raw_content
stringlengths
3
978k
doc_id
stringlengths
30
34
meta
stringlengths
189
6.79k
quality_signals
stringlengths
1.9k
1.43M
Written by: Shalman Ahmed, Yaozhen Zhang, Robert Szolosi, Andrew Endzell, Dobin Jeon, Alina Luy; student reporters Like many people, university students have been struggling with complex financial and educational situations. Many students were not eligible for the COVID-19 related federal stimulus checks due to being claimed as dependent on their parent’s taxes. For others, it was a matter of citizenship. There are multiple criteria the IRS uses to determine residence status, including the Substantial Presence Test. The COVID-19 pandemic forced students to reexamine and unexpectedly apply financial skills they otherwise wouldn’t be using. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that most people paid off expenses, but there isn’t much information on university students. For students, the stimulus checks can either be beneficial or unnecessary. A senior student from the University of Washington Bothell, Anders Wennstig, is one of the many who did not receive one. “I feel a little bit confused. I’m not sure if I’m supposed to get one or not, because the qualifications are a little bit confusing, and people are saying you will get one or you won’t get one and I really don’t know what the truth is. About not getting one, I feel lucky that I don’t need one to pay my rent or eat. But I also feel potentially cheated, like if I was supposed to get one I want the money because I could use it for sure.” Harry Nguyen, another senior, said that receiving the stimulus check helped him out. Most of the money he received was used to pay for college tuition and to support his family. “I am personally financially stable where I am but my mom actually lost her job recently due to the pandemic. So I actually had to help her along the way and support her financially and be the giver”, he said. The rest, he put away in savings. “I actually invested a good 80% of my stimulus. I put it into cryptocurrency, Roth IRA, and a little into stocks to watch that investment grow into the future”. He had to be financially stable to keep his family and his education afloat, which was greatly helped by the additional stimulus checks given to him and many other students that received it as well. Some of the students who do not receive Stimulus checks are international students. Most international students stay in the United States without U.S. citizenship, so many of them didn’t receive the stimulus check. One of those students is senior Tony Jung. He never received one because he is an international student and he doesn’t meet the qualifications to get a stimulus check. However, Jung mentioned that people who have stayed in the United States for more than 5 years are qualified to get a stimulus check. He said that he does not have any challenges with money, “because my parents support me”, and he added, “That’s why I could study here. If my parents don’t have enough money, I might not be here.” On top of stimulus check eligibility, international students are also not being able to go back to school. Some choose to return home or do part-time gig-work, such as Uber or Doordash. Still, once they get a work visa or permit, they will receive a $300 check per week from the day they obtain it. Yalin Zhao, a graduate of UW mathematics, owns a company called Isea Group. His opinions on stimulus checks are different from that of most people. He thinks the stimulus check has saved many people on the verge of bankruptcy but makes many low-income people unwilling to work. He said that he thinks some people will be lazy at home because some payments are not as high as government subsidies. He prefers the government to turn stimulus checks into loans to motivate people to work, and the University of Washington Bothell does offer loans as a financial aid option. For the University of Washington’s Bothell campus, the way students and the financial aid department responded to this crisis says a lot about their adaptability and perseverance. Understanding their experiences provides insight on how this campus got through the rough time that was 2020 and early 2021. Danette Iyall, the assistant director for the Financial Aid and Scholarships Office on the UW Bothell campus, is one of only two staff members in her department who said that and saw a large increase in financial aid requests come into her office coinciding with the pandemic and remote learning. “[I]t’s been very noticeable in the number of requests that have come across my desk,” said Iyall. Even so, she expressed satisfaction in how her department handled the surge. “[D]epending on…how many students we see in a day, students are able to sit down face to face and speak with a counselor…I think overall, with the two of us, it’s been doable. It’s been ok.” Regardless of Financial Aid’s effectiveness, it doesn’t change the fact that the CARES act, among other federal emergency funding, isn’t available for international students. Short-term fund loans are an option and are available to any currently enrolled UW student. “There is no interest attached to the loan but there is a one-time $30 processing fee,” said Iyall. They don’t go through her office, but she describes them as a way “to get you through this moment until your actual funds arrive later”. The financial aid department also reacted to the plight of students by making some adjustments to their satisfactory academic progress, or SAP, policy. For the 2020 winter and spring quarters, some credit requirements were lessened to give students room to breathe during that time. “[I]t is something that says…we will keep you eligible, you are still eligible because we understand that COVID impacted you somehow, someway, whether its job [related], whether it’s you [and/or a family member who] were being treated medically, things like that. We want to acknowledge that something was unusual and extraordinary that was happening,” Danette Iyall, Assistant Director of the Financial Aid and Scholarships Office Even with the struggles students were going through on campus, she felt that the financial aid department was still there for its student constituents: they understood the situation and reacted. For those who have received the stimulus check, the biggest question is what is the best and most efficient way financially to spend that money as a college student. Helen Andrews, a personal finance professor at the University of Washington Bothell, said that “I think the first thing you want to do with your stimulus check is to get some of those bills paid off if you have any old bills or any bills that you are behind on to try to get those paid down. And these can be essentials. And they can also be anything that you’re falling behind like utilities, or your health insurance is really important to keep that current. And then after that, anything that you’re paying interest on.” Helen continues to mention that if students do not have an emergency fund, she recommends starting one as soon as possible. The old convention used to be used for at least three to six months worth of expenses, however, for students, that can be a very large amount of money that would take a very long time to save. She states that potentially cutting down expenses such as eating out, can help in saving a small portion of money every month. Helen concludes with “new clothes, extra clothes, some of those things you can cut down to zero, but your rent, your cell phone bill, you know, your internet, those kinds of things that you have to pay for, you want to add all those together, and then maybe figure out how much that is that you spend every month that you really those essential expenses”. “Time is your biggest ally when you’re saving for retirement. So starting young is a really good thing.” Helen Andrews, Personal Finance Professor July 12, 2021 June 16, 2021 uwbeicCoronavirus, Featured StoriesEmergency Funds, Financial Aid Office, Financial Health, Financial Issues, July 21 Issue, Personal Finance, Stimulus Checks Previous Post “Rutherford Falls” is the Show That “Parks & Rec” Forgot to Be, TV Review Next Post UW Bothell Announces Redevelopment for Student Housing as Students Return to Campus
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12734
{"url": "https://thehuskyherald.com/2021/07/12/college-student-financial-health-stimulus-checks-and-emergency-funds-at-uwb/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thehuskyherald.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:52:49Z", "digest": "sha1:LGSWBVDB27DVESFSDEN2BB3Q334UPXII"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 8169, 8169.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8169, 14148.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8169, 27.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8169, 191.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8169, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8169, 269.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8169, 0.46003661]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8169, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 8169, 0.03116962]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 8169, 0.01089424]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 8169, 0.01573612]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 8169, 0.01134816]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 8169, 0.01134816]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 8169, 0.02257474]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 8169, 0.14154973]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 8169, 0.39797395]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 8169, 4.78219971]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 8169, 0.00183038]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 8169, 5.65617406]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 8169, 1382.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 115, 0.0], [115, 522, 1.0], [522, 779, 1.0], [779, 1415, 1.0], [1415, 1803, 1.0], [1803, 2197, 1.0], [2197, 2455, 1.0], [2455, 2911, 1.0], [2911, 3210, 1.0], [3210, 3781, 1.0], [3781, 4086, 1.0], [4086, 4383, 1.0], [4383, 4750, 1.0], [4750, 5254, 1.0], [5254, 5537, 1.0], [5537, 5890, 1.0], [5890, 5969, 0.0], [5969, 6164, 1.0], [6164, 6330, 1.0], [6330, 6854, 1.0], [6854, 7298, 1.0], [7298, 7654, 1.0], [7654, 7759, 1.0], [7759, 7801, 0.0], [7801, 7988, 0.0], [7988, 8076, 0.0], [8076, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 115, 0.0], [115, 522, 0.0], [522, 779, 0.0], [779, 1415, 0.0], [1415, 1803, 0.0], [1803, 2197, 0.0], [2197, 2455, 0.0], [2455, 2911, 0.0], [2911, 3210, 0.0], [3210, 3781, 0.0], [3781, 4086, 0.0], [4086, 4383, 0.0], [4383, 4750, 0.0], [4750, 5254, 0.0], [5254, 5537, 0.0], [5537, 5890, 0.0], [5890, 5969, 0.0], [5969, 6164, 0.0], [6164, 6330, 0.0], [6330, 6854, 0.0], [6854, 7298, 0.0], [7298, 7654, 0.0], [7654, 7759, 0.0], [7759, 7801, 0.0], [7801, 7988, 0.0], [7988, 8076, 0.0], [8076, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 115, 16.0], [115, 522, 60.0], [522, 779, 37.0], [779, 1415, 122.0], [1415, 1803, 71.0], [1803, 2197, 71.0], [2197, 2455, 41.0], [2455, 2911, 82.0], [2911, 3210, 55.0], [3210, 3781, 98.0], [3781, 4086, 47.0], [4086, 4383, 50.0], [4383, 4750, 65.0], [4750, 5254, 82.0], [5254, 5537, 44.0], [5537, 5890, 54.0], [5890, 5969, 11.0], [5969, 6164, 30.0], [6164, 6330, 29.0], [6330, 6854, 95.0], [6854, 7298, 81.0], [7298, 7654, 65.0], [7654, 7759, 18.0], [7759, 7801, 5.0], [7801, 7988, 24.0], [7988, 8076, 15.0], [8076, 8169, 14.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 115, 0.0], [115, 522, 0.00502513], [522, 779, 0.00793651], [779, 1415, 0.0], [1415, 1803, 0.0], [1803, 2197, 0.00520833], [2197, 2455, 0.0], [2455, 2911, 0.00224215], [2911, 3210, 0.01041667], [3210, 3781, 0.0], [3781, 4086, 0.02657807], [4086, 4383, 0.0], [4383, 4750, 0.0], [4750, 5254, 0.00407332], [5254, 5537, 0.01444043], [5537, 5890, 0.0], [5890, 5969, 0.0], [5969, 6164, 0.0], [6164, 6330, 0.0], [6330, 6854, 0.0], [6854, 7298, 0.0], [7298, 7654, 0.0], [7654, 7759, 0.0], [7759, 7801, 0.0], [7801, 7988, 0.07909605], [7988, 8076, 0.0], [8076, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 115, 0.0], [115, 522, 0.0], [522, 779, 0.0], [779, 1415, 0.0], [1415, 1803, 0.0], [1803, 2197, 0.0], [2197, 2455, 0.0], [2455, 2911, 0.0], [2911, 3210, 0.0], [3210, 3781, 0.0], [3781, 4086, 0.0], [4086, 4383, 0.0], [4383, 4750, 0.0], [4750, 5254, 0.0], [5254, 5537, 0.0], [5537, 5890, 0.0], [5890, 5969, 0.0], [5969, 6164, 0.0], [6164, 6330, 0.0], [6330, 6854, 0.0], [6854, 7298, 0.0], [7298, 7654, 0.0], [7654, 7759, 0.0], [7759, 7801, 0.0], [7801, 7988, 0.0], [7988, 8076, 0.0], [8076, 8169, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 115, 0.11304348], [115, 522, 0.03685504], [522, 779, 0.03891051], [779, 1415, 0.02987421], [1415, 1803, 0.01804124], [1803, 2197, 0.02030457], [2197, 2455, 0.03875969], [2455, 2911, 0.02192982], [2911, 3210, 0.01672241], [3210, 3781, 0.02276708], [3781, 4086, 0.01639344], [4086, 4383, 0.03030303], [4383, 4750, 0.01634877], [4750, 5254, 0.02777778], [5254, 5537, 0.01766784], [5537, 5890, 0.01983003], [5890, 5969, 0.10126582], [5969, 6164, 0.00512821], [6164, 6330, 0.0060241], [6330, 6854, 0.01717557], [6854, 7298, 0.00675676], [7298, 7654, 0.00280899], [7654, 7759, 0.01904762], [7759, 7801, 0.11904762], [7801, 7988, 0.10695187], [7988, 8076, 0.14772727], [8076, 8169, 0.12903226]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 8169, 0.36851132]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 8169, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 8169, 0.31176531]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 8169, -243.66306681]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 8169, 198.93935261]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 8169, -569.03857296]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 8169, 64.0]]}
How children, families and countries can play their way to happiness and success Learning to play with other children is vital in the development of any child (Lego Foundation) Child nutrition (Early years), Childcare, Early childhood development, ​Learning through play (Early years), Safe pregnancy and birth The importance of play as part of a young child's development is being increasingly recognised as a crucial long-term investment for them and their communities. From the LEGO Play Well report Two-year-old Finn plays happily with his pirate ship, just feet from where his mother Claire is sitting. He’s in his own little world, chatting with the pirates. Occasionally he looks round to check his mother is still there. But he’s happy to play his own game for a couple of minutes before he looks to engage with her again. He picks up a scribble pad and hands it to her. “Interacting and playing with children is so important to all of us,” says mother-of-two Claire MacFarlane, a learning and development specialist. “It’s critical for your child’s development and brings out your own creativity too. “Once they know what to do, they like to have little times where they are making up their own games – just as Finn has done there.” Claire, 42, from Perthshire in Scotland, believes that learning begins in the womb. She says: “It starts long before they actually arrive. I sang and talked to my children before they were born – thinking happy thoughts and having a positive mindset. “You don’t need money to play with your kids – time and attention is everything, especially when they are very little. To give them eye contact and smiles and fun is so important for them and vital for their learning. Claire MacFarlane plays with her two-year-old son Finn “By talking to them, they learn language structure and vocabulary. And by playing with them, they learn how to be resilient, to try new things, to interact and explore.” Play has never been more important than right now. In fact, it’s now accepted as so crucial to a child’s development that the right to play has even become government policy in Wales – the first country to take this step. Other countries around the world are waking up to the realisation that if you get the first 1000 days of a child’s life right, not only will the child benefit but so too will the community. The nation and the economy will reap the rewards for years to come. A young child’s brain is 90% developed by the time they reach five – so it’s essential that they are properly supported, interacted with and cared for in these tender years. Theirworld’s #5for5 campaign has been spotlighting the crucial role of play, protection, health, nutrition and learning in children under five. Playing together also makes families happier, closer and less stressed, according to a new report by the LEGO Group. But over a third of families admit they struggle to prioritise playtime due to hectic daily schedules of both parents and children. The Play Well Report by The LEGO Foundation surveyed nearly 13,000 parents and children in nine countries to understand the state of play today and encourage discussion around its ongoing importance. Family expert and author Jessica Joelle Alexander – who contributed to the report – says: “Playing together is a fundamental cornerstone of family life for children and parents alike. “But with modern lifestyles busier than ever and so much emphasis on formal education and structured activities, it can be easy to forget to make time for it. “Given the positive effects it has on our wellbeing and happiness levels, family play should be the most important ‘homework’ of all.” Catherine Parrott, an early child educator for 35 years and former head teacher of a nursery school in the UK, says “play is learning”. Learning through play (early childhood development) She explains: “It’s always been important, especially for young children. It is the foundation for later life. “They learn skills, boundaries, how to be safe, how to interact with others, how to explore and try things. Even when there is poverty, you can still find ways to play. “If play has not been introduced, we find that many children struggle with boundaries and other kinds of learning. “Learning starts right away – even pre-birth. Mothers can sing and talk to their unborn babies. And any kind of stimulation like talking and reading to your young baby is great. “I think children of five and under should be allowed to learn more by playing in a safe, secure and more structured play environment and not be exposed to formal styles of learning till later.” Children’s right to play has been enshrined in the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child since 1990. It seems politicians are catching up too. The Welsh Government now has play high up its agenda and Minister for Children Huw Irranca-Davies spoke to Their News about the move. “Wales was the first country to legislate on play,” he said. “Wales – A Play Friendly Country is statutory guidance to local authorities in assessing for, and securing sufficient, play opportunities for children in their areas. “The Foundation Phase – which is the statutory curriculum for all three to seven-year-olds in Wales – recognises that children learn through first-hand experiential activities with the serious business of play providing the vehicle. “Through their play, children practise and consolidate their learning, play with ideas, experiment, take risks, solve problems, and make decisions individually, in small and in large groups. “First-hand experiences allow children to develop an understanding of themselves and the world in which they live. The development of children’s self-image and feelings of self-worth and self-esteem are at the core.” The Welsh Government has provided funding to Play Wales, the national charity for children’s play, to develop the Playful Childhoods campaign. Parents should allow their children plenty of opportunities to play at home, with friends and in the community. Huw Irranca-Davies, Welsh Minister for Children Central to the campaign is an informative, supportive and accessible website aimed at non-professionals (parents, carers and community groups) that brings together practical advice and guidance. Irranca-Davies said: “It’s true that societal changes such as parental attitudes to allowing children to play outside compared to the past, increased traffic, the growth in modern technology such as mobile phones and computers means a risk that there’s less focus on play for children. “That is why it is important that everyone understands the importance of play in children’s lives. Parents should allow their children plenty of opportunities to play at home, with friends and in the community.” Play at home is highlighted in LEGO’S Play Well Report. It showed that 88% of families who play for five hours or more a week say they are happy, falling to 75% for those who play for less than five hours. But play time is being squeezed – with 30% of families spending fewer than five hours playing together every week. 10% play for fewer than two hours. Even when families do get together to play, 61% of parents admit they tend to get distracted by life’s other demands, such as work, house chores and their ever-present smartphones. Alarmingly, 17% of children say their parents are too busy for play and 81% wish their parents would play with them more. “Play is disappearing,” says Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a developmental psychologist who is a professor at Temple University and a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute. She is the co-author of a report published this month titled The Power of Play: A Pediatric Role in Enhancing Development in Young Children. It says that play “supports the formation of the safe, stable, and nurturing relationships with all caregivers that children need to thrive”. The report adds that play is “fundamentally important for learning 21st-century skills, such as problem-solving, collaboration, and creativity, which require the executive functioning skills that are critical for adult success”. By targeting doctors, explains Hirsh-Pasek, the report hopes to build on the success of a literacy initiative called Reach Out and Read – a programme that reaches nearly five million children annually by giving out children’s books at doctor visits. “You have an opportunity there,” to change behaviour, she says. The encouraging news is that most parents understand the need for play. The LEGO report shows 95% believe play is essential for children’s wellbeing and a vital educational tool. Parents also rank playful learning (76%) as the number one educational technique, over reading books (67%), classroom teaching (55%), interacting with friends (65%) and way ahead of surfing the internet (22%). “While many parents feel their children’s preference for digital play is getting in the way of what they see as better, typically more traditional activities, the truth is the two don’t have to be mutually exclusive,” said Dr Elena Hoicka, Senior Lecturer in Psychology in Education at the University of Bristol, who also contributed to the LEGO report. “More than previous generations, kids today see the digital and real worlds as part of one big, interconnected play space. To make the most of their time playing together, parents need to adopt this fluid mindset too.” Theirworld’s work on early childhood development is supported by the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. MyBestStart programme gives young girls the education they deserve Why the world needs to spend much more on early childhood education
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12735
{"url": "https://theirworld.org/news/play-crucial-to-early-childhood-development-lego-child-happiness-report/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "theirworld.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:48:21Z", "digest": "sha1:JJ3GFFGSWHWPX6JM3WMK6MDKZEF4MJJP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 9606, 9606.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 9606, 11266.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 9606, 56.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 9606, 119.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 9606, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 9606, 245.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 9606, 0.41521395]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 9606, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 9606, 0.02124936]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 9606, 0.02124936]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 9606, 0.02124936]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 9606, 0.02124936]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 9606, 0.02124936]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 9606, 0.02124936]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 9606, 0.00844854]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 9606, 0.00960061]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 9606, 0.00486431]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 9606, 0.00792393]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 9606, 0.16059165]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 9606, 0.39936306]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 9606, 4.97579618]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 9606, 0.00052826]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 9606, 5.63705565]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 9606, 1570.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 177, 0.0], [177, 311, 0.0], [311, 472, 1.0], [472, 503, 0.0], [503, 665, 1.0], [665, 879, 1.0], [879, 1110, 1.0], [1110, 1242, 1.0], [1242, 1493, 1.0], [1493, 1711, 1.0], [1711, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 1936, 1.0], [1936, 2158, 1.0], [2158, 2416, 1.0], [2416, 2590, 1.0], [2590, 2734, 1.0], [2734, 2983, 1.0], [2983, 3183, 1.0], [3183, 3367, 1.0], [3367, 3526, 1.0], [3526, 3661, 1.0], [3661, 3797, 1.0], [3797, 3849, 0.0], [3849, 3960, 1.0], [3960, 4129, 1.0], [4129, 4244, 1.0], [4244, 4422, 1.0], [4422, 4617, 1.0], [4617, 4721, 1.0], [4721, 4897, 1.0], [4897, 5125, 1.0], [5125, 5358, 1.0], [5358, 5549, 1.0], [5549, 5766, 1.0], [5766, 5909, 1.0], [5909, 6069, 0.0], [6069, 6264, 1.0], [6264, 6550, 1.0], [6550, 6762, 1.0], [6762, 6968, 1.0], [6968, 7118, 1.0], [7118, 7299, 1.0], [7299, 7421, 1.0], [7421, 7586, 1.0], [7586, 7727, 1.0], [7727, 8098, 1.0], [8098, 8348, 1.0], [8348, 8412, 1.0], [8412, 8591, 1.0], [8591, 8801, 1.0], [8801, 9155, 1.0], [9155, 9374, 1.0], [9374, 9472, 1.0], [9472, 9539, 0.0], [9539, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 177, 0.0], [177, 311, 0.0], [311, 472, 0.0], [472, 503, 0.0], [503, 665, 0.0], [665, 879, 0.0], [879, 1110, 0.0], [1110, 1242, 0.0], [1242, 1493, 0.0], [1493, 1711, 0.0], [1711, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 1936, 0.0], [1936, 2158, 0.0], [2158, 2416, 0.0], [2416, 2590, 0.0], [2590, 2734, 0.0], [2734, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3183, 0.0], [3183, 3367, 0.0], [3367, 3526, 0.0], [3526, 3661, 0.0], [3661, 3797, 0.0], [3797, 3849, 0.0], [3849, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4129, 0.0], [4129, 4244, 0.0], [4244, 4422, 0.0], [4422, 4617, 0.0], [4617, 4721, 0.0], [4721, 4897, 0.0], [4897, 5125, 0.0], [5125, 5358, 0.0], [5358, 5549, 0.0], [5549, 5766, 0.0], [5766, 5909, 0.0], [5909, 6069, 0.0], [6069, 6264, 0.0], [6264, 6550, 0.0], [6550, 6762, 0.0], [6762, 6968, 0.0], [6968, 7118, 0.0], [7118, 7299, 0.0], [7299, 7421, 0.0], [7421, 7586, 0.0], [7586, 7727, 0.0], [7727, 8098, 0.0], [8098, 8348, 0.0], [8348, 8412, 0.0], [8412, 8591, 0.0], [8591, 8801, 0.0], [8801, 9155, 0.0], [9155, 9374, 0.0], [9374, 9472, 0.0], [9472, 9539, 0.0], [9539, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 81, 13.0], [81, 177, 16.0], [177, 311, 17.0], [311, 472, 25.0], [472, 503, 6.0], [503, 665, 27.0], [665, 879, 43.0], [879, 1110, 34.0], [1110, 1242, 27.0], [1242, 1493, 42.0], [1493, 1711, 40.0], [1711, 1766, 8.0], [1766, 1936, 29.0], [1936, 2158, 41.0], [2158, 2416, 49.0], [2416, 2590, 31.0], [2590, 2734, 20.0], [2734, 2983, 41.0], [2983, 3183, 31.0], [3183, 3367, 29.0], [3367, 3526, 28.0], [3526, 3661, 22.0], [3661, 3797, 24.0], [3797, 3849, 6.0], [3849, 3960, 17.0], [3960, 4129, 31.0], [4129, 4244, 19.0], [4244, 4422, 31.0], [4422, 4617, 35.0], [4617, 4721, 19.0], [4721, 4897, 30.0], [4897, 5125, 36.0], [5125, 5358, 34.0], [5358, 5549, 27.0], [5549, 5766, 32.0], [5766, 5909, 21.0], [5909, 6069, 24.0], [6069, 6264, 26.0], [6264, 6550, 45.0], [6550, 6762, 34.0], [6762, 6968, 41.0], [6968, 7118, 27.0], [7118, 7299, 30.0], [7299, 7421, 22.0], [7421, 7586, 24.0], [7586, 7727, 24.0], [7727, 8098, 52.0], [8098, 8348, 40.0], [8348, 8412, 10.0], [8412, 8591, 29.0], [8591, 8801, 31.0], [8801, 9155, 58.0], [9155, 9374, 37.0], [9374, 9472, 14.0], [9472, 9539, 9.0], [9539, 9606, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 177, 0.0], [177, 311, 0.0], [311, 472, 0.0], [472, 503, 0.0], [503, 665, 0.0], [665, 879, 0.0], [879, 1110, 0.0], [1110, 1242, 0.0], [1242, 1493, 0.00823045], [1493, 1711, 0.0], [1711, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 1936, 0.0], [1936, 2158, 0.0], [2158, 2416, 0.01574803], [2416, 2590, 0.01176471], [2590, 2734, 0.01449275], [2734, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3183, 0.02538071], [3183, 3367, 0.0], [3367, 3526, 0.0], [3526, 3661, 0.0], [3661, 3797, 0.01515152], [3797, 3849, 0.0], [3849, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4129, 0.0], [4129, 4244, 0.0], [4244, 4422, 0.0], [4422, 4617, 0.0], [4617, 4721, 0.03921569], [4721, 4897, 0.0], [4897, 5125, 0.0], [5125, 5358, 0.0], [5358, 5549, 0.0], [5549, 5766, 0.0], [5766, 5909, 0.0], [5909, 6069, 0.0], [6069, 6264, 0.0], [6264, 6550, 0.0], [6550, 6762, 0.0], [6762, 6968, 0.02], [6968, 7118, 0.02758621], [7118, 7299, 0.01149425], [7299, 7421, 0.03418803], [7421, 7586, 0.0], [7586, 7727, 0.0], [7727, 8098, 0.00555556], [8098, 8348, 0.0], [8348, 8412, 0.0], [8412, 8591, 0.01142857], [8591, 8801, 0.05263158], [8801, 9155, 0.0], [9155, 9374, 0.0], [9374, 9472, 0.0], [9472, 9539, 0.0], [9539, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 81, 0.0], [81, 177, 0.0], [177, 311, 0.0], [311, 472, 0.0], [472, 503, 0.0], [503, 665, 0.0], [665, 879, 0.0], [879, 1110, 0.0], [1110, 1242, 0.0], [1242, 1493, 0.0], [1493, 1711, 0.0], [1711, 1766, 0.0], [1766, 1936, 0.0], [1936, 2158, 0.0], [2158, 2416, 0.0], [2416, 2590, 0.0], [2590, 2734, 0.0], [2734, 2983, 0.0], [2983, 3183, 0.0], [3183, 3367, 0.0], [3367, 3526, 0.0], [3526, 3661, 0.0], [3661, 3797, 0.0], [3797, 3849, 0.0], [3849, 3960, 0.0], [3960, 4129, 0.0], [4129, 4244, 0.0], [4244, 4422, 0.0], [4422, 4617, 0.0], [4617, 4721, 0.0], [4721, 4897, 0.0], [4897, 5125, 0.0], [5125, 5358, 0.0], [5358, 5549, 0.0], [5549, 5766, 0.0], [5766, 5909, 0.0], [5909, 6069, 0.0], [6069, 6264, 0.0], [6264, 6550, 0.0], [6550, 6762, 0.0], [6762, 6968, 0.0], [6968, 7118, 0.0], [7118, 7299, 0.0], [7299, 7421, 0.0], [7421, 7586, 0.0], [7586, 7727, 0.0], [7727, 8098, 0.0], [8098, 8348, 0.0], [8348, 8412, 0.0], [8412, 8591, 0.0], [8591, 8801, 0.0], [8801, 9155, 0.0], [9155, 9374, 0.0], [9374, 9472, 0.0], [9472, 9539, 0.0], [9539, 9606, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 81, 0.01234568], [81, 177, 0.03125], [177, 311, 0.05223881], [311, 472, 0.00621118], [472, 503, 0.22580645], [503, 665, 0.02469136], [665, 879, 0.01401869], [879, 1110, 0.02164502], [1110, 1242, 0.01515152], [1242, 1493, 0.02390438], [1493, 1711, 0.00917431], [1711, 1766, 0.07272727], [1766, 1936, 0.01176471], [1936, 2158, 0.01351351], [2158, 2416, 0.00775194], [2416, 2590, 0.00574713], [2590, 2734, 0.00694444], [2734, 2983, 0.02811245], [2983, 3183, 0.05], [3183, 3367, 0.02717391], [3367, 3526, 0.00628931], [3526, 3661, 0.00740741], [3661, 3797, 0.02941176], [3797, 3849, 0.01923077], [3849, 3960, 0.02702703], [3960, 4129, 0.01183432], [4129, 4244, 0.00869565], [4244, 4422, 0.01685393], [4422, 4617, 0.00512821], [4617, 4721, 0.05769231], [4721, 4897, 0.0625], [4897, 5125, 0.02631579], [5125, 5358, 0.01716738], [5358, 5549, 0.0052356], [5549, 5766, 0.00921659], [5766, 5909, 0.04895105], [5909, 6069, 0.04375], [6069, 6264, 0.00512821], [6264, 6550, 0.01048951], [6550, 6762, 0.00943396], [6762, 6968, 0.04854369], [6968, 7118, 0.00666667], [7118, 7299, 0.00552486], [7299, 7421, 0.00819672], [7421, 7586, 0.04848485], [7586, 7727, 0.07801418], [7727, 8098, 0.00539084], [8098, 8348, 0.024], [8348, 8412, 0.015625], [8412, 8591, 0.03351955], [8591, 8801, 0.0047619], [8801, 9155, 0.03954802], [9155, 9374, 0.00913242], [9374, 9472, 0.05102041], [9472, 9539, 0.04477612], [9539, 9606, 0.01492537]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 9606, 0.44746101]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 9606, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 9606, 0.71198016]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 9606, -462.94656402]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 9606, 272.45477534]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 9606, -289.59521128]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 9606, 74.0]]}
Getting the Full Experience at a Live Casino Posted on January 14, 2023 by Admin88 Live casino games are a growing trend among online gamblers. You may have heard of casinos offering live poker, blackjack, baccarat, and roulette. However, if you are looking for the full experience, you should try out a live dealer casino. These casino games are played in real time, and are transmitted via a live stream to your PC or mobile device. In addition to the traditional table games, you can also play slots, video poker, and poker. Online casinos have also started to experiment with cryptocurrencies and 4D playing experiences. Some top casinos even have apps. While these options can be fun, they do not offer the same number of games as their desktop counterparts. When it comes to the best way to win in online casino games, many players agree that the best bet is to play live dealer games. This is because these types of games are more tangible, and allow you to interact with your fellow players and the dealer. You can play these games on your computer, phone, or even tablet. The best online casinos will ensure that their games are optimised for all devices. To get the full experience, you need to select the right operator. This includes determining the wagering limitations for each game and checking on customer support. It’s also worth looking into live casino promotions, which could help you boost your stakes, and perhaps your bankroll. Also, a high level of e-payment security should ensure that you are not the victim of fraud. Having a good selection of games is important, but the quality of the games you choose should also be considered. A good online casino should have several versions of the popular game Blackjack, as well as a decent variety of other table games. Likewise, you should also check out the various other live dealer games available at your favorite Michigan online casino. Typically, these include Casino Hold’em, Super Slots, American Roulette, Russian Blackjack, and more. There are even some progressive slot games available. As the market continues to grow, Michigan online casino operators will continue to expand their offerings. Although the best casinos are not yet fully equipped to handle all your gambling needs, it’s always a good idea to do your homework. This includes finding out whether or not the casino has a wide range of games and variants, as well as a reputable reputation. For example, Ignition Casino is the go-to site for players looking for the best in online poker, with a large variety of tables and tournaments. Moreover, the site has a reputation for reliability, fast payouts, and a comprehensive reload bonus program. Of course, you will need to have some kind of gambling luck to win. That’s why it’s important to practice responsible gambling and know when to call it a day. Fortunately, there are several tools and apps you can use to keep track of your wins and losses, and monitor how much you are spending.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12736
{"url": "https://thelongescape.com/getting-the-full-experience-at-a-live-casino/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thelongescape.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:24:08Z", "digest": "sha1:UIQJG2TCKNAUUBM2CHYXOQ6XUG3IA2H7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2983, 2983.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2983, 3467.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2983, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2983, 33.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2983, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2983, 219.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2983, 0.44482173]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2983, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2983, 0.01454092]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2983, 0.0211882]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2983, 0.0166182]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2983, 0.00509338]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2983, 0.12903226]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2983, 0.47047244]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2983, 4.73818898]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2983, 4.97566193]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2983, 508.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 83, 0.0], [83, 435, 1.0], [435, 764, 1.0], [764, 1015, 1.0], [1015, 1165, 1.0], [1165, 1544, 1.0], [1544, 1789, 1.0], [1789, 2175, 1.0], [2175, 2689, 1.0], [2689, 2983, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 83, 0.0], [83, 435, 0.0], [435, 764, 0.0], [764, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1544, 0.0], [1544, 1789, 0.0], [1789, 2175, 0.0], [2175, 2689, 0.0], [2689, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 8.0], [45, 83, 7.0], [83, 435, 61.0], [435, 764, 54.0], [764, 1015, 48.0], [1015, 1165, 26.0], [1165, 1544, 62.0], [1544, 1789, 43.0], [1789, 2175, 56.0], [2175, 2689, 88.0], [2689, 2983, 55.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 83, 0.22222222], [83, 435, 0.0], [435, 764, 0.003125], [764, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1544, 0.0], [1544, 1789, 0.0], [1789, 2175, 0.0], [2175, 2689, 0.0], [2689, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 83, 0.0], [83, 435, 0.0], [435, 764, 0.0], [764, 1015, 0.0], [1015, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1544, 0.0], [1544, 1789, 0.0], [1789, 2175, 0.0], [2175, 2689, 0.0], [2689, 2983, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.11111111], [45, 83, 0.07894737], [83, 435, 0.01704545], [435, 764, 0.01519757], [764, 1015, 0.00796813], [1015, 1165, 0.01333333], [1165, 1544, 0.01055409], [1544, 1789, 0.0122449], [1789, 2175, 0.03626943], [2175, 2689, 0.01167315], [2689, 2983, 0.01020408]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2983, 0.05937624]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2983, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2983, 0.01513922]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2983, -148.29003294]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2983, 21.22911422]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2983, -165.92044819]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2983, 29.0]]}
Learn how we will work with you to get top dollar for your home in a timely fashion. From marketing your home to a wide audience through to final negotiations, we're there every step of the way. What you need to know about selling your home We will work for you every step of the way! Our combination of skills, experience and technology ensures that we can sell your home for the highest possible price and in the shortest period of time. We have the tools to meet the demands of a highly competitive, modern market. Our Unique Automated Internet Marketing System Online Presence: Available 24 hours a day! Our online marketing system allows us to make information accessible 24-hours a day and to respond immediately and directly to each and every prospective buyer. From our website, prospective buyers can get information immediately about your home. They can access our site 24 hours a day and view your property listing! Through our Personal Home Search, your listing will be sent by e-mail to every prospective buyer in our database if your home meets their criteria. Plus it will be e-mailed automatically to future prospective buyers as well. As soon as you list your home with us, we will enter your home in the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) database. Other agents can immediately access your property information by computer. We also regularly publish in magazines and newspapers in the area and send out direct mail pieces to potential buyers. When you think about it, there are several other homes for sale competing with your home. We will help you price your home competitively to attract qualified buyers. The way we do this is by generating a Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) report which will show you a range of prices being paid for homes in your area. You can complete our online form to get a feel for your home's market value. Every Step Of The Way... Remember, we will be working for you every step of the way to make sure that you get the highest possible price for your home in the shortest period of time.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12737
{"url": "https://thelynnteam.ca/selling.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thelynnteam.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:18:46Z", "digest": "sha1:QD5C2XT3HCVTPSOEAXF4O4UJPWSP3PKF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2034, 2034.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2034, 3392.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2034, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2034, 64.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2034, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2034, 254.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2034, 0.45614035]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2034, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2034, 0.07931666]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2034, 0.0585723]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2034, 0.02806589]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2034, 0.05369128]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2034, 0.02684564]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2034, 0.03416718]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2034, 0.00501253]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2034, 0.11111111]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2034, 0.10275689]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2034, 0.45505618]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2034, 4.60393258]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2034, 0.00250627]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2034, 4.65115023]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2034, 356.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 195, 1.0], [195, 241, 0.0], [241, 518, 1.0], [518, 608, 1.0], [608, 1152, 1.0], [1152, 1457, 1.0], [1457, 1852, 1.0], [1852, 1877, 1.0], [1877, 2034, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 195, 0.0], [195, 241, 0.0], [241, 518, 0.0], [518, 608, 0.0], [608, 1152, 0.0], [1152, 1457, 0.0], [1457, 1852, 0.0], [1852, 1877, 0.0], [1877, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 195, 37.0], [195, 241, 9.0], [241, 518, 50.0], [518, 608, 13.0], [608, 1152, 88.0], [1152, 1457, 51.0], [1457, 1852, 72.0], [1852, 1877, 5.0], [1877, 2034, 31.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 195, 0.0], [195, 241, 0.0], [241, 518, 0.0], [518, 608, 0.02298851], [608, 1152, 0.00750469], [1152, 1457, 0.0], [1457, 1852, 0.0], [1852, 1877, 0.0], [1877, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 195, 0.0], [195, 241, 0.0], [241, 518, 0.0], [518, 608, 0.0], [608, 1152, 0.0], [1152, 1457, 0.0], [1457, 1852, 0.0], [1852, 1877, 0.0], [1877, 2034, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 195, 0.01025641], [195, 241, 0.02173913], [241, 518, 0.01083032], [518, 608, 0.1], [608, 1152, 0.01470588], [1152, 1457, 0.0295082], [1457, 1852, 0.02531646], [1852, 1877, 0.2], [1877, 2034, 0.00636943]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2034, 0.01008528]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2034, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2034, 0.01286036]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2034, -136.67454393]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2034, -25.41286238]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2034, -184.26315919]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2034, 20.0]]}
The Maus Haus ICE COLD TAKES: Blues Go Marching in to Round 2 with an Uncharted Confidence themaushaus93 Uncategorized April 25, 2019 April 25, 2019 4 Minutes Friends – it’s been far too long since we’ve all gotten together. I hope to not make this a trend, but instead get the ball rolling on a promise I made long ago. My hope for this new segment that I’m calling Freezing Cold Takes is to continue to bring the #HotTakes that you’ve grown accustomed to about sandwiches and extend them into the realm of sports. (St. Louis sports to be specific). Thank you as always for your continued support. Stay tuned for more sports opinion and sandwich reviews coming soon! Blues and Stars Align Once Again Round 2 of the Stanley Cup Playoffs begins tonight, and the Blues will host the Dallas Stars in Game 1 at Enterprise Center following the conclusion of Game 1 between the Columbus Blue Jackets and Boston Bruins in an Eastern Conference showdown. This will be the 14th meeting of the Blues and Stars franchises in the playoffs since the two were created in the 1967 NHL Expansion. One interesting note, the past three times the Blues have reached the Conference Final round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, the Blues had defeated the Stars at some point in the postseason. Most recently, the Blues eliminated the Stars in 7 games in the Second Round of the 2015-16 Playoffs before losing to the Sharks in 6 games; before that, the Note swept the Stars in the Conference Semifinals (The old-school name for the Second Round) of the 2000-01 playoffs before falling to the Avalanche in 5 games; and in the 1985-86 Playoffs the Blues defeated the Minnesota North Stars 3-2 in a best-of-five series in the Division Semifinals (An even older-school name for the First Round) before eventually falling to the Flames in 7 games in the Conference Finals. None of that will matter when the puck drops at approximately 8:50 tonight, of course. The Stars won 11 of their last 18 games down the stretch to secure a Wild Card spot with 93 points in a brutal Central Division. They then went on to defeat the Division champion Nashville Predators in 6 games, finishing it off with a 3-2 Overtime thriller in Dallas last Monday night. The Blues, of course, have taken a roller coaster ride of their own to end the season. We all have heard the soundbite by now – on January 3rd the Blues were 31st overall in the NHL with 34 points, but managed to go on a tear through the later half of the season which included a franchise-best 11 game winning streak from Jan. 23 – Feb. 19, an overall record of 12-1-1 in the month of February, and to top it off, won 8 of their last 10 to finish with 99 points and clinch a matchup with the Winnipeg Jets in the First Round of the Cup Playoffs. The Blues downed the Jets in six games, finishing off the series thanks to a Jaden Schwartz hat trick in Game 6 in a 3-2 win at Enterprise. Berube Provides Identity to Club at Crucial Time Of all the improbable characters to lead the charge of the Blues’ turnaround, perhaps none is more surprising than Interim Head Coach Craig Berube. (You can call him “Chief”). The veteran of over 1,000 career NHL games, Berube joined the Blues as an assistant after a stint as Head Coach of the AHL affiliate Chicago Wolves. He took the reins back in November after the Blues parted ways with then Head Coach Mike Yeo after a disappointing start to the season and seemingly mounting frustration from the locker room. The transition from November to December revealed a team that once appeared to be packing it up for the season to one that, if nothing else, had a little bit of pride left to play for. As typical of coaching changes in several major sports, the players in the locker room seemed to use the beginning of the Craig Berube era as a wake-up call to save a season that appeared to be lost. But it was a hard-fought 2-1 loss to the New York Rangers on December 31st that seemed to truly be the turning point to set up the remarkable 30-10-5 run to end the year. Despite taking the ‘L’, the team appeared to be playing with more heart than in earlier months under Yeo. The Blues blasted 40 shots on goal, and only allowed 23 to be fired at Jake Allen. The defense seemed to be more composed, less panicked, and the team as a whole looked to be playing at a much more competitive level. Berube earned a reputation during his playing days as a an enforcer – racking up over 3,000 penalty minutes in 1,054 career games. And his aggressive style as a player seemed to translate as a coach. Following the Rangers loss on New Year’s Eve, the Blues began playing a much harder, north-south style of hockey. As referenced during Blues radio and television broadcasts, Berube is said to stress the importance of winning one on one battles and “be aggressive in all three zones”. By placing a premium on being a heavy forechecking team, the Blues seemed to have found their identify in the back half of the season and into the postseason. The Legend of Jordan Binnington There’s not a whole lot that can be said about 25-year old Jordan Binnington that hasn’t already been addressed. The Blues’ new-found net-minder has been nothing short of spectacular over his 30 regular season starts and 6 playoff starts. But for all of you stats guys and girls out there, let’s do a quick rundown: 24-5-1 Regular Season Record Winning Percentage 80% Save% .927 GAA 1.89 5 Shutouts Yes, his performance on the ice has been good enough to launch him into the discussion for the Calder Trophy. It’s been good enough for him to be dubbed the NHL First Star of the Week on February 11th after putting up just a silly stat line of 3-0-0 record / 1.31 GAA / .954 save percentage. But I am of the opinion that it’s his quirky, quiet but confident, “I-don’t-give-a-shit-I’ll-do-it-myself” attitude both on and off the ice that has propelled the team to get to the point they’re at now. Maybe I’m a little caught up in the fantasy here, but Binner appears to play with a confidence and an edge that Blues fans haven’t exactly been accustomed to seeing in the last – eh – 20 or so years. Now I’m not in the business of ripping Jake Allen, but for what it’s worth this hockey team has played very, very well with number 50 starting in net. Binnington’s confidence and goal-stopping ability has built him into a bit of a folk hero in the minds of Blues fans. His story of AHL afterthought to NHL elite is one of legend. What will the next chapter of the story reveal? Published by themaushaus93 View all posts by themaushaus93 Previous Post (SPECIAL) SANDWICH REVIEWS 6 & 7: LeGRAND’S MARKET & CATERING VS. MOM’S DELI Next Post Tiger Tracker: What does 2019 have in store for Mizzou? Maybe a lot…. One thought on “ICE COLD TAKES: Blues Go Marching in to Round 2 with an Uncharted Confidence” Michael Krupp says: You know Maus after your Mom’s Deli fiasco just when I thought you couldn’t possibly be any dumber, you go and do something like this… and totally redeem yourself
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12738
{"url": "https://themaushaus.com/2019/04/25/blues-confident-in-round-2/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "themaushaus.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:34:05Z", "digest": "sha1:QA7SBCDYV626NVDN2NJD7NRMJR2NCMX6"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 7001, 7001.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7001, 8291.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7001, 33.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7001, 86.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7001, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7001, 256.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7001, 0.40993377]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7001, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 7001, 0.01755958]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 7001, 0.03673177]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 7001, 0.01755958]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 7001, 0.01755958]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 7001, 0.01755958]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 7001, 0.01755958]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 7001, 0.01523025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 7001, 0.00716717]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 7001, 0.00573374]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 7001, 0.02317881]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 7001, 0.17748344]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 7001, 0.44541139]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 7001, 4.4153481]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 7001, 0.00198675]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 7001, 5.55744054]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 7001, 1264.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 91, 0.0], [91, 159, 0.0], [159, 551, 1.0], [551, 668, 1.0], [668, 701, 0.0], [701, 947, 1.0], [947, 1842, 1.0], [1842, 2215, 1.0], [2215, 2902, 1.0], [2902, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 3468, 1.0], [3468, 3853, 1.0], [3853, 4347, 1.0], [4347, 4990, 1.0], [4990, 5022, 0.0], [5022, 5338, 0.0], [5338, 5367, 0.0], [5367, 5390, 0.0], [5390, 5401, 0.0], [5401, 5410, 0.0], [5410, 5421, 0.0], [5421, 6268, 1.0], [6268, 6386, 1.0], [6386, 6447, 1.0], [6447, 6495, 1.0], [6495, 6522, 0.0], [6522, 6554, 0.0], [6554, 6645, 0.0], [6645, 6725, 1.0], [6725, 6819, 1.0], [6819, 6839, 0.0], [6839, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 91, 0.0], [91, 159, 0.0], [159, 551, 0.0], [551, 668, 0.0], [668, 701, 0.0], [701, 947, 0.0], [947, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 2215, 0.0], [2215, 2902, 0.0], [2902, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3853, 0.0], [3853, 4347, 0.0], [4347, 4990, 0.0], [4990, 5022, 0.0], [5022, 5338, 0.0], [5338, 5367, 0.0], [5367, 5390, 0.0], [5390, 5401, 0.0], [5401, 5410, 0.0], [5410, 5421, 0.0], [5421, 6268, 0.0], [6268, 6386, 0.0], [6386, 6447, 0.0], [6447, 6495, 0.0], [6495, 6522, 0.0], [6522, 6554, 0.0], [6554, 6645, 0.0], [6645, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6819, 0.0], [6819, 6839, 0.0], [6839, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 14, 3.0], [14, 91, 14.0], [91, 159, 10.0], [159, 551, 73.0], [551, 668, 19.0], [668, 701, 6.0], [701, 947, 42.0], [947, 1842, 155.0], [1842, 2215, 68.0], [2215, 2902, 138.0], [2902, 2951, 8.0], [2951, 3468, 89.0], [3468, 3853, 74.0], [3853, 4347, 95.0], [4347, 4990, 112.0], [4990, 5022, 5.0], [5022, 5338, 55.0], [5338, 5367, 4.0], [5367, 5390, 3.0], [5390, 5401, 2.0], [5401, 5410, 2.0], [5410, 5421, 2.0], [5421, 6268, 158.0], [6268, 6386, 21.0], [6386, 6447, 12.0], [6447, 6495, 9.0], [6495, 6522, 3.0], [6522, 6554, 5.0], [6554, 6645, 13.0], [6645, 6725, 15.0], [6725, 6819, 17.0], [6819, 6839, 3.0], [6839, 7001, 29.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 91, 0.01333333], [91, 159, 0.23076923], [159, 551, 0.0], [551, 668, 0.0], [668, 701, 0.0], [701, 947, 0.01234568], [947, 1842, 0.03436426], [1842, 2215, 0.03287671], [2215, 2902, 0.03432836], [2902, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 3468, 0.00788955], [3468, 3853, 0.0], [3853, 4347, 0.02702703], [4347, 4990, 0.01269841], [4990, 5022, 0.0], [5022, 5338, 0.01623377], [5338, 5367, 0.15384615], [5367, 5390, 0.0952381], [5390, 5401, 0.375], [5401, 5410, 0.42857143], [5410, 5421, 0.1], [5421, 6268, 0.01831502], [6268, 6386, 0.0], [6386, 6447, 0.0], [6447, 6495, 0.0], [6495, 6522, 0.07692308], [6522, 6554, 0.06451613], [6554, 6645, 0.02439024], [6645, 6725, 0.05263158], [6725, 6819, 0.01086957], [6819, 6839, 0.0], [6839, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 91, 0.0], [91, 159, 0.0], [159, 551, 0.0], [551, 668, 0.0], [668, 701, 0.0], [701, 947, 0.0], [947, 1842, 0.0], [1842, 2215, 0.0], [2215, 2902, 0.0], [2902, 2951, 0.0], [2951, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3853, 0.0], [3853, 4347, 0.0], [4347, 4990, 0.0], [4990, 5022, 0.0], [5022, 5338, 0.0], [5338, 5367, 0.0], [5367, 5390, 0.0], [5390, 5401, 0.0], [5401, 5410, 0.0], [5410, 5421, 0.0], [5421, 6268, 0.0], [6268, 6386, 0.0], [6386, 6447, 0.0], [6447, 6495, 0.0], [6495, 6522, 0.0], [6522, 6554, 0.0], [6554, 6645, 0.0], [6645, 6725, 0.0], [6725, 6819, 0.0], [6819, 6839, 0.0], [6839, 7001, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 14, 0.21428571], [14, 91, 0.23376623], [91, 159, 0.05882353], [159, 551, 0.03061224], [551, 668, 0.01709402], [668, 701, 0.15151515], [701, 947, 0.07317073], [947, 1842, 0.04916201], [1842, 2215, 0.03753351], [2215, 2902, 0.0349345], [2902, 2951, 0.12244898], [2951, 3468, 0.05609284], [3468, 3853, 0.01558442], [3853, 4347, 0.02631579], [4347, 4990, 0.02021773], [4990, 5022, 0.125], [5022, 5338, 0.01898734], [5338, 5367, 0.10344828], [5367, 5390, 0.08695652], [5390, 5401, 0.09090909], [5401, 5410, 0.33333333], [5410, 5421, 0.09090909], [5421, 6268, 0.03069658], [6268, 6386, 0.01694915], [6386, 6447, 0.1147541], [6447, 6495, 0.02083333], [6495, 6522, 0.03703704], [6522, 6554, 0.03125], [6554, 6645, 0.6043956], [6645, 6725, 0.0875], [6725, 6819, 0.20212766], [6819, 6839, 0.1], [6839, 7001, 0.0308642]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 7001, 0.55483651]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 7001, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 7001, 0.7511102]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 7001, -410.12312784]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 7001, 80.53595124]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 7001, -265.81908658]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 7001, 52.0]]}
Home/Monroe County/House engulfed in flames in Henrietta House engulfed in flames in Henrietta Henrietta, New York – Monday night, a house was engulfed in flames in Henrietta. According to firefighters the home on Moore Road around 10 p.m. was engulfed in flames when the crews arrived on the scene. Firefighters say everyone inside was able to escape the home prior and no one was hurt but there was some minimal damage to a neighboring home. According to Fire Chief Mark Cholach and his team, the fire was caused by the malfunction of a generator located in the rear of the home. Earlier in the day, thunderstorms had caused power outages in the area. The fire station’s close proximity to the scene helped prevent more damage from being done, firefighters said. Five people have been displaced from the incident. A GoFundeMe was set up to help the family that lives at the home. A man arrested after attempt to break into a car in Yates County Shooting on Magnolia Street, one man is injured
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12739
{"url": "https://themonroepost.com/2021/06/22/house-engulfed-in-flames-in-henrietta/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "themonroepost.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:21:00Z", "digest": "sha1:EM63QI6QFDHY2ZAE3Z6HNFB6MR5OICBJ"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 994, 994.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 994, 2251.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 994, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 994, 70.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 994, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 994, 262.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 994, 0.41836735]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 994, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 994, 0.10074627]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 994, 0.04975124]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 994, 0.07960199]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 994, 0.06716418]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 994, 0.01020408]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 994, 0.10714286]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 994, 0.59537572]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 994, 4.64739884]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 994, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 994, 4.26644722]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 994, 173.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 1.0], [176, 300, 1.0], [300, 444, 1.0], [444, 654, 1.0], [654, 765, 1.0], [765, 882, 1.0], [882, 947, 0.0], [947, 994, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 0.0], [176, 300, 0.0], [300, 444, 0.0], [444, 654, 0.0], [654, 765, 0.0], [765, 882, 0.0], [882, 947, 0.0], [947, 994, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 57, 7.0], [57, 95, 6.0], [95, 176, 14.0], [176, 300, 22.0], [300, 444, 26.0], [444, 654, 38.0], [654, 765, 17.0], [765, 882, 22.0], [882, 947, 13.0], [947, 994, 8.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 0.0], [176, 300, 0.01666667], [300, 444, 0.0], [444, 654, 0.0], [654, 765, 0.0], [765, 882, 0.0], [882, 947, 0.0], [947, 994, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 95, 0.0], [95, 176, 0.0], [176, 300, 0.0], [300, 444, 0.0], [444, 654, 0.0], [654, 765, 0.0], [765, 882, 0.0], [882, 947, 0.0], [947, 994, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.0877193], [57, 95, 0.05263158], [95, 176, 0.0617284], [176, 300, 0.02419355], [300, 444, 0.00694444], [444, 654, 0.02857143], [654, 765, 0.00900901], [765, 882, 0.04273504], [882, 947, 0.04615385], [947, 994, 0.06382979]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 994, 0.75004405]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 994, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 994, 0.19604999]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 994, -10.73017407]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 994, 26.54705375]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 994, 23.73537155]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 994, 11.0]]}
The inside story of an Alberta coal mine devastated by a financial crisis As Coalspur — the company behind the Vista coal mine near Hinton, Alta. — declares itself financially ‘devastated,’ experts question whether sufficient funds have been collected for eventual cleanup By Sharon J. Riley June 24, 2021 15 min. read An internal financial crisis has "devastated" Coalspur, the company behind the Vista coal mine near Hinton, Alta., according to court documents filed as part of an application for creditor protection. Coalspur has faced a string of setbacks including multi-million-dollar hedge obligations, permitting issues and the death of a billionaire coal magnate who had provided much of the financing for the project. In mid-May, beleaguered coal company Coalspur Mines Ltd — the company behind the contentious Vista thermal coal mine in Alberta — received an ominous letter. The letter came from U.S. Bank, the company’s supplier of corporate credit cards. Its subject was clearly written across the top, in bold, underlined letters: “TERMINATION NOTICE.” The company’s credit cards were cancelled, effective immediately. It was just the latest blow in a series of financial setbacks for the company that started almost the moment they began mining coal. Setbacks for coal companies are snowballing across the country, as expanded regulatory scrutiny and political and public backlash against one of the world’s most carbon-intensive fossil fuels have increasingly become the norm. Nevertheless, coal companies have continued to push for new approvals and expanded operations. Opaque corporate structures have meant international investors have historically been able to reap profits from Canadian coal resources, like in the case of Australia’s richest billionaire, often with little transparency. Now, a recent court case in Alberta provides a rare glimpse into the inner financial workings behind the struggling Vista coal mine, which is nestled in the foothills of western Alberta, just 40 kilometres from Jasper National Park. The mine, combined with its proposed — and hotly debated expansion — is what a mining industry website describes as “one of the largest undeveloped coal mines in North America.” The termination notice from U.S. Bank was among a series of court documents related to an ongoing creditor protection process involving Coalspur. The documents reveal Coalspur has been facing a financial crisis in the wake of regulatory setbacks, operating losses, a temporary shutdown, increasing investor skepticism and fallout from the sudden death of a charismatic coal magnate from West Virginia dubbed “the King of Coal.” The revelations have Alberta experts ringing alarm bells about whether sufficient funds have been collected to clean up the mine — and whether the Alberta government has ensured other mines in the province don’t end up in a similar situation. With Alberta’s auditor general recently once again raising red flags about the province’s system of ensuring companies pay for the cleanup of old mines, critics are increasingly worried companies that can’t make a financial go of it will leave behind a substantial price tag for taxpayers. Drew Yewchuk, a staff lawyer with the Public Interest Law Clinic at the University of Calgary, isn’t satisfied the province has the safeguards in place to prevent companies operating on slim margins from leaving behind large cleanup bills — and if the demand for fossils fuels declines in future years, he’s predicting a “huge catastrophe.” Together with its proposed expansion, the Vista coal mine is what a mining industry website describes as “one of the largest undeveloped coal mines in North America.” The mine exports thermal coal — coal burned for electricity — to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. The company behind the mine is insolvent, according to court documents filed in April. Map: Alicia Carvalho / The Narwhal Alberta coal mining company spiralled following death of American billionaire investor The Vista thermal coal mine describes itself in court documents as “one of the most significant employers in the Hinton and Edson regions of Alberta,” has a mining footprint of nearly 1,500 hectares and the capacity to produce roughly 6.5 million tonnes of thermal coal — coal burned for electricity — annually for export to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. The mine employs nearly 300 workers and it was first opened in 2019. The Vista mine was something of a passion project of American billionaire Chris Cline, described in court documents as “a colourful, driven and highly successful coal mining entrepreneur.” Cline had humble roots as a son of a long line of coal miners in West Virginia, a state in which he maintained a mansion, complete with an artificial lake for water-skiing, a go-kart course and a fireplace over which he hung his old well-worn hard hat from his teenage days spent working in an underground coal mine. He also owned two side-by-side oceanfront mansions in Palm Beach, Florida, and a 277-acre private archipelago in the Bahamas. In short, he had become incredibly wealthy from his coal deals. He had also used his wealth for political influence, as one of the top donors to former U.S. President’s Donald Trump’s inauguration committee and as a prolific supporter of the Republican party, according to Open Secrets, a transparency database from the Center for Responsive Politics. Another industry executive described Cline as “famous in the [coal] industry for his ability to meet ambitious targets, including targets that many thought were unachievable,” according to court documents. His bullish business strategy attracted him to the eastern slopes of the Canadian Rockies, where along with his trust company, he had used the proceeds from a billion-dollar coal company sale in the U.S. to fund the acquisition of the Vista Mine. The Vista coal mine is located just 40 kilometres from Jasper National Park, and employs nearly 300 workers near the community of Hinton, Alta. The mine was forced into a months-long closure earlier this year as it failed to obtain necessary permits to expand its tailings ponds. Photo: Shutterstock But then tragedy struck two years ago following Cline’s sudden death, at the age of 60, in a helicopter accident off the coast of his private island in the Bahamas, en route to Fort Lauderdale. Six others were killed in the accident, including Cline’s daughter, Kameron, some of her friends, and two pilots. Following the crash, Cline’s trust company limited its investment in Coalspur, leaving the mining company “unable to secure meaningful financing” for the mine, according to court documents. Prior to 2019, Cline and his trust company were the “most significant source of funding” for Coalspur. (Representatives of the Cline Group and the Cline Trust Company did not respond to The Narwhal’s request for comment.) The company’s troubles continued from there, according to court documents, which provide rare insight into the struggling coal industry — one in which scrutiny from regulators and investors is increasingly making business more difficult. In the case of Coalspur, which had been making headlines for its cantankerous relationship with the federal government over a requirement that its planned expansion undergo an environmental review, the company’s financial situation has become increasingly dire in recent months. Coalspur is ‘insolvent,’ has filed for creditor protection In court documents filed in April, the head of the parent company overseeing all coal mining at Vista acknowledged “Coalspur is currently insolvent and urgently requires protection” under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act. The company said in court documents on June 16 it had “canvassed the willingness” of another bank to provide replacement corporate credit cards so it could continue business. RBC, a company recently in the news after a report found it continues to be a major funder of the fossil fuel industry, agreed to supply the company with new credit cards. (U.S. Bank did not respond to The Narwhal’s request for an interview; an RBC spokesperson did not agree to an interview and said by email that “RBC does not comment on its banking relationships, even to confirm or deny details of a relationship.” When asked about whether it has a plan to reduce financing to carbon-intensive industries like thermal coal, RBC sent The Narwhal links to some of its policies, including a policy on “sensitive sectors” which states “RBC will not provide financing to new clients that operate significant thermal coal mining” and will “support [existing thermal coal clients] in their transition to lower carbon emissions.” RBC did not provide a response to a question from The Narwhal about how it reconciles these policy objectives with the offer, as described in the court documents, to extend new corporate credit cards to Coalspur.) Adding to Coalspur’s financial woes, the company was informed in May that its corporate credit cards, supplied by U.S. Bank, were terminated. A Canadian multinational financial services company, RBC, stepped in to offer replacements, according to court documents — despite having pledged in its own policy on “sensitive sectors” to “not provide financing to new clients that operate significant thermal coal mining.” Photo: Shutterstock Coalspur’s corporate credit cards were cancelled in the wake of the company’s financial woes. In his affidavit dated April 19, the CEO of Vista Energy Holdings (Coalspur’s parent corporation), Michael Beyer of Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, stated the insolvency was a result of an “acute liquidity shortage facing the company.” As a result, the company claimed it “urgently requires the protection of the [Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act].” Protection under the Act prevents anyone from collecting debts owed for a set period of time so companies can restructure and seek compromises with creditors. Anna Lund, an assistant professor of law at the University of Alberta who specializes in bankruptcy and insolvency, explained that protection under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act usually results in one of two things: reorganization of the company or liquidation of assets. “I’d be very surprised if somebody is using the [Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act ] just as time to find financing,” she said. “They may be using it as a chance to recruit a capital investment from somewhere and using the [Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act] to restructure the company in some way.” Either way, applying for protection, she said, damages relationships with creditors and “is a pretty serious step to take as a company.” According to court documents, a combination of circumstances “devastated” Coalspur’s ability to generate revenue. Combination of events led to financial worries Clark Williams-Derry, an energy finance analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, characterizes Coalspur’s financial troubles as “a case of both operational incompetence and financial incompetence at the same time.” “If you’ve got a sturdy ship, one wave is not going to capsize you,” he added. “If you’ve got a poorly designed boat and nothing to bail yourself out, one wave can sink you.” “A case of both operational incompetence and financial incompetence at the same time.” Clark Williams-Derry, energy finance analyst The cause of the company’s trouble was two-pronged, according to Beyer’s affidavit, and began in late 2020 when coal prices rose globally. Rising coal prices triggered the “crystallization” of a massive hedge obligation which required the company to pay more than US$72 million to a global commodity trading company, Trafigura. The company had entered into a contract that required it to pay large sums if coal prices exceeded an agreed-upon threshold. As a result of the debt, Trafigura took control of all of Coalspur’s coal inventory and sold it. The coal mining industry in Canada has faced numerous setbacks recently, with public and political backlash making it increasingly difficult for companies to get approvals for new coal mines and expansions. The use of thermal coal to generate electricity is set to be phased out in Canada by 2030, though thermal coal exports may continue. Photo: Shutterstock The situation was the result of rapidly escalating thermal coal prices in late 2020, described by Beyer as an “unprecedented escalation” in the form of a nearly 60 per cent increase in four months. Williams-Derry says there’s “something wrong there” when it comes to Coalspur’s explanation for its financial woes. “This is a super-volatile commodity,” he said of thermal coal exports. “Repeatedly over the last decade you have seen price spikes of this magnitude — this was perhaps unexpected, but it’s not that out of the ordinary,” he added, noting a rapid increase in coal prices “doesn’t happen every day, but it happens every five years.” “That is something you have to build into your business model,” he said, pointing to recent similar spikes in coal prices in 2016 and 2010. “What happened was super weird,” Williams-Derry told The Narwhal of Coalspur’s financial crunch. “When the price of coal rose, that was a terrible financial problem for Coalspur.” “If your company falls apart because of good news, you’ve done something wrong,” he added, deeming it “mismanagement.” At the same time as it faced tens of millions in hedge obligations, the mine was also forced to close due to what it characterized as “permitting issues” as the company sought to expand its tailings facilities. The closure, in February, resulted in the lay off of 274 mine employees for approximately three months. The mine restarted operations in May, according to the Alberta Energy Regulator. Coalspur had reached the capacity of its tailings pond and sought approval of an expansion in the form of eight tailings cells with a volume of nearly 30 billion litres. (Just two of the additional tailings cells were ultimately approved by the Alberta Energy Regulator, due to environmental concerns.) Williams-Derry has concerns about Coalspur’s characterization of a “permitting issue” that contributed to its financial woes. “Basically, they built a mining project and then quickly discovered that it had operational flaws and design flaws that were pretty fundamental,” he said. “It’s not just ‘oh, we forgot to get a permit.’ ” “They built a project that couldn’t handle the actual operations of the mine,” he added, calling it “fundamentally flawed.” The Narwhal attempted to reach Coalspur through numbers associated with its parent company’s CEO, Michael Beyer, as well as through email addresses once attributed to staff members at its wholly owned subsidiary, Bighorn Mining Ltd. All attempts to contact Coalspur were unsuccessful. Beyer’s attorney told The Narwhal by email that he would pass along The Narwhal’s request for an interview. The monitor overseeing Coalspur’s insolvency proceedings told The Narwhal by email that as a court officer it is not able to provide any comments on the proceeding, nor to provide any contacts at the company. Coalspur faced multi-million-dollar operating loss, floats the possibility of closure Cline’s death had hobbled the company from the start, according to documents. In the affidavit, Beyer noted that Coalspur had pursued numerous sources of financing following the restriction on financing from Cline’s trust company, but was unsuccessful in part due to “the general reticence within the financial industry to fund thermal coal development projects due to environmental, social and governance concerns.” Nevertheless, Coalspur began operations at the Vista mine in 2019 and had, as Williams-Derry put it, a “terrible year one.” According to audited financial statements submitted to the court, the company brought in $112 million in coal sales in 2019. At the same time, the company accrued $220 million in costs, leading to an operating loss of more than $107 million. The company fared better in 2020, more than tripling its revenue from coal sales, (but still faced an operating loss), according to its unaudited financial statements. The company has so far invested some $700 million into the project and has debts to many creditors, including owing the Cline Trust Company nearly $375 million. Coal mines like this one are at the mercy of global coal prices. Coalspur, the company behind the Vista coal mine in Alberta (not pictured), has faced financial setbacks since it began operations in 2019, culminating in its insolvency this year. The tragic death of American billionaire Chris Cline, and the subsequent limiting of his trust company’s investment in Coalspur, left the company scrambling to find alternative financing, according to court documents. Photo: Shutterstock Coalspur has had financial woes almost since its inception, according to documents submitted to the court. In its financial statements from its first year of operation, Coalspur noted that at the end of 2019, “substantial doubt exists about [Coalspur’s] ability to pay its current obligations as they come due.” The auditors, Ernst and Young, noted “the company has concluded that substantial doubt exists about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.” Concerns about the future of the company linger, with the company noting in an application for an extension of its creditor protection until late July that the extra time was necessary as it “now seeks to include more expansive restructuring provisions … that may become necessary” including, among other options, shutting down or downsizing the mine and laying off employees. Reclamation at Alberta coal mine ‘going to be a huge catastrophe’: lawyer Coalspur’s financial troubles raise concerns for experts about the company’s ability to one day clean up the mine. According to the affidavit of Coalspur’s parent company’s CEO, the estimates of the cost to reclaim the mine at the end of its life, known as asset retirement obligations, are $6.6 million. “That doesn’t fit offhand with my understanding of what those costs should be so I’m a little suspicious,” Yewchuk, the staff lawyer with the Public Interest Law Clinic at the University of Calgary, told The Narwhal. “I can’t even imagine what they’re doing up there that they would be able to keep reclamation costs that low.” “Coal companies generally underestimate their liabilities by a significant percentage,” he said. “Every coal mine in Alberta presents this kind of problem.” According to Tonya Zelinsky, a spokesperson for the Alberta Energy Regulator, the regulator is holding $7 million to cover cleanup costs for the mine. “If there are reclamation costs over and above that security, then [the court] is into a difficult situation,” Lund, the insolvency lawyer, told The Narwhal, noting a court has decide if those costs will be caught as part of the insolvency process and who, if anyone, the province can pursue for any additional reclamation costs. “If this ends up being a liquidating [case] and the company is essentially wound down, then there’s nothing — there’s no entity, there’s no assets — for the regulator to go after later,” she added. The Alberta government requires coal companies clean up mines like this one once they have ceased operations, and companies must post financial security to cover the bill. But experts have increasingly been ringing alarm bells about whether enough money has been collected, and Coalspur’s financial crisis has added to concerns about who will pay to clean up its mine (not pictured) in the long run. Photo: Shutterstock The regulator bases the security it collects using a formula as part of its Mine Financial Security Program. “Security collected for Alberta’s coal mines is based on a company’s assets and liabilities, which is calculated under the [regulator’s] Mine Financial Security Program,” Zelinsky wrote in an email to The Narwhal. “Each approval holder’s [Mine Financial Security Program] liability is considered confidential therefore the [regulator] is unable to provide an estimate of Vista’s liability,” she added. Yewchuk has substantial concerns with the regulator’s approach. “The mine financial security program just leaves really, really huge gaps between cleanup costs and collected security,” he said. “The mine financial security program needs to be completely replaced.” For decades B.C. failed to address selenium pollution in the Elk Valley. Now no one knows how to stop it. Yewchuk is not the first to point to concerns about the program. A report from Alberta’s auditor general concluded in 2015 that if “a mine operator cannot fulfill its reclamation obligations… the province may have to pay a potentially substantial cost for this work to be completed.” Yewchuk fears that’s exactly what will happen. “[The program] doesn’t take into account the possibility of resource prices just nose-diving and not coming back up,” Yewchuk said. “We’re looking at that possibility coming up in the next one or two decades,” he said of coal, oil and gas prices. “None of our security systems are built for it.” “It’s going to be a huge catastrophe.” Indigenous groups filed, then withdrew, statements of concern about tailings expansion The issuing of permits for Vista’s expanded tailings facilities were delayed at the Alberta Energy Regulator in part due to the submission of statements of concerns by two local Indigenous groups, Gunn Metis Local #55 and the Louis Bull Tribe. In its statement of concern, the Louis Bull Tribe noted that the expanded tailings would “have a direct and adverse impact on Louis Bull Tribe’s ability to practice constitutionally protected Aboriginal and Treaty rights.” “Coalspur did not notify or engage with the Tribe about the Applications,” the Tribe added. Gunn Metis Local #55 noted concerns about the tailings expansion related to reclamation, water quality, air quality and the safety of traditional land users and “Coalspur’s failure to engage” with local Indigenous groups. By March, both groups had withdrawn their statements of concern. Neither Gunn Metis Local #55 nor the Louis Bull Tribe responded to The Narwhal’s request for an interview by publication time. Federal government will not approve any new thermal coal mines or expansions In a further setback to Coalspur’s plans, it appears its proposed expansion is no longer a viable possibility. In a statement released as world leaders converged on the United Kingdom for the first in-person G7 summit since the start of the pandemic, federal Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson announced his government believes thermal coal projects are “likely to cause unacceptable environmental effects within federal jurisdiction and are not aligned with Canada’s domestic and international climate change commitments.” “New thermal coal mining projects or expansions are not in line with the ambition Canadians want to see on climate, or with Canada’s domestic and international climate commitments,” Wilkinson said in the statement. Just last month, Coalspur was in court fighting the federal government’s requirement that its expansion plans undergo an environmental review. Alberta coal miner launches legal challenge against federal environmental assessment Coalspur’s expansion was explicitly named in the announcement, noting “Minister Wilkinson informed Coalspur Mines Ltd. that the policy announced today applies to the consideration of its proposed thermal coal mine expansions at the Vista Coal Mine near Hinton, Alberta.” The proposed expansion would have increased output by an average additional 4.2 million tonnes of coal each year for a decade. Coalspur can still move forward with its application, but as Wilkinson told The Globe earlier this month, “we’ve told them at the front end that it will cause unacceptable — and that’s a pretty strong word — environmental impacts.” Banner: An internal financial crisis has "devastated" Coalspur, the company behind the Vista coal mine near Hinton, Alta., according to court documents filed as part of an application for creditor protection. Coalspur has faced a string of setbacks including multi-million-dollar hedge obligations, permitting issues and the death of a billionaire coal magnate who had provided much of the financing for the project. Sharon J. Riley Sharon is an award-winning journalist based in Edmonton. Her writing has also been published by The Walrus, Harper’s, The Tyee and...
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12740
{"url": "https://thenarwhal.ca/alberta-coal-mine-vista-coalspur-finances/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thenarwhal.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:08:42Z", "digest": "sha1:ZHSKAXYL3W6YC6IR3P5EPBMYWTNEPVK7"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 24468, 24468.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 24468, 29619.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 24468, 103.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 24468, 213.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 24468, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 24468, 238.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 24468, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 24468, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 24468, 1.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 24468, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 24468, 0.37106918]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 24468, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 24468, 0.06540943]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 24468, 0.12258065]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 24468, 0.1053598]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 24468, 0.08367246]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 24468, 0.07473945]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 24468, 0.06540943]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 24468, 0.01290323]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 24468, 0.0071464]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 24468, 0.01116625]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 24468, 0.00780742]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 24468, 0.00970874]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 24468, 0.15397961]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 24468, 0.32170744]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 24468, 5.24466424]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 24468, 0.00130124]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 24468, 6.05041262]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 24468, 3842.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 273, 0.0], [273, 292, 0.0], [292, 319, 0.0], [319, 728, 1.0], [728, 1133, 1.0], [1133, 1266, 1.0], [1266, 1493, 1.0], [1493, 1810, 1.0], [1810, 2221, 1.0], [2221, 2649, 1.0], [2649, 2892, 1.0], [2892, 3182, 1.0], [3182, 3523, 1.0], [3523, 3908, 0.0], [3908, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4420, 1.0], [4420, 4926, 1.0], [4926, 5116, 1.0], [5116, 5404, 1.0], [5404, 5610, 1.0], [5610, 5857, 1.0], [5857, 6157, 0.0], [6157, 6655, 1.0], [6655, 6877, 0.0], [6877, 7115, 1.0], [7115, 7394, 1.0], [7394, 7453, 0.0], [7453, 7683, 1.0], [7683, 8898, 0.0], [8898, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9780, 1.0], [9780, 9939, 1.0], [9939, 10222, 1.0], [10222, 10528, 1.0], [10528, 10665, 1.0], [10665, 10779, 1.0], [10779, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 11070, 1.0], [11070, 11245, 1.0], [11245, 11332, 1.0], [11332, 11377, 0.0], [11377, 11516, 1.0], [11516, 11927, 1.0], [11927, 12287, 0.0], [12287, 12485, 1.0], [12485, 12601, 1.0], [12601, 12931, 1.0], [12931, 13071, 1.0], [13071, 13251, 1.0], [13251, 13370, 1.0], [13370, 13766, 1.0], [13766, 14069, 0.0], [14069, 14195, 1.0], [14195, 14400, 1.0], [14400, 14524, 1.0], [14524, 15126, 1.0], [15126, 15212, 0.0], [15212, 15290, 1.0], [15290, 15629, 1.0], [15629, 15753, 1.0], [15753, 15995, 1.0], [15995, 16324, 1.0], [16324, 16808, 0.0], [16808, 16915, 1.0], [16915, 17275, 1.0], [17275, 17652, 1.0], [17652, 17726, 0.0], [17726, 17841, 1.0], [17841, 18031, 1.0], [18031, 18359, 1.0], [18359, 18516, 1.0], [18516, 18667, 1.0], [18667, 18997, 1.0], [18997, 19195, 1.0], [19195, 19615, 0.0], [19615, 19938, 1.0], [19938, 20126, 1.0], [20126, 20391, 1.0], [20391, 20497, 1.0], [20497, 20781, 1.0], [20781, 20828, 1.0], [20828, 20960, 1.0], [20960, 21124, 1.0], [21124, 21163, 1.0], [21163, 21250, 0.0], [21250, 21494, 1.0], [21494, 21717, 1.0], [21717, 21809, 1.0], [21809, 22031, 1.0], [22031, 22223, 1.0], [22223, 22300, 0.0], [22300, 22411, 1.0], [22411, 22829, 1.0], [22829, 23044, 1.0], [23044, 23187, 1.0], [23187, 23272, 0.0], [23272, 23543, 1.0], [23543, 23670, 1.0], [23670, 23902, 1.0], [23902, 24319, 1.0], [24319, 24335, 0.0], [24335, 24468, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 273, 0.0], [273, 292, 0.0], [292, 319, 0.0], [319, 728, 0.0], [728, 1133, 0.0], [1133, 1266, 0.0], [1266, 1493, 0.0], [1493, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 2221, 0.0], [2221, 2649, 0.0], [2649, 2892, 0.0], [2892, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3523, 0.0], [3523, 3908, 0.0], [3908, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4420, 0.0], [4420, 4926, 0.0], [4926, 5116, 0.0], [5116, 5404, 0.0], [5404, 5610, 0.0], [5610, 5857, 0.0], [5857, 6157, 0.0], [6157, 6655, 0.0], [6655, 6877, 0.0], [6877, 7115, 0.0], [7115, 7394, 0.0], [7394, 7453, 0.0], [7453, 7683, 0.0], [7683, 8898, 0.0], [8898, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9780, 0.0], [9780, 9939, 0.0], [9939, 10222, 0.0], [10222, 10528, 0.0], [10528, 10665, 0.0], [10665, 10779, 0.0], [10779, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 11070, 0.0], [11070, 11245, 0.0], [11245, 11332, 0.0], [11332, 11377, 0.0], [11377, 11516, 0.0], [11516, 11927, 0.0], [11927, 12287, 0.0], [12287, 12485, 0.0], [12485, 12601, 0.0], [12601, 12931, 0.0], [12931, 13071, 0.0], [13071, 13251, 0.0], [13251, 13370, 0.0], [13370, 13766, 0.0], [13766, 14069, 0.0], [14069, 14195, 0.0], [14195, 14400, 0.0], [14400, 14524, 0.0], [14524, 15126, 0.0], [15126, 15212, 0.0], [15212, 15290, 0.0], [15290, 15629, 0.0], [15629, 15753, 0.0], [15753, 15995, 0.0], [15995, 16324, 0.0], [16324, 16808, 0.0], [16808, 16915, 0.0], [16915, 17275, 0.0], [17275, 17652, 0.0], [17652, 17726, 0.0], [17726, 17841, 0.0], [17841, 18031, 0.0], [18031, 18359, 0.0], [18359, 18516, 0.0], [18516, 18667, 0.0], [18667, 18997, 0.0], [18997, 19195, 0.0], [19195, 19615, 0.0], [19615, 19938, 0.0], [19938, 20126, 0.0], [20126, 20391, 0.0], [20391, 20497, 0.0], [20497, 20781, 0.0], [20781, 20828, 0.0], [20828, 20960, 0.0], [20960, 21124, 0.0], [21124, 21163, 0.0], [21163, 21250, 0.0], [21250, 21494, 0.0], [21494, 21717, 0.0], [21717, 21809, 0.0], [21809, 22031, 0.0], [22031, 22223, 0.0], [22223, 22300, 0.0], [22300, 22411, 0.0], [22411, 22829, 0.0], [22829, 23044, 0.0], [23044, 23187, 0.0], [23187, 23272, 0.0], [23272, 23543, 0.0], [23543, 23670, 0.0], [23670, 23902, 0.0], [23902, 24319, 0.0], [24319, 24335, 0.0], [24335, 24468, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 74, 13.0], [74, 273, 29.0], [273, 292, 4.0], [292, 319, 6.0], [319, 728, 61.0], [728, 1133, 60.0], [1133, 1266, 24.0], [1266, 1493, 32.0], [1493, 1810, 43.0], [1810, 2221, 68.0], [2221, 2649, 65.0], [2649, 2892, 40.0], [2892, 3182, 46.0], [3182, 3523, 55.0], [3523, 3908, 63.0], [3908, 3995, 11.0], [3995, 4420, 73.0], [4420, 4926, 86.0], [4926, 5116, 30.0], [5116, 5404, 45.0], [5404, 5610, 29.0], [5610, 5857, 42.0], [5857, 6157, 49.0], [6157, 6655, 80.0], [6655, 6877, 36.0], [6877, 7115, 34.0], [7115, 7394, 40.0], [7394, 7453, 8.0], [7453, 7683, 33.0], [7683, 8898, 202.0], [8898, 9335, 64.0], [9335, 9780, 67.0], [9780, 9939, 25.0], [9939, 10222, 42.0], [10222, 10528, 50.0], [10528, 10665, 22.0], [10665, 10779, 14.0], [10779, 10826, 7.0], [10826, 11070, 33.0], [11070, 11245, 34.0], [11245, 11332, 13.0], [11332, 11377, 5.0], [11377, 11516, 22.0], [11516, 11927, 67.0], [11927, 12287, 57.0], [12287, 12485, 34.0], [12485, 12601, 16.0], [12601, 12931, 56.0], [12931, 13071, 25.0], [13071, 13251, 27.0], [13251, 13370, 18.0], [13370, 13766, 66.0], [13766, 14069, 49.0], [14069, 14195, 16.0], [14195, 14400, 35.0], [14400, 14524, 19.0], [14524, 15126, 95.0], [15126, 15212, 10.0], [15212, 15290, 12.0], [15290, 15629, 49.0], [15629, 15753, 20.0], [15753, 15995, 41.0], [15995, 16324, 53.0], [16324, 16808, 74.0], [16808, 16915, 16.0], [16915, 17275, 57.0], [17275, 17652, 60.0], [17652, 17726, 12.0], [17726, 17841, 18.0], [17841, 18031, 32.0], [18031, 18359, 56.0], [18359, 18516, 22.0], [18516, 18667, 24.0], [18667, 18997, 55.0], [18997, 19195, 35.0], [19195, 19615, 67.0], [19615, 19938, 50.0], [19938, 20126, 25.0], [20126, 20391, 37.0], [20391, 20497, 20.0], [20497, 20781, 47.0], [20781, 20828, 7.0], [20828, 20960, 20.0], [20960, 21124, 31.0], [21124, 21163, 7.0], [21163, 21250, 11.0], [21250, 21494, 40.0], [21494, 21717, 34.0], [21717, 21809, 15.0], [21809, 22031, 33.0], [22031, 22223, 31.0], [22223, 22300, 12.0], [22300, 22411, 18.0], [22411, 22829, 58.0], [22829, 23044, 33.0], [23044, 23187, 20.0], [23187, 23272, 10.0], [23272, 23543, 39.0], [23543, 23670, 21.0], [23670, 23902, 39.0], [23902, 24319, 62.0], [24319, 24335, 3.0], [24335, 24468, 21.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 273, 0.0], [273, 292, 0.0], [292, 319, 0.33333333], [319, 728, 0.0], [728, 1133, 0.0], [1133, 1266, 0.0], [1266, 1493, 0.0], [1493, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 2221, 0.0049505], [2221, 2649, 0.0], [2649, 2892, 0.0], [2892, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3523, 0.0], [3523, 3908, 0.0], [3908, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4420, 0.03110048], [4420, 4926, 0.0], [4926, 5116, 0.01657459], [5116, 5404, 0.0], [5404, 5610, 0.0], [5610, 5857, 0.0], [5857, 6157, 0.01706485], [6157, 6655, 0.00413223], [6655, 6877, 0.01851852], [6877, 7115, 0.0], [7115, 7394, 0.0], [7394, 7453, 0.0], [7453, 7683, 0.0], [7683, 8898, 0.00167504], [8898, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9780, 0.00462963], [9780, 9939, 0.0], [9939, 10222, 0.0], [10222, 10528, 0.0], [10528, 10665, 0.0], [10665, 10779, 0.0], [10779, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 11070, 0.0], [11070, 11245, 0.0], [11245, 11332, 0.0], [11332, 11377, 0.0], [11377, 11516, 0.02985075], [11516, 11927, 0.00496278], [11927, 12287, 0.01129944], [12287, 12485, 0.03076923], [12485, 12601, 0.0], [12601, 12931, 0.0], [12931, 13071, 0.05882353], [13071, 13251, 0.0], [13251, 13370, 0.0], [13370, 13766, 0.00773196], [13766, 14069, 0.00673401], [14069, 14195, 0.0], [14195, 14400, 0.0], [14400, 14524, 0.0], [14524, 15126, 0.0], [15126, 15212, 0.0], [15212, 15290, 0.0], [15290, 15629, 0.0], [15629, 15753, 0.03389831], [15753, 15995, 0.05579399], [15995, 16324, 0.03144654], [16324, 16808, 0.00849257], [16808, 16915, 0.0], [16915, 17275, 0.01139601], [17275, 17652, 0.0], [17652, 17726, 0.0], [17726, 17841, 0.0], [17841, 18031, 0.01092896], [18031, 18359, 0.0], [18359, 18516, 0.0], [18516, 18667, 0.00684932], [18667, 18997, 0.0], [18997, 19195, 0.0], [19195, 19615, 0.0], [19615, 19938, 0.0], [19938, 20126, 0.0], [20126, 20391, 0.0], [20391, 20497, 0.0], [20497, 20781, 0.01423488], [20781, 20828, 0.0], [20828, 20960, 0.0], [20960, 21124, 0.0], [21124, 21163, 0.0], [21163, 21250, 0.0], [21250, 21494, 0.00833333], [21494, 21717, 0.0], [21717, 21809, 0.0], [21809, 22031, 0.00921659], [22031, 22223, 0.01069519], [22223, 22300, 0.0], [22300, 22411, 0.0], [22411, 22829, 0.00241546], [22829, 23044, 0.0], [23044, 23187, 0.0], [23187, 23272, 0.0], [23272, 23543, 0.0], [23543, 23670, 0.01612903], [23670, 23902, 0.0], [23902, 24319, 0.0], [24319, 24335, 0.0], [24335, 24468, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 74, 0.0], [74, 273, 0.0], [273, 292, 0.0], [292, 319, 0.0], [319, 728, 0.0], [728, 1133, 0.0], [1133, 1266, 0.0], [1266, 1493, 0.0], [1493, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 2221, 0.0], [2221, 2649, 0.0], [2649, 2892, 0.0], [2892, 3182, 0.0], [3182, 3523, 0.0], [3523, 3908, 0.0], [3908, 3995, 0.0], [3995, 4420, 0.0], [4420, 4926, 0.0], [4926, 5116, 0.0], [5116, 5404, 0.0], [5404, 5610, 0.0], [5610, 5857, 0.0], [5857, 6157, 0.0], [6157, 6655, 0.0], [6655, 6877, 0.0], [6877, 7115, 0.0], [7115, 7394, 0.0], [7394, 7453, 0.0], [7453, 7683, 0.0], [7683, 8898, 0.0], [8898, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9780, 0.0], [9780, 9939, 0.0], [9939, 10222, 0.0], [10222, 10528, 0.0], [10528, 10665, 0.0], [10665, 10779, 0.0], [10779, 10826, 0.0], [10826, 11070, 0.0], [11070, 11245, 0.0], [11245, 11332, 0.0], [11332, 11377, 0.0], [11377, 11516, 0.0], [11516, 11927, 0.0], [11927, 12287, 0.0], [12287, 12485, 0.0], [12485, 12601, 0.0], [12601, 12931, 0.0], [12931, 13071, 0.0], [13071, 13251, 0.0], [13251, 13370, 0.0], [13370, 13766, 0.0], [13766, 14069, 0.0], [14069, 14195, 0.0], [14195, 14400, 0.0], [14400, 14524, 0.0], [14524, 15126, 0.0], [15126, 15212, 0.0], [15212, 15290, 0.0], [15290, 15629, 0.0], [15629, 15753, 0.0], [15753, 15995, 0.0], [15995, 16324, 0.0], [16324, 16808, 0.0], [16808, 16915, 0.0], [16915, 17275, 0.0], [17275, 17652, 0.0], [17652, 17726, 0.0], [17726, 17841, 0.0], [17841, 18031, 0.0], [18031, 18359, 0.0], [18359, 18516, 0.0], [18516, 18667, 0.0], [18667, 18997, 0.0], [18997, 19195, 0.0], [19195, 19615, 0.0], [19615, 19938, 0.0], [19938, 20126, 0.0], [20126, 20391, 0.0], [20391, 20497, 0.0], [20497, 20781, 0.0], [20781, 20828, 0.0], [20828, 20960, 0.0], [20960, 21124, 0.0], [21124, 21163, 0.0], [21163, 21250, 0.0], [21250, 21494, 0.0], [21494, 21717, 0.0], [21717, 21809, 0.0], [21809, 22031, 0.0], [22031, 22223, 0.0], [22223, 22300, 0.0], [22300, 22411, 0.0], [22411, 22829, 0.0], [22829, 23044, 0.0], [23044, 23187, 0.0], [23187, 23272, 0.0], [23272, 23543, 0.0], [23543, 23670, 0.0], [23670, 23902, 0.0], [23902, 24319, 0.0], [24319, 24335, 0.0], [24335, 24468, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 74, 0.02702703], [74, 273, 0.02512563], [273, 292, 0.21052632], [292, 319, 0.03703704], [319, 728, 0.01466993], [728, 1133, 0.07407407], [1133, 1266, 0.0075188], [1266, 1493, 0.00440529], [1493, 1810, 0.0126183], [1810, 2221, 0.0243309], [2221, 2649, 0.02570093], [2649, 2892, 0.01234568], [2892, 3182, 0.00689655], [3182, 3523, 0.02346041], [3523, 3908, 0.04155844], [3908, 3995, 0.02298851], [3995, 4420, 0.02352941], [4420, 4926, 0.01581028], [4926, 5116, 0.03157895], [5116, 5404, 0.04166667], [5404, 5610, 0.00970874], [5610, 5857, 0.02834008], [5857, 6157, 0.03333333], [6157, 6655, 0.02208835], [6655, 6877, 0.04954955], [6877, 7115, 0.00420168], [7115, 7394, 0.00716846], [7394, 7453, 0.01694915], [7453, 7683, 0.03478261], [7683, 8898, 0.0255144], [8898, 9335, 0.02974828], [9335, 9780, 0.04719101], [9780, 9939, 0.01257862], [9939, 10222, 0.02826855], [10222, 10528, 0.03267974], [10528, 10665, 0.00729927], [10665, 10779, 0.01754386], [10779, 10826, 0.0212766], [10826, 11070, 0.03688525], [11070, 11245, 0.01142857], [11245, 11332, 0.01149425], [11332, 11377, 0.06666667], [11377, 11516, 0.01438849], [11516, 11927, 0.01946472], [11927, 12287, 0.01666667], [12287, 12485, 0.01010101], [12485, 12601, 0.02586207], [12601, 12931, 0.00606061], [12931, 13071, 0.00714286], [13071, 13251, 0.04444444], [13251, 13370, 0.00840336], [13370, 13766, 0.02020202], [13766, 14069, 0.01650165], [14069, 14195, 0.02380952], [14195, 14400, 0.0097561], [14400, 14524, 0.00806452], [14524, 15126, 0.03654485], [15126, 15212, 0.01162791], [15212, 15290, 0.01282051], [15290, 15629, 0.01179941], [15629, 15753, 0.04032258], [15753, 15995, 0.00826446], [15995, 16324, 0.01519757], [16324, 16808, 0.02272727], [16808, 16915, 0.00934579], [16915, 17275, 0.01944444], [17275, 17652, 0.00530504], [17652, 17726, 0.02702703], [17726, 17841, 0.00869565], [17841, 18031, 0.02631579], [18031, 18359, 0.03658537], [18359, 18516, 0.01910828], [18516, 18667, 0.0397351], [18667, 18997, 0.01212121], [18997, 19195, 0.00505051], [19195, 19615, 0.01428571], [19615, 19938, 0.04334365], [19938, 20126, 0.03191489], [20126, 20391, 0.01132075], [20391, 20497, 0.05660377], [20497, 20781, 0.01056338], [20781, 20828, 0.0212766], [20828, 20960, 0.01515152], [20960, 21124, 0.01219512], [21124, 21163, 0.02564103], [21163, 21250, 0.01149425], [21250, 21494, 0.04918033], [21494, 21717, 0.04035874], [21717, 21809, 0.04347826], [21809, 22031, 0.02252252], [22031, 22223, 0.05729167], [22223, 22300, 0.01298701], [22300, 22411, 0.01801802], [22411, 22829, 0.0215311], [22829, 23044, 0.01860465], [23044, 23187, 0.01398601], [23187, 23272, 0.01176471], [23272, 23543, 0.04059041], [23543, 23670, 0.00787402], [23670, 23902, 0.01724138], [23902, 24319, 0.01678657], [24319, 24335, 0.1875], [24335, 24468, 0.06015038]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 24468, 0.9711476]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 24468, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 24468, 0.89994729]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 24468, -1173.47289138]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 24468, 913.22490883]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 24468, -466.55190363]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 24468, 167.0]]}
Home » IDNPoker – How to Play Online Poker Poker is a card game in which players compete with their skills and strategies to make the best hand possible. In the game, each player holds two cards. The other five cards are placed on the table. Depending on the rules of the game, a player can use one card from his hand or four from the table to make a higher hand. The player with the highest hand wins. There are many different sites that offer poker. You can play for free at many of them. Simply find the one that offers free daftar, click on it, and fill out the required information. This will grant you access to the game. If you want to learn how to play poker, the poker sites listed above can help. The IDNPoker network is one of the biggest in the world, with hundreds of tables available around the clock. It is a popular choice with Europeans because of its reputation for high-quality poker. However, you must ensure that you have a reliable source of funds to play poker for real money. The software used to operate IDNPoker is certified by BMM Compliance Singapore Pte Ltd. The game can be played on a smartphone or tablet. The graphics are beautiful and the game play is quick and easy. You can choose from Texas Holdem, Omaha, and other popular games. You can also try your luck at games like Blackjack or domino keliling. The more you practice, the better you will become. Situs poker idn is a platform that allows players from all over the world to play poker online. It is a secure, reliable, and fast way to play poker. It offers a number of different games and has high payout rates. Withdrawals are quick and easy, and deposits are instant. In addition to poker, users can also play other casino games like slots. If you don’t want to spend money on the initial investment, you can always play for free to try out online poker gambling. This is a great way to get started without any risk, and it is the easiest way to test new games. The best part is you don’t have to meet people or worry about losing. The winrate of online poker is high enough for a player to make a lot of money. The highest winrate is 90%, which means that there is more money to be made. If you don’t want to risk a lot of money, you can play for free and make more money. But you must find a good online poker site that has a good win rate. When playing poker, it is important to find a reliable online poker site that accepts rupiah deposits. You can make deposits through a credit card, ATM, or kartu kredit. The uang that you need to deposit is dependent on the total nilai of taruhan in the game that you want to play. The pot size and turnamen poker online also have an impact on the amount of money a player needs to deposit.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12741
{"url": "https://theologypapers.com/idnpoker-how-to-play-online-poker/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "theologypapers.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:50:28Z", "digest": "sha1:LI7C3VQBLSMPSYYC27M6TA3SGWH57OSX"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2728, 2728.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2728, 3461.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2728, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2728, 45.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2728, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2728, 161.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2728, 0.44406196]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2728, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2728, 0.03064067]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2728, 0.01671309]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2728, 0.02042711]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2728, 0.01207057]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2728, 0.00344234]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2728, 0.10843373]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2728, 0.42166344]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2728, 4.16634429]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2728, 4.79181504]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2728, 517.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 403, 1.0], [403, 707, 1.0], [707, 1088, 1.0], [1088, 1390, 1.0], [1390, 1736, 1.0], [1736, 2027, 1.0], [2027, 2338, 1.0], [2338, 2728, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 403, 0.0], [403, 707, 0.0], [707, 1088, 0.0], [1088, 1390, 0.0], [1390, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 2027, 0.0], [2027, 2338, 0.0], [2338, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 43, 9.0], [43, 403, 70.0], [403, 707, 58.0], [707, 1088, 65.0], [1088, 1390, 55.0], [1390, 1736, 63.0], [1736, 2027, 58.0], [2027, 2338, 66.0], [2338, 2728, 73.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 403, 0.0], [403, 707, 0.0], [707, 1088, 0.0], [1088, 1390, 0.0], [1390, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 2027, 0.0], [2027, 2338, 0.00660066], [2338, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 403, 0.0], [403, 707, 0.0], [707, 1088, 0.0], [1088, 1390, 0.0], [1390, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 2027, 0.0], [2027, 2338, 0.0], [2338, 2728, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 43, 0.20930233], [43, 403, 0.01388889], [403, 707, 0.01644737], [707, 1088, 0.05249344], [1088, 1390, 0.02980132], [1390, 1736, 0.01445087], [1736, 2027, 0.01030928], [2027, 2338, 0.01286174], [2338, 2728, 0.01794872]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2728, 0.11254334]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2728, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2728, 0.0341419]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2728, -128.67536916]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2728, 53.00350044]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2728, -162.12736947]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2728, 35.0]]}
Episode 175: Failure to Launch July 4, 2018 - The Other Half Podcast The best way to get someone to leave their parents place is to hire someone to fall in love with them. What happens after they move out? Do they break up? The premise of this movie is set up to fail from the get-go. Matthew McConaughey charms and chemistry with Sarah Jessica Parker don’t help, if anything they hurt this poorly made script.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12742
{"url": "https://theotherhalfpodcast.com/episode-174-love-on-a-leash-2/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "theotherhalfpodcast.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:42:39Z", "digest": "sha1:AYFO7HCWR6RD5UKRUWG4DKFP7EHP6FDF"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 410, 410.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 410, 1937.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 410, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 410, 45.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 410, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 410, 237.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 410, 0.43181818]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 410, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 410, 0.05538462]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 410, 0.15909091]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 410, 0.8]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 410, 4.33333333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 410, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 410, 3.96384754]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 410, 75.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 69, 0.0], [69, 410, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 69, 0.0], [69, 410, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 31, 5.0], [31, 69, 7.0], [69, 410, 63.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.10344828], [31, 69, 0.14705882], [69, 410, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 69, 0.0], [69, 410, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.09677419], [31, 69, 0.13157895], [69, 410, 0.02932551]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 410, 0.00011873]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 410, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 410, 0.00128853]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 410, -22.14555434]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 410, -1.96549415]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 410, -30.3784741]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 410, 5.0]]}
The Diversity of ‘White Supremacy’ Posted on | January 28, 2023 | 2 Comments When I first heard that there was a controversy about a black man being beaten to death by police in Memphis, I certainly did not expect to discover all the cops were black: Five Memphis police officers have been charged with second-degree murder, among other charges, in connection with the death of Tyre Nichols, who died three days after being stopped by the officers. Nichols, a 29-year-old black man, died on January 10, three days after Memphis police officers stopped him for “reckless driving.” A “confrontation occurred” between Nichols and the police officers when he was stopped around 8:30 p.m. on January 7, according to an initial statement released by authorities. However, “another confrontation occurred,” while officers attempted to take Nichols into custody. “While attempting to take the suspect into custody, another confrontation occurred; however, the suspect was ultimately apprehended,” the Memphis Police Department said. “Afterward the suspect complained of having shortness of breath, at which point an ambulance was called to the scene.” Nichols was transported to St. Francis Hospital, where he was reportedly in critical condition before dying days later. Notably, Memphis Police Department officers Demetrius Haley, Tadarrius Bean, Emmitt Martin III, Desmond Mills, and Justin Smith are all black. Everybody was waiting for the police bodycam video to be released, and what it shows is . . . Don’t resist arrest in Memphis. Also, while we’re dishing out advice here, let me suggest that if you’re driving a stolen KIA in Arkansas, don’t run from police in a high-speed pursuit that ends in a fiery fatal crash. (Video here.) By the way, I don’t even know what race the car thief in that case was except, well, after someone gets roasted in a gasoline fire, what’s left of them is black, no matter what race they were before they got roasted. White supremacy is so diverse even black people can be a part of it pic.twitter.com/G1kEcZAhRC — RDS4POTUS (@DwightKSchruteA) January 27, 2023 Excuse me for being sarcastic about matters of life and death, but if sarcasm was a crime, I’d be a habitual offender. Sarcasm is my response to everything, especially tragic circumstances over which I have no control. Do I want people to die because they resisted arrest or fled at 130 mph in a KIA? No, this is not what I want, but these people don’t seek my advice before they do the things that get them killed, so what happens to them is not my responsibility. That was my basic reaction to the whole George Floyd thing. All the white liberals were running around shouting mea culpa and I was like, “OK, culpa tua non est mea.” How can I be to blame for what cops do in Minneapolis? The only time I was ever in Minneapolis was three days in a hotel for a conference more than 10 years ago. Yet you had white liberals all over the country declaring themselves guilty of racism — complicit in systemic oppression — because of what happened to this guy in Minneapolis, who magically obtained civil rights sainthood merely because he died in police custody. If everybody is to blame, nobody is to blame — what this progressive rhetoric about “systemic racism” does is to absolve people of responsibility for what they actually do in their own lives, by extending the blame to the vast abstraction of “society,” so that innocent people who are simply minding their own business can be guilt-tripped for unfortunate events in which they are not involved. And if you refuse to play along with this game, if you don’t cooperate with the demand that you blame yourself for other people’s problems, the Left will interpret this as conclusive proof that you’re guilty of “white supremacy.” There is no court to which you can appeal this conviction, because the mere accusation is sufficient to destroy anyone’s career and reputation, which is why so many people tiptoe around uncomfortable topics so as to avoid expressing any opinion that might offend a liberal. There’s a lot of white silence on the subject of race whenever we are compelled to listen to angry lectures on the subject, because nearly all white people are afraid to criticize the Al Sharptons and Ben Crumps of the world. Maybe the families of these five black police officers in Memphis will have a “road to Damascus” experience as a result of having Ben Crump show up for his usual media circus before scoring another big payday for 50% of whatever multimilllion-dollar settlement the city of Memphis pays out in the subsequent civil-rights lawsuit. Maybe some of them will realize what a crooked hustle Crump is operating, and this realization might cause them to reconsider the propriety of the White Guilt Industrial Complex, within which Crump has made his fortune. Is it too much to hope that black people might finally figure out that they’re being played for chumps in this three-card monte game? Perhaps, but the alternative to optimism is despair and, as a great man once advised, “It is history that teaches us to hope.” So I’ll keep hoping despite every discouraging incident, and will keep offering helpful advice, e.g., “Don’t resist arrest in Memphis.” Category: Crime, Racism, Tennessee 2 Responses to “The Diversity of ‘White Supremacy’” Nobody’s Heroes 6 | okrahead January 28th, 2023 @ 4:23 pm […] Moar white supremacy… https://theothermccain.com/2023/01/28/the-diversity-of-white-supremacy/ […] Sunday Stuff I missed - The DaleyGator January 29th, 2023 @ 12:28 pm […] The diversity of White SUPREMACY? The Other McCain […]
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12743
{"url": "https://theothermccain.com/2023/01/28/the-diversity-of-white-supremacy/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "theothermccain.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:00:34Z", "digest": "sha1:Y4GSWMROZIS4T7WGBJ5MYRRM64GN7K4L"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 5599, 5599.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5599, 13480.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5599, 28.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5599, 407.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5599, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5599, 308.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5599, 0.41279579]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5599, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5599, 0.00332005]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5599, 0.00619743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5599, 0.01665206]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5599, 0.18054338]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5599, 0.4978355]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5599, 4.88961039]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5599, 0.00438212]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5599, 5.60077972]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5599, 924.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 77, 0.0], [77, 251, 0.0], [251, 449, 1.0], [449, 580, 1.0], [580, 757, 1.0], [757, 855, 1.0], [855, 1144, 1.0], [1144, 1264, 1.0], [1264, 1407, 1.0], [1407, 1533, 1.0], [1533, 1951, 1.0], [1951, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2094, 0.0], [2094, 2727, 1.0], [2727, 3153, 1.0], [3153, 3778, 1.0], [3778, 4278, 1.0], [4278, 4828, 1.0], [4828, 5225, 1.0], [5225, 5260, 0.0], [5260, 5312, 1.0], [5312, 5341, 0.0], [5341, 5370, 0.0], [5370, 5472, 0.0], [5472, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5541, 0.0], [5541, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 77, 0.0], [77, 251, 0.0], [251, 449, 0.0], [449, 580, 0.0], [580, 757, 0.0], [757, 855, 0.0], [855, 1144, 0.0], [1144, 1264, 0.0], [1264, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1533, 0.0], [1533, 1951, 0.0], [1951, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2094, 0.0], [2094, 2727, 0.0], [2727, 3153, 0.0], [3153, 3778, 0.0], [3778, 4278, 0.0], [4278, 4828, 0.0], [4828, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5260, 0.0], [5260, 5312, 0.0], [5312, 5341, 0.0], [5341, 5370, 0.0], [5370, 5472, 0.0], [5472, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5541, 0.0], [5541, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 35, 5.0], [35, 77, 7.0], [77, 251, 33.0], [251, 449, 31.0], [449, 580, 20.0], [580, 757, 27.0], [757, 855, 12.0], [855, 1144, 41.0], [1144, 1264, 18.0], [1264, 1407, 20.0], [1407, 1533, 21.0], [1533, 1951, 78.0], [1951, 2046, 15.0], [2046, 2094, 6.0], [2094, 2727, 118.0], [2727, 3153, 76.0], [3153, 3778, 105.0], [3778, 4278, 86.0], [4278, 4828, 90.0], [4828, 5225, 67.0], [5225, 5260, 4.0], [5260, 5312, 8.0], [5312, 5341, 4.0], [5341, 5370, 5.0], [5370, 5472, 6.0], [5472, 5511, 6.0], [5511, 5541, 5.0], [5541, 5599, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 77, 0.19444444], [77, 251, 0.0], [251, 449, 0.0], [449, 580, 0.03225806], [580, 757, 0.02339181], [757, 855, 0.0], [855, 1144, 0.0], [1144, 1264, 0.0], [1264, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1533, 0.0], [1533, 1951, 0.0], [1951, 2046, 0.01098901], [2046, 2094, 0.1627907], [2094, 2727, 0.00485437], [2727, 3153, 0.00475059], [3153, 3778, 0.0], [3778, 4278, 0.0], [4278, 4828, 0.00369004], [4828, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5260, 0.0], [5260, 5312, 0.01960784], [5312, 5341, 0.03846154], [5341, 5370, 0.375], [5370, 5472, 0.0952381], [5472, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5541, 0.4], [5541, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 77, 0.0], [77, 251, 0.0], [251, 449, 0.0], [449, 580, 0.0], [580, 757, 0.0], [757, 855, 0.0], [855, 1144, 0.0], [1144, 1264, 0.0], [1264, 1407, 0.0], [1407, 1533, 0.0], [1533, 1951, 0.0], [1951, 2046, 0.0], [2046, 2094, 0.0], [2094, 2727, 0.0], [2727, 3153, 0.0], [3153, 3778, 0.0], [3778, 4278, 0.0], [4278, 4828, 0.0], [4828, 5225, 0.0], [5225, 5260, 0.0], [5260, 5312, 0.0], [5312, 5341, 0.0], [5341, 5370, 0.0], [5370, 5472, 0.0], [5472, 5511, 0.0], [5511, 5541, 0.0], [5541, 5599, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 35, 0.11428571], [35, 77, 0.07142857], [77, 251, 0.02298851], [251, 449, 0.02020202], [449, 580, 0.02290076], [580, 757, 0.01694915], [757, 855, 0.02040816], [855, 1144, 0.01730104], [1144, 1264, 0.03333333], [1264, 1407, 0.11888112], [1407, 1533, 0.02380952], [1533, 1951, 0.01913876], [1951, 2046, 0.07368421], [2046, 2094, 0.27083333], [2094, 2727, 0.02843602], [2727, 3153, 0.01877934], [3153, 3778, 0.0048], [3778, 4278, 0.012], [4278, 4828, 0.02363636], [4828, 5225, 0.01763224], [5225, 5260, 0.11428571], [5260, 5312, 0.09615385], [5312, 5341, 0.06896552], [5341, 5370, 0.03448276], [5370, 5472, 0.00980392], [5472, 5511, 0.15384615], [5511, 5541, 0.03333333], [5541, 5599, 0.25862069]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5599, 0.52658886]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5599, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5599, 0.70590216]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5599, -240.78557865]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5599, 117.0912865]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5599, -340.46179071]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5599, 41.0]]}
Sundays in Bed With…Crown of Midnight Sundays in Bed With… is a meme/feature started by my friend Kate at Midnight Book Girl, where we can highlight the book that we’re spending the day in bed reading (or the one we wish we could be reading all day in bed!). I’m hoping to spend the day in bed with… Crown of Midnight (Throne of Glass #2) by Sarah J. Maas I was trying to read all of the Throne of Glass series this month, but it just didn’t happen. I’m a slow reader and I also don’t have a lot of time to read, especially now that my older kiddo is on summer break. And I always find myself reading high fantasy even slower than I do with other genres, because high fantasy just seems so dense. So I think I’m going to just try to finish Crown of Midnight this month, which means I’ll have read three books in the series this month (The Assassin’s Blade, Throne of Glass–a re-read, and Crown of Midnight–also a re-read) and then I might just wait until September (when Empire of Storms comes out) and read Heir of Fire, Queen of Shadows, and Empire of Storms that month. I really love this series and I’d love to read them all back to back but I think I might need a little break after Crown of Midnight. Plus I have several other things that I’d like to read ASAP. Anyway, I’ve not been feeling well this weekend, which is annoying because I wanted to clean my house, but also nice because I was able to read a lot yesterday and hopefully will be able to read a lot today, as well. What are you spending this Sunday in bed with? Let me know in the comments, or leave a link to your post if you’re participating in this meme and I’ll try to stop by your blog! Sundays in Bed With…Revenge and the Wild Sundays in Bed With… (24) Sundays in Bed With…Rebellion Sundays in Bed With... Kate Midnight Book Girl Sorry you aren't feeling well! I'm a little under the weather today too. I really need to continue with this series since I liked the first book so much, but my July is booked up right now. Haha, booked up, literally.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12744
{"url": "https://theoverstuffedbookcase.com/2016/06/sundays-in-bed-withcrown-of-midnight.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "theoverstuffedbookcase.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:51:49Z", "digest": "sha1:EDX3PN5HUMOURB3PC56UR4FHVC6TGF5M"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2023, 2023.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2023, 5486.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2023, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2023, 87.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2023, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2023, 326.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2023, 0.45093946]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2023, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2023, 0.01766562]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2023, 0.03154574]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2023, 0.04542587]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2023, 0.0214511]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2023, 0.05219207]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2023, 0.15384615]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2023, 0.14822547]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2023, 0.48062016]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2023, 4.09560724]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2023, 0.01670146]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2023, 4.83027957]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2023, 387.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 38, 0.0], [38, 259, 1.0], [259, 300, 0.0], [300, 356, 0.0], [356, 1268, 1.0], [1268, 1485, 1.0], [1485, 1662, 1.0], [1662, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1729, 0.0], [1729, 1759, 0.0], [1759, 1782, 1.0], [1782, 1806, 0.0], [1806, 2023, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 38, 0.0], [38, 259, 0.0], [259, 300, 0.0], [300, 356, 0.0], [356, 1268, 0.0], [1268, 1485, 0.0], [1485, 1662, 0.0], [1662, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1729, 0.0], [1729, 1759, 0.0], [1759, 1782, 0.0], [1782, 1806, 0.0], [1806, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 38, 6.0], [38, 259, 43.0], [259, 300, 9.0], [300, 356, 11.0], [356, 1268, 175.0], [1268, 1485, 42.0], [1485, 1662, 36.0], [1662, 1703, 7.0], [1703, 1729, 5.0], [1729, 1759, 4.0], [1759, 1782, 4.0], [1782, 1806, 4.0], [1806, 2023, 41.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 38, 0.0], [38, 259, 0.0], [259, 300, 0.0], [300, 356, 0.01960784], [356, 1268, 0.0], [1268, 1485, 0.0], [1485, 1662, 0.0], [1662, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1729, 0.08695652], [1729, 1759, 0.0], [1759, 1782, 0.0], [1782, 1806, 0.0], [1806, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 38, 0.0], [38, 259, 0.0], [259, 300, 0.0], [300, 356, 0.0], [356, 1268, 0.0], [1268, 1485, 0.0], [1485, 1662, 0.0], [1662, 1703, 0.0], [1703, 1729, 0.0], [1729, 1759, 0.0], [1759, 1782, 0.0], [1782, 1806, 0.0], [1806, 2023, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 38, 0.13157895], [38, 259, 0.03167421], [259, 300, 0.02439024], [300, 356, 0.125], [356, 1268, 0.04824561], [1268, 1485, 0.01843318], [1485, 1662, 0.02259887], [1662, 1703, 0.12195122], [1703, 1729, 0.11538462], [1729, 1759, 0.13333333], [1759, 1782, 0.13043478], [1782, 1806, 0.16666667], [1806, 2023, 0.02764977]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2023, 0.05569345]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2023, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2023, 0.00383079]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2023, -169.34373835]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2023, -11.87717391]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2023, -314.43432954]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2023, 16.0]]}
The golf queen who became more greedy after marriage… Retired at 30? If you’re good, ‘GO’ Even in the yellow dusty wind blowing from the Red Sea, the new bride’s expression was bright. Lydia Ko (25), a Korean New Zealander who married Jeong Jun (25), the son of Hyundai Card Vice Chairman Chung Tae-young, on December 30 last year, played at the Royal Green Golf Course near Jeddah, Saudi Arabia on the 16th at the European Women’s Golf Tour (LET) Aramco Saudi Ladies. participate in international Lydia Ko went on her honeymoon last month and she had the good fortune of hitting her hole-in-one at Taraiti Golf Course in New Zealand. Lydia Ko has won 19 career victories on the LPGA Tour, starting with her first win in 2012 as an amateur. She won three major championships last year, including the final CME Group Tour Championship on the LPGA Tour. She is currently ranked #1 in the women’s golf world rankings. On the 14th before the tournament, she met Lydia Ko at the Royal Green Golf Course. Q: This is your first competition after getting married, is there anything that has changed? A : “It is very meaningful for me to play my first game as a wife. Even before her marriage, her husband encouraged me regardless of whether I was playing well or not. That was a huge boost. So, she thinks she should work even harder after marriage.” Q: I went through a slump, but after meeting my husband Jung Joon, my grades seem to have improved. A: “I guess so. Her husband is not golfer Lydia Ko, but someone who likes Ko Bo-kyung, an ordinary person. So he feels comfortable and seems to be doing well.” Q: Will the participation plans and schedules change from before marriage? A: “Nothing changes. My husband is busy working, and I have to participate in competitions as well. We decided to respect each other and do our best. We won’t see each other for the next five weeks, but we understand each other in that respect.” Q: Will you continue to live like this? I used to say I would retire at 30. A : “If you are not good at it, you should quit before then, but I don’t think you have to keep your promise to retire at 30. First of all, my short-term goals are to go to the 2024 Olympics and get good results and enter the Hall of Fame. Hall of Fame has 2 points left. I will think more about what happens next.” 온라인카지노 Q: Is it not necessary to participate in this tournament held in the Middle East? A : “I won this competition two years ago. I was supposed to come out last year as the winner, but I couldn’t participate because I caught corona right before the opening. I wanted to keep my promise to come back as a winner. Also, this year, the men’s and women’s prize money has become the same (the prize money for the Saudi International men’s competition held at the same venue is 5 million dollars), so I decided to participate because I thought it was a historic event of gender equality.” Q: How often do you keep in touch with your husband? A : “The time difference is reversed here, so we call in the morning and evening. When I was in Korea, it was not easy to call once a day because of the time difference.” Q: You married into a big family. A : “My parents-in-law make it really comfortable. It’s just like a normal home. During the BMW Championship held in Korea last year, my parents-in-law came and cheered me on, saying, “Play comfortably.” Two weeks ago, I had a sleepover party with my little sister-in-law, mother-in-law and her husband. We watched a movie together and ate spring rolls, pork, and soybean paste stew. I really like this family atmosphere.” Q: Where did you get your newlyweds’ house? A : “Because of work, I live in Orlando, Florida, USA, and my husband lives in San Francisco, California. My husband travels a lot, and I also have to participate in competitions, so I can’t see him often. Even when we were dating before marriage, there were many times when we met at the golf course.” Q: Is the preparation for the competition going well? A : “Last winter, I increased the weight and did weight training. This event will be windy and the rough will be a bit longer, so the players will have a hard time. I’m going to make it a game to have fun and check for the season. It’s the first game of the season, so I’m greedy. I will try to adapt without fighting the wind.” At the end of the interview, Lydia Ko said, “We are the same age, but my husband keeps appearing in the articles as being two years older. Looks like someone wrote it wrong. Please correct it,” she asked. Previous: Geum-min Lee and Ye-eun Park, ‘female soccer aces’ meeting England “I know the style well. I want to win” Next: “I know the opponent well”…Lee Geum-min and Park Ye-eun ahead of the first match against England
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12745
{"url": "https://thereliablenews.xyz/the-golf-queen-who-became-more-greedy-after-marriage-retired-at-30-if-youre-good-go%EF%BF%BC/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thereliablenews.xyz", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:40:10Z", "digest": "sha1:RP5CHHXUBPINVD54GNH2BNIXV6YAVNL4"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4739, 4739.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4739, 5385.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4739, 25.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4739, 41.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4739, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4739, 205.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4739, 0.4014733]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4739, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4739, 0.03009135]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4739, 0.01343364]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4739, 0.01128426]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4739, 0.01209027]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4739, 0.00806018]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4739, 0.04880295]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4739, 0.18508287]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4739, 0.46127168]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4739, 4.30289017]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4739, 0.00276243]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4739, 5.43877959]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4739, 865.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 636, 1.0], [636, 916, 1.0], [916, 1000, 1.0], [1000, 1093, 1.0], [1093, 1344, 1.0], [1344, 1444, 1.0], [1444, 1604, 1.0], [1604, 1679, 1.0], [1679, 1925, 1.0], [1925, 2001, 1.0], [2001, 2324, 0.0], [2324, 2406, 1.0], [2406, 2903, 1.0], [2903, 2956, 1.0], [2956, 3127, 1.0], [3127, 3161, 1.0], [3161, 3584, 1.0], [3584, 3628, 1.0], [3628, 3931, 1.0], [3931, 3985, 1.0], [3985, 4314, 1.0], [4314, 4519, 1.0], [4519, 4636, 0.0], [4636, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 636, 0.0], [636, 916, 0.0], [916, 1000, 0.0], [1000, 1093, 0.0], [1093, 1344, 0.0], [1344, 1444, 0.0], [1444, 1604, 0.0], [1604, 1679, 0.0], [1679, 1925, 0.0], [1925, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2324, 0.0], [2324, 2406, 0.0], [2406, 2903, 0.0], [2903, 2956, 0.0], [2956, 3127, 0.0], [3127, 3161, 0.0], [3161, 3584, 0.0], [3584, 3628, 0.0], [3628, 3931, 0.0], [3931, 3985, 0.0], [3985, 4314, 0.0], [4314, 4519, 0.0], [4519, 4636, 0.0], [4636, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 91, 16.0], [91, 636, 95.0], [636, 916, 50.0], [916, 1000, 16.0], [1000, 1093, 15.0], [1093, 1344, 47.0], [1344, 1444, 19.0], [1444, 1604, 30.0], [1604, 1679, 11.0], [1679, 1925, 45.0], [1925, 2001, 17.0], [2001, 2324, 66.0], [2324, 2406, 15.0], [2406, 2903, 90.0], [2903, 2956, 11.0], [2956, 3127, 34.0], [3127, 3161, 7.0], [3161, 3584, 68.0], [3584, 3628, 8.0], [3628, 3931, 55.0], [3931, 3985, 9.0], [3985, 4314, 66.0], [4314, 4519, 38.0], [4519, 4636, 20.0], [4636, 4739, 17.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 91, 0.02272727], [91, 636, 0.01520913], [636, 916, 0.02564103], [916, 1000, 0.02469136], [1000, 1093, 0.0], [1093, 1344, 0.0], [1344, 1444, 0.0], [1444, 1604, 0.0], [1604, 1679, 0.0], [1679, 1925, 0.0], [1925, 2001, 0.02777778], [2001, 2324, 0.021875], [2324, 2406, 0.0], [2406, 2903, 0.00206612], [2903, 2956, 0.0], [2956, 3127, 0.0], [3127, 3161, 0.0], [3161, 3584, 0.0], [3584, 3628, 0.0], [3628, 3931, 0.0], [3931, 3985, 0.0], [3985, 4314, 0.0], [4314, 4519, 0.0], [4519, 4636, 0.0], [4636, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 636, 0.0], [636, 916, 0.0], [916, 1000, 0.0], [1000, 1093, 0.0], [1093, 1344, 0.0], [1344, 1444, 0.0], [1444, 1604, 0.0], [1604, 1679, 0.0], [1679, 1925, 0.0], [1925, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2324, 0.0], [2324, 2406, 0.0], [2406, 2903, 0.0], [2903, 2956, 0.0], [2956, 3127, 0.0], [3127, 3161, 0.0], [3161, 3584, 0.0], [3584, 3628, 0.0], [3628, 3931, 0.0], [3931, 3985, 0.0], [3985, 4314, 0.0], [4314, 4519, 0.0], [4519, 4636, 0.0], [4636, 4739, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 91, 0.05494505], [91, 636, 0.07522936], [636, 916, 0.07142857], [916, 1000, 0.08333333], [1000, 1093, 0.02150538], [1093, 1344, 0.02390438], [1344, 1444, 0.04], [1444, 1604, 0.05], [1604, 1679, 0.02666667], [1679, 1925, 0.02439024], [1925, 2001, 0.05263158], [2001, 2324, 0.03095975], [2324, 2406, 0.04878049], [2406, 2903, 0.0221328], [2903, 2956, 0.03773585], [2956, 3127, 0.02923977], [3127, 3161, 0.05882353], [3161, 3584, 0.03309693], [3584, 3628, 0.04545455], [3628, 3931, 0.04950495], [3931, 3985, 0.03703704], [3985, 4314, 0.02431611], [4314, 4519, 0.02926829], [4519, 4636, 0.06837607], [4636, 4739, 0.06796117]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4739, 0.33146214]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4739, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4739, 0.49056917]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4739, -248.05202004]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4739, 82.55816317]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4739, -430.57610808]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4739, 58.0]]}
To raise the world ranking… LIV golfer ‘frontier’ to Asia Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Patrick Reed, Bryson DeChambeau… . World-renowned professional golfers, known by name, flocked to the opening game of the Asian Tour. Most of these players are members of the LIV Golf League. Thanks to this, the ‘golf periphery’ Asian Tour, which is incomparable in scale to the US Professional Golf (PGA) Tour or the DP World Tour (formerly the European Tour), is attracting the most attention this week. Round 1 of the PIF Saudi International, the opening game of the 2023 Asian Tour, which ended on the 3rd (Korean time) at the Royal Greens Golf & Country Club (par 70) in King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia. The top of the leaderboard was filled with LIV golf players. On the first day of the tournament, Abraham Anser cut 7 strokes to take the sole lead, and Sebastian Muñoz, who will join the LIV Golf League this year, took the sole second place. In addition, Sergio Garcia and Louis Oosthuizen are aiming for the championship with overwhelming skills, such as tying for third place. There is only one reason why those who not only won major tournaments but also won numerous trophies on the PGA Tour participated in the Asian Tour. It’s just to get world ranking points. In other words, when LIV golfers couldn’t participate in the PGA Tour and it became difficult to obtain world ranking points, the PIF, which had strong financial power, held a large-scale tournament for them. Just looking at the prize money makes your mouth drop open. The total prize money for this tournament is $5 million. The winning prize is also $1 million. Kim Si-hwan, who won the money prize at the Asian Tour last year, earned $627,458 at the time. Even if you win this competition alone, you will earn much more than last year’s prize money winner. 메이저사이트 The world ranking points are also huge. The world ranking points that a general Asian Tour winner receives are only 5 to 7 points. However, the winner of this competition receives a whopping 24.42490 points. Although it is lower than the world ranking points (34.77978 points) received by the winner of the PGA Tour AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am held during the same period, it is 7 points higher than the 17.65 points awarded to the winner of the DP World Tour Ras Al Khaimah Championship. In addition, it is more than twice that of the Korn Ferry Tour (11.14 points), the second part of the PGA Tour. It is an unimaginable winning point for Asian Tour events. This is because the world rankings of LIV golfers who participated in the tournament are still high. The only player in the world top 10 is Cameron Smith, who is ranked 4th, but there are a total of 7 players in the world top 50, including Cameron Young and Joaquin Niemann. If you increase it to the world ranking top 100, 20 people participated. And that’s not all. Cameron Young, a former rookie of the PGA Tour, received permission to participate in the tournament with a large prize money. It is the opening match of the Asian Tour, and the main sponsor of the tournament, PIF, the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, is giving the best opportunity to take many world ranking points to those who are superior to the players of the Asian Tour. On the other hand, players from the Asian Tour are also exerting their strength on the exceptionally large stage. This is because there is an opportunity to win big prizes such as bonuses. On the first day of the tournament, Kim Min-kyu reduced 3 strokes with 5 birdies and 2 bogeys, and tied for 9th place with Patrick Reed, Jason Cocrack (USA) and Richard Bland (England). Previous: LIV Golf Phil Mickelson… Head-to-head on the PGA Tour? “We will smash” Next: KOVO “Supplementation of regulations related to Oh Ji-young’s trade… It is difficult to apply retroactively”
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12746
{"url": "https://thereliablenews.xyz/to-raise-the-world-ranking-liv-golfer-frontier-to-asia%EF%BF%BC/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thereliablenews.xyz", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:54:24Z", "digest": "sha1:IBMKJKSK4XGPWM77OQITJP5JK4Z4JDOT"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 3829, 3829.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3829, 4379.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3829, 10.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3829, 26.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3829, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3829, 167.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3829, 0.33703704]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3829, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3829, 0.030729]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3829, 0.01830664]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3829, 0.01830664]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3829, 0.02451782]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3829, 0.0235371]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3829, 0.01372998]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3829, 0.02962963]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3829, 0.19012346]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3829, 0.44210526]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3829, 4.6]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3829, 0.00493827]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3829, 5.02110425]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3829, 665.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 141, 1.0], [141, 512, 1.0], [512, 1104, 1.0], [1104, 1501, 1.0], [1501, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 3257, 1.0], [3257, 3632, 1.0], [3632, 3714, 0.0], [3714, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 141, 0.0], [141, 512, 0.0], [512, 1104, 0.0], [1104, 1501, 0.0], [1501, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3632, 0.0], [3632, 3714, 0.0], [3714, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 59, 10.0], [59, 141, 10.0], [141, 512, 62.0], [512, 1104, 104.0], [1104, 1501, 68.0], [1501, 1859, 65.0], [1859, 3257, 251.0], [3257, 3632, 66.0], [3632, 3714, 13.0], [3714, 3829, 16.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 141, 0.0], [141, 512, 0.0], [512, 1104, 0.01570681], [1104, 1501, 0.0], [1501, 1859, 0.02285714], [1859, 3257, 0.02645114], [3257, 3632, 0.01104972], [3632, 3714, 0.0], [3714, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 59, 0.0], [59, 141, 0.0], [141, 512, 0.0], [512, 1104, 0.0], [1104, 1501, 0.0], [1501, 1859, 0.0], [1859, 3257, 0.0], [3257, 3632, 0.0], [3632, 3714, 0.0], [3714, 3829, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 59, 0.08474576], [59, 141, 0.13414634], [141, 512, 0.07008086], [512, 1104, 0.06587838], [1104, 1501, 0.04785894], [1501, 1859, 0.02234637], [1859, 3257, 0.04577969], [3257, 3632, 0.04533333], [3632, 3714, 0.15853659], [3714, 3829, 0.07826087]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3829, 0.71578866]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3829, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3829, 0.73016763]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3829, -205.28347803]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3829, 72.9930624]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3829, 19.14551681]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3829, 37.0]]}
Going to San Francisco for the First Time? Here’s What Not to Miss! If you’re like me, going to San Francisco for the first time is going to result in love at first sight. While it takes me a little while to find the charms of some cities, I knew the minute I stepped off the BART at Embaracadero in 2012 that I was going to be smitten with SF for the rest of my life. I keep joking with my family that if I truly settled down in the U.S., it would have to be in San Francisco. I’ve since been able to visit the city once more with Elissa and her family. While I’m hoping to stay a bit longer on a future third trip and really explore, I thought I’d put together a fun little list of things to do in San Francisco if you’re a first time visitor. Located in Northern California’s Bay Area, San Francisco is the West Coast’s answer to the East Coast’s NYC (arguably more than LA). It’s a city for dreamers and creatives both in the traditional and modern sense, which is probably why it has such a liberal reputation. I can’t pinpoint why I fell in love with San Francisco, but I did. Who knows? Maybe the astronomical rent prices and steep hills will make me ambivalent someday, but for now, it’s still one of my favorite places in the world. Tips on Visiting San Francisco You’re probably going to want to rent a car at one point. While the main area around the bay is easily walkable, there are a lot of other places that you need a car for. If you have a car, you should be pretty okay staying in the surrounding area (and it might be cheaper). Be comfortable! There are a lot of hills in San Francisco, so wear comfortable shoes. It’s also a lot cooler in the summer than you’d think it is. The first time I went in July, I had to borrow my friend’s sweatshirt. Here are some simple pieces that would work well: Also if you’re coming from abroad, San Francisco is where Everlane’s headquarters are, so you can head to their shop and see everything in person. It’s only closed on Mondays, address: 2170 Folsom St, Ground Floor, San Francisco, CA 94110. It’s also great if you’ve forgotten a basic clothing item and need to replace it quickly since Everlane is both ethical and high quality. Just be smart. San Francisco is a major city, so of course, you’ll want to be as cautious as you are in any of the big cities around the world. I felt okay taking the BART at night when I met up with a friend, but it also wasn’t the safest I’ve ever felt on public transportation. As always, if you’re not from the U.S., make sure you get travel insurance. Look at your local companies, but if anything check out World Nomads to get a quote. They’ll help you cover everything from lost tech to hospital visits. Going to San Francisco for the First Time?: 10 Things Not to Miss 1. The Golden Gate Bridge Of all the bridges in the world, this one is my favorite. Back when I was trying to be more history-ish with my blogging, I wrote about its poetic background. There’s just something about the design and color… I really don’t think I’ve seen a bad picture of it! I’d highly recommend walking across or even halfway across to get the full experience. When I visited, we parked closer to Fisherman’s Wharf and took a bus when we were around Ghiradelli Square. Here’s a direction guide from their site. 2. Angel Island When I was growing up, I really didn’t think much about the Asian-American experience. In fact, the only time I ever heard of Angel Island was in an English vocabulary book in ninth grade! You know how you get 10 new words to learn, and then one of the activities is a paragraph that’s always about something random like history or current events? That’s how I first heard of Angel Island. For 30 years, from 1910-1940, nearly 1 million Asian immigrants passed through Angel Island. Unfortunately, due to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 (yep, that was really a thing!), immigrants could sometimes be on the island for years waiting. On my next visit, I’d really like to take the time to visit. I’ve always felt like it’s something I should experience on my own. While the impression I got from Ellis Island has always been hopeful, the impression I get from studying Angel Island always seems much sadder, so I’d like to see for myself. 3. Grab dinner in Chinatown. SF’s Chinatown here is the largest outside of Asia and the oldest on the continent. Head here for some authentic cuisine and feel like you’ve been transported to the bustling streets of Beijing or Hong Kong. Elissa, who had just gone to Hong Kong earlier that year, said the Chinatown there felt just like downtown HK. 4. Overdose on chocolate at Ghiradelli Square. This one is for all the chocolate lovers! Within Fisherman’s Wharf, Ghiradelli started out as a chocolate factory. Once the chocolate manufacturing was sold in the 1960s, the Square became home to a mix of restaurants and stores. When I visited the first time, we actually went to the Ghirardelli Chocolate store and split their massive sundae between the four of us. Lola of North Beach also has some cute souvenir options if you want something more than generic photo postcards. ** Side note: Another fun place for a sweet treat is Mr. Holmes’ Bakehouse (home to the famous “I Got Baked” wall). I went to the one in Seoul, and the baked goods are delicious. Plus, yes, that wall is fun to take a photo of! 5. Eat clam chowder at the Boudin Restaurant. By far a must eat in San Francisco is its clam chowder bread bowls. And Boudin is perhaps the most iconic place to eat them. While you can eat upstairs at the restaurant, which I did on my second visit, you can also get them down below. It’s a little more casual and budget-friendly too. Either way, you’ll be full for days afterward! 6. Go on a Napa Valley wine tour. One of the things we did on my second visit was driving out to Napa Valley for the day. If you’ve been reading TSGA, then you know I don’t drink alcohol but I really enjoy learning about wine and visiting wineries. No joke when I was visiting my friend, Allison, in Wyoming we sat there and watched a wine documentary on Netflix. The U.S. is one of the New World wine manufacturers, and Napa Valley is the heart of it all. We went to Artesia Winery, which has some gorgeous architecture and views to go with your wine. I wound up bringing back a bottle for my mom. 7. Take a ferry to Alcatraz. An island in San Francisco Bay, Alcatraz was a federal prison for almost 30 years in the mid-1900s. In its time as a prison, only one known escape occurred in 1962. In fact, if you’re like me, this is probably why you’ve only vaguely heard of Alcatraz before now– the famous Clint Eastwood movie, Escape from Alcatraz. The first time we tried to go, we couldn’t just get tickets at the pier, so I’ve only seen it from afar. Viator has a bunch of different options, and I’d definitely book ahead if this is high on your list. 8. Wind down along Lombard Street. Deemed “the Crookedest Street in the World,” I remember seeing it on “Mythbusters.” The winding street was designed to actually make the hill safer to drive and walk along. I personally would recommend walking down instead of driving as you’ll be able to enjoy the house fronts more and not worry about getting your car safely through all the twists and turns. 9. Have a little picnic by the Painted Ladies in Alamo Square. I still can’t believe I went to San Francisco TWICE and never once thought of the Painted Ladies! I used to know the “Full House” intro by heart! They’re these beautiful Victorian and Edwardian style homes that are painted in different colors. While you can see versions of them around the country, the most popular ones are right in Alamo Square in SF. 10. Drive out to Monterrey Bay. While in San Francisco, definitely take a day trip out of the city and down to Monterey Bay. If you obsessed over “Big Little Lies” like I did this last summer, then you know the name because it’s the setting of the HBO TV show (the book takes place in Australia). It’s absolutely gorgeous out there. Pay and head into the Monterrey Bay Aquarium. I don’t normally visit aquariums when I travel, but this is a worth every penny. Even if you only go for the sea otters, you’ll absolutely love it! BONUS TIP: Just walk along the bay. Honestly, the best way to enjoy San Francisco is to just walk around! You can walk along the pier or go down to the waterfront. You can get beautiful views of the Golden Gate Bridge, Ghiradelli Square, Alcatraz, and more. I feel like each time I went, we spent a good portion of our day just enjoying being outside and taking it all in. And there you go! Some tips and things to do if you’re going to San Francisco for the first time. Am I missing anything? What would you add to the list? for more travel in the usa The USA is a massive country, and I always love discovering new places to visit. I’m actually pretty sure I’ll still be hearing of new gems when I’m 90 years old and need a wheelchair to get around! Since I’ve been interested in travel, I’ve visited a number of different places in the US alone. Check out some of posts: Dreamiest Castles in the US Cool Things to Do in Cleveland, OH Fun Things to Do in Atlanta, GA Pennsylvania Bucket List Unique Things to Do in Portland, ME New York Travel Where to Stay in NYC A Guide to Owego, NY Hiking Watkins Glen Christmas in NYC Niagara Falls in the Winter California Travel Fun Things to Do in Truckee, CA Unique Things to Do in Santa Barbara How to Plan the Perfect Santa Barbara Weekend A Local Guide to Los Angeles A Los Angeles Itinerary Guide for First Timers California Coast Road Trip: The Ultimate 2-Week Itinerary One Day at Disney World Universal Orlando in a Day Fun Spot America: Florida’s Best Kept Secret Things to Do in Kissimmee Besides the Parks Where to Stay in the Florida Keys An Easy Florida Keys Itinerary Fun Things to Do in Key West New Orleans Trip Where to Eat in New Orleans How to Spend 4 Days in NOLA Historical Things to Do in the French Quarter #Korea Week 22 – First Week of School! #Korea Week 23 + 24 – Happy Fall! Théo says: I now live in SF and I can say your recommendations are great Great blog, thank you Thanks! Can’t wait to visit SF again, just gotta figure out how.
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12747
{"url": "https://thereshegoesagain.org/going-to-san-francisco-for-the-first-time/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thereshegoesagain.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:35:56Z", "digest": "sha1:XCJSIIAWGCUHVBZC6XYTJEDA7JP2OPCW"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 10232, 10232.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 10232, 14502.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 10232, 80.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 10232, 342.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 10232, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 10232, 308.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 10232, 0.43126921]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 10232, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 10232, 0.03470421]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 10232, 0.01679634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 10232, 0.01679634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 10232, 0.01679634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 10232, 0.02667655]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 10232, 0.01235025]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 10232, 0.01333827]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 10232, 0.04347826]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 10232, 0.14756258]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 10232, 0.37447257]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 10232, 4.27056962]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 10232, 0.00131752]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 10232, 5.76264755]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 10232, 1896.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 68, 1.0], [68, 478, 1.0], [478, 746, 1.0], [746, 1016, 1.0], [1016, 1242, 1.0], [1242, 1273, 0.0], [1273, 1443, 1.0], [1443, 1547, 1.0], [1547, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 2055, 1.0], [2055, 2193, 1.0], [2193, 2704, 1.0], [2704, 2770, 0.0], [2770, 2796, 0.0], [2796, 3295, 1.0], [3295, 3311, 0.0], [3311, 3701, 1.0], [3701, 3946, 1.0], [3946, 4250, 1.0], [4250, 4279, 1.0], [4279, 4598, 1.0], [4598, 4645, 1.0], [4645, 5126, 1.0], [5126, 5353, 1.0], [5353, 5399, 1.0], [5399, 5734, 1.0], [5734, 5768, 1.0], [5768, 6098, 1.0], [6098, 6333, 1.0], [6333, 6362, 1.0], [6362, 6681, 1.0], [6681, 6887, 1.0], [6887, 6922, 1.0], [6922, 7283, 1.0], [7283, 7346, 1.0], [7346, 7492, 1.0], [7492, 7700, 1.0], [7700, 7732, 1.0], [7732, 8033, 1.0], [8033, 8227, 1.0], [8227, 8263, 1.0], [8263, 8600, 1.0], [8600, 8753, 1.0], [8753, 8780, 0.0], [8780, 9101, 0.0], [9101, 9129, 0.0], [9129, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9196, 0.0], [9196, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9257, 0.0], [9257, 9273, 0.0], [9273, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9315, 0.0], [9315, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9352, 0.0], [9352, 9380, 0.0], [9380, 9398, 0.0], [9398, 9430, 0.0], [9430, 9467, 0.0], [9467, 9513, 0.0], [9513, 9542, 0.0], [9542, 9589, 0.0], [9589, 9647, 0.0], [9647, 9671, 0.0], [9671, 9698, 0.0], [9698, 9743, 0.0], [9743, 9787, 0.0], [9787, 9821, 0.0], [9821, 9852, 0.0], [9852, 9881, 0.0], [9881, 9898, 0.0], [9898, 9926, 0.0], [9926, 9954, 0.0], [9954, 10000, 0.0], [10000, 10039, 1.0], [10039, 10073, 1.0], [10073, 10084, 0.0], [10084, 10146, 0.0], [10146, 10168, 0.0], [10168, 10232, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 478, 0.0], [478, 746, 0.0], [746, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1242, 0.0], [1242, 1273, 0.0], [1273, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1547, 0.0], [1547, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 2055, 0.0], [2055, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2770, 0.0], [2770, 2796, 0.0], [2796, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3311, 0.0], [3311, 3701, 0.0], [3701, 3946, 0.0], [3946, 4250, 0.0], [4250, 4279, 0.0], [4279, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4645, 0.0], [4645, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5353, 0.0], [5353, 5399, 0.0], [5399, 5734, 0.0], [5734, 5768, 0.0], [5768, 6098, 0.0], [6098, 6333, 0.0], [6333, 6362, 0.0], [6362, 6681, 0.0], [6681, 6887, 0.0], [6887, 6922, 0.0], [6922, 7283, 0.0], [7283, 7346, 0.0], [7346, 7492, 0.0], [7492, 7700, 0.0], [7700, 7732, 0.0], [7732, 8033, 0.0], [8033, 8227, 0.0], [8227, 8263, 0.0], [8263, 8600, 0.0], [8600, 8753, 0.0], [8753, 8780, 0.0], [8780, 9101, 0.0], [9101, 9129, 0.0], [9129, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9196, 0.0], [9196, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9257, 0.0], [9257, 9273, 0.0], [9273, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9315, 0.0], [9315, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9352, 0.0], [9352, 9380, 0.0], [9380, 9398, 0.0], [9398, 9430, 0.0], [9430, 9467, 0.0], [9467, 9513, 0.0], [9513, 9542, 0.0], [9542, 9589, 0.0], [9589, 9647, 0.0], [9647, 9671, 0.0], [9671, 9698, 0.0], [9698, 9743, 0.0], [9743, 9787, 0.0], [9787, 9821, 0.0], [9821, 9852, 0.0], [9852, 9881, 0.0], [9881, 9898, 0.0], [9898, 9926, 0.0], [9926, 9954, 0.0], [9954, 10000, 0.0], [10000, 10039, 0.0], [10039, 10073, 0.0], [10073, 10084, 0.0], [10084, 10146, 0.0], [10146, 10168, 0.0], [10168, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 68, 13.0], [68, 478, 86.0], [478, 746, 53.0], [746, 1016, 46.0], [1016, 1242, 42.0], [1242, 1273, 5.0], [1273, 1443, 35.0], [1443, 1547, 20.0], [1547, 1815, 51.0], [1815, 2055, 40.0], [2055, 2193, 24.0], [2193, 2704, 98.0], [2704, 2770, 13.0], [2770, 2796, 5.0], [2796, 3295, 89.0], [3295, 3311, 3.0], [3311, 3701, 71.0], [3701, 3946, 39.0], [3946, 4250, 56.0], [4250, 4279, 5.0], [4279, 4598, 56.0], [4598, 4645, 7.0], [4645, 5126, 81.0], [5126, 5353, 45.0], [5353, 5399, 8.0], [5399, 5734, 63.0], [5734, 5768, 8.0], [5768, 6098, 62.0], [6098, 6333, 46.0], [6333, 6362, 6.0], [6362, 6681, 57.0], [6681, 6887, 41.0], [6887, 6922, 6.0], [6922, 7283, 62.0], [7283, 7346, 12.0], [7346, 7492, 28.0], [7492, 7700, 35.0], [7700, 7732, 6.0], [7732, 8033, 56.0], [8033, 8227, 36.0], [8227, 8263, 7.0], [8263, 8600, 64.0], [8600, 8753, 31.0], [8753, 8780, 6.0], [8780, 9101, 60.0], [9101, 9129, 5.0], [9129, 9164, 7.0], [9164, 9196, 7.0], [9196, 9221, 3.0], [9221, 9257, 7.0], [9257, 9273, 3.0], [9273, 9294, 5.0], [9294, 9315, 5.0], [9315, 9335, 3.0], [9335, 9352, 3.0], [9352, 9380, 5.0], [9380, 9398, 2.0], [9398, 9430, 7.0], [9430, 9467, 7.0], [9467, 9513, 8.0], [9513, 9542, 6.0], [9542, 9589, 8.0], [9589, 9647, 8.0], [9647, 9671, 5.0], [9671, 9698, 5.0], [9698, 9743, 7.0], [9743, 9787, 8.0], [9787, 9821, 7.0], [9821, 9852, 5.0], [9852, 9881, 7.0], [9881, 9898, 3.0], [9898, 9926, 6.0], [9926, 9954, 7.0], [9954, 10000, 8.0], [10000, 10039, 8.0], [10039, 10073, 7.0], [10073, 10084, 2.0], [10084, 10146, 13.0], [10146, 10168, 4.0], [10168, 10232, 12.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 478, 0.00997506], [478, 746, 0.0], [746, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1242, 0.0], [1242, 1273, 0.0], [1273, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1547, 0.0], [1547, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 2055, 0.03913043], [2055, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2770, 0.03174603], [2770, 2796, 0.04166667], [2796, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3311, 0.07142857], [3311, 3701, 0.00524934], [3701, 3946, 0.06437768], [3946, 4250, 0.0], [4250, 4279, 0.03846154], [4279, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4645, 0.02272727], [4645, 5126, 0.00847458], [5126, 5353, 0.0], [5353, 5399, 0.02325581], [5399, 5734, 0.0], [5734, 5768, 0.03225806], [5768, 6098, 0.0], [6098, 6333, 0.0], [6333, 6362, 0.03846154], [6362, 6681, 0.03236246], [6681, 6887, 0.0], [6887, 6922, 0.03125], [6922, 7283, 0.0], [7283, 7346, 0.01666667], [7346, 7492, 0.0], [7492, 7700, 0.0], [7700, 7732, 0.06896552], [7732, 8033, 0.0], [8033, 8227, 0.0], [8227, 8263, 0.0], [8263, 8600, 0.0], [8600, 8753, 0.0], [8753, 8780, 0.0], [8780, 9101, 0.00636943], [9101, 9129, 0.0], [9129, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9196, 0.0], [9196, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9257, 0.0], [9257, 9273, 0.0], [9273, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9315, 0.0], [9315, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9352, 0.0], [9352, 9380, 0.0], [9380, 9398, 0.0], [9398, 9430, 0.0], [9430, 9467, 0.0], [9467, 9513, 0.0], [9513, 9542, 0.0], [9542, 9589, 0.0], [9589, 9647, 0.01818182], [9647, 9671, 0.0], [9671, 9698, 0.0], [9698, 9743, 0.0], [9743, 9787, 0.0], [9787, 9821, 0.0], [9821, 9852, 0.0], [9852, 9881, 0.0], [9881, 9898, 0.0], [9898, 9926, 0.0], [9926, 9954, 0.03703704], [9954, 10000, 0.0], [10000, 10039, 0.05555556], [10039, 10073, 0.13793103], [10073, 10084, 0.0], [10084, 10146, 0.0], [10146, 10168, 0.0], [10168, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 478, 0.0], [478, 746, 0.0], [746, 1016, 0.0], [1016, 1242, 0.0], [1242, 1273, 0.0], [1273, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1547, 0.0], [1547, 1815, 0.0], [1815, 2055, 0.0], [2055, 2193, 0.0], [2193, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2770, 0.0], [2770, 2796, 0.0], [2796, 3295, 0.0], [3295, 3311, 0.0], [3311, 3701, 0.0], [3701, 3946, 0.0], [3946, 4250, 0.0], [4250, 4279, 0.0], [4279, 4598, 0.0], [4598, 4645, 0.0], [4645, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5353, 0.0], [5353, 5399, 0.0], [5399, 5734, 0.0], [5734, 5768, 0.0], [5768, 6098, 0.0], [6098, 6333, 0.0], [6333, 6362, 0.0], [6362, 6681, 0.0], [6681, 6887, 0.0], [6887, 6922, 0.0], [6922, 7283, 0.0], [7283, 7346, 0.0], [7346, 7492, 0.0], [7492, 7700, 0.0], [7700, 7732, 0.0], [7732, 8033, 0.0], [8033, 8227, 0.0], [8227, 8263, 0.0], [8263, 8600, 0.0], [8600, 8753, 0.0], [8753, 8780, 0.0], [8780, 9101, 0.0], [9101, 9129, 0.0], [9129, 9164, 0.0], [9164, 9196, 0.0], [9196, 9221, 0.0], [9221, 9257, 0.0], [9257, 9273, 0.0], [9273, 9294, 0.0], [9294, 9315, 0.0], [9315, 9335, 0.0], [9335, 9352, 0.0], [9352, 9380, 0.0], [9380, 9398, 0.0], [9398, 9430, 0.0], [9430, 9467, 0.0], [9467, 9513, 0.0], [9513, 9542, 0.0], [9542, 9589, 0.0], [9589, 9647, 0.0], [9647, 9671, 0.0], [9671, 9698, 0.0], [9698, 9743, 0.0], [9743, 9787, 0.0], [9787, 9821, 0.0], [9821, 9852, 0.0], [9852, 9881, 0.0], [9881, 9898, 0.0], [9898, 9926, 0.0], [9926, 9954, 0.0], [9954, 10000, 0.0], [10000, 10039, 0.0], [10039, 10073, 0.0], [10073, 10084, 0.0], [10084, 10146, 0.0], [10146, 10168, 0.0], [10168, 10232, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.13235294], [68, 478, 0.04878049], [478, 746, 0.02985075], [746, 1016, 0.06296296], [1016, 1242, 0.03097345], [1242, 1273, 0.12903226], [1273, 1443, 0.01176471], [1443, 1547, 0.00961538], [1547, 1815, 0.03731343], [1815, 2055, 0.05833333], [2055, 2193, 0.01449275], [2193, 2704, 0.0332681], [2704, 2770, 0.12121212], [2770, 2796, 0.15384615], [2796, 3295, 0.03006012], [3295, 3311, 0.125], [3311, 3701, 0.03846154], [3701, 3946, 0.03265306], [3946, 4250, 0.03947368], [4250, 4279, 0.06896552], [4279, 4598, 0.04388715], [4598, 4645, 0.06382979], [4645, 5126, 0.02910603], [5126, 5353, 0.04845815], [5353, 5399, 0.06521739], [5399, 5734, 0.02686567], [5734, 5768, 0.08823529], [5768, 6098, 0.04545455], [6098, 6333, 0.04680851], [6333, 6362, 0.06896552], [6362, 6681, 0.03761755], [6681, 6887, 0.01941748], [6887, 6922, 0.08571429], [6922, 7283, 0.02216066], [7283, 7346, 0.07936508], [7346, 7492, 0.09589041], [7492, 7700, 0.03846154], [7700, 7732, 0.09375], [7732, 8033, 0.05647841], [8033, 8227, 0.03608247], [8227, 8263, 0.25], [8263, 8600, 0.03857567], [8600, 8753, 0.04575163], [8753, 8780, 0.0], [8780, 9101, 0.04361371], [9101, 9129, 0.14285714], [9129, 9164, 0.17142857], [9164, 9196, 0.1875], [9196, 9221, 0.12], [9221, 9257, 0.16666667], [9257, 9273, 0.1875], [9273, 9294, 0.23809524], [9294, 9315, 0.23809524], [9315, 9335, 0.15], [9335, 9352, 0.23529412], [9352, 9380, 0.10714286], [9380, 9398, 0.11111111], [9398, 9430, 0.1875], [9430, 9467, 0.13513514], [9467, 9513, 0.13043478], [9513, 9542, 0.17241379], [9542, 9589, 0.14893617], [9589, 9647, 0.13793103], [9647, 9671, 0.16666667], [9671, 9698, 0.11111111], [9698, 9743, 0.15555556], [9743, 9787, 0.11363636], [9787, 9821, 0.11764706], [9821, 9852, 0.16129032], [9852, 9881, 0.17241379], [9881, 9898, 0.17647059], [9898, 9926, 0.14285714], [9926, 9954, 0.25], [9954, 10000, 0.10869565], [10000, 10039, 0.12820513], [10039, 10073, 0.11764706], [10073, 10084, 0.09090909], [10084, 10146, 0.06451613], [10146, 10168, 0.04545455], [10168, 10232, 0.0625]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 10232, 0.18901467]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 10232, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 10232, 0.15229088]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 10232, -661.72397283]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 10232, 99.00858733]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 10232, -1069.97944089]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 10232, 126.0]]}
Sportsbook Bonuses Gambling What You Should Know About Online Casinos Gambling The Basics of Online Gambling Gambling Pragmatic Play Online Slots Gambling How to Play Straight Flush and Four of a Kind in Poker Gambling A Beginner’s Guide to Badugi Poker Besides standard forms of poker, you may also find many variants of the game online. For instance, Badugi poker is a variation of pineapple poker. But what makes pineapple poker so special? Here are some tips. Trying to learn how to play pineapple poker? Here are some tips to master the game. And if you are a beginner, you should know that you can play this card game online without spending a single penny. Read on! Game of As-Nas The Game of As-Nas is an ancient Persian card game, based on betting. The rules are similar to those in modern poker, except for the fact that the as-nas deck contains only four or five cards of each suit, as opposed to the seven or eight that are used in modern poker. During play, each player receives five cards and uses them to form combinations. Combinations are ranked, much like in modern poker, by hand, but there is no straights or flushes. Players would go around the table in a circle, raising their stakes when the other players were equal. The Game of As-Nas is believed to have originated in the Middle East, although the earliest specimens date back to the seventeenth century. Because of the scarcity of As-Nas cards, it is difficult to pinpoint the game’s original origin. However, some historians believe that the game may have originated in ancient China or among traveling merchants. And there are some experts who believe it was As-Nas, a Persian card game. Game of Texas hold ’em In the Game of Texas hold ’em poker, players are dealt two cards and exercise their betting options. Five cards are then dealt out to everyone on the table in three stages. The first stage reveals three cards, known as the flop. The second stage reveals one more card. Finally, the final stage of betting reveals the last card. The highest-ranking hand wins the pot. Listed below are some of the most important poker hands. While Texas hold ’em is a very challenging game, it can be played by players with varying bankrolls. Its variety of betting options enables players with varying amounts of money to play for a small stake or a large one. The game can also be played at different levels. Beginners should start with the basic rules, as these are the most straightforward and accessible. These rules are essential for understanding the game’s gameplay and strategy. Game of Badugi Badugi is a draw poker variant that uses blinds and triple draws. Its hands are similar to lowball, and it uses blinds. The rules are similar to those of other draw poker games. If you are new to the game, here are some basics to know. Despite its similarities to other popular poker games, Badugi is still an exciting and challenging game. However, if you are a beginner, it may take some time to learn the rules. In Badugi, the object is to hold the lowest hand at the end of the round. Every Badugi beats every three-card, two-card, and one-card hand. Players compare the hand strength of their hands, starting with the highest card. If two or more players have hands of equal strength, the pot is split. Different coloured cards have the same value. This means that players with identical-value hands are eliminated. Game of pineapple poker In the game of pineapple poker, the dealer deals each player 3 cards. The winner is the player who has the highest five-card poker hand from his or her hole cards and three or four community cards. If two players have equal hands, they split the pot. The next round is known as the showdown. Once all players have been dealt 3 cards, they must show their cards. In the game of pineapple poker, the dealer is called the button. There are several variations of Pineapple poker, but the basic rules are the same in all variants. This fast-paced, high-stakes game has the same basic rules as the standard version of open-face Chinese poker. The dealer is the player who has the best hand. A high pair, straight, or flush combination are the most powerful hands in this game. Aces are not as strong, so you may want to try your luck with a higher-valued hand. Previous Post: Lottery Games – How Bonus Lottos Can Increase Your Chances of Winning Next Post: Things You Should Know About Sportsbooks Types of Poker Games Gambling How to Play Online Lottery Gambling Basic Rules of Poker Gambling Having an Excellent Casino Experience Online Gambling How to Find the Best Online Poker Sites Gambling How to Play Casino Online Gambling Connecticut Online Poker Gambling Strategies to Increase Your Odds of Winning the Lottery Gambling Online Gambling in the US Gambling Choosing the Right Online Poker Site Gambling Choosing a Casino Online Gambling How to Play Casino Online Games in Michigan Gambling
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12748
{"url": "https://theroyaloakw1.com/a-beginners-guide-to-badugi-poker/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "theroyaloakw1.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:32:34Z", "digest": "sha1:7QZCNDVKNYEFMZHVL2CBZNIIUYNEYNEC"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 4912, 4912.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4912, 5895.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4912, 33.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4912, 84.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4912, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4912, 290.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4912, 0.38461538]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4912, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4912, 0.08050633]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4912, 0.05468354]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4912, 0.01721519]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4912, 0.01721519]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4912, 0.01772152]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4912, 0.0164557]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4912, 0.01721519]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4912, 0.00303644]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4912, 0.1194332]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4912, 0.36416862]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4912, 4.62529274]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4912, 5.04335574]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4912, 854.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 79, 0.0], [79, 118, 0.0], [118, 155, 0.0], [155, 219, 0.0], [219, 254, 0.0], [254, 673, 1.0], [673, 688, 0.0], [688, 1241, 1.0], [1241, 1667, 1.0], [1667, 1690, 0.0], [1690, 2114, 1.0], [2114, 2560, 1.0], [2560, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2990, 1.0], [2990, 3396, 1.0], [3396, 3420, 0.0], [3420, 3847, 1.0], [3847, 4275, 1.0], [4275, 4360, 0.0], [4360, 4412, 0.0], [4412, 4442, 0.0], [4442, 4478, 0.0], [4478, 4508, 0.0], [4508, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4611, 0.0], [4611, 4646, 0.0], [4646, 4680, 0.0], [4680, 4745, 0.0], [4745, 4780, 0.0], [4780, 4826, 0.0], [4826, 4860, 0.0], [4860, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 79, 0.0], [79, 118, 0.0], [118, 155, 0.0], [155, 219, 0.0], [219, 254, 0.0], [254, 673, 0.0], [673, 688, 0.0], [688, 1241, 0.0], [1241, 1667, 0.0], [1667, 1690, 0.0], [1690, 2114, 0.0], [2114, 2560, 0.0], [2560, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2990, 0.0], [2990, 3396, 0.0], [3396, 3420, 0.0], [3420, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4275, 0.0], [4275, 4360, 0.0], [4360, 4412, 0.0], [4412, 4442, 0.0], [4442, 4478, 0.0], [4478, 4508, 0.0], [4508, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4611, 0.0], [4611, 4646, 0.0], [4646, 4680, 0.0], [4680, 4745, 0.0], [4745, 4780, 0.0], [4780, 4826, 0.0], [4826, 4860, 0.0], [4860, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 28, 3.0], [28, 79, 8.0], [79, 118, 6.0], [118, 155, 5.0], [155, 219, 13.0], [219, 254, 6.0], [254, 673, 76.0], [673, 688, 3.0], [688, 1241, 100.0], [1241, 1667, 70.0], [1667, 1690, 5.0], [1690, 2114, 75.0], [2114, 2560, 75.0], [2560, 2575, 3.0], [2575, 2990, 77.0], [2990, 3396, 68.0], [3396, 3420, 4.0], [3420, 3847, 80.0], [3847, 4275, 76.0], [4275, 4360, 14.0], [4360, 4412, 8.0], [4412, 4442, 5.0], [4442, 4478, 6.0], [4478, 4508, 5.0], [4508, 4562, 7.0], [4562, 4611, 9.0], [4611, 4646, 6.0], [4646, 4680, 4.0], [4680, 4745, 10.0], [4745, 4780, 6.0], [4780, 4826, 7.0], [4826, 4860, 5.0], [4860, 4912, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 79, 0.0], [79, 118, 0.0], [118, 155, 0.0], [155, 219, 0.0], [219, 254, 0.0], [254, 673, 0.0], [673, 688, 0.0], [688, 1241, 0.0], [1241, 1667, 0.0], [1667, 1690, 0.0], [1690, 2114, 0.0], [2114, 2560, 0.0], [2560, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2990, 0.0], [2990, 3396, 0.0], [3396, 3420, 0.0], [3420, 3847, 0.00481928], [3847, 4275, 0.0], [4275, 4360, 0.0], [4360, 4412, 0.0], [4412, 4442, 0.0], [4442, 4478, 0.0], [4478, 4508, 0.0], [4508, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4611, 0.0], [4611, 4646, 0.0], [4646, 4680, 0.0], [4680, 4745, 0.0], [4745, 4780, 0.0], [4780, 4826, 0.0], [4826, 4860, 0.0], [4860, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 79, 0.0], [79, 118, 0.0], [118, 155, 0.0], [155, 219, 0.0], [219, 254, 0.0], [254, 673, 0.0], [673, 688, 0.0], [688, 1241, 0.0], [1241, 1667, 0.0], [1667, 1690, 0.0], [1690, 2114, 0.0], [2114, 2560, 0.0], [2560, 2575, 0.0], [2575, 2990, 0.0], [2990, 3396, 0.0], [3396, 3420, 0.0], [3420, 3847, 0.0], [3847, 4275, 0.0], [4275, 4360, 0.0], [4360, 4412, 0.0], [4412, 4442, 0.0], [4442, 4478, 0.0], [4478, 4508, 0.0], [4508, 4562, 0.0], [4562, 4611, 0.0], [4611, 4646, 0.0], [4646, 4680, 0.0], [4680, 4745, 0.0], [4745, 4780, 0.0], [4780, 4826, 0.0], [4826, 4860, 0.0], [4860, 4912, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.10714286], [28, 79, 0.15686275], [79, 118, 0.12820513], [118, 155, 0.13513514], [155, 219, 0.125], [219, 254, 0.14285714], [254, 673, 0.02147971], [673, 688, 0.2], [688, 1241, 0.01627486], [1241, 1667, 0.03521127], [1667, 1690, 0.08695652], [1690, 2114, 0.02122642], [2114, 2560, 0.01345291], [2560, 2575, 0.13333333], [2575, 2990, 0.01686747], [2990, 3396, 0.01970443], [3396, 3420, 0.04166667], [3420, 3847, 0.01405152], [3847, 4275, 0.01635514], [4275, 4360, 0.14117647], [4360, 4412, 0.15384615], [4412, 4442, 0.13333333], [4442, 4478, 0.13888889], [4478, 4508, 0.13333333], [4508, 4562, 0.11111111], [4562, 4611, 0.14285714], [4611, 4646, 0.14285714], [4646, 4680, 0.11764706], [4680, 4745, 0.10769231], [4745, 4780, 0.14285714], [4780, 4826, 0.13043478], [4826, 4860, 0.11764706], [4860, 4912, 0.13461538]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4912, 0.36470962]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4912, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4912, 0.34343648]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4912, -205.19275533]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4912, 38.33056867]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4912, -89.77882197]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4912, 53.0]]}
reese witherspoon net worth 2019 forbes American Actress Reese Witherspoon Net Worth – A Complete Analysis December 13, 2021 January 8, 2021 by Mike The American actress, producer, and entrepreneur Reese Witherspoon Net Worth is $200 million. Reese Witherspoon is one of the world’s most-popular and …
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12749
{"url": "https://theshoppingpack.com/tag/reese-witherspoon-net-worth-2019-forbes/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "theshoppingpack.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:44:05Z", "digest": "sha1:O3DWLWL7NJB7KYCS2MZLQNFBAPFY6EHG"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 301, 301.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 301, 953.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 301, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 301, 32.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 301, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 301, 206.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 301, 0.1754386]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 301, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 301, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 301, 0.25806452]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 301, 0.22983871]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 301, 0.29032258]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 301, 0.01754386]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 301, 0.25]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 301, 0.28070175]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 301, 0.65957447]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 301, 5.27659574]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 301, 0.01754386]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 301, 3.29696048]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 301, 47.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 107, 0.0], [107, 149, 0.0], [149, 301, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 107, 0.0], [107, 149, 0.0], [149, 301, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 40, 6.0], [40, 107, 10.0], [107, 149, 8.0], [149, 301, 23.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.1025641], [40, 107, 0.0], [107, 149, 0.28205128], [149, 301, 0.02040816]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 107, 0.0], [107, 149, 0.0], [149, 301, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 40, 0.0], [40, 107, 0.13432836], [107, 149, 0.07142857], [149, 301, 0.05263158]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 301, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 301, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 301, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 301, -23.69659594]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 301, -2.6934009]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 301, -1.98404422]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 301, 2.0]]}
The Spinster Librarian Novella/Short Story 12 Days of Holiday Romance: 2022 12 Days of Holiday Mysteries: 2022 Dragon Bound I read this book as part of my Adult Reading Round Table’s paranormal romance meeting. I wanted to pick something a bit different from the vampire and werewolf books that have been very popular over the past few years….and I came across a whole sub-genre called dragon shifting. I had no idea what to expect and overall was surprised by this book. Pia Giovanni is half human, half Wyr and has spent her life hiding her true identity. When she is blackmailed by her ex-boyfriend to steal an item from the hoard of Dragos, an old and powerful dragon, she finds herself running for her life. When Dragos tracks her down, there is an immediate attraction between the two but Pia finds herself torn between fear and desire. Can she love a dragon? I had many thoughts while reading this book and there are things that I found myself enjoying and others that I did not. First off, this book doesn’t have the best writing. I have definitely read worse books but I found the very short sentence structure to be off putting. I also felt like there were a lot of characters and world building thrown at the reader right away and it wasn’t until I was further through the book that I could keep the characters straight. This seems to be a fairly common practice in fantasy romance books so it wasn’t surprising but it made it hard to immerse myself in the story. I liked the characters and was surprised that Pia wasn’t written as a wilting flower, powerless to resist Dragos. She has a mind of her own and works to get herself out of situations without relying on help. She stops and thinks about her actions and stands up for what she thinks is right. Dragos was written as a typical Alpha male character and I didn’t find him to be that interesting. There was instant attraction between the two which I normally hate in romance novels but given that these character aren’t human and there is talk of mates and bonding, it made sense in this scenario. I enjoyed the side characters and was given just enough development to be interested in reading their inevitable books. The thing I liked most was the world that Harrison created. It was expansive without being sprawling and interesting enough to make me want to find out more about all the creatures and people that inhabit it. For my first shifter romance novel, this wasn’t a bad choice. I enjoyed the female lead and the overall story but found the writing lacking and the main character not that interesting. However, I liked enough about the world and the side characters enough to read others in this series. Author: Thea Harrison StephieStar Dargons, fae, Fantasy, shapeshifter, urban fantasy
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12750
{"url": "https://thespinsterlibrarian.com/2019/07/07/dragon-bound/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thespinsterlibrarian.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:49:33Z", "digest": "sha1:SUAZ4DEM35TJET7SKPJQJRML22SSMETP"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 2766, 2766.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2766, 3888.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2766, 12.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2766, 65.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2766, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2766, 333.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2766, 0.47186933]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2766, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2766, 0.01431127]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2766, 0.00715564]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2766, 0.01341682]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2766, 0.03448276]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2766, 0.09981851]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2766, 0.49590164]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2766, 4.58196721]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2766, 0.00181488]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2766, 5.04331617]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2766, 488.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 43, 0.0], [43, 76, 0.0], [76, 111, 0.0], [111, 124, 0.0], [124, 472, 1.0], [472, 866, 1.0], [866, 2395, 1.0], [2395, 2682, 1.0], [2682, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 43, 0.0], [43, 76, 0.0], [76, 111, 0.0], [111, 124, 0.0], [124, 472, 0.0], [472, 866, 0.0], [866, 2395, 0.0], [2395, 2682, 0.0], [2682, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 23, 3.0], [23, 43, 2.0], [43, 76, 6.0], [76, 111, 6.0], [111, 124, 2.0], [124, 472, 62.0], [472, 866, 71.0], [866, 2395, 276.0], [2395, 2682, 50.0], [2682, 2704, 3.0], [2704, 2716, 1.0], [2716, 2766, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 43, 0.0], [43, 76, 0.19354839], [76, 111, 0.18181818], [111, 124, 0.0], [124, 472, 0.0], [472, 866, 0.0], [866, 2395, 0.0], [2395, 2682, 0.0], [2682, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 43, 0.0], [43, 76, 0.0], [76, 111, 0.0], [111, 124, 0.0], [124, 472, 0.0], [472, 866, 0.0], [866, 2395, 0.0], [2395, 2682, 0.0], [2682, 2704, 0.0], [2704, 2716, 0.0], [2716, 2766, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.13043478], [23, 43, 0.15], [43, 76, 0.09090909], [76, 111, 0.08571429], [111, 124, 0.15384615], [124, 472, 0.02298851], [472, 866, 0.02284264], [866, 2395, 0.01635056], [2395, 2682, 0.01393728], [2682, 2704, 0.13636364], [2704, 2716, 0.16666667], [2716, 2766, 0.04]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2766, 0.16062844]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2766, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2766, 0.12707764]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2766, -12.15788567]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2766, 38.13681382]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2766, -170.12234099]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2766, 25.0]]}
How to Balance Your Root Chakra for a Healthy Life Your root chakra is the first of seven chakras. It’s located at the base of your spine, beneath your sacral bones. This energy center is associated with your sense of self and how you relate to others and the world around you. If your root chakra is imbalanced, it can lead to a variety of … How to Balance Your Root Chakra for a Healthy Life Read More » What You Need to Know About the Seven Chakras and Their Meanings The human body is a powerful vessel that houses our spirits and represents the true meaning of who we are. The seven chakras are a major part of the human spirit. They are seven energy centers in the body that can be found from the base of your spine to the top of your head, … What You Need to Know About the Seven Chakras and Their Meanings Read More »
2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12751
{"url": "https://thestubborntaurus.com/tag/root-chakra/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "thestubborntaurus.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:03:19Z", "digest": "sha1:PADVEHDUT4VFJ6ISXGPPM6ZSAEGFIIZC"}
{"ccnet_length": [[0, 825, 825.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 825, 1450.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 825, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 825, 40.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 825, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 825, 246.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 825, 0.43604651]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 825, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 825, 0.28658537]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 825, 0.34146341]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 825, 0.28658537]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 825, 0.28658537]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 825, 0.28658537]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 825, 0.28658537]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 825, 0.04878049]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 825, 0.08536585]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 825, 0.04878049]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 825, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 825, 0.33333333]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 825, 0.0755814]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 825, 0.48148148]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 825, 4.04938272]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 825, 0.01162791]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 825, 4.05412649]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 825, 162.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 343, 0.0], [343, 406, 0.0], [406, 471, 0.0], [471, 749, 0.0], [749, 825, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 343, 0.0], [343, 406, 0.0], [406, 471, 0.0], [471, 749, 0.0], [749, 825, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 51, 10.0], [51, 343, 56.0], [343, 406, 13.0], [406, 471, 12.0], [471, 749, 56.0], [749, 825, 15.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 343, 0.0], [343, 406, 0.0], [406, 471, 0.0], [471, 749, 0.0], [749, 825, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 51, 0.0], [51, 343, 0.0], [343, 406, 0.0], [406, 471, 0.0], [471, 749, 0.0], [749, 825, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 51, 0.1372549], [51, 343, 0.01369863], [343, 406, 0.14285714], [406, 471, 0.13846154], [471, 749, 0.01079137], [749, 825, 0.14473684]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 825, -9.78e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 825, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 825, 0.00267702]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 825, -32.02497007]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 825, -3.6676482]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 825, -58.12113813]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 825, 6.0]]}

Dataset Card for "redpajama_v2_sample_10M"

More Information needed

Downloads last month
0
Edit dataset card

Models trained or fine-tuned on sade-adrien/redpajama_v2_sample_10M