893, 970, 0.0], [970, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1485, 0.00888889], [1485, 1555, 0.0], [1555, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 2050, 0.0], [2050, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2147, 0.0], [2147, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2642, 0.0], [2642, 2694, 0.0], [2694, 3449, 0.00540541], [3449, 3483, 0.0], [3483, 4053, 0.00718133], [4053, 4121, 0.0], [4121, 4618, 0.00817996], [4618, 4657, 0.0], [4657, 5124, 0.00879121], [5124, 5187, 0.01694915], [5187, 5642, 0.02494331], [5642, 5697, 0.0], [5697, 6083, 0.01069519], [6083, 6128, 0.0], [6128, 6386, 0.0], [6386, 6428, 0.0], [6428, 6683, 0.01619433], [6683, 6722, 0.05263158], [6722, 6774, 0.0], [6774, 6829, 0.0754717], [6829, 6886, 0.07272727], [6886, 6910, 0.0], [6910, 6993, 0.0], [6993, 7055, 0.0], [7055, 7120, 0.01587302], [7120, 7191, 0.05970149], [7191, 7237, 0.04444444], [7237, 7341, 0.04040404], [7341, 7406, 0.0], [7406, 7466, 0.0], [7466, 7536, 0.05797101]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 67, 0.0], [67, 112, 0.0], [112, 135, 0.0], [135, 352, 0.0], [352, 415, 0.0], [415, 893, 0.0], [893, 970, 0.0], [970, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1485, 0.0], [1485, 1555, 0.0], [1555, 1575, 0.0], [1575, 2050, 0.0], [2050, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2147, 0.0], [2147, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2642, 0.0], [2642, 2694, 0.0], [2694, 3449, 0.0], [3449, 3483, 0.0], [3483, 4053, 0.0], [4053, 4121, 0.0], [4121, 4618, 0.0], [4618, 4657, 0.0], [4657, 5124, 0.0], [5124, 5187, 0.0], [5187, 5642, 0.0], [5642, 5697, 0.0], [5697, 6083, 0.0], [6083, 6128, 0.0], [6128, 6386, 0.0], [6386, 6428, 0.0], [6428, 6683, 0.0], [6683, 6722, 0.0], [6722, 6774, 0.0], [6774, 6829, 0.0], [6829, 6886, 0.0], [6886, 6910, 0.0], [6910, 6993, 0.0], [6993, 7055, 0.0], [7055, 7120, 0.0], [7120, 7191, 0.0], [7191, 7237, 0.0], [7237, 7341, 0.0], [7341, 7406, 0.0], [7406, 7466, 0.0], [7466, 7536, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.12244898], [49, 67, 0.11111111], [67, 112, 0.08888889], [112, 135, 0.17391304], [135, 352, 0.01843318], [352, 415, 0.14285714], [415, 893, 0.0376569], [893, 970, 0.15584416], [970, 1015, 0.13333333], [1015, 1485, 0.05106383], [1485, 1555, 0.12857143], [1555, 1575, 0.15], [1575, 2050, 0.02947368], [2050, 2123, 0.16438356], [2123, 2147, 0.16666667], [2147, 2580, 0.05542725], [2580, 2642, 0.16129032], [2642, 2694, 0.17307692], [2694, 3449, 0.04900662], [3449, 3483, 0.14705882], [3483, 4053, 0.02807018], [4053, 4121, 0.14705882], [4121, 4618, 0.02615694], [4618, 4657, 0.12820513], [4657, 5124, 0.04068522], [5124, 5187, 0.12698413], [5187, 5642, 0.05494505], [5642, 5697, 0.12727273], [5697, 6083, 0.04145078], [6083, 6128, 0.13333333], [6128, 6386, 0.05813953], [6386, 6428, 0.11904762], [6428, 6683, 0.07058824], [6683, 6722, 0.12820513], [6722, 6774, 0.01923077], [6774, 6829, 0.12727273], [6829, 6886, 0.12280702], [6886, 6910, 0.16666667], [6910, 6993, 0.18072289], [6993, 7055, 0.17741935], [7055, 7120, 0.16923077], [7120, 7191, 0.14084507], [7191, 7237, 0.15217391], [7237, 7341, 0.14423077], [7341, 7406, 0.15384615], [7406, 7466, 0.18333333], [7466, 7536, 0.12857143]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7536, 0.55090147]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7536, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7536, 0.97419471]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7536, -446.98691435]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7536, 39.9473322]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7536, -135.45343884]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7536, 56.0]]}
MDOT SHA Project Wins ATA Award Fri August 17, 2018 - Northeast Edition #17 Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration The Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration's (MDOT SHA) MD 404 highway widening project has been recognized with an America's Transportation Award. Sponsored by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), Socrata, AAA and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the 11th annual America's Transportation Awards competition selected the $158 million MD 404 (Shore Highway) project as the best in the northeastern states in the Quality of Life/ Community Development Category for medium projects (costing between $25-$200 million). The award lauds MD 404 project's safety enhancements for residents and seasonal motorists, as well as overall improved operations and congestion relief. "State DOTs are committed to making America safer, better and stronger by improving connections between communities both large and small, urban and rural," said John Schroer, president of AASHTO and commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Transportation. "The transportation projects in this competition are part of a national multimodal network that is moving millions of people and tons of goods where they need to go every day." Answering Gov. Larry Hogan's landmark challenge to improve safety, reduce congestion and improve MD 404 across three counties by Thanksgiving 2017, MDOT SHA opened the four-lane divided highway with median and shoulders as promised. The 11.3-mi. dualized MD 404 provides a direct route between U.S. 50 and the town of Denton, enhancing safety and operations for residents and reducing traffic congestion caused by high season peaks associated with summer resort traffic. With extensive outreach to the community, construction began in summer 2016 with an expedited design-build contract and innovative partnership with industry partners — shortening the standard construction timetable by 18 months. "The American's Transportation Award for MD 404 is a testament to the dedication, determination and ingenuity of the project team, who exemplify MDOT SHA's commitment to bring transformative change and a positive customer experience to all Maryland travelers," said Greg Slater, MDOT SHA administrator. "At MDOT SHA, we are becoming a national leader in transportation by challenging the status quo, embracing innovation and modernization, and delivering real, lasting results." The America's Transportation Award competition will continue throughout the summer. MD 404 could be included as a "Top 12" finalist, which will compete for the Grand Prize, selected by an independent panel of industry judges, and the Socrata People's Choice Award, chosen by the public through online voting. The top two winners also receive $10,000 cash awards, to be donated to a charity or scholarship of the state DOT's choosing. Online voting begins Aug. 30. The winners of the top two awards will be announced Sept. 23, at the AASHTO Annual Meeting in Atlanta. For more information, visit AmericasTransportationAwards.org. AASHTOAwardsMaryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration AASHTO Awards Maryland Department of Transportation State Highway Administration
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/14632
{"url": "https://www.constructionequipmentguide.com/mdot-sha-project-wins-ata-award/41590", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.constructionequipmentguide.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:32:58Z", "digest": "sha1:IZ4AONDOW3HDBQE62SJBLXNSYEZGUBAD"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3283, 3283.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3283, 13424.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3283, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3283, 220.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3283, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3283, 292.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3283, 0.28694158]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3283, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3283, 0.08035385]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3283, 0.08035385]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3283, 0.04423148]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3283, 0.01290085]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3283, 0.04791743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3283, 0.04570586]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3283, 0.05154639]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3283, 0.19243986]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3283, 0.53991597]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3283, 5.69957983]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3283, 0.00171821]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3283, 5.06300793]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3283, 476.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 76, 0.0], [76, 143, 0.0], [143, 319, 1.0], [319, 727, 1.0], [727, 880, 1.0], [880, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1549, 1.0], [1549, 1787, 1.0], [1787, 2016, 1.0], [2016, 2495, 0.0], [2495, 2929, 1.0], [2929, 3062, 1.0], [3062, 3124, 1.0], [3124, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 76, 0.0], [76, 143, 0.0], [143, 319, 0.0], [319, 727, 0.0], [727, 880, 0.0], [880, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1549, 0.0], [1549, 1787, 0.0], [1787, 2016, 0.0], [2016, 2495, 0.0], [2495, 2929, 0.0], [2929, 3062, 0.0], [3062, 3124, 0.0], [3124, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 32, 6.0], [32, 76, 7.0], [76, 143, 7.0], [143, 319, 23.0], [319, 727, 58.0], [727, 880, 22.0], [880, 1316, 67.0], [1316, 1549, 34.0], [1549, 1787, 37.0], [1787, 2016, 31.0], [2016, 2495, 69.0], [2495, 2929, 70.0], [2929, 3062, 24.0], [3062, 3124, 5.0], [3124, 3203, 7.0], [3203, 3283, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 76, 0.20512821], [76, 143, 0.0], [143, 319, 0.01764706], [319, 727, 0.03341902], [727, 880, 0.02013423], [880, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1549, 0.03097345], [1549, 1787, 0.03478261], [1787, 2016, 0.02666667], [2016, 2495, 0.00649351], [2495, 2929, 0.02392344], [2929, 3062, 0.03149606], [3062, 3124, 0.0], [3124, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 76, 0.0], [76, 143, 0.0], [143, 319, 0.0], [319, 727, 0.0], [727, 880, 0.0], [880, 1316, 0.0], [1316, 1549, 0.0], [1549, 1787, 0.0], [1787, 2016, 0.0], [2016, 2495, 0.0], [2495, 2929, 0.0], [2929, 3062, 0.0], [3062, 3124, 0.0], [3124, 3203, 0.0], [3203, 3283, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.40625], [32, 76, 0.09090909], [76, 143, 0.08955224], [143, 319, 0.10795455], [319, 727, 0.08088235], [727, 880, 0.01960784], [880, 1316, 0.03899083], [1316, 1549, 0.06008584], [1549, 1787, 0.02521008], [1787, 2016, 0.00436681], [2016, 2495, 0.06471816], [2495, 2929, 0.03917051], [2929, 3062, 0.09774436], [3062, 3124, 0.06451613], [3124, 3203, 0.16455696], [3203, 3283, 0.1625]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3283, 0.77557695]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3283, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3283, 0.79444975]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3283, -126.64271556]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3283, 17.42443893]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3283, 55.28093877]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3283, 27.0]]}
This page in: EN dropdown This page in:_ World Bank Group Commits $1 Billion for Battery Storage to Ramp Up Renewable Energy Globally New program will mobilize another $4 billion; “game changer” for developing countries NEW YORK, September 26, 2018 - In a major announcement at the One Planet Summit here today, the World Bank Group committed $1 billion for a new global program to accelerate investments in battery storage for energy systems in developing and middle-income countries. The program is expected to help these countries ramp up their use of renewables – particularly wind and solar power – improve energy security, increase grid stability and expand access to electricity. The $1 billion in World Bank Group financing is expected to mobilize another $4 billion in concessional climate financing and public and private investments. The program aims to finance 17.5 gigawatt hours (GWh) of battery storage by 2025 – more than triple the 4-5 GWh currently installed in all developing countries. “For developing countries, this can be a game changer,” said World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim. “Battery storage can help countries leapfrog to the next generation of power generation technology, expand energy access, and set the stage for much cleaner, more stable, energy systems.” Currently, batteries used in energy generation systems are expensive, and most projects are concentrated in developed countries. The “Accelerating Battery Storage for Development” program, in response to demand from countries, will finance and de-risk investments such as utility-scale solar parks with battery storage, off-grid systems – including mini-grids – and stand-alone batteries that can help stabilize and strengthen grids. The program will also support large-scale demonstration projects for new storage technologies suitable for developing countries’ needs – such as batteries that are long-lasting, resilient to harsh conditions and high temperatures, and that present minimal environmental risks. “Batteries are critical to decarbonizing the world’s power systems. They allow us to store wind and solar energy and deploy it when it’s needed most to provide people with clean, affordable, round-the-clock power.” Dr. Kim said. “We call on our partners to join us and match the investments we’re making today. We can create new markets for battery storage in countries with high wind and solar potential, growing energy demand, and populations that still live without reliable electricity.” The World Bank Group is putting $1 billion of its own funds towards this new program and will fundraise another $1 billion in concessional climate funds through channels such as the Climate Investment Funds’ Clean Technology Fund (CTF). The program is expected to raise an additional $3 billion from public and private funds and investors. The new program will also convene a global think tank on battery storage, bringing together national laboratories, research institutions, development agencies and philanthropies to foster international technological cooperation and training that can develop and adapt new storage solutions tailored for the needs and conditions of developing countries. The World Bank Group has been working with countries to support the deployment of batteries together with solar and wind power for several years, with projects currently underway in Africa, South Asia, and the Pacific. The Bank Group has financed roughly 15 percent of the stationary battery storage capacity already deployed or currently under development in developing countries, mostly through mini-grid projects and in island states to improve resilience. PRESS RELEASE NO: 2019/038/EEX New York/Washington D.C. Nick Keyes nkeyes@worldbankgroup.org For more information on the Program energystorage@worldbankgroup.org Feature story: Powering New Markets for Battery Storage Infographic: Accelerating Battery Storage for Development Watch live: One Planet Summit Energy Storage Partnership: Fact Sheet
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/16711
{"url": "https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2018/09/26/world-bank-group-commits-1-billion-for-battery-storage-to-ramp-up-renewable-energy-globally?cid=ECR_LI_worldbank_EN_EXT", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.worldbank.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:00:09Z", "digest": "sha1:ZG3KCOX75J6QXWB2QNBROZHH4GFSDK7Y"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3996, 3996.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3996, 10780.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3996, 23.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3996, 493.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3996, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3996, 296.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3996, 0.29346314]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3996, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3996, 0.02958044]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3996, 0.04225777]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3996, 0.02535466]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3996, 0.0153939]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3996, 0.01390821]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3996, 0.17802503]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3996, 0.47546531]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3996, 5.60575296]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3996, 5.13015097]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3996, 591.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 41, 0.0], [41, 134, 0.0], [134, 220, 0.0], [220, 687, 1.0], [687, 1006, 1.0], [1006, 1296, 1.0], [1296, 1730, 1.0], [1730, 2007, 1.0], [2007, 2499, 1.0], [2499, 2839, 1.0], [2839, 3192, 1.0], [3192, 3652, 1.0], [3652, 3683, 0.0], [3683, 3708, 1.0], [3708, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3745, 0.0], [3745, 3781, 0.0], [3781, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3870, 0.0], [3870, 3928, 0.0], [3928, 3958, 0.0], [3958, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 41, 0.0], [41, 134, 0.0], [134, 220, 0.0], [220, 687, 0.0], [687, 1006, 0.0], [1006, 1296, 0.0], [1296, 1730, 0.0], [1730, 2007, 0.0], [2007, 2499, 0.0], [2499, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3652, 0.0], [3652, 3683, 0.0], [3683, 3708, 0.0], [3708, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3745, 0.0], [3745, 3781, 0.0], [3781, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3870, 0.0], [3870, 3928, 0.0], [3928, 3958, 0.0], [3958, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 26, 5.0], [26, 41, 3.0], [41, 134, 15.0], [134, 220, 12.0], [220, 687, 74.0], [687, 1006, 51.0], [1006, 1296, 45.0], [1296, 1730, 59.0], [1730, 2007, 37.0], [2007, 2499, 78.0], [2499, 2839, 55.0], [2839, 3192, 47.0], [3192, 3652, 69.0], [3652, 3683, 4.0], [3683, 3708, 3.0], [3708, 3719, 2.0], [3719, 3745, 1.0], [3745, 3781, 6.0], [3781, 3814, 1.0], [3814, 3870, 8.0], [3870, 3928, 6.0], [3928, 3958, 5.0], [3958, 3996, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 41, 0.0], [41, 134, 0.01098901], [134, 220, 0.01204819], [220, 687, 0.01535088], [687, 1006, 0.03548387], [1006, 1296, 0.0], [1296, 1730, 0.0], [1730, 2007, 0.0], [2007, 2499, 0.0], [2499, 2839, 0.00903614], [2839, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3652, 0.00442478], [3652, 3683, 0.25925926], [3683, 3708, 0.0], [3708, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3745, 0.0], [3745, 3781, 0.0], [3781, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3870, 0.0], [3870, 3928, 0.0], [3928, 3958, 0.0], [3958, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 41, 0.0], [41, 134, 0.0], [134, 220, 0.0], [220, 687, 0.0], [687, 1006, 0.0], [1006, 1296, 0.0], [1296, 1730, 0.0], [1730, 2007, 0.0], [2007, 2499, 0.0], [2499, 2839, 0.0], [2839, 3192, 0.0], [3192, 3652, 0.0], [3652, 3683, 0.0], [3683, 3708, 0.0], [3708, 3719, 0.0], [3719, 3745, 0.0], [3745, 3781, 0.0], [3781, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3870, 0.0], [3870, 3928, 0.0], [3928, 3958, 0.0], [3958, 3996, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.11538462], [26, 41, 0.06666667], [41, 134, 0.12903226], [134, 220, 0.01162791], [220, 687, 0.03426124], [687, 1006, 0.02821317], [1006, 1296, 0.03103448], [1296, 1730, 0.01382488], [1730, 2007, 0.00361011], [2007, 2499, 0.01219512], [2499, 2839, 0.04117647], [2839, 3192, 0.00283286], [3192, 3652, 0.02391304], [3652, 3683, 0.5483871], [3683, 3708, 0.2], [3708, 3719, 0.18181818], [3719, 3745, 0.0], [3745, 3781, 0.05555556], [3781, 3814, 0.0], [3814, 3870, 0.10714286], [3870, 3928, 0.0862069], [3928, 3958, 0.13333333], [3958, 3996, 0.13157895]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3996, 0.44064069]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3996, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3996, 0.32902735]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3996, -296.99926442]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3996, 27.57019292]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3996, -84.38503966]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3996, 26.0]]}
Vocality Vocality is a British designer and manufacturer of secure critical communication solutions. We provide Push-to-talk radio, telephone, video and data over a broad range of technologies, including cellular, Wi-Fi and satellite networks. As part Cubic Mission Solutions (CMS), Vocality helps provide networked C4ISR capabilities for defense, intelligence, security and commercial missions. Vorago Technologies Vorago Technologies designs, manufactures, and tests radiation-hardened and extreme temperature-hardened integrated circuit components for the hi-rel marketplace. The company offers high density SRAMs and microcontrollers for applications in automotive, industrial, military, aerospace, and networking markets. VORtech B.V. VORtech is a company of scientific software engineers, specialised in data-assimilation, high performance computing and data analytics. The company works on a project base, mainly for R&D departments and software development groups in large companies and institutes. For space applications, it focuses on downstream applications, turning satellite observations into useful, operational info. Vortexa Vortexa is an artificial intelligence company focused on global energy markets. Using state-of-the-art algorithms and energy domain expertise, Vortexa processes data on a massive scale from multiple satellite constellations, markets, governments and other key information sources to infer global energy flows. VSATPLUS VSATPLUS has good business relationship with the major VSAT suppliers in the market. The company has partner connection all over the world and is one of the main players due to the bulk capabilities of Products, high number of requests and warehouse facilities. VSATPLUS supports varieties of VSAT, Wireless, VOIP products, Wireless and Internet services. VT iDirect, Inc A subsidiary of VT Systems, is transforming the way the world gets and stays connected. The company's satellite-based IP communications technology enables constant connectivity for voice, video and data applications in diverse and challenging environments. VTI Co Ltd Vietnam Telecom International (VTI) was founded on 31 March 1990. VTI is an exclusive 100 percent state-owned subsidiary company of Vietnam Post and Telecommunications. Our philosophy is to supply the world with the most effective international telecommunications services. Vyoma Gmbh Our services, dedicated to improve knowledge and predictability of space traffic, are available through our Rest API as well as our dashboard.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/17630
{"url": "https://spacebizguide.com/company/list/alpha/v?site=4", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "spacebizguide.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:29:30Z", "digest": "sha1:SHRBGDVS6FHHB4WDGXGREQY5NTJMH2LY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2526, 2526.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2526, 3104.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2526, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2526, 89.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2526, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2526, 290.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2526, 0.2453271]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2526, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2526, 0.00993848]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2526, 0.01135826]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2526, 0.04672897]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2526, 0.1682243]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2526, 0.625]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2526, 6.14244186]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2526, 5.032199]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2526, 344.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 396, 1.0], [396, 416, 0.0], [416, 727, 1.0], [727, 740, 1.0], [740, 1132, 1.0], [1132, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1450, 1.0], [1450, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1815, 1.0], [1815, 1831, 0.0], [1831, 2088, 1.0], [2088, 2099, 0.0], [2099, 2373, 1.0], [2373, 2384, 0.0], [2384, 2526, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 396, 0.0], [396, 416, 0.0], [416, 727, 0.0], [727, 740, 0.0], [740, 1132, 0.0], [1132, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 1831, 0.0], [1831, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2099, 0.0], [2099, 2373, 0.0], [2373, 2384, 0.0], [2384, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 9, 1.0], [9, 396, 51.0], [396, 416, 2.0], [416, 727, 35.0], [727, 740, 2.0], [740, 1132, 52.0], [1132, 1140, 1.0], [1140, 1450, 41.0], [1450, 1459, 1.0], [1459, 1815, 55.0], [1815, 1831, 3.0], [1831, 2088, 35.0], [2088, 2099, 3.0], [2099, 2373, 38.0], [2373, 2384, 2.0], [2384, 2526, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 396, 0.00269542], [396, 416, 0.0], [416, 727, 0.0], [727, 740, 0.0], [740, 1132, 0.0], [1132, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 1831, 0.0], [1831, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2099, 0.0], [2099, 2373, 0.03370787], [2373, 2384, 0.0], [2384, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 9, 0.0], [9, 396, 0.0], [396, 416, 0.0], [416, 727, 0.0], [727, 740, 0.0], [740, 1132, 0.0], [1132, 1140, 0.0], [1140, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1459, 0.0], [1459, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 1831, 0.0], [1831, 2088, 0.0], [2088, 2099, 0.0], [2099, 2373, 0.0], [2373, 2384, 0.0], [2384, 2526, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 9, 0.11111111], [9, 396, 0.04651163], [396, 416, 0.1], [416, 727, 0.02250804], [727, 740, 0.38461538], [740, 1132, 0.01785714], [1132, 1140, 0.125], [1140, 1450, 0.00967742], [1450, 1459, 0.88888889], [1459, 1815, 0.09269663], [1815, 1831, 0.25], [1831, 2088, 0.02723735], [2088, 2099, 0.45454545], [2099, 2373, 0.05109489], [2373, 2384, 0.18181818], [2384, 2526, 0.03521127]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2526, 0.59502667]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2526, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2526, 0.08735156]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2526, -138.70192896]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2526, -15.41614293]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2526, 5.09854687]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2526, 21.0]]}
News Release 2-Sep-2021 Scientists create a labor-saving automated method for studying electronic health records Mount Sinai study suggests new method is as effective as manually-based “gold-standard” at classifying a diagnosis image: Mount Sinai scientists created an AI-based, automated system that learns to read patient data from electronic health records. Here the system identified dementia cases (purple dots) from a database of nearly 2 million patients (blue dots). view more Credit: Courtesy of the Glicksberg lab, Mount Sinai, N.Y., N.Y. In an article published in the journal Patterns, scientists at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai described the creation of a new, automated, artificial intelligence-based algorithm that can learn to read patient data from electronic health records. In a side-by-side comparison, they showed that their method, called Phe2vec (FEE-to-vek), accurately identified patients with certain diseases as well as the traditional, “gold-standard” method, which requires much more manual labor to develop and perform. “There continues to be an explosion in the amount and types of data electronically stored in a patient’s medical record. Disentangling this complex web of data can be highly burdensome, thus slowing advancements in clinical research,” said Benjamin S. Glicksberg, PhD, Assistant Professor of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, a member of the Hasso Plattner Institute for Digital Health at Mount Sinai (HPIMS), and a senior author of the study. “In this study, we created a new method for mining data from electronic health records with machine learning that is faster and less labor intensive than the industry standard. We hope that this will be a valuable tool that will facilitate further, and less biased, research in clinical informatics.” The study was led by Jessica K. De Freitas, a graduate student in Dr. Glicksberg lab. Currently, scientists rely on a set of established computer programs, or algorithms, to mine medical records for new information. The development and storage of these algorithms is managed by a system called the Phenotype Knowledgebase (PheKB). Although the system is highly effective at correctly identifying a patient diagnosis, the process of developing an algorithm can be very time-consuming and inflexible. To study a disease, researchers first have to comb through reams of medical records looking for pieces of data, such as certain lab tests or prescriptions, which are uniquely associated with the disease. They then program the algorithm that guides the computer to search for patients who have those disease-specific pieces of data, which constitute a “phenotype”. In turn, the list of patients identified by the computer needs to be manually double-checked by researchers. Each time researchers want to study a new disease, they have to restart the process from scratch. In this study, the researchers tried a different approach—one in which the computer learns, on its own, how to spot disease phenotypes and thus save researchers time and effort. This new, Phe2vec method was based on studies the team had already conducted. “Previously, we showed that unsupervised machine learning could be a highly efficient and effective strategy for mining electronic health records,” said Riccardo Miotto, PhD, a former Assistant Professor at the HPIMS and a senior author of the study. “The potential advantage of our approach is that it learns representations of diseases from the data itself. Therefore, the machine does much of the work experts would normally do to define the combination of data elements from health records that best describes a particular disease.” Essentially, a computer was programmed to scour through millions of electronic health records and learn how to find connections between data and diseases. This programming relied on “embedding” algorithms that had been previously developed by other researchers, such as linguists, to study word networks in various languages. One of the algorithms, called word2vec, was particularly effective. Then, the computer was programmed to use what it learned to identify the diagnoses of nearly 2 million patients whose data was stored in the Mount Sinai Health System. Finally, the researchers compared the effectiveness between the new and the old systems. For nine out of ten diseases tested, they found that the new Phe2vec system was as effective as, or performed slightly better than, the gold standard phenotyping process at correctly identifying a diagnoses from electronic health records. A few examples of the diseases included dementia, multiple sclerosis, and sickle cell anemia. “Overall our results are encouraging and suggest that Phe2vec is a promising technique for large-scale phenotyping of diseases in electronic health record data,” Dr. Glicksberg said. “With further testing and refinement, we hope that it could be used to automate many of the initial steps of clinical informatics research, thus allowing scientists to focus their efforts on downstream analyses like predictive modeling.” This study was supported by the Hasso Plattner Foundation, the Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation, and a courtesy graphics processing unit donation from the NVIDIA Corporation. De Freitas, J.K., et al., Phe2vec: Automated Disease Phenotyping based on Unsupervised Embeddings from Electronic Health Records, Patterns, September 2, 2021, DOI: 10.1016/j.patter.2021.100337. About the Mount Sinai Health System The Mount Sinai Health System is New York City's largest academic medical system, encompassing eight hospitals, a leading medical school, and a vast network of ambulatory practices throughout the greater New York region. Mount Sinai advances medicine and health through unrivaled education and translational research and discovery to deliver care that is the safest, highest-quality, most accessible and equitable, and the best value of any health system in the nation. The Health System includes approximately 7,300 primary and specialty care physicians; 13 joint-venture ambulatory surgery centers; more than 415 ambulatory practices throughout the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, Long Island, and Florida; and more than 30 affiliated community health centers. The Mount Sinai Hospital is ranked on U.S. News & World Report's "Honor Roll" of the top 20 U.S. hospitals and is top in the nation by specialty: No. 1 in Geriatrics and top 20 in Cardiology/Heart Surgery, Diabetes/Endocrinology, Gastroenterology/GI Surgery, Neurology/Neurosurgery, Orthopedics, Pulmonology/Lung Surgery, Rehabilitation, and Urology. New York Eye and Ear Infirmary of Mount Sinai is ranked No. 12 in Ophthalmology. Mount Sinai Kravis Children's Hospital is ranked in U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Children’s Hospitals” among the country’s best in four out of 10 pediatric specialties. The Icahn School of Medicine is one of three medical schools that have earned distinction by multiple indicators: ranked in the top 20 by U.S. News & World Report's "Best Medical Schools," aligned with a U.S. News & World Report "Honor Roll" Hospital, and No. 14 in the nation for National Institutes of Health funding. Newsweek’s “The World’s Best Smart Hospitals” ranks The Mount Sinai Hospital as No. 1 in New York and in the top five globally, and Mount Sinai Morningside in the top 20 globally. For more information, visit https://www.mountsinai.org or find Mount Sinai on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube. 10.1016/j.patter.2021.100337 Phe2vec: Automated Disease Phenotyping based on Unsupervised Embeddings from Electronic Health Records 2-Sep-2021 Christopher Thomas christopher.thomas@mssm.edu Hasso Plattner Foundation, Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation /Applied sciences and engineering/Computer science/Artificial intelligence /Applied sciences and engineering/Engineering/Robotics/Artificial intelligence/Machine learning /Applied sciences and engineering/Applied mathematics/Algorithms /Applied sciences and engineering/Engineering/Bioengineering/Systems biology /Health and medicine/Health care/Medical facilities/Hospitals /Applied sciences and engineering/Computer science/Computers /Applied sciences and engineering/Information science/Information retrieval/Data mining /Scientific community/Research programs/Clinical research /Health and medicine /Health and medicine/Clinical medicine/Personalized medicine /Health and medicine/Clinical medicine/Medical diagnosis /Applied sciences and engineering/Computer science/Artificial intelligence/Neural net processing
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/17995
{"url": "https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/927089", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.eurekalert.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:15:19Z", "digest": "sha1:W3HRHDESAPGXKV6TJJBIPZDETOPWQ6OO"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8547, 8547.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8547, 9836.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8547, 38.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8547, 84.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8547, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8547, 180.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8547, 0.29755179]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8547, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8547, 0.02550659]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8547, 0.09069009]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8547, 0.04676208]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8547, 0.04676208]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8547, 0.04676208]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8547, 0.02550659]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8547, 0.02125549]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8547, 0.0260734]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8547, 0.02295593]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8547, 0.01632141]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8547, 0.19899561]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8547, 0.41728395]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8547, 5.80823045]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8547, 5.54125481]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8547, 1215.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 113, 0.0], [113, 228, 0.0], [228, 485, 0.0], [485, 549, 1.0], [549, 1065, 1.0], [1065, 1807, 1.0], [1807, 1893, 1.0], [1893, 2877, 1.0], [2877, 3133, 1.0], [3133, 3670, 1.0], [3670, 4232, 1.0], [4232, 4654, 1.0], [4654, 5075, 1.0], [5075, 5155, 0.0], [5155, 5255, 1.0], [5255, 5449, 1.0], [5449, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7366, 1.0], [7366, 7475, 1.0], [7475, 7504, 0.0], [7504, 7607, 0.0], [7607, 7618, 0.0], [7618, 7637, 0.0], [7637, 7665, 0.0], [7665, 7730, 0.0], [7730, 7805, 0.0], [7805, 7901, 0.0], [7901, 7966, 0.0], [7966, 8043, 0.0], [8043, 8105, 0.0], [8105, 8166, 0.0], [8166, 8254, 0.0], [8254, 8312, 0.0], [8312, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8394, 0.0], [8394, 8451, 0.0], [8451, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 113, 0.0], [113, 228, 0.0], [228, 485, 0.0], [485, 549, 0.0], [549, 1065, 0.0], [1065, 1807, 0.0], [1807, 1893, 0.0], [1893, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 3133, 0.0], [3133, 3670, 0.0], [3670, 4232, 0.0], [4232, 4654, 0.0], [4654, 5075, 0.0], [5075, 5155, 0.0], [5155, 5255, 0.0], [5255, 5449, 0.0], [5449, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7475, 0.0], [7475, 7504, 0.0], [7504, 7607, 0.0], [7607, 7618, 0.0], [7618, 7637, 0.0], [7637, 7665, 0.0], [7665, 7730, 0.0], [7730, 7805, 0.0], [7805, 7901, 0.0], [7901, 7966, 0.0], [7966, 8043, 0.0], [8043, 8105, 0.0], [8105, 8166, 0.0], [8166, 8254, 0.0], [8254, 8312, 0.0], [8312, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8394, 0.0], [8394, 8451, 0.0], [8451, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 24, 3.0], [24, 113, 11.0], [113, 228, 16.0], [228, 485, 39.0], [485, 549, 10.0], [549, 1065, 74.0], [1065, 1807, 118.0], [1807, 1893, 16.0], [1893, 2877, 151.0], [2877, 3133, 42.0], [3133, 3670, 83.0], [3670, 4232, 85.0], [4232, 4654, 64.0], [4654, 5075, 62.0], [5075, 5155, 12.0], [5155, 5255, 13.0], [5255, 5449, 23.0], [5449, 5485, 6.0], [5485, 7366, 285.0], [7366, 7475, 14.0], [7475, 7504, 1.0], [7504, 7607, 12.0], [7607, 7618, 1.0], [7618, 7637, 2.0], [7637, 7665, 1.0], [7665, 7730, 7.0], [7730, 7805, 6.0], [7805, 7901, 6.0], [7901, 7966, 5.0], [7966, 8043, 5.0], [8043, 8105, 5.0], [8105, 8166, 5.0], [8166, 8254, 7.0], [8254, 8312, 4.0], [8312, 8333, 3.0], [8333, 8394, 5.0], [8394, 8451, 5.0], [8451, 8547, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.23809524], [24, 113, 0.0], [113, 228, 0.0], [228, 485, 0.00404858], [485, 549, 0.0], [549, 1065, 0.00201207], [1065, 1807, 0.0], [1807, 1893, 0.0], [1893, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 3133, 0.00401606], [3133, 3670, 0.0], [3670, 4232, 0.00362976], [4232, 4654, 0.00242718], [4654, 5075, 0.00242131], [5075, 5155, 0.0], [5155, 5255, 0.0], [5255, 5449, 0.12571429], [5449, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7366, 0.01493363], [7366, 7475, 0.0], [7475, 7504, 0.69565217], [7504, 7607, 0.00990099], [7607, 7618, 0.625], [7618, 7637, 0.0], [7637, 7665, 0.0], [7665, 7730, 0.0], [7730, 7805, 0.0], [7805, 7901, 0.0], [7901, 7966, 0.0], [7966, 8043, 0.0], [8043, 8105, 0.0], [8105, 8166, 0.0], [8166, 8254, 0.0], [8254, 8312, 0.0], [8312, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8394, 0.0], [8394, 8451, 0.0], [8451, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 113, 0.0], [113, 228, 0.0], [228, 485, 0.0], [485, 549, 0.0], [549, 1065, 0.0], [1065, 1807, 0.0], [1807, 1893, 0.0], [1893, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 3133, 0.0], [3133, 3670, 0.0], [3670, 4232, 0.0], [4232, 4654, 0.0], [4654, 5075, 0.0], [5075, 5155, 0.0], [5155, 5255, 0.0], [5255, 5449, 0.0], [5449, 5485, 0.0], [5485, 7366, 0.0], [7366, 7475, 0.0], [7475, 7504, 0.0], [7504, 7607, 0.0], [7607, 7618, 0.0], [7618, 7637, 0.0], [7637, 7665, 0.0], [7665, 7730, 0.0], [7730, 7805, 0.0], [7805, 7901, 0.0], [7901, 7966, 0.0], [7966, 8043, 0.0], [8043, 8105, 0.0], [8105, 8166, 0.0], [8166, 8254, 0.0], [8254, 8312, 0.0], [8312, 8333, 0.0], [8333, 8394, 0.0], [8394, 8451, 0.0], [8451, 8547, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.125], [24, 113, 0.01123596], [113, 228, 0.0173913], [228, 485, 0.01945525], [485, 549, 0.140625], [549, 1065, 0.02325581], [1065, 1807, 0.03504043], [1807, 1893, 0.08139535], [1893, 2877, 0.01219512], [2877, 3133, 0.01171875], [3133, 3670, 0.02607076], [3670, 4232, 0.01423488], [4232, 4654, 0.00947867], [4654, 5075, 0.01187648], [5075, 5155, 0.075], [5155, 5255, 0.09], [5255, 5449, 0.09278351], [5449, 5485, 0.13888889], [5485, 7366, 0.06166932], [7366, 7475, 0.06422018], [7475, 7504, 0.0], [7504, 7607, 0.08737864], [7607, 7618, 0.09090909], [7618, 7637, 0.10526316], [7637, 7665, 0.0], [7665, 7730, 0.10769231], [7730, 7805, 0.04], [7805, 7901, 0.05208333], [7901, 7966, 0.04615385], [7966, 8043, 0.05194805], [8043, 8105, 0.06451613], [8105, 8166, 0.04918033], [8166, 8254, 0.04545455], [8254, 8312, 0.05172414], [8312, 8333, 0.04761905], [8333, 8394, 0.04918033], [8394, 8451, 0.05263158], [8451, 8547, 0.04166667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8547, 0.52045339]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8547, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8547, 0.60503292]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8547, -639.88572042]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8547, -24.2995215]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8547, -134.74810001]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8547, 79.0]]}
NAFSA Proposes Bipartisan Legislative Agenda on International Education diverse staff reportscmaadmin (EDU) NAFSA: Association of International Educators on Wednesday issued an international education agenda for the 110th Congress, setting out a detailed legislative proposal to support and enhance U.S. global leadership, security and competitiveness. NAFSA executive director and CEO Marlene Johnson says the new congressional leadership should support international educational programs. “These programs serve U.S. interests in fundamental ways, including building the skills of Americans to work effectively in today’s global environment, developing closer ties with the leadership of other nations, improving our ability to compete in the global age and providing a foundation for addressing global challenges,” she says. “Now is the time for Congress to assert leadership and enact bold international education legislation.” The “Bipartisan Legislative Agenda for the 110th Congress” sets out three initiatives and includes comprehensive legislation suggestions to restore U.S. competitiveness in the international student market. According to the agenda, such legislation should include rules for coordinating the efforts of multiple U.S. government agencies. It also suggests establishing an International Education Council, to be led by the White House. NAFSA also wants Congress to implement student visa reforms and consider creating a special “best and brightest” visa category to attract talented international students. The second initiative is the Abraham Lincoln Study Abroad Fellowship Program, which hopes to make study abroad the routine, not the exception, on U.S. college campuses. The program is based on the recommendations of the Commission on the Abraham Lincoln Study Abroad Fellowship Program, which was established to increase the number of Americans studying in developing countries. The NAFSA agenda says legislation must ensure study abroad is accessible to students at all higher education institutions, including two-year colleges and minority-serving institutions, regardless of their financial means. Finally, the agenda calls for a complete overhaul of the immigration system. NAFSA says the 110th Congress should broaden requirements for visa applicants in the science, technology, engineering and math fields and provide relief from caps on the number of H-1B visas available for skilled foreign workers. “The United States must be competitive for the best and brightest international students because, increasingly, today’s international students are tomorrow’s innovators in the U.S. economy,” the agenda says. — Diverse staff reports Puerto Rican Resilience Is a Lesson for the Mainland Recovering from Ian and Fiona AANAPISIs Have Supported AAPI Students for 15 Years Rutgers Center for Minority Serving Institutions Publishes Infographic About HBCU Presidents Trends ADJUNCT FACULTY OF FINANCIAL PLANNING New York University School of Professional Studies Clinical Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/19701
{"url": "https://www.diverseeducation.com/institutions/msis/article/15082928/nafsa-proposes-bipartisan-legislative-agenda-on-international-education", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.diverseeducation.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:36:40Z", "digest": "sha1:33XEOP6N5PULFWPBMK3Z5UZJRZKAIETX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3053, 3053.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3053, 6205.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3053, 18.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3053, 179.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3053, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3053, 257.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3053, 0.29058116]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3053, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3053, 0.03880481]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3053, 0.03880481]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3053, 0.03880481]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3053, 0.03880481]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3053, 0.03414823]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3053, 0.01862631]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3053, 0.01319364]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3053, 0.05811623]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3053, 0.12825651]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3053, 0.56470588]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3053, 6.06352941]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3053, 5.02013477]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3053, 425.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 108, 0.0], [108, 353, 1.0], [353, 491, 1.0], [491, 931, 1.0], [931, 1137, 1.0], [1137, 1534, 1.0], [1534, 2136, 1.0], [2136, 2443, 1.0], [2443, 2651, 1.0], [2651, 2675, 0.0], [2675, 2728, 0.0], [2728, 2758, 0.0], [2758, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 2999, 0.0], [2999, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 108, 0.0], [108, 353, 0.0], [353, 491, 0.0], [491, 931, 0.0], [931, 1137, 0.0], [1137, 1534, 0.0], [1534, 2136, 0.0], [2136, 2443, 0.0], [2443, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2675, 0.0], [2675, 2728, 0.0], [2728, 2758, 0.0], [2758, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 2999, 0.0], [2999, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 72, 8.0], [72, 108, 4.0], [108, 353, 32.0], [353, 491, 17.0], [491, 931, 64.0], [931, 1137, 26.0], [1137, 1534, 57.0], [1534, 2136, 86.0], [2136, 2443, 47.0], [2443, 2651, 28.0], [2651, 2675, 4.0], [2675, 2728, 9.0], [2728, 2758, 5.0], [2758, 2810, 8.0], [2810, 2910, 12.0], [2910, 2948, 5.0], [2948, 2999, 7.0], [2999, 3053, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 108, 0.0], [108, 353, 0.01260504], [353, 491, 0.0], [491, 931, 0.0], [931, 1137, 0.01485149], [1137, 1534, 0.0], [1534, 2136, 0.0], [2136, 2443, 0.01333333], [2443, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2675, 0.0], [2675, 2728, 0.0], [2728, 2758, 0.0], [2758, 2810, 0.03921569], [2810, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 2999, 0.0], [2999, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 108, 0.0], [108, 353, 0.0], [353, 491, 0.0], [491, 931, 0.0], [931, 1137, 0.0], [1137, 1534, 0.0], [1534, 2136, 0.0], [2136, 2443, 0.0], [2443, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2675, 0.0], [2675, 2728, 0.0], [2728, 2758, 0.0], [2758, 2810, 0.0], [2810, 2910, 0.0], [2910, 2948, 0.0], [2948, 2999, 0.0], [2999, 3053, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 72, 0.15277778], [72, 108, 0.08333333], [108, 353, 0.04897959], [353, 491, 0.07246377], [491, 931, 0.01363636], [931, 1137, 0.03398058], [1137, 1534, 0.03778338], [1534, 2136, 0.03986711], [2136, 2443, 0.02931596], [2443, 2651, 0.02403846], [2651, 2675, 0.04166667], [2675, 2728, 0.11320755], [2728, 2758, 0.1], [2758, 2810, 0.30769231], [2810, 2910, 0.14], [2910, 2948, 0.86842105], [2948, 2999, 0.11764706], [2999, 3053, 0.09259259]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3053, 0.52290243]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3053, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3053, 0.80201751]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3053, -183.86771101]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3053, 61.35755106]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3053, 23.24330397]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3053, 27.0]]}
Labatt Breweries of Canada Announces Official Partnership with the NHL Français Labatt Breweries of Canada Canadian Deal Names Budweiser an Official Beer of the NHL and Mike's Hard an Official Hard Drink of the NHL in Canada TORONTO, Dec. 17, 2019 /CNW/ - Labatt Breweries of Canada and the National Hockey League (NHL) today announced a multiyear partnership, naming Budweiser an Official Beer of the NHL in Canada. The new partnership is inclusive of all marquee NHL events including the NHL Winter Classic®, NHL® All-Star Weekend, Stanley Cup® Playoffs and Stanley Cup® Final. Additionally, the agreement includes the Ready-To-Drink Beverages (RTD) Category, with Mike's 0g HARDer Sparkling Water becoming an Official Hard Drink of the NHL. Labatt Breweries of Canada Announces Official Partnership with the NHL (CNW Group/Labatt Breweries of Canada) "In Canada, Budweiser has supported hockey and its fans for years and we're excited and honoured to take our love for the game to the next level as an official partner of the NHL," said Todd Allen, VP Marketing, Labatt Breweries of Canada. "To continue to elevate the fan experience, we're also bringing along the newest addition to our roster, Mike's 0g HARDer Sparkling Water, and we're eager for hockey fans to learn more about the brand." "We're thrilled to announce our new partnership with Labatt Breweries and their tremendous portfolio of beverages, most notably Budweiser - an iconic global brand embraced by hockey fans across Canada," said Kyle McMann, Senior Vice President, North American Business Development & Global Partnerships, NHL. "Our partnership with Labatt presents a tremendous opportunity to amplify our engagement with NHL fans through Budweiser's impressive, award-winning creative campaigns that celebrate our sport while shining a spotlight on the spirit of hockey fandom." The new deal is part of a broader North American partnership between Anheuser-Busch and the NHL, which includes Bud Light becoming an Official Beer of the NHL in the U.S. As part of the deal, Bud Light and Budweiser Canada will have the ability to create content and activate throughout the season at NHL marquee events, including the NHL Winter Classic®, NHL® All-Star Weekend, NHL Stadium Series™, Stanley Cup® Playoffs, Stanley Cup® Final, NHL Awards™ and NHL Draft™. Both Anheuser-Busch and Labatt have a proud and longstanding history with the NHL, highlighted by local partnerships with 24 NHL Clubs including the Anaheim Ducks, Boston Bruins, Buffalo Sabres, Calgary Flames, Chicago Blackhawks, Colorado Avalanche, Columbus Blue Jackets, Dallas Stars, Detroit Red Wings, Florida Panthers, Los Angeles Kings, Minnesota Wild, Nashville Predators, New Jersey Devils, New York Islanders, New York Rangers, Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, St. Louis Blues, Tampa Bay Lightning, Vancouver Canucks, Vegas Golden Knights, Washington Capitals and Winnipeg Jets. For more information, be sure to follow @BudweiserCanada on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook and Mike's 0g HARDer Sparkling Water on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook. NHL, the NHL Shield, the word mark and image of the Stanley Cup and the word mark NHL Winter Classic are registered trademarks and the NHL Winter Classic logo, NHL Stadium Series name and logo, NHL Awards and NHL Draft are trademarks of the National Hockey League. NHL and NHL team marks are the property of the NHL and its teams. © NHL 2019. All Rights Reserved. About Labatt Breweries of Canada Labatt Breweries of Canada, one of Canada's oldest companies, has been a leading national brewer for more than 170 years. Founded in London, Ontario in 1847, Labatt has six breweries from Newfoundland to British Columbia, and employs 3,500 skilled professionals and craftspeople. Labatt's portfolio of more than 60 quality beers is unmatched in breadth and quality. Regional favourites include Alexander Keith's, Kokanee, and Labatt Blue. As part of the Anheuser-Busch InBev family, Labatt also offers consumers globally-renowned beers such as Stella Artois, Budweiser, Bud Light, Corona and Goose Island. Labatt is also a significant player in the craft beer market through Stanley Park Brewing in British Columbia, Toronto's Mill Street, and Archibald Microbrasserie in Quebec, and in the ready-to-drink segment with Palm Bay, Mike's Hard Lemonade and Okanagan Cider. ABOUT THE NHL: The National Hockey League (NHL®), founded in 1917, consists of 31 Member Clubs and proudly welcomes its 32nd franchise, based in Seattle, for the 2021-22 season. Each team roster reflects the League's international makeup with players from more than 20 countries represented, all vying for the most cherished and historic trophy in professional sports – the Stanley Cup®. Gary Bettman has served the NHL as Commissioner since February 1, 1993 and has guided the world's top professional hockey league to more than $5 billion in annual revenues and partnerships with more than 40 blue chip corporate sponsors. Every year, the NHL entertains more than 670 million fans in-arena and through its partners on national television and radio; more than 151 million followers - league, team and player accounts combined - across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and YouTube; and more than 100 million fans online at NHL.com. The League broadcasts games in more than 160 countries and territories through its rightsholders including NBC/NBCSN and the NHL Network™ in the U.S., Sportsnet and TVA in Canada, Viasat in the Nordic Region, Yandex in Russia and CCTV and Tencent in China. The NHL reaches fans worldwide with games available online in every country including via its live and on-demand streaming service NHL.TV™. Having entered the esports world in 2018, the League hosts the NHL Gaming World Championship™ annually, drawing record digital streaming audiences during the 2019 campaign. Fans are engaged across the League's digital assets on mobile devices via the free NHL® App; across nine social media platforms; on SiriusXM NHL Network Radio™; and on NHL.com, available in eight languages and featuring unprecedented access to player and team statistics as well as every regular-season and playoff game box score dating back to the League's inception, powered by SAP. The NHL is committed to building healthy and vibrant communities through the sport of hockey by increasing youth participation and engagement; fostering positive family experiences; promoting inclusion, positive culture and leadership; and supporting sustainable community impact. SOURCE Labatt Breweries of Canada For further information: Tamar Nersesian, Senior Communications Manager, Labatt Breweries of Canada, [email protected], 416-361-5247; Jessica Walcot, Consultant, Veritas Communications, [email protected], 416-955-4580; Brad Klein, Director, Corporate Communications, NHL, [email protected], 212-324-8140 Opposing parties join national brewing competition to advocate for gender representation in politics Labatt Breweries of Canada Reflects on 175 Years of Brewing and Sets Sights on Future Growth
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/19939
{"url": "https://www.newswire.ca/news-releases/labatt-breweries-of-canada-announces-official-partnership-with-the-nhl-803150809.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.newswire.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:03:15Z", "digest": "sha1:OEATRJSBOCDJWUXDPX55FCTYMIGUGC2M"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7063, 7063.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7063, 16361.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7063, 20.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7063, 507.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7063, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7063, 291.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7063, 0.2704918]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7063, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7063, 0.02115852]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7063, 0.09972251]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7063, 0.06416927]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7063, 0.06416927]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7063, 0.03954214]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7063, 0.03954214]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7063, 0.02289282]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7063, 0.03243149]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7063, 0.039889]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7063, 0.04918033]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7063, 0.19746647]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7063, 0.47091932]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7063, 5.40900563]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7063, 5.49386148]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7063, 1066.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 107, 0.0], [107, 225, 0.0], [225, 417, 1.0], [417, 744, 1.0], [744, 854, 0.0], [854, 1297, 0.0], [1297, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2328, 1.0], [2328, 2926, 1.0], [2926, 3091, 1.0], [3091, 3455, 1.0], [3455, 3488, 0.0], [3488, 4358, 1.0], [4358, 4373, 0.0], [4373, 6532, 1.0], [6532, 6566, 0.0], [6566, 6870, 0.0], [6870, 6971, 0.0], [6971, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 107, 0.0], [107, 225, 0.0], [225, 417, 0.0], [417, 744, 0.0], [744, 854, 0.0], [854, 1297, 0.0], [1297, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2328, 0.0], [2328, 2926, 0.0], [2926, 3091, 0.0], [3091, 3455, 0.0], [3455, 3488, 0.0], [3488, 4358, 0.0], [4358, 4373, 0.0], [4373, 6532, 0.0], [6532, 6566, 0.0], [6566, 6870, 0.0], [6870, 6971, 0.0], [6971, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 80, 11.0], [80, 107, 4.0], [107, 225, 22.0], [225, 417, 30.0], [417, 744, 48.0], [744, 854, 15.0], [854, 1297, 77.0], [1297, 1857, 77.0], [1857, 2328, 78.0], [2328, 2926, 81.0], [2926, 3091, 24.0], [3091, 3455, 67.0], [3455, 3488, 5.0], [3488, 4358, 129.0], [4358, 4373, 3.0], [4373, 6532, 329.0], [6532, 6566, 5.0], [6566, 6870, 32.0], [6870, 6971, 13.0], [6971, 7063, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 107, 0.0], [107, 225, 0.0], [225, 417, 0.03333333], [417, 744, 0.00318471], [744, 854, 0.0], [854, 1297, 0.00235294], [1297, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2328, 0.0], [2328, 2926, 0.00350263], [2926, 3091, 0.00632911], [3091, 3455, 0.01126761], [3455, 3488, 0.0], [3488, 4358, 0.01551313], [4358, 4373, 0.0], [4373, 6532, 0.02094241], [6532, 6566, 0.0], [6566, 6870, 0.10909091], [6870, 6971, 0.0], [6971, 7063, 0.0326087]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 107, 0.0], [107, 225, 0.0], [225, 417, 0.0], [417, 744, 0.0], [744, 854, 0.0], [854, 1297, 0.0], [1297, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2328, 0.0], [2328, 2926, 0.0], [2926, 3091, 0.0], [3091, 3455, 0.0], [3455, 3488, 0.0], [3488, 4358, 0.0], [4358, 4373, 0.0], [4373, 6532, 0.0], [6532, 6566, 0.0], [6566, 6870, 0.0], [6870, 6971, 0.0], [6971, 7063, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 80, 0.125], [80, 107, 0.11111111], [107, 225, 0.15254237], [225, 417, 0.140625], [417, 744, 0.13149847], [744, 854, 0.14545455], [854, 1297, 0.0496614], [1297, 1857, 0.04642857], [1857, 2328, 0.11677282], [2328, 2926, 0.11371237], [2926, 3091, 0.0969697], [3091, 3455, 0.13736264], [3455, 3488, 0.12121212], [3488, 4358, 0.05862069], [4358, 4373, 0.73333333], [4373, 6532, 0.05002316], [6532, 6566, 0.26470588], [6566, 6870, 0.07236842], [6870, 6971, 0.00990099], [6971, 7063, 0.10869565]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7063, 0.79381913]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7063, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7063, 0.98727548]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7063, -391.21932788]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7063, -12.51205471]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7063, 85.00681552]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7063, 39.0]]}
American Aviators Orville Wright and Edward W Hill 1928 signed Spherical Balloon Pilot's License Tom Lingenfelter, America's History Detective, has unearthed a rare document significant to aviation history. Lingenfelter has authenticated the 1928 Spherical Balloon Pilot's License issued to and signed by both Edmund W. Hill and aviation pioneer, Orville Wright. Edmund W. Hill (1896-1973) had a distinguished military career spanning two world wars. After schooling, which included numerous military institutions, he was commissioned second lieutenant, Infantry, U.S. Army before being transferred to the air service where he would eventually rise to the rank of Air Force Major General. In 1939, Gen. Hill commanded Bolling Field in Washington DC and would go on to command U.S. Air Forces in Northern Ireland (during World War II) and the Eighth Air Force Composite Command. Gen. Hill was in charge of air operations at the Yalta and Potsdam Conferences and established air forces in Berlin. In 1944, he would become commanding officer in charge of Post Hostilities planning with the U.S. Army Air Force in Europe. Later that year, he would become head of the Air Section of the United States mission to Moscow and served as commanding general of the U.S. Air Force in the U.S.S.R. from December 1944 until May 1945. He was also coordinator of the Inter-American Defense Board before his retirement. Gen. Hill was a free balloon pilot, captive balloon pilot, dirigible airship pilot and airplane pilot. He flew the first airship to launch and pick up an airplane while in flight at Wilbur Wright Field in 1924. Among his numerous awards are a Distinguished Service Medal, a Legion of Merit with oak leaf cluster, a Bronze Star, and Air Medal, Commander of the British Empire, C.B.E., Legion D'Honeur and Croix de Guerre with Palm. He was also decorated by Great Britain and France. This license, measuring 5" x 4" unfolded, was issued by the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale in 1928 to Edmund W. Hill acknowledging his expertise in Spherical Ballooning. In excellent condition, it is license number 25 and FAI number 930. Hill's photograph is affixed to the top, right, inside panel with his signature below. On the left, inside panel, is the signature of Orville Wright who served as the Chairman of the National Aeronautic Association Contest Committee. The official seal of the National Aeronautic Association has been affixed twice to the document. Founded in 1905, the National Aeronautic Association joined with The Fédération Aéronautique Internationale with the goal of fostering aeronautical activities worldwide. The organization, still in existence today, established itself as the world governing body for air sports, aeronautics and astronautics world records. The FAI records database counts over 7,300 record flights to include those of balloons, airships, airplanes, (landplanes, seaplanes, amphibians, very light jets,) gliders, helicopters, autogiros, model aircraft, parachutes, human powered aircraft, spacecraft, tilt-wing/tilt-engine aircraft, hang gliders, paragliders, microlights, space models, and UAVs. In addition, the NAA certifies a wide variety of records including altitude, time-to-climb, distance, speed, greatest payload carried, and efficiency. When asked why the document is noteworthy, Lingenfelter said, "It's rare because it's for a balloon pilot and it was issued to a young man who would go on to have such a distinguished military career. There are very few ballooning licenses issued and authentically signed by Orville Wright. The document itself is in pristine condition and contains the signatures of two aviation giants." Tom Lingenfelter a lifetime historian and collector, learned his 'trade' as a Special Agent for USA Counter-Intelligence and as president of Heritage Collectors' Society, he has dealt in rare and authentic documents for over 35 years. For more information on the acquisition of this piece and other artifacts offered by Heritage Collectors' Society, contact Tom Lingenfelter at 215.230.5330 or e-mail him at Tom@heritagecs.com. More info on Edward Walton Hill United States Air Force Records
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/21286
{"url": "https://www.americana-archives.com/post/american-aviators-orville-wright-and-edward-w-hill-1928-signed-spherical-balloon-pilot-s-license", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.americana-archives.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:01:36Z", "digest": "sha1:QPD6YWBERD7OEDS6LM6K6HTV3WRJ6FLR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4170, 4170.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4170, 4772.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4170, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4170, 34.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4170, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4170, 141.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4170, 0.29032258]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4170, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4170, 0.02001177]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4170, 0.01030018]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4170, 0.0097116]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4170, 0.02825191]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4170, 0.03225806]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4170, 0.19851117]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4170, 0.51962323]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4170, 5.33437991]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4170, 5.32786079]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4170, 637.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 97, 0.0], [97, 363, 1.0], [363, 689, 1.0], [689, 1403, 1.0], [1403, 1885, 1.0], [1885, 2462, 1.0], [2462, 3290, 1.0], [3290, 3679, 0.0], [3679, 4107, 1.0], [4107, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 97, 0.0], [97, 363, 0.0], [363, 689, 0.0], [689, 1403, 0.0], [1403, 1885, 0.0], [1885, 2462, 0.0], [2462, 3290, 0.0], [3290, 3679, 0.0], [3679, 4107, 0.0], [4107, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 97, 14.0], [97, 363, 37.0], [363, 689, 48.0], [689, 1403, 123.0], [1403, 1885, 83.0], [1885, 2462, 90.0], [2462, 3290, 104.0], [3290, 3679, 64.0], [3679, 4107, 63.0], [4107, 4170, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 97, 0.04210526], [97, 363, 0.0155642], [363, 689, 0.02555911], [689, 1403, 0.02318841], [1403, 1885, 0.00862069], [1885, 2462, 0.01953819], [2462, 3290, 0.01013942], [3290, 3679, 0.0], [3679, 4107, 0.02912621], [4107, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 97, 0.0], [97, 363, 0.0], [363, 689, 0.0], [689, 1403, 0.0], [1403, 1885, 0.0], [1885, 2462, 0.0], [2462, 3290, 0.0], [3290, 3679, 0.0], [3679, 4107, 0.0], [4107, 4170, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 97, 0.11340206], [97, 363, 0.05639098], [363, 689, 0.03680982], [689, 1403, 0.08263305], [1403, 1885, 0.06639004], [1885, 2462, 0.04679376], [2462, 3290, 0.02415459], [3290, 3679, 0.01799486], [3679, 4107, 0.04439252], [4107, 4170, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4170, 0.79073989]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4170, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4170, 0.97321278]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4170, -62.62270719]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4170, 39.89537116]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4170, 163.75067244]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4170, 52.0]]}
Energy Transition/ Reports, Studies Clean Energy Deals Grow to a Record Share of Oil & Gas Sector M&A Activity: Deloitte Mark Segal February 22, 2023 Oil & gas companies have been refocusing the M&A and dealmaking activity towards clean energy technologies and initiatives, and away from traditional hydrocarbon-focused investments, according to a new study released today by professional services firm Deloitte. The report, “Oil and Gas M&A Outlook 2023: Pivoting for Change,” found that oil and gas M&A activity fell to an 18-year low 3% of industry market cap in 2022, despite the presence of typical deal drivers including record energy prices and low valuations. According to report co-author Amy Chronis, Vice Chair – US Energy & Chemicals Leader at Deloitte, this phenomenon indicates that “the old drivers of M&A activity, such as investing and acquiring for growth and increasing market share, seem to have been replaced by new drivers,” which in addition to energy security and operational efficiency, include energy transition and ESG-focused considerations. Chronis added: “Over the last two years, the O&G industry has moved from engaging in M&A to build resilience amid COVID-related uncertainty to building a new core—whether that be low-carbon O&G development or expansion into cleaner energy solutions. In the coming year, these drivers are expected to continue impacting M&A decisions.” Supporting this conclusion, the report found that hydrocarbon-focused M&A fell particularly sharply in 2022, declining 35% in the year, while clean energy M&A grew to a record $32 billion, up roughly 4x over the prior year, accounting for a 15% share of total deal value by oil and gas companies in the year. Within the clean energy, biofuels and combined wind & solar assets accounted for nearly 80% of the M&A deals. The shift in focus extended into the joint venture space as well, according to the report, with nearly a third of JVs by oil and gas companies in 2022 focused on low-carbon initiatives, up from only 13% in 2020. The highest number of clean energy JVs related to hydrogen and related fuels, including ammonia, nitrogen, and sustainable aviation fuel, indicating a broadening focus from wind and solar to a growing mix of sources, fuels, and carbon-capture programs. The report also indicated that ESG appears to be a factor in M&A decisions, with more than 70% of deals in the space over the past several years including sellers with higher ESG scores than the buyer, with the effect particularly pronounced in bigger deals. Report co-author Melinda Yee, Partner, oil and gas transactions and M&A Leader at Deloitte, said: “The M&A playbook has changed. Oil prices are no longer a major driver of M&A activity. Instead, the industry is striking a balance between energy security and sustainability. Many oil and gas companies are positioning themselves for long-term growth by turning to clean energy and partnerships with strategic investments.” Click here to access the report. Mark founded ESG Today following a 20 year career in investment management and research. Prior to founding ESG Today, Mark worked at Delaney Capital Management (DCM) in Toronto, Canada, most recently as the firm’s head of U.S. equities. While at DCM, Mark was part of the firm’s ESG team, responsible for evaluating and tracking the sustainability factors impacting portfolio companies, and assessing the suitability of companies for portfolio inclusion. Mark also spent several years in the sell-side research industry, covering the technology and services sectors. Mark holds an MBA from Columbia University in New York, a BBA from the Schulich School of Business at York University in Toronto, and is a CFA charterholder. Energy Transition / Reports, Studies / ‹ Guest Post: Digital Transformation of EHS & ESG Promises Clarity, Consensus, and Direction › UL Solutions Launches New ESG Advisory and Assurance Practice
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/21453
{"url": "https://www.esgtoday.com/clean-energy-deals-grow-to-a-record-share-of-oil-gas-sector-ma-activity-deloitte/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.esgtoday.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:41:28Z", "digest": "sha1:RCK2B6XMY3RPYWGTPEDYSO7CXOVCWHLQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3923, 3923.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3923, 6854.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3923, 18.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3923, 80.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3923, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3923, 276.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3923, 0.29290323]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3923, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3923, 0.01383213]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3923, 0.01383213]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3923, 0.02074819]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3923, 0.01414649]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3923, 0.01697579]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3923, 0.06580645]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3923, 0.1883871]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3923, 0.49512987]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3923, 5.16396104]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3923, 5.1909895]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3923, 616.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 121, 0.0], [121, 150, 0.0], [150, 413, 1.0], [413, 668, 1.0], [668, 1070, 1.0], [1070, 1085, 0.0], [1085, 1405, 1.0], [1405, 1824, 1.0], [1824, 2289, 1.0], [2289, 2548, 1.0], [2548, 2646, 0.0], [2646, 2970, 1.0], [2970, 3003, 1.0], [3003, 3728, 1.0], [3728, 3748, 0.0], [3748, 3767, 0.0], [3767, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 121, 0.0], [121, 150, 0.0], [150, 413, 0.0], [413, 668, 0.0], [668, 1070, 0.0], [1070, 1085, 0.0], [1085, 1405, 0.0], [1405, 1824, 0.0], [1824, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2548, 0.0], [2548, 2646, 0.0], [2646, 2970, 0.0], [2970, 3003, 0.0], [3003, 3728, 0.0], [3728, 3748, 0.0], [3748, 3767, 0.0], [3767, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 36, 4.0], [36, 121, 15.0], [121, 150, 5.0], [150, 413, 35.0], [413, 668, 44.0], [668, 1070, 59.0], [1070, 1085, 2.0], [1085, 1405, 49.0], [1405, 1824, 71.0], [1824, 2289, 77.0], [2289, 2548, 45.0], [2548, 2646, 15.0], [2646, 2970, 49.0], [2970, 3003, 6.0], [3003, 3728, 113.0], [3728, 3748, 2.0], [3748, 3767, 2.0], [3767, 3923, 23.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 121, 0.0], [121, 150, 0.22222222], [150, 413, 0.0], [413, 668, 0.04489796], [668, 1070, 0.0], [1070, 1085, 0.0], [1085, 1405, 0.0], [1405, 1824, 0.0325], [1824, 2289, 0.02222222], [2289, 2548, 0.00790514], [2548, 2646, 0.0], [2646, 2970, 0.0], [2970, 3003, 0.0], [3003, 3728, 0.00283688], [3728, 3748, 0.0], [3748, 3767, 0.0], [3767, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 121, 0.0], [121, 150, 0.0], [150, 413, 0.0], [413, 668, 0.0], [668, 1070, 0.0], [1070, 1085, 0.0], [1085, 1405, 0.0], [1405, 1824, 0.0], [1824, 2289, 0.0], [2289, 2548, 0.0], [2548, 2646, 0.0], [2646, 2970, 0.0], [2970, 3003, 0.0], [3003, 3728, 0.0], [3728, 3748, 0.0], [3748, 3767, 0.0], [3767, 3923, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.11111111], [36, 121, 0.15294118], [121, 150, 0.10344828], [150, 413, 0.01520913], [413, 668, 0.03921569], [668, 1070, 0.039801], [1070, 1085, 0.06666667], [1085, 1405, 0.046875], [1405, 1824, 0.01909308], [1824, 2289, 0.01290323], [2289, 2548, 0.03474903], [2548, 2646, 0.08163265], [2646, 2970, 0.02469136], [2970, 3003, 0.03030303], [3003, 3728, 0.06896552], [3728, 3748, 0.1], [3748, 3767, 0.10526316], [3767, 3923, 0.16025641]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3923, 0.3127014]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3923, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3923, 0.57236427]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3923, -276.29561246]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3923, 6.1615106]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3923, 19.08258583]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3923, 23.0]]}
GODLAND by Hlynur Pálmason selected for Cannes Godland, by Icelandic writer/director Hlynur Pálmason, has been selected to participate in the Un Certain Regard program of the 75th Cannes Film Festival, which will take place from May 17 - 28. Un Certain Regard, established in 1978 to highlight emerging talent and innovative and daring works of cinema, is part of the festival's Official Selection. In the late 19th century, a young Danish priest travels to a remote part of Iceland to build a church and photograph its people. But the deeper he goes into the unforgiving landscape, the more he strays from his purpose, the mission and morality. The film was written and directed by Hlynur Pálmason, and stars Elliott Crosset Hove and Ingvar Sigurdsson. Other key cast members include Jacob Hauberg Lohmann, Hilmar Guðjónsson, Vic Carmen Sonne, Waage Sandø, and Ída Mekkín Hlynsdóttir. It was shot by Maria von Hausswolff and edited by Julius Krebs Damsbo. Production design was in the hands of Frosti Friðriksson, the sound was designed by Björn Viktorsson and Kristian Eidnes Andersen, and the score was composed by Alex Zhang Hungtai. The film is a Denmark/Iceland/Sweden/France coproduction. It was produced by Katrin Pors, Mikkel Jersin, Eva Jakobsen at Denmark’s Snowglobe, and Anton Máni Svansson at Iceland’s Join Motion Pictures. Co-producers are Didar Domehri of Maneki Films (France), Anthony Muir and Peter Possne of Film I Väst (Sweden), Mimmi Spång of Garagefilm International (Sweden) and Iceland’s Guðmundur Arnar Guðmundsson of Join Motion Pictures. Pálmason has written and directed two award-winning feature films. His first, the Danish/Icelandic Winter Brothers, premiered in the main competition at the Locarno Film Festival in 2017, where it won four awards. His second, A White, White Day had its premiere in the International Critics' Week at Cannes Film Festival in 2019, where Icelandic actor Ingvar Sigurdsson won the Louis Roederer Foundation Rising Star Award. Each film collected over 20 awards and sold to multiple territories worldwide. International sales for Godland are being handled by New Europe Film Sales (jan@neweuropefilmsales.com). Additional credits for the film can be found here. Godland is the sixth Icelandic film to participate in Un Certain Regard. In 2021, Valdimar Jóhannsson’s Lamb received the Prize of Originality. In 2015, Grímur Hákonarson's Rams won the Prix Un Certain Regard, given to the program's top film. The other three films were Dagur Kári's Dark Horse (2005), Sólveig Anspach's Stormy Weather (2003), and Óskar Jónasson's Remote Control (1993).
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/21536
{"url": "https://www.icelandicfilmcentre.is/news/godland-by-hlynur-palmason-selected-for-cannes", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.icelandicfilmcentre.is", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:12:51Z", "digest": "sha1:56DBGK7XQMPFJ2YGTNOACBVBGUYKX7HA"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2611, 2611.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2611, 4067.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2611, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2611, 112.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2611, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2611, 211.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2611, 0.27380952]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2611, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2611, 0.01166589]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2611, 0.02799813]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2611, 0.00595238]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2611, 0.18253968]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2611, 0.61881188]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2611, 5.30445545]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2611, 5.12561873]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2611, 404.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 399, 1.0], [399, 646, 1.0], [646, 1138, 1.0], [1138, 1567, 1.0], [1567, 2069, 1.0], [2069, 2174, 1.0], [2174, 2225, 1.0], [2225, 2611, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 399, 0.0], [399, 646, 0.0], [646, 1138, 0.0], [1138, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 2069, 0.0], [2069, 2174, 0.0], [2174, 2225, 0.0], [2225, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 47, 7.0], [47, 399, 55.0], [399, 646, 44.0], [646, 1138, 78.0], [1138, 1567, 61.0], [1567, 2069, 77.0], [2069, 2174, 13.0], [2174, 2225, 9.0], [2225, 2611, 60.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 399, 0.02932551], [399, 646, 0.00829876], [646, 1138, 0.0], [1138, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 2069, 0.0204499], [2069, 2174, 0.0], [2174, 2225, 0.0], [2225, 2611, 0.0536193]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 399, 0.0], [399, 646, 0.0], [646, 1138, 0.0], [1138, 1567, 0.0], [1567, 2069, 0.0], [2069, 2174, 0.0], [2174, 2225, 0.0], [2225, 2611, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 47, 0.21276596], [47, 399, 0.04545455], [399, 646, 0.01619433], [646, 1138, 0.07926829], [1138, 1567, 0.10955711], [1567, 2069, 0.05976096], [2069, 2174, 0.05714286], [2174, 2225, 0.01960784], [2225, 2611, 0.08290155]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2611, 0.96862751]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2611, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2611, 0.94742924]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2611, -121.71929125]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2611, 8.1431969]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2611, 80.28053987]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2611, 22.0]]}
Gishwati Forest, Rwanda July 19, 1986JPEG July 19, 1986TIFF December 11, 2001JPEG December 11, 2001TIFF Google Earth - July 19, 1986 - December 11, 2001KML Rwanda is a small, mountainous country in east-central Africa, just a few degrees south of the equator. The country’s high elevation provides it with a tropical temperate climate, two dry and two rainy seasons each year, and relatively abundant surface water. With an estimated population in excess of 9 million, Rwanda is mainland Africa’s most densely populated country, according to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). Although protected areas in Rwanda increased slightly between 1990 and 2005, the large population puts intense pressure on the land. That pressure is evident in this pair of images showing deforestation in Gishwati Forest, a protected area in the northwestern part of the country, not far from Lake Kivu. NASA’s Landsat 5 satellite captured the top image on July 19, 1986. NASA’s Landsat 7 satellite captured the bottom image on December 11, 2001. Densely forested areas are deep green. According to UNEP, the reserve’s forests were largely intact in 1978, and substantial forest cover still remained in 1986. But in the 15 years that elapsed between these images—a time that spanned the country’s tragic genocide—wave after wave of refugees arrived in Gishwati Forest and began clearing it, often for subsistence farming. By 2001, only a small circular patch of native forest remained—1,500 acres of the forest’s original 250,000. Large tea estates occupy the central and northern parts of the reserve. The tea-growing areas are lighter green, and the dark green patches are probably plantations of eucalyptus or pine trees. (The wood boilers that produce the heat for drying tea consume huge amounts of firewood.) Rwandan deforestation was driven by the need for food, medicine, charcoal, and timber, especially for commercial products. But the loss of so many trees in a rainy, mountainous country has had severe environmental consequences. In addition to tremendous loss of biodiversity, the region experiences soil erosion and degradation and landslides. UNEP hoped that innovative agroforestry techniques would help restore the vegetation, and reported that the forested land area in Rwanda had grown between 1990 and 2005. Reforestation efforts at Gishwati in the past few years have increased the remnant native forest to about 2,500 acres. In 2008, the Rwandan government and the American conservation group Great Ape Trust of Iowa began a partnership to restore a corridor of native forest between Gishwati and the much larger Nyungwe Forest National Park, in southern Rwanda. They hope the corridor will preserve the genetic diversity of Rwanda’s remaining populations of chimpanzees. NASA image created by Jesse Allen, using Landsat data provided by the United States Geological Survey. Caption by Michon Scott and Rebecca Lindsey. Gishwati Forest suffered severe deforestation, evident in these true-color images. Image of the Day for June 9, 2009 Landsat 5 — TM Landsat 7 — ETM+ Image of the Day Land Life Human Presence Great Ape Trust of Iowa. (2008, January 14). Rwanda’s Gishwati Forest Selected as Site for Historic Conservation Project. Accessed June 8, 2009. United Nations Environment Programme. (2008). Africa: Atlas of Our Changing Environment. Division of Early Warning and Assessment, United Nations Environment Programme, Nairobi, Kenya. A Polish Royal Forest Since the mid-1200s, the state has controlled Niepołomice Forest, which contains some of the last pockets of old-growth forest in Poland. When a Definition Makes a Forest Disappear By changing a percentage, institutions can take some forested lands off the map. Forest Changes in British Columbia In British Columbia’s Coast Mountains, some 200 kilometers (125 miles) inland from the Pacific Ocean, rivers and lakes cut tortuous paths through rugged terrain. The peaks and valleys in this region are covered with forest, but the forest has changed over the years due to human use and insect pests, in particular, the mountain pine beetle. A Living Relic: Madeira’s Laurissilva Forest The deep green forest that covers the northern mountains of Madeira Island is one of the last remnants of an ancient forest that once covered much of Europe and North Africa.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/22319
{"url": "https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/38644/gishwati-forest-rwanda", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "earthobservatory.nasa.gov", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:37:44Z", "digest": "sha1:B2QTPW2JABENYR74KSIBMOR3TQ4OISES"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4336, 4336.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4336, 5597.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4336, 28.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4336, 102.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4336, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4336, 143.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4336, 0.29044118]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4336, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4336, 0.01070121]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4336, 0.01126443]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4336, 0.02027598]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4336, 0.02787947]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4336, 0.01838235]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4336, 0.19607843]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4336, 0.53994083]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4336, 5.25295858]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4336, 5.36645149]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4336, 676.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 42, 0.0], [42, 60, 0.0], [60, 82, 0.0], [82, 104, 0.0], [104, 156, 0.0], [156, 724, 1.0], [724, 1078, 1.0], [1078, 1523, 1.0], [1523, 1807, 0.0], [1807, 2440, 1.0], [2440, 2787, 1.0], [2787, 2935, 1.0], [2935, 3018, 1.0], [3018, 3052, 0.0], [3052, 3067, 0.0], [3067, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3271, 1.0], [3271, 3456, 1.0], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3616, 1.0], [3616, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3740, 1.0], [3740, 3775, 0.0], [3775, 4117, 1.0], [4117, 4162, 0.0], [4162, 4336, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 42, 0.0], [42, 60, 0.0], [60, 82, 0.0], [82, 104, 0.0], [104, 156, 0.0], [156, 724, 0.0], [724, 1078, 0.0], [1078, 1523, 0.0], [1523, 1807, 0.0], [1807, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2787, 0.0], [2787, 2935, 0.0], [2935, 3018, 0.0], [3018, 3052, 0.0], [3052, 3067, 0.0], [3067, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3271, 0.0], [3271, 3456, 0.0], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3616, 0.0], [3616, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3740, 0.0], [3740, 3775, 0.0], [3775, 4117, 0.0], [4117, 4162, 0.0], [4162, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 24, 3.0], [24, 42, 3.0], [42, 60, 3.0], [60, 82, 3.0], [82, 104, 3.0], [104, 156, 8.0], [156, 724, 86.0], [724, 1078, 59.0], [1078, 1523, 69.0], [1523, 1807, 46.0], [1807, 2440, 95.0], [2440, 2787, 53.0], [2787, 2935, 23.0], [2935, 3018, 10.0], [3018, 3052, 8.0], [3052, 3067, 4.0], [3067, 3084, 4.0], [3084, 3126, 8.0], [3126, 3271, 22.0], [3271, 3456, 23.0], [3456, 3478, 4.0], [3478, 3616, 21.0], [3616, 3659, 7.0], [3659, 3740, 13.0], [3740, 3775, 5.0], [3775, 4117, 56.0], [4117, 4162, 6.0], [4162, 4336, 31.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 42, 0.375], [42, 60, 0.375], [60, 82, 0.3], [82, 104, 0.3], [104, 156, 0.26666667], [156, 724, 0.01627486], [724, 1078, 0.04057971], [1078, 1523, 0.05517241], [1523, 1807, 0.0], [1807, 2440, 0.01938611], [2440, 2787, 0.01169591], [2787, 2935, 0.0], [2935, 3018, 0.0], [3018, 3052, 0.15625], [3052, 3067, 0.07142857], [3067, 3084, 0.06666667], [3084, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3271, 0.08088235], [3271, 3456, 0.02298851], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3616, 0.03030303], [3616, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3740, 0.0], [3740, 3775, 0.0], [3775, 4117, 0.01807229], [4117, 4162, 0.0], [4162, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 42, 0.0], [42, 60, 0.0], [60, 82, 0.0], [82, 104, 0.0], [104, 156, 0.0], [156, 724, 0.0], [724, 1078, 0.0], [1078, 1523, 0.0], [1523, 1807, 0.0], [1807, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2787, 0.0], [2787, 2935, 0.0], [2935, 3018, 0.0], [3018, 3052, 0.0], [3052, 3067, 0.0], [3067, 3084, 0.0], [3084, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 3271, 0.0], [3271, 3456, 0.0], [3456, 3478, 0.0], [3478, 3616, 0.0], [3616, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3740, 0.0], [3740, 3775, 0.0], [3775, 4117, 0.0], [4117, 4162, 0.0], [4162, 4336, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.125], [24, 42, 0.27777778], [42, 60, 0.27777778], [60, 82, 0.22727273], [82, 104, 0.22727273], [104, 156, 0.13461538], [156, 724, 0.02816901], [724, 1078, 0.05084746], [1078, 1523, 0.02022472], [1523, 1807, 0.01056338], [1807, 2440, 0.01579779], [2440, 2787, 0.04322767], [2787, 2935, 0.10810811], [2935, 3018, 0.02409639], [3018, 3052, 0.08823529], [3052, 3067, 0.2], [3067, 3084, 0.23529412], [3084, 3126, 0.14285714], [3126, 3271, 0.10344828], [3271, 3456, 0.1027027], [3456, 3478, 0.18181818], [3478, 3616, 0.02898551], [3616, 3659, 0.11627907], [3659, 3740, 0.01234568], [3740, 3775, 0.11428571], [3775, 4117, 0.02339181], [4117, 4162, 0.13333333], [4162, 4336, 0.03448276]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4336, 0.73902863]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4336, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4336, 0.69880652]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4336, -240.45426876]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4336, 13.24187629]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4336, 42.70738555]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4336, 37.0]]}
Robots, AI and podcasting: a Q&A with Pieter Abbeel EECS Prof. Pieter Abbeel launched “The Robot Brains Podcast” in the spring of 2021. In each episode, he is joined by leading experts in AI Robotics from around the world to explore how far humanity has come in its mission to create conscious computers, mindful machines and rational robots. Abbeel sits down for a Q&A with Berkeley Engineering, in which he discusses his experience with podcasting and how it has shaped his own thinking about communicating AI to a broader audience. Berkeley Engineering: Robots, AI and podcasting: a Q&A with Pieter Abbeel The Robot Brains Podcast Tiny switches give solid-state LiDAR record resolution A new type of high-resolution LiDAR chip developed by EECS Prof. Ming Wu could lead to a new generation of powerful, low-cost 3D sensors for autonomous cars, drones, robots, and smartphones. The paper, which appeared in the journal Nature, was co-authored by his former graduate students Xiaosheng Zhang (Ph.D. '21) and Johannes Henriksson (Ph.D. '21), current graduate student Jianheng Luo, and postdoc Kyungmok Kwon, in the Berkeley Sensor and Actuator Center (BSAC). Their new, smaller, more efficient, and less expensive LiDAR design is based on a focal plane switch array (FPSA) with a resolution of 16,384 pixels per 1-centimeter square chip, which dwarfs the 512 pixels or less currently found on FPSA. The design is scalable to megapixel sizes using the same complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) technology used to produce computer processors. Additionally, large, slow and inefficient thermo-optic switches are replaced by microelectromechanical system (MEMS) switches, which are traditionally used to route light in communications networks. If the resolution and range of the new system can be improved, conventional CMOS production technology can be used to produce the new, inexpensive chip-sized LiDAR. Berkeley Engineering: Tiny switches give solid-state LiDAR record resolution A large-scale microelectromechanical-systems-based silicon photonics LiDAR Chandan Singh is 2022 Berkeley Grad Slam Competition semi-finalist CS graduate student Chandan Singh (advisor: Bin Yu) has made it to the semi-finals of the 2022 Berkeley Grad Slam Competition, a UC showcase for graduate student research presented in three-minute talks for a general audience, likened to short Ted Talks. In "Unlocking Scientific Secrets by Distilling Neural Networks," Singh hopes to build on recent advances in machine learning to improve the world of healthcare. His research focuses on how to build trustworthy machine-learning systems by making them more interpretable through partnerships with domain experts (e.g. medical doctors and cell biologists). These collaborations give rise to useful methodology that both build more transparent models as well as improve the trustworthiness of black-box models. He hopes to help bridge the gap between both types of models so that they can be reliably used to improve real-world healthcare. Berkeley Graduate Division: 2022 Berkeley Grad Slam Competition Steven Conolly awarded 2022 Bakar Prize EECS and Bioengineering Prof. Steven Conolly has been awarded the 2022 U.C. Berkeley Bakar Prize. This prize is given annually to former Bakar Program Fellows whose technological innovations promise to deliver solutions to some of the world’s most pressing problems. Funds are provided to help new technologies transition from an academic setting to industrial applications. The objective of Conolly's project, titled Rapid in vivo optimization of solid tumor CAR-T cell therapies using advanced magnetic particle imaging (MPI), is to determine whether a particular CAR-T cell cancer immunotherapy is working in hours rather than months. CAR-T cells are tagged with safe magnetic nanoparticles before a treatment is administered so that oncologists can view how well they are targeting cancer cells using high resolution imaging technology. Berkeley News: Four innovative faculty members awarded campus’s 2022 Bakar Prize Colin Parris elected to the NAE EE alumnus Colin Parris (M.S. '87, Ph.D. '94, advisor: Domenico Ferrari) has been elected to the National Academy of Engineering (NAE). After a career at IBM Systems & Technology and General Electric (GE) Research, Parris is currently Senior Vice President and Chief Technology Officer at GE. He is known for his life-long commitment to "the development and enhancement of STEM programs across minority communities," and serves as a board member of the Annual Multicultural Business Youth Educational Services Embarkment (Ambyese), which prepares multicultural secondary school students for the challenges of pursuing careers in the corporate sector through self-esteem-building and exposure to successful role models in industry. While a student Berkeley, Parris helped start the Summer Undergraduate Program in Engineering Research at Berkeley (SUPERB) and was deeply involved with the group Black Graduate Engineering and Science Students (BGESS). At GE, Parris, whose expertise spans engineering, software, and AI-driven analytics, leads teams that leverage digital technologies in the energy industry and other industrial environments. He created and leads the Digital Twin Initiative company-wide and is currently working to "accelerate business impact and transformation by combining lean principles with digital solutions." Power: GE Digital’s Colin Parris Elected as a Member of the National Academy of Engineers (NAE) Kathy Yelick wins 2022 CRA Distinguished Service Award EECS Prof. Katherine Yelick has won the 2022 CRA Distinguished Service Award. This award recognizes "a person or organization that has made an outstanding service contribution" with a major impact "to the computing research community" in the areas of government, professional societies, publications, conferences, or leadership. Yelick has been a professor in the department since 1991, and was the Associate Laboratory Director for Computing Sciences at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL). She is known as the co-inventor of the UPC and Titanium languages and demonstrated their applicability through the use of novel runtime and compilation methods. She also co-developed techniques for self-tuning numerical libraries. She is the co-author of two books and more than 100 refereed technical papers on parallel languages, compilers, algorithms, libraries, architecture, and storage. Avishay Tal named 2022 Sloan Research Fellow in Computer Science CS Assistant Prof. Avishay Tal has been selected as a 2022 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellow in Computer Science. This award recognizes outstanding early-career faculty for their "potential to revolutionize their fields of study." Tal is a member of the Theory group; his interests include computational complexity, analysis of boolean functions, circuit and formula lower bounds, query complexity, pseudorandomness, computational learning theory, quantum computing, combinatorics, and connections between algorithms and lower bounds. He is among 4 winners from UC Berkeley representing the fields of CS, math, physics, and neuroscience. Winners receive $75K, which may be spent over a two-year term to support their research. Sloan Research Fellowships: 2022 Sloan Research Fellows Pilawa Research Group paper wins 1st place 2020 PELS Transactions Prize Paper Award Researchers from the Pilawa Research Group, including EECS alumnus Nathan Pallo (Ph.D. '21), EECS Associate Prof. Robert Pilawa-Podgurski, and former postdoc Tomas Modeer, have won one of four 1st place 2020 IEEE Power Electronics Society (PELS) Transactions Prize Paper Awards. Their paper, which was co-authored by Pilawa-Podgurski's UIUC graduate students, Tom Foulkes and Chris Barth, is titled "Design of a GaN-Based Interleaved Nine-Level Flying Capacitor Multilevel Inverter for Electric Aircraft Applications." This award is considered the top publication award in the field of power electronics, and is known for it's rigorous evaluation process, which recognizes "originality; contribution to the field; extent to which the paper is supported by analysis and experimental evidence; and quality of presentation, including the effective use of illustrations." The winners of the 2020 award were selected from a pool of 1,148 papers. PELS: Transactions Prize Paper Award, 2020 Winners Berkeley CS students help build a database of police misconduct in California Students in the Data Science Discovery Program are filling a gap in engineering resources to help journalists more easily sort through large stores of records for their research. The Discovery Program, which is part of Berkeley's Division of Computing, Data Science, and Society (CDSS), connects around 200 undergraduates with hands-on, team-based data science research projects at Berkeley, government agencies, community groups, and entrepreneurial ventures. Students have worked on projects like the SF Chronicle's air quality map, the Wall Street Journal's effort to analyze its source and topic diversity using natural processing language, and the California Reporting Project's police misconduct database. “I don’t know if we’d be able to do this without them,” said KQED data reporter Lisa Pickoff-White. “None of these newsrooms would be able to automate this work on their own.” NiemanLab: How UC Berkeley computer science students helped build a database of police misconduct in California Aditya Parameswaran wins 2022 IIT Bombay Young Alumni Achievers Award EECS Associate Prof. Aditya Parameswaran has been selected to receive the Young Alumni Achievers Award from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Bombay. This award "recognizes and celebrates the outstanding achievements of [IIT's] young alumni in their chosen field of endeavor." Parameswaran, who has a joint appointment at the I School, synthesizes techniques from data systems and human-computer interaction to develop tools to simplify data science at scale. His tools, which have been downloaded and employed by millions of users, empower "individuals and teams to leverage and make sense of their large datasets more easily, efficiently, and effectively." These include the Lux library, an intelligent visualization recommendation system for very large data sets in dataframe workflows, and Modin, a scalable dataframe system which applies database and distributed systems ideas to help run dataframe workloads faster. The award will be presented during the university's Institute Foundation Day Function on March 10, 2022. Indian Institute of Technology Bombay: Youn Alumnus Achiever Awards
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/22328
{"url": "https://eecs.berkeley.edu/news/09whinnerycelebration/pages/09celebrating_johnwhinnery.025.htm?field_eecs_news_topics_target_id_entityreference_filter=59&from=timeline%20arachni_xss_in_tag%3D5bc8faf4aae0d31ba3cd0c04442c65d3%20blah%3D&isappinstalled=0&page=5", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "eecs.berkeley.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:53:12Z", "digest": "sha1:GZLBJA5WHACCWBMX6W3P63U6X5FE2RUT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10632, 10632.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10632, 13095.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10632, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10632, 218.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10632, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10632, 268.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10632, 0.28616025]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10632, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10632, 0.06329836]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10632, 0.03832117]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10632, 0.03010949]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10632, 0.03010949]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10632, 0.00912409]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10632, 0.0051323]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10632, 0.00239507]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10632, 0.00684307]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10632, 0.04162331]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10632, 0.17429761]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10632, 0.46104314]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10632, 5.64584675]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10632, 5.94286269]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10632, 1553.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 535, 1.0], [535, 609, 0.0], [609, 634, 0.0], [634, 689, 0.0], [689, 1915, 1.0], [1915, 1992, 0.0], [1992, 2067, 0.0], [2067, 2134, 0.0], [2134, 3025, 1.0], [3025, 3089, 0.0], [3089, 3129, 0.0], [3129, 3970, 1.0], [3970, 4051, 0.0], [4051, 4083, 0.0], [4083, 5415, 0.0], [5415, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5566, 0.0], [5566, 6460, 1.0], [6460, 6525, 0.0], [6525, 7250, 1.0], [7250, 7306, 0.0], [7306, 7390, 0.0], [7390, 8331, 1.0], [8331, 8382, 0.0], [8382, 8460, 0.0], [8460, 9348, 1.0], [9348, 9460, 0.0], [9460, 9530, 0.0], [9530, 10565, 1.0], [10565, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 535, 0.0], [535, 609, 0.0], [609, 634, 0.0], [634, 689, 0.0], [689, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 1992, 0.0], [1992, 2067, 0.0], [2067, 2134, 0.0], [2134, 3025, 0.0], [3025, 3089, 0.0], [3089, 3129, 0.0], [3129, 3970, 0.0], [3970, 4051, 0.0], [4051, 4083, 0.0], [4083, 5415, 0.0], [5415, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5566, 0.0], [5566, 6460, 0.0], [6460, 6525, 0.0], [6525, 7250, 0.0], [7250, 7306, 0.0], [7306, 7390, 0.0], [7390, 8331, 0.0], [8331, 8382, 0.0], [8382, 8460, 0.0], [8460, 9348, 0.0], [9348, 9460, 0.0], [9460, 9530, 0.0], [9530, 10565, 0.0], [10565, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 52, 9.0], [52, 535, 81.0], [535, 609, 11.0], [609, 634, 4.0], [634, 689, 7.0], [689, 1915, 181.0], [1915, 1992, 9.0], [1992, 2067, 6.0], [2067, 2134, 9.0], [2134, 3025, 136.0], [3025, 3089, 8.0], [3089, 3129, 6.0], [3129, 3970, 124.0], [3970, 4051, 11.0], [4051, 4083, 6.0], [4083, 5415, 187.0], [5415, 5511, 16.0], [5511, 5566, 8.0], [5566, 6460, 127.0], [6460, 6525, 10.0], [6525, 7250, 104.0], [7250, 7306, 7.0], [7306, 7390, 13.0], [7390, 8331, 136.0], [8331, 8382, 7.0], [8382, 8460, 12.0], [8460, 9348, 132.0], [9348, 9460, 16.0], [9460, 9530, 10.0], [9530, 10565, 151.0], [10565, 10632, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 535, 0.00843882], [535, 609, 0.0], [609, 634, 0.0], [634, 689, 0.0], [689, 1915, 0.01193521], [1915, 1992, 0.0], [1992, 2067, 0.0], [2067, 2134, 0.06153846], [2134, 3025, 0.00460829], [3025, 3089, 0.06451613], [3089, 3129, 0.1025641], [3129, 3970, 0.00485437], [3970, 4051, 0.05063291], [4051, 4083, 0.0], [4083, 5415, 0.00311526], [5415, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5566, 0.07407407], [5566, 6460, 0.01270208], [6460, 6525, 0.0625], [6525, 7250, 0.01001431], [7250, 7306, 0.07407407], [7306, 7390, 0.06024096], [7390, 8331, 0.0166113], [8331, 8382, 0.08333333], [8382, 8460, 0.0], [8460, 9348, 0.00348028], [9348, 9460, 0.0], [9460, 9530, 0.05797101], [9530, 10565, 0.00597015], [10565, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 535, 0.0], [535, 609, 0.0], [609, 634, 0.0], [634, 689, 0.0], [689, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 1992, 0.0], [1992, 2067, 0.0], [2067, 2134, 0.0], [2134, 3025, 0.0], [3025, 3089, 0.0], [3089, 3129, 0.0], [3129, 3970, 0.0], [3970, 4051, 0.0], [4051, 4083, 0.0], [4083, 5415, 0.0], [5415, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5566, 0.0], [5566, 6460, 0.0], [6460, 6525, 0.0], [6525, 7250, 0.0], [7250, 7306, 0.0], [7306, 7390, 0.0], [7390, 8331, 0.0], [8331, 8382, 0.0], [8382, 8460, 0.0], [8460, 9348, 0.0], [9348, 9460, 0.0], [9460, 9530, 0.0], [9530, 10565, 0.0], [10565, 10632, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 52, 0.13461538], [52, 535, 0.04554865], [535, 609, 0.12162162], [609, 634, 0.16], [634, 689, 0.09090909], [689, 1915, 0.05464927], [1915, 1992, 0.09090909], [1992, 2067, 0.06666667], [2067, 2134, 0.08955224], [2134, 3025, 0.02805836], [3025, 3089, 0.109375], [3089, 3129, 0.1], [3129, 3970, 0.04280618], [3970, 4051, 0.0617284], [4051, 4083, 0.15625], [4083, 5415, 0.06306306], [5415, 5511, 0.14583333], [5511, 5566, 0.14545455], [5566, 6460, 0.03914989], [6460, 6525, 0.10769231], [6525, 7250, 0.03310345], [7250, 7306, 0.10714286], [7306, 7390, 0.13095238], [7390, 8331, 0.06907545], [8331, 8382, 0.17647059], [8382, 8460, 0.05128205], [8460, 9348, 0.04279279], [9348, 9460, 0.0625], [9460, 9530, 0.14285714], [9530, 10565, 0.03478261], [10565, 10632, 0.11940299]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10632, 0.30339378]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10632, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10632, 0.88573354]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10632, -522.92411155]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10632, -17.64433735]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10632, 71.07266656]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10632, 74.0]]}
University of California announces Global Food Initiative 30 Under 30 Awards UC Office of the President June 14, 2016 The University of California today announced the recipients of its inaugural Global Food Initiative 30 Under 30 Awards. The awards recognize 30 young pioneers and innovators trailblazing to solve the global food crisis by making extraordinary contributions in a wide array of food-related fields. The 30 Under 30 Awards recognize individuals both inside and outside the UC system who have made outstanding contributions to fields including food production, food access and security, food sourcing, food education and communication, and food policy and public impact. The honorees were selected through a comprehensive nomination and review process, with a selection committee of industry leaders and influential voices in the food movement, both from within the UC system and the broader public. The Global Food Initiative was launched by UC President Janet Napolitano in 2014 to develop, demonstrate and export solutions that help put the world on a path to sustainably and nutritiously feeding itself. She started the 30 Under 30 Awards to highlight and amplify the good work being done by 30 young leaders and further encourage dialogue about food education, access and security, health and sustainability, in line with the initiative’s goals. “Today we honor 30 young people who have devoted their lives to addressing some of the most important topics of our day,” Napolitano said. “Food is at the heart of issues related to sustainability, climate security and healthy communities.” Emilie Aguirre, 29 – As a research and policy fellow at the Resnick Program for Food Law and Policy at UCLA Law, Aguirre researches and advances solutions for the food system, teaches food law, and has helped develop and launch a free legal intake and referral service for nonprofits and small businesses working to improve healthy food access and sustainable production. Komal Ahmad, 26 – Ahmad is the founder and CEO of Copia, a website and mobile app that connects businesses with excess food inventory to communities in need. Copia has fed more than 660,000 people and recovered more than 800,000 pounds of food, enough to feed the entire country of Luxembourg. Louise Bruce, 29 – Since converting a vacant Brooklyn lot into a thriving “compost-first” garden, Bruce has been engaged in community-based composting. As the NYC Organics senior program manager, Bruce oversees the expansion of the city’s organic waste management programs to provide all New Yorkers with curbside collection and convenient local drop-off locations where they can recycle their food waste. Caroline Cahill, 25 – As a member of Feeding America Child Hunger Corps, Cahill has worked to complete community needs assessment programs in Alabama, Florida and Mississippi, establishing goals and securing funding for new child hunger and multidimensional community health programs for the rural South. Ruben E. Canedo, 27 – Canedo has established himself as a national expert on student food security and college campus programs and policies to address the issue. In his role as research and mobilization coordinator at UC Berkeley's Centers for Educational Equity and Excellence and as co-chair of the GFI Food Access and Security Subcommittee, Canedo is engaged in actively researching and addressing college student food access and security. Claire Cummings, 27 – Cummings is a student activist turned garbage guru who now serves as the first-ever waste programs manager for Bon Appétit Management Company Foundation, the nonprofit arm of the food service company. Lisa Curtis, 28 – Curtis is the founder and CEO of Kuli Kuli, a line of nutritious food products made from moringa, a superfood sourced from women-owned farming cooperatives in Ghana and Haiti. Kuli Kuli’s products are carried by more than 800 retailers across the country. Elhadj Diallo, 29 – Diallo is a program director with Dare to Innovate, a program that provides training and funding for aspiring agricultural entrepreneurs in Guinea. Having overseen the disbursement of funding to seven businesses throughout the country, Diallo is in the process of launching an annual agropreneur incubator program. Kelly Dumke, 29 – Dumke is the assistant project director for Choose Health LA Kids, one of the nation’s largest investments aimed at preventing early childhood obesity among nearly 1 million children in Los Angeles County. She also leads an interdepartmental task force between the Department of Public Health and Department of Children and Family Services to develop mechanisms for addressing high rates of obesity within the child welfare system. Sophie Egan, 29 – Egan is the director of programs and culinary nutrition for strategic initiatives at The Culinary Institute of America, where she works to help the food service industry make its menus healthier and more sustainable. She also contributes to the New York Times' Well blog and has just written her first book: "Devoured: From Chicken Wings to Kale Smoothies - How What We Eat Defines Who We Are." Elaine Lander, 28 – Lander is a program officer with the Food Literacy Center in Sacramento, California, helping improve children’s knowledge about healthy and nutritious food. She now oversees hands-on food education for 800 students weekly and works with community partners to reach an additional 20,000 kids with more than 300 programs per year. Chris Massa, 27 – Massa began teaching children about food and agriculture in 2013 as a FoodCorps service member in Ventura County, California. He now works as a farm-to-school operations specialist, helping local farmers sell their products to school districts. Brianna McGuire, 26 – McGuire is the co-founder and CEO of Foodfully, a small business building software to eliminate household food waste. The Foodfully app syncs with store loyalty cards and scans receipts to track food purchases, sending users reminders when their food is most likely to go bad, and providing recipes for soon-to-spoil items. Nandeet Mehta, 22 – Mehta is the founder and CEO of Pyur Solutions, a company that develops nontoxic, biodegradable, plant-based pesticides, herbicides and insecticides for agriculture. This past fall, Mehta co-founded SNAC, a student nutrition advocacy group. Matthew Meisner, 26 – Meisner is a co-founder and the head of data science of Farmers Business Network, a rapidly growing venture-backed startup with the mission of harnessing farm data for the benefit of farmers. Data is the next frontier in agricultural productivity and Meisner is at the forefront of innovating to create this future. Fortino Morales III, 28 – After having founded UC Riverside’s community garden as an undergraduate student, Morales established the garden’s first student-run course, the Urban Garden Seminar, and ushered through a student referendum to fund sustainability engagement. Upon graduation, he returned to UC Riverside as its first R'Garden manager, overseeing the 3-acre sustainable community garden. Laura Moreno, 29 – As a Ph.D. student in the Energy and Resources Group at UC Berkeley and project manager for a food waste measurement program for the Natural Resources Defense Council in Nashville, Tennessee, Moreno has focused her work on research and action in food waste tracking, prevention and disposal. Aviva Paley, 25 – A social entrepreneur with professional experience in marrying a social mission with proven business strategies, Paley and her co-founder launched Kitchens for Good under the belief that kitchens can be social and economic engines for good in communities. In just one year, Paley has grown the organization from two to 37 employees, operating a $1.5 million social enterprise catering company. Esther Park, 27 – Park is one of the co-creators of the Los Angeles Food Policy Council’s Healthy Neighborhood Market Network, a groundbreaking initiative to build the leadership and business acumen of immigrant business owners in low-income communities to help them bring fresher, more nutritious food to their customers. Kate Polakiewicz, 29 – Polakiewicz is an agricultural scientist specializing in sustainable production and extension services for small-scale producers in the developing world, with a background in fair trade certification and supply chain labor practices. Polakiewicz also helps lead the development of coffee education at UC Davis, and will travel to Honduras this year to work with Catholic Relief Services’ Blue Harvest program as part of a UC-USAID fellowship. Lauren Ponisio, 27 – As a native of California’s Central Valley, Ponisio has a personal connection to issues concerning the sustainability of agriculture, and her primary research interest is to make agricultural systems better for humans and wildlife. Ponisio investigates strategies for designing agricultural systems to promote biodiversity conservation, and the links between conservation strategies and improving livelihoods. Samuel Rigu, 27 – Rigu is the co-founder and CEO of Safi Organics, a for-profit company in Kenya that produces and sells a carbon negative, organic fertilizer (Safi Sarvi) that helps rural farmers increase their farm yields by up to 30 percent and income by up to 50 percent. Judith Rowland, 27 – As U.S. policy and advocacy manager for Global Citizen, Rowland works to amplify the voices of millions of global citizens who take action and call on elected officials to pass policies that would improve global food security and access to nutritious food for the world's poor. Edward Silva, 26 – Silva is executive director of Thought For Food and co-founder of Henlight – a solar-powered solution to help small-scale poultry farmers. His current work for Thought For Food focuses on a reciprocal value proposition project, developing a handful of tools that allow the global community to engage with an ever-changing food/agriculture industry in a more effective way. Matthew Spinelli, 30 – Spinelli is studying the impact of food security on HIV treatment outcomes in women living with HIV. This research could pave the way for interventions to address food security for women living with HIV such as a comprehensive meal programs linked to HIV care and behavioral health treatment. Katie Stagliano, 17 – In 2008, 9-year-old Katie Stagliano planted a single cabbage seedling in her South Carolina front yard as part of a school project. It grew to be 40 pounds, and fed 275 people in a local soup kitchen. Today, Katie’s Krops consists of 100 gardens across the country, all maintained by local children of the community. Rachel Sumekh, 24 – Sumekh co-founded Swipe Out Hunger as a UCLA student and is now executive director of the organization, which allows college students to donate excess dollars on their meal plan to fellow students in need. The organization now has chapters on four UC campuses with plans to expand to all nine UC undergraduate campuses. It has served 1.2 million meals across the country. Joe Viana, 28 – Viana, in close collaboration with UCLA researchers and nutritionists, implemented an evidence-based trial of healthier vending machines at UCLA, designed to increase sales of healthier items without compromising the bottom-line revenue from over 30 trial machines. Viana’s work has triggered a review of UC-wide policies around vending, and spurred discussion around healthy vending at the national level with Partnership for a Healthier America, which works with the private sector and Michelle Obama to make healthier choices easier. Tim Williams, 27 – Williams currently acts as program manager for Working Landscapes, a rural economic development nonprofit based in Warren County, North Carolina. His work focuses on building farm-to-table supply chains, primarily focusing on an effort called the Chopped Produce Initiative. Tyler Youngblood, 29 – Tyler Youngblood is the co-founder of Azahar, a Colombia-based coffee company committed to reimagining and redefining the way coffee is grown, processed and distributed globally. Today, Azahar and its 20 full-time employees purchase more than 400 tons of coffee per year from more than 500 producers, boosting their incomes by 50 to 70 percent while providing technical assistance to continue improving their farms’ operations. The selection committee included: Anya Fernald – co-founder and CEO, Belcampo Inc. Rose Hayden-Smith – editor, UC Food Observer Glenda Humiston – vice president, Agriculture and Natural Resources, University of California Josette Lewis – associate director, World Food Center, UC Davis Michael Moss – New York Times best-selling author of "Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us" Janet Napolitano – president, University of California Jaspal Sandhu – lecturer, School of Public Health, UC Berkeley Naomi Starkman – founder and editor-in-chief, Civil Eats For more background about each of the winners, as well as information about the 30 Under 30 Awards, click here. About the UC Global Food Initiative The University of California Global Food Initiative addresses one of the critical issues of our time: how to sustainably and nutritiously feed a world population expected to reach 8 billion by 2025. The initiative aligns the university’s research, outreach and operations in a sustained effort to develop, demonstrate and export solutions — throughout California, the United States and the world — for food security, health and sustainability. The initiative draws on UC’s leadership in the fields of agriculture, medicine, nutrition, climate science, public policy, social science, biological science, humanities, arts and law, among others. The UC Global Food Initiative involves all 10 UC campuses, UC’s Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. It is guided by a systemwide working group appointed by President Janet Napolitano and the UC chancellors. The GFI partners with nonprofits, government agencies and others to translate UC research into policies and programs that help communities in California and around the world eat more sustainably and nutritiously. It also drives operational improvements across the UC system aimed at using UC’s collective buying power and dining practices to implement best practices for healthy, sustainable campus communities. For media inquiries (reporters only), please email media@ucop.edu For Health-related media inquiries, please email uchealthnews@ucop.edu UC Global Food Initiative 30 Under 30 Awards website Press images of 30 Under 30 winners Six at Berkeley receive new 30 Under 30 Award for global food crisis work UCLA: Trailblazing solutions to global food crisis UC Riverside's Fortino Morales III wins the Global Food Initiative 30 Under 30 … UC Santa Barbara: Alumna honored for ag work UC Santa Cruz: Former CASFS intern named to Global Food Initiative 30 Under 30 …
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/23535
{"url": "https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/press-room/university-california-announces-global-food-initiative-30-under-30-awards", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.universityofcalifornia.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:10:04Z", "digest": "sha1:X5WHT3YCLXGLA6IQWDVG7P3LZT2B2HGW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 14913, 14913.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 14913, 16625.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 14913, 57.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 14913, 128.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 14913, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 14913, 299.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 14913, 0.29509406]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 14913, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 14913, 0.03650407]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 14913, 0.02804878]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 14913, 0.01341463]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 14913, 0.01056911]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 14913, 0.00731707]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 14913, 0.00731707]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 14913, 0.02176319]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 14913, 0.03508772]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 14913, 0.16709701]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 14913, 0.40397924]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 14913, 5.3200692]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 14913, 0.00073774]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 14913, 5.96041088]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 14913, 2312.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 77, 0.0], [77, 118, 0.0], [118, 415, 1.0], [415, 914, 1.0], [914, 1365, 1.0], [1365, 1606, 1.0], [1606, 1978, 1.0], [1978, 2272, 1.0], [2272, 2678, 1.0], [2678, 2983, 1.0], [2983, 3426, 1.0], [3426, 3649, 1.0], [3649, 3923, 1.0], [3923, 4258, 1.0], [4258, 4708, 1.0], [4708, 5121, 0.0], [5121, 5470, 1.0], [5470, 5733, 1.0], [5733, 6079, 1.0], [6079, 6340, 1.0], [6340, 6678, 1.0], [6678, 7075, 1.0], [7075, 7386, 1.0], [7386, 7798, 1.0], [7798, 8121, 1.0], [8121, 8587, 1.0], [8587, 9018, 1.0], [9018, 9294, 1.0], [9294, 9593, 1.0], [9593, 9985, 1.0], [9985, 10301, 1.0], [10301, 10640, 1.0], [10640, 11032, 1.0], [11032, 11585, 1.0], [11585, 11879, 1.0], [11879, 12330, 1.0], [12330, 12364, 0.0], [12364, 12413, 1.0], [12413, 12458, 0.0], [12458, 12552, 0.0], [12552, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12717, 0.0], [12717, 12772, 0.0], [12772, 12835, 0.0], [12835, 12892, 0.0], [12892, 13004, 1.0], [13004, 13040, 0.0], [13040, 14356, 1.0], [14356, 14422, 0.0], [14422, 14493, 0.0], [14493, 14546, 0.0], [14546, 14582, 0.0], [14582, 14656, 0.0], [14656, 14707, 0.0], [14707, 14788, 0.0], [14788, 14833, 0.0], [14833, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 77, 0.0], [77, 118, 0.0], [118, 415, 0.0], [415, 914, 0.0], [914, 1365, 0.0], [1365, 1606, 0.0], [1606, 1978, 0.0], [1978, 2272, 0.0], [2272, 2678, 0.0], [2678, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3426, 0.0], [3426, 3649, 0.0], [3649, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4258, 0.0], [4258, 4708, 0.0], [4708, 5121, 0.0], [5121, 5470, 0.0], [5470, 5733, 0.0], [5733, 6079, 0.0], [6079, 6340, 0.0], [6340, 6678, 0.0], [6678, 7075, 0.0], [7075, 7386, 0.0], [7386, 7798, 0.0], [7798, 8121, 0.0], [8121, 8587, 0.0], [8587, 9018, 0.0], [9018, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9593, 0.0], [9593, 9985, 0.0], [9985, 10301, 0.0], [10301, 10640, 0.0], [10640, 11032, 0.0], [11032, 11585, 0.0], [11585, 11879, 0.0], [11879, 12330, 0.0], [12330, 12364, 0.0], [12364, 12413, 0.0], [12413, 12458, 0.0], [12458, 12552, 0.0], [12552, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12717, 0.0], [12717, 12772, 0.0], [12772, 12835, 0.0], [12835, 12892, 0.0], [12892, 13004, 0.0], [13004, 13040, 0.0], [13040, 14356, 0.0], [14356, 14422, 0.0], [14422, 14493, 0.0], [14493, 14546, 0.0], [14546, 14582, 0.0], [14582, 14656, 0.0], [14656, 14707, 0.0], [14707, 14788, 0.0], [14788, 14833, 0.0], [14833, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 77, 11.0], [77, 118, 8.0], [118, 415, 44.0], [415, 914, 75.0], [914, 1365, 72.0], [1365, 1606, 39.0], [1606, 1978, 61.0], [1978, 2272, 51.0], [2272, 2678, 60.0], [2678, 2983, 45.0], [2983, 3426, 69.0], [3426, 3649, 35.0], [3649, 3923, 46.0], [3923, 4258, 50.0], [4258, 4708, 70.0], [4708, 5121, 70.0], [5121, 5470, 54.0], [5470, 5733, 40.0], [5733, 6079, 55.0], [6079, 6340, 37.0], [6340, 6678, 55.0], [6678, 7075, 55.0], [7075, 7386, 51.0], [7386, 7798, 64.0], [7798, 8121, 49.0], [8121, 8587, 69.0], [8587, 9018, 58.0], [9018, 9294, 49.0], [9294, 9593, 50.0], [9593, 9985, 61.0], [9985, 10301, 52.0], [10301, 10640, 59.0], [10640, 11032, 66.0], [11032, 11585, 81.0], [11585, 11879, 42.0], [11879, 12330, 68.0], [12330, 12364, 4.0], [12364, 12413, 8.0], [12413, 12458, 7.0], [12458, 12552, 12.0], [12552, 12616, 10.0], [12616, 12717, 18.0], [12717, 12772, 7.0], [12772, 12835, 10.0], [12835, 12892, 8.0], [12892, 13004, 20.0], [13004, 13040, 6.0], [13040, 14356, 192.0], [14356, 14422, 8.0], [14422, 14493, 7.0], [14493, 14546, 9.0], [14546, 14582, 7.0], [14582, 14656, 14.0], [14656, 14707, 7.0], [14707, 14788, 14.0], [14788, 14833, 8.0], [14833, 14913, 15.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 77, 0.05263158], [77, 118, 0.15384615], [118, 415, 0.02047782], [415, 914, 0.00816327], [914, 1365, 0.02252252], [1365, 1606, 0.00847458], [1606, 1978, 0.00546448], [1978, 2272, 0.04895105], [2272, 2678, 0.00503778], [2678, 2983, 0.00668896], [2983, 3426, 0.0045977], [3426, 3649, 0.00913242], [3649, 3923, 0.01872659], [3923, 4258, 0.00607903], [4258, 4708, 0.00674157], [4708, 5121, 0.00498753], [5121, 5470, 0.03812317], [5470, 5733, 0.02352941], [5733, 6079, 0.00595238], [6079, 6340, 0.00803213], [6340, 6678, 0.0060423], [6678, 7075, 0.00779221], [7075, 7386, 0.00660066], [7386, 7798, 0.01492537], [7798, 8121, 0.00632911], [8121, 8587, 0.00436681], [8587, 9018, 0.00471698], [9018, 9294, 0.02247191], [9294, 9593, 0.00684932], [9593, 9985, 0.0052356], [9985, 10301, 0.00641026], [10301, 10640, 0.04573171], [10640, 11032, 0.01041667], [11032, 11585, 0.00739372], [11585, 11879, 0.00701754], [11879, 12330, 0.03181818], [12330, 12364, 0.0], [12364, 12413, 0.0], [12413, 12458, 0.0], [12458, 12552, 0.0], [12552, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12717, 0.0], [12717, 12772, 0.0], [12772, 12835, 0.0], [12835, 12892, 0.0], [12892, 13004, 0.03703704], [13004, 13040, 0.0], [13040, 14356, 0.00542636], [14356, 14422, 0.0], [14422, 14493, 0.0], [14493, 14546, 0.07692308], [14546, 14582, 0.11428571], [14582, 14656, 0.05479452], [14656, 14707, 0.0], [14707, 14788, 0.05063291], [14788, 14833, 0.0], [14833, 14913, 0.05063291]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 77, 0.0], [77, 118, 0.0], [118, 415, 0.0], [415, 914, 0.0], [914, 1365, 0.0], [1365, 1606, 0.0], [1606, 1978, 0.0], [1978, 2272, 0.0], [2272, 2678, 0.0], [2678, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3426, 0.0], [3426, 3649, 0.0], [3649, 3923, 0.0], [3923, 4258, 0.0], [4258, 4708, 0.0], [4708, 5121, 0.0], [5121, 5470, 0.0], [5470, 5733, 0.0], [5733, 6079, 0.0], [6079, 6340, 0.0], [6340, 6678, 0.0], [6678, 7075, 0.0], [7075, 7386, 0.0], [7386, 7798, 0.0], [7798, 8121, 0.0], [8121, 8587, 0.0], [8587, 9018, 0.0], [9018, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9593, 0.0], [9593, 9985, 0.0], [9985, 10301, 0.0], [10301, 10640, 0.0], [10640, 11032, 0.0], [11032, 11585, 0.0], [11585, 11879, 0.0], [11879, 12330, 0.0], [12330, 12364, 0.0], [12364, 12413, 0.0], [12413, 12458, 0.0], [12458, 12552, 0.0], [12552, 12616, 0.0], [12616, 12717, 0.0], [12717, 12772, 0.0], [12772, 12835, 0.0], [12835, 12892, 0.0], [12892, 13004, 0.0], [13004, 13040, 0.0], [13040, 14356, 0.0], [14356, 14422, 0.0], [14422, 14493, 0.0], [14493, 14546, 0.0], [14546, 14582, 0.0], [14582, 14656, 0.0], [14656, 14707, 0.0], [14707, 14788, 0.0], [14788, 14833, 0.0], [14833, 14913, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 77, 0.09090909], [77, 118, 0.12195122], [118, 415, 0.03030303], [415, 914, 0.01603206], [914, 1365, 0.02660754], [1365, 1606, 0.01244813], [1606, 1978, 0.03763441], [1978, 2272, 0.03061224], [2272, 2678, 0.0320197], [2678, 2983, 0.04262295], [2983, 3426, 0.04514673], [3426, 3649, 0.03587444], [3649, 3923, 0.04379562], [3923, 4258, 0.0238806], [4258, 4708, 0.04222222], [4708, 5121, 0.062954], [5121, 5470, 0.02578797], [5470, 5733, 0.03422053], [5733, 6079, 0.03179191], [6079, 6340, 0.05363985], [6340, 6678, 0.02366864], [6678, 7075, 0.04785894], [7075, 7386, 0.05787781], [7386, 7798, 0.01941748], [7798, 8121, 0.0371517], [8121, 8587, 0.04291845], [8587, 9018, 0.01856148], [9018, 9294, 0.03985507], [9294, 9593, 0.02675585], [9593, 9985, 0.02806122], [9985, 10301, 0.05063291], [10301, 10640, 0.03244838], [10640, 11032, 0.04081633], [11032, 11585, 0.03435805], [11585, 11879, 0.04421769], [11879, 12330, 0.01773836], [12330, 12364, 0.02941176], [12364, 12413, 0.14285714], [12413, 12458, 0.15555556], [12458, 12552, 0.07446809], [12552, 12616, 0.125], [12616, 12717, 0.12871287], [12717, 12772, 0.07272727], [12772, 12835, 0.12698413], [12835, 12892, 0.07017544], [12892, 13004, 0.02678571], [13004, 13040, 0.16666667], [13040, 14356, 0.03723404], [14356, 14422, 0.01515152], [14422, 14493, 0.02816901], [14493, 14546, 0.13207547], [14546, 14582, 0.05555556], [14582, 14656, 0.05405405], [14656, 14707, 0.09803922], [14707, 14788, 0.14814815], [14788, 14833, 0.11111111], [14833, 14913, 0.175]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 14913, 0.25359136]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 14913, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 14913, 0.70589912]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 14913, -925.31626059]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 14913, 57.48326512]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 14913, 45.56550316]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 14913, 82.0]]}
NASA and Hera Systems Enter into Space Act Agreement by [email protected] | Aug 4, 2016 SAN JOSE, Calif., August 4, 2016 “ Hera Systems, home of innovative, small satellite platforms for Earth observation and real-time on-board analytics, announced that it has entered into a Non-Reimbursable Space Act Agreement (NRSAA) with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames Research Center (NASA Ames). Under this agreement, NASA Ames and Hera Systems will collaborate on the development of an upgraded satellite design for Hera Systems that is based on NASA's existing COTSAT (Cost Optimized Test for Spacecraft Avionics and Technologies) prototype spacecraft. The agreement is a key stepping stone in Hera Systems' plans to deliver affordable, highly refreshed, high-resolution satellite imagery and derived information to customers, and significantly accelerates the company's own development timeline. The arrangement with NASA Ames is unique in the aerospace industry. It enables Hera Systems to use the COTSAT technology to undertake final mission integration, launch and operation of its own 2HOPSatâ„¢ (2nd-Generation High Optical Performance Satellite), a low Earth orbit system designed to provide imagery of the Earth for a range of government and commercial applications. NASA Ames originally developed COTSAT to demonstrate rapid and low-cost prototyping concepts. Based on this design, which houses the bus and payload subsystems in a single-atmosphere, artificial environment, the Hera Systems 2HOPSat technology demonstrator will accommodate multiple payloads, including a sensor capable of imaging the Earth's surface at better than 22 centimeters ground sample distance (GSD). This level of resolution is particularly suitable to security applications and for monitoring the built environment and related activity. This unique arrangement with NASA helps Hera Systems realize the promise of the COTSAT design, and demonstrates new heights of performance in a low-cost Earth observation platform, said Bobby Machinski, chief executive officer and president of Hera Systems. We're thrilled, because we're able to save money and time by leveraging NASA's program investment. Current U.S. government policy restricts commercial satellite imagery resolution to 1-meter (multispectral) and 25-centimeter (panchromatic). However, to date, governments are the most frequent users of the highest quality imagery, while other types of user organizations are limited by the high cost of and low access to such products; Hera Systems' objective is to greatly broaden the user base. Our aim is to level the playing field. We know that certain applications in government and commerce benefit particularly from 31-centimeter resolution and better, and intend to open up access to such imagery and derived information to the greatest allowable extent, Machinski said. COTSAT provides an ideal foundation for the extremely stable platform necessary for such levels of ultra-high resolution imaging and optical communications. 2HOPSat will incorporate sensors to cover a range of visible and infrared spectra for the delivery of still-frame and video products. It will also incorporate on-board analytics capabilities that are already built into Hera Systems' first-generation 1HOPSat design. As announced in a February 2016 news release, the 1HOPSat constellation will provide fresh, daily imagery and video as well as intelligent analytics and derived information products. The company is on track to launch the 1HOPSat constellation beginning in late 2016, and plans to launch the 2HOPSat mission in late 2017. More information about Hera Systems' products and services may be obtained by contacting the Hera Systems sales team directly at [email protected] or +1.844.437.2797 ext. 721. About Hera Systems Hera Systems is a satellite information and analytics company that collects images of the Earth every day, enabling commercial and government organizations to monitor change and make smart decisions in near-real time. The company is the only single source of fresh, up-to-the minute, universally accessible, affordable, high-resolution information about any location on the globe. Hera Systems' initial satellite constellation will enable customers to acquire imagery and video, as well as intelligent analytics and derived information, on demand through a simplified user interface. Future generation systems will feature higher resolution imaging capabilities and other advanced technologies. For more information, visit www.herasys.com.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/25665
{"url": "https://eijournal.com/news/business-2/nasa-and-hera-systems-enter-into-space-act-agreement", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "eijournal.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:27:37Z", "digest": "sha1:X64SAXSHI6Y2FUY5EV6IXRCG6VTUE5HL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4559, 4559.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4559, 6333.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4559, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4559, 82.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4559, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4559, 292.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4559, 0.29689441]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4559, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4559, 0.03384453]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4559, 0.04970915]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4559, 0.03384453]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4559, 0.03384453]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4559, 0.03384453]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4559, 0.03384453]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4559, 0.04653622]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4559, 0.02221047]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4559, 0.01480698]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4559, 0.02360248]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4559, 0.16770186]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4559, 0.48780488]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4559, 5.7652439]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4559, 5.22455279]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4559, 656.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 88, 0.0], [88, 914, 1.0], [914, 1292, 1.0], [1292, 1841, 1.0], [1841, 2200, 0.0], [2200, 2598, 1.0], [2598, 2881, 1.0], [2881, 3625, 1.0], [3625, 3801, 1.0], [3801, 3820, 0.0], [3820, 4559, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 88, 0.0], [88, 914, 0.0], [914, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1841, 0.0], [1841, 2200, 0.0], [2200, 2598, 0.0], [2598, 2881, 0.0], [2881, 3625, 0.0], [3625, 3801, 0.0], [3801, 3820, 0.0], [3820, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 53, 9.0], [53, 88, 6.0], [88, 914, 116.0], [914, 1292, 57.0], [1292, 1841, 75.0], [1841, 2200, 53.0], [2200, 2598, 58.0], [2598, 2881, 43.0], [2881, 3625, 110.0], [3625, 3801, 26.0], [3801, 3820, 3.0], [3820, 4559, 100.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 88, 0.17241379], [88, 914, 0.00626566], [914, 1292, 0.00539084], [1292, 1841, 0.00559701], [1841, 2200, 0.0], [2200, 2598, 0.0078534], [2598, 2881, 0.00722022], [2881, 3625, 0.02328767], [3625, 3801, 0.08433735], [3801, 3820, 0.0], [3820, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 88, 0.0], [88, 914, 0.0], [914, 1292, 0.0], [1292, 1841, 0.0], [1841, 2200, 0.0], [2200, 2598, 0.0], [2598, 2881, 0.0], [2881, 3625, 0.0], [3625, 3801, 0.0], [3801, 3820, 0.0], [3820, 4559, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.18867925], [53, 88, 0.02857143], [88, 914, 0.07627119], [914, 1292, 0.06878307], [1292, 1841, 0.04189435], [1841, 2200, 0.06406685], [2200, 2598, 0.01507538], [2598, 2881, 0.01060071], [2881, 3625, 0.04301075], [3625, 3801, 0.02840909], [3801, 3820, 0.15789474], [3820, 4559, 0.01082544]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4559, 0.71253657]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4559, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4559, 0.8211863]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4559, -239.61194671]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4559, -4.91842935]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4559, -14.54915102]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4559, 34.0]]}
In 2006, Hoa Lam joined the financial market with a significant capital investment in Vietnam Thuong Tin Joint Stock Commercial Bank (VIETBANK) where Mr. Duong Ngoc Hoa serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors. The investment was the first step of consolidating and enlarging financial potential of Hoa Lam sustainably. On February 2nd, 2007, VIETBANK was officially opened at 47 Tran Hung Dao Street, Soc Trang City, Soc Trang Province. Hoa Lam Investment and Development Joint Stock Company became a strategic shareholder of the bank, with 35% of the total outstanding shares. Other 39 shareholders are enterprises and individuals with financial potential and experiences in banking management and operation, typically, Asia Commercial Bank (ACB). After two years of operation, VIETBANK began a rapid growth strategy. The bank’s brand name gradually determined the wide range of service products and flexible policies. VIETBANK strives to meet the consumers’ needs of the diversifiedfinancial services across the country. Specifically, VIETBANK invests in R&D programs of customers’ needs to invent various financial products and programs that are suitable to each particular group of consumers. VIETBANK has simultaneously carried out a series of improvements such as diversifying financial products, developing information technology systems and frequently providing professional training courses. Notably, the bank invested heavily to construct modern spacious banking centers and transaction offices across Vietnam. On November 26th, 2012, VIETBANK’s banking center – HCM City Branch was inaugurated at 4B Ton Duc Thang Street, Ben Nghe Ward, District 1, an ergonomic design of a 11-storey building featuring an automatic underground parking system. Meanwhile, the new headquarters of VIETBANK, a 2,700-square-meter building in Soc Trang City, was also put into operation. Additionally VIETBANK also operates at the 15-story building with 2 levels of basement at 70-72 Ba Trieu Street, Hoan Kiem District in Hanoi; and the 18-storey building with 3 levels of basement at 412 Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street, District 3 in HCMC. In 2015, VIETBANK operates approximately 100 banking centers and transaction offices across the country in major economic regions such as HCMC, Hanoi, Ba Ria – Vung Tau, Can Tho, Danang, Khanh Hoa, Hai Phong, Long An, Nghe An, Quang Ngai and Soc Trang. In HCMC, there are approximately 50 banking centers and transaction offices located in all districts. With 1,500 professional staffs and the total value of assets up to VND20 trillion, VIETBANK gradually affirms its position within Vietnamese financial market. VIETBANK’s strategy is to always improve banking operation quality in all aspects, and become one of the most prestigious banks in Vietnam’s banking insdustry. VIETBANK aims to be a dynamic and modern retail bank with top-quality service in the country which having competitive advantage and sustainable growth in the new era. For more information, please visit our website at www.vietbank.com.vn.
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/25778
{"url": "https://hoalam.com/en/nganhang/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hoalam.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:34:51Z", "digest": "sha1:RJHCJI67AQAJRF73GOWS2VXDLONS4WEH"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3045, 3045.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3045, 11167.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3045, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3045, 52.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3045, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3045, 271.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3045, 0.26750449]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3045, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3045, 0.04659498]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3045, 0.03265631]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3045, 0.00995619]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3045, 0.02031063]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3045, 0.03345281]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3045, 0.03949731]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3045, 0.19030521]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3045, 0.57298475]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3045, 5.47058824]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3045, 5.16211821]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3045, 459.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 324, 1.0], [324, 754, 1.0], [754, 1202, 1.0], [1202, 1883, 1.0], [1883, 2134, 1.0], [2134, 2648, 1.0], [2648, 2975, 1.0], [2975, 3045, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 324, 0.0], [324, 754, 0.0], [754, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1883, 0.0], [1883, 2134, 0.0], [2134, 2648, 0.0], [2648, 2975, 0.0], [2975, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 324, 51.0], [324, 754, 64.0], [754, 1202, 65.0], [1202, 1883, 95.0], [1883, 2134, 43.0], [2134, 2648, 81.0], [2648, 2975, 51.0], [2975, 3045, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 324, 0.0126183], [324, 754, 0.02644231], [754, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1883, 0.02114804], [1883, 2134, 0.05761317], [2134, 2648, 0.03018109], [2648, 2975, 0.0], [2975, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 324, 0.0], [324, 754, 0.0], [754, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1883, 0.0], [1883, 2134, 0.0], [2134, 2648, 0.0], [2648, 2975, 0.0], [2975, 3045, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 324, 0.08641975], [324, 754, 0.07906977], [754, 1202, 0.06473214], [1202, 1883, 0.06754772], [1883, 2134, 0.10358566], [2134, 2648, 0.09922179], [2648, 2975, 0.05198777], [2975, 3045, 0.01428571]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3045, 0.39226109]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3045, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3045, 0.2903443]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3045, -169.86093664]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3045, -0.95379209]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3045, 26.92180579]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3045, 24.0]]}
Vaco Opens New Office in Vancouver November 19, 2020 – Brentwood, TN-headquartered recruiting firm Vaco has continued its expansion in Canada with the opening of a new office in Vancouver. The firm has named Nirad Chaudhari as managing partner. “We’ve enjoyed exciting and rapid expansion in the Canadian market in recent years, and a great opportunity for continued growth exists in the Vancouver area,” said Tom Turpin, president of technology solutions for Vaco’s Canada offices. “The Vancouver market is the fastest-growing economy in the country and has untapped potential for success. We are thrilled to have Nirad lead our growth plans in this market.” Vaco’s Vancouver team will offer a full range of services including technology, finance, accounting, operations, administration and managed services. The new office will help Vaco reach the technology, trade, entertainment, tourism and construction industries. Mr. Chaudhari has more than 20 years of executive recruiting and C-suite building experience for the private and public sector. Prior to joining Vaco, he served as managing director for Experis, an IT, finance and engineering recruiting division of ManpowerGroup. Mr. Chaudhari was also a director and Vancouver branch manager for Randstad Canada. He has worked in India, the U.S. and Canada. “Vaco is an innovative company with a dynamic culture that is experiencing quick growth across Canada, and Vancouver is a thriving center for investment in the technology, IT, AI, software development, cybersecurity and retail sectors,” said Mr. Chaudhari. “I am eager to lead our team and position Vaco as a force in the marketplace poised to capitalize on the many opportunities in British Columbia.” With its location on the Pacific Rim and at the western terminus of Canada’s transcontinental highway and rail routes, Vancouver is one of the nation’s largest industrial centers. Port Metro Vancouver, Canada’s largest and most diversified port, does more than $172 billion in trade with over 160 different trading economies annually. In recent years, Vancouver has become a center for software development, biotechnology, aerospace, video game development, animation studios and television production and film industry. Founded in 2002 by Mr. Bostelman, Jay Hollomon and Brian Waller, Vaco provides boutique-level service with global reach in executive search, consulting, permanent placement and strategic staffing. Its areas of expertise include accounting, finance, technology, healthcare IT, operations, administration and managed services. The firm operates more than 35 offices, with 780-plus employees and 4,300 consultants worldwide. Expansion in Canada The launch of Vaco in Vancouver builds on recent expansions in Canada, following its acquisition of technology-focused recruiting firm Prodigy Bank of Toronto. The acquisition complements Vaco’s recent expansions in Canada, following its Lannick acquisition in 2017 and expansion into Montreal last year. “We felt a kindred chemistry with the Prodigy Bank team from the first meeting, and our bond was quickly steeled as we had to creatively find our way together through the tumultuousness of 2020,” said Jerry Bostelman, Vaco co-founder and CEO. “The creative spirit and progressive resiliency they’ve shown through these challenging times is one of many reasons we’re proud to fortify our Toronto operations with this extraordinary organization.” Prodigy Bank, founded in 2016, joins an organization that delivers talent and solutions across diverse industries and to more than 10,000 clients globally. Prodigy Bank specializes in the e-commerce, technology, digital, software product development and financial services sectors, serving more than 100 clients ranging from the largest enterprises in Canada composed of financial institutions, banks and retailers to small to mid-size companies across various industries. Earlier this year, Vaco opened a new office in West Palm Beach, FL and added two key leaders: Matt Walter, co-managing partner of the technology practice, and Albert Llodra, managing director. Mr. Walter oversees the technology practice’s temporary, consulting and permanent placement teams. Mr. Llodra has more than 30 years of multidisciplinary experience in public accounting and the private sector. Contributed by Scott A. Scanlon, Editor-in-Chief; Dale M. Zupsansky, Managing Editor; and Stephen Sawicki, Managing Editor – Hunt Scanlon Media Check Out These Related Articles On Firms Opening New Offices: Boyden Opens New Canadian Office Kennedy Executive Search Adds New Office in Sweden Kingsley Gate Partners Opens New Office in Madrid How to Hire 5,000 People in a Day PFM Executive Search Places Chief Scientific Officer for Genome BC Bespoke Partners Launches Strategic Resourcing Group to Serve PE Outfits DHR Global Launches Corporate Affairs and Communications Practice N2Growth Unveils Board Effectiveness Solution
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/25793
{"url": "https://huntscanlon.com/vaco-opens-new-office-in-vancouver/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "huntscanlon.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:25:03Z", "digest": "sha1:AQZKQTPNH7BIUCMCTXC3RCTF6C56MYJM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4932, 4932.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4932, 7503.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4932, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4932, 135.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4932, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4932, 269.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4932, 0.28378378]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4932, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4932, 0.03963788]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4932, 0.03963788]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4932, 0.01321263]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4932, 0.0134573]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4932, 0.0078297]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4932, 0.01914414]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4932, 0.17567568]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4932, 0.51444292]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4932, 5.62173315]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4932, 5.41562034]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4932, 727.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 660, 1.0], [660, 921, 1.0], [921, 1314, 1.0], [1314, 1717, 1.0], [1717, 2238, 1.0], [2238, 2660, 1.0], [2660, 2680, 0.0], [2680, 3430, 1.0], [3430, 3903, 1.0], [3903, 4306, 1.0], [4306, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4513, 0.0], [4513, 4647, 0.0], [4647, 4681, 0.0], [4681, 4748, 0.0], [4748, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4887, 0.0], [4887, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 660, 0.0], [660, 921, 0.0], [921, 1314, 0.0], [1314, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 2238, 0.0], [2238, 2660, 0.0], [2660, 2680, 0.0], [2680, 3430, 0.0], [3430, 3903, 0.0], [3903, 4306, 0.0], [4306, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4513, 0.0], [4513, 4647, 0.0], [4647, 4681, 0.0], [4681, 4748, 0.0], [4748, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4887, 0.0], [4887, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 35, 6.0], [35, 660, 98.0], [660, 921, 34.0], [921, 1314, 62.0], [1314, 1717, 64.0], [1717, 2238, 75.0], [2238, 2660, 56.0], [2660, 2680, 3.0], [2680, 3430, 112.0], [3430, 3903, 65.0], [3903, 4306, 60.0], [4306, 4450, 20.0], [4450, 4513, 10.0], [4513, 4647, 21.0], [4647, 4681, 8.0], [4681, 4748, 10.0], [4748, 4821, 10.0], [4821, 4887, 8.0], [4887, 4932, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 660, 0.00980392], [660, 921, 0.0], [921, 1314, 0.00527704], [1314, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 2238, 0.01181102], [2238, 2660, 0.03217822], [2660, 2680, 0.0], [2680, 3430, 0.01084011], [3430, 3903, 0.02608696], [3903, 4306, 0.00514139], [4306, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4513, 0.0], [4513, 4647, 0.0], [4647, 4681, 0.125], [4681, 4748, 0.0], [4748, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4887, 0.0], [4887, 4932, 0.02222222]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 660, 0.0], [660, 921, 0.0], [921, 1314, 0.0], [1314, 1717, 0.0], [1717, 2238, 0.0], [2238, 2660, 0.0], [2660, 2680, 0.0], [2680, 3430, 0.0], [3430, 3903, 0.0], [3903, 4306, 0.0], [4306, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4513, 0.0], [4513, 4647, 0.0], [4647, 4681, 0.0], [4681, 4748, 0.0], [4748, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4887, 0.0], [4887, 4932, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.14285714], [35, 660, 0.0336], [660, 921, 0.01532567], [921, 1314, 0.05089059], [1314, 1717, 0.03225806], [1717, 2238, 0.02111324], [2238, 2660, 0.02843602], [2660, 2680, 0.1], [2680, 3430, 0.03066667], [3430, 3903, 0.01057082], [3903, 4306, 0.03722084], [4306, 4450, 0.125], [4450, 4513, 0.15873016], [4513, 4647, 0.14179104], [4647, 4681, 0.11764706], [4681, 4748, 0.17910448], [4748, 4821, 0.1369863], [4821, 4887, 0.13636364], [4887, 4932, 0.13333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4932, 0.44026721]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4932, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4932, 0.85213369]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4932, -278.90732699]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4932, 64.05087073]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4932, -11.62886526]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4932, 39.0]]}
Index of Economic Freedom The Kevin Roberts Show Open Navigation Open Search Explore Issues American Founders Coal, Oil, Natural Gas Legal and Judicial Poverty & Welfare Hunger and Food Programs International Economies Markets and Finance The U.S. Tax System Unfairly Burdens U.S. Business Report Taxes May 16, 2017 11 min read Download Report Former Senior Policy Analyst, Grover M. Hermann Center Adam N. Michel focused on tax policy and the federal budget as a Senior Policy Analyst in the Grover M. Hermann Center. The United States’ corporate income tax unnecessarily burdens U.S. businesses and domestic production. With the highest corporate income tax in the developed world, the disadvantage to U.S. business is self-imposed. Simply lowering the corporate-income-tax rate and moving toward a territorial tax system would place American business on a more equal tax footing with foreign competitors. These reforms, paired with capital expensing, would help to grow the economy, increasing wages, investment, and jobs. The U.S. has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world—almost 40 percent. The high rate hurts workers, investors, the economy, and job and wage growth. The disproportionate tax burden on U.S. business is primarily due to an unusually high corporate-income-tax rate, not to features of other countries’ tax systems. To attract and keep business in the U.S., reform should lower the corporate tax rate, allow capital-expense deduction, and embrace a traditional territorial tax. Select a Section 1/0 Toggle open close The tax reform debate has recently focused on remedying the tax disadvantages faced by U.S. companies. The additional tax burden on U.S. business is primarily a function of an unusually high corporate-income-tax rate. Focusing too much on other countries’ varied tax systems or fundamentally changing the U.S. corporate income tax misses the straightforward remedy of simply lowering the U.S. corporate-income-tax rate, and taxing only domestic income. Internationally Uncompetitive An unusually high corporate income tax leaves U.S. workers and investors, and the economy as a whole, worse off than they should be.[REF] The corporate income tax is a poorly designed tax, which biases the whole tax system against savings and investment. This bias makes it harder for businesses to invest in things like new equipment, factories, and research and development. Less investment and smaller capital stocks make it more difficult for the economy to expand, limiting job creation and wage growth. Chart 1 shows various different measures of the corporate income tax, but there is one clear takeaway: By each measure, the United States ranks consistently as one of the worst.[REF] The combined statutory rate is the legislatively enacted federal tax rate plus an average of state rates. Average tax rates measure taxes paid as a share of corporate income, and the two different measures of effective marginal rates are different imputed measures of the tax burden on a marginal investment. In addition to the high statutory rate, a significant secondary driver of the United States’ high marginal effective tax rate is the system of capital-cost recovery. Full expensing, discussed under “Policy Reforms” below, should be paired with rate reforms. The statutory rate will be used throughout the remainder of the brief, but a similar story could be told using any other measure, as Chart 1 shows that the U.S. is near the top in every measure. How Is International Income Taxed? Corporate income taxes are levied based on incredibly complex rules that govern where firm profits are earned. In a simple model, there are two types of firms to consider: American firms (headquartered in the U.S.) and foreign firms (headquartered abroad). A territorial corporate income tax falls on U.S. production, which means a country’s chosen tax rate can change the relative attractiveness of foreign versus domestic production. The U.S. worldwide system, paired with high tax rates, biases businesses—both American and foreign—against headquartering in the U.S. U.S.-Based Production If any business produces its goods in the U.S. its factors of production (labor and capital) bear the U.S. corporate tax, regardless of where the firm is headquartered or where the product is consumed. Because the U.S. corporate tax is higher than in most other countries, U.S.-based production is artificially made less profitable than foreign-based alternatives, which lowers business investment in the U.S. Less investment places downward pressure on the U.S. capital stock, which results in lower output and wages. In reality, actually determining the source of a multinational firm’s (those with subsidiaries in other countries) profits is a challenging task for tax administrators. In a world with perfect information, income would be sourced to the proper jurisdiction, and taxes would be levied as described in Table 1. In reality, the system of income sourcing is highly imperfect and allows firms with subsidiaries in other tax jurisdictions to pay less than the full U.S. tax. High U.S. corporate taxes increase the incentive to shift profits to other countries. This results in the right side of Table 2 (foreign-headquartered firms) paying lower, often significantly lower, average taxes than their U.S.-headquartered counterparts. Similar to the foreign firms, profit-shifting is often a strategy used by U.S.-headquartered firms if they have foreign subsidiaries. For example, Ireland has a 12.5 percent corporate-income-tax rate, so if a U.S. business can attribute some additional profits to a valuable patent owned by an Irish subsidiary, it may be able to lower its U.S. tax bill. Assuming aggressive income shifting, economist Gavin Ekins estimates that a 15-point reduction of the corporate-income-tax rate to 20 percent could raise an additional $74 billion in revenue, purely from income being attributed to the United States.[REF] U.S. firms that are fully domestic must pay the full U.S. corporate tax, and their U.S. factors of production bear the full cost of the U.S. corporate income tax. A lower U.S. corporate tax rate would significantly reduce the incentive to shift U.S. tax liabilities to other jurisdictions, increase profit shifting into the U.S., and largely mitigate inequities between multinational and entirely domestic firms. Production Abroad If a good is produced in another country by a firm that is headquartered in the U.S., the profits are taxable in the U.S., whether deferred or paid currently, no matter where the final product is sold. A similar foreign firm’s profits, headquartered in the jurisdiction of production, are only taxable under the foreign government’s territorial corporate tax. Because the U.S. corporate tax is higher than in most other countries, and is levied on worldwide income, foreign production and foreign headquarters are often more attractive than the U.S. alternative. The U.S. system of worldwide taxation attempts to tax all U.S. corporate profits, even those earned in other countries. To avoid taxing the same income twice, a credit is allowed for taxes paid to other countries. U.S.-headquartered firms with foreign subsidiaries are at a disadvantage because they are expected to pay the U.S. corporate tax rate, which usually exceeds the rate payed by their competitors in other jurisdictions. To mitigate this harm, the U.S. allows firms to defer paying taxes on foreign profits that are held overseas. Under current law, tax is only due on those profits if they are repatriated (brought back to the U.S.). Currently, more than $2.5 trillion of U.S. corporate profits are trapped overseas.[REF] Reacting to both the high U.S. corporate-income-tax rate and worldwide taxation, U.S. firms are pressured to merge with foreign competitors and move their new joint headquarters overseas to avoid the U.S. tax system. Prominent examples include Anheuser-Busch’s acquisition by Belgian brewer InBev, and Burger King’s buyout of Canadian Tim Hortons.[REF] U.S.-foreign mergers always reincorporate outside the U.S. Even if the merger is not explicitly tax motivated, the decision to not headquarter in the U.S. certainly is tax motivated. The U.S.-headquartered firm in Table 2 is often able to use its foreign subsidiary to delay paying U.S. taxes and better compete abroad. To the extent that U.S. corporations, with less-sophisticated tax-planning operations, are not able to keep profits earned in foreign markets offshore, those businesses face a higher tax rate than their competitors. The primary additional tax burden on U.S. business and production exists where the U.S. corporate income tax exceeds that of other countries. The disadvantages faced by U.S. production are self-imposed. Simply lowering the U.S. corporate-income-tax rate would place American business on a more equal tax footing with foreign competitors. Sales and Value-Added Taxes (VATs). When comparing the international treatment of goods produced by U.S. businesses, it is easy to conflate the corporate income tax with other taxes, such as foreign VATs, which are also collected at the corporate-entity level. However, VATs are more similar to U.S. sales taxes than the current corporate income tax and are largely irrelevant in determining how international income is taxed, as they fall largely on consumption within a country’s borders. A VAT is a type of consumption tax that is economically similar to a sales tax, levied on final consumption. VATs are border-adjusted, which means that the tax is levied on all imports and removed from all exports. Although under a simple analysis, border-adjustable taxes may appear to implement a tariff-like tax on imports and a subsidy for exports, this is misleading.[REF] The symmetric border adjustment does not distort trade like a tariff, but instead ensures that domestic consumption bears the tax.[REF] In much the same way that sales taxes and corporate income taxes are separate tax systems, any analysis should be equally careful to distinguish between foreign VATs and corporate income taxes. Policy Reforms To make the U.S. a more attractive place to do business, tax reform should lower the corporate-income-tax rate, allow the immediate deduction of capital expenses, and move toward a territorial tax system. These three reforms have the potential to dramatically increase new investment, wages, output, and jobs. Reduced Rates. Lowering the corporate-income-tax rate is necessary for a more equal treatment of U.S.-headquartered firms. Lowering the U.S. corporate tax rate to, or below, the international average would largely even the playing field, allowing U.S. firms to compete with foreign firms. A U.S. federal corporate tax rate of 20 percent is the upper bound for global tax competitiveness. Adding in average state tax rates to a 20 percent rate, a U.S. combined rate of about 24 percent would put the U.S. above the worldwide average of 22.5 percent, on par with the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) average of 24.2 percent, and below the Group of 20 (G20) average of 28.5 percent.[REF] A 24 percent combined rate would make the U.S. competitive with China, and more competitive than Mexico. The corporate income tax should ultimately be eliminated, but a federal rate lower than the 12.5 percent of Ireland (lowest in the OECD) would make America a leader in business tax rates and go a long way toward benefitting U.S. consumers, workers, and investors. Territorial Taxation. Worldwide taxation puts all U.S. firms competing abroad at a disadvantage to similar firms in almost every other country because their income is taxable at the high U.S. corporate rate. The U.S. should move to a territorial tax system under which the U.S. would not collect additional taxes on foreign-earned profits when distributed back to the U.S. headquarters. This simple change would allow U.S. firms to compete abroad through foreign subsidiaries without the additional burden of U.S. taxes. Expensing. Lowering tax rates is necessary if America wants to compete for global business. If America wants to win the competition for global business, tax reform should include full expensing. The current U.S. tax system discourages capital investment by decreasing its economic value and creating unnecessary complexity by requiring capital expenditures to be deducted over an often arbitrary number of years, a system known as depreciation. Full expensing removes this complexity and allows businesses to write off all expenditures in the year they are purchased—encouraging investment, job creation, and economic growth by treating all business costs equally.[REF] High corporate tax rates burden all U.S. businesses, falling especially directly on businesses with limited or no international operations. Rather than searching for novel ways of taxing businesses, the simple policy solution is to reform the current system. A lower corporate-income-tax rate, immediate deduction of capital expenses, and a territorial tax system would allow the economy to grow, creating jobs and increasing wages. —Adam N. Michel is a Policy Analyst in Tax and Budget Policy in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies, of the Institute for Economic Freedom, at The Heritage Foundation. More on This Issue COMMENTARY 3 min read Biden’s $7-Trillion Budget Game Takes More of Your Money. Guess Where It Goes So-Called Inflation Reduction Act’s Bait-and-Switch: IRS to Crack Down on Waitresses’ Underreported Tips Think You Left a Smothering Tax Climate Behind When You Moved? Think Again Privacy Policy Copyright © 2023, The Heritage Foundation
2023-14/0003/en_head.json.gz/26534
{"url": "https://www.heritage.org/taxes/report/the-us-tax-system-unfairly-burdens-us-business", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.heritage.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:26:18Z", "digest": "sha1:YYBZIETJU76GAD7USE6C7K3JPIDUSBFX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 13699, 13699.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 13699, 15246.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 13699, 56.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 13699, 161.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 13699, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 13699, 229.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 13699, 0.29379562]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 13699, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 13699, 0.02267003]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 13699, 0.07016913]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 13699, 0.04632961]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 13699, 0.02842749]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 13699, 0.02267003]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 13699, 0.02267003]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 13699, 0.01619288]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 13699, 0.01943145]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 13699, 0.00764664]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 13699, 0.0689781]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 13699, 0.18284672]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 13699, 0.31486742]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 13699, 5.26325758]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 13699, 5.51310341]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 13699, 2112.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 49, 0.0], [49, 77, 0.0], [77, 92, 0.0], [92, 110, 0.0], [110, 133, 0.0], [133, 152, 0.0], [152, 170, 0.0], [170, 195, 0.0], [195, 219, 0.0], [219, 239, 0.0], [239, 290, 0.0], [290, 303, 0.0], [303, 344, 0.0], [344, 399, 0.0], [399, 519, 1.0], [519, 1026, 1.0], [1026, 1188, 1.0], [1188, 1351, 1.0], [1351, 1513, 1.0], [1513, 1534, 0.0], [1534, 1552, 0.0], [1552, 2005, 1.0], [2005, 2035, 0.0], [2035, 2544, 1.0], [2544, 3489, 1.0], [3489, 4094, 1.0], [4094, 4116, 0.0], [4116, 4635, 1.0], [4635, 5361, 1.0], [5361, 6384, 1.0], [6384, 6402, 0.0], [6402, 6965, 1.0], [6965, 7698, 0.0], [7698, 8234, 1.0], [8234, 8587, 1.0], [8587, 8925, 1.0], [8925, 9416, 1.0], [9416, 9930, 0.0], [9930, 10124, 1.0], [10124, 10139, 0.0], [10139, 10449, 1.0], [10449, 10738, 1.0], [10738, 11268, 1.0], [11268, 11532, 1.0], [11532, 12053, 1.0], [12053, 12723, 0.0], [12723, 13156, 1.0], [13156, 13344, 1.0], [13344, 13363, 0.0], [13363, 13385, 0.0], [13385, 13463, 0.0], [13463, 13568, 0.0], [13568, 13643, 0.0], [13643, 13668, 0.0], [13668, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 49, 0.0], [49, 77, 0.0], [77, 92, 0.0], [92, 110, 0.0], [110, 133, 0.0], [133, 152, 0.0], [152, 170, 0.0], [170, 195, 0.0], [195, 219, 0.0], [219, 239, 0.0], [239, 290, 0.0], [290, 303, 0.0], [303, 344, 0.0], [344, 399, 0.0], [399, 519, 0.0], [519, 1026, 0.0], [1026, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 1534, 0.0], [1534, 1552, 0.0], [1552, 2005, 0.0], [2005, 2035, 0.0], [2035, 2544, 0.0], [2544, 3489, 0.0], [3489, 4094, 0.0], [4094, 4116, 0.0], [4116, 4635, 0.0], [4635, 5361, 0.0], [5361, 6384, 0.0], [6384, 6402, 0.0], [6402, 6965, 0.0], [6965, 7698, 0.0], [7698, 8234, 0.0], [8234, 8587, 0.0], [8587, 8925, 0.0], [8925, 9416, 0.0], [9416, 9930, 0.0], [9930, 10124, 0.0], [10124, 10139, 0.0], [10139, 10449, 0.0], [10449, 10738, 0.0], [10738, 11268, 0.0], [11268, 11532, 0.0], [11532, 12053, 0.0], [12053, 12723, 0.0], [12723, 13156, 0.0], [13156, 13344, 0.0], [13344, 13363, 0.0], [13363, 13385, 0.0], [13385, 13463, 0.0], [13463, 13568, 0.0], [13568, 13643, 0.0], [13643, 13668, 0.0], [13668, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 26, 4.0], [26, 49, 4.0], [49, 77, 4.0], [77, 92, 2.0], [92, 110, 2.0], [110, 133, 4.0], [133, 152, 3.0], [152, 170, 2.0], [170, 195, 4.0], [195, 219, 2.0], [219, 239, 3.0], [239, 290, 8.0], [290, 303, 2.0], [303, 344, 8.0], [344, 399, 8.0], [399, 519, 22.0], [519, 1026, 72.0], [1026, 1188, 28.0], [1188, 1351, 24.0], [1351, 1513, 24.0], [1513, 1534, 4.0], [1534, 1552, 3.0], [1552, 2005, 66.0], [2005, 2035, 2.0], [2035, 2544, 82.0], [2544, 3489, 156.0], [3489, 4094, 89.0], [4094, 4116, 2.0], [4116, 4635, 80.0], [4635, 5361, 110.0], [5361, 6384, 157.0], [6384, 6402, 2.0], [6402, 6965, 89.0], [6965, 7698, 118.0], [7698, 8234, 78.0], [8234, 8587, 54.0], [8587, 8925, 49.0], [8925, 9416, 76.0], [9416, 9930, 82.0], [9930, 10124, 31.0], [10124, 10139, 2.0], [10139, 10449, 47.0], [10449, 10738, 42.0], [10738, 11268, 90.0], [11268, 11532, 44.0], [11532, 12053, 80.0], [12053, 12723, 97.0], [12723, 13156, 63.0], [13156, 13344, 32.0], [13344, 13363, 4.0], [13363, 13385, 4.0], [13385, 13463, 13.0], [13463, 13568, 13.0], [13568, 13643, 13.0], [13643, 13668, 3.0], [13668, 13699, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 49, 0.0], [49, 77, 0.0], [77, 92, 0.0], [92, 110, 0.0], [110, 133, 0.0], [133, 152, 0.0], [152, 170, 0.0], [170, 195, 0.0], [195, 219, 0.0], [219, 239, 0.0], [239, 290, 0.0], [290, 303, 0.0], [303, 344, 0.20512821], [344, 399, 0.0], [399, 519, 0.0], [519, 1026, 0.0], [1026, 1188, 0.01298701], [1188, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 1534, 0.10526316], [1534, 1552, 0.0], [1552, 2005, 0.0], [2005, 2035, 0.0], [2035, 2544, 0.0], [2544, 3489, 0.0021645], [3489, 4094, 0.0], [4094, 4116, 0.0], [4116, 4635, 0.0], [4635, 5361, 0.002849], [5361, 6384, 0.00921187], [6384, 6402, 0.0], [6402, 6965, 0.0], [6965, 7698, 0.00286123], [7698, 8234, 0.0], [8234, 8587, 0.00295858], [8587, 8925, 0.0], [8925, 9416, 0.0], [9416, 9930, 0.0], [9930, 10124, 0.0], [10124, 10139, 0.0], [10139, 10449, 0.0], [10449, 10738, 0.0], [10738, 11268, 0.04166667], [11268, 11532, 0.01181102], [11532, 12053, 0.0], [12053, 12723, 0.0], [12723, 13156, 0.0], [13156, 13344, 0.0], [13344, 13363, 0.0], [13363, 13385, 0.04761905], [13385, 13463, 0.01351351], [13463, 13568, 0.0], [13568, 13643, 0.0], [13643, 13668, 0.0], [13668, 13699, 0.13333333]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 49, 0.0], [49, 77, 0.0], [77, 92, 0.0], [92, 110, 0.0], [110, 133, 0.0], [133, 152, 0.0], [152, 170, 0.0], [170, 195, 0.0], [195, 219, 0.0], [219, 239, 0.0], [239, 290, 0.0], [290, 303, 0.0], [303, 344, 0.0], [344, 399, 0.0], [399, 519, 0.0], [519, 1026, 0.0], [1026, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 1534, 0.0], [1534, 1552, 0.0], [1552, 2005, 0.0], [2005, 2035, 0.0], [2035, 2544, 0.0], [2544, 3489, 0.0], [3489, 4094, 0.0], [4094, 4116, 0.0], [4116, 4635, 0.0], [4635, 5361, 0.0], [5361, 6384, 0.0], [6384, 6402, 0.0], [6402, 6965, 0.0], [6965, 7698, 0.0], [7698, 8234, 0.0], [8234, 8587, 0.0], [8587, 8925, 0.0], [8925, 9416, 0.0], [9416, 9930, 0.0], [9930, 10124, 0.0], [10124, 10139, 0.0], [10139, 10449, 0.0], [10449, 10738, 0.0], [10738, 11268, 0.0], [11268, 11532, 0.0], [11532, 12053, 0.0], [12053, 12723, 0.0], [12723, 13156, 0.0], [13156, 13344, 0.0], [13344, 13363, 0.0], [13363, 13385, 0.0], [13385, 13463, 0.0], [13463, 13568, 0.0], [13568, 13643, 0.0], [13643, 13668, 0.0], [13668, 13699, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.11538462], [26, 49, 0.17391304], [49, 77, 0.14285714], [77, 92, 0.13333333], [92, 110, 0.11111111], [110, 133, 0.17391304], [133, 152, 0.10526316], [152, 170, 0.11111111], [170, 195, 0.12], [195, 219, 0.08333333], [219, 239, 0.1], [239, 290, 0.19607843], [290, 303, 0.15384615], [303, 344, 0.07317073], [344, 399, 0.14545455], [399, 519, 0.08333333], [519, 1026, 0.02169625], [1026, 1188, 0.02469136], [1188, 1351, 0.01840491], [1351, 1513, 0.01851852], [1513, 1534, 0.0952381], [1534, 1552, 0.05555556], [1552, 2005, 0.02428256], [2005, 2035, 0.06666667], [2035, 2544, 0.01768173], [2544, 3489, 0.02010582], [3489, 4094, 0.03140496], [4094, 4116, 0.18181818], [4116, 4635, 0.02890173], [4635, 5361, 0.01790634], [5361, 6384, 0.03225806], [6384, 6402, 0.11111111], [6402, 6965, 0.01953819], [6965, 7698, 0.03001364], [7698, 8234, 0.05223881], [8234, 8587, 0.02549575], [8587, 8925, 0.03550296], [8925, 9416, 0.03869654], [9416, 9930, 0.02918288], [9930, 10124, 0.02061856], [10124, 10139, 0.13333333], [10139, 10449, 0.01290323], [10449, 10738, 0.03460208], [10738, 11268, 0.0490566], [11268, 11532, 0.03409091], [11532, 12053, 0.03646833], [12053, 12723, 0.01791045], [12723, 13156, 0.01154734], [13156, 13344, 0.11170213], [13344, 13363, 0.15789474], [13363, 13385, 0.45454545], [13385, 13463, 0.15384615], [13463, 13568, 0.14285714], [13568, 13643, 0.16], [13643, 13668, 0.12], [13668, 13699, 0.09677419]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 13699, 0.54579747]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 13699, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 13699, 0.58249384]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 13699, -1053.36940559]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 13699, 317.43177998]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 13699, 65.21749501]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 13699, 260.0]]}
Shaughnessy Hospital records [multiple media] R1183-58-5-E, RG38 Documents photographiques, Images en mouvement Department of Veterans Affairs fonds Shaughnessy Hospital records Série comprend : 11 description(s) de niveau inférieur Voir description(s) de niveau inférieur Équivalent bilingue : ca. 13 000 photographs 7 drawings 5.61 m of textual records 2 audio cassettes 1 video cassette Series consists of records relating to the operation of Shaughnessy Hospital in its role as a veterans' hospital and as a general provincial hospital, documenting various functions within it mandate for patient care, teaching, and research. The series consists of records acquired after the hospital's closure. As a result, there are numerous gaps in the date ranges of the series, and only a limited number of hospital functions are documented. Records include, but are not limited to: photographs documenting hospital activities; documents of Shaughnessy Hospital doctors and administrators Dr. C.C. Covernton and Dr. H.E. Simmons; equipment ledgers and inventories; publications and annual reports; hospital accreditation records; administrative and staff records; and laundry records. Shaughnessy Hospital Biographie/Histoire administrative : Shaughnessy Hospital : Shaughnessy Hospital, located in Vancouver, B.C., operated from 1917 to 1993, serving first as a convalescent home, then as a military hospital, and finally as a provincial hospital. The hospital opened in 1917 as a convalescent home for the treatment of First World War veterans. At its inception, Shaughnessy was administered by the Military Hospitals Commission (MHC), a federal government agency that was created in 1915 to administer programs for the medical needs of First World War veterans. In 1917 the Commission leased Braemar School, a private residential school for girls at 28th Avenue and Willow Street in Vancouver, and Langara School, a private residential school for boys at 33rd Avenue and Heather Street in Vancouver. These buildings comprised the veterans' convalescent homes Shaughnessy and Fairmont. Fairmont Hospital later became an RCMP barracks in 1920. After increasing its range of medical services and capacity for patient care, Shaughnessy became a military hospital in 1919. By 1918 by MHC was disbanded and the Department of Soldier's Civil Re-establishment (SCR) was created in its place. In 1928, the SCR merged with the Department of Health to form the Department of Pensions and National Health. A separate Department of Veterans Affairs (DVA) was created in 1944. This department was created to deal exclusively with matter affecting veterans and their dependents, with its major functions being medical treatment and allowances, welfare work, rehabilitation of the disabled, and land settlement. Shaughnessy Hospital was administered by the DVA until 1974. During its years under DVA administration, Shaughnessy was responsible for the treatment of veterans and for other individuals under federal responsibility, such as prisoners of the British Columbia Penitentiary, immigrants, and the merchant marine. Civilians were also treated at Shaughnessy, and by the 1960s, the number of civilians being treated was increasing as the number of veterans being treated decreased. The hospital's major functions were to provide ambulatory care, general acute care, intermediate and extended care. Shaughnessy also provided rehabilitation services. The George Derby Health and Occupational Centre, named after the DVA Regional Administrator, opened in Burnaby in 1947, and provided intermediate care and rehabilitation services. Also, in 1943, Senator A.D. McRae donated his mansion "Hycroft" to serve as a veterans' home and rehabilitation centre. Shaughnessy also served as a teaching hospital, and by the 1960s was one of the main teaching hospitals in British Columbia. Shaughnessy also became a research hospital in the 1940s, with early steroid research projects undertaken by Dr. Hamish McIntosh in the late 1940s and early 1950s. In 1950, the Clinical Investigation Unit was opened to facilitate research. In 1974, the hospital was sold to the province of British Columbia for $1. This sale to the province severed the hospital's direct tie to the DVA, but an agreement between the federal and provincial governments gave the hospital ongoing responsibility for the care and treatment of veterans, federal prisoners, and other individuals who came under federal jurisdiction. The province maintained Shaughnessy as a separate institution until 1988 when the hospital merged with UBC Health Sciences Centre and became known as University Hospital - Shaughnessy Site. Under this regime, Shaughnessy continued its role as a general hospital providing acute, intermediate and extended care, as well as referral programs in medical genetics, reproductive gynaecology, spinal injury and rehabilitation, women's health, corneal transplant/eye bank services, diabetes and psoriasis treatments. It also continued as a research centre, and as a teaching hospital acting as an academic centre for geriatric medicine, rehabilitation medicine, gynaecology and medical genetics. On February 15, 1993, the provincial government announced the closure of Shaughnessy Hospital, and its functions were divided and transferred to other hospitals. The hospital was officially closed on December 3, 1993. There are two hospitals remaining on the Shaughnessy site: British Columbia Women's Hospital (formerly Grace Hospital), and British Columbia Children's Hospital. The George Derby Centre remains open as an intermediate and long term care facility. Hycroft is now the home of the University Women's Club of Vancouver Source du titre : Title is based on the contents of the series. Versements complémentaires : Further accruals are not expected. No de contrôle reliés : 1993-94/556 VFRC Documents iconographiques (photo) [Consultation32 Restreint selon la loi] Images en mouvement (film) Modalités d'utilisation : Copyright belongs to the Crown.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/801
{"url": "https://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/fra/accueil/notice?app=fonandcol&IdNumber=196769", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:01:29Z", "digest": "sha1:5ODJ22WHYOQ6SU7I3GPMBGZPUY75EECL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6021, 6021.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6021, 9131.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6021, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6021, 141.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6021, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6021, 198.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6021, 0.29135338]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6021, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6021, 0.02290076]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6021, 0.0136601]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6021, 0.00783447]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6021, 0.01265569]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6021, 0.01084773]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6021, 0.02255639]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6021, 0.18984962]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6021, 0.4162844]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6021, 5.7087156]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6021, 5.20312851]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6021, 872.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 65, 0.0], [65, 112, 0.0], [112, 149, 0.0], [149, 178, 0.0], [178, 195, 0.0], [195, 233, 0.0], [233, 273, 0.0], [273, 295, 0.0], [295, 318, 0.0], [318, 329, 0.0], [329, 355, 0.0], [355, 373, 0.0], [373, 390, 0.0], [390, 631, 1.0], [631, 836, 1.0], [836, 1179, 1.0], [1179, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 5694, 0.0], [5694, 5712, 0.0], [5712, 5758, 1.0], [5758, 5787, 0.0], [5787, 5822, 1.0], [5822, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5863, 0.0], [5863, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 5937, 0.0], [5937, 5964, 0.0], [5964, 5990, 0.0], [5990, 6021, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 65, 0.0], [65, 112, 0.0], [112, 149, 0.0], [149, 178, 0.0], [178, 195, 0.0], [195, 233, 0.0], [233, 273, 0.0], [273, 295, 0.0], [295, 318, 0.0], [318, 329, 0.0], [329, 355, 0.0], [355, 373, 0.0], [373, 390, 0.0], [390, 631, 0.0], [631, 836, 0.0], [836, 1179, 0.0], [1179, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 5694, 0.0], [5694, 5712, 0.0], [5712, 5758, 0.0], [5758, 5787, 0.0], [5787, 5822, 0.0], [5822, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5863, 0.0], [5863, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 5937, 0.0], [5937, 5964, 0.0], [5964, 5990, 0.0], [5990, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 46, 5.0], [46, 65, 2.0], [65, 112, 5.0], [112, 149, 5.0], [149, 178, 3.0], [178, 195, 2.0], [195, 233, 5.0], [233, 273, 5.0], [273, 295, 2.0], [295, 318, 4.0], [318, 329, 2.0], [329, 355, 5.0], [355, 373, 3.0], [373, 390, 3.0], [390, 631, 36.0], [631, 836, 34.0], [836, 1179, 43.0], [1179, 1200, 2.0], [1200, 1237, 2.0], [1237, 5694, 660.0], [5694, 5712, 3.0], [5712, 5758, 9.0], [5758, 5787, 2.0], [5787, 5822, 5.0], [5822, 5846, 4.0], [5846, 5863, 2.0], [5863, 5897, 3.0], [5897, 5937, 5.0], [5937, 5964, 4.0], [5964, 5990, 2.0], [5990, 6021, 5.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 65, 0.64285714], [65, 112, 0.0], [112, 149, 0.0], [149, 178, 0.0], [178, 195, 0.0], [195, 233, 0.05555556], [233, 273, 0.0], [273, 295, 0.0], [295, 318, 0.23809524], [318, 329, 0.1], [329, 355, 0.125], [355, 373, 0.05882353], [373, 390, 0.0625], [390, 631, 0.0], [631, 836, 0.0], [836, 1179, 0.0], [1179, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 5694, 0.02303617], [5694, 5712, 0.0], [5712, 5758, 0.0], [5758, 5787, 0.0], [5787, 5822, 0.0], [5822, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5863, 0.64285714], [5863, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 5937, 0.05405405], [5937, 5964, 0.0], [5964, 5990, 0.0], [5990, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 65, 0.0], [65, 112, 0.0], [112, 149, 0.0], [149, 178, 0.0], [178, 195, 0.0], [195, 233, 0.0], [233, 273, 0.0], [273, 295, 0.0], [295, 318, 0.0], [318, 329, 0.0], [329, 355, 0.0], [355, 373, 0.0], [373, 390, 0.0], [390, 631, 0.0], [631, 836, 0.0], [836, 1179, 0.0], [1179, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1237, 0.0], [1237, 5694, 0.0], [5694, 5712, 0.0], [5712, 5758, 0.0], [5758, 5787, 0.0], [5787, 5822, 0.0], [5822, 5846, 0.0], [5846, 5863, 0.0], [5863, 5897, 0.0], [5897, 5937, 0.0], [5937, 5964, 0.0], [5964, 5990, 0.0], [5990, 6021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 46, 0.04347826], [46, 65, 0.21052632], [65, 112, 0.04255319], [112, 149, 0.08108108], [149, 178, 0.06896552], [178, 195, 0.05882353], [195, 233, 0.0], [233, 273, 0.025], [273, 295, 0.04545455], [295, 318, 0.0], [318, 329, 0.0], [329, 355, 0.0], [355, 373, 0.0], [373, 390, 0.0], [390, 631, 0.01244813], [631, 836, 0.0097561], [836, 1179, 0.03206997], [1179, 1200, 0.0952381], [1200, 1237, 0.05405405], [1237, 5694, 0.03881535], [5694, 5712, 0.05555556], [5712, 5758, 0.02173913], [5758, 5787, 0.03448276], [5787, 5822, 0.02857143], [5822, 5846, 0.04166667], [5846, 5863, 0.23529412], [5863, 5897, 0.02941176], [5897, 5937, 0.05], [5937, 5964, 0.03703704], [5964, 5990, 0.03846154], [5990, 6021, 0.06451613]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6021, 0.86372811]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6021, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6021, 0.73204994]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6021, -195.4722245]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6021, 22.23598306]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6021, 203.48859649]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6021, 50.0]]}
FILM FEST Palm Springs film festival calling Timothée Chalamet's name for Spotlight Award Bruce Fessier The Palm Springs International Film Festival will present its Spotlight Award, Actor, to Timothée Chalamet for his performance in "Beautiful Boy," the festival has announced. He's scheduled to accept the award at the festival's Film Awards Gala Jan. 3 at the Palm Springs Convention Center. The festival runs Jan. 3-14 at venues throughout Palm Springs and Cathedral City. Chalamet last year received the festival's Rising Star Award, Actor for his performance in "Call Me by Your Name." “Timothée Chalamet gives a heartwarming, but tragic performance as a young man struggling with drug addiction in the film 'Beautiful Boy,' ” said Festival Chairman Harold Matzner. “He is definitely a rising star.” More: Local ex-red carpet reporter returning to as an acting honoree More: See what films are playing in the festival More:Freddie Mercury's story isn't exact in 'Bohemian Rhapsody.' But the film aims to blend truth and art. Chalamet will join previously announced honorees Glenn Close, Olivia Colman, Bradley Cooper, Alfonso Cuarón, Regina King, Spike Lee, Rami Malek, Melissa McCarthy and the cast and director of "Green Book" in walking the red carpet to the black tie-optional awards ceremony. Past recipients of the Spotlight Award, Actor include Bryan Cranston, Andrew Garfield, Sam Rockwell and J.K. Simmons. All recipients received Academy Award nominations in the year they were honored, with Rockwell and Simmons winning an Oscar for Best Supporting Actor. "Beautiful Boy," produced by Plan B Entertainment in association with Big Indie Pictures from Amazon Studios, is a portrait of a family’s unwavering love and commitment to each other in the face of their son’s addiction and his attempts at recovery. It's based on two memoirs, one from journalist David Sheff and one from his son, Nic Sheff. The film is directed by Felix van Groeningen and also stars Steve Carell, Maura Tierney and Amy Ryan. Chalamet's performance in the film has earned him a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor in a Supporting Role in any Motion Picture, a SAG Award nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Supporting Role, and a Critics Choice Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor. Chalamet, who turns 23 on Dec. 27, was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as Elio in Luca Guadagnino’s Oscar-nominated film, "Call Me By Your Name." Other credits in his young film career include "Lady Bird," "Hot Summer Nights," "A Rainy Day in New York," "Hostiles," "Interstellar," "Miss Stevens" and "Men, Women & Children." Chalamet is currently filming "The King," directed by David Michôd. The Film Awards Gala is hosted by Mary Hart and "Entertainment Tonight," and presented by American Express. Call (760) 969-7533 for gala tickets or tables, or (760) 778-8979 for film festival information. Programming information can be found at psfilmfest.org.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/1187
{"url": "https://www.desertsun.com/story/life/entertainment/movies/film-festival/2018/12/19/timothee-chalamet-returning-palm-springs-film-fest-accept-award/2358341002/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.desertsun.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:51:24Z", "digest": "sha1:4NMS5UBFN2ST6DNBNRSOLF65APYHIPKN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2994, 2994.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2994, 6845.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2994, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2994, 35.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2994, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2994, 155.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2994, 0.26578073]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2994, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2994, 0.03156146]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2994, 0.01038206]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2994, 0.0211794]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2994, 0.01578073]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2994, 0.01162791]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2994, 0.19933555]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2994, 0.55485232]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2994, 5.08016878]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2994, 5.15716987]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2994, 474.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 10, 0.0], [10, 90, 0.0], [90, 104, 0.0], [104, 279, 1.0], [279, 477, 1.0], [477, 592, 0.0], [592, 806, 1.0], [806, 875, 0.0], [875, 924, 0.0], [924, 1031, 1.0], [1031, 1304, 1.0], [1304, 1573, 1.0], [1573, 1915, 1.0], [1915, 2017, 1.0], [2017, 2306, 1.0], [2306, 2734, 1.0], [2734, 2994, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 10, 0.0], [10, 90, 0.0], [90, 104, 0.0], [104, 279, 0.0], [279, 477, 0.0], [477, 592, 0.0], [592, 806, 0.0], [806, 875, 0.0], [875, 924, 0.0], [924, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1304, 0.0], [1304, 1573, 0.0], [1573, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 2017, 0.0], [2017, 2306, 0.0], [2306, 2734, 0.0], [2734, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 10, 2.0], [10, 90, 11.0], [90, 104, 2.0], [104, 279, 25.0], [279, 477, 33.0], [477, 592, 19.0], [592, 806, 33.0], [806, 875, 11.0], [875, 924, 9.0], [924, 1031, 17.0], [1031, 1304, 41.0], [1304, 1573, 40.0], [1573, 1915, 58.0], [1915, 2017, 18.0], [2017, 2306, 48.0], [2306, 2734, 68.0], [2734, 2994, 39.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 10, 0.0], [10, 90, 0.0], [90, 104, 0.0], [104, 279, 0.0], [279, 477, 0.02105263], [477, 592, 0.0], [592, 806, 0.0], [806, 875, 0.0], [875, 924, 0.0], [924, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1304, 0.0], [1304, 1573, 0.0], [1573, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 2017, 0.0], [2017, 2306, 0.0], [2306, 2734, 0.01017812], [2734, 2994, 0.08130081]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 10, 0.0], [10, 90, 0.0], [90, 104, 0.0], [104, 279, 0.0], [279, 477, 0.0], [477, 592, 0.0], [592, 806, 0.0], [806, 875, 0.0], [875, 924, 0.0], [924, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1304, 0.0], [1304, 1573, 0.0], [1573, 1915, 0.0], [1915, 2017, 0.0], [2017, 2306, 0.0], [2306, 2734, 0.0], [2734, 2994, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 10, 0.8], [10, 90, 0.075], [90, 104, 0.14285714], [104, 279, 0.07428571], [279, 477, 0.07575758], [477, 592, 0.07826087], [592, 806, 0.04205607], [806, 875, 0.02898551], [875, 924, 0.04081633], [924, 1031, 0.05607477], [1031, 1304, 0.07326007], [1304, 1573, 0.08178439], [1573, 1915, 0.04385965], [1915, 2017, 0.08823529], [2017, 2306, 0.08650519], [2306, 2734, 0.08878505], [2734, 2994, 0.04615385]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2994, 0.4431082]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2994, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2994, 0.98786688]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2994, -99.07590624]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2994, 7.85301146]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2994, 57.99197715]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2994, 27.0]]}
News, Shipyard News Bollinger delivers final Bahrain-bound Fast Response Cutter Written by Nick Blenkey USCGC Clarence Sutphin in Key West, Florida. Bollinger Shipyards LLC has delivered the USCGC Clarence Sutphin to the U.S. Coast Guard in Key West, Fla. The 47th Fast Response Cutter (FRC), it is the final ship in a series of six FRCs to be home-ported in Manama, Bahrain. They will replace the aging 110 foot Island Class Patrol Boats, built by Bollinger Shipyards 30 years ago, supporting Patrol Forces Southwest Asia (PATFORSWA), the U.S. Coast Guard’s largest overseas presence outside the United States. “Ensuring that the brave men and women of the U.S. Coast Guard have the most state-of-the-art, advanced vessels as they work to build and maintain the necessary regional alliances to ensure maritime security in the region is a top priority,” said Bollinger President and CEO Ben Bordelon. “Bollinger is proud to continue enhancing and supporting the U.S. Coast Guard’s operational presence in the Middle East and ensuring it remains the preferred partner around the world.” Earlier this year, at the commissioning ceremony of the USCGC Charles Moulthrope, U.S. Coast Guard Cmdr. Adm. Karl Schultz praised the enhanced seakeeping capabilities of the PATFORSWA-bound FRCs, saying “these ships are truly going to be game changing in their new theater of operations” and “offer increased opportunities for integrated joint operations with our Navy and Marine Corps colleagues” as the Coast Guard seeks to be part of the whole-of-government solution set in the region. PATFORSWA is composed of six cutters, shoreside support personnel, and the Maritime Engagement Team. The unit’s mission is to train, organize, equip, support and deploy combat-ready Coast Guard Forces in support of U.S. Central Command and national security objectives. COAST GUARD HERO Each FRC is named for an enlisted Coast Guard hero who distinguished themselves in the line of duty. Clarence Sutphin, Boatswain Mate First Class, USCG, was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for his courageous actions during the invasion of Saipan Island in 1944. His citation reads: “For heroic achievement in action against enemy Japanese forces during the invasion of Saipan, Marianas Islands, on June 15 and 16, 1944. Swimming with a line through heavy surf to a tank lighter stranded on a reef, Sutphin remained aboard under mortar and artillery fire until the boat was salvaged. Returning to the beach, he aided in salvaging another tank lighter under enemy fire and, when a mortar shell struck a group of eight Marines, promptly treated the wounded and moved them to a first aid station. His courage and grave concern for the safety of others reflects the highest credit upon Sutphin and the United States Naval Service. Categories: News, Shipyard News Tags: Bollinger Shipyards, Clarence Sutphin, Fast Response Cutter, Karl Schultz, shipyard, U.S. Coast Guard
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/1390
{"url": "https://www.marinelog.com/shipbuilding/shipyards/shipyard-news/bollinger-delivers-final-bahrain-bound-fast-response-cutter/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.marinelog.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:28:09Z", "digest": "sha1:ABCHJTDHNFPDCNPXMVKBJ7UTCYCOBTQ7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2926, 2926.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2926, 10260.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2926, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2926, 213.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2926, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2926, 187.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2926, 0.29298246]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2926, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2926, 0.02097315]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2926, 0.03355705]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2926, 0.01677852]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2926, 0.01258389]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2926, 0.04912281]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2926, 0.16666667]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2926, 0.57792208]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2926, 5.16017316]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2926, 5.12609217]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2926, 462.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 80, 0.0], [80, 104, 0.0], [104, 149, 1.0], [149, 256, 1.0], [256, 612, 1.0], [612, 1086, 1.0], [1086, 1576, 1.0], [1576, 1846, 1.0], [1846, 1863, 0.0], [1863, 2123, 1.0], [2123, 2787, 1.0], [2787, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 80, 0.0], [80, 104, 0.0], [104, 149, 0.0], [149, 256, 0.0], [256, 612, 0.0], [612, 1086, 0.0], [1086, 1576, 0.0], [1576, 1846, 0.0], [1846, 1863, 0.0], [1863, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2787, 0.0], [2787, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 20, 3.0], [20, 80, 7.0], [80, 104, 4.0], [104, 149, 7.0], [149, 256, 18.0], [256, 612, 58.0], [612, 1086, 75.0], [1086, 1576, 75.0], [1576, 1846, 39.0], [1846, 1863, 3.0], [1863, 2123, 43.0], [2123, 2787, 112.0], [2787, 2926, 18.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 80, 0.0], [80, 104, 0.0], [104, 149, 0.0], [149, 256, 0.0], [256, 612, 0.02052786], [612, 1086, 0.0], [1086, 1576, 0.0], [1576, 1846, 0.0], [1846, 1863, 0.0], [1863, 2123, 0.01574803], [2123, 2787, 0.01228879], [2787, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 80, 0.0], [80, 104, 0.0], [104, 149, 0.0], [149, 256, 0.0], [256, 612, 0.0], [612, 1086, 0.0], [1086, 1576, 0.0], [1576, 1846, 0.0], [1846, 1863, 0.0], [1863, 2123, 0.0], [2123, 2787, 0.0], [2787, 2926, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.15], [20, 80, 0.08333333], [80, 104, 0.125], [104, 149, 0.22222222], [149, 256, 0.17757009], [256, 612, 0.10674157], [612, 1086, 0.04008439], [1086, 1576, 0.06734694], [1576, 1846, 0.07407407], [1846, 1863, 0.82352941], [1863, 2123, 0.08076923], [2123, 2787, 0.02560241], [2787, 2926, 0.1294964]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2926, 0.32177728]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2926, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2926, 0.95054221]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2926, -163.16884869]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2926, 45.22366618]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2926, 39.06910762]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2926, 32.0]]}
Smart Grid Will Give Electric System a Brain Thomas F. Armistead Brilliant minds—Nikola Tesla, Thomas A. Edison—and great engineers produced the marvel of the electric grid. It has united and fed the vast complex that is modern industrial and post-industrial society. But like the Scarecrow in Oz, the grid lacks a brain. Advances in electronics, communication and information technology now are enabling engineers to give the grid a brain. In the last decade, grassroots initiatives have sprung up around the country to create what has come to be called the smart grid. In a smart grid, sensors can anticipate system disturbances and respond to them before they cripple the system. Communication With Cable-Linked Projects Island State Aims To Be Model Just over a year into a long-term partnership with the U.S. Dept. of Energy to transform Hawaii into a model clean-energy economy, 1,000 MW of alternative-energy projects are in the works along with an undersea-cable transmission project to deliver power among the state’s islands. One goal of the partnership is to offer Hawaii’s experience as a test bed for island economies globally as they make the transition to clean energy. Photo: Castle & Cooke Hawai’i Castle & Cooke’s La Ola solar station recently began generating 1.2 MW. The Hawaii Clean Energy Initiative (HCEI) was launched in January 2008 with a U.S. Pushes Standards, Funds Development for Smart Grid Electric-utility executives are cheering the announcement that the federal government will promote standards for interoperability and security of a “smart grid” and that Energy Dept. grants for smart-grid investments and demonstration projects will be greatly enlarged. On May 18, U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu and Commerce Secretary Gary Locke announced the first set of 16 standards required for smart-grid implementation. DOE also will provide $10 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds to the National Institute of Standards and Technology to support development of the standards. DOE’s maximum award of ARRA funds for the Smart Grid Investment Grant Program Tax Breaks To Boost Turbine Spending Sarah Klose Wind-power owners, developers and suppliers are preparing to soar under a new round of federal incentives. The news had 23,200 visitors—78% more than last year—blowing into the world’s largest conference on wind-generated electricity. On tap was February’s passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which boosts production tax credits (PTCs) to reduce owners’ tax burden for the first 10 years of operation. Wind PTCs are extended two years, through Dec. 31, 2012. Developers also can claim an alternate investment tax credit (ITC) or Treasury Dept. grant to recoup 30% in the first year. Photo: Sarah Klose / ENR John On the Threshold of Rebirth As a standard-bearer for French plans to control one-third of the global nuclear powerplant market, Finland’s Olkiluoto project falls short of expectations. Delayed and mired in contractual disputes, the project is the world’s first to include new Franco-German reactor technology on which Paris-based Areva NP is hanging its ambitions. Slide Show Photo: TVO First Franco-German EPR reactor for Finland’s Olkiluoto plant is late. Olkiluoto’s third unit (OL3) is the first of a kind, say Areva officials, in explaining some of the project’s difficulties, hinting that the joint venture may have bid too optimistically for the turnkey contract. Now in arbitration, Photovoltaic Expansion Will Be North America’s Largest Tony Illia Sempra Generation believes in solar power’s bright future: The dust had barely settled at the company’s five-month-old 10-MW photovoltaic power generation plant near Boulder City, Nev., when it announced an expansion to quintuple capacity. The company claims it will create North America’s largest thin-film photovoltaic installation. Photo: First Solar Solar plant is next to Sempra’s 480-MW gas-turbine plant. The unit of San Diego-based Sempra Energy “won’t start construction until we have a [power sales] contract in hand,” says a Sempra spokesman. “We hope to start construction later this year.” Potential buyers could come from neighboring states, all of which have Stimulus Set To Push 7,400 MW Into Construction by End of 2010 Federal stimulus funds will help get 7,400 MW of wind-energy and solar-energy projects ready for construction on public lands by the end of 2010, U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar told the American Wind Energy Association in Chicago on May 5. About $41 million is earmarked for the effort. The Obama administration also plans renewable-energy coordination offices in Arizona, California, Nevada and Wyoming to complete reviews “on the most ready-to-go projects,” he said. The projects will require new transmission lines to carry electricity to markets, including 1,500 kV of capacity in California, nearly 900 kV in Idaho and 1,000 kV in Large-Scale Solar Stations To Help Meet California Goal California’s push to increase renewable energy’s share of the power market is showing results. Construction of the first phase of a new 400-MW solar power project in the California desert will begin in late 2009 once a contractor is named. Photo: Brightsource Energy Inc. Flat mirrors mean lower cost for BrightSource’s solar plant, piloted in Israel’s Negev Desert. Oakland, Calif.-based BrightSource Energy Inc. this year has signed contracts with Rosemead, Calif.-based Southern California Edison Co. and San Francisco-based Pacific Gas & Electric Co. for a total of 2,200 MW of power from seven planned solar plants at locations in California DOE Launches Initiative To Boost Efficiency of Commercial Buildings The U.S. Dept. of Energy recently launched its Commercial Real Estate Energy Alliance (CREEA), a collaboration of commercial real estate owners and operators who will work together and with DOE to reduce energy consumption by commercial buildings. The undertaking will link the real estate community with research and technology emerging from DOE national laboratories. The group will serve as a national forum in which best practices in energy efficiency are documented and publicized and in which peers can share practical experiences and insights, says the Building Owners and Managers Association International, which also is involved in the group. The alliance Market Is Hopeful, But Awaiting Definition Steven Setzer Thomas F. Armistead Engineers, contractors and owners are boarding the Energy Dept.’s $32.7- billion gravy train, augmented by $12.5 billion in loan programs, as it leaves Washington, D.C. Energy Secretary Steven Chu’s last job was as director of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His familiarity with the condition of lab facilities may be why DOE is pouncing on the $1.6 billion in funds appropriated by ARRA, with half earmarked for construction, infrastructure, equipment acquisition and research at nine national laboratories in seven states (see table below). The largest share for a single project is $150 million to accelerate construction on the National Synchrotron Light
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/2902
{"url": "https://www.enr.com/articles/topic/129?page=187", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.enr.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:01:49Z", "digest": "sha1:H7GKRLCGUQPDEJXFCDMLI6KTULPGHW52"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7100, 7100.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7100, 13427.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7100, 24.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7100, 270.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7100, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7100, 275.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7100, 0.28924419]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7100, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7100, 0.01750472]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7100, 0.0068646]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7100, 0.00549168]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7100, 0.00377553]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7100, 0.02834302]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7100, 0.18386628]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7100, 0.49907919]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7100, 5.36556169]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7100, 5.69715756]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7100, 1086.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 65, 0.0], [65, 697, 0.0], [697, 754, 0.0], [754, 1365, 0.0], [1365, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 2104, 0.0], [2104, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2153, 0.0], [2153, 2785, 0.0], [2785, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 3476, 0.0], [3476, 3531, 0.0], [3531, 3542, 0.0], [3542, 4216, 0.0], [4216, 4279, 0.0], [4279, 4920, 0.0], [4920, 4976, 0.0], [4976, 5623, 0.0], [5623, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 6357, 0.0], [6357, 6400, 0.0], [6400, 6434, 0.0], [6434, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 65, 0.0], [65, 697, 0.0], [697, 754, 0.0], [754, 1365, 0.0], [1365, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 2104, 0.0], [2104, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2153, 0.0], [2153, 2785, 0.0], [2785, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 3476, 0.0], [3476, 3531, 0.0], [3531, 3542, 0.0], [3542, 4216, 0.0], [4216, 4279, 0.0], [4279, 4920, 0.0], [4920, 4976, 0.0], [4976, 5623, 0.0], [5623, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 6357, 0.0], [6357, 6400, 0.0], [6400, 6434, 0.0], [6434, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 8.0], [45, 65, 3.0], [65, 697, 100.0], [697, 754, 9.0], [754, 1365, 98.0], [1365, 1421, 8.0], [1421, 2104, 100.0], [2104, 2141, 6.0], [2141, 2153, 2.0], [2153, 2785, 99.0], [2785, 2813, 5.0], [2813, 3476, 100.0], [3476, 3531, 7.0], [3531, 3542, 2.0], [3542, 4216, 100.0], [4216, 4279, 12.0], [4279, 4920, 100.0], [4920, 4976, 8.0], [4976, 5623, 99.0], [5623, 5691, 9.0], [5691, 6357, 100.0], [6357, 6400, 6.0], [6400, 6434, 5.0], [6434, 7100, 100.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 65, 0.0], [65, 697, 0.0], [697, 754, 0.0], [754, 1365, 0.01694915], [1365, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 2104, 0.00894188], [2104, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2153, 0.0], [2153, 2785, 0.02796053], [2785, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 3476, 0.0015528], [3476, 3531, 0.0], [3531, 3542, 0.0], [3542, 4216, 0.00766871], [4216, 4279, 0.13114754], [4279, 4920, 0.03548387], [4920, 4976, 0.0], [4976, 5623, 0.01757188], [5623, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 6357, 0.0], [6357, 6400, 0.0], [6400, 6434, 0.0], [6434, 7100, 0.01708075]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 65, 0.0], [65, 697, 0.0], [697, 754, 0.0], [754, 1365, 0.0], [1365, 1421, 0.0], [1421, 2104, 0.0], [2104, 2141, 0.0], [2141, 2153, 0.0], [2153, 2785, 0.0], [2785, 2813, 0.0], [2813, 3476, 0.0], [3476, 3531, 0.0], [3531, 3542, 0.0], [3542, 4216, 0.0], [4216, 4279, 0.0], [4279, 4920, 0.0], [4920, 4976, 0.0], [4976, 5623, 0.0], [5623, 5691, 0.0], [5691, 6357, 0.0], [6357, 6400, 0.0], [6400, 6434, 0.0], [6434, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.15555556], [45, 65, 0.15], [65, 697, 0.0221519], [697, 754, 0.1754386], [754, 1365, 0.04909984], [1365, 1421, 0.14285714], [1421, 2104, 0.0556369], [2104, 2141, 0.16216216], [2141, 2153, 0.16666667], [2153, 2785, 0.04588608], [2785, 2813, 0.10714286], [2813, 3476, 0.04524887], [3476, 3531, 0.12727273], [3531, 3542, 0.18181818], [3542, 4216, 0.03857567], [4216, 4279, 0.14285714], [4279, 4920, 0.04368175], [4920, 4976, 0.16071429], [4976, 5623, 0.05564142], [5623, 5691, 0.14705882], [5691, 6357, 0.04354354], [6357, 6400, 0.13953488], [6400, 6434, 0.14705882], [6434, 7100, 0.03903904]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7100, 0.56471699]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7100, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7100, 0.84930998]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7100, -567.64467786]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7100, 79.44399869]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7100, -81.12219649]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7100, 70.0]]}
A round-up of activities of the UN system in Somalia in November 2021 Highlights from the activities of the UN in November, 2021. Humanitarian | OCHA facilitates joint statement on worsening drought On 18 November, OCHA facilitated the release of a joint statement on the worsening drought in the country. The Federal Government of Somalia and the humanitarian community are alarmed at the rapidly worsening drought. Climate projections show that Somalia is on the verge of a fourth consecutive failed rainfall season and is at the risk of a potentially extreme situation by April 2022. About 2.3 million people are ravaged by serious water, food and pasture shortages. The lack of access to safe and potable water as well as hygiene and sanitation facilities has heightened the risk of water-borne diseases. Nearly 100,000 people have abandoned their homes in search of food, water and pasture for their livestock, exposing their families to the danger of conflict over the diminishing resources. https://reliefweb.int/report/somalia/somalia-joint-statement-worsening-drought-enso Livelihoods | UNHCR supports youth with vocational skills training In November, UNHCR through its implementing partner - the Galkayo Education Centre for Peace and Development - supported 145 vulnerable young people through the facilitation of a six-month Vocational Training in Puntland and Galmudug states. The participants received hands-on training in electrical installation, hairdressing, beauty, tailoring and hospitality management among other skills. The training aims at giving vulnerable youth the skills that will facilitate their reintegration and enable them to contribute to their daily lives and become self-reliant. UNHCR is working towards increasing the availability of skilled labour for a sustainable future for vulnerable communities. https://www.unhcr.org/somalia.html Criminal Investigation | UNODC enhances criminal investigation capacity of Somali police officers In November, another 20 police officers and four prosecutors, including three female police officers and one female prosecutor, from Jubaland and Hirshabelle graduated from the first course of the Investigator Development Pathway, which is a training course developed by UNODC to enhance the criminal investigation capacity of police officers and criminal investigators across Somalia. In October, 27 Officers, including two female officers, from Puntland, Jubaland, Hirshabelle, and South West State also graduated from the first course.The Investigator Development Pathway training course has been developed, and is being implemented, as part of the UNODC Criminal Investigation Program for Somalia, funded by the U.S. Department of State – Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs. https://twitter.com/UNODC_EA/status/1463117271707103239 Finance | UNIDO supports Somali businesses in establishing partnerships Thanks to the fruitful cooperation established between UNIDO and several stakeholders, such as the Ministry of commerce and industry ( MoCI), the Somalia Chamber of Commerce and Industry( SCCI) and the Italian agency for development cooperation (AICS),an important partnership was established between the Somali Cooperative Gaaloge and the international brand, Case New Holland (CNH). This will allow a technology upgrade in the Somali agro-industrial framework as well as the increase of turnover, new jobs, and new trade opportunities was made possible thanks to the entrepreneurship development support provided by Enterprise Development Unit (EDU) in Baidoa, the financial assistance provided by IBS Bank and the business matchmaking support furnished by UNIDO’s Italian Investment and Technology Office (ITPO). https://www.unido.it/news.php?&id=1458&lang=eng Emergency | FAO supports Somali government in desert locust monitoring and control activities Somalia has made great gains in suppressing one of the largest desert locust upsurges in history. For almost two years, FAO has worked closely with the government to control the spread and reduce the devastation caused to rural livelihoods across the country through ground and aerial monitoring and spraying, as well as livelihood recovery to affected communities. Now, FAO is supporting the government to take the lead in managing the situation and also future upsurges thanks to a new facility in Qardho, Puntland. It is dedicated to desert locust monitoring and control activities and will act as a hub for the region, helping with any resurgence in the future. With FAO’s support, the new government-run facility is crucial to help promote recovery and restoration of food security and livelihoods, not only for Somalia but for the whole region. https://www.fao.org/emergencies/fao-in-action/stories/stories-detail/en/c/1451696 Peace and Poetry | UNDP supports Somali poetry awards that promote women poets The first annual Home of Somali Poetry Awards, supported by UNDP, were presented as part of an initiative to preserve and promote Somali poetry, advocate for women's rights and bring people together around a shared cultural heritage. The winning poems, chosen by a panel of new and established names in Somali literature, dealt with themes of unity, freedom and colonialism. The next Home of Somali Poetry activity will bring women poets and upcoming women photographers and videographers together to collaborate on works that express how they feel about life for women in Somalia and issues of importance to them, with exhibitions planned for December and January. www.hoygamaansada.com Gender-Based Violence | UNFPA facilitates cash assistance for the mitigation of gender-based violence In 2021, Somalia witnessed a catastrophic increase in the number of vulnerable women and girls exposed to Gender-Based Violence (GBV) risks. Natural disasters and armed conflicts resulted in multiple displacements, forced evictions, and the destruction of livelihoods, health facilities, GBV service sites and schools. To mitigate the unprecedented and complicated humanitarian emergency in Somalia, the GBV Area of Responsibility (AoR) and Cash Working Group joined their efforts to understand how to better mitigate and address GBV risks of vulnerable women and girls. In November 2021, UNFPA Somalia released a learning brief on Cash Assistance for Mitigation of Gender-Based Violence, showcasing the benefits of using Cash and Voucher Assistance as an approach to address and meet a multitude of immediate needs of women and girls in Somalia. https://somalia.unfpa.org/en/publications/gbv-learning-brief-cash-assistance-mitigation-gender-based-violence-somalia Humanitarian | UNICEF provides humanitarian support to displaced families in Galmudug state Conflict has forced 100,000 people to flee Guriceel in Galmudug state to 28 remote settlements. Among the displaced are 1,000 unaccompanied children and 2,000 persons with disability. The conflict has resulted in school closures, affecting an estimated 10,000 children, 40 percent of whom are girls. In response, UNICEF provided 24 tons of Interagency Emergency Health Kits, acute watery diarrhea kits, medicines, and medical equipment to support the IDPs for three months. Some 16,200 IDPs were provided with water through trucking and 9,000 received hygiene kits. In Galkayo, 1,500 households received hygiene kits such as soap, buckets, jerry cans, aqua tabs, and sanitary pads. A bladder water tank was also installed for safe water storage and 21 social mobilizers trained to communicate critical and lifesaving messages through local radio and television. https://twitter.com/unicefsomalia/status/1454701359438213120 Peace, stability and recreation | UNMAS promotes sports to raise awareness on the dangers of explosive hazards In October and November 2021, UNMAS Somalia organized a series of advocacy sports events in Mogadishu. The events were part of a five-year Safe Ground campaign developed to raise awareness and resources for the victims and survivors of armed conflict through the promotion of sports. In addition, the events celebrated the mine action services’ work of clearing the sports village of mine hazards and the rehabilitation of the Mogadishu National stadium, highlighting the role that mine action services plays in stabilization efforts aligned to Somalia’s Transition Plan. Over 200 participants took part in sports matches including football, basketball and running races, targeting young girls, boys and persons with disabilities (PWDs). The event also provided a forum for Explosive Ordnance Risk Education (EORE) sessions in Somali language after each game. https://www.unmas.org/en/safe-ground Resilience | New WFP Somalia strategic plan approved In November, the WFP Executive Board approved the new WFP 2022-2025 country strategic plan for Somalia. Embodying the humanitarian, development and peacebuilding nexus, this is a roadmap for WFP to further develop its dual approach to Zero Hunger in Somalia: saving lives by meeting immediate humanitarian needs, while also changing lives by empowering Somalis and strengthening national institutions to build long-term, self-sufficient resilience. The country strategic plan builds on WFP’s strong and growing partnership with the Government at federal, state and local levels. It was developed through extensive consultation with the Government and other stakeholders across the country, and aligns with Somalia’s own National Development Plan as well as the United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework for Somalia. The plan will come into effect from January 2022. https://twitter.com/WFPSomalia Security Council | UN Special Representative for Somalia briefs UN Security Council On 17 November, the UN Special Representative to Somalia, James Swan, briefed the UN Security Council on Somalia’s political and developmental situation. Mr Swan welcomed progress made so in the electoral process and urged for the swift completion of the House of the People elections and for a list of seats reserved for women to be published as well as the assurance that the women’s 30 per cent quota in Parliament is attained. He stressed that women’s full inclusion and representation in political life is key for Somalia’s sustainable peace and development. The UN Special Representative noted that the ongoing delays in the electoral process “continue to stall progress in other critical areas and hamper the achievement of national priorities beyond the elections, such as governance, security, and development.” He also spoke of the “dire” humanitarian situation in Somalia, “compounded by conflict, displacement and disease outbreaks. https://unsom.unmissions.org/statement-special-representative-secretary-general-james-swan-security-council-situation-somalia-2 United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs United Nations Industrial Development Organization UNMAS United Nations Mine Action Service United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/4253
{"url": "https://somalia.un.org/en/161759-round-activities-un-system-somalia-november-2021", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "somalia.un.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:35:45Z", "digest": "sha1:ALWC5UFWX4THWHDTMXRFZBCJFAEN4UCU"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10979, 10979.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10979, 12853.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10979, 46.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10979, 128.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10979, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10979, 272.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10979, 0.29804728]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10979, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10979, 0.01467367]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10979, 0.00919842]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10979, 0.00492773]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10979, 0.0043802]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10979, 0.00361367]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10979, 0.02672148]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10979, 0.17266187]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10979, 0.42969261]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10979, 5.97253107]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10979, 5.67778284]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10979, 1529.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 70, 0.0], [70, 130, 1.0], [130, 199, 0.0], [199, 998, 1.0], [998, 1082, 0.0], [1082, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1839, 1.0], [1839, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2778, 1.0], [2778, 2834, 0.0], [2834, 2906, 0.0], [2906, 3722, 1.0], [3722, 3770, 0.0], [3770, 3864, 0.0], [3864, 4715, 1.0], [4715, 4797, 0.0], [4797, 4876, 0.0], [4876, 5542, 1.0], [5542, 5564, 0.0], [5564, 5666, 0.0], [5666, 5985, 1.0], [5985, 6513, 1.0], [6513, 6631, 0.0], [6631, 6723, 0.0], [6723, 7023, 1.0], [7023, 7289, 1.0], [7289, 7585, 1.0], [7585, 7646, 0.0], [7646, 7757, 0.0], [7757, 8041, 1.0], [8041, 8329, 1.0], [8329, 8617, 1.0], [8617, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 8707, 0.0], [8707, 9156, 1.0], [9156, 9592, 1.0], [9592, 9623, 0.0], [9623, 9707, 0.0], [9707, 10652, 1.0], [10652, 10780, 0.0], [10780, 10847, 0.0], [10847, 10898, 0.0], [10898, 10904, 0.0], [10904, 10939, 0.0], [10939, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 70, 0.0], [70, 130, 0.0], [130, 199, 0.0], [199, 998, 0.0], [998, 1082, 0.0], [1082, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2778, 0.0], [2778, 2834, 0.0], [2834, 2906, 0.0], [2906, 3722, 0.0], [3722, 3770, 0.0], [3770, 3864, 0.0], [3864, 4715, 0.0], [4715, 4797, 0.0], [4797, 4876, 0.0], [4876, 5542, 0.0], [5542, 5564, 0.0], [5564, 5666, 0.0], [5666, 5985, 0.0], [5985, 6513, 0.0], [6513, 6631, 0.0], [6631, 6723, 0.0], [6723, 7023, 0.0], [7023, 7289, 0.0], [7289, 7585, 0.0], [7585, 7646, 0.0], [7646, 7757, 0.0], [7757, 8041, 0.0], [8041, 8329, 0.0], [8329, 8617, 0.0], [8617, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 8707, 0.0], [8707, 9156, 0.0], [9156, 9592, 0.0], [9592, 9623, 0.0], [9623, 9707, 0.0], [9707, 10652, 0.0], [10652, 10780, 0.0], [10780, 10847, 0.0], [10847, 10898, 0.0], [10898, 10904, 0.0], [10904, 10939, 0.0], [10939, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 70, 13.0], [70, 130, 10.0], [130, 199, 8.0], [199, 998, 128.0], [998, 1082, 1.0], [1082, 1149, 8.0], [1149, 1839, 93.0], [1839, 1874, 1.0], [1874, 1972, 11.0], [1972, 2778, 114.0], [2778, 2834, 1.0], [2834, 2906, 8.0], [2906, 3722, 115.0], [3722, 3770, 1.0], [3770, 3864, 12.0], [3864, 4715, 138.0], [4715, 4797, 1.0], [4797, 4876, 12.0], [4876, 5542, 106.0], [5542, 5564, 1.0], [5564, 5666, 12.0], [5666, 5985, 44.0], [5985, 6513, 82.0], [6513, 6631, 1.0], [6631, 6723, 11.0], [6723, 7023, 45.0], [7023, 7289, 40.0], [7289, 7585, 45.0], [7585, 7646, 1.0], [7646, 7757, 16.0], [7757, 8041, 45.0], [8041, 8329, 42.0], [8329, 8617, 42.0], [8617, 8654, 1.0], [8654, 8707, 7.0], [8707, 9156, 63.0], [9156, 9592, 64.0], [9592, 9623, 1.0], [9623, 9707, 11.0], [9707, 10652, 146.0], [10652, 10780, 1.0], [10780, 10847, 9.0], [10847, 10898, 5.0], [10898, 10904, 1.0], [10904, 10939, 5.0], [10939, 10979, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 70, 0.05882353], [70, 130, 0.07017544], [130, 199, 0.0], [199, 998, 0.01783439], [998, 1082, 0.0], [1082, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1839, 0.00445104], [1839, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2778, 0.00508259], [2778, 2834, 0.40425532], [2834, 2906, 0.0], [2906, 3722, 0.0], [3722, 3770, 0.11428571], [3770, 3864, 0.0], [3864, 4715, 0.0], [4715, 4797, 0.10606061], [4797, 4876, 0.0], [4876, 5542, 0.0], [5542, 5564, 0.0], [5564, 5666, 0.0], [5666, 5985, 0.01298701], [5985, 6513, 0.00770713], [6513, 6631, 0.0], [6631, 6723, 0.0], [6723, 7023, 0.07931034], [7023, 7289, 0.04280156], [7289, 7585, 0.02090592], [7585, 7646, 0.35849057], [7646, 7757, 0.0], [7757, 8041, 0.01433692], [8041, 8329, 0.0], [8329, 8617, 0.01079137], [8617, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 8707, 0.0], [8707, 9156, 0.01830664], [9156, 9592, 0.00930233], [9592, 9623, 0.0], [9623, 9707, 0.0], [9707, 10652, 0.00429646], [10652, 10780, 0.00909091], [10780, 10847, 0.0], [10847, 10898, 0.0], [10898, 10904, 0.0], [10904, 10939, 0.0], [10939, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 70, 0.0], [70, 130, 0.0], [130, 199, 0.0], [199, 998, 0.0], [998, 1082, 0.0], [1082, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1839, 0.0], [1839, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1972, 0.0], [1972, 2778, 0.0], [2778, 2834, 0.0], [2834, 2906, 0.0], [2906, 3722, 0.0], [3722, 3770, 0.0], [3770, 3864, 0.0], [3864, 4715, 0.0], [4715, 4797, 0.0], [4797, 4876, 0.0], [4876, 5542, 0.0], [5542, 5564, 0.0], [5564, 5666, 0.0], [5666, 5985, 0.0], [5985, 6513, 0.0], [6513, 6631, 0.0], [6631, 6723, 0.0], [6723, 7023, 0.0], [7023, 7289, 0.0], [7289, 7585, 0.0], [7585, 7646, 0.0], [7646, 7757, 0.0], [7757, 8041, 0.0], [8041, 8329, 0.0], [8329, 8617, 0.0], [8617, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 8707, 0.0], [8707, 9156, 0.0], [9156, 9592, 0.0], [9592, 9623, 0.0], [9623, 9707, 0.0], [9707, 10652, 0.0], [10652, 10780, 0.0], [10780, 10847, 0.0], [10847, 10898, 0.0], [10898, 10904, 0.0], [10904, 10939, 0.0], [10939, 10979, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 70, 0.07142857], [70, 130, 0.06666667], [130, 199, 0.07246377], [199, 998, 0.02002503], [998, 1082, 0.0], [1082, 1149, 0.08955224], [1149, 1839, 0.03333333], [1839, 1874, 0.0], [1874, 1972, 0.08163265], [1972, 2778, 0.05583127], [2778, 2834, 0.125], [2834, 2906, 0.09722222], [2906, 3722, 0.07107843], [3722, 3770, 0.0], [3770, 3864, 0.05319149], [3864, 4715, 0.0199765], [4715, 4797, 0.0], [4797, 4876, 0.08860759], [4876, 5542, 0.02852853], [5542, 5564, 0.0], [5564, 5666, 0.07843137], [5666, 5985, 0.03761755], [5985, 6513, 0.0625], [6513, 6631, 0.0], [6631, 6723, 0.08695652], [6723, 7023, 0.01666667], [7023, 7289, 0.06766917], [7289, 7585, 0.01013514], [7585, 7646, 0.0], [7646, 7757, 0.05405405], [7757, 8041, 0.04577465], [8041, 8329, 0.02083333], [8329, 8617, 0.04861111], [8617, 8654, 0.0], [8654, 8707, 0.11320755], [8707, 9156, 0.04231626], [9156, 9592, 0.04587156], [9592, 9623, 0.12903226], [9623, 9707, 0.13095238], [9707, 10652, 0.02962963], [10652, 10780, 0.0], [10780, 10847, 0.08955224], [10847, 10898, 0.09803922], [10898, 10904, 0.83333333], [10904, 10939, 0.14285714], [10939, 10979, 0.125]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10979, 0.38987935]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10979, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10979, 0.74371266]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10979, -675.99781658]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10979, -55.11622426]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10979, 18.46712062]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10979, 75.0]]}
Successful Implantation of a Continuous-Flow Total Artificial Heart in a Patient at The Texas Heart Institute at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital Denton A. Cooley, MD and Bud Frazier, MD with Texas Heart Institute review X-ray of first implanted continuous-flow total artificial heart. (Photo: Business Wire) March 23, 2011 11:55 PM Eastern Daylight Time HOUSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Doctors at the Texas Heart Institute (THI) at St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital (SLEH) have successfully implanted the first continuous-flow total artificial heart in a desperately ill patient facing imminent death. On March 10, 2011, Drs. Bud Frazier and Billy Cohn removed the heart of 55–year-old Houstonian Craig A. Lewis and replaced it with the artificial heart, which had been developed at THI over the last five years in collaboration with industry and funded by grants from the National Institute of Health and the Dunn Foundation. Mr. Lewis had a rare condition called cardiac amyloidosis, a disease in which the heart is infiltrated by an abnormal protein produced elsewhere in the body. Patients with this affliction are not candidates for heart transplantation because the amyloidosis would probably recur in the transplanted heart. The continuous-flow total artificial heart consists of 2 turbine-like blood pumps implanted to replace the 2 sides of the explanted heart. The turbines used in Mr. Lewis’s device were modified left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) manufactured by Thoratec Corporation (Pleasanton, Calif.) and approved by the Food and Drug Administration in January 2010 for assisting the failing left ventricle (the heart’s main pumping chamber) in patients suffering from terminal heart failure. Mr. Lewis was not a candidate for an assist pump because his left ventricle was too badly involved with amyloidosis. His right ventricle had also failed. Mr. Lewis had been supported by an external blood pump, a dialysis machine, and a breathing machine for two weeks before doctors decided to try the experimental mechanical heart. Because the device produces continuous flow, Mr. Lewis does not have a heartbeat, or a pulse. An EKG records no rhythm because the heart has been removed. Extensive research performed at the Cullen Cardiovascular Research Lab has shown that this unusual physiology is well tolerated by mammals. Based on their results over the last 5 years, Drs. Cohn and Frazier believed that this device was an option for Mr. Lewis. Less than one week after the device’s implantation, Mr. Lewis was able to sit up in bed and speak with family members. The Texas Heart Institute has played a pivotal role in the development of implantable blood pumps to treat end-stage heart failure. Under Dr. Frazier’s leadership over the last 40 years, many of the devices currently in clinical trials were first tested and perfected at THI. The newer generation of continuous-flow turbine-like pumps, first introduced 10 years ago, are smaller, quieter, and much more durable than their pulse-producing predecessors. These technically sophisticated pumps have accelerated the progress in the field of implantable devices. They also gave Frazier the idea for a continuous-flow total artificial heart. “This really is medical history in the making. The demonstration that one can support the human cardiovascular system with 2 implanted continuous-flow pumps is remarkable and very encouraging. With this new concept in cardiac replacement, we are much closer to realizing a meaningful off-the-shelf replacement,” said Dr. James T. Willerson, THI president. “The Texas Heart Institute is extremely proud of Drs. Bud Frazier and Billy Cohn and their entire team. This is an impressive step forward, following in the legacy of Dr. Denton Cooley, who in 1969 first implanted a prototype artificial heart in a human with a severe heart injury.” Added Dr. Cooley, founder of THI, “Forty years ago the first total artificial heart was implanted here in a patient dying of advanced heart failure. The device served as a bridge to cardiac transplantation maintaining the patient’s life until a donor heart was procured. Since then, a major focus of research at THI has been the development of a total mechanical heart that could overcome some of the problems presented by the previous pulsatile devices, including patient discomfort. The continuous-flow design of this device promises a major advance in the effort to replace the heart in patients with terminal cardiac failure. I applaud Dr. Frazier and Dr. Cohn for their contributions. This is a further milestone.” About the Texas Heart® Institute The Texas Heart Institute (www.texasheart.org), founded by world-renowned cardiovascular surgeon Dr. Denton A. Cooley in 1962, is a nonprofit organization dedicated to reducing the devastating toll of cardiovascular disease through innovative and progressive programs in research, education and improved patient care. Together with its clinical partner, St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital, it has been ranked among the top 10 cardiovascular centers in the United States by U.S. News & World Report’s annual guide to “America’s Best Hospitals” for the past 20 years. The Texas Heart Institute is also affiliated with the University of Texas (UT) System, which promotes collaboration in cardiovascular research and education among UT and THI faculty at the Texas Heart Institute and other UT components. About St. Luke’s Episcopal Health System St. Luke’s Episcopal Health System (StLukesTexas.com) includes St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital in the Texas Medical Center, founded in 1954 by the Episcopal Diocese of Texas; St. Luke’s The Woodlands Hospital; St. Luke’s Sugar Land Hospital; St. Luke’s Lakeside Hospital; St. Luke’s Patients Medical Center; St. Luke’s Hospital at The Vintage; and St. Luke’s Episcopal Health Charities, a charity devoted to assessing and enhancing community health, especially among the underserved. St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital is home to the Texas Heart® Institute, which was founded in 1962 by Denton A. Cooley, MD, and is consistently ranked among the top 10 cardiology and heart surgery centers in the country by U.S. News & World Report. Affiliated with several nursing schools and three medical schools, St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital was the first hospital in Texas named a Magnet hospital for nursing excellence, receiving the award three times. Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6658331&lang=en St. Luke’s Episcopal Hospital Frank Michel, 832-355-9510 fmichel@heart.thi.tmc.edu
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/4475
{"url": "https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20110323006769/en/Successful-Implantation-Continuous-Flow-Total-Artificial-Heart-Patient", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.businesswire.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:55:00Z", "digest": "sha1:DSQNPYZTXYJN234ZAGRYM4QHLUVGOVQG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 6558, 6558.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6558, 8063.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6558, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6558, 81.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6558, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6558, 177.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6558, 0.2994527]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6558, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6558, 0.07789788]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 6558, 0.02310846]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 6558, 0.02236303]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 6558, 0.03168095]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 6558, 0.03261275]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 6558, 0.02345582]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 6558, 0.19077404]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 6558, 0.42555332]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 6558, 5.39839034]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 6558, 5.33855337]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 6558, 994.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 143, 0.0], [143, 306, 0.0], [306, 352, 0.0], [352, 590, 1.0], [590, 1220, 1.0], [1220, 1857, 1.0], [1857, 2036, 1.0], [2036, 2573, 1.0], [2573, 3208, 1.0], [3208, 3847, 1.0], [3847, 4567, 1.0], [4567, 4600, 0.0], [4600, 5397, 1.0], [5397, 5438, 0.0], [5438, 6375, 1.0], [6375, 6476, 0.0], [6476, 6506, 0.0], [6506, 6533, 0.0], [6533, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 143, 0.0], [143, 306, 0.0], [306, 352, 0.0], [352, 590, 0.0], [590, 1220, 0.0], [1220, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2036, 0.0], [2036, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 3208, 0.0], [3208, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4567, 0.0], [4567, 4600, 0.0], [4600, 5397, 0.0], [5397, 5438, 0.0], [5438, 6375, 0.0], [6375, 6476, 0.0], [6476, 6506, 0.0], [6506, 6533, 0.0], [6533, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 143, 21.0], [143, 306, 24.0], [306, 352, 8.0], [352, 590, 31.0], [590, 1220, 101.0], [1220, 1857, 96.0], [1857, 2036, 29.0], [2036, 2573, 92.0], [2573, 3208, 94.0], [3208, 3847, 101.0], [3847, 4567, 116.0], [4567, 4600, 5.0], [4600, 5397, 116.0], [5397, 5438, 6.0], [5438, 6375, 142.0], [6375, 6476, 4.0], [6476, 6506, 4.0], [6506, 6533, 3.0], [6533, 6558, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 143, 0.0], [143, 306, 0.0], [306, 352, 0.23255814], [352, 590, 0.0], [590, 1220, 0.01294498], [1220, 1857, 0.00967742], [1857, 2036, 0.0], [2036, 2573, 0.00191205], [2573, 3208, 0.00647249], [3208, 3847, 0.00805153], [3847, 4567, 0.0], [4567, 4600, 0.0], [4600, 5397, 0.01034929], [5397, 5438, 0.0], [5438, 6375, 0.01109878], [6375, 6476, 0.08235294], [6476, 6506, 0.0], [6506, 6533, 0.43478261], [6533, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 143, 0.0], [143, 306, 0.0], [306, 352, 0.0], [352, 590, 0.0], [590, 1220, 0.0], [1220, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2036, 0.0], [2036, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 3208, 0.0], [3208, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4567, 0.0], [4567, 4600, 0.0], [4600, 5397, 0.0], [5397, 5438, 0.0], [5438, 6375, 0.0], [6375, 6476, 0.0], [6476, 6506, 0.0], [6506, 6533, 0.0], [6533, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 143, 0.11188811], [143, 306, 0.09815951], [306, 352, 0.13043478], [352, 590, 0.14285714], [590, 1220, 0.03492063], [1220, 1857, 0.02982732], [1857, 2036, 0.01117318], [2036, 2573, 0.03910615], [2573, 3208, 0.02204724], [3208, 3847, 0.03599374], [3847, 4567, 0.02638889], [4567, 4600, 0.12121212], [4600, 5397, 0.05269762], [5397, 5438, 0.14634146], [5438, 6375, 0.07577375], [6375, 6476, 0.03960396], [6476, 6506, 0.13333333], [6506, 6533, 0.07407407], [6533, 6558, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 6558, 0.49364507]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 6558, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 6558, 0.75527006]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 6558, -425.69873069]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 6558, 27.93965629]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 6558, -70.31642443]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 6558, 90.0]]}
Happy Dog Takes on the World Citizen Participation in the Judicial System in Japan & East Asia The Happy Dog 5801 Detroit Ave. Cleveland, Ohio 44102 Watch the VideoView Photo Gallery Listen to the Podcast "The conviction rate in Japan is 99.98 percent. It truly is remarkable. Judges indicate this occurs because prosecutor’s only bring cases that they know they can win." – Matthew J. Wilson, J.D. Systems that incorporate juries into the legal decision-making process can significantly impact a country’s political system, political culture, and society. Bodies of average citizens can function as powerful tools in educating, ensuring justice, and enhancing the judiciary’s credibility. They also provide a valuable civic engagement tool that enables self-governance and facilitates checks on individuals, industry, and government. As societies face rapid change and related challenges, many nations are searching for potential solutions. Many civic reformers view jury systems both as a partial solution and means of compelling positive political, economic, and social change. In fact, the major players in Asia and several other countries around the world have integrated lay participation into the administration of justice over the past 15 years in an effort to effect change, advance public policy-making, and manifest popular sovereignty. These bold moves stand in stark contrast to other parts of the world where established jury systems have been criticized, attacked, and even face diminished use. Join us as WCPN's Tony Ganzer talks with University of Akron Professor of Law Matthew J. Wilson on the views on jury systems and lay participation in the administration of justice through the experiences of Japan, South Korea, and other countries in East Asia, including China. Matthew J. Wilson, J.D. Professor of Law, The University of Akron School of Law, and Current President-Designate, Missouri Western State University Tony Ganzer Host/Producer, WCPN This series is presented with the generous support of an anonymous donor. Happy Dog Takes on the World is presented in collaboration with Since its creation 30 years ago, over 30,000 students have participated at the City Club. Discover the different ways that students can get involved, here.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/4504
{"url": "https://www.cityclub.org/forums/2019/05/07/happy-dog-takes-on-the-world", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.cityclub.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:59:49Z", "digest": "sha1:AR7SDFSH4TEFPYFDHCE6GPHRPKXXNEVL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2261, 2261.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2261, 4652.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2261, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2261, 128.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2261, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2261, 248.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2261, 0.29832936]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2261, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2261, 0.02477114]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2261, 0.02477114]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2261, 0.01723209]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2261, 0.02261712]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2261, 0.01615509]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2261, 0.02147971]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2261, 0.16706444]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2261, 0.6057971]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2261, 5.3826087]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2261, 5.00348003]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2261, 345.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 95, 0.0], [95, 109, 0.0], [109, 149, 0.0], [149, 205, 0.0], [205, 399, 1.0], [399, 835, 1.0], [835, 1510, 1.0], [1510, 1788, 1.0], [1788, 1812, 1.0], [1812, 1936, 0.0], [1936, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 1968, 0.0], [1968, 2042, 1.0], [2042, 2106, 0.0], [2106, 2261, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 95, 0.0], [95, 109, 0.0], [109, 149, 0.0], [149, 205, 0.0], [205, 399, 0.0], [399, 835, 0.0], [835, 1510, 0.0], [1510, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1936, 0.0], [1936, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 1968, 0.0], [1968, 2042, 0.0], [2042, 2106, 0.0], [2106, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 6.0], [29, 95, 10.0], [95, 109, 3.0], [109, 149, 6.0], [149, 205, 9.0], [205, 399, 32.0], [399, 835, 57.0], [835, 1510, 103.0], [1510, 1788, 46.0], [1788, 1812, 4.0], [1812, 1936, 17.0], [1936, 1948, 2.0], [1948, 1968, 2.0], [1968, 2042, 12.0], [2042, 2106, 11.0], [2106, 2261, 25.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 95, 0.0], [95, 109, 0.0], [109, 149, 0.24324324], [149, 205, 0.0], [205, 399, 0.02185792], [399, 835, 0.0], [835, 1510, 0.00302572], [1510, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1936, 0.0], [1936, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 1968, 0.0], [1968, 2042, 0.0], [2042, 2106, 0.0], [2106, 2261, 0.04666667]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 95, 0.0], [95, 109, 0.0], [109, 149, 0.0], [149, 205, 0.0], [205, 399, 0.0], [399, 835, 0.0], [835, 1510, 0.0], [1510, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 1812, 0.0], [1812, 1936, 0.0], [1936, 1948, 0.0], [1948, 1968, 0.0], [1968, 2042, 0.0], [2042, 2106, 0.0], [2106, 2261, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.13793103], [29, 95, 0.10606061], [95, 109, 0.21428571], [109, 149, 0.1], [149, 205, 0.125], [205, 399, 0.04639175], [399, 835, 0.00688073], [835, 1510, 0.00740741], [1510, 1788, 0.07194245], [1788, 1812, 0.20833333], [1812, 1936, 0.11290323], [1936, 1948, 0.16666667], [1948, 1968, 0.3], [1968, 2042, 0.01351351], [2042, 2106, 0.0625], [2106, 2261, 0.02580645]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2261, 0.31579852]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2261, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2261, 0.21436137]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2261, -105.73044171]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2261, 9.27311863]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2261, -0.44605148]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2261, 23.0]]}
PHMSA Advisory Bulletin: Updating Inspection and Maintenance Plans to Address Hazardous Leaks phmsa.publicaffairs@dot.gov PHMSA Advisory Bulletin: Pipeline Industry Must Take Actions to Address Methane Leaks from Pipelines and Pipeline Facilities PHMSA 03-21 Contact: PHMSAPublicAffairs@dot.gov WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) today announced it has submitted to the Federal Register an advisory bulletin underscoring to pipeline and pipeline facility operators requirements to minimize methane emissions in the Protecting our Infrastructure of Pipelines and Enhancing Safety (PIPES) Act of 2020. The PIPES Act directs pipeline operators to update their inspection and maintenance plans to address the elimination of hazardous leaks, and to minimize natural gas releases from pipeline facilities. The updated plans must also address the replacement or remediation at facilities that historically have been known to experience leaks. This action is only one piece of PHMSA’s ongoing efforts to minimize methane emissions. “Minimizing methane emissions from pipelines will help improve safety and combat climate change, while creating jobs for pipeline workers,” said PHMSA Acting Administrator Tristan Brown. “Pipeline operators have an obligation to protect the public and the environment by identifying and addressing methane leaks.” In the advisory, PHMSA reminds operators of their obligation to comply with Section 114 of the PIPES Act by December 27, 2021. The Act requires operators to update their inspection and maintenance plans to identify procedures to prevent and mitigate both vented (intentional) and fugitive (unintentional) pipeline emissions. Vented emissions can occur during repairs, maintenance, pressure relief systems, or other controlled activities. Fugitive emissions include leaks from mains or service lines, natural gas meters, or excavation damage, as well as other accidental releases. In addition to addressing intentional and unintentional emissions, the advisory also specifies that operator plans are required to address the replacement or remediation of pipelines made from cast iron, bare steel, certain vintage plastic, or other legacy materials that are known to cause a disproportionately large share of incidents involving methane leaks. In January 2021, President Biden signed Executive Orders aimed at demonstrating the Administration’s commitment to making domestic and international climate change a top priority for the federal government. In the U.S., the onshore oil and gas sector is the largest domestic industrial source of methane emissions according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Methane has nearly 30 times the heat-trapping power of carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere. The Advisory Bulletin applies to the nation’s entire 2.8 million-mile pipeline network, over 17,000 underground natural gas wells, and 164 liquefied natural gas facilities—covering an estimated 1/3rd of the estimated methane emissions from the oil and gas sector. PHMSA and state pipeline safety regulatory programs will begin inspecting operator plans for compliance with the requirements in 2022. PHMSA’s advisory bulletin will go on Public Inspection in the June 9, 2021 edition of the Federal Register and will publish on June 10, 2021. The mission of the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) is to protect people and the environment by advancing the safe transportation of energy and other hazardous materials that are essential to our daily lives. PHMSA develops and enforces regulations for the safe operation of the nation’s 2.8 million-mile pipeline transportation system and the nearly one million daily shipments of hazardous materials by land, sea, and air. Please visit https://www.phmsa.dot.gov or https://twitter.com/PHMSA_DOT for more information.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/8167
{"url": "https://www.phmsa.dot.gov/news/phmsa-advisory-bulletin-pipeline-industry-must-take-actions-address-methane-leaks-pipelines", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.phmsa.dot.gov", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:36:32Z", "digest": "sha1:5OIXFNMPI2MGOSLONXHAJNBAF4QSLQJF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3911, 3911.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3911, 7364.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3911, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3911, 143.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3911, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3911, 279.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3911, 0.29061103]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3911, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3911, 0.09984733]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3911, 0.07908397]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3911, 0.06534351]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3911, 0.03236641]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3911, 0.03236641]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3911, 0.02442748]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3911, 0.02198473]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3911, 0.02656489]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3911, 0.02980626]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3911, 0.16542474]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3911, 0.4673913]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3911, 5.93297101]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3911, 5.01251581]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3911, 552.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 94, 0.0], [94, 122, 0.0], [122, 247, 0.0], [247, 259, 0.0], [259, 295, 0.0], [295, 1105, 1.0], [1105, 1419, 1.0], [1419, 1999, 1.0], [1999, 2361, 1.0], [2361, 2822, 1.0], [2822, 3221, 1.0], [3221, 3363, 1.0], [3363, 3911, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 94, 0.0], [94, 122, 0.0], [122, 247, 0.0], [247, 259, 0.0], [259, 295, 0.0], [295, 1105, 0.0], [1105, 1419, 0.0], [1419, 1999, 0.0], [1999, 2361, 0.0], [2361, 2822, 0.0], [2822, 3221, 0.0], [3221, 3363, 0.0], [3363, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 94, 12.0], [94, 122, 1.0], [122, 247, 17.0], [247, 259, 2.0], [259, 295, 2.0], [295, 1105, 115.0], [1105, 1419, 43.0], [1419, 1999, 83.0], [1999, 2361, 52.0], [2361, 2822, 67.0], [2822, 3221, 57.0], [3221, 3363, 25.0], [3363, 3911, 76.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 94, 0.0], [94, 122, 0.0], [122, 247, 0.0], [247, 259, 0.4], [259, 295, 0.0], [295, 1105, 0.00501253], [1105, 1419, 0.0], [1419, 1999, 0.01598579], [1999, 2361, 0.0], [2361, 2822, 0.01327434], [2822, 3221, 0.04102564], [3221, 3363, 0.07971014], [3363, 3911, 0.00379507]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 94, 0.0], [94, 122, 0.0], [122, 247, 0.0], [247, 259, 0.0], [259, 295, 0.0], [295, 1105, 0.0], [1105, 1419, 0.0], [1419, 1999, 0.0], [1999, 2361, 0.0], [2361, 2822, 0.0], [2822, 3221, 0.0], [3221, 3363, 0.0], [3363, 3911, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 94, 0.14893617], [94, 122, 0.0], [122, 247, 0.144], [247, 259, 0.41666667], [259, 295, 0.22222222], [295, 1105, 0.06419753], [1105, 1419, 0.03503185], [1419, 1999, 0.03103448], [1999, 2361, 0.00276243], [2361, 2822, 0.03253796], [2822, 3221, 0.02005013], [3221, 3363, 0.07746479], [3363, 3911, 0.04562044]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3911, 0.55644107]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3911, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3911, 0.62322962]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3911, -273.68905767]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3911, 20.16941958]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3911, -34.34847113]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3911, 33.0]]}
About Photo Friends Photographer’s Eye L.A. in Focus Shades of L.A. and Shades of California L.A. Neighborhoods Project Group Los Angeles 2020 Support Photo Friends LGBT Heritage Month, A Time For Commemoration and Celebration June 6, 2016 by Annie Murphy June is LGBT Heritage Month (also known as LGBT Pride Month), a time to remember the challenges that the LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) community has faced and to commemorate the contributions they have made. The photo collection of the Los Angeles Public Library features many images documenting the struggles and triumphs of L.A.’s gay community in their quest for recognition, respect, and equal rights, as well as showing them as simply our friends, neighbors, coworkers, and family members. During the 1940s, Malcolm Boyd was a hot shot junior producer of radio and television. He founded PRB, a production company, with Mary Pickford (America’s sweetheart!) before leaving the business world to become an Episcopal priest. Boyd was prominent in the American Civil Rights movement, participating as a Freedom Rider in 1961, riding interstate buses in the South in mixed racial groups to challenge segregation laws. He also actively protested the Vietnam War and was the author of 30 books. In 1977, Boyd came out and became the most prominent openly homosexual clergy person at the time. He became a spokesman for gay rights and served as writer-in-residence for the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles. Mary Pickford and Buddy Rogers converse with Malcolm Boyd, their TV-radio production partner, who is beginning theological studies, having been admitted as a postulant for holy orders in the Protestant Episcopal Church. (Herald-Examiner Collection, May 7, 1950) The Briggs Initiative, also known as California Proposition 6, was on the California State ballot on November 7, 1978. Named for its sponsor, John Briggs, a state legislator from Orange County, the initiative was designed to ban gays and lesbians from working in California’s public schools. The initiative was opposed by a diverse group of politicians including Ronald Reagan, Jerry Brown, Gerald Ford, and then-president Jimmy Carter. It was defeated by California voters. Members and supporters of Los Angeles gay community march down Hollywood Boulevard on July 2, 1978, to protest the Briggs Initiative. (Ken Papaleo/Herald-Examiner Collection, July 3, 1978) In 1970, the first Gay Pride Parade was held in Los Angeles on Hollywood Boulevard. The parade was so controversial that the city’s police commission tried to stop it for fear that those who participated in it would be attacked. Today, LGBTQ pride celebrations take place in various venues and streets throughout Southern California, with the largest festival, LA Pride, occurring annually in West Hollywood. A float from the Golden State Gay Rodeo Association is featured in the Gay Parade in West Hollywood. (Paul Chinn/Herald-Examiner Collection, June 23, 1985) A mother supports her gay son while participating in the Gay Parade and Festival. (Steve Grayson/Herald-Examiner Collection, June 26, 1989) In 1979, Norman Laurila and George Leigh opened the bookstore A Different Light at 4014 Santa Monica Boulevard in the Silver Lake neighborhood in Los Angeles. The store specialized in gay and lesbian literature and publications, often hosting signing tours and reading from LGBTQ writers. A Different Light eventually added locations in West Hollywood, San Francisco, and New York, becoming one of the nation’s largest gay-owned booksellers. Two men (unidentified) in the gay bookstore, “A Different Light,” located at 4014 Santa Monica Boulevard in the Silver Lake district. (Gary Leonard Collection, no date) In 1985, Marine Sergeant Rolf Lindblom, a computer programming instructor at the Marine Corps Reserve Training Center in Chavez Ravine in Los Angeles, petitioned the Corps for an honorable discharge on the grounds that he was homosexual. The 25-year old Lindblom had an exemplary military record, had been named Marine of the Year in Los Angeles, and had two years left of service. The Marine Corps would not consider the petition until Lindblom provided proof of homosexual conduct, proof that Lindblom refused to give as he feared doing so would trigger a court-martial against him. After filing a second request, Corps spokesman said Lindblom had met all requirements for an honorable discharge and such discharge was granted. A crowd gathered outside the Marine Corps Reserve Center in Los Angeles shows support for Sgt. Rolf Lindblom who is seeking an honorable discharge because he is gay. (James Ruebsamen/Herald-Examiner Collection, October 21, 1985) The 2004 LGBT Pride Parade celebrated gay life with lesbian bikers, Mr. Leather 2004 in a black convertible, stilt walkers, latex wearers, drag queen cheerleaders, and a contingency of Episcopalians quietly carrying signs with a powerful message. A group carries the message in the 2004 Gay Pride Parade in West Hollywood. (Douglas McCulloh/Los Angeles Neighborhoods Collection, 2004) Categories Local History Tags briggs initiative, gay activists, gay bookstores, gay parades, gay pride, gay rodeo association, LA Pride, lgbt heritage month, LGBT pride, lgbtq history, los angeles gay community, malcolm boyd, rolf lindblom, west hollywood parades Pete Rodriguez: A Voice for Latinos in Broadcasting Shades of L.A.: Picnics in the Park Marilyn White – An Olympian Forever Shades of L.A.: The Filipino American Experience Heritage Reclaimed: The Story of Glenda Ahhaitty © 2023 LAPL Photo Friends • Built with GeneratePress
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/8448
{"url": "http://photofriends.org/tag/la-pride/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "photofriends.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:16:51Z", "digest": "sha1:VDOZRGLFIXD6MUMZ2BN5KEEL5LB5D2MY"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5598, 5598.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5598, 5762.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5598, 30.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5598, 42.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5598, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5598, 234.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5598, 0.25988701]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5598, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5598, 0.01795096]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5598, 0.01795096]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5598, 0.01795096]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5598, 0.01795096]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5598, 0.01795096]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5598, 0.02189142]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5598, 0.01313485]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5598, 0.00963222]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5598, 0.03201507]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5598, 0.19397363]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5598, 0.50580046]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5598, 5.29930394]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5598, 5.48791897]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5598, 862.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 39, 0.0], [39, 53, 0.0], [53, 93, 0.0], [93, 120, 0.0], [120, 143, 0.0], [143, 165, 0.0], [165, 227, 0.0], [227, 256, 0.0], [256, 764, 1.0], [764, 1474, 1.0], [1474, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 2211, 1.0], [2211, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2809, 1.0], [2809, 2965, 0.0], [2965, 3105, 0.0], [3105, 3547, 1.0], [3547, 3716, 0.0], [3716, 4446, 1.0], [4446, 4675, 0.0], [4675, 4922, 1.0], [4922, 5060, 0.0], [5060, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5376, 0.0], [5376, 5412, 0.0], [5412, 5448, 0.0], [5448, 5497, 0.0], [5497, 5546, 0.0], [5546, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 39, 0.0], [39, 53, 0.0], [53, 93, 0.0], [93, 120, 0.0], [120, 143, 0.0], [143, 165, 0.0], [165, 227, 0.0], [227, 256, 0.0], [256, 764, 0.0], [764, 1474, 0.0], [1474, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 2211, 0.0], [2211, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2809, 0.0], [2809, 2965, 0.0], [2965, 3105, 0.0], [3105, 3547, 0.0], [3547, 3716, 0.0], [3716, 4446, 0.0], [4446, 4675, 0.0], [4675, 4922, 0.0], [4922, 5060, 0.0], [5060, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5376, 0.0], [5376, 5412, 0.0], [5412, 5448, 0.0], [5448, 5497, 0.0], [5497, 5546, 0.0], [5546, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 20, 3.0], [20, 39, 2.0], [39, 53, 3.0], [53, 93, 7.0], [93, 120, 3.0], [120, 143, 4.0], [143, 165, 3.0], [165, 227, 9.0], [227, 256, 6.0], [256, 764, 79.0], [764, 1474, 115.0], [1474, 1736, 37.0], [1736, 2211, 73.0], [2211, 2400, 27.0], [2400, 2809, 65.0], [2809, 2965, 24.0], [2965, 3105, 20.0], [3105, 3547, 67.0], [3547, 3716, 26.0], [3716, 4446, 117.0], [4446, 4675, 34.0], [4675, 4922, 37.0], [4922, 5060, 20.0], [5060, 5324, 37.0], [5324, 5376, 8.0], [5376, 5412, 7.0], [5412, 5448, 6.0], [5448, 5497, 7.0], [5497, 5546, 7.0], [5546, 5598, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 39, 0.0], [39, 53, 0.0], [53, 93, 0.0], [93, 120, 0.0], [120, 143, 0.18181818], [143, 165, 0.0], [165, 227, 0.0], [227, 256, 0.18518519], [256, 764, 0.0], [764, 1474, 0.02023121], [1474, 1736, 0.01992032], [1736, 2211, 0.01304348], [2211, 2400, 0.05586592], [2400, 2809, 0.01], [2809, 2965, 0.04054054], [2965, 3105, 0.04545455], [3105, 3547, 0.01851852], [3547, 3716, 0.025], [3716, 4446, 0.00837989], [4446, 4675, 0.02727273], [4675, 4922, 0.0334728], [4922, 5060, 0.06060606], [5060, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5376, 0.0], [5376, 5412, 0.0], [5412, 5448, 0.0], [5448, 5497, 0.0], [5497, 5546, 0.0], [5546, 5598, 0.07692308]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 39, 0.0], [39, 53, 0.0], [53, 93, 0.0], [93, 120, 0.0], [120, 143, 0.0], [143, 165, 0.0], [165, 227, 0.0], [227, 256, 0.0], [256, 764, 0.0], [764, 1474, 0.0], [1474, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 2211, 0.0], [2211, 2400, 0.0], [2400, 2809, 0.0], [2809, 2965, 0.0], [2965, 3105, 0.0], [3105, 3547, 0.0], [3547, 3716, 0.0], [3716, 4446, 0.0], [4446, 4675, 0.0], [4675, 4922, 0.0], [4922, 5060, 0.0], [5060, 5324, 0.0], [5324, 5376, 0.0], [5376, 5412, 0.0], [5412, 5448, 0.0], [5448, 5497, 0.0], [5497, 5546, 0.0], [5546, 5598, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 20, 0.15], [20, 39, 0.10526316], [39, 53, 0.21428571], [53, 93, 0.125], [93, 120, 0.14814815], [120, 143, 0.13043478], [143, 165, 0.13636364], [165, 227, 0.17741935], [227, 256, 0.10344828], [256, 764, 0.04724409], [764, 1474, 0.03943662], [1474, 1736, 0.05725191], [1736, 2211, 0.05263158], [2211, 2400, 0.07407407], [2400, 2809, 0.05378973], [2809, 2965, 0.1025641], [2965, 3105, 0.07142857], [3105, 3547, 0.0678733], [3547, 3716, 0.07100592], [3716, 4446, 0.03972603], [4446, 4675, 0.069869], [4675, 4922, 0.04048583], [4922, 5060, 0.0942029], [5060, 5324, 0.04166667], [5324, 5376, 0.11538462], [5376, 5412, 0.13888889], [5412, 5448, 0.13888889], [5448, 5497, 0.14285714], [5497, 5546, 0.12244898], [5546, 5598, 0.17307692]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5598, 0.55588377]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5598, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5598, 0.92553484]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5598, -230.10873242]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5598, 16.14975256]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5598, 146.98115962]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5598, 46.0]]}
Panel acquits US airman of 2022 insider attack in Syria By Rachel S. Cohen Wednesday, Mar 15 Then-Staff Sgt. David Dezwaan, left, and Airman 1st Class Alex Nona, 60th Civil Engineer Squadron explosive ordnance disposal technicians, conduct radioactive detection methods during an exercise May 5, 2016, at Clear Lake, Calif. (Senior Airman Bobby Cummings/Air Force) This story was updated at 11:35 p.m. on March 15 to include a comment from the Air Force. An American airman accused of attacking his fellow troops on a U.S. military outpost in Syria last year was acquitted of all charges Wednesday at the end of an eight-day court-martial, a civilian attorney advising the defendant told Air Force Times. Air Force Tech. Sgt. David Dezwaan, an enlisted explosive ordnance disposal technician with the active-duty 775th Civil Engineer Squadron at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, was charged with three violations of military code: destruction of military property; reckless endangerment, and aggravated assault. The U.S. government argued that Dezwaan set up explosives that injured four service members — including himself — at Green Village, a small U.S. military base in northern Syria, in April 2022. The airman, who had served as his squadron’s noncommissioned officer in charge of EOD equipment, was deployed as an explosives specialist at the time. Around $50,000 worth of military equipment was destroyed in the blasts, which struck after 1 a.m. local time, the publication Coffee or Die reported in September. Military lawyers used soil samples, bomb fragments and metal shavings to make their case against Dezwaan. Airman accused of insider attack in Syria headed to court-martial The trial of the explosive ordnance disposal technician is slated to run March 6-16 at Hill Air Force Base, Utah. The injured troops were treated for traumatic brain injuries and returned to work later that month. It remains unclear how the attack came to fruition. Coffee or Die reported that officials initially believed insurgents set the explosives, but targeted Dezwaan after uncovering text messages that Air Force lawyers said expressed dissatisfaction with his deployment. Dezwaan was arrested in the United States on June 16, 2022, and placed in pretrial confinement at the Weber County Correctional Facility. His court-martial began the week of March 6. A panel of three enlisted troops and five officers deliberated for six hours before issuing their verdict, said Phil Cave, a military law attorney at the Virginia-based firm Cave & Freeburg. “We are pleased that the members found Tech. Sgt. Dezwaan innocent of all charges relating to an attack on MSS Green Village, Syria, in 2022,” Cave said in an email Wednesday. “He has served his country honorably for 15 years. He has been released from pretrial confinement and is back with his loving family who were present throughout the trial, along with many other members of the EOD community in his support.” Trial counsel representing the government included Maj. Megan Ortner, Maj. Jasmine Prokscha, Capt. Taylor Brown, and Capt. Matias Montillano, according to the Air Force docket. Dezwaan was represented by Capt. Luke Harle, Capt. Nathan Wiebenga and Maj. Luke Gilhooly. Air Force bomb disposal tech charged in April insider attack in Syria Tech. Sgt. David Wayne Dezwaan Jr., is accused of several violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Dezwaan enlisted in 2007 and has received the Joint Service Achievement Medal as well as multiple service-level awards, according to the Air Force Personnel Center. He earned the Air Force Combat Action Medal for engaging in a firefight with enemy fighters while deployed with the Marine Corps to Afghanistan’s Helmand province in 2009. About 900 U.S. personnel remain in Syria to advise and assist the Syrian Democratic Forces fighting government troops in the country’s civil war. “I am grateful for the close collaboration with the leadership teams at Air Force Materiel Command and Hill Air Force Base over the duration of this case. We appreciate the efforts of everyone involved and continue to trust the Air Force’s judicial process,” Air Forces Central commander Lt. Gen. Alexus Grynkewich said in a statement Wednesday night. About Rachel S. Cohen Rachel Cohen joined Air Force Times as senior reporter in March 2021. Her work has appeared in Air Force Magazine, Inside Defense, Inside Health Policy, the Frederick News-Post (Md.), the Washington Post, and others. Tech. Sgt. David DezwaanGreen Villageinsider attackexplosivesSyriacourt-martialAir Forcemilitary trialHill Air Force Base
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/8610
{"url": "https://beta.airforcetimes.com/news/your-air-force/2023/03/15/panel-acquits-us-airman-of-2022-insider-attack-in-syria/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "beta.airforcetimes.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:29:11Z", "digest": "sha1:BESIIFMFTEJ2NSV5DFGVEI2LF56WHSQQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4599, 4599.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4599, 8336.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4599, 25.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4599, 133.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4599, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4599, 282.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4599, 0.26940639]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4599, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4599, 0.02346041]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4599, 0.01173021]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4599, 0.03199147]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4599, 0.01173021]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4599, 0.01599573]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4599, 0.01826484]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4599, 0.17694064]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4599, 0.51456311]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4599, 5.20249653]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4599, 5.42220263]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4599, 721.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 75, 0.0], [75, 93, 0.0], [93, 365, 0.0], [365, 455, 1.0], [455, 705, 1.0], [705, 1006, 1.0], [1006, 1350, 1.0], [1350, 1619, 1.0], [1619, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1799, 1.0], [1799, 1899, 1.0], [1899, 2166, 1.0], [2166, 2349, 1.0], [2349, 2540, 1.0], [2540, 2956, 1.0], [2956, 3224, 1.0], [3224, 3294, 0.0], [3294, 3404, 1.0], [3404, 3741, 1.0], [3741, 3887, 1.0], [3887, 4239, 1.0], [4239, 4261, 0.0], [4261, 4478, 1.0], [4478, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 75, 0.0], [75, 93, 0.0], [93, 365, 0.0], [365, 455, 0.0], [455, 705, 0.0], [705, 1006, 0.0], [1006, 1350, 0.0], [1350, 1619, 0.0], [1619, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1799, 0.0], [1799, 1899, 0.0], [1899, 2166, 0.0], [2166, 2349, 0.0], [2349, 2540, 0.0], [2540, 2956, 0.0], [2956, 3224, 0.0], [3224, 3294, 0.0], [3294, 3404, 0.0], [3404, 3741, 0.0], [3741, 3887, 0.0], [3887, 4239, 0.0], [4239, 4261, 0.0], [4261, 4478, 0.0], [4478, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 56, 10.0], [56, 75, 4.0], [75, 93, 3.0], [93, 365, 38.0], [365, 455, 18.0], [455, 705, 41.0], [705, 1006, 42.0], [1006, 1350, 56.0], [1350, 1619, 42.0], [1619, 1685, 10.0], [1685, 1799, 20.0], [1799, 1899, 16.0], [1899, 2166, 38.0], [2166, 2349, 30.0], [2349, 2540, 30.0], [2540, 2956, 72.0], [2956, 3224, 39.0], [3224, 3294, 12.0], [3294, 3404, 18.0], [3404, 3741, 53.0], [3741, 3887, 23.0], [3887, 4239, 57.0], [4239, 4261, 4.0], [4261, 4478, 34.0], [4478, 4599, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 56, 0.07272727], [56, 75, 0.0], [75, 93, 0.125], [93, 365, 0.03100775], [365, 455, 0.07058824], [455, 705, 0.0], [705, 1006, 0.01034483], [1006, 1350, 0.01201201], [1350, 1619, 0.02316602], [1619, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1799, 0.02727273], [1799, 1899, 0.0], [1899, 2166, 0.0], [2166, 2349, 0.03954802], [2349, 2540, 0.0], [2540, 2956, 0.01477833], [2956, 3224, 0.0], [3224, 3294, 0.0], [3294, 3404, 0.0], [3404, 3741, 0.02409639], [3741, 3887, 0.02112676], [3887, 4239, 0.0], [4239, 4261, 0.0], [4261, 4478, 0.0195122], [4478, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 75, 0.0], [75, 93, 0.0], [93, 365, 0.0], [365, 455, 0.0], [455, 705, 0.0], [705, 1006, 0.0], [1006, 1350, 0.0], [1350, 1619, 0.0], [1619, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1799, 0.0], [1799, 1899, 0.0], [1899, 2166, 0.0], [2166, 2349, 0.0], [2349, 2540, 0.0], [2540, 2956, 0.0], [2956, 3224, 0.0], [3224, 3294, 0.0], [3294, 3404, 0.0], [3404, 3741, 0.0], [3741, 3887, 0.0], [3887, 4239, 0.0], [4239, 4261, 0.0], [4261, 4478, 0.0], [4478, 4599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 56, 0.07142857], [56, 75, 0.21052632], [75, 93, 0.11111111], [93, 365, 0.08088235], [365, 455, 0.04444444], [455, 705, 0.036], [705, 1006, 0.04651163], [1006, 1350, 0.04069767], [1350, 1619, 0.02230483], [1619, 1685, 0.03030303], [1685, 1799, 0.06140351], [1799, 1899, 0.01], [1899, 2166, 0.02247191], [2166, 2349, 0.05464481], [2349, 2540, 0.03141361], [2540, 2956, 0.04086538], [2956, 3224, 0.09328358], [3224, 3294, 0.05714286], [3294, 3404, 0.09090909], [3404, 3741, 0.05637982], [3741, 3887, 0.04794521], [3887, 4239, 0.05681818], [4239, 4261, 0.18181818], [4261, 4478, 0.09677419], [4478, 4599, 0.10743802]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4599, 0.59837681]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4599, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4599, 0.99296528]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4599, -204.257565]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4599, 57.08199911]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4599, 89.69623524]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4599, 63.0]]}
Lake Vyrnwy (Breathing LIFE into Welsh blanket bogs) Practical restoration work at two Special Areas of Conservation in mid-Wales has aimed to bring the blanket bog in these two locations into favourable condition. Work has included a combination of ditch blocking, plantation forestry removal and the extraction of invasive, non-native plant species. It is estimated that 70,000 ha of deep blanket peat soils occur in Wales, although probably more than 10% of this no longer supports blanket bog vegetation. The LIFE Active Blanket Bog in Wales project aimed to achieve significant and sustained improvement in the condition of blanket bogs across key areas of two Special Areas of Conservation (SAC) in mid-Wales: The Berwyn and South Clwyd Mountains SAC (27,221 ha) The Migneint-Arenig-Dduallt SAC (19,968 ha). The primary problems affecting the condition of blanket bog in the project areas included drainage ditches, forestry plantations, inappropriate grazing levels and encroachment by non-native species. In addition to practical restoration work, the project wanted to increase the knowledge and understanding of blanket bog habitats in order to improve their future management. This project has been successful at many levels, changing attitudes locally and bringing blanket bogs and their importance to the notice of decision makers and policy makers. The combination of practical work on a landscape scale, supported by rigorous monitoring and cutting edge science has enabled this high profile project to help inform policy across the whole of Wales and has contributed to the understanding of this ecosystem on a UK and international platform. The moorlands of Wales are a significant part of Welsh cultural heritage. Working with the local farming community was of particular importance to this project as this was the first time practical upland restoration work had been carried out in the area. Farmers were invited to visit the project in conjunction with an extensive programme of community events, such as guided walks and talks, attendance at local shows and a large school education programme. Initially there was considerable unease about the management programme, however towards the end of the project a significant shift in perception was observed. The LIFE project has been successful in restoring significant areas of important habitat, developing skills, refining techniques and gaining the interest and support of the local community. The project far exceeded its targets for restoration work, rewetting a total of 7,200 ha of upland habitat. In total 485 km of grips were blocked, 249 ha of forestry plantation was removed and non-native plant species were removed across an area of 6,300 ha. Furthermore, the associated scientific knowledge gained during this project has also helped add to the understanding of moorland management and its effect on climate. Farms in the catchment also produce organic wool, and organic Welsh black beef and Welsh mountain lamb. As well as being used as a conservation tool for habitat management purposes, sheep and cattle form the basis of a commercial farming operations, which contribute to the local economy. Countryside Council for Wales Forestry Commission. {"zoom":15,"lat":52.7634811,"lon":-3.4667921,"markers":{"0":{"lat":52.76065288,"lon":-3.45874552}}} Project Name: Lake Vyrnwy (Breathing LIFE into Welsh blanket bogs) Organisation / Lead partner: RSPB Location: Lake Vyrnwy, Wales Approximate area covered: 5479 ha Conservation Status: Special Area of Conservation (SAC), Special Protection Area (SPA), Nature Reserve (NR) Project Type: Restoration, Management, Citizen science/ community engagement. EU LIFE Project Description
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/9675
{"url": "https://www.iucn-uk-peatlandprogramme.org/projects/lake-vyrnwy-breathing-life-welsh-blanket-bogs-0?destination=/projects-map", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.iucn-uk-peatlandprogramme.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:55:57Z", "digest": "sha1:QZWFTDX6YYPLJTPNEIHHJKTV3HC7MRBL"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3709, 3709.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3709, 7603.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3709, 19.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3709, 137.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3709, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3709, 274.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3709, 0.00161769]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3709, 0.29210134]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3709, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3709, 0.04733728]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3709, 0.02827087]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3709, 0.02827087]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3709, 0.02827087]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3709, 0.01643655]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3709, 0.01183432]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3709, 0.01512163]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3709, 0.02086438]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3709, 0.17883756]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3709, 0.48540146]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3709, 5.55109489]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3709, 5.04122716]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3709, 548.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 352, 1.0], [352, 716, 0.0], [716, 769, 0.0], [769, 814, 1.0], [814, 1188, 1.0], [1188, 1658, 1.0], [1658, 2276, 1.0], [2276, 3181, 1.0], [3181, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3232, 1.0], [3232, 3332, 0.0], [3332, 3399, 0.0], [3399, 3433, 0.0], [3433, 3462, 0.0], [3462, 3496, 0.0], [3496, 3604, 0.0], [3604, 3682, 1.0], [3682, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 352, 0.0], [352, 716, 0.0], [716, 769, 0.0], [769, 814, 0.0], [814, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1658, 0.0], [1658, 2276, 0.0], [2276, 3181, 0.0], [3181, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3232, 0.0], [3232, 3332, 0.0], [3332, 3399, 0.0], [3399, 3433, 0.0], [3433, 3462, 0.0], [3462, 3496, 0.0], [3496, 3604, 0.0], [3604, 3682, 0.0], [3682, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 53, 8.0], [53, 352, 44.0], [352, 716, 60.0], [716, 769, 9.0], [769, 814, 5.0], [814, 1188, 52.0], [1188, 1658, 74.0], [1658, 2276, 97.0], [2276, 3181, 143.0], [3181, 3211, 4.0], [3211, 3232, 2.0], [3232, 3332, 1.0], [3332, 3399, 10.0], [3399, 3433, 4.0], [3433, 3462, 4.0], [3462, 3496, 5.0], [3496, 3604, 14.0], [3604, 3682, 8.0], [3682, 3709, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 352, 0.0], [352, 716, 0.01971831], [716, 769, 0.10204082], [769, 814, 0.13157895], [814, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1658, 0.0], [1658, 2276, 0.0], [2276, 3181, 0.01578354], [3181, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3232, 0.0], [3232, 3332, 0.62903226], [3332, 3399, 0.0], [3399, 3433, 0.0], [3433, 3462, 0.0], [3462, 3496, 0.125], [3496, 3604, 0.0], [3604, 3682, 0.0], [3682, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 53, 0.0], [53, 352, 0.0], [352, 716, 0.0], [716, 769, 0.0], [769, 814, 0.0], [814, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1658, 0.0], [1658, 2276, 0.0], [2276, 3181, 0.0], [3181, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3232, 0.0], [3232, 3332, 0.0], [3332, 3399, 0.0], [3399, 3433, 0.0], [3433, 3462, 0.0], [3462, 3496, 0.0], [3496, 3604, 0.0], [3604, 3682, 0.0], [3682, 3709, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.1509434], [53, 352, 0.02006689], [352, 716, 0.04945055], [716, 769, 0.1509434], [769, 814, 0.15555556], [814, 1188, 0.00534759], [1188, 1658, 0.0106383], [1658, 2276, 0.00970874], [2276, 3181, 0.01325967], [3181, 3211, 0.1], [3211, 3232, 0.0952381], [3232, 3332, 0.0], [3332, 3399, 0.14925373], [3399, 3433, 0.17647059], [3433, 3462, 0.13793103], [3462, 3496, 0.02941176], [3496, 3604, 0.16666667], [3604, 3682, 0.06410256], [3682, 3709, 0.2962963]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3709, 0.3589077]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3709, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3709, 0.65682411]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3709, -171.40501065]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3709, 4.62355463]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3709, 73.21312374]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3709, 25.0]]}
India Author: reporter - August 17, 2019 Arun Jaitley on life support: Amit Shah, President Kovind visit AIIMS as former finance minister’s health goes critical Arun Jaitley been put on life support. According to sources, the veteran Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) leader is critical. Jaitley has been put on extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO), The Hindu reported citing hospital sources. ECMO is used for those whose lungs and heart are incapable of operating on its own. The 66-year-old was admitted to the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) on August 9 after he had complained of restlessness and breathlessness. A multidisciplinary team of doctors at AIIMS has been appointed to supervise his treatment. Jaitley was admitted to AIIMS in May as well. He did not contest the 2019 Lok Sabha election because of his ill health. AIIMS has not issued any official statement on Jaitley’s health since August 10. Jaitley is under observation in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). On August 17, many politicians visited AIIMS to visit Jaitley and ask him about his health. Those who visited included Union minister Piyush Goyal, Congress leaders Abhishek Singhvi and Jyotiraditya Scindia, and Bihar Chief Minister Nitish Kumar. BSP chief and former Uttar Pradesh chief minister Mayawati was also one of the visitors, according to tweet posted on her official handle. She also said that she consoled Jaitley’s family and prayed for his health. On August 16, various prominent BJP leaders visited Jaitley at the hospital. Union Minister Harsh Vardhan, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath and Home Minister Amit Shah were among the ones who met the former finance minister. President Ram Nath Kovind, too, visited the hospital to meet Jaitley. Jaitley, a lawyer by profession, had been an important part in Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Cabinet in the BJP government’s first term. He held the finance and defence portfolios, and often acted as the chief troubleshooter of the government. He had undergone a renal transplant in May 2018 at AIIMS with Railways Minister Piyush Goyal filling in for him in the finance ministry at that time. Jaitley, who had stopped attending office since early April last year, was back in the finance ministry on August 23, 2018. In September 2014, he underwent bariatric surgery to correct the weight he had gained because of a long-standing diabetic condition. Arun Jaitley on life support: Amit Shah, President Kovind visit AIIMS as former finance minister’s health goes critical 0 out of 5 based on 0 ratings. 0 user reviews. Shweta Tiwari’s Daughter Palak Speaks Up in Case Against Abhinav Kohli, Says ‘He Made Disturbing Remarks’ In another setback, US cuts $440 million financial aid to Pakistan India March 18, 2023 Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday released the postal stamp and unveiled the official coin… Govt nod to acquire defence hardware worth Rs 70,500 crore The Defence Acquisition Council (DAC), headed by Defence Minister Rajnath Singh, on Thursday accorded Acceptance… Modi govt loud on United Kingdom, silent on Adani: Congress Whatever Rahul Gandhi says riles the BJP and the Narendra Modi government, triggering a torrent…
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/9764
{"url": "https://www.mynews.in/national-news/arun-jaitleys-health-critical-amit-shah-president-kovind-meet/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.mynews.in", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:19:13Z", "digest": "sha1:FCDSIOAFNJ6WNAT3APF7M4FYPYUQYFV2"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3202, 3202.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3202, 9392.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3202, 23.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3202, 104.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3202, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3202, 227.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3202, 0.29470199]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3202, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3202, 0.07636502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3202, 0.07636502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3202, 0.07636502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3202, 0.07636502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3202, 0.07636502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3202, 0.07636502]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3202, 0.0122184]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3202, 0.01489118]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3202, 0.01298205]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3202, 0.03145695]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3202, 0.13043478]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3202, 0.16887417]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3202, 0.54598826]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3202, 5.12524462]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3202, 0.00496689]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3202, 5.23777346]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3202, 511.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 161, 0.0], [161, 283, 1.0], [283, 480, 1.0], [480, 728, 1.0], [728, 848, 1.0], [848, 992, 1.0], [992, 1239, 1.0], [1239, 1454, 1.0], [1454, 1761, 1.0], [1761, 2006, 1.0], [2006, 2156, 1.0], [2156, 2280, 1.0], [2280, 2413, 1.0], [2413, 2580, 1.0], [2580, 2686, 0.0], [2686, 2753, 0.0], [2753, 2774, 0.0], [2774, 2873, 0.0], [2873, 2932, 0.0], [2932, 3046, 0.0], [3046, 3106, 0.0], [3106, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 161, 0.0], [161, 283, 0.0], [283, 480, 0.0], [480, 728, 0.0], [728, 848, 0.0], [848, 992, 0.0], [992, 1239, 0.0], [1239, 1454, 0.0], [1454, 1761, 0.0], [1761, 2006, 0.0], [2006, 2156, 0.0], [2156, 2280, 0.0], [2280, 2413, 0.0], [2413, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2686, 0.0], [2686, 2753, 0.0], [2753, 2774, 0.0], [2774, 2873, 0.0], [2873, 2932, 0.0], [2932, 3046, 0.0], [3046, 3106, 0.0], [3106, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 41, 6.0], [41, 161, 18.0], [161, 283, 19.0], [283, 480, 31.0], [480, 728, 38.0], [728, 848, 23.0], [848, 992, 23.0], [992, 1239, 37.0], [1239, 1454, 36.0], [1454, 1761, 48.0], [1761, 2006, 39.0], [2006, 2156, 27.0], [2156, 2280, 21.0], [2280, 2413, 20.0], [2413, 2580, 29.0], [2580, 2686, 16.0], [2686, 2753, 11.0], [2753, 2774, 4.0], [2774, 2873, 15.0], [2873, 2932, 10.0], [2932, 3046, 15.0], [3046, 3106, 10.0], [3106, 3202, 15.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.16666667], [41, 161, 0.0], [161, 283, 0.0], [283, 480, 0.0], [480, 728, 0.01244813], [728, 848, 0.03418803], [848, 992, 0.01438849], [992, 1239, 0.00829876], [1239, 1454, 0.0], [1454, 1761, 0.00668896], [1761, 2006, 0.0], [2006, 2156, 0.02702703], [2156, 2280, 0.05042017], [2280, 2413, 0.03100775], [2413, 2580, 0.02469136], [2580, 2686, 0.0], [2686, 2753, 0.046875], [2753, 2774, 0.31578947], [2774, 2873, 0.0], [2873, 2932, 0.0877193], [2932, 3046, 0.0], [3046, 3106, 0.0], [3106, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 41, 0.0], [41, 161, 0.0], [161, 283, 0.0], [283, 480, 0.0], [480, 728, 0.0], [728, 848, 0.0], [848, 992, 0.0], [992, 1239, 0.0], [1239, 1454, 0.0], [1454, 1761, 0.0], [1761, 2006, 0.0], [2006, 2156, 0.0], [2156, 2280, 0.0], [2280, 2413, 0.0], [2413, 2580, 0.0], [2580, 2686, 0.0], [2686, 2753, 0.0], [2753, 2774, 0.0], [2774, 2873, 0.0], [2873, 2932, 0.0], [2932, 3046, 0.0], [3046, 3106, 0.0], [3106, 3202, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 41, 0.07317073], [41, 161, 0.09166667], [161, 283, 0.07377049], [283, 480, 0.05583756], [480, 728, 0.07258065], [728, 848, 0.08333333], [848, 992, 0.09722222], [992, 1239, 0.08906883], [1239, 1454, 0.0372093], [1454, 1761, 0.08143322], [1761, 2006, 0.04081633], [2006, 2156, 0.07333333], [2156, 2280, 0.02419355], [2280, 2413, 0.01503759], [2413, 2580, 0.06586826], [2580, 2686, 0.14150943], [2686, 2753, 0.05970149], [2753, 2774, 0.0952381], [2774, 2873, 0.05050505], [2873, 2932, 0.03389831], [2932, 3046, 0.11403509], [3046, 3106, 0.08333333], [3106, 3202, 0.08333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3202, 0.47885883]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3202, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3202, 0.96576923]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3202, -132.0523624]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3202, 56.89996926]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3202, 53.04183752]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3202, 25.0]]}
Grab's Q3 revenue near pre-pandemic level, says firm's president Grab's food business now generates more than 50 per cent of revenue. ST PHOTO: KELVIN CHNG https://str.sg/J66Z SINGAPORE (THE BUSINESS TIMES) - Ride-hailing and food-delivery firm Grab has logged in a Q3 group revenue that is more than 95 per cent of that of pre-Covid-19 levels, the Singapore-headquartered firm's president Ming Maa said in an e-mailed newsletter on Thursday (Oct 22). Grab's food business, in particular, now generates more than 50 per cent of revenue, "reflecting increased consumer demand for food delivery in the new normal", he added. The company's other key verticals include ride-hailing and financial services. The announcement comes months after Grab's ride-hailing business was disrupted by pandemic lockdown measures across South-east Asia. In June, the firm, which has yet to turn a profit, laid off about 360 employees, or close to 5 per cent of its headcount. But it now has more than 270 openings across the region listed on its careers portal. The portal also shows that it is on the lookout for senior talent for digital banking in Singapore. There are about 20 job openings in this or related areas listed on the portal. The senior positions for the digital bank include chief financial officer, chief risk officer, credit risk head for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and retail, head of compliance, head of deposits and head of cards and unsecured lending. Other digital bank-related openings include roles in AML (anti-money laundering) operations, data science, quality-assurance engineering, data governance and legal counsel. Grab is in the running for a digital banking licence in Singapore via a joint venture with Singtel. Back in April, the joint venture hired Charles Wong, Citigroup's former retail banking head in Singapore, to be the senior managing director of the digital bank as it starts up. In the Thursday newsletter, Mr Maa said that Grab continues to receive strong support from investors. Last month, Grab clinched a US$200 million investment from South Korean private equity firm STIC Investments. Grab will focus on growing its financial services and merchant services businesses for the rest of the year. It will also work with governments to help micro SMEs digitalise, especially in rural areas, he added. For instance, Grab last month expanded its ride-hailing, digital payments and delivery services to more rural areas in Malaysia. In Indonesia, it partnered over 30 regional and city governments to co-create digitalisation programmes for micro SMEs. SMRT ditches taxi display terminal for enhanced Grab app New private-hire drivers must be Singaporean, aged 30 and above Between March and September, more than 350,000 SMEs and over 32,000 micro merchants, such as wet market stall owners, used Grab services to go online. These services include online-to-offline commerce service GrabKios, grocery delivery service GrabMart, food-delivery services GrabFood and on-demand grocery shopper service GrabAssistant. Meanwhile, Grab's financial services arm is clocking strong growth, Mr Maa said. The insurance business has distributed over 20 million insurance policies since April 2019. Singapore companies
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/9902
{"url": "https://www.straitstimes.com/business/companies-markets/grabs-q3-revenue-near-pre-pandemic-level-says-firms-president", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.straitstimes.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T11:00:35Z", "digest": "sha1:HNSJ6U5GGDO3ODNWWT4TCNGVHPLM363I"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3246, 3246.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3246, 7316.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3246, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3246, 273.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3246, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3246, 296.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3246, 0.28571429]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3246, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3246, 0.02877698]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3246, 0.02877698]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3246, 0.02877698]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3246, 0.02877698]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3246, 0.02877698]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3246, 0.01514578]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3246, 0.0136312]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3246, 0.01514578]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3246, 0.02354788]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3246, 0.19152276]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3246, 0.53521127]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3246, 5.3138833]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3246, 5.22584792]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3246, 497.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 65, 0.0], [65, 156, 0.0], [156, 176, 0.0], [176, 452, 1.0], [452, 702, 1.0], [702, 957, 1.0], [957, 1222, 1.0], [1222, 1470, 1.0], [1470, 1643, 1.0], [1643, 1921, 1.0], [1921, 2133, 1.0], [2133, 2594, 1.0], [2594, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2715, 0.0], [2715, 3054, 1.0], [3054, 3227, 1.0], [3227, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 65, 0.0], [65, 156, 0.0], [156, 176, 0.0], [176, 452, 0.0], [452, 702, 0.0], [702, 957, 0.0], [957, 1222, 0.0], [1222, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1921, 0.0], [1921, 2133, 0.0], [2133, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2715, 0.0], [2715, 3054, 0.0], [3054, 3227, 0.0], [3227, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 65, 9.0], [65, 156, 16.0], [156, 176, 1.0], [176, 452, 43.0], [452, 702, 37.0], [702, 957, 42.0], [957, 1222, 49.0], [1222, 1470, 38.0], [1470, 1643, 20.0], [1643, 1921, 48.0], [1921, 2133, 32.0], [2133, 2594, 71.0], [2594, 2651, 9.0], [2651, 2715, 10.0], [2715, 3054, 45.0], [3054, 3227, 25.0], [3227, 3246, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 65, 0.01666667], [65, 156, 0.02298851], [156, 176, 0.14285714], [176, 452, 0.02692308], [452, 702, 0.00840336], [702, 957, 0.01632653], [957, 1222, 0.01915709], [1222, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1921, 0.0], [1921, 2133, 0.01456311], [2133, 2594, 0.00445434], [2594, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2715, 0.03278689], [2715, 3054, 0.03384615], [3054, 3227, 0.03592814], [3227, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 65, 0.0], [65, 156, 0.0], [156, 176, 0.0], [176, 452, 0.0], [452, 702, 0.0], [702, 957, 0.0], [957, 1222, 0.0], [1222, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1643, 0.0], [1643, 1921, 0.0], [1921, 2133, 0.0], [2133, 2594, 0.0], [2594, 2651, 0.0], [2651, 2715, 0.0], [2715, 3054, 0.0], [3054, 3227, 0.0], [3227, 3246, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 65, 0.03076923], [65, 156, 0.1978022], [156, 176, 0.1], [176, 452, 0.12318841], [452, 702, 0.008], [702, 957, 0.02352941], [957, 1222, 0.01509434], [1222, 1470, 0.01612903], [1470, 1643, 0.02312139], [1643, 1921, 0.0323741], [1921, 2133, 0.0754717], [2133, 2594, 0.02819957], [2594, 2651, 0.0877193], [2651, 2715, 0.03125], [2715, 3054, 0.04719764], [3054, 3227, 0.03468208], [3227, 3246, 0.05263158]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3246, 0.86605823]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3246, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3246, 0.94637024]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3246, -171.97605997]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3246, 18.8911126]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3246, -14.09378642]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3246, 25.0]]}
(Redirected from Steam locomotive) L'arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat (The Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Auguste and Louis Lumière. It was first screened on December 28 1895 in Paris, France, and was shown to a paying audience January 6 1896. Train, train, comin' 'round, 'round the bend Train, train, comin' 'round the bend --"Mystery Train" (1953) by Junior Parker "The Europeans (2019) interweaves rail transport, the diffusion of cultural products, the histories of copyright, mechanical reproduction, tourism, 19th century literature, art and music with the personal lives of operatic star Pauline Viardot, her husband Louis Viardot and her lover Ivan Turgenev to sketch a remarkably lively portrait of 19th century Europe."--Sholem Stein "By the railway space is annihilated, and only time remains. [...] In three hours and a half one can now go to Orleans, in the same time to Rouen. What will it be when the lines to Belgium and Germany shall be finished and connected with the railways of those countries? I seem to see the mountains and forests of every country coming to Paris. I smell the perfume of German lime-trees; the billows of the North Sea are bounding and roaring before my door."--French affairs – Letters from Paris. In: Two Volumes. Vol. II. Lutetia () by Heinrich Heine "The terms ‘railway-spine’ and ‘railway-brain,’ which the English and American pathologists have given to certain states of these organs, show that they recognise them as due partly to the effects of railway accidents, partly to the constant vibrations undergone in railway travelling."--Degeneration (1892) by Max Nordau Train wreck at Montparnasse (October 22, 1895) by Studio Lévy and Sons. Rain, Steam and Speed – The Great Western Railway (1844) by William Turner Rail transport (also known as train transport) is a means of transport that transfers passengers and goods on wheeled vehicles running on rails, which are located on tracks. In contrast to road transport, where the vehicles run on a prepared flat surface, rail vehicles (rolling stock) are directionally guided by the tracks on which they run. Tracks usually consist of steel rails, installed on sleepers (ties) set in ballast, on which the rolling stock, usually fitted with metal wheels, moves. Other variations are also possible, such as "slab track", in which the rails are fastened to a concrete foundation resting on a prepared subsurface. Rolling stock in a rail transport system generally encounters lower frictional resistance than rubber-tyred road vehicles, so passenger and freight cars (carriages and wagons) can be coupled into longer trains. The operation is carried out by a railway company, providing transport between train stations or freight customer facilities. Power is provided by locomotives which either draw electric power from a railway electrification system or produce their own power, usually by diesel engines or, historically, steam engines. Most tracks are accompanied by a signalling system. Railways are a safe land transport system when compared to other forms of transport. Railway transport is capable of high levels of passenger and cargo utilisation and energy efficiency, but is often less flexible and more capital-intensive than road transport, when lower traffic levels are considered. The oldest known, man/animal-hauled railways date back to the 6th century BC in Corinth, Greece. Rail transport then commenced in mid 16th century in Germany in the form of horse-powered funiculars and wagonways. Modern rail transport commenced with the British development of the steam locomotive in Merthyr Tydfil when Richard Trevithick ran a steam locomotive and loaded wagons between Penydarren Ironworks and Abercynon in 1802. Thus the railway system in Great Britain is the oldest in the world. Built by George Stephenson and his son Robert's company Robert Stephenson and Company, the Locomotion No. 1 is the first steam locomotive to carry passengers on a public rail line, the Stockton and Darlington Railway in 1825. George Stephenson also built the first public inter-city railway line in the world to use only the steam locomotives, the Liverpool and Manchester Railway which opened in 1830. With steam engines, one could construct mainline railways, which were a key component of the Industrial Revolution. Also, railways reduced the costs of shipping, and allowed for fewer lost goods, compared with water transport, which faced occasional sinking of ships. The change from canals to railways allowed for "national markets" in which prices varied very little from city to city. The spread of the railway network and the use of railway timetables, led to the standardisation of time (railway time) in Britain based on Greenwich Mean Time. Prior to this, major towns and cities varied their local time relative to GMT. The invention and development of the railway in the United Kingdom was one of the most important technological inventions of the 19th century. The world's first underground railway, the Metropolitan Railway (part of the London Underground), opened in 1863. In the 1880s, electrified trains were introduced, leading to electrification of tramways and rapid transit systems. Starting during the 1940s, the non-electrified railways in most countries had their steam locomotives replaced by diesel-electric locomotives, with the process being almost complete by the 2000s. During the 1960s, electrified high-speed railway systems were introduced in Japan and later in some other countries. Many countries are in the process of replacing diesel locomotives with electric locomotives, mainly due to environmental concerns, a notable example being Switzerland, which has completely electrified its network. Other forms of guided ground transport outside the traditional railway definitions, such as monorail or maglev, have been tried but have seen limited use. Following a decline after World War II due to competition from cars and aeroplanes, rail transport has had a revival in recent decades due to road congestion and rising fuel prices, as well as governments investing in rail as a means of reducing CO2 emissions in the context of concerns about global warming. The Arrival of a Train at La Ciotat Station Train wreck at Montparnasse Rain, Steam and Speed – The Great Western Railway by William Turner 1 In fiction 4 Television Examples of railways in fiction include: 3:10 to Yuma (2007), the second adaptation of Elmore Leonard's short story, starred Russell Crowe and Christian Bale. The 39 Steps (1935) - Richard Hannay travels on the Flying Scotsman. The American Friend (Template:Lang-de) (1977), adapted from Patricia Highsmith's novel Ripley's Game, features action sequences in the Paris Métro and on a German train. Back to the Future Part III – the improvised method of propelling the time machine to 88 mph in 1885 was by using a steam locomotive, also Emmett Brown refitted a steam locomotive into a hovertrain as the basis of his new time machine. Brief Encounter (1945) – romantic meetings in a train station Boxcar Bertha (1972) - starring Barbara Hershey as an orphan who turns to robbing trains for survival. Martin Scorsese's first feature film. The Cassandra Crossing (1976) – passengers aboard a transcontinental train face a threat from carrier of plague virus. Cairo Station (1958) – takes place in a train station. Closely Watched Trains – The story takes places at a railway station in World War II in Czechoslovakia under the Nazi occupation. The film is based on Bohumil Hrabal's novel, directed by Jiří Menzel. Creep (2004) - A killer stalks the London Underground. Dancer in the Dark (2000) - A hypnotic musical number is staged on a slow-moving freight train. The Darjeeling Limited (2007) - a comedy-drama by Wes Anderson that is primarily set aboard a luxury train "The Darjeeling Limited". Death Line (1972) – features a killer on the London Underground. Dil Se.. (1998) - features a fantasy musical number, Chaiyya Chaiyya, staged on a moving Nilgiri Mountain Railway train. Double Indemnity (1944) - A murderer stages a fake accident on a train. Emperor of the North Pole (1973) - A Great Depression-era film about hobos starring Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine. The First Great Train Robbery - based on the Great Gold Robbery of 1855. From Russia with Love – James Bond novel and film, confrontation on board of the Orient Express. The Burning Train (1980) - The plot revolves around a train named Super Express that catches fire on its inaugural run from New Delhi to Mumbai. Give My Regards to Broad Street – A day in the life of Paul McCartney. Master tapes to McCartney's new album are stolen. Featuring London Broad Street station. The Great St Trinian's Train Robbery (1969) - a group of train robbers are chased up and down a local railway line by a group of unruly students from a local school. The Great Train Robbery – an influential 1903 silent film based on a true story, also title of a modern film. Horror Express – Anglo-Spanish horror film set aboard the Trans-Siberian Express, on which passengers are killed off one by one. The Lady Vanishes by Alfred Hitchcock – the majority of the plot takes place on a train heading for England. Men in Black and Men in Black II – starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, has aliens living in the subway. Mission: Impossible – sees a helicopter pursuing a TGV train into the Channel Tunnel which runs between Great Britain and France. In reality this type of train does not travel through the Channel Tunnel, and the tunnel shown in the film has double track whereas the real tunnel has two single bores. Miss Potter – Sequences for the film Miss Potter starring Ewan McGregor and Renée Zellweger were filmed at Horsted Keynes station on the Bluebell Railway. Murder on the Orient Express (1974) Based on novel by Agatha Christie, starring Albert Finney, Lauren Bacall, Ingrid Bergman. Murder, She Said – features extensive railway scenes. Based on the novel 4.50 from Paddington by Agatha Christie. The Narrow Margin (1952) - a deadly game of cat-and-mouse aboard a train. Remade under the same title in 1990. Night Mail (1936) - a documentary film about a mail train's trip from London to Scotland. Night Train (1959) - Polish film by Jerzy Kawalerowicz. North by Northwest (1959) - Alfred Hitchcock thriller starring Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint and James Mason. North West Frontier (1959) – A British army officer transports a young prince to safety aboard an antiquated locomotive. Oh, Mr Porter! (1937) - Will Hay film about an incompetent station master in charge of a near-derelict railway station in Northern Ireland. The Olsen Gang on the Track (1975) - A Danish comedy film directed by Erik Balling and starring Ove Sprogøe. Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) - A Spaghetti Western directed by Sergio Leone that deals with a railroad tycoon trying force a widow off her land to make way for his railroad. The Polar Express - a Christmas story about a non-believing young boy and his adventures with Santa Claus Robbery (1967) - based loosely on the Great Train Robbery. Runaway (2009) – National Film Board of Canada animated comedy short about a runaway train. Runaway Train – escaped convicts on a runaway train. Silver Streak - a passenger train is both the primary set and plays a pivotal part in bringing murderers to justice. Speed (1994) - Known mostly for its sequences on a city bus, this film's climax is set on the Los Angeles subway. The Station Agent (2003) - a man who seeks solitude in an abandoned train station in Newfoundland, New Jersey. Strangers on a Train (1951) - Alfred Hitchcock classic thriller. Snowpiercer (2013) - a science fiction post-apocalyptic film directed by Bong Joon Ho about a luxury train that circles around the Earth. Steamboy (2004) - featured extensive railway scenes (including a chase scene between a train, a "steam automotive" and a steam-powered monowheel) around London and Manchester. Terror by Night (1946) - a Sherlock Holmes film, with the story revolving around the theft of a famous diamond aboard a train. Terror Train (1980) - Canadian horror film starring Jamie Lee Curtis. The Taking of Pelham One Two Three – 1974 film adapted from the John Godey novel of the same name about the hijacking of a New York Subway train. The Taking of Pelham 123 - 2009 remake of the 1974 version of the hijacking of the New York Subway train The Titfield Thunderbolt (1953) - set on a country railway threatened with closure and sabotage by a local bus service. Tourist Train (1933) - comic adventures of travellers on Italian railways. The Train (1964) - French Resistance members try to stop a Nazi colonel from transporting priceless works of art aboard a train to Germany. Train of Events (1949) - revolves around the lives of several people involved in a train crash. Under Siege 2: Dark Territory (1995) - sequel of the 1992 film Under Siege about mercenaries who hijacked a passenger train in the Rocky Mountains and ex-Navy SEAL Casey Ryback who tries to stop them. Unstoppable (2010) - tells the story of a runaway freight train and two men who try to stop it. Inspired by the CSX 8888 incident. Volcano – An extension to the subway meets a lava flow. Von Ryan's Express is about World War II POW's escaping by hijacking their train. The Warriors (1979) - many scenes set in and around the New York City Subway. While You Were Sleeping – stars Sandra Bullock as a subway worker who is mistaken for the fiancee of an injured passenger. Zootopia - An express train and freight train are used by the protagonist, and an abandoned subway car is one of the sites of the climax. 4.50 from Paddington (book; film and TV adaptations) – a Miss Marple story. A passenger on one train is witness to a murder being committed on another train. The Adventure of the Lost Locomotive - a Solar Pons story about a disappearing train on the Great Northern Railway. Anna Karenina (book) – by Leo Tolstoy. Train travel is arguably the most prominent motif of the story. "The Celestial Railroad" – Short story by Nathaniel Hawthorne Choo Choo: The Story of a Little Engine Who Ran Away (book, episode adaptation in Shelley Duvall's Bedtime Stories) - A children's book by Virginia Lee Burton The adventures of a beautiful little locomotive who decided to run away from her humdrum duties. The Dark Tower (book series) by Stephen King – The main character Roland of Gilead travels through a series of caves which were once part of an underground railroad system. The characters also ride on a monorail with artificial intelligence. The Devil's Horse, The Poison Tree and The Abyss in Cynthia Harrod-Eagles' The Morland Dynasty series feature the development of steam power and the first railways in Britain. Galaxy Express 999 – From the manga and anime of the same name by Leiji Matsumoto, this train travels the galaxy from planet to planet. Iron Council (book) by China Mieville) – a fantasy novel about the building of a cross-continental railway line. Railsea (book) by China Mieville - a fantasy novel that features railway tracks that represent oceans and sea called "Railsea" and features giant moles ("moldywarpes") that represent whales and boat-like trains. It parodies Herman Melville's Moby-Dick. Jim Stringer: Steam Detective - series of mystery novels by Andrew Martin set on various British railway lines. La Bête humaine – (novel) by Émile Zola, filmed 5 times, e.g. as Cruel Train The Engine Woman’s Light (Laurel Anne Hill) – a spirits-meet-steampunk novel about the heroic journey of a young Latina in an alternate 19th Century California, where trains are used to transport undesirables to a dreaded asylum. The Little Engine That Could – children's book. Also adapted as an animated film in 1991 (see The Little Engine That Could (film)). The Locomotive – dynamic poem for children by Julian Tuwim, filmed by Zbigniew Rybczyński The Lost Special - short story by Arthur Conan Doyle, about the investigation of a special train mysteriously disappearing. Making Tracks (23 Classic Railroad Stories) (2013), ed. by Jon Schlenker and Charles G. Waugh. The Moosepath Saga by Van Reid – All six books in this series feature travel by rail, entailing adventure, comedy, mystery, and romance in late 19th century Maine. The Motion Demon – 1919 (book) horror stories by Stefan Grabiński- Engine Driver Grot; The Wandering Train; The Motion Demon; The Sloven; The Perpetual Passenger; In the Compartment; Signals; The Siding; Ultima Thule. Murder on the Orient Express (book by Agatha Christie, 1934; film) – describes a train journey from Istanbul to Paris aboard the Orient Express during which a murder takes place. Hercule Poirot, riding on the train solves the mystery and justice is served. The Mystery of the Blue Train (book, TV adaptation) – earlier Poirot story in which a murder takes place on a train. The Network (book) – by Laurence Staig. An ancient prophecy is realised one Christmas Eve in the London Underground, a dramatic race against time as 3 people are thrown together to prevent a terrifying catastrophe. Night on the Galactic Railroad (novel, film) - two boys travel on a magical train across the night sky - but there is a deeper meaning to the journey. The Railway Series, British stories about a fictional railway by Rev. W. Awdry, which would later be adapted into the children's show Thomas and Friends. Silver on the Tree, the last book in Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising cycle - approaching the climax of the story, the main characters travel on a mystical train to the final battle between the Light and the Dark Strangers on a Train (novel, film) – tells the story of how two strangers meet on a train and decide to exchange murders so they can't be tied to each other. Taggart Comet (Atlas Shrugged) The Thirty-Nine Steps – (book by John Buchan, films, one by Alfred Hitchcock) features a sequence where the character Richard Hannay escapes from the Police by jumping from a train on the Forth Bridge in Scotland. Via Bodenbach, an experimental novel about a train journey to Berlin by Hungarian novelist Ferenc Körmendi, published in 1932 and widely translated. The Wind in the Willows - an episode in the novel involves the flight of Mr. Toad by rail and a chase-scene with another train full of policemen. Grim Tuesday - The second book in The Keys to the Kingdom series feature a train with SPIKES all over it. Greatwinter Trilogy - A book series featuring trains powered by wind turbines and trains powered by pedaling done by it passengers. Passengers are ranked according to how much they pedal, and those who pedal most get credits towards their fare and priority use of the railside facilities. Red Mars - The first book in the Mars Trilogy feature a train that went around the circumference of the moon and travel fast enough to generate rotatinal gravity, relieving the difficulties of living in microgravity and allowing colonists to acclimate before moving down to the Martian surface colonies. Inverted World - A novel about a large city run on rails. Commonwealth Saga - A novel series feature huge, nuclear-powered trains for interstellar travel (through artificial wormholes). Wheelworld - The second novel in the To the Stars (trilogy) set in an agricultural colony on a planet with very extreme seasons causing the entire colony to escape the brutal summers twice per year by turning into a mobile colony. They did this by jacking up the colony's main buildings on wheels, forming them up behind the colony's nuclear power plants (which now transformed into an enormous locomotive) into a train-like vehicle that run on roads rather than tracks. This make the 12,000 mile trek to the other side of the planet. Dreadnought - The third novel in Cherie Priest Clockwork Century novel, where the main character ride on a Union war locomotive called the Dreadnought. It is used by the Union to terrorize Confederate rail traffic. It's a warship on rails, with a heavily armored engine, plenty of automated guns, and a complement of troops on board. Nightside (book series) - A book series feature subway trains that don't require drivers, it travel through various other dimensions as shortcuts, and heal themselves when damaged. Raising Steam - The 40th Discworld novel feature the first steam locomotive on Discworld called Iron Girder. The Boundless - A novel by Kenneth Oppel set in a train called The Boundless. The Half-Made World - A novel featuring The 38 Engines of the Line which are sentient trains. Nobody knows their exact origin. Freedom Express - The seventh novel in the Wingman series by Mack Maloney feature a ten-mile-long super-train that is heavily armored, heavily armed and is manned by members of the heroic Post-Apocalyptic Badass Army that protects what remains of America. Starcross (novel) - The second novel in the Larklight series feature a space railway in the Asteroid Belt made by the same company that built the Crystal Palace. Quadrail series - A novel series feature an interplanetary metro system, with light-years-long tunnels that snake around the galaxy and connect many interplanetary systems together. The Yellow Arrow - the allegorical story by Victor Pelevin written in 1993. Atomic Train – television film (1999) A runaway train carrying an atomic bomb into a town. Chuggington is a British children's computer-animated television series produced by Ludorum plc. Dad's Army - several episodes were set at Walmington-on-Sea railway station or on the local railway line. Digimon Frontier – features several train like Digimon called Trailmon that run on monorails. Digimon Tamers: The Runaway Digimon Express – features a train like Digimon called Locomon that is controlled by another Digimon causing it to run wild on the railways. It later evolves into a meaner looking Digimon called Grandlocomon. The Flockton Flyer - about a family who work on a heritage railway. Oh, Doctor Beeching! - set on a railway station threatened with closure. Petticoat Junction - set on a rural railway line permanently threatened with closure. Two seasons of Power Rangers, Lightspeed Rescue and Mystic Force, feature train based Megazords; the Supertrain Megazord and Solar Streak Megazord respectively. They are based on Grand Liner of Kyuukyuu Sentai GoGoFive and Travelion of Mahou Sentai Magiranger respectively. Quatermass and the Pit - building work on the London Underground unearths artefacts from a race of extraterrestrials. Supertrain – A television series on a huge luxury double deckered high speed train. Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends – TV series originated from The Railway Series by the Rev.W.Awdry Kabaneri of the Iron Fortress – Anime series featuring a locomotive that runs on steam transporting villagers escaping from Kabane. Kamen Rider Den-O – features the DenLiner, the train that ables to travel time. Ressha Sentai ToQger - Super Sentai series featuring trains Template:Expand list Astrotrain – A Decepticon triple-changer from the Transformers toy line, who transforms into a steam locomotive and a shuttle. The Crazy Locomotive – by Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz, 1923 expressionistic 45-minutes play ( Obie Award-winning production at the Chelsea Theatre Center in 1977, Classical Theatre of Harlem). Two engineers push the locomotive to ever-greater speeds causing a head-on collision. Dutchman (play) by LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka) is set in the New York City Subway. The Ghost Train - stageplay by Arnold Ridley about a group of passengers stranded in a haunted railway station. Adapted to film numerous times. Starlight Express (Andrew Lloyd Webber) – Musical about trains competing in a World Championship railway race. "Tons of Steel" – A Grateful Dead song about a man and the train he operates. The Wrecker - stageplay by Arnold Ridley about a steam engine that is allegedly possessed.This later made into the 1929 film The Wrecker however it did not feature the possessed train. Le Transperceneige - A French Graphic novel about a luxury train that went around a post-apocalyptic ice age later inspired the 2013 film Snowpiercer. The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks - Features the controllable Spirit Train and the Demon Train as an antagonist. Half-Life (series) - Several of the games start or end on trams and trains, and feature themes of rail transportation in-game as usable trams or as obstacles and scenery. Grand Theft Auto - Most of this series of games contains a form of railroading (train, tram etc.). Alice Madness Returns - In game appears the Infernal Train as the main source of destruction in Wonderland, controlled by the Dollmaker. It can be seen throughout numerous parts in the game, and it is used as a final chapter. Mario Kart 8 - One race takes place in a subway station called Golden Bell. Coors Light - One of its ads feature a refrigerated train filled with chilled Coors Light beer. Everytime its passes, its surrounding gets covered in frost. Stand Still, Stay Silent - A Finnish-Swedish webcomic feature an armored railcar called Dalahästen that destroys anything that gets on the tracks. It also has a giant buzzsaws mounted on the top. Paranatural - A webcomic feature a living spirit that represents a flying ghost train called Ghost Train. Batman - The character had a subterranean jet-propelled train car called the Batsubway Rocket. The League of Extraordinary Gentleman, Vol II - A comic book feature a Secret Black Government Train. Its engine number is .007. Assassin's Creed: The Fall - A comic book mini-series feature Alexander III's Imperial Train. Different Trains Railway music L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat Trans Europ Express Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare Fear of trains Train whistle Abandoned railway Freighthopping Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Rail transport" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice. Retrieved from "http://artandpopularculture.com/Rail_transport" This page was last modified 22:14, 16 January 2023.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/10018
{"url": "http://artandpopularculture.com/Steam_locomotive", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "artandpopularculture.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:36:36Z", "digest": "sha1:VLWEO54QJXZ7NHWFTL5PIK44ADEEZYKJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 26306, 26306.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 26306, 27174.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 26306, 175.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 26306, 224.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 26306, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 26306, 226.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 26306, 0.29675908]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 26306, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 26306, 0.02840025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 26306, 0.01292636]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 26306, 0.01019012]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 26306, 0.01019012]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 26306, 0.00707647]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 26306, 0.00754824]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 26306, 0.00226447]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 26306, 0.00179271]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 26306, 0.01054276]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 26306, 0.18176494]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 26306, 0.38001889]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 26306, 5.00637695]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 26306, 0.00019524]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 26306, 6.17925899]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 26306, 4234.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 349, 1.0], [349, 394, 0.0], [394, 431, 0.0], [431, 473, 0.0], [473, 850, 0.0], [850, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 1723, 0.0], [1723, 1795, 1.0], [1795, 1870, 0.0], [1870, 2516, 1.0], [2516, 3400, 1.0], [3400, 5189, 1.0], [5189, 5987, 1.0], [5987, 6296, 1.0], [6296, 6340, 0.0], [6340, 6368, 0.0], [6368, 6436, 0.0], [6436, 6449, 0.0], [6449, 6462, 0.0], [6462, 6503, 0.0], [6503, 6621, 1.0], [6621, 6690, 1.0], [6690, 6860, 1.0], [6860, 7096, 1.0], [7096, 7158, 0.0], [7158, 7299, 1.0], [7299, 7418, 1.0], [7418, 7473, 1.0], [7473, 7673, 1.0], [7673, 7728, 1.0], [7728, 7824, 1.0], [7824, 7957, 1.0], [7957, 8022, 1.0], [8022, 8143, 1.0], [8143, 8215, 1.0], [8215, 8331, 1.0], [8331, 8404, 1.0], [8404, 8501, 1.0], [8501, 8646, 1.0], [8646, 8806, 1.0], [8806, 8972, 1.0], [8972, 9082, 1.0], [9082, 9211, 1.0], [9211, 9320, 1.0], [9320, 9429, 1.0], [9429, 9729, 1.0], [9729, 9884, 1.0], [9884, 10010, 1.0], [10010, 10124, 1.0], [10124, 10235, 1.0], [10235, 10325, 1.0], [10325, 10381, 1.0], [10381, 10489, 1.0], [10489, 10610, 1.0], [10610, 10750, 1.0], [10750, 10859, 1.0], [10859, 11040, 1.0], [11040, 11146, 0.0], [11146, 11205, 1.0], [11205, 11297, 1.0], [11297, 11350, 1.0], [11350, 11467, 1.0], [11467, 11581, 1.0], [11581, 11692, 1.0], [11692, 11757, 1.0], [11757, 11895, 1.0], [11895, 12071, 1.0], [12071, 12198, 1.0], [12198, 12268, 1.0], [12268, 12414, 1.0], [12414, 12519, 0.0], [12519, 12639, 1.0], [12639, 12714, 1.0], [12714, 12854, 1.0], [12854, 12950, 1.0], [12950, 13151, 1.0], [13151, 13282, 1.0], [13282, 13338, 1.0], [13338, 13420, 1.0], [13420, 13498, 1.0], [13498, 13621, 1.0], [13621, 13759, 1.0], [13759, 13917, 1.0], [13917, 14033, 1.0], [14033, 14136, 1.0], [14136, 14198, 0.0], [14198, 14454, 1.0], [14454, 14696, 1.0], [14696, 14872, 1.0], [14872, 15008, 1.0], [15008, 15121, 1.0], [15121, 15374, 1.0], [15374, 15486, 1.0], [15486, 15563, 0.0], [15563, 15793, 1.0], [15793, 15925, 1.0], [15925, 16015, 0.0], [16015, 16139, 1.0], [16139, 16234, 1.0], [16234, 16398, 1.0], [16398, 16616, 1.0], [16616, 16873, 1.0], [16873, 16990, 1.0], [16990, 17205, 1.0], [17205, 17356, 1.0], [17356, 17510, 1.0], [17510, 17724, 0.0], [17724, 17882, 1.0], [17882, 17913, 0.0], [17913, 18127, 1.0], [18127, 18276, 1.0], [18276, 18422, 1.0], [18422, 18528, 1.0], [18528, 18817, 1.0], [18817, 19121, 1.0], [19121, 19179, 1.0], [19179, 19307, 1.0], [19307, 19842, 1.0], [19842, 20176, 1.0], [20176, 20357, 1.0], [20357, 20466, 1.0], [20466, 20544, 1.0], [20544, 20671, 1.0], [20671, 20927, 1.0], [20927, 21089, 1.0], [21089, 21271, 1.0], [21271, 21347, 1.0], [21347, 21438, 1.0], [21438, 21535, 1.0], [21535, 21641, 1.0], [21641, 21735, 1.0], [21735, 21972, 1.0], [21972, 22040, 1.0], [22040, 22113, 1.0], [22113, 22199, 1.0], [22199, 22473, 1.0], [22473, 22591, 1.0], [22591, 22675, 1.0], [22675, 22776, 0.0], [22776, 22908, 1.0], [22908, 22988, 1.0], [22988, 23048, 0.0], [23048, 23069, 0.0], [23069, 23196, 1.0], [23196, 23475, 1.0], [23475, 23557, 1.0], [23557, 23701, 1.0], [23701, 23812, 1.0], [23812, 23890, 1.0], [23890, 24075, 1.0], [24075, 24226, 1.0], [24226, 24340, 1.0], [24340, 24511, 1.0], [24511, 24610, 1.0], [24610, 24836, 1.0], [24836, 24912, 1.0], [24912, 25069, 1.0], [25069, 25265, 1.0], [25265, 25371, 1.0], [25371, 25466, 1.0], [25466, 25595, 1.0], [25595, 25689, 1.0], [25689, 25706, 0.0], [25706, 25720, 0.0], [25720, 25762, 0.0], [25762, 25782, 0.0], [25782, 25831, 0.0], [25831, 25846, 0.0], [25846, 25860, 0.0], [25860, 25878, 0.0], [25878, 25893, 0.0], [25893, 26191, 1.0], [26191, 26255, 0.0], [26255, 26306, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 349, 0.0], [349, 394, 0.0], [394, 431, 0.0], [431, 473, 0.0], [473, 850, 0.0], [850, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 1723, 0.0], [1723, 1795, 0.0], [1795, 1870, 0.0], [1870, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 3400, 0.0], [3400, 5189, 0.0], [5189, 5987, 0.0], [5987, 6296, 0.0], [6296, 6340, 0.0], [6340, 6368, 0.0], [6368, 6436, 0.0], [6436, 6449, 0.0], [6449, 6462, 0.0], [6462, 6503, 0.0], [6503, 6621, 0.0], [6621, 6690, 0.0], [6690, 6860, 0.0], [6860, 7096, 0.0], [7096, 7158, 0.0], [7158, 7299, 0.0], [7299, 7418, 0.0], [7418, 7473, 0.0], [7473, 7673, 0.0], [7673, 7728, 0.0], [7728, 7824, 0.0], [7824, 7957, 0.0], [7957, 8022, 0.0], [8022, 8143, 0.0], [8143, 8215, 0.0], [8215, 8331, 0.0], [8331, 8404, 0.0], [8404, 8501, 0.0], [8501, 8646, 0.0], [8646, 8806, 0.0], [8806, 8972, 0.0], [8972, 9082, 0.0], [9082, 9211, 0.0], [9211, 9320, 0.0], [9320, 9429, 0.0], [9429, 9729, 0.0], [9729, 9884, 0.0], [9884, 10010, 0.0], [10010, 10124, 0.0], [10124, 10235, 0.0], [10235, 10325, 0.0], [10325, 10381, 0.0], [10381, 10489, 0.0], [10489, 10610, 0.0], [10610, 10750, 0.0], [10750, 10859, 0.0], [10859, 11040, 0.0], [11040, 11146, 0.0], [11146, 11205, 0.0], [11205, 11297, 0.0], [11297, 11350, 0.0], [11350, 11467, 0.0], [11467, 11581, 0.0], [11581, 11692, 0.0], [11692, 11757, 0.0], [11757, 11895, 0.0], [11895, 12071, 0.0], [12071, 12198, 0.0], [12198, 12268, 0.0], [12268, 12414, 0.0], [12414, 12519, 0.0], [12519, 12639, 0.0], [12639, 12714, 0.0], [12714, 12854, 0.0], [12854, 12950, 0.0], [12950, 13151, 0.0], [13151, 13282, 0.0], [13282, 13338, 0.0], [13338, 13420, 0.0], [13420, 13498, 0.0], [13498, 13621, 0.0], [13621, 13759, 0.0], [13759, 13917, 0.0], [13917, 14033, 0.0], [14033, 14136, 0.0], [14136, 14198, 0.0], [14198, 14454, 0.0], [14454, 14696, 0.0], [14696, 14872, 0.0], [14872, 15008, 0.0], [15008, 15121, 0.0], [15121, 15374, 0.0], [15374, 15486, 0.0], [15486, 15563, 0.0], [15563, 15793, 0.0], [15793, 15925, 0.0], [15925, 16015, 0.0], [16015, 16139, 0.0], [16139, 16234, 0.0], [16234, 16398, 0.0], [16398, 16616, 0.0], [16616, 16873, 0.0], [16873, 16990, 0.0], [16990, 17205, 0.0], [17205, 17356, 0.0], [17356, 17510, 0.0], [17510, 17724, 0.0], [17724, 17882, 0.0], [17882, 17913, 0.0], [17913, 18127, 0.0], [18127, 18276, 0.0], [18276, 18422, 0.0], [18422, 18528, 0.0], [18528, 18817, 0.0], [18817, 19121, 0.0], [19121, 19179, 0.0], [19179, 19307, 0.0], [19307, 19842, 0.0], [19842, 20176, 0.0], [20176, 20357, 0.0], [20357, 20466, 0.0], [20466, 20544, 0.0], [20544, 20671, 0.0], [20671, 20927, 0.0], [20927, 21089, 0.0], [21089, 21271, 0.0], [21271, 21347, 0.0], [21347, 21438, 0.0], [21438, 21535, 0.0], [21535, 21641, 0.0], [21641, 21735, 0.0], [21735, 21972, 0.0], [21972, 22040, 0.0], [22040, 22113, 0.0], [22113, 22199, 0.0], [22199, 22473, 0.0], [22473, 22591, 0.0], [22591, 22675, 0.0], [22675, 22776, 0.0], [22776, 22908, 0.0], [22908, 22988, 0.0], [22988, 23048, 0.0], [23048, 23069, 0.0], [23069, 23196, 0.0], [23196, 23475, 0.0], [23475, 23557, 0.0], [23557, 23701, 0.0], [23701, 23812, 0.0], [23812, 23890, 0.0], [23890, 24075, 0.0], [24075, 24226, 0.0], [24226, 24340, 0.0], [24340, 24511, 0.0], [24511, 24610, 0.0], [24610, 24836, 0.0], [24836, 24912, 0.0], [24912, 25069, 0.0], [25069, 25265, 0.0], [25265, 25371, 0.0], [25371, 25466, 0.0], [25466, 25595, 0.0], [25595, 25689, 0.0], [25689, 25706, 0.0], [25706, 25720, 0.0], [25720, 25762, 0.0], [25762, 25782, 0.0], [25782, 25831, 0.0], [25831, 25846, 0.0], [25846, 25860, 0.0], [25860, 25878, 0.0], [25878, 25893, 0.0], [25893, 26191, 0.0], [26191, 26255, 0.0], [26255, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 35, 4.0], [35, 349, 55.0], [349, 394, 7.0], [394, 431, 6.0], [431, 473, 6.0], [473, 850, 53.0], [850, 1401, 98.0], [1401, 1723, 46.0], [1723, 1795, 12.0], [1795, 1870, 13.0], [1870, 2516, 104.0], [2516, 3400, 130.0], [3400, 5189, 283.0], [5189, 5987, 113.0], [5987, 6296, 53.0], [6296, 6340, 9.0], [6340, 6368, 4.0], [6368, 6436, 12.0], [6436, 6449, 3.0], [6449, 6462, 2.0], [6462, 6503, 6.0], [6503, 6621, 18.0], [6621, 6690, 11.0], [6690, 6860, 24.0], [6860, 7096, 44.0], [7096, 7158, 10.0], [7158, 7299, 21.0], [7299, 7418, 18.0], [7418, 7473, 10.0], [7473, 7673, 34.0], [7673, 7728, 8.0], [7728, 7824, 16.0], [7824, 7957, 20.0], [7957, 8022, 11.0], [8022, 8143, 18.0], [8143, 8215, 12.0], [8215, 8331, 18.0], [8331, 8404, 13.0], [8404, 8501, 17.0], [8501, 8646, 25.0], [8646, 8806, 28.0], [8806, 8972, 31.0], [8972, 9082, 21.0], [9082, 9211, 20.0], [9211, 9320, 20.0], [9320, 9429, 22.0], [9429, 9729, 52.0], [9729, 9884, 25.0], [9884, 10010, 19.0], [10010, 10124, 18.0], [10124, 10235, 19.0], [10235, 10325, 15.0], [10325, 10381, 8.0], [10381, 10489, 16.0], [10489, 10610, 19.0], [10610, 10750, 22.0], [10750, 10859, 19.0], [10859, 11040, 34.0], [11040, 11146, 17.0], [11146, 11205, 9.0], [11205, 11297, 15.0], [11297, 11350, 9.0], [11350, 11467, 20.0], [11467, 11581, 21.0], [11581, 11692, 18.0], [11692, 11757, 9.0], [11757, 11895, 21.0], [11895, 12071, 24.0], [12071, 12198, 22.0], [12198, 12268, 10.0], [12268, 12414, 29.0], [12414, 12519, 20.0], [12519, 12639, 19.0], [12639, 12714, 10.0], [12714, 12854, 23.0], [12854, 12950, 16.0], [12950, 13151, 34.0], [13151, 13282, 24.0], [13282, 13338, 11.0], [13338, 13420, 14.0], [13420, 13498, 14.0], [13498, 13621, 22.0], [13621, 13759, 25.0], [13759, 13917, 28.0], [13917, 14033, 19.0], [14033, 14136, 18.0], [14136, 14198, 9.0], [14198, 14454, 42.0], [14454, 14696, 40.0], [14696, 14872, 28.0], [14872, 15008, 25.0], [15008, 15121, 18.0], [15121, 15374, 35.0], [15374, 15486, 17.0], [15486, 15563, 15.0], [15563, 15793, 36.0], [15793, 15925, 23.0], [15925, 16015, 14.0], [16015, 16139, 18.0], [16139, 16234, 15.0], [16234, 16398, 28.0], [16398, 16616, 33.0], [16616, 16873, 43.0], [16873, 16990, 22.0], [16990, 17205, 35.0], [17205, 17356, 27.0], [17356, 17510, 25.0], [17510, 17724, 39.0], [17724, 17882, 31.0], [17882, 17913, 4.0], [17913, 18127, 36.0], [18127, 18276, 22.0], [18276, 18422, 27.0], [18422, 18528, 20.0], [18528, 18817, 46.0], [18817, 19121, 48.0], [19121, 19179, 11.0], [19179, 19307, 15.0], [19307, 19842, 92.0], [19842, 20176, 55.0], [20176, 20357, 26.0], [20357, 20466, 16.0], [20466, 20544, 14.0], [20544, 20671, 21.0], [20671, 20927, 39.0], [20927, 21089, 27.0], [21089, 21271, 24.0], [21271, 21347, 12.0], [21347, 21438, 16.0], [21438, 21535, 12.0], [21535, 21641, 16.0], [21641, 21735, 14.0], [21735, 21972, 38.0], [21972, 22040, 12.0], [22040, 22113, 11.0], [22113, 22199, 12.0], [22199, 22473, 39.0], [22473, 22591, 17.0], [22591, 22675, 14.0], [22675, 22776, 17.0], [22776, 22908, 20.0], [22908, 22988, 14.0], [22988, 23048, 8.0], [23048, 23069, 2.0], [23069, 23196, 19.0], [23196, 23475, 38.0], [23475, 23557, 15.0], [23557, 23701, 23.0], [23701, 23812, 16.0], [23812, 23890, 16.0], [23890, 24075, 30.0], [24075, 24226, 23.0], [24226, 24340, 18.0], [24340, 24511, 28.0], [24511, 24610, 17.0], [24610, 24836, 39.0], [24836, 24912, 14.0], [24912, 25069, 25.0], [25069, 25265, 31.0], [25265, 25371, 16.0], [25371, 25466, 13.0], [25466, 25595, 21.0], [25595, 25689, 13.0], [25689, 25706, 2.0], [25706, 25720, 2.0], [25720, 25762, 8.0], [25762, 25782, 3.0], [25782, 25831, 7.0], [25831, 25846, 3.0], [25846, 25860, 2.0], [25860, 25878, 2.0], [25878, 25893, 1.0], [25893, 26191, 46.0], [26191, 26255, 3.0], [26255, 26306, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 349, 0.04901961], [349, 394, 0.0], [394, 431, 0.0], [431, 473, 0.11428571], [473, 850, 0.02209945], [850, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 1723, 0.01294498], [1723, 1795, 0.08823529], [1795, 1870, 0.05633803], [1870, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 3400, 0.0], [3400, 5189, 0.01259302], [5189, 5987, 0.02053915], [5987, 6296, 0.00327869], [6296, 6340, 0.0], [6340, 6368, 0.0], [6368, 6436, 0.0], [6436, 6449, 0.08333333], [6449, 6462, 0.08333333], [6462, 6503, 0.0], [6503, 6621, 0.06363636], [6621, 6690, 0.0952381], [6690, 6860, 0.02515723], [6860, 7096, 0.02575107], [7096, 7158, 0.06779661], [7158, 7299, 0.03007519], [7299, 7418, 0.03478261], [7418, 7473, 0.07843137], [7473, 7673, 0.0], [7673, 7728, 0.08163265], [7728, 7824, 0.04494382], [7824, 7957, 0.03225806], [7957, 8022, 0.06557377], [8022, 8143, 0.03603604], [8143, 8215, 0.06060606], [8215, 8331, 0.03669725], [8331, 8404, 0.05797101], [8404, 8501, 0.0], [8501, 8646, 0.02877698], [8646, 8806, 0.0], [8806, 8972, 0.02515723], [8972, 9082, 0.03738318], [9082, 9211, 0.0], [9211, 9320, 0.0], [9320, 9429, 0.0], [9429, 9729, 0.0], [9729, 9884, 0.0], [9884, 10010, 0.03361345], [10010, 10124, 0.02752294], [10124, 10235, 0.07843137], [10235, 10325, 0.04819277], [10325, 10381, 0.08], [10381, 10489, 0.03960396], [10489, 10610, 0.03418803], [10610, 10750, 0.03053435], [10750, 10859, 0.03883495], [10859, 11040, 0.02285714], [11040, 11146, 0.0], [11146, 11205, 0.0754717], [11205, 11297, 0.04545455], [11297, 11350, 0.0], [11350, 11467, 0.0], [11467, 11581, 0.03773585], [11581, 11692, 0.03846154], [11692, 11757, 0.06779661], [11757, 11895, 0.03053435], [11895, 12071, 0.02439024], [12071, 12198, 0.03333333], [12198, 12268, 0.0625], [12268, 12414, 0.02777778], [12414, 12519, 0.10784314], [12519, 12639, 0.03508772], [12639, 12714, 0.05797101], [12714, 12854, 0.02985075], [12854, 12950, 0.04444444], [12950, 13151, 0.04663212], [13151, 13282, 0.06451613], [13282, 13338, 0.0], [13338, 13420, 0.0], [13420, 13498, 0.05555556], [13498, 13621, 0.0], [13621, 13759, 0.0], [13759, 13917, 0.01986755], [13917, 14033, 0.0], [14033, 14136, 0.0], [14136, 14198, 0.0], [14198, 14454, 0.0], [14454, 14696, 0.0], [14696, 14872, 0.0], [14872, 15008, 0.02255639], [15008, 15121, 0.0], [15121, 15374, 0.0], [15374, 15486, 0.0], [15486, 15563, 0.01388889], [15563, 15793, 0.00896861], [15793, 15925, 0.03225806], [15925, 16015, 0.0], [16015, 16139, 0.0], [16139, 16234, 0.06976744], [16234, 16398, 0.01265823], [16398, 16616, 0.01941748], [16616, 16873, 0.01606426], [16873, 16990, 0.0], [16990, 17205, 0.00478469], [17205, 17356, 0.0], [17356, 17510, 0.0], [17510, 17724, 0.0], [17724, 17882, 0.0], [17882, 17913, 0.0], [17913, 18127, 0.0], [18127, 18276, 0.02739726], [18276, 18422, 0.0], [18422, 18528, 0.0], [18528, 18817, 0.0], [18817, 19121, 0.0], [19121, 19179, 0.0], [19179, 19307, 0.0], [19307, 19842, 0.00961538], [19842, 20176, 0.0], [20176, 20357, 0.0], [20357, 20466, 0.01904762], [20466, 20544, 0.0], [20544, 20671, 0.01652893], [20671, 20927, 0.0], [20927, 21089, 0.0], [21089, 21271, 0.0], [21271, 21347, 0.05555556], [21347, 21438, 0.04597701], [21438, 21535, 0.0], [21535, 21641, 0.0], [21641, 21735, 0.0], [21735, 21972, 0.0], [21972, 22040, 0.0], [22040, 22113, 0.0], [22113, 22199, 0.0], [22199, 22473, 0.0], [22473, 22591, 0.0], [22591, 22675, 0.0], [22675, 22776, 0.0], [22776, 22908, 0.0], [22908, 22988, 0.0], [22988, 23048, 0.0], [23048, 23069, 0.0], [23069, 23196, 0.0], [23196, 23475, 0.03745318], [23475, 23557, 0.0], [23557, 23701, 0.0], [23701, 23812, 0.0], [23812, 23890, 0.0], [23890, 24075, 0.02222222], [24075, 24226, 0.02739726], [24226, 24340, 0.0], [24340, 24511, 0.0], [24511, 24610, 0.0], [24610, 24836, 0.0], [24836, 24912, 0.01388889], [24912, 25069, 0.0], [25069, 25265, 0.0], [25265, 25371, 0.0], [25371, 25466, 0.0], [25466, 25595, 0.02459016], [25595, 25689, 0.0], [25689, 25706, 0.0], [25706, 25720, 0.0], [25720, 25762, 0.0], [25762, 25782, 0.0], [25782, 25831, 0.0], [25831, 25846, 0.0], [25846, 25860, 0.0], [25860, 25878, 0.0], [25878, 25893, 0.0], [25893, 26191, 0.0], [26191, 26255, 0.0], [26255, 26306, 0.20833333]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 349, 0.0], [349, 394, 0.0], [394, 431, 0.0], [431, 473, 0.0], [473, 850, 0.0], [850, 1401, 0.0], [1401, 1723, 0.0], [1723, 1795, 0.0], [1795, 1870, 0.0], [1870, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 3400, 0.0], [3400, 5189, 0.0], [5189, 5987, 0.0], [5987, 6296, 0.0], [6296, 6340, 0.0], [6340, 6368, 0.0], [6368, 6436, 0.0], [6436, 6449, 0.0], [6449, 6462, 0.0], [6462, 6503, 0.0], [6503, 6621, 0.0], [6621, 6690, 0.0], [6690, 6860, 0.0], [6860, 7096, 0.0], [7096, 7158, 0.0], [7158, 7299, 0.0], [7299, 7418, 0.0], [7418, 7473, 0.0], [7473, 7673, 0.0], [7673, 7728, 0.0], [7728, 7824, 0.0], [7824, 7957, 0.0], [7957, 8022, 0.0], [8022, 8143, 0.0], [8143, 8215, 0.0], [8215, 8331, 0.0], [8331, 8404, 0.0], [8404, 8501, 0.0], [8501, 8646, 0.0], [8646, 8806, 0.0], [8806, 8972, 0.0], [8972, 9082, 0.0], [9082, 9211, 0.0], [9211, 9320, 0.0], [9320, 9429, 0.0], [9429, 9729, 0.0], [9729, 9884, 0.0], [9884, 10010, 0.0], [10010, 10124, 0.0], [10124, 10235, 0.0], [10235, 10325, 0.0], [10325, 10381, 0.0], [10381, 10489, 0.0], [10489, 10610, 0.0], [10610, 10750, 0.0], [10750, 10859, 0.0], [10859, 11040, 0.0], [11040, 11146, 0.0], [11146, 11205, 0.0], [11205, 11297, 0.0], [11297, 11350, 0.0], [11350, 11467, 0.0], [11467, 11581, 0.0], [11581, 11692, 0.0], [11692, 11757, 0.0], [11757, 11895, 0.0], [11895, 12071, 0.0], [12071, 12198, 0.0], [12198, 12268, 0.0], [12268, 12414, 0.0], [12414, 12519, 0.0], [12519, 12639, 0.0], [12639, 12714, 0.0], [12714, 12854, 0.0], [12854, 12950, 0.0], [12950, 13151, 0.0], [13151, 13282, 0.0], [13282, 13338, 0.0], [13338, 13420, 0.0], [13420, 13498, 0.0], [13498, 13621, 0.0], [13621, 13759, 0.0], [13759, 13917, 0.0], [13917, 14033, 0.0], [14033, 14136, 0.0], [14136, 14198, 0.0], [14198, 14454, 0.0], [14454, 14696, 0.0], [14696, 14872, 0.0], [14872, 15008, 0.0], [15008, 15121, 0.0], [15121, 15374, 0.0], [15374, 15486, 0.0], [15486, 15563, 0.0], [15563, 15793, 0.0], [15793, 15925, 0.0], [15925, 16015, 0.0], [16015, 16139, 0.0], [16139, 16234, 0.0], [16234, 16398, 0.0], [16398, 16616, 0.0], [16616, 16873, 0.0], [16873, 16990, 0.0], [16990, 17205, 0.0], [17205, 17356, 0.0], [17356, 17510, 0.0], [17510, 17724, 0.0], [17724, 17882, 0.0], [17882, 17913, 0.0], [17913, 18127, 0.0], [18127, 18276, 0.0], [18276, 18422, 0.0], [18422, 18528, 0.0], [18528, 18817, 0.0], [18817, 19121, 0.0], [19121, 19179, 0.0], [19179, 19307, 0.0], [19307, 19842, 0.0], [19842, 20176, 0.0], [20176, 20357, 0.0], [20357, 20466, 0.0], [20466, 20544, 0.0], [20544, 20671, 0.0], [20671, 20927, 0.0], [20927, 21089, 0.0], [21089, 21271, 0.0], [21271, 21347, 0.0], [21347, 21438, 0.0], [21438, 21535, 0.0], [21535, 21641, 0.0], [21641, 21735, 0.0], [21735, 21972, 0.0], [21972, 22040, 0.0], [22040, 22113, 0.0], [22113, 22199, 0.0], [22199, 22473, 0.0], [22473, 22591, 0.0], [22591, 22675, 0.0], [22675, 22776, 0.0], [22776, 22908, 0.0], [22908, 22988, 0.0], [22988, 23048, 0.0], [23048, 23069, 0.0], [23069, 23196, 0.0], [23196, 23475, 0.0], [23475, 23557, 0.0], [23557, 23701, 0.0], [23701, 23812, 0.0], [23812, 23890, 0.0], [23890, 24075, 0.0], [24075, 24226, 0.0], [24226, 24340, 0.0], [24340, 24511, 0.0], [24511, 24610, 0.0], [24610, 24836, 0.0], [24836, 24912, 0.0], [24912, 25069, 0.0], [25069, 25265, 0.0], [25265, 25371, 0.0], [25371, 25466, 0.0], [25466, 25595, 0.0], [25595, 25689, 0.0], [25689, 25706, 0.0], [25706, 25720, 0.0], [25720, 25762, 0.0], [25762, 25782, 0.0], [25782, 25831, 0.0], [25831, 25846, 0.0], [25846, 25860, 0.0], [25860, 25878, 0.0], [25878, 25893, 0.0], [25893, 26191, 0.0], [26191, 26255, 0.0], [26255, 26306, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.05714286], [35, 349, 0.05732484], [349, 394, 0.02222222], [394, 431, 0.02702703], [431, 473, 0.0952381], [473, 850, 0.02917772], [850, 1401, 0.04537205], [1401, 1723, 0.01863354], [1723, 1795, 0.08333333], [1795, 1870, 0.12], [1870, 2516, 0.00619195], [2516, 3400, 0.00678733], [3400, 5189, 0.03242035], [5189, 5987, 0.00877193], [5987, 6296, 0.02265372], [6296, 6340, 0.13636364], [6340, 6368, 0.07142857], [6368, 6436, 0.13235294], [6436, 6449, 0.07692308], [6449, 6462, 0.07692308], [6462, 6503, 0.02439024], [6503, 6621, 0.05932203], [6621, 6690, 0.08695652], [6690, 6860, 0.07058824], [6860, 7096, 0.03389831], [7096, 7158, 0.03225806], [7158, 7299, 0.04255319], [7299, 7418, 0.02521008], [7418, 7473, 0.03636364], [7473, 7673, 0.075], [7673, 7728, 0.07272727], [7728, 7824, 0.03125], [7824, 7957, 0.06015038], [7957, 8022, 0.06153846], [8022, 8143, 0.05785124], [8143, 8215, 0.04166667], [8215, 8331, 0.0862069], [8331, 8404, 0.10958904], [8404, 8501, 0.07216495], [8501, 8646, 0.06206897], [8646, 8806, 0.1], [8806, 8972, 0.03614458], [8972, 9082, 0.03636364], [9082, 9211, 0.05426357], [9211, 9320, 0.05504587], [9320, 9429, 0.10091743], [9429, 9729, 0.04333333], [9729, 9884, 0.09032258], [9884, 10010, 0.0952381], [10010, 10124, 0.06140351], [10124, 10235, 0.03603604], [10235, 10325, 0.04444444], [10325, 10381, 0.08928571], [10381, 10489, 0.10185185], [10489, 10610, 0.04132231], [10610, 10750, 0.05], [10750, 10859, 0.09174312], [10859, 11040, 0.04972376], [11040, 11146, 0.05660377], [11146, 11205, 0.06779661], [11205, 11297, 0.05434783], [11297, 11350, 0.03773585], [11350, 11467, 0.01709402], [11467, 11581, 0.03508772], [11581, 11692, 0.05405405], [11692, 11757, 0.06153846], [11757, 11895, 0.03623188], [11895, 12071, 0.01704545], [12071, 12198, 0.03149606], [12198, 12268, 0.08571429], [12268, 12414, 0.07534247], [12414, 12519, 0.05714286], [12519, 12639, 0.025], [12639, 12714, 0.04], [12714, 12854, 0.04285714], [12854, 12950, 0.02083333], [12950, 13151, 0.07462687], [13151, 13282, 0.03816794], [13282, 13338, 0.03571429], [13338, 13420, 0.12195122], [13420, 13498, 0.07692308], [13498, 13621, 0.04878049], [13621, 13759, 0.01449275], [13759, 13917, 0.03797468], [13917, 14033, 0.07758621], [14033, 14136, 0.04854369], [14136, 14198, 0.09677419], [14198, 14454, 0.0703125], [14454, 14696, 0.03719008], [14696, 14872, 0.08522727], [14872, 15008, 0.03676471], [15008, 15121, 0.03539823], [15121, 15374, 0.03557312], [15374, 15486, 0.0625], [15486, 15563, 0.07792208], [15563, 15793, 0.04347826], [15793, 15925, 0.08333333], [15925, 16015, 0.06666667], [16015, 16139, 0.0483871], [16139, 16234, 0.10526316], [16234, 16398, 0.04268293], [16398, 16616, 0.11926606], [16616, 16873, 0.04280156], [16873, 16990, 0.05982906], [16990, 17205, 0.04186047], [17205, 17356, 0.01986755], [17356, 17510, 0.05844156], [17510, 17724, 0.04205607], [17724, 17882, 0.01265823], [17882, 17913, 0.12903226], [17913, 18127, 0.06542056], [18127, 18276, 0.04026846], [18276, 18422, 0.03424658], [18422, 18528, 0.11320755], [18528, 18817, 0.01384083], [18817, 19121, 0.01973684], [19121, 19179, 0.05172414], [19179, 19307, 0.0234375], [19307, 19842, 0.01121495], [19842, 20176, 0.03592814], [20176, 20357, 0.01104972], [20357, 20466, 0.06422018], [20466, 20544, 0.08974359], [20544, 20671, 0.07086614], [20671, 20927, 0.04296875], [20927, 21089, 0.04320988], [21089, 21271, 0.01098901], [21271, 21347, 0.06578947], [21347, 21438, 0.03296703], [21438, 21535, 0.03092784], [21535, 21641, 0.03773585], [21641, 21735, 0.04255319], [21735, 21972, 0.05063291], [21972, 22040, 0.04411765], [22040, 22113, 0.04109589], [22113, 22199, 0.02325581], [22199, 22473, 0.09124088], [22473, 22591, 0.03389831], [22591, 22675, 0.02380952], [22675, 22776, 0.11881188], [22776, 22908, 0.03787879], [22908, 22988, 0.075], [22988, 23048, 0.1], [23048, 23069, 0.0952381], [23069, 23196, 0.03149606], [23196, 23475, 0.05376344], [23475, 23557, 0.12195122], [23557, 23701, 0.04166667], [23701, 23812, 0.07207207], [23812, 23890, 0.06410256], [23890, 24075, 0.03783784], [24075, 24226, 0.0397351], [24226, 24340, 0.0877193], [24340, 24511, 0.01754386], [24511, 24610, 0.04040404], [24610, 24836, 0.03982301], [24836, 24912, 0.06578947], [24912, 25069, 0.03821656], [25069, 25265, 0.04591837], [25265, 25371, 0.03773585], [25371, 25466, 0.04210526], [25466, 25595, 0.10077519], [25595, 25689, 0.11702128], [25689, 25706, 0.11764706], [25706, 25720, 0.07142857], [25720, 25762, 0.0952381], [25762, 25782, 0.15], [25782, 25831, 0.12244898], [25831, 25846, 0.06666667], [25846, 25860, 0.07142857], [25860, 25878, 0.05555556], [25878, 25893, 0.06666667], [25893, 26191, 0.05033557], [26191, 26255, 0.03125], [26255, 26306, 0.03921569]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 26306, 0.94396085]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 26306, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 26306, 0.94620115]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 26306, -1342.15050989]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 26306, -111.43234648]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 26306, 740.01313427]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 26306, 224.0]]}
Home/Biography/Nuton Wiki, Wife, Net Worth, Age, Height, Girlfriend, and Biography Nuton Wiki, Wife, Net Worth, Age, Height, Girlfriend, and Biography Jenny HanJanuary 29, 2022 Nuton, Bangladesh – In Nuton Bangladesh, there exists a community of artists called “nuton craftsmen”. They use various techniques to make beautiful embroidery, crochet, jewelry, and fabrics. If you are looking for rare and exclusive fashion garments and accessories, Nuton garments and Nuton accessories are a good choice. The Nuton Family is an art collective that brings together artisans from all over the world. The founder of Nuton was a seamstress who had a passion for what she felt was the beauty of art. She began by teaching herself how to make necklaces and bracelets, eventually earning enough money to open her own boutique. Today, the brand is an internationally renowned luxury jewelry and textile brand. The company is dedicated to using ethical and fair trade practices. Intro Bangladeshi actress A.K.A. Farhana Amin Ratna Is Actor From Bangladesh Type Film, TV, Stage & Radio Birth Bangladesh Residence Dhaka, Dhaka Division, Bangladesh Nuton cuisine The Nuton cuisine has been described as a fusion of Indian, Chinese and Middle Eastern cuisine. Some of its main dishes include stuffed lamb, ram, chicken curry, pakoras, metal, rice and rotis. The cuisine also includes a variety of desserts such as chutneys, salads, jalebis and icicles. Nuton culture A Nuton scarf is considered a sign of respect in the community. The Burmese government has declared Nuton a national monument. Many communities have also incorporated Nuton’s cuisine into their own cultures. As such, there are several festivals throughout the year that celebrate Nuton art and history. These festivals generally center around Nuton drums or burlap bags as instruments. See also Bukayo Saka Net Worth, Age, Height, Weight,personal, physical, career, and wedding life info International recognition Nuton cuisine is also gaining popularity in other parts of the world. For example, in Canada, Nuton brides are becoming popular. The company also produces the award-winning wine and tea. History The history of Nuton can be traced back as far as the fourteenth century in France. At that time, the area was populated by Thracian speakers who settled in the region. From that time until approximately the eighteenth century, the island was known for being an important trading point between Europe and Asia. Nuton married film producer Ruhul Amin Babul in 1978. 2015 Amar Chhobi Shahfiuzzaman Khan Lodi Channel i Award Title 1987 Bachsas Awards Won 1991 National Film Award Best Supporting Actress Strir Paona Won 2015 Bangla Cine Awards Lifetime Achievement Award Won Industrialization During the nineteenth century, several industries appeared in and around Nuton. These included a sugar industry, an aloe cultivation and a rubber industry. Today, the economy is primarily based on tourism. People from all over the world come to visit Nuton and enjoy the beautiful beaches, the friendly people and the delicious cuisine. There is even a resort that offers luxurious accommodations to visitors. Artworks Due to the lack of documentation, much of Nuton’s art is unknown. However, many of the paintings and other works of art that can be found in the area portray Nuton as a beautiful scene in lush tropical surroundings. Portraits of Nuton also exist. In addition, Nuton is well-known for its jewelry design, glass artwork, paintings and pottery. History notes There is no documentation available that details what happened prior to the nineteenth century. However, most agree that the island was first colonized by French officials. It is believed that during that time, the island was incorporated into French Guiana, or later, Portuguese Guiana. French authorities began establishing settlements in Nuton, and from there, trading began. Settlements were built along the coast and later inland. Alina Kabaeva Height, Weight, Age, Family, Facts, Education, Biography Wang Yan Net Worth, Measurements, Birthday, Height, weight, Age, Family Facts & Life Story Dimple Hayathi Height, Weight, Age, Body Statistics, Biography, Family Robert James-Collier Height, Weight, Age, Body Statistics, Biography, Fact Dominika Grecová Height, Weight, Age, Boyfriend, Facts, Biography
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/10439
{"url": "https://exposetimes.com/nuton-wiki-wife-net-worth-age-height-girlfriend-and-biography/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "exposetimes.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:53:03Z", "digest": "sha1:BNTTBJPC4GI7FBFUTTDGP3IUG6D4WY5N"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4333, 4333.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4333, 8512.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4333, 31.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4333, 155.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4333, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4333, 298.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4333, 0.27832512]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4333, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4333, 0.07357102]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4333, 0.04810413]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4333, 0.02659875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4333, 0.02659875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4333, 0.02659875]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4333, 0.01697793]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4333, 0.02122241]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4333, 0.01443124]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4333, 0.00615764]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4333, 0.17857143]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4333, 0.5443609]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4333, 5.31428571]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4333, 5.40351061]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4333, 665.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 151, 0.0], [151, 177, 0.0], [177, 501, 1.0], [501, 966, 1.0], [966, 992, 0.0], [992, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1072, 0.0], [1072, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1133, 0.0], [1133, 1436, 1.0], [1436, 1836, 1.0], [1836, 1938, 0.0], [1938, 2151, 1.0], [2151, 2470, 1.0], [2470, 2524, 1.0], [2524, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2587, 0.0], [2587, 2611, 0.0], [2611, 2676, 0.0], [2676, 2731, 0.0], [2731, 3159, 1.0], [3159, 3510, 1.0], [3510, 3960, 1.0], [3960, 4031, 0.0], [4031, 4122, 0.0], [4122, 4193, 0.0], [4193, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 151, 0.0], [151, 177, 0.0], [177, 501, 0.0], [501, 966, 0.0], [966, 992, 0.0], [992, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1072, 0.0], [1072, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1133, 0.0], [1133, 1436, 0.0], [1436, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 1938, 0.0], [1938, 2151, 0.0], [2151, 2470, 0.0], [2470, 2524, 0.0], [2524, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2587, 0.0], [2587, 2611, 0.0], [2611, 2676, 0.0], [2676, 2731, 0.0], [2731, 3159, 0.0], [3159, 3510, 0.0], [3510, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4031, 0.0], [4031, 4122, 0.0], [4122, 4193, 0.0], [4193, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 83, 10.0], [83, 151, 10.0], [151, 177, 4.0], [177, 501, 48.0], [501, 966, 79.0], [966, 992, 3.0], [992, 1018, 4.0], [1018, 1027, 2.0], [1027, 1043, 2.0], [1043, 1072, 5.0], [1072, 1089, 2.0], [1089, 1133, 5.0], [1133, 1436, 49.0], [1436, 1836, 61.0], [1836, 1938, 15.0], [1938, 2151, 32.0], [2151, 2470, 54.0], [2470, 2524, 9.0], [2524, 2575, 8.0], [2575, 2587, 2.0], [2587, 2611, 4.0], [2611, 2676, 10.0], [2676, 2731, 8.0], [2731, 3159, 65.0], [3159, 3510, 59.0], [3510, 3960, 67.0], [3960, 4031, 9.0], [4031, 4122, 13.0], [4122, 4193, 9.0], [4193, 4268, 9.0], [4268, 4333, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 151, 0.0], [151, 177, 0.25], [177, 501, 0.0], [501, 966, 0.0], [966, 992, 0.0], [992, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1072, 0.0], [1072, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1133, 0.0], [1133, 1436, 0.0], [1436, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 1938, 0.0], [1938, 2151, 0.0], [2151, 2470, 0.0], [2470, 2524, 0.07692308], [2524, 2575, 0.08], [2575, 2587, 0.0], [2587, 2611, 0.17391304], [2611, 2676, 0.0625], [2676, 2731, 0.07407407], [2731, 3159, 0.0], [3159, 3510, 0.0], [3510, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4031, 0.0], [4031, 4122, 0.0], [4122, 4193, 0.0], [4193, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 151, 0.0], [151, 177, 0.0], [177, 501, 0.0], [501, 966, 0.0], [966, 992, 0.0], [992, 1018, 0.0], [1018, 1027, 0.0], [1027, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1072, 0.0], [1072, 1089, 0.0], [1089, 1133, 0.0], [1133, 1436, 0.0], [1436, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 1938, 0.0], [1938, 2151, 0.0], [2151, 2470, 0.0], [2470, 2524, 0.0], [2524, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2587, 0.0], [2587, 2611, 0.0], [2611, 2676, 0.0], [2676, 2731, 0.0], [2731, 3159, 0.0], [3159, 3510, 0.0], [3510, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4031, 0.0], [4031, 4122, 0.0], [4122, 4193, 0.0], [4193, 4268, 0.0], [4268, 4333, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 83, 0.13253012], [83, 151, 0.13235294], [151, 177, 0.11538462], [177, 501, 0.02777778], [501, 966, 0.0172043], [966, 992, 0.07692308], [992, 1018, 0.23076923], [1018, 1027, 0.22222222], [1027, 1043, 0.125], [1043, 1072, 0.20689655], [1072, 1089, 0.11764706], [1089, 1133, 0.11363636], [1133, 1436, 0.02970297], [1436, 1836, 0.03], [1836, 1938, 0.07843137], [1938, 2151, 0.02816901], [2151, 2470, 0.02821317], [2470, 2524, 0.07407407], [2524, 2575, 0.11764706], [2575, 2587, 0.16666667], [2587, 2611, 0.125], [2611, 2676, 0.13846154], [2676, 2731, 0.12727273], [2731, 3159, 0.01869159], [3159, 3510, 0.02564103], [3510, 3960, 0.02666667], [3960, 4031, 0.12676056], [4031, 4122, 0.13186813], [4122, 4193, 0.12676056], [4193, 4268, 0.13333333], [4268, 4333, 0.12307692]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4333, 0.49608356]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4333, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4333, 0.53524572]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4333, -102.17035963]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4333, 24.10351315]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4333, 100.93929405]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4333, 41.0]]}
Here's how you know we're official. Explore All Topics Careers Economy Ecosystems Geodesy Hazards Navigation Observations Ocean Recreation Sea Level Rise Story Maps Tools Save Spectacular: Celebrating 50 Years of National Marine Sanctuaries Save Spectacular Celebrating 50 Years of National Marine Sanctuaries Celebrate Sanctuaries Visit NOAA Sanctuaries for more feature stories, events, multimedia, sanctuary milestones, and our new video as we celebrate a half-century of science, service, and stewardship. October 23, 2022, marks the 50th anniversary of NOAA’s National Marine Sanctuary System. It’s a milestone in NOAA’s mission to conserve and protect some of the nation's most treasured wildlife, seascapes, maritime heritage, and cultural resources. Today, the sanctuary system encompasses more than 1,605,793 square kilometers (620,000 square miles) of ocean and Great Lakes waters from Washington state to the Florida Keys, and from Lake Huron to American Samoa. The network includes a system of 15 national marine sanctuaries and Papahānaumokuākea and Rose Atoll marine national monuments. A diverse network of sites with diverse goals, our sanctuaries and monuments include remote coral reefs and deep canyons, whale migration routes, shipwrecks, and idyllic settings for recreation, as well as places that sustain the stories and cultures that define America’s Indigenous people and maritime legacy. These sites play a critical role in marine conservation and stewardship, and provide safe haven for marine life and ecosystems we depend on for a variety of ecosystem services, social, cultural, and economic benefits. But where did this idea for a national system of ocean parks begin? Explore Key Moments Spanning 50 Years of NOAA Sanctuaries → 1969: An oil spill inspires conservation A series of environmental crises in the late 1960s, culminating with the Santa Barbara Oil Spill in 1969, prompted the nation’s leaders to get serious about the need to protect special ocean places. Here, President Nixon and the press corps tour an oiled beach in Santa Barbara in 1969. Credit: Oliver Atkins, White House photographer, courtesy of the National Archives. 1970: NOAA is created NOAA, the parent agency of the Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, was created in 1970 (shown above is the DOC Secretary approving its creation), along with the Environmental Protection Agency. The Marine Mammal Protection Act, Coastal Zone Management Act, Clean Water Act, and Marine Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act, which form the foundation for our conservation efforts today, were all signed in October 1972. 1975: U.S.S. Monitor becomes first NOAA National Marine Sanctuary Monitor National Marine Sanctuary, the nation’s first, was designated in 1975 to protect the wreck of the Civil War-era ironclad USS Monitor. Another new sanctuary, Key Largo National Marine Sanctuary, followed later that year. This painting by J.O. Davidson shows the Battle of Hampton Roads fought on March 9, 1862, between USS Monitor and CSS Virginia. Credit: Naval History and Heritage Command. 1981: Sanctuaries designated in Georgia, Florida and California If the 1970s were about establishing the foundation of the sanctuary program, the 1980s were about gaining its stability. President Carter ordered NOAA to create a list of areas for consideration as sanctuaries and urged the agency to move more expeditiously in designations. Channel Island National Marine Sanctuary was designated in 1980 and in January 1981 President Carter approved the designations of Gray’s Reef, Looe Key (here a snorkeler checks out a Florida Keys reef in the late 1970s), and Point Reyes-Farallon Islands national marine sanctuaries. Credit: Flip Schulke, part of the EPA’s Documerica Project, courtesy of the National Archives. 1989: Recreational divers lead California sanctuary effort Fagatele Bay National Marine Sanctuary was designated in 1986. Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary followed in 1989, largely as a result of the efforts of a group of dedicated recreational divers, Cordell Expeditions, who explored the bank in the early 1980s. One of the Cordell Expeditions divers is shown above, exploring the bank. Credit: Cordell Expeditions. 1992: Sanctuary program adds four new sites The 1990s brought rapid growth. New, large sites were added to the program, starting with Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary in 1990, followed by four more in 1992: Stellwagen Bank, Flower Garden Banks, Monterey Bay, and Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale national marine sanctuaries (shown here). Olympic Coast followed in 1994. 1998: Sanctuary program achieves higher profile The 1990s also brought a higher profile to the sanctuary program and to ocean conservation in general, as seen here as President Clinton and Vice President Gore walk on the beach of Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary in 1998, there to head up the National Ocean Conference. The sanctuary program adopted its now iconic whale tail logo in 1995 and partnered with National Geographic in 1998 on the Sustainable Seas Expeditions. Credit: Bob McNeely, courtesy of the National Archives. 2000: A national system takes shape In 2000, Congress ordered NOAA to take the next step in its development and become a system. This meant taking a more strategic approach to plan for its future needs and growth, and undergo a deliberate effort to develop its system identity. New sites added to the system during this decade were Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary (shown here), Northwestern Hawaiian Islands Coral Reef Ecosystem Reserve, and Rose Atoll Marine National Monument. 2010s: Investing in local communities A maturing view of sanctuaries in the 2010s resulted in increasing investments in programs and partnerships at the local level: empowerment of sanctuary advisory councils, establishment of citizen science and other volunteer programs, creation of programs to reach more diverse audiences, and renewed dedication to working with Indigenous partners and communities. Here, members of a singing group rehearse for choral competitions held every Flag Day in American Samoa. 2019: Expanded protection In 2012, Fagatele Bay National Marine Sanctuary was expanded into National Marine Sanctuary of American Samoa. Additional expansions followed: Thunder Bay in 2014; Monterey Bay, Cordell Bank, and Greater Farallones in 2015; and Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in 2016. The decade closed with the first new sanctuary designation in a generation when Mallows Bay-Potomac River National Marine Sanctuary was designated in 2019, shown here. 2021: New site in the Great Lakes The 2020s started off with the designation of the newest site in the sanctuary system: Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary in 2021. The sanctuary’s southern boundary ends at picturesque Port Washington, shown above. The same year, Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary expanded to include an additional 14 banks, tripling in size. 2022: Future challenges, aspirations As we reach our 50th anniversary, we are committed to putting ourselves on the right path to meet the challenges we face now and those we know are coming. We hope to add new areas to the system, starting with the proposed Lake Ontario, Hudson Canyon, and Chumash Heritage national marine sanctuaries. We are helping prepare future stewards of our ocean, including our Nancy Foster Scholars shown above. Our newly released five-year strategic plan and twenty-year vision will help chart our course. We don’t know how things will look for our centennial in 2072 but we fully embrace our responsibility to save these spectacular places and ensure the National Marine Sanctuary System remains a source of pride and enjoyment for all people.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/10752
{"url": "https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/recreation/noaa-sanctuaries-50th-anniversary.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "oceanservice.noaa.gov", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:44:44Z", "digest": "sha1:SCHOIVNV3HESZ2UU4FRSMO5T4UV4C3JX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7767, 7767.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7767, 8838.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7767, 35.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7767, 79.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7767, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7767, 278.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7767, 0.28766141]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7767, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7767, 0.06568888]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7767, 0.04400062]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7767, 0.01872367]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7767, 0.01872367]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7767, 0.01872367]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7767, 0.05024185]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7767, 0.05741925]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7767, 0.01622718]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7767, 0.01649928]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7767, 0.17001435]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7767, 0.43522439]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7767, 5.42675699]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7767, 5.50697231]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7767, 1181.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 36, 1.0], [36, 171, 0.0], [171, 241, 0.0], [241, 258, 0.0], [258, 310, 0.0], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 510, 1.0], [510, 758, 1.0], [758, 1101, 1.0], [1101, 1699, 1.0], [1699, 1759, 0.0], [1759, 1800, 0.0], [1800, 2171, 1.0], [2171, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2619, 1.0], [2619, 2685, 0.0], [2685, 3085, 1.0], [3085, 3149, 0.0], [3149, 3803, 1.0], [3803, 3862, 0.0], [3862, 4228, 1.0], [4228, 4272, 0.0], [4272, 4603, 1.0], [4603, 4651, 0.0], [4651, 5138, 1.0], [5138, 5174, 0.0], [5174, 5623, 1.0], [5623, 5661, 0.0], [5661, 6131, 1.0], [6131, 6157, 0.0], [6157, 6605, 1.0], [6605, 6639, 0.0], [6639, 6994, 1.0], [6994, 7031, 0.0], [7031, 7767, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 171, 0.0], [171, 241, 0.0], [241, 258, 0.0], [258, 310, 0.0], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 510, 0.0], [510, 758, 0.0], [758, 1101, 0.0], [1101, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1759, 0.0], [1759, 1800, 0.0], [1800, 2171, 0.0], [2171, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2619, 0.0], [2619, 2685, 0.0], [2685, 3085, 0.0], [3085, 3149, 0.0], [3149, 3803, 0.0], [3803, 3862, 0.0], [3862, 4228, 0.0], [4228, 4272, 0.0], [4272, 4603, 0.0], [4603, 4651, 0.0], [4651, 5138, 0.0], [5138, 5174, 0.0], [5174, 5623, 0.0], [5623, 5661, 0.0], [5661, 6131, 0.0], [6131, 6157, 0.0], [6157, 6605, 0.0], [6605, 6639, 0.0], [6639, 6994, 0.0], [6994, 7031, 0.0], [7031, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 36, 6.0], [36, 171, 18.0], [171, 241, 9.0], [241, 258, 2.0], [258, 310, 7.0], [310, 332, 2.0], [332, 510, 25.0], [510, 758, 36.0], [758, 1101, 51.0], [1101, 1699, 93.0], [1699, 1759, 10.0], [1759, 1800, 6.0], [1800, 2171, 60.0], [2171, 2193, 4.0], [2193, 2619, 64.0], [2619, 2685, 9.0], [2685, 3085, 62.0], [3085, 3149, 8.0], [3149, 3803, 100.0], [3803, 3862, 7.0], [3862, 4228, 56.0], [4228, 4272, 7.0], [4272, 4603, 50.0], [4603, 4651, 6.0], [4651, 5138, 79.0], [5138, 5174, 6.0], [5174, 5623, 72.0], [5623, 5661, 5.0], [5661, 6131, 68.0], [6131, 6157, 3.0], [6157, 6605, 64.0], [6605, 6639, 7.0], [6639, 6994, 53.0], [6994, 7031, 4.0], [7031, 7767, 122.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 171, 0.0], [171, 241, 0.02941176], [241, 258, 0.0], [258, 310, 0.03921569], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 510, 0.0], [510, 758, 0.0334728], [758, 1101, 0.04477612], [1101, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1759, 0.03389831], [1759, 1800, 0.1025641], [1800, 2171, 0.033241], [2171, 2193, 0.2], [2193, 2619, 0.01946472], [2619, 2685, 0.06557377], [2685, 3085, 0.02337662], [3085, 3149, 0.06557377], [3149, 3803, 0.03125], [3803, 3862, 0.07017544], [3862, 4228, 0.03370787], [4228, 4272, 0.0952381], [4272, 4603, 0.05031447], [4603, 4651, 0.08695652], [4651, 5138, 0.03340292], [5138, 5174, 0.11764706], [5174, 5623, 0.00911162], [5623, 5661, 0.11111111], [5661, 6131, 0.00865801], [6131, 6157, 0.16666667], [6157, 6605, 0.0456621], [6605, 6639, 0.125], [6639, 6994, 0.02881844], [6994, 7031, 0.11764706], [7031, 7767, 0.00828729]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 171, 0.0], [171, 241, 0.0], [241, 258, 0.0], [258, 310, 0.0], [310, 332, 0.0], [332, 510, 0.0], [510, 758, 0.0], [758, 1101, 0.0], [1101, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1759, 0.0], [1759, 1800, 0.0], [1800, 2171, 0.0], [2171, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2619, 0.0], [2619, 2685, 0.0], [2685, 3085, 0.0], [3085, 3149, 0.0], [3149, 3803, 0.0], [3803, 3862, 0.0], [3862, 4228, 0.0], [4228, 4272, 0.0], [4272, 4603, 0.0], [4603, 4651, 0.0], [4651, 5138, 0.0], [5138, 5174, 0.0], [5174, 5623, 0.0], [5623, 5661, 0.0], [5661, 6131, 0.0], [6131, 6157, 0.0], [6157, 6605, 0.0], [6605, 6639, 0.0], [6639, 6994, 0.0], [6994, 7031, 0.0], [7031, 7767, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.02777778], [36, 171, 0.13333333], [171, 241, 0.1], [241, 258, 0.11764706], [258, 310, 0.09615385], [310, 332, 0.09090909], [332, 510, 0.03370787], [510, 758, 0.05645161], [758, 1101, 0.04081633], [1101, 1699, 0.0083612], [1699, 1759, 0.16666667], [1759, 1800, 0.02439024], [1800, 2171, 0.0458221], [2171, 2193, 0.18181818], [2193, 2619, 0.07746479], [2619, 2685, 0.16666667], [2685, 3085, 0.0925], [3085, 3149, 0.0625], [3149, 3803, 0.05351682], [3803, 3862, 0.03389831], [3862, 4228, 0.04918033], [4228, 4272, 0.02272727], [4272, 4603, 0.06042296], [4603, 4651, 0.02083333], [4651, 5138, 0.05338809], [5138, 5174, 0.02777778], [5174, 5623, 0.05567929], [5623, 5661, 0.02631579], [5661, 6131, 0.01489362], [6131, 6157, 0.03846154], [6157, 6605, 0.07142857], [6605, 6639, 0.08823529], [6639, 6994, 0.04788732], [6994, 7031, 0.02702703], [7031, 7767, 0.02445652]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7767, 0.52723593]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7767, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7767, 0.90838265]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7767, -362.2755236]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7767, 4.49468513]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7767, 27.91228164]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7767, 53.0]]}
⌂ Calendar → October in 2024 October, 2024 Calendar with holidays, observances and special days → view ← October 2 Events → Current year 2023, October; year 2024, October see also: year 2016, October; year 2017, October; year 2018, October; year 2019, October; year 2020, October; year 2021, October; year 2022, October calendar Tuesday 1 October 2024 October 1 marks the beginning of International School Library Month (ISLM), a month to celebrate and draw attention to school libraries. First started as International Sc..→ quotes & wishes → International Day of Non-Violence According to General Assembly resolution A/RES/61/271 of 15 June 2007, which established the commemoration, the International Day is an occasion to "disseminate the ..→ Rosh Hashannah The festival of Rosh Hashanah—the name means “Head of the Year”—is observed for two days beginning on 1 Tishrei, the first day of the Jewish year. It is the anniversary o..→ Friday 4 October 2024 World Animal Day World Animal Day was observed on October 4th, the feast day of Francis of Assisi, the patron saint of animals. Started in Florence Italy in 1931 at a convention of ecolog..→ World Smile Day World Smile Day is celebrated on the first Friday in the month of October every year. The idea of World Smile Day was coined and initiated by Harvey Ball, a commercial ar..→ The General Assembly declares 4 to 10 October World Space Week to celebrate each year at the international level the contributions of space science and technology to the ..→ Saturday 5 October 2024 Ostomy Awareness Day (World Ostomy Day) In 1993 Professor Dr. Gerhard Englert proposed the idea to organize World Ostomy Day. The aim was to draw attention for people with a stoma and pouch, their quality of l..→ World Teachers’ Day UNESCO proclaimed 5 October to be World Teachers’ Day in 1994, celebrating the great step made for teachers on 5 October 1966, when a special intergovernmental conference..→ Sunday 6 October 2024 German-American Day In 1983, President Ronald Reagan proclaimed October 6 as German-American Day to celebrate and honor the 300th anniversary of German American immigration and culture to th..→ Nonviolence Week in Ohio The idea of Ohio Violence Week was developed by the Mahoning Valley Sojourn to the Past, an organization that advocates for peace, tolerance and understanding in the comm..→ World Architecture Day World Architect Day is celebrated on the first Monday of every October, concurrently with the United Nations’ World Habitat Day, was set up by the Union International de..→ World Habitat Day In 1985 the United Nations designated the first Monday of October every year as World Habitat Day (Resolution 40/202 of 17 December 1985). The idea is to reflect on the s..→ Leif Erikson Day in Wisconsin Leif Erikson was born in Iceland and raised in Greenland. Norse sagas written 300 years after his death describe his explorations, around 1000 CE, of a land he called &qu..→ World Post Day World Post Day is celebrated each year on 9 October, the anniversary of the establishment of the Universal Postal Union in 1874 in the Swiss Capital, Bern. It was declare..→ World Mental Health Day is observed on 10 October every year, with the overall objective of raising awareness of mental health issues around the world and mobilizing effo..→ World Sight Day World Sight Day, observed annually on the second Thursday of October, is a global event meant to draw attention on blindness and vision impairment. It was originally init..→ General Pulaski Memorial Day in Ohio Casimir Pulaski (March 6, 1745 – October 11, 1779) was a Polish noblemanb, soldier and military commander who has been called with his fellow Hungarian friend Michael Kov..→ On December 19, 2011, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution 66/170 to declare 11 October as the International Day of the Girl Child. Girls face discrimi..→ World Egg Day Eggs are one of nature’s highest quality sources of protein, and indeed contain many of the key ingredients for life. The proteins contained within eggs are highly import..→ Christopher Columbus Day in Wisconsin Christopher Columbus was an Italian explorer, navigator, colonizer and citizen of the Republic of Genoa. Under the auspices of the Catholic Monarchs of Spain, he complete..→ World Arthritis Day World Arthritis Day (WAD), established in 1996 by Arthritis and Rheumatism International (ARI) is a global initiative bringing people together to raise awareness of issue..→ World Hospice and Palliative Care Day World Hospice and Palliative Care Day is a unified day of action to celebrate and support hospice and palliative care around the world. Voices for Hospices is a wave of c..→ Yom Kippur is the holiest day of the year—the day on which jews are closest to G-d and to the quintessence of their own souls. It is the Day of Atonement—“For on this day..→ International Day for Disaster Reduction By resolution 44/236 (22 December 1989), the General Assembly designated the second Wednesday of October International Day for Natural Disaster Reduction. The Internation..→ Metastatic Breast Cancer Awareness Day in Ohio Metastatic breast cancer is also called stage IV or advanced breast cancer. At University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, offer one of the only support and education gr..→ American Indian Heritage Day in Alabama STATE OF ALABAMA. PROCLAMATION BY THE GOVERNOR: "WHEREAS, many of our state citizens are of Native American Indian heritage, and their Traditional Ways have greatly..→ Columbus Day is a federal U.S. holiday that officially commemorates the anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ landing in the New World on October 12, 1492. Though the holi..→ Farmers’ Day in Florida Farmer’s Day has history dating back to the 1800’s. There are some cities and towns across the United States that have their own versions of Farmer’s Day, with celebratio..→ Fraternal Day in Alabama Fraternal Day was originally celebrated in Alabama on the second Thursday of October beginning in 1915. In 1915, The Fraternal Monitor, published by the National Fratern..→ Indigenous People’s Day in Berkeley, California The idea of replacing Columbus Day with a day celebrating the indigenous people of North America first arose in 1977 from the International Conference on Discrimination A..→ Native American Day in South Dakota In 1989, the South Dakota legislature unanimously passed legislation proposed by Governor George S. Mickelson to proclaim 1990 as the "Year of Reconciliation" b..→ Virgin Islands-Puerto Rico Friendship Day It is easy to be insular in thinking when geographic factors facilitate it but it is good for us in the Virgin Islands to retain some regard for our neighbors, even if th..→ World Standards Day Each year on 14 October, the members of the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and International Teleco..→ Global Handwashing Day Global Handwashing Day is an annual global advocacy day dedicated to increasing awareness and understanding about the importance of handwashing with soap as an easy, effe..→ International Day of Rural Women The first International Day of Rural Women was observed on 15 October 2008. This new international day, established by the General Assembly in its resolution 62/136 of 18..→ Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day in Ohio Approximately 1 in 4 pregnancies worldwide end in miscarriage. According to the World Health Organization, 4.5 million stillbirths occur each year worldwide. The Lancet ..→ White Cane Safety Day (White Cane Day) White Cane Safety Day is a national observance in the United States, celebrated on Oct. 15 of each year since 1964. Then President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the bill that ..→ Dravet Syndrome Awareness Day in Ohio Dravet syndrome, also known as Severe Myoclonic Epilepsy of Infancy (SMEI), is a rare and catastrophic form of intractable epilepsy that begins in infancy, with an estima..→ Missouri Day To appeal to as many voters as possible, politicians sometimes pronounce "Missouri" two different ways—Missouree and Missouruh—in the same speech. At one time, ..→ National Boss’s Day (or Bosses Day) Boss’s Day, also known as Bosses Day or National Boss Day, is generally observed on or around October 16 in the United States. (If the holiday falls on a weekend, it is c..→ Sukkot or Succot, in traditional Ashkenazi pronunciation Sukkos or Succos, literally Feast of Booths, is commonly translated to English as Feast of Tabernacles, sometimes..→ World Anesthesia Day World Anesthesia Day commemorates the first successful demonstration of ether anesthesia on October 16, 1846. American dentist William Morton , for the first time publicl..→ On 16 October 1945, 42 countries assembled in Quebec, Canada, to create the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). Their goal was to free humanity..→ International Credit Union Day International Credit Union Day (ICU Day) has been celebrated on the third Thursday of October since 1948. 2018 marks the 70th anniversary of its celebration. (The 2018 IC..→ International Day for the Eradication of Poverty We are living in the world, where every fourth person tries to survive for 1 US dollar a day. Even in the most technologically developed country, USA, every 7th person is..→ Alaska Day Alaska has two official state holidays: Seward’s Day, the last Monday in March, commemorates the 1867 signing of the treaty in which U.S. Secretary of State William Sewar..→ Day of Struggle Against Breast Cancer On October 19 is celebrated worldwide on the Day of Struggle Against Breast Cancer. The best tool for this struggle is early detection, therefore, worldwide October it in..→ International Chefs Day Each year on the 20th of October we celebrate the International Chefs Day. The American Culinary Federation, Inc. (ACF), a professional, organization for chefs and cooks..→ International Day of the Air Traffic Controller The International Day of the Air Traffic Controller, celebrated on 20 October each year, not only marks the anniversary of the International Federation of Air Traffic Con..→ World Osteoporosis Day The concept for World Osteoporosis Day started with a campaign launched by the United Kingdom’s National Osteoporosis Society and supported by European Commission on Octo..→ World Statistics Day World Statistics Day is observed On 20 October every 5 years since 2010 when it was celebrated for the first time, as decided in the UN General Assembly resolution 64/267..→ International Stuttering Awareness Day Since 1998, every year on October 22 we celebrate International Stuttering Awareness Day (ISAD). The self-help groups and the national associations become very active an..→ U.S.S. Hocking day in Ohio USS Hocking (APA-121) was a Haskell-class attack transport of the United States Navy (Displacement: 6,873 tons; Length: 455 ft (139 m); Beam: 62 ft (19 m); Draft: 24 ft (..→ Disarmament Week The annual observance of Disarmament Week, which begins on the anniversary of the founding of the United Nations, was called for in the Final Document of the General Asse..→ United Nations Day (UN Day) UN Day marks the anniversary of the entry into force in 1945 of the UN Charter. With the ratification of this founding document by the majority of its signatories, includ..→ The General Assembly in 1972 instituted World Development Information Day to draw the attention of world public opinion to development problems and the need to strengthen..→ Larry Itliong Day in California Larry Itliong is known as a prominent leader in one of the greatest social justice movements in the United States of America: the American farm labor movement. At 15 yea..→ Nevada Day With the passage of AB396 by the 1997 legislature, Nevada voters, on November 3, 1998 advised the 1999 legislature they wanted to celebrate Nevada Day on the last Friday ..→ World Pasta Day Just imagine a plate of hot freshly cooked spaghetti in a thick tomato sauce, with seasoned pieces of smoked sausage, black olives, and mushrooms, or delicious Chicken Fe..→ Make a Difference Day British police officers carry a teddy bear in their cars to help comfort kids who are scared after an accident. That’s really awesome! If you’re a police officer in India..→ Daylight saving time (autumn) New Zealander George Hudson proposed the idea of daylight saving in 1895. Germany and Austria-Hungary organized the first nationwide implementation, starting on April 30,..→ World Day for Audiovisual Heritage Audiovisual documents, such as films, radio and television programmes, are our common heritage and contain the primary records of the 20th and 21st centuries. They help t..→ International Animation Day October 28, the International Animation Day (IAD) was proclaimed in 2002 by the International Animated Film Association (ASIFA) as the main global event to celebrate the ..→ World Psoriasis Day This Day is an annual day specially dedicated to people with psoriasis and/or psoriatic arthritis. Conceived by patients for patients, World Psoriasis Day is a truly glob..→ World Stroke Day Stroke can be caused either by a clot obstructing the flow of blood to the brain (called an ischemic stroke) or by a blood vessel rupturing and preventing blood flow to t..→ According to BBC Online, it is "widely believed" that many Halloween traditions originated from the ancient Celtic harvest festival Samhain, and that this Gaeli..→ The United Nations has designated every 31 October as World Cities Day. The Day is expected to greatly promote the international community’s interest in global urbanizati..→ World Savings Day (World Thrift Day) The World Savings Day was established on October 31, 1924, during the 1st International Savings Bank Congress (World Society of Savings Banks) in Milano, Italy. The Itali..→
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/12696
{"url": "https://webplus.info/index.php?page=340&month=10&year=2024", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "webplus.info", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:50:15Z", "digest": "sha1:6RZK2HAWIJ26W4NOMWHAXX467BN3D7WN"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 13835, 13835.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 13835, 19339.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 13835, 134.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 13835, 323.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 13835, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 13835, 267.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 13835, 0.29245648]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 13835, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 13835, 0.03981828]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 13835, 0.02814894]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 13835, 0.00730447]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 13835, 0.01068947]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 13835, 0.00962052]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 13835, 0.00677]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 13835, 0.01818182]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 13835, 0.18568665]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 13835, 0.38909091]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 13835, 5.10272727]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 13835, 5.68078236]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 13835, 2200.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 96, 0.0], [96, 124, 0.0], [124, 329, 0.0], [329, 352, 0.0], [352, 526, 0.0], [526, 544, 0.0], [544, 578, 0.0], [578, 747, 0.0], [747, 762, 0.0], [762, 936, 0.0], [936, 958, 0.0], [958, 975, 0.0], [975, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1339, 0.0], [1339, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 1537, 0.0], [1537, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1750, 0.0], [1750, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 1944, 0.0], [1944, 1966, 0.0], [1966, 1986, 0.0], [1986, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2185, 0.0], [2185, 2359, 0.0], [2359, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2555, 0.0], [2555, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 2747, 0.0], [2747, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3314, 0.0], [3314, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3541, 0.0], [3541, 3715, 0.0], [3715, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 3902, 0.0], [3902, 4076, 0.0], [4076, 4114, 0.0], [4114, 4288, 0.0], [4288, 4308, 0.0], [4308, 4482, 0.0], [4482, 4520, 0.0], [4520, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4868, 0.0], [4868, 4909, 0.0], [4909, 5083, 0.0], [5083, 5130, 0.0], [5130, 5303, 0.0], [5303, 5343, 0.0], [5343, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5685, 0.0], [5685, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5883, 0.0], [5883, 5908, 0.0], [5908, 6081, 0.0], [6081, 6129, 0.0], [6129, 6303, 0.0], [6303, 6339, 0.0], [6339, 6503, 0.0], [6503, 6545, 0.0], [6545, 6719, 0.0], [6719, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6913, 0.0], [6913, 6936, 0.0], [6936, 7110, 0.0], [7110, 7143, 0.0], [7143, 7317, 0.0], [7317, 7367, 0.0], [7367, 7540, 0.0], [7540, 7579, 0.0], [7579, 7753, 0.0], [7753, 7791, 0.0], [7791, 7965, 0.0], [7965, 7978, 0.0], [7978, 8142, 0.0], [8142, 8178, 0.0], [8178, 8352, 0.0], [8352, 8526, 0.0], [8526, 8547, 0.0], [8547, 8721, 0.0], [8721, 8895, 0.0], [8895, 8926, 0.0], [8926, 9100, 0.0], [9100, 9149, 0.0], [9149, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9334, 0.0], [9334, 9508, 0.0], [9508, 9546, 0.0], [9546, 9720, 0.0], [9720, 9744, 0.0], [9744, 9917, 0.0], [9917, 9965, 0.0], [9965, 10139, 0.0], [10139, 10162, 0.0], [10162, 10336, 0.0], [10336, 10357, 0.0], [10357, 10531, 0.0], [10531, 10570, 0.0], [10570, 10743, 0.0], [10743, 10770, 0.0], [10770, 10944, 0.0], [10944, 10961, 0.0], [10961, 11135, 0.0], [11135, 11163, 0.0], [11163, 11337, 0.0], [11337, 11511, 0.0], [11511, 11543, 0.0], [11543, 11716, 0.0], [11716, 11727, 0.0], [11727, 11901, 0.0], [11901, 11917, 0.0], [11917, 12091, 0.0], [12091, 12113, 0.0], [12113, 12287, 0.0], [12287, 12317, 0.0], [12317, 12491, 0.0], [12491, 12526, 0.0], [12526, 12700, 0.0], [12700, 12728, 0.0], [12728, 12902, 0.0], [12902, 12922, 0.0], [12922, 13096, 0.0], [13096, 13113, 0.0], [13113, 13287, 0.0], [13287, 13451, 0.0], [13451, 13625, 0.0], [13625, 13662, 0.0], [13662, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 96, 0.0], [96, 124, 0.0], [124, 329, 0.0], [329, 352, 0.0], [352, 526, 0.0], [526, 544, 0.0], [544, 578, 0.0], [578, 747, 0.0], [747, 762, 0.0], [762, 936, 0.0], [936, 958, 0.0], [958, 975, 0.0], [975, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1339, 0.0], [1339, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 1537, 0.0], [1537, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1750, 0.0], [1750, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 1944, 0.0], [1944, 1966, 0.0], [1966, 1986, 0.0], [1986, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2185, 0.0], [2185, 2359, 0.0], [2359, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2555, 0.0], [2555, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 2747, 0.0], [2747, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3314, 0.0], [3314, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3541, 0.0], [3541, 3715, 0.0], [3715, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 3902, 0.0], [3902, 4076, 0.0], [4076, 4114, 0.0], [4114, 4288, 0.0], [4288, 4308, 0.0], [4308, 4482, 0.0], [4482, 4520, 0.0], [4520, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4868, 0.0], [4868, 4909, 0.0], [4909, 5083, 0.0], [5083, 5130, 0.0], [5130, 5303, 0.0], [5303, 5343, 0.0], [5343, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5685, 0.0], [5685, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5883, 0.0], [5883, 5908, 0.0], [5908, 6081, 0.0], [6081, 6129, 0.0], [6129, 6303, 0.0], [6303, 6339, 0.0], [6339, 6503, 0.0], [6503, 6545, 0.0], [6545, 6719, 0.0], [6719, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6913, 0.0], [6913, 6936, 0.0], [6936, 7110, 0.0], [7110, 7143, 0.0], [7143, 7317, 0.0], [7317, 7367, 0.0], [7367, 7540, 0.0], [7540, 7579, 0.0], [7579, 7753, 0.0], [7753, 7791, 0.0], [7791, 7965, 0.0], [7965, 7978, 0.0], [7978, 8142, 0.0], [8142, 8178, 0.0], [8178, 8352, 0.0], [8352, 8526, 0.0], [8526, 8547, 0.0], [8547, 8721, 0.0], [8721, 8895, 0.0], [8895, 8926, 0.0], [8926, 9100, 0.0], [9100, 9149, 0.0], [9149, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9334, 0.0], [9334, 9508, 0.0], [9508, 9546, 0.0], [9546, 9720, 0.0], [9720, 9744, 0.0], [9744, 9917, 0.0], [9917, 9965, 0.0], [9965, 10139, 0.0], [10139, 10162, 0.0], [10162, 10336, 0.0], [10336, 10357, 0.0], [10357, 10531, 0.0], [10531, 10570, 0.0], [10570, 10743, 0.0], [10743, 10770, 0.0], [10770, 10944, 0.0], [10944, 10961, 0.0], [10961, 11135, 0.0], [11135, 11163, 0.0], [11163, 11337, 0.0], [11337, 11511, 0.0], [11511, 11543, 0.0], [11543, 11716, 0.0], [11716, 11727, 0.0], [11727, 11901, 0.0], [11901, 11917, 0.0], [11917, 12091, 0.0], [12091, 12113, 0.0], [12113, 12287, 0.0], [12287, 12317, 0.0], [12317, 12491, 0.0], [12491, 12526, 0.0], [12526, 12700, 0.0], [12700, 12728, 0.0], [12728, 12902, 0.0], [12902, 12922, 0.0], [12922, 13096, 0.0], [13096, 13113, 0.0], [13113, 13287, 0.0], [13287, 13451, 0.0], [13451, 13625, 0.0], [13625, 13662, 0.0], [13662, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 6.0], [29, 96, 9.0], [96, 124, 7.0], [124, 329, 31.0], [329, 352, 4.0], [352, 526, 26.0], [526, 544, 3.0], [544, 578, 4.0], [578, 747, 24.0], [747, 762, 2.0], [762, 936, 31.0], [936, 958, 4.0], [958, 975, 3.0], [975, 1149, 31.0], [1149, 1165, 3.0], [1165, 1339, 32.0], [1339, 1513, 29.0], [1513, 1537, 4.0], [1537, 1577, 6.0], [1577, 1750, 31.0], [1750, 1770, 3.0], [1770, 1944, 27.0], [1944, 1966, 4.0], [1966, 1986, 2.0], [1986, 2160, 26.0], [2160, 2185, 4.0], [2185, 2359, 28.0], [2359, 2382, 3.0], [2382, 2555, 28.0], [2555, 2573, 3.0], [2573, 2747, 31.0], [2747, 2777, 5.0], [2777, 2951, 30.0], [2951, 2966, 3.0], [2966, 3140, 30.0], [3140, 3314, 28.0], [3314, 3330, 3.0], [3330, 3504, 28.0], [3504, 3541, 6.0], [3541, 3715, 28.0], [3715, 3888, 27.0], [3888, 3902, 3.0], [3902, 4076, 28.0], [4076, 4114, 5.0], [4114, 4288, 26.0], [4288, 4308, 3.0], [4308, 4482, 25.0], [4482, 4520, 6.0], [4520, 4694, 31.0], [4694, 4868, 34.0], [4868, 4909, 5.0], [4909, 5083, 23.0], [5083, 5130, 7.0], [5130, 5303, 27.0], [5303, 5343, 6.0], [5343, 5511, 25.0], [5511, 5685, 27.0], [5685, 5709, 4.0], [5709, 5883, 29.0], [5883, 5908, 4.0], [5908, 6081, 26.0], [6081, 6129, 6.0], [6129, 6303, 27.0], [6303, 6339, 6.0], [6339, 6503, 24.0], [6503, 6545, 5.0], [6545, 6719, 33.0], [6719, 6739, 3.0], [6739, 6913, 21.0], [6913, 6936, 3.0], [6936, 7110, 26.0], [7110, 7143, 5.0], [7143, 7317, 28.0], [7317, 7367, 8.0], [7367, 7540, 25.0], [7540, 7579, 7.0], [7579, 7753, 31.0], [7753, 7791, 6.0], [7791, 7965, 27.0], [7965, 7978, 2.0], [7978, 8142, 24.0], [8142, 8178, 6.0], [8178, 8352, 33.0], [8352, 8526, 24.0], [8526, 8547, 3.0], [8547, 8721, 24.0], [8721, 8895, 28.0], [8895, 8926, 4.0], [8926, 9100, 28.0], [9100, 9149, 7.0], [9149, 9323, 31.0], [9323, 9334, 2.0], [9334, 9508, 28.0], [9508, 9546, 6.0], [9546, 9720, 28.0], [9720, 9744, 3.0], [9744, 9917, 26.0], [9917, 9965, 7.0], [9965, 10139, 27.0], [10139, 10162, 3.0], [10162, 10336, 25.0], [10336, 10357, 3.0], [10357, 10531, 30.0], [10531, 10570, 4.0], [10570, 10743, 25.0], [10743, 10770, 5.0], [10770, 10944, 30.0], [10944, 10961, 2.0], [10961, 11135, 29.0], [11135, 11163, 5.0], [11163, 11337, 30.0], [11337, 11511, 26.0], [11511, 11543, 5.0], [11543, 11716, 30.0], [11716, 11727, 2.0], [11727, 11901, 30.0], [11901, 11917, 3.0], [11917, 12091, 28.0], [12091, 12113, 4.0], [12113, 12287, 30.0], [12287, 12317, 4.0], [12317, 12491, 24.0], [12491, 12526, 5.0], [12526, 12700, 27.0], [12700, 12728, 3.0], [12728, 12902, 27.0], [12902, 12922, 3.0], [12922, 13096, 27.0], [13096, 13113, 3.0], [13113, 13287, 32.0], [13287, 13451, 24.0], [13451, 13625, 26.0], [13625, 13662, 6.0], [13662, 13835, 27.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.14285714], [29, 96, 0.0625], [96, 124, 0.03703704], [124, 329, 0.19251337], [329, 352, 0.22727273], [352, 526, 0.00598802], [526, 544, 0.0], [544, 578, 0.0], [578, 747, 0.06875], [747, 762, 0.0], [762, 936, 0.00591716], [936, 958, 0.23809524], [958, 975, 0.0], [975, 1149, 0.0297619], [1149, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1339, 0.0], [1339, 1513, 0.01754386], [1513, 1537, 0.2173913], [1537, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1750, 0.0239521], [1750, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 1944, 0.0591716], [1944, 1966, 0.23809524], [1966, 1986, 0.0], [1986, 2160, 0.04733728], [2160, 2185, 0.0], [2185, 2359, 0.0], [2359, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2555, 0.0], [2555, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 2747, 0.08982036], [2747, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2951, 0.04191617], [2951, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3140, 0.0297619], [3140, 3314, 0.01176471], [3314, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3541, 0.0], [3541, 3715, 0.06626506], [3715, 3888, 0.07831325], [3888, 3902, 0.0], [3902, 4076, 0.0], [4076, 4114, 0.0], [4114, 4288, 0.0], [4288, 4308, 0.0], [4308, 4482, 0.02409639], [4482, 4520, 0.0], [4520, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4868, 0.0], [4868, 4909, 0.0], [4909, 5083, 0.06626506], [5083, 5130, 0.0], [5130, 5303, 0.0], [5303, 5343, 0.0], [5343, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5685, 0.03592814], [5685, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5883, 0.02366864], [5883, 5908, 0.0], [5908, 6081, 0.04790419], [6081, 6129, 0.0], [6129, 6303, 0.02339181], [6303, 6339, 0.0], [6339, 6503, 0.05095541], [6503, 6545, 0.0], [6545, 6719, 0.0], [6719, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6913, 0.01212121], [6913, 6936, 0.0], [6936, 7110, 0.0], [7110, 7143, 0.0], [7143, 7317, 0.07738095], [7317, 7367, 0.0], [7367, 7540, 0.02409639], [7540, 7579, 0.0], [7579, 7753, 0.03592814], [7753, 7791, 0.0], [7791, 7965, 0.0], [7965, 7978, 0.0], [7978, 8142, 0.0], [8142, 8178, 0.0], [8178, 8352, 0.01204819], [8352, 8526, 0.0], [8526, 8547, 0.0], [8547, 8721, 0.03592814], [8721, 8895, 0.04848485], [8895, 8926, 0.0], [8926, 9100, 0.08433735], [9100, 9149, 0.0], [9149, 9323, 0.01197605], [9323, 9334, 0.0], [9334, 9508, 0.02409639], [9508, 9546, 0.0], [9546, 9720, 0.01190476], [9720, 9744, 0.0], [9744, 9917, 0.01226994], [9917, 9965, 0.0], [9965, 10139, 0.01183432], [10139, 10162, 0.0], [10162, 10336, 0.0], [10336, 10357, 0.0], [10357, 10531, 0.07100592], [10531, 10570, 0.0], [10570, 10743, 0.03636364], [10743, 10770, 0.0], [10770, 10944, 0.12418301], [10944, 10961, 0.0], [10961, 11135, 0.0], [11135, 11163, 0.0], [11163, 11337, 0.02366864], [11337, 11511, 0.02339181], [11511, 11543, 0.0], [11543, 11716, 0.01190476], [11716, 11727, 0.0], [11727, 11901, 0.0952381], [11901, 11917, 0.0], [11917, 12091, 0.0], [12091, 12113, 0.0], [12113, 12287, 0.0], [12287, 12317, 0.0], [12317, 12491, 0.03592814], [12491, 12526, 0.0], [12526, 12700, 0.0239521], [12700, 12728, 0.0], [12728, 12902, 0.03614458], [12902, 12922, 0.0], [12922, 13096, 0.0], [13096, 13113, 0.0], [13113, 13287, 0.0], [13287, 13451, 0.0], [13451, 13625, 0.01176471], [13625, 13662, 0.0], [13662, 13835, 0.04242424]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 96, 0.0], [96, 124, 0.0], [124, 329, 0.0], [329, 352, 0.0], [352, 526, 0.0], [526, 544, 0.0], [544, 578, 0.0], [578, 747, 0.0], [747, 762, 0.0], [762, 936, 0.0], [936, 958, 0.0], [958, 975, 0.0], [975, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1339, 0.0], [1339, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 1537, 0.0], [1537, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1750, 0.0], [1750, 1770, 0.0], [1770, 1944, 0.0], [1944, 1966, 0.0], [1966, 1986, 0.0], [1986, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2185, 0.0], [2185, 2359, 0.0], [2359, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2555, 0.0], [2555, 2573, 0.0], [2573, 2747, 0.0], [2747, 2777, 0.0], [2777, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 2966, 0.0], [2966, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3314, 0.0], [3314, 3330, 0.0], [3330, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3541, 0.0], [3541, 3715, 0.0], [3715, 3888, 0.0], [3888, 3902, 0.0], [3902, 4076, 0.0], [4076, 4114, 0.0], [4114, 4288, 0.0], [4288, 4308, 0.0], [4308, 4482, 0.0], [4482, 4520, 0.0], [4520, 4694, 0.0], [4694, 4868, 0.0], [4868, 4909, 0.0], [4909, 5083, 0.0], [5083, 5130, 0.0], [5130, 5303, 0.0], [5303, 5343, 0.0], [5343, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5685, 0.0], [5685, 5709, 0.0], [5709, 5883, 0.0], [5883, 5908, 0.0], [5908, 6081, 0.0], [6081, 6129, 0.0], [6129, 6303, 0.0], [6303, 6339, 0.0], [6339, 6503, 0.0], [6503, 6545, 0.0], [6545, 6719, 0.0], [6719, 6739, 0.0], [6739, 6913, 0.0], [6913, 6936, 0.0], [6936, 7110, 0.0], [7110, 7143, 0.0], [7143, 7317, 0.0], [7317, 7367, 0.0], [7367, 7540, 0.0], [7540, 7579, 0.0], [7579, 7753, 0.0], [7753, 7791, 0.0], [7791, 7965, 0.0], [7965, 7978, 0.0], [7978, 8142, 0.0], [8142, 8178, 0.0], [8178, 8352, 0.0], [8352, 8526, 0.0], [8526, 8547, 0.0], [8547, 8721, 0.0], [8721, 8895, 0.0], [8895, 8926, 0.0], [8926, 9100, 0.0], [9100, 9149, 0.0], [9149, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9334, 0.0], [9334, 9508, 0.0], [9508, 9546, 0.0], [9546, 9720, 0.0], [9720, 9744, 0.0], [9744, 9917, 0.0], [9917, 9965, 0.0], [9965, 10139, 0.0], [10139, 10162, 0.0], [10162, 10336, 0.0], [10336, 10357, 0.0], [10357, 10531, 0.0], [10531, 10570, 0.0], [10570, 10743, 0.0], [10743, 10770, 0.0], [10770, 10944, 0.0], [10944, 10961, 0.0], [10961, 11135, 0.0], [11135, 11163, 0.0], [11163, 11337, 0.0], [11337, 11511, 0.0], [11511, 11543, 0.0], [11543, 11716, 0.0], [11716, 11727, 0.0], [11727, 11901, 0.0], [11901, 11917, 0.0], [11917, 12091, 0.0], [12091, 12113, 0.0], [12113, 12287, 0.0], [12287, 12317, 0.0], [12317, 12491, 0.0], [12491, 12526, 0.0], [12526, 12700, 0.0], [12700, 12728, 0.0], [12728, 12902, 0.0], [12902, 12922, 0.0], [12922, 13096, 0.0], [13096, 13113, 0.0], [13113, 13287, 0.0], [13287, 13451, 0.0], [13451, 13625, 0.0], [13625, 13662, 0.0], [13662, 13835, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.06896552], [29, 96, 0.02985075], [96, 124, 0.07142857], [124, 329, 0.04878049], [329, 352, 0.08695652], [352, 526, 0.06896552], [526, 544, 0.0], [544, 578, 0.11764706], [578, 747, 0.0591716], [747, 762, 0.13333333], [762, 936, 0.04597701], [936, 958, 0.09090909], [958, 975, 0.17647059], [975, 1149, 0.05172414], [1149, 1165, 0.1875], [1165, 1339, 0.06321839], [1339, 1513, 0.04022989], [1513, 1537, 0.08333333], [1537, 1577, 0.15], [1577, 1750, 0.05202312], [1750, 1770, 0.15], [1770, 1944, 0.06321839], [1944, 1966, 0.09090909], [1966, 1986, 0.15], [1986, 2160, 0.05747126], [2160, 2185, 0.12], [2185, 2359, 0.04597701], [2359, 2382, 0.13043478], [2382, 2555, 0.06936416], [2555, 2573, 0.16666667], [2573, 2747, 0.06321839], [2747, 2777, 0.13333333], [2777, 2951, 0.04022989], [2951, 2966, 0.2], [2966, 3140, 0.06321839], [3140, 3314, 0.02873563], [3314, 3330, 0.1875], [3330, 3504, 0.03448276], [3504, 3541, 0.13513514], [3541, 3715, 0.04597701], [3715, 3888, 0.07514451], [3888, 3902, 0.21428571], [3902, 4076, 0.01149425], [4076, 4114, 0.10526316], [4114, 4288, 0.05172414], [4288, 4308, 0.15], [4308, 4482, 0.06896552], [4482, 4520, 0.13157895], [4520, 4694, 0.04022989], [4694, 4868, 0.04022989], [4868, 4909, 0.09756098], [4909, 5083, 0.07471264], [5083, 5130, 0.12765957], [5130, 5303, 0.05202312], [5303, 5343, 0.125], [5343, 5511, 0.30357143], [5511, 5685, 0.05747126], [5685, 5709, 0.125], [5709, 5883, 0.04022989], [5883, 5908, 0.12], [5908, 6081, 0.06358382], [6081, 6129, 0.10416667], [6129, 6303, 0.05172414], [6303, 6339, 0.13888889], [6339, 6503, 0.05487805], [6503, 6545, 0.14285714], [6545, 6719, 0.01724138], [6719, 6739, 0.15], [6739, 6913, 0.09195402], [6913, 6936, 0.13043478], [6936, 7110, 0.01724138], [7110, 7143, 0.12121212], [7143, 7317, 0.05172414], [7317, 7367, 0.12], [7367, 7540, 0.04046243], [7540, 7579, 0.17948718], [7579, 7753, 0.06896552], [7753, 7791, 0.13157895], [7791, 7965, 0.05172414], [7965, 7978, 0.15384615], [7978, 8142, 0.0304878], [8142, 8178, 0.13888889], [8178, 8352, 0.06321839], [8352, 8526, 0.05747126], [8526, 8547, 0.14285714], [8547, 8721, 0.04022989], [8721, 8895, 0.07471264], [8895, 8926, 0.12903226], [8926, 9100, 0.07471264], [9100, 9149, 0.08163265], [9149, 9323, 0.04022989], [9323, 9334, 0.18181818], [9334, 9508, 0.06321839], [9508, 9546, 0.13157895], [9546, 9720, 0.05172414], [9720, 9744, 0.125], [9744, 9917, 0.07514451], [9917, 9965, 0.10416667], [9965, 10139, 0.06896552], [10139, 10162, 0.13043478], [10162, 10336, 0.06896552], [10336, 10357, 0.14285714], [10357, 10531, 0.05172414], [10531, 10570, 0.1025641], [10570, 10743, 0.06358382], [10743, 10770, 0.18518519], [10770, 10944, 0.0862069], [10944, 10961, 0.11764706], [10961, 11135, 0.05172414], [11135, 11163, 0.21428571], [11163, 11337, 0.04022989], [11337, 11511, 0.04022989], [11511, 11543, 0.125], [11543, 11716, 0.04046243], [11716, 11727, 0.18181818], [11727, 11901, 0.04597701], [11901, 11917, 0.1875], [11917, 12091, 0.01724138], [12091, 12113, 0.13636364], [12113, 12287, 0.02298851], [12287, 12317, 0.03333333], [12317, 12491, 0.04597701], [12491, 12526, 0.11428571], [12526, 12700, 0.01149425], [12700, 12728, 0.10714286], [12728, 12902, 0.09195402], [12902, 12922, 0.15], [12922, 13096, 0.03448276], [13096, 13113, 0.17647059], [13113, 13287, 0.00574713], [13287, 13451, 0.05487805], [13451, 13625, 0.05172414], [13625, 13662, 0.16216216], [13662, 13835, 0.0982659]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 13835, 0.72834849]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 13835, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 13835, 0.20427132]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 13835, -833.72385965]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 13835, -46.32388843]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 13835, 309.81327707]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 13835, 124.0]]}
/ World & News / Countries of the World / Country Profiles / State Department Notes on Argentina State Department Notes on Argentina U.S. Department of State Background Note Government and Political Conditions U.S.-Argentine Relations Argentines are a fusion of diverse national and ethnic groups, with descendants of Italian and Spanish immigrants predominant. Waves of immigrants from many European countries arrived in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Syrian, Lebanese, and other Middle Eastern immigrants number about 500,000 to 600,000, mainly in urban areas. Argentina's population is overwhelmingly Catholic, but it also has the largest Jewish population in Latin America, estimated at between 280,000 and 300,000. In recent years, there has been a substantial influx of immigrants from neighboring countries, particularly Paraguay, Bolivia, and Peru. The indigenous population, estimated at 700,000, is concentrated in the provinces of the north, northwest, and south. The Argentine population has one of Latin America's lowest growth rates. Eighty percent of the population resides in cities or towns of more than 2,000, and over one-third lives in the greater Buenos Aires area. Europeans arrived in the region with the 1502 voyage of Amerigo Vespucci. Spanish navigator Juan Diaz de Solias visited what is now Argentina in 1516. Spain established a permanent colony on the site of Buenos Aires in 1580, although initial settlement was primarily overland from Peru. The Spanish further integrated Argentina into their empire by establishing the Vice Royalty of Rio de la Plata in 1776, and Buenos Aires became a flourishing port. Buenos Aires formally declared independence from Spain on July 9, 1816. Argentines revere Gen. Jose de San Martin--who campaigned in Argentina, Chile, and Peru--as the hero of their national independence. Following the defeat of the Spanish, centralist and federalist groups waged a lengthy conflict between themselves to determine the future of the nation. A modern constitution was promulgated in 1853, and a national unity government was established in 1861. Two forces combined to create the modern Argentine nation in the late 19th century: the introduction of modern agricultural techniques and integration of Argentina into the world economy. Foreign investment and immigration from Europe aided this economic revolution. Investment, primarily from Britain, came in such fields as railroads and ports. As in the United States, the migrants who worked to develop Argentina's resources--especially the western pampas--came from throughout Europe. From 1880 to 1930, Argentina became one of the world's 10 wealthiest nations based on rapid expansion of agriculture and foreign investment in infrastructure. Conservative forces dominated Argentine politics until 1916, when their traditional rivals, the Radicals, won control of the government. The Radicals, with their emphasis on fair elections and democratic institutions, opened their doors to Argentina's rapidly expanding middle class as well as to groups previously excluded from power. The Argentine military forced aged Radical President Hipolito Yrigoyen from power in 1930 and ushered in another decade of Conservative rule. Using fraud and force when necessary, the governments of the 1930s attempted to contain the currents of economic and political change that eventually led to the ascendance of Juan Domingo Peron (b. 1897). New social and political forces were seeking political power, including a modern military and labor movements that emerged from the growing urban working class. The military ousted Argentina's constitutional government in 1943. Peron, then an army colonel, was one of the coup's leaders, and he soon became the government's dominant figure as Minister of Labor. Elections carried him to the presidency in 1946. He created the Partido Unico de la Revolucion, which became more commonly known as the Peronist or Justicialista party (PJ). He aggressively pursued policies aimed at empowering the working class and greatly expanded the number of unionized workers. In 1947, Peron announced the first 5-year plan based on the growth of industries he nationalized. He helped establish the powerful General Confederation of Labor (CGT). Peron's dynamic wife, Eva Duarte de Peron, known as Evita (1919-52), played a key role in developing support for her husband. Peron won reelection in 1952, but the military sent him into exile in 1955. In the 1950s and 1960s, military and civilian administrations traded power, trying, with limited success, to deal with diminished economic growth and continued social and labor demands. When military governments failed to revive the economy and suppress escalating terrorism in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the way was open for Peron's return. On March 11, 1973, Argentina held general elections for the first time in 10 years. Peron was prevented from running, but voters elected his stand-in, Dr. Hector Campora, as President. Peron's followers also commanded strong majorities in both houses of Congress. Campora resigned in July 1973, paving the way for new elections. Peron won a decisive victory and returned as President in October 1973 with his third wife, Maria Estela Isabel Martinez de Peron, as Vice President. During this period, extremists on the left and right carried out violent acts with a frequency that threatened public order. The government resorted to a number of emergency decrees, including the implementation of special executive authority to deal with violence. This allowed the government to imprison persons indefinitely without charge. Peron died on July 1, 1974. His wife succeeded him in office, but a military coup removed her from office on March 24, 1976, and the armed forces formally exercised power through a junta composed of the three service commanders until December 10, 1983. The armed forces applied harsh measures against those they considered extremists and many suspected of being their sympathizers. While they were able to gradually restore basic order, the human costs of what became known as "El Proceso," or the "Dirty War" were high. Conservative counts list between 10,000 and 30,000 persons as "disappeared" during the 1976-83 period. Serious economic problems, mounting charges of corruption, public revulsion in the face of human rights abuses and, finally, the country's 1982 defeat by the United Kingdom in an unsuccessful attempt to seize the Falklands/Malvinas Islands all combined to discredit the Argentine military regime. The junta lifted bans on political parties and gradually restored basic political liberties. Democracy returned to Argentina in 1983, with Raul Alfonsin of the country's oldest political party, the Radical Civic Union (UCR), winning the presidency in elections that took place on October 30, 1983. He began a 6-year term of office on December 10, 1983. In 1985 and 1987, large turnouts for mid-term elections demonstrated continued public support for a strong and vigorous democratic system. The UCR-led government took steps to resolve some of the nation's most pressing problems, including accounting for those who disappeared during military rule, establishing civilian control of the armed forces, and consolidating democratic institutions. However, failure to resolve endemic economic problems, and an inability to maintain public confidence undermined the effectiveness of the Alfonsin government, which left office 6 months early after Justicialista Party (PJ) candidate Carlos Saul Menem won the 1989 presidential elections. President Menem imposed peso-dollar parity (convertibility) in 1992 to break the back of hyperinflation and adopted far-reaching market-based policies. Menem's accomplishments included dismantling a web of protectionist trade and business regulations, and reversing a half-century of statism by implementing an ambitious privatization program. These reforms contributed to significant increases in investment and growth with stable prices through most of the 1990s. Unfortunately, widespread corruption in the administrations of President Menem and his successor President Fernando De la Rua, who won election in 1999 at the head of a UCR-led coalition of center and center-left parties known as the "Alianza", shook confidence and weakened the recovery. Also, while convertibility defeated inflation, its permanence undermined Argentina's export competitiveness and created chronic deficits in the current account of the balance of payments, which were financed by massive borrowing. The contagion effect of the Asian financial crisis of 1998 precipitated an outflow of capital that gradually mushroomed into a 4-year depression that culminated in a financial panic in November 2001. In December 2001, amidst bloody riots, President De la Rua resigned. A legislative assembly on December 23, 2001, elected Adolfo Rodriguez Saa (PJ) to serve as President and called for general elections to choose a new president within 3 months. Rodriguez Saa announced immediately Argentina's default on $88 billion in debt (the largest sovereign debt default in history), but expressed his commitment to maintain the currency board and the peso's 1-to-1 peg to the dollar. Rodriguez Saa, however, was unable to rally support from within his own party for his temporary administration and this, combined with renewed violence in the Federal Capital, led to his resignation on December 30. Yet another legislative assembly elected Eduardo Duhalde (PJ) President on January 1, 2002 to complete the term of former President De la Rua. Duhalde assumed office in the midst of a widespread public rejection of the "political class" in Argentina. Duhalde--differentiating himself from his three predecessors--quickly abandoned the peso's 10-year-old link with the dollar, a move that was followed by a sharp currency depreciation and rising inflation. In the face of increasing poverty and continued social unrest, Duhalde moved to bolster the government's social programs and to contain inflation. He was able to stabilize the social situation, but advanced presidential elections by 6 months in order to pave the way for a president elected with a popular mandate. In the first round of the presidential election on April 27, 2003, former President Carlos Menem (-PJ) won 24.3% of the vote, Santa Cruz Governor Nestor Kirchner (PJ) won 22%, followed by RECREAR candidate Ricardo Lopez Murphy with 16.4% and Affirmation for an Egalitarian Republic (ARI) candidate Elisa Carrio with 14.2%. Menem withdrew from the May 25 runoff election after polls showed overwhelming support for Kirchner in the second round of elections. President Kirchner assumed the presidency on May 25, 2003. He took office following the immense social and economic upheaval stemming from the financial crisis caused by a failed currency convertibility regime. Despite widespread concern, democracy and democratic institutions survived the crisis, and Nestor Kirchner took firm control as President. After taking office, Kirchner focused on consolidating his political strength and alleviating social problems. He pushed for changes in the Supreme Court and military and undertook popular measures, such as raising government salaries, pensions, and the minimum wage. On October 23, 2005, President Kirchner, bolstered by Argentina's rapid economic growth and recovery from its 2001/2002 crisis, won a major victory in the midterm legislative elections, giving him a strengthened mandate and control of a legislative majority in both the Senate and Chamber of Deputies. President Kirchner is considered by many experts to be the most powerful Argentine president since democracy was restored in 1983. Argentina's constitution of 1853, as revised in 1994, mandates a separation of powers into executive, legislative, and judicial branches at the national and provincial level. Each province also has its own constitution, roughly mirroring the structure of the national constitution. The president and vice president are directly elected to 4-year terms. Both are limited to two consecutive terms; they are allowed to stand for a third term or more after an interval of at least one term. The president appoints cabinet ministers, and the constitution grants him considerable power, including authority to enact laws by presidential decree under conditions of "urgency and necessity" and the line-item veto. Since 2001, senators have been directly elected, with each province and the Federal Capital represented by three senators. Senators serve 6-year terms. One-third of the Senate stands for reelection every 2 years. Members of the Chamber of Deputies are directly elected to 4-year terms. Voters elect half the members of the lower house every 2 years. Both houses are elected via a system of proportional representation. Female representation in Congress--at nearly one-third of total seats--ranks among the world's highest, with representation comparable to European Union (EU) countries such as Austria and Germany. Female senators include Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who was a nationally known member of the Senate for the Province of Santa Cruz before her husband was elected President, and was reelected on October 23, 2005 as a Senator for the Province of Buenos Aires. The constitution establishes the judiciary as an independent government entity. The president appoints members of the Supreme Court with the consent of the Senate. The president on the recommendation of a magistrates' council appoints other federal judges. The Supreme Court has the power to declare legislative acts unconstitutional. The two largest political parties are the Justicialist Party (PJ--also called Peronist), founded in 1945 by Juan Domingo Peron, and the Union Civica Radical (UCR), or Radical Civic Union, founded in 1891. Traditionally, the UCR has had more urban middle-class support and the PJ more labor support, but both parties have become more broadly based. The PJ does not currently have a recognized national committee or leader due to internal differences. President Kirchner, a Peronist by origin, nominally is head of his Frente Para la Victoria (FPV) coalition that includes Peronists and non-Peronists aligned with him. Kirchner announced in July 2007 that he would not run for reelection in presidential elections in October 2007, and publicly supported the candidacy of his wife, Senator Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. Fernandez de Kirchner formally announced her campaign for the presidency in July. While the national leadership of the UCR remains in opposition to the Kirchner government, many of its governors, mayors, and other representatives have allied with President Kirchner. In the April 2003 presidential elections, the UCR received only 2% of the national vote, the lowest tally in the party's history. The UCR continues to retain significant strength in many parts of the country, and persons identifying with the party govern roughly one-third of the provinces. The UCR is the only opposition political party with a nationwide structure. Smaller parties, such as the center-right Propuesta Republicana (PRO) and the left-leaning Afirmacion para una Republica Igalitaria (ARI) represent various positions on the political spectrum, and are strongest in Buenos Aires. PRO's candidate for mayor of Buenos Aires city, businessman Mauricio Macri, won a strong majority in elections in June 2007. He defeated Education Minister Daniel Filmus, who was supported by President Kirchner, in a high-visibility second round vote. Historically, organized labor--largely tied to the Peronist Party--and the armed forces also have played significant roles in national life. However, the Argentine military's public standing suffered as a result of its perpetration of human rights abuses, economic mismanagement, and defeat by the United Kingdom during the period of military rule (1976-83). The Argentine military today is a downsized, volunteer force fully subordinate to civilian authority. Principal Government Officials President--Nestor Kirchner Minister of Foreign Affairs--Jorge Taiana Ambassador to the United States--Jose Bordon Ambassador to the Organization of American States--Rodolfo Gil Ambassador to the United Nations--Jorge Arguello Argentina maintains an embassy in the United States at 1600 New Hampshire Ave. NW, Washington DC 20009; tel (202) 238-6400; fax (202) 332-3171. The president and a civilian minister of defense control the Argentine armed forces. The Interior Ministry controls the paramilitary Gendarmeria (border police), the Federal Police, the Prefectura Naval (coast guard), and the Airport Security Police. The Argentine armed forces maintain close defense cooperation and military supply relationships with the United States. Other countries also have military relationships with the Argentine forces, principally Israel, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Brazil, Chile, and Venezuela. The current Minister of Defense has pursued an aggressive restructuring program based on the Argentine 1988 defense law. Priorities include emphasis on joint operations and peacekeeping. There has been minimal recapitalization due to budget constraints experienced over the past 5 years. Argentina's foreign policy priorities are focused on increasing regional partnerships, including expanding the MERCOSUR regional trade bloc by integrating Venezuela and Bolivia as new full members. Argentina has played a positive role in promoting human rights and democratic institutions in the hemisphere, particularly in Haiti. Argentina currently has nearly 600 peacekeeping troops in Haiti in support of MINUSTAH, reflecting its traditionally strong support of UN peacekeeping operations. As a member of the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Argentina has been a strong voice in support of nuclear non-proliferation issues. The U.S. has a positive bilateral relationship with Argentina based on many common strategic interests, including non-proliferation, counternarcotics, counterterrorism, and issues of regional stability, as well as the strength of commercial ties. Argentina is a participant in the Three-Plus-One regional mechanism (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, and the U.S.), which focuses on coordination of counter-terrorism policies in the tri-border region. Argentina has endorsed the Proliferation Security Initiative, and has implemented the Container Security Initiative, a program of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security which provides for the selective scanning of shipping containers for weapons of mass destruction components. In 2004, Argentina signed a Letter of Agreement with the Department of State opening the way for enhanced cooperation with the U.S. on counternarcotics issues and enabling the U.S. to begin providing financial assistance to the Government of Argentina for its counternarcotics efforts. In recognition of its contributions to international security and peacekeeping, the U.S. Government designated Argentina as a major non-NATO ally in January 1998. The Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Argentine Ministry of Defense hold an annual Bilateral Working Group Meeting, alternating between Argentina and Washington, DC. U.S.-Argentine cooperation also includes science and technology initiatives in the fields of space, peaceful uses of nuclear energy, and the environment. In June 2007, the U.S. and Argentina modernized a bilateral civil aviation agreement to update safety and security safeguards and allow a significant increase in flight frequencies between the two countries, which hold excellent potential for increased tourism and business travel. An active media, together with widespread interest in American culture and society, make Argentina a receptive environment for the information and cultural exchange work of the U.S. Embassy. The Fulbright scholarship program has more than tripled the annual number of U.S. and Argentine academic grantees since 1994, and the U.S. Embassy is actively working to increase other education exchanges. U.S. Embassy Functions The U.S. Mission in Buenos Aires carries out the traditional diplomatic function of representing the U.S. Government and people in discussions with the Argentine Government, and more generally, in relations with the people of Argentina. The Embassy is focused on increasing people-to-people contacts, and promoting outreach and exchanges on a wide range of issues. Political, economic, and science officers deal directly with the Argentine Government in advancing U.S. interests but are also available to brief U.S. citizens on general conditions in the country. Officers from the U.S. Foreign Service, Foreign Commercial Service, and Foreign Agricultural Service work closely with the hundreds of U.S. companies that do business in Argentina, providing information on Argentine trade and industry regulations and assisting U.S. companies starting or maintaining business ventures in Argentina. The Embassy's Consular Section monitors the welfare and whereabouts of more than 20,000 U.S. citizen residents of Argentina and more than 250,000 U.S. tourists each year. Consular personnel also provide American citizens passport, voting, notary, Social Security, and other services. With the end of Argentine participation in the visa waiver program in February 2002, Argentine tourists, students, and those who seek to work in the United States must have nonimmigrant visas. The Consular Section processes nonimmigrant visa applications for persons who wish to visit the United States for tourism, studies, temporary work, or other purposes, and immigrant visas for persons who qualify to make the United States a permanent home. Attaches accredited to Argentina from the Department of Justice--including the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation--the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Aviation Administration, and other federal agencies work closely with Argentine counterparts on international law enforcement cooperation, aviation security, and other issues of concern. The Department of Defense is represented by the U.S. Military Group and the Defense Attache Office. These organizations ensure close military-to-military contacts, and defense and security cooperation with the armed forces of Argentina. Principal U.S. Embassy Officials Ambassador-- E. Anthony Wayne Deputy Chief of Mission--Thomas Kelly Political Counselor--Alex Featherstone Economic Counselor--Douglas Climan Commercial Counselor--Brian Brisson Consul General--Susan Abeyta Science, Technology & Environment Counselor--Alfred Schandlbauer Management Counselor--Daniel Foote Defense Attache--Col. Douglas Lengenfelder, USAF U.S. Military Group Commander--Col. Joseph Napoli, USA Public Affairs Officer--Robert Banks The U.S. Embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina, is located at 4300 Colombia Avenue in the Palermo district of Buenos Aires. Mission offices can be reached at by phone at (54)(11) 5777-4533/34 or by fax at (54)(11) 5777-4240. Mailing addresses: U.S. Embassy Buenos Aires, APO AA 34034; or 4300 Colombia, 1425 Buenos Aires, Argentina. American Chamber of Commerce in Argentina Viamonte 1133, 8th floor Tel (54)(11) 4371-4500; Fax (54)(11) 4371-8400 Office of Latin America and the Caribbean International Trade Administration 14th and Constitution Avenue, NW Tel (202) 482-2436; (800) USA-TRADE; Fax (202) 482-4726 Automated fax service for trade-related information: (202) 482-4464 TRAVEL AND BUSINESS INFORMATION The U.S. Department of State's Consular Information Program advises Americans traveling and residing abroad through Consular Information Sheets, Public Announcements, and Travel Warnings. Consular Information Sheets exist for all countries and include information on entry and exit requirements, currency regulations, health conditions, safety and security, crime, political disturbances, and the addresses of the U.S. embassies and consulates abroad. Public Announcements are issued to disseminate information quickly about terrorist threats and other relatively short-term conditions overseas that pose significant risks to the security of American travelers. Travel Warnings are issued when the State Department recommends that Americans avoid travel to a certain country because the situation is dangerous or unstable. For the latest security information, Americans living and traveling abroad should regularly monitor the Department's Bureau of Consular Affairs Internet web site at http://www.travel.state.gov, where the current Worldwide Caution, Public Announcements, and Travel Warnings can be found. Consular Affairs Publications, which contain information on obtaining passports and planning a safe trip abroad, are also available at http://www.travel.state.gov. For additional information on international travel, see http://www.usa.gov/Citizen/Topics/Travel/International.shtml. The Department of State encourages all U.S citizens traveling or residing abroad to register via the State Department's travel registration website or at the nearest U.S. embassy or consulate abroad. Registration will make your presence and whereabouts known in case it is necessary to contact you in an emergency and will enable you to receive up-to-date information on security conditions. Emergency information concerning Americans traveling abroad may be obtained by calling 1-888-407-4747 toll free in the U.S. and Canada or the regular toll line 1-202-501-4444 for callers outside the U.S. and Canada. The National Passport Information Center (NPIC) is the U.S. Department of State's single, centralized public contact center for U.S. passport information. Telephone: 1-877-4USA-PPT (1-877-487-2778). Customer service representatives and operators for TDD/TTY are available Monday-Friday, 7:00 a.m. to 12:00 midnight, Eastern Time, excluding federal holidays. Travelers can check the latest health information with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia. A hotline at 877-FYI-TRIP (877-394-8747) and a web site at http://www.cdc.gov/travel/index.htm give the most recent health advisories, immunization recommendations or requirements, and advice on food and drinking water safety for regions and countries. A booklet entitled "Health Information for International Travel" (HHS publication number CDC-95-8280) is available from the U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402, tel. (202) 512-1800. Further Electronic Information Department of State Web Site. Available on the Internet at http://www.state.gov, the Department of State web site provides timely, global access to official U.S. foreign policy information, including Background Notes and daily press briefings along with the directory of key officers of Foreign Service posts and more. The Overseas Security Advisory Council (OSAC) provides security information and regional news that impact U.S. companies working abroad through its website http://www.osac.gov Export.gov provides a portal to all export-related assistance and market information offered by the federal government and provides trade leads, free export counseling, help with the export process, and more. STAT-USA/Internet, a service of the U.S. Department of Commerce, provides authoritative economic, business, and international trade information from the Federal government. The site includes current and historical trade-related releases, international market research, trade opportunities, and country analysis and provides access to the National Trade Data Bank. Revised: Jul. 2007 Infoplease country profile: Argentina Encyclopedia: Argentina Atlas: Argentina Select another country... Afghanistan Albania Algeria Andorra Angola Antigua and Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan The Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burma Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Cayman Islands Central African Republic Chad Chile China Colombia Comoros Congo (Brazzaville) Congo (Kinshasa) Costa Rica Cote d'Ivoire Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic East Timor Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Fiji Finland France Gabon The Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Grenada Guatemala Guinea-Bissau Guinea Guyana Haiti Holy See Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland Holy See India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macau Macedonia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Mauritania Mauritius Mexico Micronesia Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Morocco Mozambique Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Antilles Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria North Korea Norway Oman Pakistan Palau Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Samoa San Marino Sao Tome and Principe Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Korea Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Suriname Swaziland Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Tajikistan Tanzania Thailand Togo Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey Turkmenistan Tuvalu Uganda Ukraine United Arab Emirates United Kingdom Uruguay Uzbekistan Vanuatu Venezuela Vietnam Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/12855
{"url": "https://www.factmonster.com/world/countries/state-department-notes/argentina", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.factmonster.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:48:25Z", "digest": "sha1:XBGMQLOCADJK6ITMRX7WUUE5S5LBBRH5"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 29645, 29645.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 29645, 31191.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 29645, 79.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 29645, 187.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 29645, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 29645, 169.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 29645, 0.27759009]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 29645, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 29645, 0.01527528]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 29645, 0.00245058]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 29645, 0.00776017]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 29645, 0.00367587]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 29645, 0.00277732]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 29645, 0.02702703]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 29645, 0.19294294]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 29645, 0.39018088]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 29645, 5.75146817]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 29645, 0.00018769]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 29645, 6.36320668]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 29645, 4257.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 40, 0.0], [40, 59, 0.0], [59, 97, 0.0], [97, 133, 0.0], [133, 174, 0.0], [174, 210, 0.0], [210, 235, 0.0], [235, 1196, 1.0], [1196, 2109, 1.0], [2109, 2599, 1.0], [2599, 3602, 1.0], [3602, 4820, 1.0], [4820, 5642, 1.0], [5642, 6656, 1.0], [6656, 7596, 1.0], [7596, 8850, 1.0], [8850, 10242, 1.0], [10242, 11750, 1.0], [11750, 12456, 1.0], [12456, 13334, 1.0], [13334, 13669, 1.0], [13669, 14570, 1.0], [14570, 15122, 1.0], [15122, 15602, 1.0], [15602, 16063, 1.0], [16063, 16094, 0.0], [16094, 16121, 0.0], [16121, 16163, 0.0], [16163, 16208, 0.0], [16208, 16271, 0.0], [16271, 16320, 0.0], [16320, 16464, 1.0], [16464, 16992, 1.0], [16992, 17280, 1.0], [17280, 17937, 1.0], [17937, 19287, 1.0], [19287, 20120, 1.0], [20120, 20143, 0.0], [20143, 21038, 1.0], [21038, 21770, 1.0], [21770, 22395, 1.0], [22395, 22428, 0.0], [22428, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22496, 0.0], [22496, 22535, 0.0], [22535, 22570, 0.0], [22570, 22606, 0.0], [22606, 22635, 0.0], [22635, 22700, 0.0], [22700, 22735, 0.0], [22735, 22784, 0.0], [22784, 22839, 0.0], [22839, 22876, 0.0], [22876, 23206, 1.0], [23206, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23273, 0.0], [23273, 23320, 0.0], [23320, 23362, 0.0], [23362, 23397, 0.0], [23397, 23430, 0.0], [23430, 23486, 0.0], [23486, 23554, 0.0], [23554, 23586, 0.0], [23586, 24409, 1.0], [24409, 24978, 1.0], [24978, 25370, 1.0], [25370, 25586, 1.0], [25586, 25944, 1.0], [25944, 26525, 1.0], [26525, 26556, 0.0], [26556, 27051, 0.0], [27051, 27260, 1.0], [27260, 27624, 1.0], [27624, 27643, 0.0], [27643, 27681, 0.0], [27681, 27705, 0.0], [27705, 27722, 0.0], [27722, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 40, 0.0], [40, 59, 0.0], [59, 97, 0.0], [97, 133, 0.0], [133, 174, 0.0], [174, 210, 0.0], [210, 235, 0.0], [235, 1196, 0.0], [1196, 2109, 0.0], [2109, 2599, 0.0], [2599, 3602, 0.0], [3602, 4820, 0.0], [4820, 5642, 0.0], [5642, 6656, 0.0], [6656, 7596, 0.0], [7596, 8850, 0.0], [8850, 10242, 0.0], [10242, 11750, 0.0], [11750, 12456, 0.0], [12456, 13334, 0.0], [13334, 13669, 0.0], [13669, 14570, 0.0], [14570, 15122, 0.0], [15122, 15602, 0.0], [15602, 16063, 0.0], [16063, 16094, 0.0], [16094, 16121, 0.0], [16121, 16163, 0.0], [16163, 16208, 0.0], [16208, 16271, 0.0], [16271, 16320, 0.0], [16320, 16464, 0.0], [16464, 16992, 0.0], [16992, 17280, 0.0], [17280, 17937, 0.0], [17937, 19287, 0.0], [19287, 20120, 0.0], [20120, 20143, 0.0], [20143, 21038, 0.0], [21038, 21770, 0.0], [21770, 22395, 0.0], [22395, 22428, 0.0], [22428, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22496, 0.0], [22496, 22535, 0.0], [22535, 22570, 0.0], [22570, 22606, 0.0], [22606, 22635, 0.0], [22635, 22700, 0.0], [22700, 22735, 0.0], [22735, 22784, 0.0], [22784, 22839, 0.0], [22839, 22876, 0.0], [22876, 23206, 0.0], [23206, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23273, 0.0], [23273, 23320, 0.0], [23320, 23362, 0.0], [23362, 23397, 0.0], [23397, 23430, 0.0], [23430, 23486, 0.0], [23486, 23554, 0.0], [23554, 23586, 0.0], [23586, 24409, 0.0], [24409, 24978, 0.0], [24978, 25370, 0.0], [25370, 25586, 0.0], [25586, 25944, 0.0], [25944, 26525, 0.0], [26525, 26556, 0.0], [26556, 27051, 0.0], [27051, 27260, 0.0], [27260, 27624, 0.0], [27624, 27643, 0.0], [27643, 27681, 0.0], [27681, 27705, 0.0], [27705, 27722, 0.0], [27722, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 15, 2.0], [15, 40, 4.0], [40, 59, 2.0], [59, 97, 5.0], [97, 133, 5.0], [133, 174, 6.0], [174, 210, 4.0], [210, 235, 2.0], [235, 1196, 143.0], [1196, 2109, 142.0], [2109, 2599, 69.0], [2599, 3602, 149.0], [3602, 4820, 191.0], [4820, 5642, 127.0], [5642, 6656, 157.0], [6656, 7596, 137.0], [7596, 8850, 177.0], [8850, 10242, 216.0], [10242, 11750, 225.0], [11750, 12456, 107.0], [12456, 13334, 136.0], [13334, 13669, 48.0], [13669, 14570, 139.0], [14570, 15122, 86.0], [15122, 15602, 69.0], [15602, 16063, 65.0], [16063, 16094, 3.0], [16094, 16121, 2.0], [16121, 16163, 5.0], [16163, 16208, 6.0], [16208, 16271, 8.0], [16271, 16320, 6.0], [16320, 16464, 23.0], [16464, 16992, 71.0], [16992, 17280, 41.0], [17280, 17937, 93.0], [17937, 19287, 188.0], [19287, 20120, 121.0], [20120, 20143, 3.0], [20143, 21038, 128.0], [21038, 21770, 110.0], [21770, 22395, 81.0], [22395, 22428, 4.0], [22428, 22458, 4.0], [22458, 22496, 5.0], [22496, 22535, 3.0], [22535, 22570, 3.0], [22570, 22606, 3.0], [22606, 22635, 3.0], [22635, 22700, 5.0], [22700, 22735, 3.0], [22735, 22784, 5.0], [22784, 22839, 7.0], [22839, 22876, 4.0], [22876, 23206, 53.0], [23206, 23248, 6.0], [23248, 23273, 4.0], [23273, 23320, 6.0], [23320, 23362, 7.0], [23362, 23397, 3.0], [23397, 23430, 5.0], [23430, 23486, 8.0], [23486, 23554, 8.0], [23554, 23586, 4.0], [23586, 24409, 109.0], [24409, 24978, 65.0], [24978, 25370, 60.0], [25370, 25586, 32.0], [25586, 25944, 44.0], [25944, 26525, 78.0], [26525, 26556, 3.0], [26556, 27051, 69.0], [27051, 27260, 30.0], [27260, 27624, 46.0], [27624, 27643, 3.0], [27643, 27681, 4.0], [27681, 27705, 2.0], [27705, 27722, 2.0], [27722, 29645, 255.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 40, 0.0], [40, 59, 0.0], [59, 97, 0.0], [97, 133, 0.0], [133, 174, 0.0], [174, 210, 0.0], [210, 235, 0.0], [235, 1196, 0.04094828], [1196, 2109, 0.03251121], [2109, 2599, 0.00420168], [2599, 3602, 0.02644964], [3602, 4820, 0.03647159], [4820, 5642, 0.02], [5642, 6656, 0.03760163], [6656, 7596, 0.03285871], [7596, 8850, 0.02042484], [8850, 10242, 0.01554404], [10242, 11750, 0.02933151], [11750, 12456, 0.01310044], [12456, 13334, 0.01641266], [13334, 13669, 0.0], [13669, 14570, 0.01830664], [14570, 15122, 0.00929368], [15122, 15602, 0.00865801], [15602, 16063, 0.01351351], [16063, 16094, 0.0], [16094, 16121, 0.0], [16121, 16163, 0.0], [16163, 16208, 0.0], [16208, 16271, 0.0], [16271, 16320, 0.0], [16320, 16464, 0.21969697], [16464, 16992, 0.0], [16992, 17280, 0.01760563], [17280, 17937, 0.00464396], [17937, 19287, 0.00611621], [19287, 20120, 0.00987654], [20120, 20143, 0.0], [20143, 21038, 0.0], [21038, 21770, 0.02115656], [21770, 22395, 0.0], [22395, 22428, 0.0], [22428, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22496, 0.0], [22496, 22535, 0.0], [22535, 22570, 0.0], [22570, 22606, 0.0], [22606, 22635, 0.0], [22635, 22700, 0.0], [22700, 22735, 0.0], [22735, 22784, 0.0], [22784, 22839, 0.0], [22839, 22876, 0.0], [22876, 23206, 0.14144737], [23206, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23273, 0.2173913], [23273, 23320, 0.68571429], [23320, 23362, 0.0], [23362, 23397, 0.0], [23397, 23430, 0.06451613], [23430, 23486, 0.52272727], [23486, 23554, 0.16129032], [23554, 23586, 0.0], [23586, 24409, 0.0], [24409, 24978, 0.0], [24978, 25370, 0.0], [25370, 25586, 0.10784314], [25586, 25944, 0.07012195], [25944, 26525, 0.0626151], [26525, 26556, 0.0], [26556, 27051, 0.0], [27051, 27260, 0.0], [27260, 27624, 0.0], [27624, 27643, 0.25], [27643, 27681, 0.0], [27681, 27705, 0.0], [27705, 27722, 0.0], [27722, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 40, 0.0], [40, 59, 0.0], [59, 97, 0.0], [97, 133, 0.0], [133, 174, 0.0], [174, 210, 0.0], [210, 235, 0.0], [235, 1196, 0.0], [1196, 2109, 0.0], [2109, 2599, 0.0], [2599, 3602, 0.0], [3602, 4820, 0.0], [4820, 5642, 0.0], [5642, 6656, 0.0], [6656, 7596, 0.0], [7596, 8850, 0.0], [8850, 10242, 0.0], [10242, 11750, 0.0], [11750, 12456, 0.0], [12456, 13334, 0.0], [13334, 13669, 0.0], [13669, 14570, 0.0], [14570, 15122, 0.0], [15122, 15602, 0.0], [15602, 16063, 0.0], [16063, 16094, 0.0], [16094, 16121, 0.0], [16121, 16163, 0.0], [16163, 16208, 0.0], [16208, 16271, 0.0], [16271, 16320, 0.0], [16320, 16464, 0.0], [16464, 16992, 0.0], [16992, 17280, 0.0], [17280, 17937, 0.0], [17937, 19287, 0.0], [19287, 20120, 0.0], [20120, 20143, 0.0], [20143, 21038, 0.0], [21038, 21770, 0.0], [21770, 22395, 0.0], [22395, 22428, 0.0], [22428, 22458, 0.0], [22458, 22496, 0.0], [22496, 22535, 0.0], [22535, 22570, 0.0], [22570, 22606, 0.0], [22606, 22635, 0.0], [22635, 22700, 0.0], [22700, 22735, 0.0], [22735, 22784, 0.0], [22784, 22839, 0.0], [22839, 22876, 0.0], [22876, 23206, 0.0], [23206, 23248, 0.0], [23248, 23273, 0.0], [23273, 23320, 0.0], [23320, 23362, 0.0], [23362, 23397, 0.0], [23397, 23430, 0.0], [23430, 23486, 0.0], [23486, 23554, 0.0], [23554, 23586, 0.0], [23586, 24409, 0.0], [24409, 24978, 0.0], [24978, 25370, 0.0], [25370, 25586, 0.0], [25586, 25944, 0.0], [25944, 26525, 0.0], [26525, 26556, 0.0], [26556, 27051, 0.0], [27051, 27260, 0.0], [27260, 27624, 0.0], [27624, 27643, 0.0], [27643, 27681, 0.0], [27681, 27705, 0.0], [27705, 27722, 0.0], [27722, 29645, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.13333333], [15, 40, 0.08], [40, 59, 0.10526316], [59, 97, 0.10526316], [97, 133, 0.11111111], [133, 174, 0.14634146], [174, 210, 0.08333333], [210, 235, 0.16], [235, 1196, 0.02705515], [1196, 2109, 0.03943045], [2109, 2599, 0.0244898], [2599, 3602, 0.01994018], [3602, 4820, 0.0270936], [4820, 5642, 0.03041363], [5642, 6656, 0.01972387], [6656, 7596, 0.0287234], [7596, 8850, 0.0199362], [8850, 10242, 0.02298851], [10242, 11750, 0.03912467], [11750, 12456, 0.00708215], [12456, 13334, 0.03758542], [13334, 13669, 0.02686567], [13669, 14570, 0.05327414], [14570, 15122, 0.03623188], [15122, 15602, 0.06041667], [15602, 16063, 0.01952278], [16063, 16094, 0.09677419], [16094, 16121, 0.11111111], [16121, 16163, 0.11904762], [16163, 16208, 0.11111111], [16208, 16271, 0.0952381], [16271, 16320, 0.10204082], [16320, 16464, 0.07638889], [16464, 16992, 0.05113636], [16992, 17280, 0.02083333], [17280, 17937, 0.05022831], [17937, 19287, 0.04592593], [19287, 20120, 0.02641056], [20120, 20143, 0.17391304], [20143, 21038, 0.04357542], [21038, 21770, 0.03551913], [21770, 22395, 0.0464], [22395, 22428, 0.15151515], [22428, 22458, 0.13333333], [22458, 22496, 0.13157895], [22496, 22535, 0.1025641], [22535, 22570, 0.11428571], [22570, 22606, 0.11111111], [22606, 22635, 0.13793103], [22635, 22700, 0.09230769], [22700, 22735, 0.11428571], [22735, 22784, 0.18367347], [22784, 22839, 0.2], [22839, 22876, 0.13513514], [22876, 23206, 0.08484848], [23206, 23248, 0.0952381], [23248, 23273, 0.04], [23273, 23320, 0.04255319], [23320, 23362, 0.0952381], [23362, 23397, 0.08571429], [23397, 23430, 0.12121212], [23430, 23486, 0.17857143], [23486, 23554, 0.01470588], [23554, 23586, 0.875], [23586, 24409, 0.03523694], [24409, 24978, 0.03690685], [24978, 25370, 0.0255102], [25370, 25586, 0.03703704], [25586, 25944, 0.09217877], [25944, 26525, 0.06196213], [26525, 26556, 0.09677419], [26556, 27051, 0.05050505], [27051, 27260, 0.00478469], [27260, 27624, 0.04945055], [27624, 27643, 0.10526316], [27643, 27681, 0.05263158], [27681, 27705, 0.08333333], [27705, 27722, 0.11764706], [27722, 29645, 0.12844514]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 29645, 0.83969563]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 29645, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 29645, 0.8671574]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 29645, -1343.71647807]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 29645, 212.27394506]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 29645, 868.25259128]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 29645, 285.0]]}
Home » Disney Interactive ‘Kingdom Hearts: Unchained X’ Coming to Mobile Devices in the US Recently Disney Interactive and SQUARE ENIX announced that Kingdom Hearts Unchained X is coming to mobile devices in the United States. This is the first game in the Kingdom Hearts series to come to iOS and Android devices and will be a free-to-play app here. POSTED Sat, 08/23/2014 - 05:00 | POSTED BY Traci C. D23 members Disney archives Disney Legends Tickets on Sale Now for 2015 D23 Expo Tickets are on sale for the 2015 D23 Expo which will take place August 14-16, 2015 at the Anaheim Convention Center. The D23 Expo is the largest Disney fan event in the world, celebrating all facets of Disney entertainment including The Walt Disney Studios (including Marvel, Pixar, and Lucasfilm), Walt Disney Parks and Resorts, Disney Consumer Products, Disney media networks, and Disney Interactive. In 2013 more than 65,000 Disney fans gathered for the third annual D23 Expo. Disney Expects Sales of Infinity Game to Reach $1 Billion after 2.0 Version Launches this Fall Less than a year after debuting, Disney Infinity is proving to be a huge hit for The Walt Disney Company. Sales of the game are expected to reach $1 billion according to statements from Jimmy Pitaro, president of the company's interactive division. The interactive video game allows players to mix and match Disney characters and the 2.0 version will launch this fall featuring the Marvel Super Heroes. POSTED Sat, 05/17/2014 - 05:00 | POSTED BY Guest Author Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes (2.0 Edition) The next big step for Disney Interactive's, Disney Infinity game was showcased at a special event on April 30th 2014. Big names in both the Disney and Marvel Universe arrived in Hollywood for this press event as Jimmy Pitaro (Disney Interactive President), Joe Quesada (Marvel Chief Creative Officer), and Clark Gregg (Plays Agent Coulson on Marvel's Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.) unveil Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes. Disney Consumer Products The Walt Disney Company Releases First Quarter Earnings Report Thanks to a hammer wielding god and a queen with an icy touch, The Walt Disney Company reported a 33 percent increase in profits for the 2014 fiscal year first quarter. Walt Disney Studios reported a 75 percent increase in operating income to $409 million which was due to the success of Marvel's Thor: The Dark World and the monstrous hit Frozen. Thor earned $633.1 million in global box office sales, while Frozen is on track to earn $1 billion in global ticket sales. Disney Animated ‘Disney Animated’ Named Apple’s iPad App of the Year This year's top iPad app is Disney Animated and the commendation marks the first time a Disney app has been recognized the app of the year. The app was selected out of the 100,000 iPad apps that were launched in 2013. The app gives fans the ability to discover the story of Disney animation through interactive illustrations and animation workshops. It was created through a partnership between Disney Interactive, Walt Disney Animation Studios, and developer Touch Press. Kingdom Hearts for the Web Epic Mickey II: Oswald Disney's PIXEL’D App for iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch Where's My Perry? Fiscal year report Fourth quarter earnings MyMagic+ Saving Mr. Banks Disney’s Theme Parks and Interactive Media Divisions Boost Company’s Fourth Quarter Profits The Walt Disney Company has reported a positive end to its fourth quarter and fiscal year, reporting a 7 percent increase in revenue for the year and an 8 percent increase in net income. The positive quarter-and year-end results were due in large part to the theme park and interactive segments, including sales of Disney Infinity. POSTED Mon, 06/03/2013 - 05:05 | POSTED BY Guest Author Environmentality Innoventions Imagine and Invent at Innoventions East and West at Epcot Even on the best-planned days at Epcot, it's bound to happen - the kids will inevitably whine about being bored. They're tired of waiting in the queues for rides and it's hot and you need to find something "new" to do. And you need to find it fast. This is when you make a stop at Innoventions East and West, the two pavilions to the left and right of the back of Spaceship Earth where kids of all ages can try their hand at interactive games and exhibits. POSTED Tue, 11/06/2012 - 05:05 | POSTED BY Melissa W. Disney Family Deals Disney Family Deals Giveaway: Disney Princess – My Fairytale Adventure Disney recently launched a new site called Disney Family Deals, where each day will offer up an exclusive offer on Disney products and experiences! You'll find deals on everything from toys, clothing, collectibles, music, videos and even Disney vacations! You can sign up to receive daily emails to alert you of the Disney Family Deals, in addition to local and online deals.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/13246
{"url": "https://www.wdwforgrownups.com/category/tags/disney-interactive", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.wdwforgrownups.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:32:31Z", "digest": "sha1:SA5A476O3Q7ANS3IMQQ3O2P3EO4Q6ZIO"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4825, 4825.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4825, 6623.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4825, 49.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4825, 170.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4825, 0.89]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4825, 286.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4825, 0.27579162]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4825, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4825, 0.05043747]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4825, 0.01338137]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4825, 0.02058672]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4825, 0.01672671]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4825, 0.02058672]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4825, 0.03370787]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4825, 0.19509704]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4825, 0.45786164]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4825, 4.88805031]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4825, 5.27411873]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4825, 795.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.0], [91, 351, 1.0], [351, 403, 1.0], [403, 415, 0.0], [415, 431, 0.0], [431, 446, 0.0], [446, 484, 0.0], [484, 601, 1.0], [601, 887, 1.0], [887, 964, 1.0], [964, 1059, 0.0], [1059, 1165, 1.0], [1165, 1308, 1.0], [1308, 1462, 1.0], [1462, 1518, 0.0], [1518, 1569, 0.0], [1569, 1989, 1.0], [1989, 2014, 0.0], [2014, 2077, 0.0], [2077, 2246, 1.0], [2246, 2548, 1.0], [2548, 2564, 0.0], [2564, 2617, 0.0], [2617, 2757, 1.0], [2757, 2835, 1.0], [2835, 3090, 1.0], [3090, 3117, 0.0], [3117, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3193, 0.0], [3193, 3211, 1.0], [3211, 3230, 0.0], [3230, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3263, 0.0], [3263, 3280, 0.0], [3280, 3372, 0.0], [3372, 3559, 1.0], [3559, 3704, 1.0], [3704, 3760, 0.0], [3760, 3777, 0.0], [3777, 3790, 0.0], [3790, 3848, 0.0], [3848, 4097, 1.0], [4097, 4305, 1.0], [4305, 4359, 1.0], [4359, 4379, 0.0], [4379, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4598, 1.0], [4598, 4825, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.0], [91, 351, 0.0], [351, 403, 0.0], [403, 415, 0.0], [415, 431, 0.0], [431, 446, 0.0], [446, 484, 0.0], [484, 601, 0.0], [601, 887, 0.0], [887, 964, 0.0], [964, 1059, 0.0], [1059, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1462, 0.0], [1462, 1518, 0.0], [1518, 1569, 0.0], [1569, 1989, 0.0], [1989, 2014, 0.0], [2014, 2077, 0.0], [2077, 2246, 0.0], [2246, 2548, 0.0], [2548, 2564, 0.0], [2564, 2617, 0.0], [2617, 2757, 0.0], [2757, 2835, 0.0], [2835, 3090, 0.0], [3090, 3117, 0.0], [3117, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3193, 0.0], [3193, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3230, 0.0], [3230, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3263, 0.0], [3263, 3280, 0.0], [3280, 3372, 0.0], [3372, 3559, 0.0], [3559, 3704, 0.0], [3704, 3760, 0.0], [3760, 3777, 0.0], [3777, 3790, 0.0], [3790, 3848, 0.0], [3848, 4097, 0.0], [4097, 4305, 0.0], [4305, 4359, 0.0], [4359, 4379, 0.0], [4379, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 26, 4.0], [26, 91, 11.0], [91, 351, 45.0], [351, 403, 8.0], [403, 415, 2.0], [415, 431, 2.0], [431, 446, 2.0], [446, 484, 8.0], [484, 601, 21.0], [601, 887, 42.0], [887, 964, 14.0], [964, 1059, 16.0], [1059, 1165, 20.0], [1165, 1308, 22.0], [1308, 1462, 25.0], [1462, 1518, 8.0], [1518, 1569, 7.0], [1569, 1989, 65.0], [1989, 2014, 3.0], [2014, 2077, 9.0], [2077, 2246, 31.0], [2246, 2548, 53.0], [2548, 2564, 2.0], [2564, 2617, 9.0], [2617, 2757, 26.0], [2757, 2835, 15.0], [2835, 3090, 36.0], [3090, 3117, 5.0], [3117, 3140, 4.0], [3140, 3193, 9.0], [3193, 3211, 3.0], [3211, 3230, 3.0], [3230, 3254, 3.0], [3254, 3263, 1.0], [3263, 3280, 3.0], [3280, 3372, 12.0], [3372, 3559, 34.0], [3559, 3704, 22.0], [3704, 3760, 8.0], [3760, 3777, 1.0], [3777, 3790, 1.0], [3790, 3848, 10.0], [3848, 4097, 47.0], [4097, 4305, 40.0], [4305, 4359, 8.0], [4359, 4379, 3.0], [4379, 4450, 10.0], [4450, 4598, 24.0], [4598, 4825, 38.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.0], [91, 351, 0.0], [351, 403, 0.28571429], [403, 415, 0.18181818], [415, 431, 0.0], [431, 446, 0.0], [446, 484, 0.16216216], [484, 601, 0.12389381], [601, 887, 0.00727273], [887, 964, 0.14864865], [964, 1059, 0.0326087], [1059, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1308, 0.00724638], [1308, 1462, 0.01324503], [1462, 1518, 0.25531915], [1518, 1569, 0.04347826], [1569, 1989, 0.01503759], [1989, 2014, 0.0], [2014, 2077, 0.0], [2077, 2246, 0.03614458], [2246, 2548, 0.03424658], [2548, 2564, 0.0], [2564, 2617, 0.0], [2617, 2757, 0.0], [2757, 2835, 0.13333333], [2835, 3090, 0.0], [3090, 3117, 0.0], [3117, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3193, 0.0], [3193, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3230, 0.0], [3230, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3263, 0.0], [3263, 3280, 0.0], [3280, 3372, 0.0], [3372, 3559, 0.01086957], [3559, 3704, 0.0], [3704, 3760, 0.25531915], [3760, 3777, 0.0], [3777, 3790, 0.0], [3790, 3848, 0.0], [3848, 4097, 0.0], [4097, 4305, 0.0], [4305, 4359, 0.27272727], [4359, 4379, 0.0], [4379, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.0], [91, 351, 0.0], [351, 403, 0.0], [403, 415, 0.0], [415, 431, 0.0], [431, 446, 0.0], [446, 484, 0.0], [484, 601, 0.0], [601, 887, 0.0], [887, 964, 0.0], [964, 1059, 0.0], [1059, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1308, 0.0], [1308, 1462, 0.0], [1462, 1518, 0.0], [1518, 1569, 0.0], [1569, 1989, 0.0], [1989, 2014, 0.0], [2014, 2077, 0.0], [2077, 2246, 0.0], [2246, 2548, 0.0], [2548, 2564, 0.0], [2564, 2617, 0.0], [2617, 2757, 0.0], [2757, 2835, 0.0], [2835, 3090, 0.0], [3090, 3117, 0.0], [3117, 3140, 0.0], [3140, 3193, 0.0], [3193, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3230, 0.0], [3230, 3254, 0.0], [3254, 3263, 0.0], [3263, 3280, 0.0], [3280, 3372, 0.0], [3372, 3559, 0.0], [3559, 3704, 0.0], [3704, 3760, 0.0], [3760, 3777, 0.0], [3777, 3790, 0.0], [3790, 3848, 0.0], [3848, 4097, 0.0], [4097, 4305, 0.0], [4305, 4359, 0.0], [4359, 4379, 0.0], [4379, 4450, 0.0], [4450, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4825, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.11538462], [26, 91, 0.13846154], [91, 351, 0.09615385], [351, 403, 0.32692308], [403, 415, 0.08333333], [415, 431, 0.0625], [431, 446, 0.13333333], [446, 484, 0.13157895], [484, 601, 0.05982906], [601, 887, 0.07692308], [887, 964, 0.05194805], [964, 1059, 0.10526316], [1059, 1165, 0.06603774], [1165, 1308, 0.02097902], [1308, 1462, 0.03246753], [1462, 1518, 0.30357143], [1518, 1569, 0.11764706], [1569, 1989, 0.0952381], [1989, 2014, 0.12], [2014, 2077, 0.14285714], [2077, 2246, 0.0295858], [2246, 2548, 0.03642384], [2548, 2564, 0.125], [2564, 2617, 0.13207547], [2617, 2757, 0.03571429], [2757, 2835, 0.02564103], [2835, 3090, 0.04313725], [3090, 3117, 0.11111111], [3117, 3140, 0.2173913], [3140, 3193, 0.22641509], [3193, 3211, 0.16666667], [3211, 3230, 0.05263158], [3230, 3254, 0.04166667], [3254, 3263, 0.22222222], [3263, 3280, 0.17647059], [3280, 3372, 0.11956522], [3372, 3559, 0.02139037], [3559, 3704, 0.02068966], [3704, 3760, 0.30357143], [3760, 3777, 0.05882353], [3777, 3790, 0.07692308], [3790, 3848, 0.10344828], [3848, 4097, 0.01606426], [4097, 4305, 0.02884615], [4305, 4359, 0.31481481], [4359, 4379, 0.15], [4379, 4450, 0.12676056], [4450, 4598, 0.03378378], [4598, 4825, 0.02643172]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4825, 0.48667669]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4825, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4825, 0.73950905]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4825, -420.81130403]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4825, -48.06356073]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4825, -89.35443773]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4825, 40.0]]}
Men of Progress Video Series Reference Materials, Interactives & Media Throughout the 1800s, homegrown American scientists and inventors were a source of pride for the fledgling republic, which was rapidly surpassing Great Britain and the rest of Europe as a hotbed of industrial activity. The period also coincided with the peak of the Romantic Period in art, music, Labor Leaders Video Series Labor leaders often rose from the ranks to secure for fellow workers a living wage, safer working conditions, shorter hours, and balance the scales of economic justice through direct action as well as state and federal legislation. In this video series, learn about 5 labor leaders. Computer Pioneers Video Series Through innovative ideas and inventions, computer pioneers transformed the ways people worked, played, and communicated in the 1900s. In this video series, learn about 6 pioneers in computing. American Enterprise: The Business of Slavery Primary Sources, Interactives & Media Learn more about the business of slavery by exploring four historic documents from the United States slave trade. C-3PO, from Return of the Jedi In the fictional universe of George Lucas' Star Wars films, robots called droids (short for android) come in many shapes and serve many purposes. Two droids--R2-D2 and C-3PO--have won enormous popularity for their supporting roles in all six of the series. In the collections of the museum are cos Blog Post: Total eclipse of the sun, partial eclipse of inequality “"It was now quick work," Maria Mitchell noted. "As the last rays of sunlight disappeared, the corona burst out all around the sun, so intensely bright near the sun that the eye could scarcely bear it." Maria Mitchell brought a team of Vassar graduates—"Vassar girls" as the press called Patent Models: Textile and Sewing Machines The Museum’s Textile Collection contains over four thousand patent models. The collection includes many examples of carding machines, spinning machines, knitting machines, rope making machines, looms, baskets, carpets, fabrics, and sewing machines. Even the simple clothespin is well represented Pamphlet, "Where is Democracy?" This 1960s organizing pamphlet from the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) asks, “Where is Democracy?” Behind this question was a demand for equal representation for all who have felt excluded or marginalized by the electoral process and political institutions. Student Protest T-Shirt Made during the Harvard University student anti-war protest and sit-in of the administration building, 1968–1969. After a young lady learned to embroider a sampler, she might attend a female academy to make a silk embroidered picture. This was a more challenging technique that became popular in the early 1800s. Subjects included classical, biblical, and historical scenes, as well as mourning pictures.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/13813
{"url": "https://historyexplorer.si.edu/search-results?e=1458&tab=resources&results=10&q=search-results&page=2&sort=grade", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "historyexplorer.si.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:21:25Z", "digest": "sha1:MDIUVEVFNNQCEOTDIAGN6F7UKJPEGGWE"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2844, 2844.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2844, 5670.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2844, 21.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2844, 195.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2844, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2844, 299.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2844, 0.29714286]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2844, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2844, 0.02320584]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2844, 0.02320584]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2844, 0.01289214]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2844, 0.00687581]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2844, 0.01461109]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2844, 0.0152381]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2844, 0.16]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2844, 0.62672811]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2844, 5.36175115]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2844, 5.16361026]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2844, 434.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 71, 0.0], [71, 368, 0.0], [368, 395, 0.0], [395, 678, 1.0], [678, 709, 0.0], [709, 902, 1.0], [902, 947, 0.0], [947, 985, 0.0], [985, 1099, 1.0], [1099, 1130, 0.0], [1130, 1428, 0.0], [1428, 1495, 0.0], [1495, 1783, 0.0], [1783, 1826, 0.0], [1826, 2122, 0.0], [2122, 2154, 0.0], [2154, 2416, 1.0], [2416, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2554, 1.0], [2554, 2844, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 71, 0.0], [71, 368, 0.0], [368, 395, 0.0], [395, 678, 0.0], [678, 709, 0.0], [709, 902, 0.0], [902, 947, 0.0], [947, 985, 0.0], [985, 1099, 0.0], [1099, 1130, 0.0], [1130, 1428, 0.0], [1428, 1495, 0.0], [1495, 1783, 0.0], [1783, 1826, 0.0], [1826, 2122, 0.0], [2122, 2154, 0.0], [2154, 2416, 0.0], [2416, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2554, 0.0], [2554, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 5.0], [29, 71, 4.0], [71, 368, 48.0], [368, 395, 4.0], [395, 678, 46.0], [678, 709, 4.0], [709, 902, 28.0], [902, 947, 6.0], [947, 985, 4.0], [985, 1099, 18.0], [1099, 1130, 6.0], [1130, 1428, 49.0], [1428, 1495, 11.0], [1495, 1783, 49.0], [1783, 1826, 6.0], [1826, 2122, 39.0], [2122, 2154, 4.0], [2154, 2416, 39.0], [2416, 2440, 3.0], [2440, 2554, 15.0], [2554, 2844, 46.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 71, 0.0], [71, 368, 0.0137457], [368, 395, 0.0], [395, 678, 0.00362319], [678, 709, 0.0], [709, 902, 0.02688172], [902, 947, 0.0], [947, 985, 0.0], [985, 1099, 0.0], [1099, 1130, 0.03571429], [1130, 1428, 0.01052632], [1428, 1495, 0.0], [1495, 1783, 0.0], [1783, 1826, 0.0], [1826, 2122, 0.0], [2122, 2154, 0.0], [2154, 2416, 0.015625], [2416, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2554, 0.0733945], [2554, 2844, 0.01413428]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 71, 0.0], [71, 368, 0.0], [368, 395, 0.0], [395, 678, 0.0], [678, 709, 0.0], [709, 902, 0.0], [902, 947, 0.0], [947, 985, 0.0], [985, 1099, 0.0], [1099, 1130, 0.0], [1130, 1428, 0.0], [1428, 1495, 0.0], [1495, 1783, 0.0], [1783, 1826, 0.0], [1826, 2122, 0.0], [2122, 2154, 0.0], [2154, 2416, 0.0], [2416, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2554, 0.0], [2554, 2844, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.13793103], [29, 71, 0.0952381], [71, 368, 0.02693603], [368, 395, 0.14814815], [395, 678, 0.00706714], [678, 709, 0.12903226], [709, 902, 0.01036269], [902, 947, 0.11111111], [947, 985, 0.10526316], [985, 1099, 0.02631579], [1099, 1130, 0.16129032], [1130, 1428, 0.04026846], [1428, 1495, 0.04477612], [1495, 1783, 0.02777778], [1783, 1826, 0.11627907], [1826, 2122, 0.02027027], [2122, 2154, 0.09375], [2154, 2416, 0.04198473], [2416, 2440, 0.16666667], [2440, 2554, 0.02631579], [2554, 2844, 0.01034483]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2844, 0.66092372]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2844, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2844, 0.24483585]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2844, -47.64370545]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2844, 26.0360382]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2844, 65.1208096]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2844, 19.0]]}
Star Wars Celebration Won’t Return Until 2019, Skipping 2018 By Spencer Perry Though Star Wars Celebration 2017 hasn’t even kicked off yet, Lucasfilm has officially announced that the convention won’t be returning in 2018 and instead will next take place in 2019. They wrote the following on their official site: “Celebration is the official, definitive Star Wars event, with entertainment, interactive experiences and exclusives that can only be found at this Lucasfilm production. They are the ultimate community fan gathering as well, and friends will want to start planning to be together again to commemorate everyone’s favorite saga. The next official Celebration is slated for a location and date soon-to-be announced, in 2019.” Fans expected Star Wars Celebration would have become an annual event once it restarted in 2015 with the Star Wars franchise itself releasing a new film a year. 2018 won’t be entirely Star Wars-free though, as the Untitled Han Solo film will be released on May 25, 2018. Lucsfilm did make two more announcements about this year’s Star Wars Celebration, confirming that Dave Filoni, executive producer of Star Wars Rebels, will host a panel on Saturday, April 15, featuring some special guests and a sneak peek of Star Wars Rebels‘ fourth season. In addition, Billy Dee Williams (Lando Calrissian), Alan Tudyk (K-2SO), and Vanessa Marshall (Hera Syndulla, Star Wars Rebels), along with Matthew Wood (supervising sound editor at Skywalker Sound and voice of General Grievous), will be signing autographs at the Star Wars Celebration Autograph Hall. Star Wars Celebration 2017 takes place in Orlando, Florida from April 13-16, 2017, at the Orange County Convention Center. Some of the previously-announced guests for the event include Felicity Jones (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story), Ian McDiarmid (Emperor Palpatine), Jeremy Bulloch (Boba Fett), who will all be signing at the Star Wars Celebration Autograph Hall; plus Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy and Star Wars: The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson. Star Wars Celebration Orlando Badges Star Wars Celebration Orlando Jyn Spencer Perry Spencer Perry is the Executive Editor for ComingSoon.net. Star Wars Star Wars Celebration The Mandalorian EP ‘Wouldn’t Be Surprised’ by Star Wars Movie Appearances The Mandalorian is one of the most popular projects to ever take place in the Star Wars universe, and it’s… Kevin Feige’s Star Wars Movie No Longer in Development Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige’s Star Wars movie is reportedly no longer in development at Lucasfilm. Variety is reporting that… Andy Serkis Was ‘Gutted’ by Snoke’s Death in Star Wars: The Last Jedi When the Star Wars sequel trilogy began in 2015, it introduced a new threat to the galaxy in the form… Star Wars Jedi: Survivor Director Envisioned Series as a Trilogy Star Wars is known for its trilogies, and it seems like that might not change with Star Wars Jedi: Survivor.… Games 3 weeks ago
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/14402
{"url": "https://www.comingsoon.net/movies/news/823343-star-wars-celebration-wont-return-until-2019-skipping-2018", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.comingsoon.net", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:33:58Z", "digest": "sha1:T2F6DL6D3UYO5OETBAUXFJBZ7S4DAADM"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2953, 2953.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2953, 5420.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2953, 22.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2953, 118.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2953, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2953, 240.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2953, 0.29895105]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2953, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2953, 0.06713634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2953, 0.03066722]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2953, 0.03066722]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2953, 0.08951513]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2953, 0.07874016]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2953, 0.01906341]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2953, 0.00699301]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2953, 0.18181818]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2953, 0.17482517]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2953, 0.53715499]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2953, 5.12314225]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2953, 0.00699301]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2953, 5.02008076]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2953, 471.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 78, 0.0], [78, 313, 0.0], [313, 736, 1.0], [736, 1007, 1.0], [1007, 1583, 1.0], [1583, 2041, 1.0], [2041, 2078, 0.0], [2078, 2108, 0.0], [2108, 2112, 0.0], [2112, 2126, 0.0], [2126, 2184, 1.0], [2184, 2216, 0.0], [2216, 2290, 0.0], [2290, 2398, 0.0], [2398, 2453, 0.0], [2453, 2588, 0.0], [2588, 2658, 0.0], [2658, 2761, 0.0], [2761, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 78, 0.0], [78, 313, 0.0], [313, 736, 0.0], [736, 1007, 0.0], [1007, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 2041, 0.0], [2041, 2078, 0.0], [2078, 2108, 0.0], [2108, 2112, 0.0], [2112, 2126, 0.0], [2126, 2184, 0.0], [2184, 2216, 0.0], [2216, 2290, 0.0], [2290, 2398, 0.0], [2398, 2453, 0.0], [2453, 2588, 0.0], [2588, 2658, 0.0], [2658, 2761, 0.0], [2761, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 9.0], [61, 78, 3.0], [78, 313, 38.0], [313, 736, 63.0], [736, 1007, 48.0], [1007, 1583, 88.0], [1583, 2041, 70.0], [2041, 2078, 5.0], [2078, 2108, 4.0], [2108, 2112, 1.0], [2112, 2126, 2.0], [2126, 2184, 8.0], [2184, 2216, 5.0], [2216, 2290, 11.0], [2290, 2398, 20.0], [2398, 2453, 9.0], [2453, 2588, 20.0], [2588, 2658, 13.0], [2658, 2761, 20.0], [2761, 2826, 10.0], [2826, 2936, 20.0], [2936, 2953, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.13559322], [61, 78, 0.0], [78, 313, 0.05194805], [313, 736, 0.00970874], [736, 1007, 0.05283019], [1007, 1583, 0.00542495], [1583, 2041, 0.02739726], [2041, 2078, 0.0], [2078, 2108, 0.0], [2108, 2112, 0.0], [2112, 2126, 0.0], [2126, 2184, 0.0], [2184, 2216, 0.0], [2216, 2290, 0.0], [2290, 2398, 0.0], [2398, 2453, 0.0], [2453, 2588, 0.0], [2588, 2658, 0.0], [2658, 2761, 0.03960396], [2761, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 2953, 0.05882353]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 78, 0.0], [78, 313, 0.0], [313, 736, 0.0], [736, 1007, 0.0], [1007, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 2041, 0.0], [2041, 2078, 0.0], [2078, 2108, 0.0], [2108, 2112, 0.0], [2112, 2126, 0.0], [2126, 2184, 0.0], [2184, 2216, 0.0], [2216, 2290, 0.0], [2290, 2398, 0.0], [2398, 2453, 0.0], [2453, 2588, 0.0], [2588, 2658, 0.0], [2658, 2761, 0.0], [2761, 2826, 0.0], [2826, 2936, 0.0], [2936, 2953, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.1147541], [61, 78, 0.17647059], [78, 313, 0.02553191], [313, 736, 0.01654846], [736, 1007, 0.04428044], [1007, 1583, 0.07465278], [1583, 2041, 0.09388646], [2041, 2078, 0.13513514], [2078, 2108, 0.13333333], [2108, 2112, 0.25], [2112, 2126, 0.14285714], [2126, 2184, 0.10344828], [2184, 2216, 0.15625], [2216, 2290, 0.14864865], [2290, 2398, 0.03703704], [2398, 2453, 0.14545455], [2453, 2588, 0.05925926], [2588, 2658, 0.15714286], [2658, 2761, 0.02912621], [2761, 2826, 0.12307692], [2826, 2936, 0.05454545], [2936, 2953, 0.05882353]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2953, 0.94672269]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2953, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2953, 0.26703823]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2953, -166.94032461]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2953, 38.09582287]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2953, -65.89519784]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2953, 15.0]]}
Enviva and The Longleaf Alliance Announce Partnership to Protect and Restore Longleaf Pine Forests BETHESDA, MD – March 27, 2020 – Today, Enviva and The Longleaf Alliance announced the signing of a five-year partnership to protect and restore longleaf pine forests, one of the most biodiverse ecosystems in North America. Enviva and The Longleaf Alliance will collaboratively implement Enviva’s longleaf forest restoration plan. Longleaf pine forests are a critical forest ecosystem in the southeastern U.S. They are considered high conservation value forests because of their rarity and biodiversity value. Longleaf forests support some of the highest levels of small-scale species diversity of any forest ecosystem in North America. Well-managed longleaf pine forests provide critical habitat for 29 threatened and endangered species, including the red-cockaded woodpecker, the gopher tortoise, and the Eastern indigo snake. Once spreading over 90 million acres, longleaf forests today only cover about 4.7 million acres. The partnership between Enviva and The Longleaf Alliance will support the goals of America’s Longleaf Restoration Initiative, an extensive collaboration to increase acreage of longleaf pine forests to 8 million acres across the southeastern U.S. “The Longleaf Alliance is excited to work with Enviva to bring new management opportunities and a much-needed market to landowners who are restoring longleaf forests. This collaboration will make a significant difference in furthering longleaf ecosystem restoration on high conservation value lands. This biomass removal tool will effectively kickstart the restoration process and allow landowners to reach their forest management goals more quickly,” said The Longleaf Alliance President Carol Denhof. The Longleaf Alliance will provide technical expertise to ensure that Enviva’s biomass sourcing in mapped longleaf forests improves forest ecosystem conditions. Because many existing longleaf forests need thinning, and because millions of acres of former longleaf forests were converted to other forest types, appropriate biomass removals are a critical step in the longleaf restoration process. “Enviva is honored and excited to work with The Longleaf Alliance on this vital environmental initiative,” said John Keppler, Chairman and CEO of Enviva. “Longleaf forests are one of the most important and biologically diverse ecosystems in the southeastern United States. With this partnership, we are using our biomass sourcing to create space for longleaf ecosystems to flourish where they once did not and improve habitat for at-risk species.” Together, Enviva and The Longleaf Alliance will work with stakeholders, landowners, land managers, and others to support longleaf restoration on public and private lands, as well as to monitor, track, and report on progress. About The Longleaf Alliance The Longleaf Alliance, based in Andalusia, Alabama, was established in 1995 to promote retention, management and restoration of longleaf throughout its historic range. They serve as a clearinghouse of information on all things longleaf. They provide technical assistance to landowners and managers, provide education and training to natural resource professionals, and facilitate partnerships among the numerous public and private stakeholders vital to the future of the longleaf forest. The mission of The Longleaf Alliance is to ensure a sustainable future for the longleaf pine ecosystem through partnerships, landowner assistance, and science-based education and outreach. Learn more at longleafalliance.org. Lynnsey Basala, Vice President for Development Lynnsey@longleafalliance.org About Enviva Holdings, LP Enviva Holdings, LP is the world’s largest producer of industrial wood pellets, a renewable and sustainable energy source used to generate electricity and heat. Through its subsidiaries, Enviva Holdings, LP owns and operates wood pellet processing plants and deep-water export terminals in the Southeastern United States. We export our pellets primarily to power plants in the United Kingdom, Europe and Japan that previously were fueled by coal, enabling them to reduce their lifetime carbon footprint by about 80 percent. We make our pellets using sustainable practices that protect Southern forests and employ about 1,200 people and support many other businesses in the U.S. South. Enviva Holdings, LP conducts its activities primarily through two entities: Enviva Partners, LP, a publicly traded master limited partnership (NYSE: EVA), and Enviva Development Holdings, LLC, a wholly owned private company. To learn more about Enviva Holdings, LP, please visit our website at www.envivabiomass.com and follow us on social media @Enviva.
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/14462
{"url": "https://www.envivabiomass.com/enviva-and-the-longleaf-alliance-announce-partnership-to-protect-and-restore-longleaf-pine-forests/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.envivabiomass.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:36:07Z", "digest": "sha1:LQNYG3ELSO3BA7CIGYVTH27RBM4PSQBQ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4724, 4724.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4724, 10702.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4724, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4724, 238.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4724, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4724, 299.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4724, 0.29440994]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4724, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4724, 0.07801418]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4724, 0.0491388]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4724, 0.0248227]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4724, 0.0248227]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4724, 0.03900709]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4724, 0.0529382]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4724, 0.02532928]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4724, 0.02236025]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4724, 0.14534161]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4724, 0.44771723]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4724, 5.81443299]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4724, 5.09625992]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4724, 679.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 99, 0.0], [99, 429, 1.0], [429, 927, 1.0], [927, 1270, 1.0], [1270, 1773, 1.0], [1773, 2169, 1.0], [2169, 2617, 1.0], [2617, 2842, 1.0], [2842, 2870, 0.0], [2870, 3583, 1.0], [3583, 3630, 0.0], [3630, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3685, 0.0], [3685, 4724, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 99, 0.0], [99, 429, 0.0], [429, 927, 0.0], [927, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1773, 0.0], [1773, 2169, 0.0], [2169, 2617, 0.0], [2617, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2870, 0.0], [2870, 3583, 0.0], [3583, 3630, 0.0], [3630, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3685, 0.0], [3685, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 99, 14.0], [99, 429, 49.0], [429, 927, 70.0], [927, 1270, 50.0], [1270, 1773, 70.0], [1773, 2169, 55.0], [2169, 2617, 69.0], [2617, 2842, 34.0], [2842, 2870, 4.0], [2870, 3583, 98.0], [3583, 3630, 6.0], [3630, 3659, 1.0], [3659, 3685, 4.0], [3685, 4724, 155.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 99, 0.0], [99, 429, 0.01863354], [429, 927, 0.00411523], [927, 1270, 0.01488095], [1270, 1773, 0.0], [1773, 2169, 0.0], [2169, 2617, 0.0], [2617, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2870, 0.0], [2870, 3583, 0.00573888], [3583, 3630, 0.0], [3630, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3685, 0.0], [3685, 4724, 0.00595238]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 99, 0.0], [99, 429, 0.0], [429, 927, 0.0], [927, 1270, 0.0], [1270, 1773, 0.0], [1773, 2169, 0.0], [2169, 2617, 0.0], [2617, 2842, 0.0], [2842, 2870, 0.0], [2870, 3583, 0.0], [3583, 3630, 0.0], [3630, 3659, 0.0], [3659, 3685, 0.0], [3685, 4724, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 99, 0.11111111], [99, 429, 0.06969697], [429, 927, 0.01807229], [927, 1270, 0.03498542], [1270, 1773, 0.02385686], [1773, 2169, 0.01262626], [2169, 2617, 0.03348214], [2617, 2842, 0.02222222], [2842, 2870, 0.14285714], [2870, 3583, 0.01683029], [3583, 3630, 0.10638298], [3630, 3659, 0.03448276], [3659, 3685, 0.19230769], [3685, 4724, 0.04716073]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4724, 0.49022907]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4724, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4724, 0.86504334]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4724, -204.47727292]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4724, 24.36174116]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4724, -50.39635285]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4724, 37.0]]}
Home / Projects / Survey methods and assessments / Gender issues in surveys In 2006, the Inter-agency and Expert Group on Gender Statistics (IAEG-GS) was formed to foster collaboration and cooperation for the development of gender-relevant and sex-disaggregated statistics. The IAEG-GS selected a set of gender indicators that built on the Beijing Platform for Action and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Since then, other work and initiatives have been launched to improve gender statistics. These include the production of guidelines and manuals such as Statistics Sweden’s Engendering Statistics, United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) and World Bank’s Developing Gender Statistics, United Nations Statistics Division’s (UNSD) Gender Statistics Manual (forthcoming), and UNSD’s Guidelines for Producing Statistics on Violence against Women (forthcoming). Further, the recently launched Evidence and Data for Gender Equality (EDGE) initiative is developing methodologies and guidelines for entrepreneurship and asset data. To complement these initiatives, the IHSN initiated a project to assess if and how (well) survey programs in developing countries provide the necessary information to produce gender indicators and conduct analysis on gender issues. The objective of the project is twofold: To provide a detailed inventory of available information, identify data gaps, and inform users about available data; and to identify areas where improvement of survey methods is most needed. Project status: Open Sponsor(s): UK Department for International Development - DFID (Trust Fund TF011722 administered by the World Bank) Implemented by: The project is implemented by the World Bank Development Data Group, in collaboration with counterparts from multiple partner organizations (i.e., FAO, ILO, UIS, UNSD, UN Women, WHO, World Bank). Assessing how (well) gender issues are addressed in surveys involves the following five activities: 1. Identification of key gender issues potentially covered by household surveys. Gender is a cross-cutting issue, so it is important to define the scope of the assessment. We used the list of indicators recommended by the EDGE program, gender issues described in key documents, and consultation with gender specialists in several agencies to define the scope of our assessment. The list of indicators and key documents are provided in the "Related resources" section. UNSD Gender Statistics Manual United Nations Statistics Division - May 2013 The gender statistics manual published by the United Nations Statistics Division provided a framework for our assessment. The manual covers four topics: 1) Users, uses and production of gender statistics; 2) Bringing gender issues into statistics; 3) Integrating a gender perspective into data collection; 4) Analysis and presentation of gender statistics. 2. Translation of these data needs into a list of variables and development of an assessment form. To assess the relevance and reliability of survey questionnaires, we need to identify the questions and variables obtained by implementing the survey. This phase produces an assessment form, consisting of a "questionnaire on survey questionnaires." The assessment form is a critical component of the project, and much attention is devoted to its review and testing by multiple experts and agencies. Instructions on completing the form are also produced at this stage. A draft version of the form is being developed as a PDF form (provided below). The final version will consist of a web-based form, which will also be made available to other teams/agencies interested in conducting similar projects, which will allow us to expand the scope and coverage of the project Gender Assessment Form (version 1.1) IHSN and World Bank - January 2013 This document provides a PDF version of the form used to conduct an inventory of variables related to gender issues in household surveys, with a short instruction manual. A web-based version of this form is being used by the IHSN to conduct the assessment. The form is provided for information. The development of this form has benefited from input from many agencies and experts. 3. Evaluation of a large collection of household surveys and censuses. The geographic coverage of this exercise consists of all low- and middle-income countries (based on the World Bank classification of countries). When and where available, the project will assess the following operations in these countries: Population and housing censuses Household income and expenditure surveys or equivalent Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire (CWIQ) surveys Other country-specific socioeconomic monitoring surveys Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) Agricultural censuses or surveys Labor force surveys Financial inclusion surveys (FINDEX) Other surveys (those with nationwide coverage and gender-specific surveys are given priority) The project prioritizes the most recent surveys for assessment, but will eventually cover as many data collection activities as possible from the year 2000 to the present. A list of surveys identified for the assessment is provided below. This list will be regularly updated to add surveys and other information. Gender assessment project - List of surveys reviewed IHSN / World Bank - 24 February 2014 This MS-Excel file provides the list of surveys and censuses that the IHSN has assessed from a gender perspective. 4. Production of a meta database. All information collected using the assessment form will be stored in a database format and also made available in MS-Excel, Stata, and SPSS formats for easy analysis. A web-based user interface will be developed to allow public access to this "data discovery" tool. The database in other formats will also be made publicly available. Gender Data Navigator (web query tool) The Gender Data Navigator application is a searchable inventory of gender-related questions found in survey and census questionnaires from low- and middle-income countries. It provides a convenient data discovery tool to researchers interested in identifying surveys and censuses that collected data on a particular topic of interest. 5. Production of a report or working paper on "How (well) are gender issues covered in surveys and censuses?". Production of the report will be coordinated by the IHSN and World Bank, but other interested agencies will be invited to collaborate as co-authors or reviewers. How (well) are gender issues covered in surveys and censuses? Gayatri Koolwal - July 2015 This report presents the findings from a desk review of national household survey and census questionnaires to understand the availability of different types of sex-disaggregated data. It also provides recommendations on questions that could be added in the near term to different survey types, to address substantial gender data gaps we observe across countries. Author(s) Fourth World Conference on Women The Platform for Action is an agenda for women's empowerment. It aims at accelerating the implementation of the Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women and at removing all the obstacles to women's active participation in all spheres of public and private life through a full and equal share in economic, social, cultural and political decision-making. http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/beijing/platform/ Inter-agency and Expert Group on Gender Statistics (IAEG-GS) The global gender statistics programme of the United Nations Statistics Division aims at developing concepts and methods, supporting and enhancing national statistical offices’ capacity and fostering inter-agency collaboration and cooperation for the development of statistics to address gender-based policy issues. UNSD serves as Secretariat of the Inter-agency and Expert Group on Gender Statistics (IAEG-GS) first convened in 2006. The IAEG-GS functions through three advisory groups on gender statistics databases and indicators, gender statistics training and gender statistics legislation, respectively. http://unstats.un.org/unsd/gender/default.html UN Women website Author(s) UN Women In July 2010, the United Nations General Assembly created UN Women, the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women. In doing so, UN Member States took an historic step in accelerating the Organization’s goals on gender equality and the empowerment of women. The creation of UN Women came about as part of the UN reform agenda, bringing together resources and mandates for greater impact. http://www.unwomen.org/ Developing Gender Statistics: A Practical Tool Author(s) Inited Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE) and World Bank Institute Gender statistics is not a discrete or isolated field. It cuts across traditional fields of statistics, such as economics, agriculture, health and employment, to explore the differences that exist between women and men in society. Such information is vital to inform policy and decision-makers and to make advances towards achieving gender equality. The manual Developing Gender Statistics: A Practical Tool aims to guide statistical organizations in the production and use of gender statistics. http://www.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/stats/publications/Developing_Gender_Statistics.pdf Engendering Statistics - A Tool for Change Author(s) Birgitta Hedman, Francesca Perucci, Pehr Sundström This book is targeted primarily to statisticians in national statistical offices and other governmental departments, and to trainers as a resource manual for training workshops and training in academic settings. It can also be used by users who wish to understand the problems involved in the production of gender statistics to be better. http://www.scb.se/statistik/_publikationer/LE0202_1996A01_BR_X93%C3%96P9601.pdf On Norms and Agency - Conversations about Gender Equality with Women and Men in 20 Countries Author(s) Ana Maria Munoz Boudet, Patti Petesch, and Carolyn Turk with Angelica Thumala (World Bank) http://siteresources.worldbank.org/EXTSOCIALDEVELOPMENT/Resources/244362-1164107274725/On-Norms-Agency-Book.pdf Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) Author(s) International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), OPHI, USAID The Women’s Empowerment in Agriculture Index (WEAI) measures the empowerment, agency, and inclusion of women in the agriculture sector in an effort to identify ways to overcome those obstacles and constraints. The Index is a significant innovation in its field and aims to increase understanding of the connections between women’s empowerment, food security, and agricultural growth. http://www.ifpri.org/publication/womens-empowerment-agriculture-index
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/14532
{"url": "https://www.ihsn.org/Gender_Assessment", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ihsn.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:37:53Z", "digest": "sha1:JSGTEPKOZASSD6K2GFCWPSLMMY6KFDLW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10729, 10729.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10729, 14314.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10729, 63.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10729, 226.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10729, 0.89]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10729, 292.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10729, 0.29778465]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10729, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10729, 0.01106345]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10729, 0.08771732]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10729, 0.07597652]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10729, 0.05791375]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10729, 0.03894784]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10729, 0.02280424]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10729, 0.03431926]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10729, 0.01016031]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10729, 0.00846692]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10729, 0.03348789]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10729, 0.17619784]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10729, 0.36273864]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10729, 5.83146807]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10729, 5.42961729]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10729, 1519.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 413, 1.0], [413, 1048, 1.0], [1048, 1512, 1.0], [1512, 1533, 0.0], [1533, 1649, 0.0], [1649, 1861, 1.0], [1861, 1961, 0.0], [1961, 2429, 1.0], [2429, 2459, 0.0], [2459, 2505, 0.0], [2505, 2862, 1.0], [2862, 3729, 0.0], [3729, 3766, 0.0], [3766, 3801, 0.0], [3801, 4182, 1.0], [4182, 4493, 0.0], [4493, 4525, 0.0], [4525, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4689, 0.0], [4689, 4726, 0.0], [4726, 4768, 0.0], [4768, 4801, 0.0], [4801, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4858, 0.0], [4858, 4952, 0.0], [4952, 5265, 1.0], [5265, 5318, 0.0], [5318, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5470, 1.0], [5470, 5839, 1.0], [5839, 5878, 0.0], [5878, 6213, 1.0], [6213, 6486, 1.0], [6486, 6548, 1.0], [6548, 6576, 0.0], [6576, 6940, 1.0], [6940, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7359, 1.0], [7359, 7410, 0.0], [7410, 7471, 0.0], [7471, 8081, 1.0], [8081, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8145, 0.0], [8145, 8164, 0.0], [8164, 8580, 1.0], [8580, 8604, 0.0], [8604, 8651, 0.0], [8651, 8740, 0.0], [8740, 9236, 1.0], [9236, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9366, 0.0], [9366, 9427, 0.0], [9427, 9766, 1.0], [9766, 9846, 0.0], [9846, 9939, 0.0], [9939, 10040, 0.0], [10040, 10152, 0.0], [10152, 10200, 0.0], [10200, 10276, 0.0], [10276, 10660, 1.0], [10660, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 413, 0.0], [413, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1512, 0.0], [1512, 1533, 0.0], [1533, 1649, 0.0], [1649, 1861, 0.0], [1861, 1961, 0.0], [1961, 2429, 0.0], [2429, 2459, 0.0], [2459, 2505, 0.0], [2505, 2862, 0.0], [2862, 3729, 0.0], [3729, 3766, 0.0], [3766, 3801, 0.0], [3801, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4493, 0.0], [4493, 4525, 0.0], [4525, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4689, 0.0], [4689, 4726, 0.0], [4726, 4768, 0.0], [4768, 4801, 0.0], [4801, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4858, 0.0], [4858, 4952, 0.0], [4952, 5265, 0.0], [5265, 5318, 0.0], [5318, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5470, 0.0], [5470, 5839, 0.0], [5839, 5878, 0.0], [5878, 6213, 0.0], [6213, 6486, 0.0], [6486, 6548, 0.0], [6548, 6576, 0.0], [6576, 6940, 0.0], [6940, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7359, 0.0], [7359, 7410, 0.0], [7410, 7471, 0.0], [7471, 8081, 0.0], [8081, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8145, 0.0], [8145, 8164, 0.0], [8164, 8580, 0.0], [8580, 8604, 0.0], [8604, 8651, 0.0], [8651, 8740, 0.0], [8740, 9236, 0.0], [9236, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9366, 0.0], [9366, 9427, 0.0], [9427, 9766, 0.0], [9766, 9846, 0.0], [9846, 9939, 0.0], [9939, 10040, 0.0], [10040, 10152, 0.0], [10152, 10200, 0.0], [10200, 10276, 0.0], [10276, 10660, 0.0], [10660, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 76, 10.0], [76, 413, 48.0], [413, 1048, 82.0], [1048, 1512, 70.0], [1512, 1533, 3.0], [1533, 1649, 15.0], [1649, 1861, 31.0], [1861, 1961, 14.0], [1961, 2429, 73.0], [2429, 2459, 4.0], [2459, 2505, 6.0], [2505, 2862, 51.0], [2862, 3729, 139.0], [3729, 3766, 5.0], [3766, 3801, 6.0], [3801, 4182, 64.0], [4182, 4493, 46.0], [4493, 4525, 4.0], [4525, 4580, 7.0], [4580, 4633, 6.0], [4633, 4689, 5.0], [4689, 4726, 5.0], [4726, 4768, 5.0], [4768, 4801, 4.0], [4801, 4821, 3.0], [4821, 4858, 4.0], [4858, 4952, 12.0], [4952, 5265, 50.0], [5265, 5318, 7.0], [5318, 5355, 6.0], [5355, 5470, 19.0], [5470, 5839, 60.0], [5839, 5878, 6.0], [5878, 6213, 47.0], [6213, 6486, 45.0], [6486, 6548, 10.0], [6548, 6576, 4.0], [6576, 6940, 54.0], [6940, 6983, 6.0], [6983, 7359, 57.0], [7359, 7410, 1.0], [7410, 7471, 8.0], [7471, 8081, 79.0], [8081, 8128, 1.0], [8128, 8145, 3.0], [8145, 8164, 3.0], [8164, 8580, 68.0], [8580, 8604, 1.0], [8604, 8651, 6.0], [8651, 8740, 12.0], [8740, 9236, 73.0], [9236, 9323, 1.0], [9323, 9366, 6.0], [9366, 9427, 7.0], [9427, 9766, 53.0], [9766, 9846, 1.0], [9846, 9939, 15.0], [9939, 10040, 15.0], [10040, 10152, 1.0], [10152, 10200, 6.0], [10200, 10276, 9.0], [10276, 10660, 56.0], [10660, 10729, 1.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 413, 0.01234568], [413, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1512, 0.0], [1512, 1533, 0.0], [1533, 1649, 0.05555556], [1649, 1861, 0.0], [1861, 1961, 0.0], [1961, 2429, 0.00219298], [2429, 2459, 0.0], [2459, 2505, 0.09302326], [2505, 2862, 0.0115942], [2862, 3729, 0.00117925], [3729, 3766, 0.06060606], [3766, 3801, 0.125], [3801, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4493, 0.00332226], [4493, 4525, 0.0], [4525, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4689, 0.0], [4689, 4726, 0.0], [4726, 4768, 0.0], [4768, 4801, 0.0], [4801, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4858, 0.0], [4858, 4952, 0.0], [4952, 5265, 0.01298701], [5265, 5318, 0.0], [5318, 5355, 0.1875], [5355, 5470, 0.0], [5470, 5839, 0.00280112], [5839, 5878, 0.0], [5878, 6213, 0.0], [6213, 6486, 0.00381679], [6486, 6548, 0.0], [6548, 6576, 0.16], [6576, 6940, 0.0], [6940, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7359, 0.0], [7359, 7410, 0.0], [7410, 7471, 0.0], [7471, 8081, 0.00671141], [8081, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8145, 0.0], [8145, 8164, 0.0], [8164, 8580, 0.00980392], [8580, 8604, 0.0], [8604, 8651, 0.0], [8651, 8740, 0.0], [8740, 9236, 0.0], [9236, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9366, 0.0], [9366, 9427, 0.0], [9427, 9766, 0.0], [9766, 9846, 0.296875], [9846, 9939, 0.02222222], [9939, 10040, 0.0], [10040, 10152, 0.19587629], [10152, 10200, 0.0], [10200, 10276, 0.0], [10276, 10660, 0.0], [10660, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 76, 0.0], [76, 413, 0.0], [413, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1512, 0.0], [1512, 1533, 0.0], [1533, 1649, 0.0], [1649, 1861, 0.0], [1861, 1961, 0.0], [1961, 2429, 0.0], [2429, 2459, 0.0], [2459, 2505, 0.0], [2505, 2862, 0.0], [2862, 3729, 0.0], [3729, 3766, 0.0], [3766, 3801, 0.0], [3801, 4182, 0.0], [4182, 4493, 0.0], [4493, 4525, 0.0], [4525, 4580, 0.0], [4580, 4633, 0.0], [4633, 4689, 0.0], [4689, 4726, 0.0], [4726, 4768, 0.0], [4768, 4801, 0.0], [4801, 4821, 0.0], [4821, 4858, 0.0], [4858, 4952, 0.0], [4952, 5265, 0.0], [5265, 5318, 0.0], [5318, 5355, 0.0], [5355, 5470, 0.0], [5470, 5839, 0.0], [5839, 5878, 0.0], [5878, 6213, 0.0], [6213, 6486, 0.0], [6486, 6548, 0.0], [6548, 6576, 0.0], [6576, 6940, 0.0], [6940, 6983, 0.0], [6983, 7359, 0.0], [7359, 7410, 0.0], [7410, 7471, 0.0], [7471, 8081, 0.0], [8081, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8145, 0.0], [8145, 8164, 0.0], [8164, 8580, 0.0], [8580, 8604, 0.0], [8604, 8651, 0.0], [8651, 8740, 0.0], [8740, 9236, 0.0], [9236, 9323, 0.0], [9323, 9366, 0.0], [9366, 9427, 0.0], [9427, 9766, 0.0], [9766, 9846, 0.0], [9846, 9939, 0.0], [9939, 10040, 0.0], [10040, 10152, 0.0], [10152, 10200, 0.0], [10200, 10276, 0.0], [10276, 10660, 0.0], [10660, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 76, 0.05263158], [76, 413, 0.08308605], [413, 1048, 0.07874016], [1048, 1512, 0.01508621], [1512, 1533, 0.0952381], [1533, 1649, 0.13793103], [1649, 1861, 0.13207547], [1861, 1961, 0.01], [1961, 2429, 0.01923077], [2429, 2459, 0.23333333], [2459, 2505, 0.10869565], [2505, 2862, 0.0280112], [2862, 3729, 0.01153403], [3729, 3766, 0.08108108], [3766, 3801, 0.2], [3801, 4182, 0.02887139], [4182, 4493, 0.01607717], [4493, 4525, 0.03125], [4525, 4580, 0.01818182], [4580, 4633, 0.1509434], [4633, 4689, 0.01785714], [4689, 4726, 0.16216216], [4726, 4768, 0.19047619], [4768, 4801, 0.03030303], [4801, 4821, 0.05], [4821, 4858, 0.18918919], [4858, 4952, 0.0106383], [4952, 5265, 0.00958466], [5265, 5318, 0.03773585], [5318, 5355, 0.18918919], [5355, 5470, 0.06956522], [5470, 5839, 0.03252033], [5839, 5878, 0.07692308], [5878, 6213, 0.01492537], [6213, 6486, 0.03296703], [6486, 6548, 0.01612903], [6548, 6576, 0.10714286], [6576, 6940, 0.00549451], [6940, 6983, 0.11627907], [6983, 7359, 0.02393617], [7359, 7410, 0.0], [7410, 7471, 0.18032787], [7471, 8081, 0.04590164], [8081, 8128, 0.0], [8128, 8145, 0.17647059], [8145, 8164, 0.21052632], [8164, 8580, 0.06730769], [8580, 8604, 0.0], [8604, 8651, 0.12765957], [8651, 8740, 0.15730337], [8740, 9236, 0.02016129], [9236, 9323, 0.06896552], [9323, 9366, 0.11627907], [9366, 9427, 0.1147541], [9427, 9766, 0.00589971], [9766, 9846, 0.1], [9846, 9939, 0.09677419], [9939, 10040, 0.12871287], [10040, 10152, 0.22321429], [10152, 10200, 0.16666667], [10200, 10276, 0.26315789], [10276, 10660, 0.02864583], [10660, 10729, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10729, 0.29559767]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10729, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10729, 0.62838548]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10729, -837.61860876]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10729, -141.20495538]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10729, -91.56295707]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10729, 84.0]]}
The Brooklyn Museum Awards Fourth Annual UOVO Prize to Suneil Sanzgiri Suneil Sanzgiri, 2022. (Photo: Shala Miller, courtesy of the artist) Brooklyn-based filmmaker to receive a solo exhibition, public installation, and $25,000 cash award The Brooklyn Museum is pleased to award Suneil Sanzgiri the fourth annual UOVO Prize, which recognizes the work of emerging Brooklyn-based artists. Sanzgiri will receive a solo exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum; a commission for a fifty-by-fifty-foot public art installation on the facade of UOVO’s Brooklyn facility, located in Bushwick; and a $25,000 unrestricted cash grant. A jury of Brooklyn Museum curators chose Sanzgiri for the award. Drew Sawyer, Phillip and Edith Leonian Curator of Photography at the Brooklyn Museum, will curate Sanzgiri’s exhibition, which will be the artist’s first solo museum show. Both the exhibition and public installation will debut later this year. “We are thrilled to present the fourth UOVO Prize to Suneil Sanzgiri, whose recent trilogy of short films greatly impressed the jury. Using a range of imaging technologies to meditate on what it means to see at a distance, Sanzgiri poetically explores the complexities of diasporic identity, anticolonialism, and nationalism,” says Sawyer. “We’relooking forward to supporting Sanzgiri’s upcoming feature-length film project and sharing his deeply thoughtful practice with our audiences.” Sanzgiri is an artist, researcher, and filmmaker. Spanning experimental video and film, animations, essays, and installations, his work contends with questions of identity, heritage, culture, and diaspora in relation to structural violence and anticolonial struggles across the Global South. Sanzgiri’s films offer sonic and visual journeys through family history, local mythology, and colonial legacies of extraction in Goa, India—where his family originates—vividly blending 3D renderings, drone videography, photogrammetry and lidar scanning, 16 mm film and animation, archival footage, and desktop documentary practices. Together these imaging techniques dislodge the concept of diaspora from representational tropes and recast it as a tool that allows viewers to trace the effects of haunted fragments of the past. “I am so honored to be the recipient of the UOVO Prize,” says Sanzgiri. “I’m looking forward to expanding my practice into the museum space with my first solo show, and I’m excited to share with audiences a series of new works centered on my first feature- length film, which seeks to encourage inquiry into mutual struggle and intertwined histories of liberation within the Global South. I hope viewers in Brooklyn and beyond will form their own connections between histories of the past and struggles today.” Anne Pasternak, Shelby White and Leon Levy Director, Brooklyn Museum, says, “The UOVO Prize’s impact on artists has been breathtaking. Now, as the first filmmaker to be awarded the prize, Sanzgiri joins a growing consortium of artists receiving accolades for beautifully and thoughtfully tackling the important issues affecting contemporary society.” Steven Guttman, UOVO Founder and Cochairman, adds, “We are privileged to join the Brooklyn Museum in announcing Suneil Sanzgiri as the fourth recipient of the UOVO Prize. It is an honor to continue to provide a platform for local artists to express their vision to our community, and we are excited to support the first feature-length film to be included as part of the UOVO Prize.” Previous UOVO Prize winners are John Edmonds, Baseera Khan, and Oscar yi Hou. Oscar yi Hou: East of sun, west of moon is on view in the Brooklyn Museum’s Ingrassia Gallery of Contemporary Art through September 17, 2023, and yi Hou’s work Flock together, aka: a mural family portrait (2022) is on view at UOVO’s Bushwick facility until July 2023. Suneil Sanzgiri’s work has been screened extensively at festivals and arts venues around the world, including the International Film Festival Rotterdam, New York Film Festival, Hong Kong International Film Festival, True/False Film Fest, Sheffield Doc/Fest, Doclisboa, Viennale, e-flux, REDCAT, Menil Collection, Block Museum, MASS MoCA, moCa Cleveland, Le Cinéma Club, and Criterion Collection. He has won awards at the BlackStar Film Festival, Open City Documentary Festival, Images Festival, Videoex, and more. In addition to Sentient.Art.Film’s inaugural Line of Sight Fellowship, Sanzgiri has completed residencies and fellowships at SOMA, MacDowell, Pioneer Works, and Flaherty NYC. His work has been supported by grants from Creative Capital, the Jerome Foundation, NYSCA, Field of Vision, and the Foundation for Contemporary Arts. He was named one of the “25 New Faces of Independent Film” in Filmmaker magazine’s fall 2021 issue and was included in Art in America’s “New Talent” issue in 2022. Sanzgiri graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) with a master of science in art, culture, and technology in 2017. He is currently working on his first feature-length film. About the Brooklyn Museum The Brooklyn Museum contains one of the nation’s most comprehensive and wide- ranging collections, enhanced by a distinguished record of exhibitions, scholarship, and service to the public. The Museum’s vast holdings span five thousand years of human creativity from cultures in every corner of the globe. Collection highlights include the ancient Egyptian holdings, renowned for objects of the highest quality, and the American collections, which are unrivaled in their diversity, from Native American art and artifacts and Spanish colonial painting, to nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American painting, sculpture, and decorative objects. The Museum is also home to the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, which is dedicated to the study and exhibition of feminist art and is the only curatorial center of its kind. The Brooklyn Museum is both a leading cultural institution and a community museum. Located in the heart of Brooklyn, the Museum welcomes and celebrates the diversity of its home borough and city. Few, if any, museums in the country attract an audience as varied with respect to race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status, educational background, and age as that of the Brooklyn Museum. About UOVO UOVO is the nation’s leading storage and logistics provider for art, fashion, archives, and collectibles, with state-of-the-art facilities in New York, Delaware, Florida, California, Colorado, and Texas. Founded by collectors who sought a new standard of care for artworks, UOVO is operated by an expert team of industry professionals and offers bespoke solutions to meet the specialized needs of any collection. UOVO’s services include climate-controlled storage, private viewing galleries, local transportation, international shipping, installation, packing, archival photography, digital inventory management, art finance, optional loss protection, and more. To learn more about all that UOVO has to offer, visit uovo.art. Previous Post: 10th Anniversary of Taste NY Program Next Post: Rihanna To Perform At The Oscars®
2023-14/0004/en_head.json.gz/15809
{"url": "https://thecitylife.org/2023/02/22/the-brooklyn-museum-awards-fourth-annual-uovo-prize-to-suneil-sanzgiri/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thecitylife.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:59:01Z", "digest": "sha1:WVHCUU5LEXGR7S74GL2FJBEQ4DPJHWYR"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7100, 7100.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7100, 9496.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7100, 17.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7100, 113.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7100, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7100, 221.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7100, 0.29977629]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7100, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7100, 0.00856604]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7100, 0.02638342]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7100, 0.0262121]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7100, 0.00719548]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7100, 0.02237136]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7100, 0.18269948]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7100, 0.49671978]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7100, 5.47047798]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7100, 5.57431425]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7100, 1067.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 140, 0.0], [140, 239, 0.0], [239, 926, 1.0], [926, 1414, 1.0], [1414, 2234, 1.0], [2234, 2745, 1.0], [2745, 3096, 1.0], [3096, 3479, 1.0], [3479, 3825, 1.0], [3825, 5024, 1.0], [5024, 5050, 0.0], [5050, 6267, 1.0], [6267, 6278, 0.0], [6278, 7004, 1.0], [7004, 7056, 0.0], [7056, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 140, 0.0], [140, 239, 0.0], [239, 926, 0.0], [926, 1414, 0.0], [1414, 2234, 0.0], [2234, 2745, 0.0], [2745, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3479, 0.0], [3479, 3825, 0.0], [3825, 5024, 0.0], [5024, 5050, 0.0], [5050, 6267, 0.0], [6267, 6278, 0.0], [6278, 7004, 0.0], [7004, 7056, 0.0], [7056, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 71, 11.0], [71, 140, 10.0], [140, 239, 13.0], [239, 926, 104.0], [926, 1414, 70.0], [1414, 2234, 113.0], [2234, 2745, 86.0], [2745, 3096, 50.0], [3096, 3479, 66.0], [3479, 3825, 60.0], [3825, 5024, 177.0], [5024, 5050, 4.0], [5050, 6267, 186.0], [6267, 6278, 2.0], [6278, 7004, 99.0], [7004, 7056, 8.0], [7056, 7100, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 140, 0.06451613], [140, 239, 0.05376344], [239, 926, 0.00748503], [926, 1414, 0.0], [1414, 2234, 0.0037594], [2234, 2745, 0.0], [2745, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3479, 0.0], [3479, 3825, 0.04204204], [3825, 5024, 0.01212121], [5024, 5050, 0.0], [5050, 6267, 0.0], [6267, 6278, 0.0], [6278, 7004, 0.0], [7004, 7056, 0.04], [7056, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 140, 0.0], [140, 239, 0.0], [239, 926, 0.0], [926, 1414, 0.0], [1414, 2234, 0.0], [2234, 2745, 0.0], [2745, 3096, 0.0], [3096, 3479, 0.0], [3479, 3825, 0.0], [3825, 5024, 0.0], [5024, 5050, 0.0], [5050, 6267, 0.0], [6267, 6278, 0.0], [6278, 7004, 0.0], [7004, 7056, 0.0], [7056, 7100, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 71, 0.18309859], [71, 140, 0.07246377], [140, 239, 0.01010101], [239, 926, 0.05094614], [926, 1414, 0.02663934], [1414, 2234, 0.01097561], [2234, 2745, 0.02544031], [2745, 3096, 0.04843305], [3096, 3479, 0.06266319], [3479, 3825, 0.0867052], [3825, 5024, 0.0942452], [5024, 5050, 0.11538462], [5050, 6267, 0.02382909], [6267, 6278, 0.45454545], [6278, 7004, 0.03443526], [7004, 7056, 0.13461538], [7056, 7100, 0.18181818]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7100, 0.31623483]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7100, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7100, 0.92338473]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7100, -373.60505328]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7100, 71.20534339]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7100, 16.25254271]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7100, 45.0]]}