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13,161,661 | https://www.ghanaiantimes.com.gh/police-unaware-of-operation-by-national-security-operatives-at-ayawaso-west-wuogon-police-director-of-operations/ | Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon – Police Director of Operations | ["Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nPolice unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nThe Accra Regional Police Director of Operations, Chief Superintendent Kwesi Ofori, has confirmed report that one police man had an altercation with national security operatives leading to injury during the Ayawaso West Wuogon by-election.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\n\u201cWe had pieces of information that an officer had suffered in the hands of some of the National Security operatives during the by-election. I met and asked the young officer whether he had been injured and he said it was minor. It seems he was trying to intervene during the scuffle,\u201d he stated.\nHe said these yesterday when he testified before the Commission of Inquiry on the Ayawaso West Wuogon by-election violence.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nOn the national security operation in the Constituency on the by-election day, Chief Supt. Ofori, said the Command was not aware that a major security operation would be conducted by the national security at the constituency and suggested a greater collaboration between security agencies in future operations.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\n\u201cGiven the closeness of the Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) operation to the polling station, it should probably have been discussed with us, so that together we plan to ensure it was carried out successfully without any hitch,\u201d he added.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nAlthough a report of the happenings on January 31 was yet to be done,he said the Accra Regional Command had held meetings at the operational headquarters to review what happened with the election seen as incident-free except for the isolated issue at La-Bawaleshie Presbyterian School.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nDisputing claims by the East Legon Police Commander, Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) George Asare that he was sidelined in the preparation of operational strategy for the by-election, he explained that the various district and regional commanders were given duties to perform on the day of the Ayawaso by-election.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nFor the Accra Regional Command, Chief Supt. Ofori noted that divisional and district commanders access operational orders through WhatsApp and other messages saying that \u201cfor the Accra Region, the first thing is to visit our Accra Region WhatsApp group for operational orders.\u201d", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\n\u201cNo one was sidelined. Police operations are teamwork, which is why we request for briefings from the Divisional Commands in the constituency before the day of the by-elections. The East Legon Police Commander was at the joint briefing prior to the by-election. We have someone who monitors and handles the messages on our Accra Region messaging platforms,\u201d he added.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nAfter being informed of an incident at the school, the Accra Regional Operations Director said he moved to the scene from his patrol duties in the constituency and ordered all patrol units to move there to restore calm.\nTogether with DSP Abena Kwabena, East Legon Police Crime Officer, he said they saw a mass of people, stones and some stains of blood at various points where the scuffle took place.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nUpon meeting with the National Democratic Congress (NDC) parliamentary candidate after some initial difficulty in his house, he said he stationed nine police men to provide security and ensure his safety.\nHe said it came to his attention during interactions with the crowd that some masked and armed men in a police vehicle fired gunshots adding that he saw the Hunter vehicle and the SWAT operatives for the first time at Ayawaso West Wuogon that night.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nOn the retrieval of bullet casings which were said to be in the possession of some civilians, Chief Supt Ofori said his outfit would do whatever it takes to get to the Wala chief, alleged to have refused to hand them over, to take them back.\nThe Regional Command he said was ready to submit itself to support the national Criminal Investigations Department (CID) which took over investigations of the incident to determine what really happened on the day.", "Police unaware of operation by National Security operatives at Ayawaso West Wuogon \u2013 Police Director of Operations\nBroadcast journalists, Bernardino Koku Avle and Paul Adom-Otchere of Citi FM and Metro TV respectively, appeared before the commission with audio and video evidences taken during the violence to help the commission with its work.\nBy Claude Nyarko Adams"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ghanaiantimes.com.gh", "date_download": "2022-08-15T10:18:51Z", "digest": "sha1:RGGHLIGTQZP2CWVEQXU3ZTIDBQGIKHMQ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 4145, 4145.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 4145, 6970.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 4145, 18.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 4145, 136.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 4145, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 4145, 326.6]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 4145, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 4145, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 4145, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 4145, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 4145, 0.44414894]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 4145, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 4145, 0.0]], 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13,161,663 | https://www.kentonline.co.uk/faversham/news/the-kent-born-pirate-who-inspired-captain-jack-sparrow-267758/ | The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow | ["The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nHome Faversham News Article\nJohnny Depp's Captain Jack Sparrow character based on Faversham pirate John Ward\nGerry Warren\[email protected]\nPublished: 05:00, 28 May 2022\nThe brown, murky waters of Faversham Creek are a far cry from the turquoise seas and white sands of the Caribbean.\nYet that is where the fisherman turned notorious pirate, who is said to have inspired the flamboyant lead character of one of Walt Disney's best known film franchises, first set sail.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nCaptain Jack Sparrow, played by Johnny Depp, is one of Hollywood's best-loved characters. Picture: Disney\nBut while swashbuckling Jack Sparrow \u2013 played by Johnny Depp in the blockbuster Pirates of the Caribbean film series \u2013 became a household name, few, if any, will have heard of Jack Ward whose life he was based on.\nAnd there's certainly no blue plaque to mark his former residence in the town.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nThe BBC History Magazine, which makes the claim of the link to Sparrow, says John Ward was \"outlandish and fearless, terrorising the Mediterranean with a complete absence of morals\", adding: \"Little wonder the English pirate was an inspiration for Captain Jack Sparrow in the Pirates of the Caribbean films.\"\nAccording to the author and history writer Giles Milton, Ward was born into an impoverished family with his early life spent fishing the tidal waters of his native Kent.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nHe adds that he was \"an out-and-out wastrel who spent much of his time getting drunk\" but who went on to be one of England's most notorious pirates.\nPirate John Ward was born in Faversham. Picture: BBC History Magazine/Sue Gent (56926642)\nKent already has a firm connection to the film franchise in Canterbury-born actor Orlando Bloom, who starred as Will Turner in the movies.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nBut what do we know of Jack Ward, who also went by the name Jack Birdy, and who is believed to have been born in Faversham around 1553?\nInformation about Ward's early life comes from a pamphlet purportedly written by someone who sailed with him during his pirate days.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nLike many born in coastal areas, he spent his youth and early adult years working in the fisheries. After the failed invasion of England by the Spanish Armada in 1588, Ward found work as a privateer, plundering Spanish ships with a licence from Queen Elizabeth I.\nWhen James I ended the war with Spain on assuming the throne in 1603, many privateers refused to give up their livelihood and simply continued to plunder.\nFaversham Creek is a far cry from the turquoise waters of the Caribbean", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nThose who did were considered pirates because they no longer had valid licences \u2013 called letters of marque \u2013 issued by the state.\nElected captain by his shipmates, Ward's prolific exploits on the high seas gained him a reputation as one of the most fearsome and notorious pirates of his time.\nAt his peak, he had a fleet of 15 ships and 1,500 men under his command.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nHis numerous ship captures included one Venetian vessel, which is said to have led to the ambassador saying: \"That famous pirate, Ward, so well-known in this port for the damage he has done, is beyond doubt the greatest scoundrel that ever sailed from England.\"\nIn his later years he converted to Islam, changing his name to Yusuf Reis, but a description of his appearance by an English sailor in Tunis could not be further from Depp's flamboyant interpretation.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\n\"John Ward was an out-and-out wastrel who spent much of his time getting drunk...\"\nHe allegedly described Ward as \"very short with little hair, and that quite white, bald in front, swarthy face and beard.\n\"Speaks little and almost always swearing. Drunk from morn till night... the habits of a thorough salt. A fool and an idiot out of his trade.\"", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nThere is certainly a geographical discrepancy between the hunting grounds of Jack Sparrow and Jack Ward, who seemed to mostly roam the Mediterranean looking for victims.\nHe ended his 'career' in piracy in around 1612, electing to teach younger privateers gunnery and navigation.\nBut he had profited greatly from his ill-gotten gains, retiring to Tunis to live a life of opulent comfort until his death in 1622, at the age of 70, possibly from the plague.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nA fictionalised account of Ward's career appears in Thomas Costain's historical novel For My Great Folly, which was published in 1942.\nJohnny Depp and Kent-born Orlando Bloom in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. Picture: Disney\nIn the 2010s, various Turkish newspapers and websites popularised a suggestion that John Ward could be the inspiration for Jack Sparrow, and then the BBC History Magazine also revealed John Ward as the pirate behind the character.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nThe claimed connection between Jack Sparrow and the real-life Jack Ward has been flagged up on social media as a 'fun fact' by Ashley Young.\nIt has sparked debate and suggestions for how the town could even capitalise on the connection.\n\"We could have a pirate festival on the creek,\" wrote Claire Martin.\nAnother referred to an annual pirate festival in Poole which celebrates one of its historic bandits of the seas.", "The Kent-born pirate who inspired Captain Jack Sparrow\nNow the town council's events and development officer, Claire Windridge, thinks the idea of a pirates festival \"is something worth exploring\".\n\"I have heard of the festival in Poole and we could do something like that here,\" she said.\n\"There's a huge appetite for anything historical in the town so it could well be embraced and businesses could benefit.\n\"I will certainly put the idea to the committee on the town council and look into it further.\"\nFaversham Kent Gerry Warren"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.kentonline.co.uk", "date_download": "2022-08-15T09:51:39Z", "digest": "sha1:QU74ARADHFSIEI5NMDQB4FKP5WX352SX", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 5501, 5501.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 5501, 8695.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 5501, 43.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 5501, 251.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 5501, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 5501, 251.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 5501, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 5501, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 5501, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 5501, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 5501, 0.41401274]], 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41,140,838 | http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/rugby/rugby-union/club-rugby/tigers-pay-tribute-as-ellis-is-forced-to-hang-up-his-boots-2021974.html | Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent | ["Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent\nSportRugbyRugby UnionClub Rugby Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots\nRobin Scott-Elliot\n@RobinScottEllio\nThursday 8 July 2010 23:00 BST", "Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent\nHarry Ellis, the Leicester and England scrum-half, has been forced to retire at the age of 28 with persistent knee problems. Ellis, who won 27 caps, has followed the advice of his surgeon after he suffered a recurrence of the injury that dogged his career for the last three years.In 2007 he missed the World Cup, having undergone a reconstruction of his left knee", "Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent\nA sniping runner and combative nuisance from the base of the scrum, he reclaimed the Red Rose No 9 shirt last year and won his only cap for the British & Irish Lions in the third Test victory over South Africa in Johannesburg last July, but those 28 minutes at Ellis Park were to prove both his crowning glory and his final international appearance.", "Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent\nLast season he made just two Premiership starts for the Tigers, the club he had served since the age of 15. \"The most difficult decision for any player to make is about when they have to stop playing,\" Ellis said yesterday. \"This is not the way I wanted to end my career because I have always taken great enjoyment from the game of rugby and I have some very special memories. But now I will have to consider other options for the future and take on a new challenge.\"", "Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent\nEllis, who has been succeeded in both the Tigers and England side by the talented Ben Youngs, was identified early in his career as a potential high flyer. He played for England at every level from Under-16 upwards and came to senior prominence by scoring a try while still a teenager in Leicester's Heineken Cup semi-final victory over Llanelli in 2002", "Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent\nHe made his England debut aged only 22 in a victory over South Africa in 2004 and was first choice for his country for the next three years until he ruptured anterior cruciate ligaments in the Premiership semi-final against Bristol in 2007. He returned to fitness to win the Premiership with the Tigers two years ago and was first choice again for England in 2009.", "Tigers pay tribute as Ellis is forced to hang up his boots | The Independent | The Independent\n\"Harry is a local lad who made a big impression when he broke into the Tigers team,\" said Richard Cockerill, Leicester's head coach. \"He was afraid of nothing when he wore a Tigers shirt.\"\nMartin Johnson, the England manager and a former team-mate of Ellis, said: \"If he'd been fit Harry would have continued to make a huge contribution to his club and country for many years.\" More about:"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.independent.co.uk", "date_download": "2016-05-26T16:08:17Z", "digest": "sha1:VXAFSFGCSEWTVORVUIBS7FN4H6JM2VZX", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 2451, 2451.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 2451, 4402.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 2451, 9.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 2451, 159.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 2451, 0.99]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 2451, 159.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 2451, 0.43636364]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 2451, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 2451, 0.02446483]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 2451, 0.01529052]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 2451, 0.00815494]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 2451, 0.0224261]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 2451, 0.01212121]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 2451, 0.13131313]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 2451, 0.55172414]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 2451, 4.51034483]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 2451, 5.03310603]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 2451, 435.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 110, 0.0], [110, 127, 0.0], [127, 158, 0.0], [158, 874, 1.0], [874, 1342, 0.0], [1342, 2062, 1.0], [2062, 2251, 0.0], [2251, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 110, 0.0], [110, 127, 0.0], [127, 158, 0.0], [158, 874, 0.0], [874, 1342, 0.0], [1342, 2062, 0.0], [2062, 2251, 0.0], [2251, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 91, 15.0], [91, 110, 2.0], [110, 127, 1.0], [127, 158, 6.0], [158, 874, 127.0], [874, 1342, 89.0], [1342, 2062, 126.0], [2062, 2251, 34.0], [2251, 2451, 35.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 110, 0.0], [110, 127, 0.0], [127, 158, 0.31034483], [158, 874, 0.01569187], [874, 1342, 0.00437637], [1342, 2062, 0.02820874], [2062, 2251, 0.0], [2251, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 91, 0.0], [91, 110, 0.0], [110, 127, 0.0], [127, 158, 0.0], [158, 874, 0.0], [874, 1342, 0.0], [1342, 2062, 0.0], [2062, 2251, 0.0], [2251, 2451, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 91, 0.08791209], [91, 110, 0.15789474], [110, 127, 0.17647059], [127, 158, 0.16129032], [158, 874, 0.03072626], [874, 1342, 0.02350427], [1342, 2062, 0.03055556], [2062, 2251, 0.03703704], [2251, 2451, 0.035]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 2451, 0.75650007]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 2451, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 2451, 0.99584746]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 2451, 8.42207187]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 2451, 56.64200304]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 2451, 51.07725477]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 2451, 16.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,849 | http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S30/43/00Q65/index.xml?from=2003-10-01&to=2003-11-01 |
EmailA to ZContactsSite MapNewsMultimediaSearch Topics and PeopleShortcuts Other News Emergency Info Media Central Event Streaming Public Events Calendar Faculty News Student Publications The Daily Princetonian Campus Media Local News World News About Pri | ["ncetonAcademicsAdmission & AidArtsInternationalLibraryResearch\ufffdAdministration & ServicesCampus LifeVisiting CampusStudentsFaculty & StaffAlumniParents & FamiliesUndergraduate ApplicantsGraduate School ApplicantsMobile Princeton Web AppMobile Princeton App for AndroidMobile Princeton App for iOSConnect & SubscribeHome \ufffd News \ufffd Archive \ufffd Working group recommends changes to enhance social and residential lifeNews at PrincetonWednesday, May 25, 2016News StoriesFAQsEvents & CalendarsMultimediaFor News MediaShare Your NewsCurrent StoriesFeaturesScience & TechPeopleEmergency AlertsUniversity BulletinArchive\ufffd", "\n\ufffdRead the full text of the report\nWeb StoriesTo News Archive|\ufffd Previous by Date|Next by Date \ufffdWorking group recommends changes to enhance social and residential life\nPosted May 2, 2011; 12:00 p.m.by Ruth StevensTweet\ufffde-mail\nWhile Princeton University undergraduates express high levels of satisfaction with social and residential life, a working group of students, faculty and staff is recommending several changes to enhance this essential element of the campus experience.", "\nIn a report issued May 2, the Working Group on Campus Social and Residential Life states: \"The basic message is clear: Overall levels of satisfaction are high (and generally higher than at other institutions) and where there is dissatisfaction, in large measure it does not correlate with any specific demographic factor or living arrangement. In other words, while we found areas for improvement, we did not discover any definable group that is not having a meaningful and rewarding social life at Princeton.\"", "\nThe 13-member group, appointed by President Shirley M. Tilghman in September 2010, however discovered after meeting with 17 focus groups and receiving almost 300 comments on its website that there were some needs that could be better met, areas that could be improved and concerns that could be addressed. Its key recommendations include:", "\nStudents should be prohibited from affiliating with a fraternity or sorority or engaging in any form of rush at any time during the freshman year, or from conducting or having responsibility for any form of rush in which freshmen participate. The penalty for violating these prohibitions should be severe enough to encourage widespread compliance, which probably means a minimum penalty of suspension.", "\nThe University should significantly increase its commitment to enforce policies that prohibit serious forms of hazing wherever it occurs, and the University should become even more vigilant in imposing highly consequential disciplinary penalties on students found to have engaged in hazing that seriously threatened the health and well-being of any student.", "\nThe working group concurs with the widespread and strongly held view across a broad range of campus constituencies that it would be desirable to reinstate a campus pub that would be open to all undergraduates, graduate students, faculty and staff and help to model the responsible use of alcohol.", "\nThe group also recommends several initiatives regarding both larger- and smaller-scale events on campus, building relationships across classes, enhancing life in the residential colleges, expanding the roles of residential college advisers and Outdoor Action/Community Action groups, and revamping aspects of freshman orientation and Princeton Preview.", "\n\"The working group was asked to put forward its judgments and suggestions and to stimulate lively and informed conversation about on-campus social and residential life,\" the report concludes. \"The next steps depend on those students, faculty and staff who have responsibilities in these areas. It is now for them to decide which of the ideas and recommendations in this report ought to be pursued, by whom and at what pace", "\nThe members of the working group would be delighted to participate in this ongoing conversation in any ways they can be helpful.\"", "\nFollowing up on previous workTilghman appointed the working group following a period of significant change in campus life. A new four-year residential college system had been implemented, creating new living and dining options for juniors, seniors and graduate students", "\nThe Frist Campus Center was celebrating its 10th anniversary; the Fields Center for Equality and Cultural Understanding had moved into spacious new quarters; and Campus Club -- a former eating club -- had reopened as a gathering place for all undergraduate and graduate students", "\nA separate student-faculty-staff-alumni task force had spent the previous year examining relationships between the University and the eating clubs, organizations founded and operated by students and alumni that for more than a hundred years have played an integral role in undergraduate life at Princeton. In May 2010 that task force issued a report making 25 recommendations to improve the relationships and the experiences students have in the clubs", "\nIn addition, the task force identified several issues related to undergraduate on-campus social and residential life that fell outside of its charge, but that it thought merited careful review by a similarly constituted group of students, faculty and staff", "\nTilghman asked the new group to address the issues identified by the Eating Club Task Force and, specifically, to accomplish two tasks: review the University's goals regarding undergraduate on-campus social and residential life; and answer four questions: How can undergraduate social and residential life be enhanced and improved on campus", "\n? How can the University enrich the social and residential experience in the residential colleges? What is and should be the role of fraternities and sororities at Princeton? Is it desirable, and if so, feasible to reintroduce a campus pub", "\n? The working group included five undergraduates, two faculty members (one of them a residential college master) and six members of the staff, including two directors of student life in the residential colleges and, as co-chairs, Vice President for Campus Life Cynthia Cherrey and Vice President and Secretary Robert Durkee.", "\nIn addition to meeting with focus groups and creating a website, the group examined data about the social and residential experience of Princeton undergraduates, and it met with an outside expert on fraternities and sororities. It also established an affiliated committee under the leadership of Amy Campbell, director of campus life initiatives in the Office of the Vice President for Campus Life, to examine in detail the issues related to reinstatement of a campus pub.", "\nIdentifying goals and themesThe group's report provides a brief history of social and residential life at Princeton, as well as a snapshot of the data the group considered in making its recommendations.", "\nIn reviewing the University's goals regarding undergraduate on-campus social and residential life, the report states: \"In its undergraduate admission process, Princeton University looks carefully at two sets of characteristics. One set focuses on academic qualifications and capacities, while the other encompasses extracurricular activities, leadership potential and a broad range of personal qualities", "\nBoth sets of characteristics are important because while Princeton is first and foremost an academic institution, it also cares deeply about developing each student's non-academic interests and talents and preparing students to live healthy, productive and meaningful lives that include opportunities for leadership and service to others.\"", "\nThe residential experience and campus social life, the report concludes, are intended to develop core values and build the skills needed to create a sense of community and mutual respect, a sense of responsibility for themselves and others, an empathy for those from different backgrounds and a capacity to be refreshed, foster friendships and live a balanced life.", "\nThroughout the report, students and alumni who submitted comments to the group\u2019s website are quoted. \"I think the goals for social and residential life should be about creating opportunities for meaningful interaction, to prepare students for life beyond the University, and also to provide a social network that ensures that they have support and guidance and the strength of community,\" one wrote", "\n\"I also think that there must be an expectation of responsible, thoughtful, engaged participation for all campus community members in the social life of the campus.\" The working group identifies three recurring themes that emerged in its work: an \"intense desire\" by entering students to get to know older undergraduates in order to benefit from their experience; the importance of relieving stress and building friendships through unstructured socializing; and the call for a broader sense of community.", "\nRecommendationsIn recommending the changes regarding fraternities and sororities, the report states, \"The working group expresses its concern that because of the nature of the selection process and the cost, fraternities and sororities exacerbate the divide on campus between students of means and students with limited resources. It also expresses its concern that behavior within some of the Greek organizations is demeaning, dangerous and incompatible with Princeton's values.\"", "\nThe proposal to prohibit first-year students from affiliating with these organizations grew out of a concern that \"membership \u2026 in freshman year narrows students' social circles before they gain a full sense of the opportunities Princeton has to offer or experience the full diversity of backgrounds and interests among their fellow students,\" the report states", "\n\"This concern is heightened by the pipeline relationship that exists between some of the Greek organizations and some of the eating clubs, which has the effect of tracking students very early in their Princeton careers.\"", "\nThis recommendation, as well as the one on enforcing hazing policies, also emerged from a concern about the dangerous use of alcohol, according to the report.", "\n\"The particular circumstances of Greek life at Princeton accentuate this concern,\" the report states, \"because (a) rush takes place in freshman year when students may be more insecure and less capable of resisting peer pressure than they will be in later years; (b) students may be more susceptible to peer pressure if they believe admission to a fraternity or sorority will also get them into the eating club of their choice; and (c) the lack of a significant junior and senior presence in fraternities and sororities at Princeton means that most pledging and hazing is conducted by sophomores, in contrast to the junior and senior leadership that more typically exists on campuses with fully developed Greek systems.\"", "\nThe group is not proposing a prohibition beyond freshman year, but is recommending the University continue with its policy of not officially recognizing fraternities and sororities. This means the organizations cannot use University resources or facilities. The group also recommends that the University be more vigilant in challenging the national fraternities and sororities that use Princeton's name on their websites.", "\nWhile the working group endorses the widely supported reinstatement of a campus pub, it states that the next step of finding a place for it was more difficult. In the end, it acknowledges the advantages of building a new facility, but recommends as more feasible converting one of two spaces on campus: the downstairs \"Tap Room\" at Prospect House; or the downstairs caf\ufffd area at Chancellor Green.", "\n\"The working group believes the benefits that would accrue from reinstating a pub, especially in helping to create a more responsible culture on campus regarding alcohol, justify the investment of time and resources to develop a plan for one of these two locations, and seek the approvals and funding necessary to go forward,\" the report states.\nThe working group also recommends a variety of changes to address the recurring themes that surfaced.", "\nThey include adding one or two \"big signature events\" each year to attract all four undergraduate classes, such as concerts with headliner talent, all-student dances, or an annual Princeton birthday party with music, dancing and a special cake. It also recommends smaller-scale events intended to increase bonding within each of the classes and among the classes", "\nIn addition, the report calls for more events in the residential colleges that are open only to college members, open to those outside the college and planned by students, as well as greater outreach to juniors and seniors.", "\nThe working group also suggests that Outdoor Action and Community Action groups get together on occasion throughout freshman year to share experiences and seek guidance from the upperclass students who lead these pre-orientation programs. The report asks whether residential college advisers and dormitory assistants in the upperclass dorms should play more of a role in building a sense of community in those dorms", "\nIn addition, the report recommends making a greater effort during orientation to bring freshmen together with upperclass students who can share their insights and experiences. And it suggests creating more time for bonding and fun at both orientation and Princeton Preview, the annual hosting program for admitted students and their families. Back To Top"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.princeton.edu", "date_download": "2016-05-26T15:07:59Z", "digest": "sha1:KE5DHACLGIPIRCA5I7LKRE5BDQQO5357", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 13581, 13581.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 13581, 16922.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 13581, 28.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 13581, 55.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 13581, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 13581, 289.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 13581, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 13581, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 13581, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 13581, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 13581, 0.396777]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 13581, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 13581, 0.01291807]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 13581, 0.07777385]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 13581, 0.0409662]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 13581, 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41,140,860 | http://www.robertmorris.edu/development/fund/ |
Office of Development & Alumni Affairs Office of Alumni Affairs
Student Records & Transcript Request
IRRB
Annual Fund Program
Robert Morris University's Annual Fund Program | ["", "\nRobert Morris University strives to improve the quality of life for our graduates. Since 1913, we have made a difference in the lives of our students, the City of Chicago, the State of Illinois and society at large. Through the learning process, our students have overcome the challenges of poverty, first generation status and caring for dependents while enrolled", "\nToday, we have among our alumni: a State Representative, a White House Budget Office manager, attorneys, hospital administrators, restaurant owners, Certified Public Accountants, business owners, designers and professional athletes...just to name a few. Growing up, many never imagined the life they would be living today...a life made possible through an education at Robert Morris University.", "\nYour investment in Robert Morris University provides endless opportunities to our students! The Leadership Scholars Program is built on support from individuals, corporations, and foundations, and is a comprehensive program designed to allow friends of the University to support and encourage deserving students in need of financial assistance. Each year thousands of alumni and friends express their commitment to Robert Morris University by making a gift to the Leadership Scholars Program", "\nThe vitality of this school\u2019s student body is a direct reflection of its supporters\u2019 collective generosity. The demand for scholarships far outreaches the supply of available awards. With your help, we can offer more awards each year so more graduates leave with the ability, desire, and confidence to become household, community, and national leaders. The Annual Fund Contribution Form is available for you to use and discover the different ways to assist Robert Morris University in accomplishing its goals", "\n? You can use your credit card to make a donation online! Robert Morris University is a private, not-for-profit institution of higher education 501(c)3. Donations to the University are tax-deductible to the extent allowable by the law. Once your gift is made, a receipt will be sent to you, acknowledging your donation. There are so many ways you can make a difference!", "\nChoose the option that's right for you.\nDonate Online: You can make your donation today. It's a quick and simple online form. With the click of a button, you can make your donation!\nMatching Gift Program: Make your gift count twice as much by matching it through your employer! Many employers have a gift program that enables your donation to be matched by the employer. Print this form and your employer can use it to begin the Matching Gift process. Begin the Matching Gift process today!", "\nPlanned Giving: Leave your legacy for future generations!\nDonate by mail: Our Annual Fund Contribution Form will give you all the information you need. You can fIll out the form and mail it to the address indicated.\nDo you have questions about making a donation? To speak with someone about donating, please contact the Office of the President at (312) 935-6600.\nMake a Difference - Give to RMU", "\nRobert Morris University Illinois is a private, not-for-profit associate, baccalaureate, and master's degree-granting institution, accredited by the Higher learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60604, 312.263.0456) and authorized by the Illinois Board of Higher Education (1 N. Old State Capitol Plaza Suite 333, Springfield, Illinois 62701-1377, 217.782.2551, IBHE Feedback)", "\nRobert Morris serves over 4500 students interested in getting an education that meets the demands of today's business, graphic arts, health care, culinary and technical world at its main campus in Chicago as well as at locations in Arlington Heights, DuPage, Elgin, Orland Park, Bensenville, Schaumburg, Springfield, Peoria and Lake County."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.robertmorris.edu", "date_download": "2016-05-26T14:32:57Z", "digest": "sha1:SL6VBEBYN4K3DIDOTEC7VGI4FOJEXJXH", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 4030, 4030.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 4030, 5704.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 4030, 15.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 4030, 115.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 4030, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 4030, 239.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 4030, 0.34736842]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 4030, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 4030, 0.04745969]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 4030, 0.03285671]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 4030, 0.04685123]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 4030, 0.01399452]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 4030, 0.00526316]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 4030, 0.18026316]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 4030, 0.48064516]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 4030, 5.3016129]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 4030, 0.00263158]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 4030, 5.17204405]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 4030, 620.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 101, 0.0], [101, 106, 0.0], [106, 126, 0.0], [126, 173, 0.0], [173, 934, 1.0], [934, 2343, 1.0], [2343, 2383, 1.0], [2383, 2525, 1.0], [2525, 2834, 1.0], [2834, 2892, 1.0], [2892, 3050, 1.0], [3050, 3197, 1.0], [3197, 3229, 0.0], [3229, 4030, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 101, 0.0], [101, 106, 0.0], [106, 126, 0.0], [126, 173, 0.0], [173, 934, 0.0], [934, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2383, 0.0], [2383, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2834, 0.0], [2834, 2892, 0.0], [2892, 3050, 0.0], [3050, 3197, 0.0], [3197, 3229, 0.0], [3229, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 64, 9.0], [64, 101, 4.0], [101, 106, 1.0], [106, 126, 3.0], [126, 173, 6.0], [173, 934, 114.0], [934, 2343, 219.0], [2343, 2383, 7.0], [2383, 2525, 26.0], [2525, 2834, 53.0], [2834, 2892, 8.0], [2892, 3050, 29.0], [3050, 3197, 24.0], [3197, 3229, 6.0], [3229, 4030, 111.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 101, 0.0], [101, 106, 0.0], [106, 126, 0.0], [126, 173, 0.0], [173, 934, 0.00544959], [934, 2343, 0.00290065], [2343, 2383, 0.0], [2383, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2834, 0.0], [2834, 2892, 0.0], [2892, 3050, 0.0], [3050, 3197, 0.07142857], [3197, 3229, 0.0], [3229, 4030, 0.05897772]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 101, 0.0], [101, 106, 0.0], [106, 126, 0.0], [126, 173, 0.0], [173, 934, 0.0], [934, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2383, 0.0], [2383, 2525, 0.0], [2525, 2834, 0.0], [2834, 2892, 0.0], [2892, 3050, 0.0], [3050, 3197, 0.0], [3197, 3229, 0.0], [3229, 4030, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 64, 0.109375], [64, 101, 0.10810811], [101, 106, 0.8], [106, 126, 0.15], [126, 173, 0.12765957], [173, 934, 0.03022339], [934, 2343, 0.02555004], [2343, 2383, 0.025], [2383, 2525, 0.03521127], [2525, 2834, 0.03559871], [2834, 2892, 0.05172414], [2892, 3050, 0.05063291], [3050, 3197, 0.02721088], [3197, 3229, 0.1875], [3229, 4030, 0.06242197]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 4030, 0.01276577]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 4030, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 4030, 0.22758085]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 4030, -194.09330304]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 4030, -58.42076847]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 4030, -147.35873996]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 4030, 40.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,142,412 | http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/7802?quicktabs_8=4 |
U.S. Code › Title 26 › Subtitle F › Chapter 80 › Subchapter A › § 7802 26 U.S. Code § 7802 - Internal Revenue Service Oversight Board
Establishment There is established within the Department of the Treasury the Internal Revenue Service Oversight Board (he | ["reafter in this subchapter referred to as the \u201cOversight Board\u201d).\nComposition The Oversight Board shall be composed of nine members, as follows:", "\nsix members shall be individuals who are not otherwise Federal officers or employees and who are appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.\none member shall be the Secretary of the Treasury or, if the Secretary so designates, the Deputy Secretary of the Treasury.\none member shall be the Commissioner of Internal Revenue.", "\none member shall be an individual who is a full-time Federal employee or a representative of employees and who is appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.\nQualifications and terms (A)\nQualifications Members of the Oversight Board described in paragraph (1)(A) shall be appointed without regard to political affiliation and solely on the basis of their professional experience and expertise in one or more of the following areas:\nManagement of large service organizations.", "\nFederal tax laws, including tax administration and compliance.\nOrganization development.\nThe needs and concerns of taxpayers.\nThe needs and concerns of small businesses.\nIn the aggregate, the members of the Oversight Board described in paragraph (1)(A) should collectively bring to bear expertise in all of the areas described in the preceding sentence.", "\nTerms Each member who is described in subparagraph (A) or (D) of paragraph (1) shall be appointed for a term of 5 years, except that of the members first appointed under paragraph (1)(A)\u2014\ntwo members shall be appointed for a term of 3 years,\ntwo members shall be appointed for a term of 4 years, and\ntwo members shall be appointed for a term of 5 years.", "\nReappointment An individual who is described in subparagraph (A) or (D) of paragraph (1) may be appointed to no more than two 5-year terms on the Oversight Board.\nVacancy Any vacancy on the Oversight Board shall be filled in the same manner as the original appointment. Any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring before the expiration of the term for which the member\u2019s predecessor was appointed shall be appointed for the remainder of that term.\nEthical considerations (A)", "\nFinancial disclosure During the entire period that an individual appointed under subparagraph (A) or (D) of paragraph (1) is a member of the Oversight Board, such individual shall be treated as serving as an officer or employee referred to in section 101(f) of the Ethics in Government Act of 1978 for purposes of title I of such Act, except that section 101(d) of such Act shall apply without regard to the number of days of service in the position.\nRestrictions on post-employment For purposes of section 207", "\n(c) of title 18, United States Code, an individual appointed under subparagraph (A) or (D) of paragraph (1) shall be treated as an employee referred to in section 207(c)(2)(A)(i) of such title during the entire period the individual is a member of the Board, except that subsections (c)(2)(B) and (f) ofsection 207 of such title shall not apply.", "\nMembers who are special Government employees If an individual appointed under subparagraph (A) or (D) of paragraph (1) is a special Government employee, the following additional rules apply for purposes of chapter 11 of title 18, United States Code:\nRestriction on representation\nIn addition to any restriction under section 205", "\n(c) of title 18, United States Code, except as provided in subsections (d) through (i) ofsection 205 of such title, such individual (except in the proper discharge of official duties) shall not, with or without compensation, represent anyone to or before any officer or employee of\u2014\nthe Oversight Board or the Internal Revenue Service on any matter;\nthe Department of the Treasury on any matter involving the internal revenue laws or involving the management or operations of the Internal Revenue Service; or", "\nthe Department of Justice with respect to litigation involving a matter described in subclause (I) or (II).\nCompensation for services provided by another\nFor purposes of section 203 of such title\u2014\nsuch individual shall not be subject to the restrictions of subsection (a)(1) thereof for sharing in compensation earned by another for representations on matters covered by such section, and", "\na person shall not be subject to the restrictions of subsection (a)(2) thereof for sharing such compensation with such individual.", "\nWaiver The President may, only at the time the President nominates the member of the Oversight Board described in paragraph (1)(D), waive for the term of the member any appropriate provision of chapter 11 of title 18, United States Code, to the extent such waiver is necessary to allow such member to participate in the decisions of the Board while continuing to serve as a full-time Federal employee or a representative of employees", "\nAny such waiver shall not be effective unless a written intent of waiver to exempt such member (and actual waiver language) is submitted to the Senate with the nomination of such member.", "\nQuorum Five members of the Oversight Board shall constitute a quorum. A majority of members present and voting shall be required for the Oversight Board to take action.\nRemoval (A)\nIn general Any member of the Oversight Board appointed under subparagraph (A) or (D) of paragraph (1) may be removed at the will of the President.", "\nSecretary and Commissioner An individual described in subparagraph (B) or (C) of paragraph (1) shall be removed upon termination of service in the office described in such subparagraph.\nClaims (A)\nIn general Members of the Oversight Board who are described in subparagraph (A) or (D) of paragraph (1) shall have no personal liability under Federal law with respect to any claim arising out of or resulting from an act or omission by such member within the scope of service as a member.", "\nEffect on other law This paragraph shall not be construed\u2014\nto affect any other immunities and protections that may be available to such member under applicable law with respect to such transactions;\nto affect any other right or remedy against the United States under applicable law; or\nto limit or alter in any way the immunities that are available under applicable law for Federal officers and employees.\nGeneral responsibilities (1)\nOversight (A)", "\nIn general The Oversight Board shall oversee the Internal Revenue Service in its administration, management, conduct, direction, and supervision of the execution and application of the internal revenue laws or related statutes and tax conventions to which the United States is a party.\nMission of IRS As part of its oversight functions described in subparagraph (A), the Oversight Board shall ensure that the organization and operation of the Internal Revenue Service allows it to carry out its mission.", "\nConfidentiality The Oversight Board shall ensure that appropriate confidentiality is maintained in the exercise of its duties.\nExceptions The Oversight Board shall have no responsibilities or authority with respect to\u2014\nthe development and formulation of Federal tax policy relating to existing or proposed internal revenue laws, related statutes, and tax conventions,", "\nspecific law enforcement activities of the Internal Revenue Service, including specific compliance activities such as examinations, collection activities, and criminal investigations,\nspecific procurement activities of the Internal Revenue Service, or\nexcept as provided in subsection (d)(3), specific personnel actions.\nSpecific responsibilities The Oversight Board shall have the following specific responsibilities:", "\nStrategic plans To review and approve strategic plans of the Internal Revenue Service, including the establishment of\u2014\nmission and objectives, and standards of performance relative to either, and\nannual and long-range strategic plans.\nOperational plans To review the operational functions of the Internal Revenue Service, including\u2014\nplans for modernization of the tax system,\nplans for outsourcing or managed competition, and\nplans for training and education.\nManagement To\u2014", "\nrecommend to the President candidates for appointment as the Commissioner of Internal Revenue and recommend to the President the removal of the Commissioner;\nreview the Commissioner\u2019s selection, evaluation, and compensation of Internal Revenue Service senior executives who have program management responsibility over significant functions of the Internal Revenue Service; and\nreview and approve the Commissioner\u2019s plans for any major reorganization of the Internal Revenue Service.\nBudget To\u2014", "\nreview and approve the budget request of the Internal Revenue Service prepared by the Commissioner;\nsubmit such budget request to the Secretary of the Treasury; and\nensure that the budget request supports the annual and long-range strategic plans.\nTaxpayer protection To ensure the proper treatment of taxpayers by the employees of the Internal Revenue Service.", "\nThe Secretary shall submit the budget request referred to in paragraph (4)(B) for any fiscal year to the President who shall submit such request, without revision, to Congress together with the President\u2019s annual budget request for the Internal Revenue Service for such fiscal year.\nBoard personnel matters (1)\nCompensation of members (A)\nIn general Each member of the Oversight Board who\u2014\nis described in subsection (b)(1)(A); or", "\nis described in subsection (b)(1)(D) and is not otherwise a Federal officer or employee,\nshall be compensated at a rate of $30,000 per year. All other members shall serve without compensation for such service.\nChairperson In lieu of the amount specified in subparagraph (A), the Chairperson of the Oversight Board shall be compensated at a rate of $50,000 per year.\nTravel expenses (A)", "\nIn general The members of the Oversight Board shall be allowed travel expenses, including per diem in lieu of subsistence, at rates authorized for employees of agencies under subchapter I of chapter 57 of title 5, United States Code, to attend meetings of the Oversight Board and, with the advance approval of the Chairperson of the Oversight Board, while otherwise away from their homes or regular places of business for purposes of duties as a member of the Oversight Board.", "\nReport The Oversight Board shall include in its annual report under subsection (f)(3)(A) information with respect to the travel expenses allowed for members of the Oversight Board under this paragraph.\nStaff (A)\nIn general The Chairperson of the Oversight Board may appoint and terminate any personnel that may be necessary to enable the Board to perform its duties.", "\nDetail of Government employees Upon request of the Chairperson of the Oversight Board, a Federal agency shall detail a Federal Government employee to the Oversight Board without reimbursement. Such detail shall be without interruption or loss of civil service status or privilege.\nProcurement of temporary and intermittent services The Chairperson of the Oversight Board may procure temporary and intermittent services under section 3109\n(b) of title 5, United States Code.\nAdministrative matters (1)\nChair (A)", "\nTerm The members of the Oversight Board shall elect for a 2-year term a chairperson from among the members appointed under subsection (b)(1)(A).\nPowers Except as otherwise provided by a majority vote of the Oversight Board, the powers of the Chairperson shall include\u2014\nestablishing committees;\nsetting meeting places and times;\nestablishing meeting agendas; and\ndeveloping rules for the conduct of business.", "\nMeetings The Oversight Board shall meet at least quarterly and at such other times as the Chairperson determines appropriate.\nReports (A)\nAnnual The Oversight Board shall each year report with respect to the conduct of its responsibilities under this title to the President, the Committees on Ways and Means, Government Reform and Oversight, and Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Committees on Finance, Governmental Affairs, and Appropriations of the Senate.", "\nAdditional report Upon a determination by the Oversight Board under subsection (c)(1)(B) that the organization and operation of the Internal Revenue Service are not allowing it to carry out its mission, the Oversight Board shall report such determination to the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives and the Committee on Finance of the Senate.", "\n(Aug. 16, 1954, ch. 736, 68A Stat. 915; Pub. L. 93\u2013406, title II, \u00a7 1051(a),Sept. 2, 1974, 88 Stat. 951; Pub. L. 94\u2013455, title XIX, \u00a7 1906(b)(13)(A), (B),Oct. 4, 1976, 90 Stat. 1834; Pub. L. 97\u2013258, \u00a7 2(f)(2),Sept. 13, 1982, 96 Stat. 1059; Pub. L. 100\u2013647, title VI, \u00a7 6235(a),Nov. 10, 1988, 102 Stat. 3737; Pub. L. 104\u2013168, title I, \u00a7 101(a), (b)(2),July 30, 1996, 110 Stat. 1453, 1455; Pub. L. 105\u2013206, title I, \u00a7 1101(a),July 22, 1998, 112 Stat. 691; Pub. L. 106\u2013554, \u00a7 1(a)(7) [title III, \u00a7 319(27)], Dec", "\nThe Ethics in Government Act of 1978, referred to in subsec. (b)(3)(A), is Pub. L. 95\u2013521, Oct. 26, 1978, 92 Stat. 1824, as amended. Title I of the Act is set out in the Appendix to Title 5, Government Organization and Employees. For complete classification of this Act to the Code, see Short Title note set out under section 101 ofPub. L. 95\u2013521in the Appendix to Title 5 and Tables.\n2000\u2014Subsec. (b)(2)(B)(ii). Pub. L. 106\u2013554substituted a comma for semicolon before \u201cand\u201d.", "\n1998\u2014Pub. L. 105\u2013206amended section catchline and text of section generally, substituting present provisions for provisions which: in subsec. (a), declared that there shall be in the Department of the Treasury a Commissioner of Internal Revenue, appointed by the President, with such duties and powers as prescribed by Secretary of the Treasury; in subsec", "\n(b), established Office of Employee Plans and Exempt Organizations to carry out functions with respect to organizations exempt from tax and with respect to plans to which part I of subchapter D of chapter 1 applied; in subsec. (c), established Office for Taxpayer Services such as telephone, walk-in, and taxpayer educational services, and design and production of forms; and in subsec", "\n(d), established Office of Taxpayer Advocate and set forth functions of Office and responsibilities of Commissioner regarding response to recommendations of Office. See section 7803 of this title.", "\n1996\u2014Pub. L. 104\u2013168, \u00a7 101(b)(2), substituted \u201cCommissioners; Taxpayer Advocate.\u201d for \u201cCommissioner (Employee Plans and Exempt Organizations)\u201d in section catchline.\nSubsec. (d). Pub. L. 104\u2013168, \u00a7 101(a), added subsec. (d).\n1982\u2014Subsec. (b). Pub. L. 97\u2013258redesignated existing provisions as par. (1), added par. (1) heading, and added par. (2). Par. (2) is based on provisions that appeared in section 1037 of former Title 31, Money and Finance, prior to enactment of Title 31 by Pub. L. 97\u2013258.", "\n1976\u2014Subsec. (a). Pub. L. 94\u2013455, \u00a7 1906(b)(13)(B), substituted \u201cSecretary of the Treasury\u201d for \u201cSecretary\u201d after \u201cprescribed by the\u201d.\nSubsec. (b). Pub. L. 94\u2013455, \u00a7 1906(b)(13)(A), struck out \u201cor his delegate\u201d after \u201cSecretary\u201d.\n1974\u2014Pub. L. 93\u2013406designated existing provisions as subsec. (a) and added subsec. (b).", "\nCommittee on Governmental Affairs of Senate changed to Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of Senate, effective Jan. 4, 2005, by Senate Resolution No. 445, One Hundred Eighth Congress, Oct. 9, 2004.", "\nCommittee on Government Reform and Oversight of House of Representatives changed to Committee on Government Reform of House of Representatives by House Resolution No. 5, One Hundred Sixth Congress, Jan. 6, 1999. Committee on Government Reform of House of Representatives changed to Committee on Oversight and Government Reform of House of Representatives by House Resolution No. 6, One Hundred Tenth Congress, Jan. 5, 2007.\nPub. L. 105\u2013206, title I, \u00a7 1101(d),July 22, 1998, 112 Stat. 697, provided that:", "\n\u201c(1) In general.\u2014The amendments made by this section [amending this section and sections 4946 and 6103 of this title] shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act [July 22, 1998].\n\u201c(2) Initial nominations to internal revenue service oversight board.\u2014The President shall submit the initial nominations under section 7802 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as added by this section, to the Senate not later than 6 months after the date of the enactment of this Act [July 22, 1998].", "\n\u201c(3) Effect on actions prior to appointment of oversight board.\u2014Nothing in this section shall be construed to invalidate the actions and authority of the Internal Revenue Service prior to the appointment of the members of the Internal Revenue Service Oversight Board.\u201d", "\nPub. L. 104\u2013168, title I, \u00a7 101(c),July 30, 1996, 110 Stat. 1456, provided that: \u201cThe amendments made by this section [amending this section and section 7811 of this title] shall take effect on the date of the enactment of this Act [July 30, 1996].\u201d\nPub. L. 100\u2013647, title VI, \u00a7 6235(c),Nov. 10, 1988, 102 Stat. 3737, provided that: \u201cThe amendment made by subsection (a) [amending this section] shall take effect on the date 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act [Nov. 10, 1988].\u201d", "\nPub. L. 93\u2013406, title II, \u00a7 1051(d),Sept. 2, 1974, 88 Stat. 951, provided that: \u201cThe amendments made by this section [amending this section and sections 5108 and 5109 of Title 5, Government Organization and Employees] shall take effect on the 90th day after the date of the enactment of this Act [Sept. 2, 1974].\u201d"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.law.cornell.edu", "date_download": "2014-09-16T19:19:03Z", "digest": "sha1:KINHKOQPNRZLFF3YKKXQTHA2GJNLILSS", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 17682, 17682.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 17682, 22368.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 17682, 121.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 17682, 268.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 17682, 0.93]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 17682, 173.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 17682, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 17682, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 17682, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 17682, 0.0]], 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41,140,837 | https://eas.caltech.edu/news?keyword=Richard+Flagan |
Anthony Leonard and Richard Flagan Elected Members of the 2010 Class of the NAE | ["", "\nAnthony Leonard, Theodore von K\u00e1rm\u00e1n Professor of Aeronautics, Emeritus, and Richard C. Flagan, Irma and Ross McCollum-William H. Corcoran Professor of Chemical Engineering and Professor of Environmental Science & Engineering; Executive Officer of Chemical Engineering, have been elected members of the 2010 class of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE)", "\nNAE membership honors those who have made important contributions to engineering theory and practice, and those who have demonstrated unusual accomplishments in the pioneering of new and developing fields of technology. Election to the NAE is one the highest professional distinctions an engineer can receive", "\nProfessor Flagan was elected to the NAE \"for leadership in invention, measurement, production, and technology of aerosols\" and Professor Leonard was elected \"for contributions to simulation of turbulence, new vortex methods of flow simulation, and understanding of flow-induced vibration.\" [Caltech Today Article]", "\nTags: honors GALCIT ESE Anthony Leonard Richard Flagan National Academy of Engineering"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "eas.caltech.edu", "date_download": "2020-09-19T03:55:24Z", "digest": "sha1:4YSKHXISEVLPMBBEUVHJSMTJAMIB2RG2", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1150, 1150.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1150, 3736.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1150, 3.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1150, 133.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1150, 0.93]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1150, 236.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1150, 0.30208333]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1150, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1150, 0.06875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1150, 0.06875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1150, 0.06875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1150, 0.06875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1150, 0.02083333]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1150, 0.03333333]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1150, 0.03958333]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1150, 0.046875]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1150, 0.15625]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1150, 0.51851852]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1150, 5.92592593]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1150, 4.06835764]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1150, 162.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 80, 14.0], [80, 1064, 136.0], [1064, 1150, 12.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 80, 0.05063291], [80, 1064, 0.00418848], [1064, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 1064, 0.0], [1064, 1150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 80, 0.125], [80, 1064, 0.05182927], [1064, 1150, 0.19767442]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1150, 0.01007813]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1150, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1150, 0.2713843]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1150, -20.90839877]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1150, 4.71888774]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1150, 35.448727]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1150, 7.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,843 | https://epsy.ku.edu/ku-researchers-develop-virtual-reality-improve-social-competencies-students |
KU researchers to develop virtual reality to improve social competencies for students with disabilities
LAWRENCE — University of Kansas researchers have secured grant funding that will allow them to develop virtual reality technology to help students with | [" high-functioning autism and learning disabilities learn social competencies and apply them to their everyday lives and education.", "\nStudents with disabilities often do not learn social skills or pick up on social cues at the same pace as their peers. The Office of Special Education and Programs in the U.S. Department of Education granted KU researchers $2.5 million for a five-year program to implement VR that delivers evidence-based practices proven to help improve social competencies", "\nResearchers in KU\u2019s Center for Research on Learning, within the Life Span Institute, and the Department of Special Education will work with a minimum of 17 schools to implement the VR technology.", "\nThe program, known as AViSSS, will allow middle school students to encounter situations in which social competencies could be tested throughout a typical school day. Users will interact with avatars in settings such as school hallways, lunch rooms, locker rooms, buses, classrooms and others", "\nThey will have opportunities to react to school-based social situations that might require them to start a conversation, respond to questions, problem-solve potential inappropriate behavior and practice numerous other skills in a safe, controlled environment. The system, along with teachers who administer it, will offer the students feedback on how they handled situations, why certain actions are socially appropriate and how to generalize those lessons in everyday life", "\nThe grant is an extension of previous funding in which AViSSS was developed.", "\n\u201cWith previous funding, we developed and did initial testing of our virtual reality tool to develop and improve social competencies with students with high-functioning autism and learning disabilities,\u201d said Sean Smith, professor of special education and co-principal investigator of the project. \u201cBased on that work, we\u2019ve wanted to expand and further investigate this tool with students and teachers in schools, and this grant will allow us to do that.\u201d", "\nSmith is leading the project with Amber Rowland, assistant research professor in the Center for Research on Learning, and Bruce Frey, professor of research psychology. They will implement the technology in at least 17 schools throughout the Midwest over the five-year project. They will also evaluate the technology and its progress throughout. At present, AViSSS can be used on tablets, computers and electronic devices", "\nEventually they hope to make it available on VR-compatible headsets, continuing to advance VR capabilities.", "\n\u201cOur idea is to use virtual reality to explicitly teach students these social competency skills and how to generalize them in their natural environments. Likewise, we want to equip teachers with ways to implement virtual reality and support student generalization of skills into the classroom setting,\u201d Rowland said.", "\nThe AViSSS virtual reality system will give students an opportunity to learn and practice various social-skill-building techniques, and researchers will monitor progress while improving and revising the system based on input from student learning, schools, teachers and parents. The project comes at a vital time because students are increasingly challenged with social skill development", "\nThis is further complicated by initiatives like the Next Generation Science Standards that require a level of student social competence in order to demonstrate knowledge through increased social interaction, including verbal presentations, group-based learning and informed arguments.", "\nAs Rowland explained, \u201cWith an emphasis on argumentation, collaboration and communication, new learning standards place heavy importance on social competency and thus limit access to content to some individuals. We\u2019ll be able to help these individuals work through those challenges and learn how to process these struggles in a safe environment.\u201d", "\nIn addition to the students and teachers, KU researchers will collaborate with educational leaders at the Ohio Center on Autism and Low Incidence Disabilities and a team of computer scientists at Western Illinois University.", "\n\u201cIn our schools, there is a great need for inquiry-based instruction focused on social competency. Many of our learners need to be taught these skills, and this is an effective venue to do that,\u201d Smith said. \u201cVirtual reality offers individuals an interactive learning experience where they feel as if they are actually engaged and part of the virtual environment", "\nWe want to be able to build off of that and help them generalize skills learned in the VR to actual classrooms, schools and other everyday experiences.\u201d", "\nPHOTO: A screen capture from the AViSSS program shows an avatar a student could interact with in a hallway setting to help boost social competencies. 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41,140,855 | https://reports.data.montgomerycountymd.gov/reports/BB_FY16_REC/CCT |
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Montgomery CountyMCG HomedataMontgomeryb | ["udgetMontgomeryspendingMontgomery\nOverview | Programs | Summary | Visualize", "\nThe mission of the Circuit Court is to serve Sixth Judicial Circuit residents in the determination of litigation in serious criminal matters, substantive civil cases, domestic and child support cases in accordance with the Constitution while administering justice in an honest, fair, and efficient manner.", "\nThe total recommended FY16 Operating Budget for the Circuit Court is $14,020,516, an increase of $41,424 or 0.3 percent from the FY15 Approved Budget of $13,979,092. Personnel Costs comprise 80.1 percent of the budget for 112 full-time positions and four part-time positions, and a total of 114.00 FTEs. Total FTEs may include seasonal or temporary positions and may also reflect workforce charged to or from other departments or funds", "\nOperating Expenses account for the remaining 19.9 percent of the FY16 budget.", "\nLINKAGE TO COUNTY RESULT AREAS\nWhile this program area supports all eight of the County Result Areas, the following are emphasized:\nA Responsive, Accountable County Government\nHealthy and Sustainable Neighborhoods\nVital Living for All of Our Residents\nDEPARTMENT PERFORMANCE MEASURES", "\nPerformance measures for this department are included below, with multi-program measures displayed at the front of this section and program-specific measures shown with the relevant program. The FY15 estimates reflect funding based on the FY15 approved budget. The FY16 and FY17 figures are performance targets based on the FY16 recommended budget and funding for comparable service levels in FY17.\nACCOMPLISHMENTS AND INITIATIVES", "\nIn FY14, Montgomery County Circuit Court processed 36,041 filings and 36,301 terminations, 646 more terminations than in FY13, resulting in a clearance rate of 101%.\nThe Court met or exceeded case processing performance standards set by the Maryland Judiciary in FY14 for Family-Limited Divorce cases and Termination of Parental Rights cases.", "\nIn FY14, the Court improved its case processing performance in Civil cases (95% to 97%), Child in Need of Assistance Shelter cases (72% to 81%), and Child in Need of Assistance Non-Shelter cases (66% to 89%).\nThe Court opened the South Tower on April 28, 2014, adding 10 courtrooms, 8 hearings rooms, and office space for the Family Division, the Family Law Self-Help Center, and the Juvenile Division.", "\nFor the first six months of FY15, the Court processed 15,796 filings and 16,258 terminations, respectively. The annual filings and terminations for FY15 (compared to FY14) are estimated to increase by 8% reaching 39,062 filings and 39,348 terminations.", "\nThe Court annually updates its web-based performance dashboard that displays 10 nationally-recognized trial court performance measures (CourTools) developed by the National Center for State Courts. In FY15, the Court presented data in support of the court employee satisfaction measure, which highlights results from the Court\u2019s first annual survey of court employees. More information can be found at: http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/circuitcourt/court/publications/publications.html.", "\nThe Adult Drug Court commemorated its 10th Anniversary on November 12, 2014. Since the program\u2019s inception,148 participants have graduated.", "\nDuring the first half of FY15, the Court opened a newly-renovated Jury Lounge, now located on the second floor of the North Tower. Other projects currently underway include construction of the Child Waiting Area in the South Tower and, in the North Tower, renovations to the Clerk of the Court\u2019s office and the office space for the retired judges. These projects are expected to be completed before the end of the fiscal year.", "\nThe Court will be performing more detailed analyses of its Juvenile Delinquency cases and reviewing select cases where an extraordinary cause postponement was granted to determine if efficiencies are to be gained in case processing.", "\nThe U.S. Census estimates that by 2040 one in five of the county\u2019s residents will be 65 years or older (compared to one in ten in 2000). To meet the anticipated needs of this segment of the county\u2019s population, the Court anticipates the continuation of its Adult Guardianship Grant program. This program is designed to help guardians successfully fulfill their responsibilities.", "\nThe Adult Drug Court will continue to support the mission of eliminating drug abuse, crime, the consequences of crime, thereby increasing public safety by leveraging new initiatives in the areas of education and life skills. The GED program will be improved to include supportive services and partnerships will be forged with the local business community to provide career-based employment opportunities for qualified participants.", "\nThe Maryland Electronic Courts (MDEC) case management and electronic filing system was deployed in Fall 2014. The Court will continue to analyze the technical challenges associated with integrating this eventual statewide case management system with the functionality of its own case management system as well as its differentiated case management policies.", "\nBased on the information obtained from its first employee satisfaction survey, the Court will define and implement several administrative initiatives related to employee development and the management of court operations. The initiatives will further develop the skills of court personnel in an effort to improve upon the quality service currently delivered to internal and external customers", "\nGains in operational efficiency are anticipated to occur without hindering the Court\u2019s ability to administer justice in an honest and fair manner.", "\nUpdated policies and practices related to the Family Differentiated Case Management (DCM) plan", "\nThe existing Family DCM plan will be modified to allow for specified cases to be assigned to an individual Circuit Court Judge and Family Division Support Team for the totality of the litigation process, in essence One Family, One Judge.The approach was recognized by the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges as one of the key elements to provide expedited and coordinated resolutions for cases involving children, youth and families", "\nIt is anticipated that any stress created when families are shuttled between different departments and courtrooms to resolve a variety of issues will be reduced with this approach. In addition, case progression is anticipated to be more efficient since the assigned judge will already be familiar with the family\u2019s general situation.", "\nThe Court\u2019s Jury Office will transition from a two-step to a one-step process in jury selection; join a statewide jury management system; install kiosks to streamline the juror check-in process; and convert to cash payment for jury service.", "\nThe Court is undertaking several initiatives aimed at improving services to self-represented litigants who visit the Court for assistance. One initiative focuses on examining the front and back-office processes in the Family Law self-Help Center to address increased demand and evaluate service delivery. Another project is to increase the type of information collected from the client intake form to better inform the Court\u2019s understanding of the quality of service delivery.", "\nThe Court has automated the process of collecting and analyzing the \u2018To Be Assigned\u2019 docket. Overall, the percentage of \u2018To Be Assigned\u2019 cases reached between April 2011 and June 2014 is 98%. This analysis enables the Court to better manage its workload through more efficient scheduling and better management of resources.", "\nContact Judy Rupp of the Circuit Court at 240.777.9103 or Elyse Greenwald of the Office of Management and Budget at 240.777.2768 for more information regarding this department's operating budget.\nLanguage Translation Policy\nUser Rights Policy\n\u00a9 2020 Montgomery County, Maryland"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "reports.data.montgomerycountymd.gov", "date_download": "2020-09-19T02:12:24Z", "digest": "sha1:WHPPI7DFBTKGFOATO36XYU63KFDGM6OL", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 8090, 8090.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 8090, 8458.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 8090, 43.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 8090, 71.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 8090, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 8090, 253.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 8090, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 8090, 0.0]], 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47,013,530 | http://bulletin.appstate.edu/preview_course_nopop.php?catoid=7&coid=15657 |
An investigation of the major philosophies of music in both historical and contemporary perspective. Particular emphasis is placed on aesthetic theory. The relationship between aesthetics of music educational methodology will be examined. | [""] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "bulletin.appstate.edu", "date_download": "2018-07-16T01:12:26Z", "digest": "sha1:GZBV3L7AWE5K6TI4DLK6ZPMBHJCQEUJT", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 238, 238.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 238, 2395.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 238, 1.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 238, 71.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 238, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 238, 124.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 238, 0.37142857]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 238, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 238, 0.06862745]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 238, 0.08571429]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 238, 0.875]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 238, 6.375]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 238, 3.2760976]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 238, 32.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 238, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 238, 32.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 238, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 238, 0.01260504]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 238, 0.00215632]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 238, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 238, -9.89e-06]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 238, -7.10385459]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 238, 2.3589053]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 238, 7.40122295]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 238, 3.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
47,013,531 | http://cscu.education/home/mission/?view=mobile |
The mission of CSCU is to act as a leading center of Christian thought and practice by developing men and women of character that are competent and proven leaders able to lead in their local Church or ministry for the Glory of God. We believe that godly c | ["ompetent leaders can change the world for the better. Jesus provides a message of hope for all and our mission is to all yet unreached and outside of His love and care", "\nCSCU uses a real world model, (similar to some business schools) where accomplished Church leaders teach and model real time ministry at the local Church level within the communities where students are currently serving. Classrooms are not centralized to one campus but are organized to function at a local Church campus and thereby capable of serving students from a local or regional area."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "cscu.education", "date_download": "2018-09-19T03:05:49Z", "digest": "sha1:JLHQT27LYIKBX4TZQZEM5TA254AL5JF2", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 814, 814.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 814, 2023.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 814, 2.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 814, 46.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 814, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 814, 282.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 814, 0.47651007]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 814, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 814, 0.04954955]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 814, 0.01342282]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 814, 0.04697987]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 814, 0.6056338]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 814, 4.69014085]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 814, 4.21488958]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 814, 142.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 423, 0.0], [423, 814, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 423, 0.0], [423, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 423, 79.0], [423, 814, 63.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 423, 0.0], [423, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 423, 0.0], [423, 814, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 423, 0.02836879], [423, 814, 0.02046036]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 814, 0.0302825]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 814, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 814, 0.0009281]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 814, -31.19562922]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 814, 5.50348288]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 814, -2.83913291]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 814, 4.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
47,013,535 | http://www.nmu.edu/forensic-science-camp-nmu |
Forensic Investigation Summer Program
Cyber Camp
Environmental Science Camp
Superior International Wrestling Camp
ReImagine STEM Summer Youth Academy
Wildcat Youth & Tween Camps
Summer College for Kids
Summer Skilled Trades Camps
Grades: 9-11
Dates: July | ["15-21, 2018\nRegistration Fee: $900, before June 1, 2018 (or $950 after June 1, 2018)\nRegistration Fee Includes: Lodging, meals, camp activities and evening programs\nApplication Deadline: June 1, 2018\n2018 Flyer", "\nThe Forensic Investigation Summer Program at Northern Michigan University is a residential summer camp that offers high school students hands-on experience with methods used by crime scene investigators and forensic scientists to collect and analyze evidence used to solve crimes. The curriculum is intended for academically able students who are currently in 9th, 10th, or 11th grades (during the 2017-2018 school year)", "\nTopics that will be explored during this program include impression evidence (fingerprints, shoe prints), trace evidence (hairs, fibers), crime scene documentation, forensic anthropology and more!", "\nThe summer program is led by Dr. Jane Wankmiller, Director of NMU's Forensic Research Outdoor Station (FROST), along with other faculty members and NMU students from related disciplines.\nPlease submit an application accompanied by a letter of recommendation from your science teacher or a school administrator.\nDaily Schedule:\n7:00 a.m. Wake up\n7:30 - 8:15 a.m. Breakfast\n8:30 - 11 a.m. Academic Lecture & Lab and/or Fieldwork\n11:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m. Lunch", "\n12:30 - 4:30 p.m. Academic Lecture & Lab and/or Fieldwork\n5:30 - 6:30 p.m. Dinner\n6:30 - 9:30 p.m. Evening Group Activity\n10:30 p.m. Lights Out"] | null | {"partition": 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47,013,571 | http://news.canton.edu/blog/category/academics/page/2/ |
Archive for the ‘Academics’ Category
SUNY Canton Faculty Receive Chancellor’s Awards
Tuesday, May 22nd, 2018
The State University of New York recently announced three SUNY Canton faculty members had received chancellor’s awards. | ["", "\n\u201cOne of my themes for SUNY is individualized education, meaning the work we do to help our students navigate the programs and opportunities within our 64 campuses,\u201d said SUNY Chancellor Kristina M. Johnson. \u201cOur faculty and staff educate, inspire, and support our students to pursue their passions; they are the driving force on campus. Those we honor today are leading this effort through their commitment to their craft and their dedication to our students.\u201d", "\nAll three award recipients are noted for providing exceptional instruction and mentoring to students.\nPictured is Associate Professor Rashid Aidun of Potsdam receiving the SUNY Chancellor\u2019s Award for Excellence in Faculty Service from SUNY Canton President Zvi Szafran.", "\nRashid Aidun, Ph.D., an associate professor who teaches in the Electrical Engineering Technology and Engineering Science programs, received the Chancellor\u2019s Award for Excellence in Faculty Service. He was recognized for his 13 years of academic service and his 16 years of professional industrial experience. He holds a patent on a non-destructive coating thickness measuring device.", "\nAidun has made positive contributions to the Canino School of engineering technology, including developing new programs and courses, recruiting new students, helping current students secure scholarships, in addition to helping graduates continue on for their advanced degrees.", "\n\u201cWhat I most admire about Dr. Aidun is his remarkable ability to stimulate students and add personality to his course material,\u201d said Associate Professor Feng Hong, who teaches physics at the college. \u201cHis dynamic teaching style engages students. They can feel the energy and optimism radiate from him.\u201d\nAidun lives in Potsdam with his wife, Peggy Sue, and their daughter Savarah.", "\nProfessor Charles R. Fenner of Canton receives the SUNY Chancellor\u2019s Award for Excellence in Teaching from SUNY Canton President Zvi Szafran.", "\nCharles R. Fenner, Ph.D., the curriculum coordinator for the college\u2019s management program, received the Chancellor\u2019s Award for Excellence in Teaching. His creative approach to incorporating innovative teaching strategies encourages problem solving and critical thinking skills, giving graduates the tools they need to handle difficult situations head-on when they start their careers.", "\nHe was one of the first faculty members to embrace online learning. He has continued that forward-thinking philosophy and consistently utilizes new technology to enhance his classes.", "\nPrior to his academic career, he served for 20 years in the Army, and takes the time to mentor both active duty and veteran learners. His students describe him as an engaged, motivational educator who deeply cares about their success. Under his guidance, four students helped north country businesses become more profitable. Many of his courses emphasize entrepreneurial strategies.", "\n\u201cCharles\u2019 ability to engage students and to assist each with understanding the objectives is commendable,\u201d said Maureen P. Maioco, Ed.D., one of the faculty members who nominated Fenner. \u201cHe uses humor to supplement his effective teaching strategies and incorporates a student-centered approach in his teaching practice. He prepares students to think on their feet, as they will need to do in a business or client meeting.\u201d\nFenner lives in Canton with his wife, Dorothy. They have two grown daughters.", "\nJamie L. Gibson of Edwards, a clinical instructor in SUNY Canton\u2019s two-year Nursing program, won the SUNY Chancellor\u2019s Award for Excellence in Adjunct Teaching. Gibson is pictured with President Zvi Szafran.\nJamie L. Gibson, who is a clinical instructor in the two-year Nursing program, received the Chancellor\u2019s Award for Excellence in Adjunct Teaching. She is known for emphasizing critical thinking and reasoning skills that help students connect lecture concepts to real-life clinical scenarios.", "\nHer students overwhelmingly described her as a dedicated professional who is kind, approachable, and supportive. In addition, her colleagues credit her with being a major contributing factor for student success during nursing certification exams.\nThrough her more than 10 years working as a nurse, she is able to impart the knowledge she has gained by working in a fast-paced emergency room setting, where quick thinking and sound decision-making skills save lives.", "\n\u201cShe is committed to the college and its Nursing students,\u201d said Debra Backus, Ph.D., a recently-retired Nursing curriculum coordinator. \u201cShe approaches each students\u2019 education at whatever level they are at and guides them to higher levels of understanding. She provides outstanding support for their continuing intellectual growth.\u201d\nGibson Lives in Edwards with her husband, Jonathan, their daughter, Marlow, and son, Aiden.", "\nTags: Chancellor Kristina Johnson, Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Adjunct Teaching, Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Faculty Service, Chancellor's Award for Excellence in Teaching, Charles Fenner, Jamie Gibson, President Zvi Szafran, Rashid Aidun\nPosted in Academics, Awards, Faculty, SUNY | Comments Off on SUNY Canton Faculty Receive Chancellor\u2019s Awards\nSUNY Canton\u2019s 110th Commencement Honors Class of 2018", "\nSUNY Canton celebrated the accomplishments of nearly 900 graduates during the college\u2019s 110th Commencement ceremony held Saturday, May 12, at the Roos House Convocation Athletic and Recreation Center.\nPresident Zvi Szafran and SUNY Canton College Council Chair Ronald M. O\u2019Neill, class of 1963, welcomed family and friends and congratulated the class of 2018 on their accomplishments.\nPresident Zvi Szafran congratulates graduates as they cross the stage.", "\nBoth also took the opportunity to acknowledge a special milestone in college history. It was five decades ago that SUNY Canton moved from a small cluster of buildings adjacent to the St. Lawrence University campus to its current location, marking a new era.\n\u201cAll graduations are special, but you have the added distinction of being the class who graduates during our \u201850 Years on the Hill\u2019 commemoration,\u201d O\u2019Neill said.", "\nSzafran read a congratulatory message from alumna Rosella M. Todd Valentine, who was among the first cohort to graduate from the new campus in 1968.\nFrancesco Palumbo \u2013 SUNY Canton President Zvi Szafran embraces Francesco Palumbo, a Sports Management graduate from Canton, as he crosses the stage during commencement.", "\n\u201cThe year 1968 was a tumultuous and pivotal year, and so is 2018,\u201d she wrote. \u201cYou have much to look forward to, but also much to do. Go out, do good things, and always remember the wonderful start this college has given you.\u201d\nSzafran noted this year\u2019s class comprises graduates who range in age from 18 to 62 years old and represent 17 different states and 7 foreign countries, including Angola, Australia, The Bahamas, Cameroon, Finland, Sweden and Canada.", "\nHe then introduced Student Government Association President and David R. Maynard Student Activities Award winner Rachel \u201cNikki\u201d Zeitzmann, who delivered the senior class address. She encouraged her fellow graduates to build upon the lessons they learned while completing their degrees.\nPresident Szafran embraces Student Government Association President and David R. Maynard Student Activities Award winner Rachel \u201cNikki\u201d Zeitzmann \u201918.", "\n\u201cMy hope is that we continue to expand what we have built as groundwork here into our future careers,\u201d she said. \u201cWe may be separated, but we will never be divided from our SUNY Canton foundation.\u201d\nSeveral outstanding students received special recognition, including:\nCriminal Justice major Michael J. Volpe of Centereach, who earned the Outstanding Associate Graduate Award.\nApplied Psychology major Jamie L. Reed of Canton, who earned the Outstanding Baccalaureate Graduate Award.", "\nJamie Reed \u2013 Jamie L. Reed of Canton earned the Outstanding Graduate award at the bachelor\u2019s degree level. Pictured (l to r) are SUNY Canton President Zvi Szafran, Reed, and Vice President for Student Affairs and Dean of Students Courtney B. Bish.\nThe keynote address was delivered by Pulitzer Prize winner John G. Maines III, who attended SUNY Canton from 1976 to 1977.", "\nMaines earned the most prestigious award in American journalism while he was working for the South Florida Sun Sentinel in 2013. He and colleague Sally Kestin authored an in-depth investigative report about speeding by Florida\u2019s off-duty police officers that earned the paper its first Pulitzer and led to sweeping reform and disciplinary action across the state.", "\nHe recounted the story of how he began his studies at SUNY Canton with the intention of becoming an engineer, but changed course once he began writing for the student newspaper.\n\u201cI had fun; I wrote stories and editorials,\u201d he told the audience. \u201cNewspaper work was what I really wanted to do\u2014it was exciting and always challenging and changing. It wasn\u2019t until years later that I first heard the phrase \u2018follow your bliss,\u2019 but that is exactly what I had done.\u201d", "\nohn Maines \u2013 John G. Maines III receives a hood denoting his honorary doctorate from SUNY Canton President Zvi Szafran at the college\u2019s 110th Commencement Ceremony. Maines is Pulitzer-prize winning journalist who got his start with the SUNY Canton student newspaper.", "\nAfter nearly twenty years of working as a reporter, Maines said he switched to a new area of investigative work in the late 1990s called computer-assisted reporting, or CAR. Ironically, he was able to draw upon the skills he learned while attending SUNY Canton as he learned about this highly technical field.", "\n\u201cI found the discipline, logic, science, critical thinking and other things I learned at Canton to be a tremendous help in that change,\u201d he said. \u201cIt was database work, in fact, that helped investigative reporter Sally Kestin and I win the Pulitzer.\u201d\nSzafran presented Maines with an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters for his contributions to the field of journalism.", "\nAs the degrees were conferred, the President of the Alumni Board of Directors Kelly Obermayer, class of 1979, welcomed each graduate into the alumni family by presenting them with a special medallion.\nSUNY Canton Alumni Association President Kelly Obermayer presents David Russell, a Graphic and Multimedia Design major from New York, N.Y., with his graduation medallion.", "\nThe top five bachelor\u2019s degrees awarded, in order of popularity, were Criminal Investigation, Health Care Management, Nursing, Management and Veterinary Technology.\nThe top five associate degrees awarded, in order of popularity, were Nursing, Liberal Arts, Individual Studies, Criminal Justice and Business Administration.\nAdditionally, more than 90 graduates from the college\u2019s one and two-year Nursing programs were recognized at special pinning ceremonies held earlier in the week.", "\nTags: Commencement, Jamie Reed, John Maines, President Zvi Szafran, Rosella Todd Valentine\nPosted in Academics, Canino School of Engineering Technology, School of Business & Liberal Arts, School of Science, Health, & Criminal Justice | Comments Off on SUNY Canton\u2019s 110th Commencement Honors Class of 2018\nPulitzer Prize-Winning Alum to Speak at SUNY Canton Commencement", "\nA Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter who began his journalism career in the North Country will deliver the keynote speech at SUNY Canton\u2019s 110th Commencement Ceremony at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, May 12, in the Roos House Convocation, Athletic and Recreation Center.", "\nJohn G. Maines III, who attended SUNY Canton from 1976 to 1977, earned the South Florida Sun Sentinel newspaper its first Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2013 for a groundbreaking investigative report about speeding by Florida off-duty police officers. Maines and colleague Sally Kestin authored a three-part series titled \u201cAbove the Law,\u201d and their findings led to sweeping reform and disciplinary action by police departments across the state.", "\n\u201cJohn is one of the most esteemed members of our alumni family, and we\u2019re pleased to welcome him back to campus,\u201d said SUNY Canton President Zvi Szafran. \u201cJohn\u2019s life\u2019s work is an example of journalism\u2019s value as a government watchdog and ally of public safety.\u201d", "\nA reporter for more than 40 years, he began his career writing for SUNY Canton\u2019s student newspaper, the Insight, until he was recruited to work full-time for the Massena Observer. He subsequently went on to work for the Ithaca Journal and the Clarion-Ledger in Jackson, Miss., before becoming a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C. In the late 1980s, he became interested in computer-assisted reporting, or CAR, a technique that reporters use to gather and organize data for articles.", "\nUpon joining the Sun Sentinel in 1993, he used his CAR background to assist the research team on a number of high-profile investigations, including voting irregularities in the 2000 presidential election, Florida\u2019s connections to the Sept. 11 terrorists, and widespread FEMA fraud after Hurricane Frances in 2004.", "\nHe is the recipient of numerous journalism honors, including the Associated Press Managing Editors Public Service and First Amendment awards, the Investigative Reporters and Editors Award, and the Roy W. Howard Award in Public Service Reporting from the Scripps Howard Foundation. He was also a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting in 2006 for the FEMA series.", "\nMaines attended SUNY Canton to study Agricultural Engineering and attributes his success in CAR to his interest in and aptitude for technology.\n\u201cI\u2019ve been really lucky,\u201d he said. \u201cI took a sharp turn from engineering into journalism, but many of the skills I learned at SUNY Canton have stayed with me throughout my career.\u201d\nHe was inducted into the SUNY Canton Hall of Fame in 2016 and will receive an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree in recognition of his accomplishments.", "\nTags: Honorary Doctorate, John Maines, President Zvi Szafran, Sun Sentinel\nPosted in Academics, Alumni, Commencement | Comments Off on Pulitzer Prize-Winning Alum to Speak at SUNY Canton Commencement\nSUNY Canton Recognizes Students for Academic Success at Honors Convocation\nSUNY Canton students will be receiving academic awards for achieving the highest GPA in their majors at the college\u2019s Dr. William J. Fassinger Honors Convocation celebration.", "\nThe awards ceremony will be held at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday, April 25 in the Roos House Convocation, Athletic and Recreation Center. The college recently published an article about Fassinger and the ceremony.", "\n\u201cCongratulations to all of the students who have top marks in their fields of study,\u201d said Douglas M. Scheidt, SUNY Canton provost and vice president for academic affairs. \u201cTheir achievement indicates that they are making the best of all the opportunities available at SUNY Canton and their academic success will help prepare them for their careers.\u201d\nStudents who will be receiving awards include:\nNicholas Abbott, a junior in the Alternative & Renewable Energy Systems Bachelor of Technology", "\nJohnathan N. Andre, a sophomore in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nBrendan Arthur, a freshman in the Electrical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nRyan Auger, a freshman in the Game Design and Development Bachelor of Technology\nDylan T. Aumell, a freshman in the Sports Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nSeth D. Bly, a freshman in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology", "\nDaniel Bonilla, a senior in the Emergency Management Bachelor of Science\nJuliana R. Boothby, a junior in the Funeral Services Administration Bachelor of Technology\nWesley Bortnick, a sophomore in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nTyler Bowman, a sophomore in the Criminal Investigation Bachelor of Technology\nHeath J. Boyea, a junior in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology", "\nTimothy W. Buckley, a sophomore in the Individual Studies \u2013 Nursing Associate in Applied Science\nMiranda Bulriss, a sophomore in the Applied Psychology Bachelor of Science\nCourtney Burgess, a sophomore in the Health Care Management Bachelor of Science\nNicholas Burnett, a freshman in the Electrical Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nChristopher Calamia, a sophomore in the Finance Bachelor of Business Administration", "\nJames J. Canevari, a junior in the Law Enforcement Leadership Bachelor of Technology\nJamie L. Carey, a freshman in the Liberal Arts-General Studies Associate of Science\nMarni B. Cartelli, a senior in the Health Care Management Bachelor of Science\nErica A. Castrina, a senior in the Finance Bachelor of Business Administration\nSamanthe A. Caza, a senior in the Bachelor of Science in Nursing Bachelor of Science\nIsaiah Cechnicki, a freshman in the Funeral Services Administration Bachelor of Technology", "\nChristopher D. Cerosaletti, a sophomore in the Funeral Services Administration Bachelor of Technology\nAndrew Chapin, a junior in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nAshley Chapin, a senior in the Funeral Services Administration Bachelor of Technology\nDante S. Coco, a sophomore in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nMcKayla Coller, a freshman in the Criminal Justice Associate in Applied Science", "\nKimberly Collins, a sophomore in the Engineering Science Associate of Science\nAlexandra G. Corradi, a senior in the Legal Studies Bachelor of Science\nAbbey D\u2019Agostino, a sophomore in the Sports Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nAmanda M. Dahl, a junior in the Veterinary Technology Bachelor of Science\nDemeishia E. Day, a freshman in the Practical Nursing Certificate\nElizabeth E. Dexter, a freshman in the Management Bachelor of Business Administration", "\nTristan M. Dibble, a freshman in the Homeland Security Bachelor of Technology\nJeffrey Dollinger, a freshman in the Accounting Associate in Applied Science\nLevi S. Edwards, a senior in the Electrical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nKrista Eggleston, a sophomore in the Veterinary Science Technology Associate in Applied Science\nSierra Erwin, a freshman in the undeclared Bachelor of Science\nJacob Facey, a sophomore in the Health & Fitness Promotion Bachelor of Technology", "\nJohanna Falkenham, a sophomore in the Physical Therapist Assistant Associate in Applied Science\nGarrett Fields, a sophomore in the Air Conditioning Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nJessica L. Fischer, a senior in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nAndrew P. Fitch, a freshman in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nCassandra Foster, a sophomore in the Liberal Arts-General Studies Associate of Science", "\nAshlee N. Fowler, a junior in the Applied Psychology Bachelor of Science\nMichael A. Francis III, a sophomore in the Computer Information Systems Associate in Applied Science\nJames A. Gibson, a freshman in the Criminal Investigation Bachelor of Technology\nAlexander J. Green, a junior in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nAlexis E. Grotto, a freshman in the Veterinary Technology Bachelor of Science", "\nThomas Guilfoil, a freshman in the Air Conditioning Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nJordan T. Guyer, a freshman in the Applied Psychology Bachelor of Science\nMatthew Hamilton, a freshman in the Automotive Technology Associate in Applied Science\nJeffrey B. Hance, a freshman in the Law Enforcement Leadership Bachelor of Technology\nJohanna H. Hanchar, a sophomore in the Physical Therapist Assistant Associate in Applied Science", "\nLoretta L. Harris, a sophomore in the Business Administration Associate of Science\nLeigha S. Haskins, a sophomore in the Homeland Security Bachelor of Technology\nGrant M. Heath, a sophomore in the Civil Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nThomas L. Heath, a junior in the Graphic and Multimedia Design Bachelor of Science\nStephanie Hernandez, a sophomore in the Business Administration Associate of Science\nMadeline F. Hewitt, a junior in the Legal Studies Bachelor of Technology", "\nJohn C. Holt, a junior in the Emergency Management Bachelor of Science\nCharlotte Huether, a freshman in the Legal Studies Bachelor of Science\nCassandra Hughes, a senior in the Homeland Security Bachelor of Technology\nRyan Hurlbert, a freshman in the Heating & Plumbing Service Certificate\nBilly Hyde II, a freshman in the Powersports Perform & Repair Certificate\nBriannah Isaac, a freshman in the Graphic and Multimedia Design Bachelor of Science", "\nEderly Jimenez Dominguez, a senior in the Health & Fitness Promotion Bachelor of Technology\nDaniel H. Johnson, a freshman in the Physical Therapist Assistant Associate in Applied Science\nJesse K. Jordan, a sophomore in the Electrical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nJerome E. Joseph, a freshman in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nAlexander King, a sophomore in the Individual Studies Associate in Applied Science", "\nKody Kocsis, a junior in the Electrical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nVili-Jesper V. Koivula, a sophomore in the Business Administration Associate in Applied Science\nAustin Lanning, a sophomore in the Engineering Science Associate of Science\nBrandy L. LaPorte, a freshman in the Computer Information Systems Associate in Applied Science\nElizabeth LaSalle, a freshman in the Dental Hygiene Associate in Applied Science", "\nSamuel D. Lawrence, a sophomore in the Law Enforcement Leadership Bachelor of Technology\nHailie Lehman, a senior in the Law Enforcement Leadership Bachelor of Technology\nEric J. Leroux, a freshman in the Homeland Security Bachelor of Technology\nSamantha Levitz, a senior in the Legal Studies Bachelor of Science\nWes A. Lincoln, a senior in the Industrial Technology Management Bachelor of Technology\nTanya Logan, a junior in the Criminal Investigation Bachelor of Technology", "\nSharon L. Luce, a senior in the Emergency Management Bachelor of Science\nJonathan A. Luse, a freshman in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nMason R. Maitland, a senior in the Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nAmber Makuch, a freshman in the Individual Studies \u2013 Veterinary Science Technology Associate in Applied Science\nErica J. Mallette, a freshman in the Nursing Associate in Applied Science", "\nAlexander J. Marshall, a sophomore in the Alternative & Renewable Energy Systems Bachelor of Technology\nReanna M. Martin, a senior in the Legal Studies Bachelor of Science\nLillianna N. Matthews, a freshman in the Individual Studies \u2013 Nursing Associate in Applied Science\nTina M. McCallus, a freshman in the Individual Studies \u2013 Nursing Associate in Applied Science\nJacob McDonald, a sophomore in the Construction Technology: Management Associate in Applied Science", "\nMaddison McIntosh, a sophomore in the Information Technology Bachelor of Technology\nReily R. McIntosh, a freshman in the Business Administration Associate in Applied Science\nMitchell L. Mclean, a senior in the Sports Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nCole J. McMahon, a freshman in the Construction Technology: Management Associate in Applied Science\nMelissa M. Mello, a sophomore in the Veterinary Technology Bachelor of Science", "\nDevon R. Meunier, a junior in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nJasmine Michitsch, a senior in the Veterinary Service Administration Bachelor of Business Administration\nJames Middlemiss, a freshman in the undeclared Bachelor of Business Administration\nJennifer C. Mikulski, a senior in the Dental Hygiene Bachelor of Technology\nPaige Monacelli, a freshman in the Early Childhood Associate of Science", "\nLindsey A. Morgan, a sophomore in the Physical Therapist Assistant Associate in Applied Science\nKayla M. Myers, a junior in the Bachelor of Science in Nursing Bachelor of Science\nLane A. Netto, a senior in the Information Technology Bachelor of Technology\nNoelle M. Niemiec, a junior in the Health & Fitness Promotion Bachelor of Technology\nShaynah Novak, a senior in the Veterinary Technology Bachelor of Science\nEmily Oeser, a freshman in the Game Design and Development Bachelor of Science", "\nChristopher P. Oley, a sophomore in the Automotive Technology Associate in Applied Science\nGrace L. Page, a junior in the Sports Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nRachel M. Paugh, a freshman in the Veterinary Science Technology Associate in Applied Science\nJustin C. Peebles, a freshman in the General Technology Associate in Applied Science\nJoseph Peppe, a sophomore in the Industrial Technology Management Bachelor of Technology", "\nMisael M. Perez, a sophomore in the Emergency Management Bachelor of Science\nErik D. Perry, a sophomore in the Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nJennifer Petricca, a freshman in the Agribusiness Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nNicole K. Pond, a sophomore in the Dental Hygiene Associate in Applied Science\nCarrie A. Raines, a sophomore in the Early Childhood Associate of Science\nAmanda M. Raymer, a freshman in the Legal Studies Bachelor of Technology", "\nLiam Rice, a junior in the Finance Bachelor of Business Administration\nSusannah Ripley, a junior in the Health Care Management Bachelor of Science\nPeyton Robinson, a junior in the Criminal Investigation Bachelor of Technology\nDylan J. Rosen, a senior in the Finance Bachelor of Business Administration\nJacob A. Satterley, a sophomore in the Criminal Justice Associate in Applied Science\nShawn Savard, a freshman in the Individual Studies Associate in Applied Science", "\nJacob C. Scaggs, a senior in the Information Technology Bachelor of Technology\nTristan Scelzi, a junior in the Game Design and Development Bachelor of Science\nSamantha A. Schramp, a senior in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology\nRyan Schubert, a junior in the Criminal Investigation Bachelor of Technology\nOrly Schwartz, a senior in the Criminal Investigation Bachelor of Technology\nKevin A. Segit, a senior in the Alternative & Renewable Energy Systems Bachelor of Technology", "\nKelly A. Shelton, a freshman in the Alternative & Renewable Energy Systems Bachelor of Technology\nMatthew P. Snodgrass, a sophomore in the Nursing Associate in Applied Science\nIsabela Spelta, a freshman in the Civil Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nMorgan Stinson, a senior in the Graphic and Multimedia Design Bachelor of Technology\nTyler Studer, a senior in the Mechanical Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology", "\nConnor D. Sullivan, a sophomore in the Electrical Engineering Technology Associate in Applied Science\nAlyssa Suzuki, a freshman in the Criminal Justice Associate in Applied Science\nAubree Swart, a freshman in the Air Conditioning Maintenance & Repair Certificate\nTia M. Tassava, a junior in the Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nBrian Thomas, a sophomore in the Electrical Construction & Maintenance Certificate\nCollin Trathen, a freshman in the Engineering Science Associate of Science", "\nJacob Vierno, a junior in the Homeland Security Bachelor of Technology\nJoseph M. Vocino, a senior in the Applied Psychology Bachelor of Science\nForrest C. Vorolieff, a sophomore in the Graphic and Multimedia Design Bachelor of Science\nAdeline F. Wagner, a freshman in the Health & Fitness Promotion Bachelor of Technology\nMargaret J. Walker, a freshman in the Engineering Science Associate of Science", "\nNatalia Wallace, a freshman in the Individual Studies \u2013 Veterinary Science Technology Associate in Applied Science\nMary Wallace, a senior in the Finance Bachelor of Business Administration\nRobert Wallace, a senior in the Finance Bachelor of Business Administration\nChris K. Wentzel, a junior in the Information Technology Bachelor of Technology\nJoseph M. Werner, a freshman in the Civil & Environmental Engineering Technology Bachelor of Technology", "\nJaneen M. West, a senior in the Legal Studies Bachelor of Science\nKambree L. White, a sophomore in the Accounting Associate in Applied Science\nDaniel S. Whitton, a freshman in the Engineering Science Associate of Science\nKain Wilder, a sophomore in the Sports Management Bachelor of Business Administration\nChristopher R. Wolfe-Mcguire, a sophomore in the Game Design and Development Bachelor of Science\nAndrew Woodard, a freshman in the one-plus-one with SUNY ESF Associate in Applied Science", "\nStudents have been notified via SUNY Canton email about their awards. The college has also issued a Merit Achievement, which includes a news release for their hometown newspapers, for each student listed above. Students who have requested confidentiality are excluded from all published lists. For corrections or questions, please email [email protected], or call 315-386-7300.\nTags: Doug Scheidt, Honors Convocation, William Fassinger", "\nPosted in Academics, Awards | Comments Off on SUNY Canton Recognizes Students for Academic Success at Honors Convocation\nChancellor Selects SUNY Canton Students to Receive Prestigious Award\nTwo SUNY Canton students were selected by SUNY Chancellor Kristina M. Johnson to receive the 2018 Chancellor\u2019s Award for Student Excellence.", "\nSenior Jessica L. Fischer, a Mechanical Engineering Technology major, and senior Kaitlyn N. Tibbetts, a Criminal Investigation major, were recognized at a special ceremony held April 10 in Albany. They will wear a medallion denoting their accomplishments at the college\u2019s 110thCommencement Ceremony Saturday, May 12.\nKaitlyn N. Tibbetts (left) and Jessica L. Fischer (right) were selected to receive the 2018 SUNY Chancellor\u2019s Award for Student Excellence.", "\n\u201cI am immensely proud of these students, who have demonstrated academic excellence and dedication to enriching their campuses and communities,\u201d said Johnson. \u201cFrom research publications in industry journals to volunteering in hospitals and local clinics to holding leadership roles at their institutions, I am inspired by each student we recognize today. Congratulations to all of the students receiving this year\u2019s award.\u201d", "\nFischer is the founder and president of SUNY Canton\u2019s Environmental Change Organization, which is dedicated to achieving a more eco-friendly campus. In this capacity, she has spearheaded efforts to coordinate clean-up days, establish a pollinator garden and organize recycling initiatives. She also obtained a grant to establish a campus food composting operation that has diverted tons of waste from landfills.", "\nA champion of green energy, Fischer was selected by the WindAid Institute in 2016 to build a wind turbine in the rural community of Playa Blanca, Peru. She worked with a team of 12 fellow volunteer engineers to complete the four-week project.", "\n\u201cDuring my tenure at SUNY Canton, I have not seen any other student accomplish as much as Jessica has,\u201d said Assistant Professor Lucas Craig, Ph.D., who teaches in the Mechanical Engineering Technology program. \u201cHer extracurricular activities throughout her academic career mirror that of a humanitarian, and she has made the entire campus proud.\u201d", "\nFischer has maintained a 4.0 GPA every semester and is a member of Tau Alpha Pi Honor Society. A highly regarded peer mentor, she has shared her knowledge and experience by serving as a tutor, a guest speaker in the college\u2019s first-year experience course for freshman, and an ambassador for the Mechanical Engineering Program at open houses and admitted student days.", "\nTibbetts is a founding member of the SUNY Canton Emergency Medical Service Squad and a volunteer with the St. Lawrence County Canton Fire and Rescue organization, where she provided patient care and transport to local hospitals. Her outstanding efforts in support of law enforcement earned her the New York State University Police Chief\u2019s Dr. McBride Criminal Justice Student Achievement Award.", "\nShe also received SUNY Canton\u2019s Outstanding Associate Graduate Award in 2016 upon earning a degree in Criminal Justice and is a member of the national criminal justice honor society, Alpha Phi Sigma. She will graduate with a double minor in Homeland Security and Forensic Science and also earned an associate degree in Liberal Arts and Sciences in 2017.", "\nTibbetts was hired by the U.S. Secret Service last fall to complete an extended pathway internship in Knoxville, Tenn. Her duties include supporting criminal investigations and handling counterfeit currency.", "\n\u201cHaving been in higher education for 17 years, and law enforcement prior to that, I recognize that Kaitlyn is the ideal person to have a career in law enforcement,\u201d said SUNY Canton Criminal Justice Lecturer Lisa E. Colbert. \u201cShe is professional, serious about any task she is given, mature, personable and has great communication skills. No matter if it is academic, organizational or community-oriented, Kaitlyn takes what she does seriously and with pride.\u201d", "\nThe Chancellor\u2019s Award for Student Excellence was created in 1997 to recognize students who have best demonstrated, and have been recognized for, the integration of academic excellence with accomplishments in the areas of leadership, athletics, community service, creative and performing arts, campus involvement, or career achievement.\nTags: Chancellor Kristina Johnson, Jessica Fischer, Kaitlyn Tibbetts", "\nPosted in Academics | Comments Off on Chancellor Selects SUNY Canton Students to Receive Prestigious Award\nSUNY Canton Honors Convocation Named for Retired Criminal Justice Faculty Member\nSUNY Canton Provost Douglas M. Scheidt recently announced that the college\u2019s annual Honors Convocation celebration has been named to honor a retired faculty member who taught in the Criminal Investigation and Criminal Justice programs.", "\n\u201cI\u2019m pleased that the 2018 Honors Convocation will be named for Professor Emeritus William J. Fassinger, Ph.D.,\u201d Scheidt said. \u201cDr. Fassinger will be the guest of honor as we celebrate our best and brightest students, and their academic achievements, for the past year.\u201d\nHonors convocation will be held at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday, April 25, in the Roos House Convocation, Athletic and Recreation Center.", "\nFassinger began his career as an instructor at SUNY Canton in 2003, following military police service in the U.S. Army, and successful teaching careers at both the secondary and college levels. He was promoted to assistant professor in 2005, associate professor in 2008, and was promoted to full professor in 2013.", "\nSUNY Canton Professor Emeritus William J. Fassinger teaches a student how to take crime scene photographs for the college\u2019s Criminal Investigation program. Fassinger is the namesake of the 2018 Honors Convocation Celebration.", "\n\u201cThank you for giving me the humbling opportunity to share a day with the SUNY Canton students who have reached the pinnacle of their educational journey,\u201d Fassinger said. \u201cIt is evident that our honor students have sacrificed much in order to achieve greatness. As they pass through the portals of life, they will continue to be great achievers in all that they set forth to accomplish.\u201d", "\nFassinger was the primary advisor to the Criminal Justice Student Association and helped orchestrate the Save a K9 project, which provided bulletproof vests for eight area police dogs. Students held fundraisers to purchase the body armor, which is designed specifically for each animal and costs upwards of $1,000. Many area departments would not have been able to purchase this equipment without help from SUNY Canton.", "\nAs the inaugural faculty liaison for the Veterans Association at SUNY Canton, he devoted numerous hours to help establish the College\u2019s award-wining program. He both helped student veterans start their education and helped them succeed during their academic career. SUNY Canton has been frequently recognized as a military- and veteran-friendly institution.", "\nPictured are (l to r) SUNY Canton Grants Coordinator JoAnne M. Fassinger and her husband, Professor Emeritus William J. Fassinger, at a Veterans Association memorial tree planting ceremony.\n\u201cWe\u2019ve all heard that actions speak louder than words,\u201d said Professor Charles R. Fenner, Ph.D., one of the faculty members who nominated Fassinger for the award. \u201cWhen it comes to Dr. Fassinger\u2019s love of people, his actions speak volumes.\u201d", "\nWill and his wife, JoAnne, were the lead faculty and staff representatives for the Habitat for Humanity student club. Since his retirement, he continues to work with the local Habitat Chapter and is leading the renovation of a local home with SUNY Canton Professor Emeritus Brian Washburn.", "\nAdditionally, he was a College Association board member and served as the board President in 2014 to 2015. He received the college\u2019s Northstar award in 2008, two awards from the Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society, and a Dean of Students Specialty Award in 2014. He also helped organize the annual 9/11 Commemorative Ceremony for six years.\nTags: Criminal Justice, Honors Convocation, William Fassinger", "\nPosted in Academics, Faculty, School of Science, Health, & Criminal Justice | Comments Off on SUNY Canton Honors Convocation Named for Retired Criminal Justice Faculty Member\nSUNY Canton Law Enforcement Day to Feature Officers, Investigators Involved in Dannemora Fugitive Manhunt", "\nFour New York State Police officers and an official with the New York State Office of Special Investigations who were involved in the 2015 high-profile pursuit of Dannemora prison escapees Richard Matt and David Sweat will speak at SUNY Canton as part of the college\u2019s annual Law Enforcement Day Wednesday, March 28.", "\nRetired New York State Police Maj. Charles E. Guess, who was the incident commander during the 23-day manhunt, will speak at 9 a.m. in the Richard W. Miller Campus Center\u2019s Kingston Theater. He is the author of the 2017 book \u201cRelentless Pursuit,\u201d a first-hand account of the largest search in state history.", "\n\u201cI can certainly claim an insider\u2019s point of view \u2026 as to what I saw, what I experienced and how we did things both strategically and tactically during those 23 days with all of our federal, state and local partners,\u201d Guess told WAMC Radio in an interview last year.", "\nGuess\u2019 colleagues Sgt. Jay Cook, Sgt. Ronald Pena and Sgt. Christopher Giovazzino will also discuss their involvement in the operation, which ended with Matt being shot and killed by a U.S. Border Patrol SWAT team, and Sweat being shot and wounded by a state trooper.\nAt 1:30 p.m., Office of Special Investigations Deputy Commissioner Steven J. Maher will screen a short film detailing the escape and subsequent Department of Corrections and Community Supervision\u2019s investigation.", "\nAll events will be held in the Kingston Theater and are free and open to the public; parking is available in Lots 1, 6, 7 and 13. Guess will be available for book signings following the discussion.\nThis is the college\u2019s eighth annual Law Enforcement Day. It is designed to give students an opportunity to meet with and hear from experts in the field. Criminal Justice, Criminal Investigation and related two- and four-year programs are among the most popular degrees offered at the college.", "\nSUNY Canton is also home to the state-certified David Sullivan-St. Lawrence County Law Enforcement Academy, which trains the majority of the North Country\u2019s police force.\nTags: Law Enforcement Day, Maj. Charles E. Guess, Sgt. Christopher Giovazzino, Sgt. Jay Cook, Sgt. Ronald Pena, Steven J. Maher\nPosted in Academics, School of Science, Health, & Criminal Justice | Comments Off on SUNY Canton Law Enforcement Day to Feature Officers, Investigators Involved in Dannemora Fugitive Manhunt", "\nSUNY Canton Honors Renowned Nurse and Educator With Naming\nA dedication ceremony was held March 1 to celebrate the naming of SUNY Canton\u2019s School of Nursing for the late Margaret D. Sovie, Ph.D., a pioneer in health care.\nThe naming was in recognition of a generous gift from Margaret\u2019s husband, Alfred L. Sovie, in honor of her accomplished career. Alfred, a 1958 SUNY Canton graduate, passed away in 2016 and wished to keep his wife\u2019s legacy alive in the North Country.", "\nFriends and family celebrated the Margaret D. Sovie School of Nursing naming at SUNY Canton. Pictured from left to right are Margaret\u2019s brother and sister-in-law William and Carol Doe, and Sovie family friends Mary and Deborah Polniak and William Barr.\n\u201cAl Sovie gave us an incredible gift\u2014with this naming, he reminds us all to remember those who paved the way before us,\u201d said SUNY Canton President Zvi Szafran at the ceremony. \u201cMargaret Sovie was a leader and innovator in the field of nursing.\u201d", "\nThe Sovies were originally from Ogdensburg and married in 1954. Alfred graduated from the George Hall Trade School in Ogdensburg and continued his education at SUNY Canton and Syracuse University in civil engineering. Margaret graduated from the St. Lawrence State Hospital School of Nursing and earned her bachelor\u2019s, master\u2019s, and doctoral degrees from Syracuse University.", "\nMargaret\u2019s professional career in nursing administration consisted of positions as chief nursing officer at the University of Rochester\u2019s Strong Memorial Hospital and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. She is perhaps most remembered for her landmark study for the 1983 American Academy of Nursing\u2019s Task Force on Nursing Practice in Hospitals", "\nShe and her colleagues identified the characteristics of facilities that attracted and retained the best and brightest nurses, as well as established the framework for a program of nursing excellence. From this study evolved the Magnet Recognition Program, which is considered the highest recognition for nursing excellence and is used by the American Nurses Credentialing Center today.", "\nPictured from left to right are family friend Deborah Polniak, Director of Major Gifts Peggy Levato, Margaret\u2019s brother William Doe, and President Zvi Szafran.\nA pioneer in combining the values of higher education, research and publication with nursing practice, she received national recognition for her study of the interrelationship of nursing acuity, diagnosis related groups, and the economic delivery of health care.", "\n\u201cAs an internationally recognized scholar, researcher, educator and author, Margaret\u2019s studies have impacted clinical and practical nursing protocol throughout the United States and other countries,\u201d Szafran said. \u201cShe was known for her fearlessness, outspoken manner and strong commitment to mentoring and patient care services.\u201d", "\nNursing Faculty/Staff Past and Present \u2013 Pictured from left to right are Debra Backus, James Akins, Linda Fay, Anne Ryan, Christine Brassard, Joan Fregoe, John Conklin, Paula Jacques, and Kimberly Davies.\nFollowing her death in 2002, the University of Rochester created the Margaret D. Sovie Lecture Series, and Alfred endowed the Margaret D. Sovie Center for Advanced Practice in 2006, the first of its kind in the country.", "\nHe also established the Margaret D. Sovie Endowed Scholarship at SUNY Canton, which provides awards annually to three students studying nursing or health care. More than 400 students are currently enrolled in the college\u2019s nursing programs, which are traditionally among the most competitive and popular degrees.\nLast year, the school unveiled a state-of-the-art nursing simulation laboratory that replicates a hospital\u2019s intensive care unit to assist students with problem solving and patient assessment.", "\n\u201cOur work in the simulation laboratory, paired with knowledgeable and experienced faculty members, establishes a solid foundation to excel in our professional careers,\u201d said senior nursing student Joshua Cartmill, a Sovie scholarship recipient. \u201cI hope to one day step back through the doors of the Margaret D. Sovie School of Nursing and offer the same support and enthusiasm as Al and Margaret have given us.\u201d", "\nThe ceremony concluded with a plaque unveiling by President Szafran and Deborah Polniak, a longtime friend of Alfred\u2019s.\n\u201cEach time we see Margaret\u2019s name, we are reminded of her strength, drive and intelligence,\u201d said Vice President for Advancement Anne M. Sibley. \u201cWe are sincerely grateful to Al for his generosity, and to Debbie Polniak, who helped make all of this possible.\u201d\nTags: Alfred Sovie, Anne Sibley, Margaret Sovie, nursing, President Zvi Szafran", "\nPosted in Academics, College Foundation, School of Science, Health, & Criminal Justice | Comments Off on SUNY Canton Honors Renowned Nurse and Educator With Naming"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "news.canton.edu", "date_download": "2018-09-19T03:53:02Z", "digest": "sha1:VN545FKTDI6X6G32ZLGH3ECHJAP553NN", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 44437, 44437.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 44437, 64841.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 44437, 296.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 44437, 824.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 44437, 0.93]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 44437, 308.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 44437, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 44437, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 44437, 0.0]], 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\"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 44437, 385.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
47,013,632 | https://www.amazing-nikko.org/en/column/column_d.html?0:120 | Nishirokuban Enchi: A Quiet Spot with History and Scenic Beauty | ["Nishirokuban Enchi: A Quiet Spot with History and Scenic Beauty\nRecommended Quiet Spot in International Summer Resort, OkuNikko ;)\nWhat a beautiful fresh greenery this time of year!\nTake time to gaze at the shores of Lake Chuzenji while thinking back to the days when yacht races were held.\n\"In the summer, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs moves into Nikko.\"\nDid you know that there was a time when it was said so?", "Nishirokuban Enchi: A Quiet Spot with History and Scenic Beauty\nFrom the Taisho era (1912-1926) to the early Showa era (1926-1926), many foreign people visited Okunikko, an international summer resort, to escape the hot and humid summer heat.\nNishirokuban Enchi is a place where you can feel such history.\nNishirokuban Enchi is the former site of the Nishirokuban Villa, which was once the base of the Tokyo Angling End Country Club, an international social club visited by members of the royal family, diplomats, and many other distinguished guests.", "Nishirokuban Enchi: A Quiet Spot with History and Scenic Beauty\nThe villa was built by Thomas Glover, known for the \"Glover House\" in Nagasaki, and later rebuilt into a clubhouse by Hans Hunter, but unfortunately the building was destroyed by fire in 1940.\nFly fishing and yacht races, flying boats circling, people cooling off by the shimmering lakeside....\nWhy don't you enjoy the pleasant breeze blowing through this place and think back to the scenery of those days?"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.amazing-nikko.org", "date_download": "2023-03-28T08:31:42Z", "digest": "sha1:B6VSFIK2EO7XXRJH4ESWGV7PKTOJ7REB", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1243, 1243.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1243, 2154.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1243, 11.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1243, 41.0]], 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10.43266653]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1243, 16.30345984]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1243, 7.98586364]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1243, 10.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
45,329,048 | https://elc.byu.edu/tutoring/report.php?day=12&month=11&year=2020&area=3&room=304 |
Report on Meetings
Report start date: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026
Report end date: 1 2 3 4 | ["5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026\nMatch area:\nMatch room:", "\nMatch type: Use Control-Click to select more than one type\nMatch brief description:\nMatch full description:\nReport only Summary only Report and Summary Report as CSV Summary as CSV\nSort Report by:\nTutor Start Date/Time\nDisplay in report:\nDuration End Time\nSummarize by:\nBrief description Creator"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "elc.byu.edu", "date_download": "2021-04-10T23:03:26Z", "digest": "sha1:SQPBNPQ3MTKVLEYBOXDNL45YXQ46ZJXS", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 753, 753.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 753, 2754.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 753, 15.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 753, 95.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 753, 0.68]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 753, 235.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 753, 0.07692308]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 753, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 753, 0.47735192]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 753, 0.47735192]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 753, 0.47735192]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 753, 0.47735192]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 753, 0.47735192]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 753, 0.47735192]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 753, 0.0174216]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 753, 0.02090592]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 753, 0.02439024]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 753, 0.01098901]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 753, 0.53296703]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 753, 0.53571429]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 753, 3.41666667]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 753, 4.41794648]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 753, 168.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 230, 0.0], [230, 434, 0.0], [434, 446, 0.0], [446, 458, 0.0], [458, 517, 0.0], [517, 542, 0.0], [542, 566, 0.0], [566, 639, 0.0], [639, 655, 0.0], [655, 677, 0.0], [677, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 728, 0.0], [728, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 230, 0.0], [230, 434, 0.0], [434, 446, 0.0], [446, 458, 0.0], [458, 517, 0.0], [517, 542, 0.0], [542, 566, 0.0], [566, 639, 0.0], [639, 655, 0.0], [655, 677, 0.0], [677, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 728, 0.0], [728, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 19, 3.0], [19, 230, 58.0], [230, 434, 57.0], [434, 446, 2.0], [446, 458, 2.0], [458, 517, 10.0], [517, 542, 3.0], [542, 566, 3.0], [566, 639, 13.0], [639, 655, 3.0], [655, 677, 3.0], [677, 696, 3.0], [696, 714, 3.0], [714, 728, 2.0], [728, 753, 3.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 230, 0.48325359], [230, 434, 0.48019802], [434, 446, 0.0], [446, 458, 0.0], [458, 517, 0.0], [517, 542, 0.0], [542, 566, 0.0], [566, 639, 0.0], [639, 655, 0.0], [655, 677, 0.0], [677, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 728, 0.0], [728, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 230, 0.0], [230, 434, 0.0], [434, 446, 0.0], [446, 458, 0.0], [458, 517, 0.0], [517, 542, 0.0], [542, 566, 0.0], [566, 639, 0.0], [639, 655, 0.0], [655, 677, 0.0], [677, 696, 0.0], [696, 714, 0.0], [714, 728, 0.0], [728, 753, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 19, 0.10526316], [19, 230, 0.06161137], [230, 434, 0.06372549], [434, 446, 0.08333333], [446, 458, 0.08333333], [458, 517, 0.06779661], [517, 542, 0.04], [542, 566, 0.04166667], [566, 639, 0.16438356], [639, 655, 0.125], [655, 677, 0.18181818], [677, 696, 0.05263158], [696, 714, 0.16666667], [714, 728, 0.07142857], [728, 753, 0.08]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 753, -1.001e-05]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 753, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 753, 0.89280242]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 753, -166.20385322]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 753, -78.83424716]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 753, -69.19565439]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 753, 1.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,132 | https://web-prod.santafe.edu/people/profile/daniel-l-stein |
Daniel L. Stein
External Faculty; Science Board Fellow
Daniel L. Stein is Professor of Physics and Mathematics at New York University. From 2006-2012 he served as NYU Dean of Science. Prior to coming to NYU, he served on the faculties at Princeton Univers | ["ity and at the University of Arizona, where he was Head of the Department of Physics for a decade. He received his Ph.D. In Physics from Princeton University in 1979.", "\nHis research is in the fields of theoretical condensed matter physics and statistical mechanics, with applications to problems in social science and biological physics. It focuses primarily on randomness and disorder in condensed matter systems, with an emphasis on magnetic materials and on stochastic processes leading to rare nucleation events", "\nIn addition, he has worked on topics as diverse as protein biophysics, biological evolution, amorphous semiconductors, superconductors and superfluids, liquid crystals, neutron stars, and the interface between particle physics and cosmology.", "\nHis awards include a Princeton University C.E. Proctor Fellowship, an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship, University of Arizona College of Science Distinguished Teaching Award, Commission on the Status of Women Vision 2000 Award, election as a Fellow of the American Physical Society, election as a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the U.S. Air Force Exemplary Civilian Service Medal, and a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship.\nScholar Profiles\nPhysics and Mathematics"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "web-prod.santafe.edu", "date_download": "2019-05-19T14:55:38Z", "digest": "sha1:CQ6DURXKDZC3QQXHASTIBKW7XFBCWDO6", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1551, 1551.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1551, 2448.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1551, 8.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1551, 71.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1551, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1551, 56.9]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1551, 0.29304029]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1551, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1551, 0.09664848]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1551, 0.04676539]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1551, 0.04676539]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1551, 0.03897116]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1551, 0.04910366]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1551, 0.03273578]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1551, 0.03663004]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1551, 0.15018315]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1551, 0.55603448]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1551, 5.53017241]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1551, 4.50907129]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1551, 232.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 55, 0.0], [55, 422, 1.0], [422, 1012, 1.0], [1012, 1474, 1.0], [1474, 1491, 0.0], [1491, 1515, 0.0], [1515, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 55, 0.0], [55, 422, 0.0], [422, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1474, 0.0], [1474, 1491, 0.0], [1491, 1515, 0.0], [1515, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 16, 3.0], [16, 55, 5.0], [55, 422, 64.0], [422, 1012, 81.0], [1012, 1474, 69.0], [1474, 1491, 2.0], [1491, 1515, 3.0], [1515, 1551, 5.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 55, 0.0], [55, 422, 0.03370787], [422, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1474, 0.00892857], [1474, 1491, 0.0], [1491, 1515, 0.0], [1515, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 55, 0.0], [55, 422, 0.0], [422, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1474, 0.0], [1474, 1491, 0.0], [1491, 1515, 0.0], [1515, 1551, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 16, 0.1875], [16, 55, 0.12820513], [55, 422, 0.08991826], [422, 1012, 0.00508475], [1012, 1474, 0.0974026], [1474, 1491, 0.11764706], [1491, 1515, 0.08333333], [1515, 1551, 0.08333333]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1551, 0.78135878]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1551, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1551, 0.89504462]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1551, -35.64032175]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1551, 5.3524055]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1551, 62.24333357]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1551, 18.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,134 | http://www.osti.gov/home/ostiblog/notifications/subscribe/21/taxonomy/tid/109?page=2&destination=keywords |
OSTIblog HomeTopicsAuthorsArchive DOE Releases Manhattan District History and Oppenheimer Personnel Hearing Transcript via OSTI-Hosted OpenNet 09 Oct | ["", "\n2014 Published by Rita Hohenbrink The Department of Energy (DOE) recently completed two significant declassification efforts and has made the newly released documents publicly available on the OpenNet database, which DOE launched 20 years ago to improve public access to declassified documents. The website is supported by the DOE Office of Classification and hosted by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) on a cost-reimbursable basis.", "\nOver a 12-month period concluding in July 2014, DOE released to the public the Manhattan District History, a multi-volume classified history of the Manhattan Project.\nRead more... Accepted Manuscript Submissions for DOE PAGES(Beta) Officially Start October 1, 2014 01 Oct", "\n2014 Published by Judy Gilmore On August 4, 2014, the Department of Energy (DOE) launched the DOE Public Access Gateway for Energy and ScienceBeta (DOE PAGESBeta), a portal and search engine that makes scholarly scientific publications resulting from DOE research funding publicly accessible and searchable at no charge to users.", "\nDOE PAGESBeta was developed and is maintained by the DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) in response to a February 2013 White House Office of Science and Technology Policy memorandum that called on federal agencies to develop and implement plans to provide public access to the results of research they fund within a year of publication.\nRead more... Mining for Gold, Neutrinos and the Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay 23 Sep", "\n2014 Published by Kathy Chambers Deep within the caverns of Lead, South Dakota is one of the nation\u2019s preeminent underground laboratories. The site of the former Homestake Mine was once one of the largest and deepest gold mines in North America. This famous mine was discovered during the 1876 Black Hills gold rush and maintained a rich and colorful mining history for the next 125 years", "\nWhen the mine became unprofitable it closed in 2003, having produced more than 40 million ounces of gold over its lifetime.", "\nRead more... Stretchable electronics - a new way to monitor health using microfluidics 19 Aug", "\n2014 Published by Kathy Chambers Thanks to microfluidics, you may soon be able to easily and continually monitor your health with the help of Northwestern University\u2019s new wearable, stretchable monitors. Yonggang Huang, a Northwestern University professor, and John A. Rogers, a University of Illinois professor, have designed thin, soft, stick-on patches that stretch and move with the skin and incorporate commercial, off-the-shelf chip-based electronics for sophisticated wireless health monitoring", "\nThese microfluidic devices can be laminated onto the skin to track everyday health and wirelessly send updates to your cellphone, computer, or doctor\u2019s office.", "\nRead more... Achieving Public Access: The Department of Energy Launches DOE PAGES(Beta) 04 Aug\n2014 Published by Dr. Jeffrey Salmon Click here (www.osti.gov/pages/) to view the future of public access to scientific publications.", "\nAs of August 4, 2014, and for the first time ever, the Department of Energy (DOE) will provide a portal (see above) allowing anyone to read, download, and analyze in digital form final peer-reviewed manuscripts or final published articles of work sponsored by the Department. 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46,832,140 | http://www.uwec.edu/alumni/e-view/2003/e-viewOct03.htm |
Welcome to e-View, UW-Eau Claire’s monthly online newsletter for alumni and friends. e-View connects you to UW-Eau Claire with information on alumni happenings, special events and much more. You can unsubscribe or subscribe at any time. (Note: e-View subs | ["cribers and nonsubscribers will continue to receive The View, the university\u2019s printed alumni publication.) Please let us know whether e-View provides you with the information you want", "\nTo send us your comments and suggestions for future e-View issues, please complete our online survey.", "\nCampus Events More Campus News\nSubscribe or Unsubscribe Contact Us\nMORE LINKS Class Notes\nBlugold Babies\nBlugold Athletics\ne-View Back Issues\nSee highlights from Homecoming 2003!\nHomecoming draws alumni from across the nation UW-Eau Clalire photos by Rick Mickelson", "\nAlumni returned to UW-Eau Claire in record numbers for Homecoming 2003. Blugolds from across the nation joined the festivities \u2014 Florida, California, Nevada, Colorado, Alabama, Minnesota, Illinois, Maryland, North Dakota, Missouri, Michigan and Wisconsin were among the states represented. See highlights from the Oct. 4 events in the Alumni Photo Album.\nAlexandre Dossin had the honor of performing with Martha Argerich after winning the Martha Argerich International Piano Competition in Buenos Aires.", "\nIf pianist Alexandre Dossin were an athlete, he would be an Olympian. That\u2019s the caliber of the competitors at the international piano competition he won last month in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Dossin, assistant professor of music and theatre arts at UW-Eau Claire, was awarded both the first prize of $10,000 and the special prize of $2,000 for best performance of a composition by an Argentine composer at the Martha Argerich International Piano Competition the first weekend in September", "\n\u201cThis is a major event, and it is certainly an honor to perform there as one of the selected performers,\u201d said David Baker, chairman of the department of music and theatre arts. \u201cTo win it all is very big news.\" Full story.", "\nUW-Eau Claire, UW-La Crosse and UW-Oshkosh are proposing a pilot program that would offer discounts in out-of-state tuition to children and grandchildren of alumni, commonly known as legacy students, who live outside Wisconsin and Minnesota. The UW System Board of Regents was to review the \u201cLegacy Scholars Program\u201d proposal at its Oct. 9-10 meetings in Oshkosh. The proposal will then go back to the Board of Regents for action at its November meeting", "\nUnder the proposal, legacy students would pay 25 percent less in tuition than other out-of-state students. Full story.", "\nProfessor represents UW System at national education summit", "\nDr. Roger Tlusty, professor and chair of the foundations of education department at UW-Eau Claire, represented the UW System as a member of a Wisconsin delegation attending a one-day U.S. Department of Education summit on high school reform Oct. 8 in Washington, D.C. Tlusty joined seven others from Wisconsin, including State Superintendent Elizabeth Burmaster and Jessica Clark, education policy advisor from Gov", "\nDoyle\u2019s office, as they met with congressional representatives, think tank staff and other educators and government officials from across the nation to discuss the challenges facing America\u2019s high schools and address the solutions and \u201cnext steps\u201d needed to tackle those challenges. Full story.", "\nA recovery fund has been established for UW-Eau Claire linebacker Justin Greenwood who is in serious condition at St. Paul Regions Hospital following a head injury suffered in the Blugolds\u2019 Sept. 27 football game at UW-River Falls. The Blugold football team\u2019s Unity Council, comprised of senior players, has set up a support fund to help Greenwood and his family offset their medical expenses. \u201cThe Justin Greenwood Recovery Fund\u201d has been established at Royal Credit Union in Eau Claire", "\nContributions, which are not tax deductible, can be made to the \u201cThe Justin Greenwood Recovery Fund\u201d at any RCU location or mailed to Royal Credit Union, P.O. Box 970, Eau Claire, 54702. Full story.", "\nThe usual festive atmosphere of Homecoming was more upbeat than ever as the UW-Eau Claire Foundation and generous financial supporters of UW-Eau Claire celebrated the progress of the university\u2019s ongoing comprehensive fund-raising campaign at the Circle of Excellence Roundup", "\n(See more details and photos of the event.) Alumni and friends have contributed or committed more than $27 million so far to Fulfilling the Promise of Excellence, Chancellor Donald Mash announced at the Foundation's annual board meeting earlier in the day. Also at the board meeting, David G. Anderson \u201966 was elected board chairman, succeeding Larry Weber \u201968, who had served as chairman since 2000", "\nAlso elected as Foundation board officers were Dan Market, vice president; John Kell \u201973, secretary; and Jim Pinter, treasurer. New board members introduced were Dr. James Anderson \u201963, Michael Duffield \u201974, Dr. Thomas Grewe, Dr. William Hutchinson \u201977, Jane Moore \u201973, Dean Olson, Jerry L. Smith \u201976, Jon Stowe \u201967, Cathy Sultan, Michael Swenson and Sally Webb \u201902. Full story.", "\nGift supports program to connect physicians, pre-med students", "\nKerry and Daniel Kincaid, Eau Claire, have provided support through the UW-Eau Claire Foundation for a new program to connect UW-Eau Claire pre-med students and area physicians. The UW-Eau Claire Pre-Med Career Exploration and Service Partnership, initiated by senior pre-med student Joe Eaton, will help students make contacts with local physicians so they can get advice, learn more about medicine as a profession and do job shadowing. Full story", "\nThe Kincaids\u2019 total gift of $25,000 also will support the Kincaid Pre-Med Scholarship Fund and the Kerry Kincaid Fund for Political Science. Kerry Kincaid graduated in 1993 and 1996 from UW-Eau Claire with degrees in political science and education. The Kincaids\u2019 gift is recognized as a contribution to the Foundation\u2019s ongoing comprehensive fund-raising campaign, Fulfilling the Promise of Excellence.", "\nAcademic Adviser Rita Webb leaves for peace mission in Sri Lanka", "\nRita Webb, an academic adviser and coordinator of the Adult Opportunity Office at UW-Eau Claire, left for Sri Lanka Sept. 25 to serve two years there as a member of a civilian \u201cpeace army.\u201d Webb, a longtime peace activist from Eau Claire, was selected from a pool of more than 150 applicants to participate in the initial pilot peace project by the international Nonviolent Peaceforce organization, based in St. Paul", "\nWebb has taken a leave of absence from the university to join 10 other participants from nine countries in Sri Lanka. Peaceforce will work with local groups to protect human rights, deter violence and help local peace workers. Read more about Webb\u2019s mission in articles from the St. Paul Pioneer Press and the Eau Claire Leader-Telegram.", "\nPaul Granlund created \"Sprites\" in 1979. (UW-Eau Claire photo by Rick Mickelson) \u201cSprites\u201d sculptor Paul Granlund dies", "\nSculptor Paul Granlund died Sept. 15 in Mankato, Minn., of complications from long-term exposure to the chemicals and dust involved in sculpting bronze. He was 77. Of the 650 mostly bronze sculptures Granlund created, three are in Eau Claire, including \"Sprites\" on the UW-Eau Claire Campus Mall, \"Resurrection\" outside the Ecumenical Religious Center and \"Family Circle\" at the Luther Hospital entrance. More information about Granlund can be found by searching the online Star Tribune.", "\nBack to top ____________________________________\nTen inducted into Alumni Hall of Honor\nThe newest members of the UW-Eau Claire Alumni Hall of Honor are (seated, l-r) Elmer Winters, Janice Ozzello Wilcox, William Febry, Chih-Ping Liu, James Anderson and Nancy McKinley. Standing, from left, are Peter Scobie, Faye Deich, Kimberly Hill Phelps and Stephen Koepp. (UW-Eau Claire photo by Rick Mickelson)", "\nTen UW-Eau Claire alumni were inducted into the university\u2019s Alumni Hall of Honor during an on-campus luncheon Oct. 3. The Alumni Hall of Honor recognizes the outstanding accomplishments of alumni from the university\u2019s three colleges: Arts and Sciences, Business, and Professional Studies. Follow the links below for photos and more detailed biographical information about the honorees:", "\n2003 College of Arts and Sciences honorees are Dr. James M. Anderson \u201963, professor of pathology, macromolecular science and biomedical engineering at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Cleveland; Stephen Koepp \u201978, deputy managing editor at TIME Magazine, New York; and Chih-Ping Liu \u201974, founder and president of Pepgen Corp., Alameda, Calif.", "\nCollege of Business honorees are William Febry \u201974, sales and marketing manager, Leinenkugel Brewing Co., Chippewa Falls; Peter Scobie \u201971, chairman and chief executive officer, R.W. Scobie Inc., Eau Claire; and Janice Ozzello Wilcox \u201974, senior vice president and chief financial officer of Marquette Financial Cos., Minneapolis.", "\nCollege of Professional Studies honorees are Faye Deich \u201979, assistant administrator and chief nursing officer at Sacred Heart Hospital, Eau Claire; Nancy McKinley \u201974, chief executive officer and editor in chief of Thinking Publications, Eau Claire; Kimberly Hill Phelps \u201980, co-principal of Flynn Elementary School, Eau Claire; and Dr. Elmer Winters \u201951, UW-Eau Claire professor emeritus of foundations of education and library science, Eau Claire.\nFamily makes Blugold football a three-generation tradition", "\nRobert H. King \u201949\nRobert A. King \u201974\nRobert Allen King", "\nRobert Allen King is the third generation of his family to attend UW-Eau Claire and to play on the Blugold football team. His father and grandfather \u2014 both also named Robert King \u2014 are graduates of the university and former Blugold football players. Two of his uncles also were Blugold football standouts. It all started with the late Robert H. King, who graduated in 1949 with degrees in geography and physical education", "\nThe Blugold football star later coached and taught in western and central Wisconsin, ending his career as a principal in Marshfield. Three of his sons, Robert A. King, Dave King and Craig King, followed in their father\u2019s footsteps and played for the Blugolds while attending UW-Eau Claire. (Robert H", "\nKing\u2019s only daughter, Barbara King Derousseau, also attended UW-Eau Claire, graduating with an education degree in 1990.) Robert King II graduated from UW-Eau Claire in 1974 and became a teacher, coach and principal in Ladysmith. Robert King II\u2019s son, Robert Allen King, is now a sophomore biology/pre-medicine major at UW-Eau Claire and \u2014 true to family tradition\u2014a member of the Blugold football team.", "\nAlumni spotlight: The Honorable Lisa K. Stark\nUW-Eau Claire alumna Lisa Stark has the distinction of being the first woman to serve on the bench in Eau Claire County Circuit Court. Find out how one of her professors at UW-Eau Claire helped put her on course for the judgeship \u2014 and read about the successes of other alumni \u2014 on the Success Stories page of the alumni Web site.\nBack to top ___________________________________________\nCollege of Business Bash in Minneapolis", "\nBusiness graduates, don\u2019t miss the College of Business Bash on Thursday, Oct. 16, from 5:30-7:30 p.m. at Champps in the Butler Square Building, 100 N. 6th St., Minneapolis. Enjoy complimentary food and beverages, visit with your favorite professors and be eligible for great door prizes. To register, send e-mail to [email protected] or call (715) 836-3266.\nAlumni gatherings in Dallas, Houston and Atlanta", "\nUW-Eau Claire alumni and friends living or visiting in the Dallas, Houston or Atlanta areas are invited to the following Alumni Association gatherings. Enjoy complimentary hors d\u2019oeuvres and refreshments, hear a UW-Eau Claire update and register to win great Blugold door prizes. Times and locations are as follows:\nDallas: Friday, Oct. 17, from 6-8 p.m. at Dave & Buster\u2019s, Stemmons (I-35E) at Walnut Hill, Dallas.", "\nHouston: Saturday, Oct. 18, from 6-8 p.m. at Birraporetti\u2019s Restaurant, 1997 W. Gray St., Houston\nAtlanta: Thursday, Oct. 23, from 6-8 p.m. at Fad\u00f3 Irish Pub, 3035 Peachtree Road, Atlanta\nTo register for one of these alumni gatherings, send e-mail to [email protected] or call (715) 836-3266.\nAlumni reception at WMEA conference", "\nUW-Eau Claire alumni and friends are invited to attend an open house reception from 5:30-7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 30, in Room F of the Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center in Madison. The reception will be held in conjunction with the Wisconsin Music Educators Association state conference.\nBlugold Hall of Fame", "\nFour former UW-Eau Claire athletes and one former coach will be inducted into the Blugold Hall of Fame during a banquet Nov. 1 in the Crystal Ballroom at The Plaza Hotel & Suites, Eau Claire. Also honored at the event will be current student-athlete recipients of the 2003 Blugold Super Six Salute Awards", "\nHall of Fame inductees will be Ken Cychosz, tennis (1987-91); Brenda Dahl-Erickson, swimming (1982-85); Mike March, football (1979-82); Tom Peck, basketball (1969-73); and Robert Scott, tennis coach (1967-94). Tickets for the event, which is open to the public, are $15. The evening will begin with a 5:30 p.m. social hour, dinner at 6:30 p.m. and a 7:30 program. For more information or to order tickets, send e-mail to [email protected] or call (715) 836-3266.", "\nAlumni Association trip to Rome\nPlan now to join the UW-Eau Claire Alumni Association\u2019s trip to Rome from Feb. 20-28, 2004. Departures to \u201cThe Eternal City\u201d are available from Minneapolis/St. Paul, Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison and additional cities. The cost of the trip ($1,299 per person, double occupancy, or $1,599 single occupancy) includes round-trip airfare, first-class hotel accommodations in Rome, daily buffet breakfast and more. Find details online, or call (800) 842-9023 for additional information.", "\nEvent in the works\nDetails will be finalized soon for an alumni event in southern California. Watch the online alumni events calendar and future issues of e-View for more information.\nFor more information . . .\nContact the Alumni Association for more information about any of the events above or about planning an alumni event in your area.\nBack to top ________________________________________________", "\nFor a complete listing of upcoming events at UW-Eau Claire and links to detailed information, see the university\u2019s online Calendar of Events.\nFollow this link to find more campus news, including recent and past news releases, the University Bulletin (faculty/staff newsletter), The Spectator (student newspaper), and Blugold athletics news.\nUW-Eau Claire values your privacy. If you do not wish to receive the e-View newsletter, please send e-mail to [email protected].", "\nIf you have just discovered e-View through the UW-Eau Claire Web site or someone has forwarded the e-View link to you and you would like to subscribe, please complete and submit the online e-View subscription form.\n___________________________________________ CONTACT US\nHave a comment about one of the stories you\u2019ve read in e-View? Send your comments to [email protected].", "\nWe\u2019re always interested in your career and life accomplishments. Please share your information with us by filling out the online class note form.\nYour comments are important to us. 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46,832,145 | http://www.uwosh.edu/facstaff/author/jeanfrae |
Dr. Emmanuel Jean Francois is from Haiti. He lives in Oshkosh, Wisconsin with his wife Pierrette. He has two adorable daughters (Emmarald and Maellie), and a handsome son (Pierremael). He received my bachelor degree in pedagogy from the University Institu | ["te of Education Sciences (Port-au-Prince, Haiti). He earned a Master\u2019s degree, with honor, in Human Services (track: Organization Management and Leadership), a graduate certificate in college teaching from the University of South Florida, and a Ph.D", "\nin Curriculum and Instruction (track: Adult Education) from the University of South Florida (USF).", "\nAuthor's external home page\u2026\nRecent content created by this user\nAbout Dr. Emmanuel Jean Francois\nInternational Conference 2014\nStudy Abroad in Prague\nStudy Abroad in Prague Jan 24, 2012\nSignup Sheet\nContact, Information, or questions!\nAll content created by Jean Francois, Emmanuel\u2026"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.uwosh.edu", "date_download": "2015-05-22T11:56:42Z", "digest": "sha1:5QGLVGTTJTZYDRL2YV3JX2WUDY6OTXHY", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 927, 927.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 927, 1739.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 927, 12.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 927, 71.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 927, 0.91]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 927, 294.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 927, 0.21787709]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 927, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 927, 0.08244681]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 927, 0.08244681]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 927, 0.06382979]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 927, 0.06781915]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 927, 0.05851064]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 927, 0.01117318]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 927, 0.16666667]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 927, 0.22905028]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 927, 0.65441176]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 927, 5.52941176]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 927, 0.01117318]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 927, 4.30981727]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 927, 136.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 39, 0.0], [39, 644, 1.0], [644, 673, 0.0], [673, 709, 0.0], [709, 742, 0.0], [742, 772, 0.0], [772, 795, 0.0], [795, 831, 0.0], [831, 844, 0.0], [844, 880, 1.0], [880, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 39, 0.0], [39, 644, 0.0], [644, 673, 0.0], [673, 709, 0.0], [709, 742, 0.0], [742, 772, 0.0], [772, 795, 0.0], [795, 831, 0.0], [831, 844, 0.0], [844, 880, 0.0], [880, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 24, 3.0], [24, 39, 2.0], [39, 644, 89.0], [644, 673, 4.0], [673, 709, 6.0], [709, 742, 5.0], [742, 772, 3.0], [772, 795, 4.0], [795, 831, 7.0], [831, 844, 2.0], [844, 880, 4.0], [880, 927, 7.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 39, 0.0], [39, 644, 0.0], [644, 673, 0.0], [673, 709, 0.0], [709, 742, 0.0], [742, 772, 0.13793103], [772, 795, 0.0], [795, 831, 0.17647059], [831, 844, 0.0], [844, 880, 0.0], [880, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 39, 0.0], [39, 644, 0.0], [644, 673, 0.0], [673, 709, 0.0], [709, 742, 0.0], [742, 772, 0.0], [772, 795, 0.0], [795, 831, 0.0], [831, 844, 0.0], [844, 880, 0.0], [880, 927, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 24, 0.125], [24, 39, 0.13333333], [39, 644, 0.07107438], [644, 673, 0.03448276], [673, 709, 0.02777778], [709, 742, 0.15151515], [742, 772, 0.06666667], [772, 795, 0.13043478], [795, 831, 0.11111111], [831, 844, 0.15384615], [844, 880, 0.05555556], [880, 927, 0.08510638]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 927, 6.092e-05]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 927, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 927, 0.00298554]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 927, -78.67674453]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 927, -25.16701089]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 927, 6.41450349]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 927, 11.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
45,329,053 | https://embryo.asu.edu/search?text=Nobel%20Prize%20in%20Physiology%20or%20Medicine&f%5B0%5D=dc_subject_embryo%3A18&page=1 |
Reproduction (57) Apply Reproduction filter
RHAZ (1) Apply RHAZ filter
Hermann Joseph Muller (1890-1967) | ["", "\nHermann Joseph Muller studied the effects of x-ray radiation on genetic material in the US during the twentieth century. At that time, scientists had yet to determine the dangers that x-rays presented. In 1927, Muller demonstrated that x-rays, a form of high-energy radiation, can mutate the structure of genetic material. Muller warned others of the dangers of radiation, advising radiologists to protect themselves and their patients from radiation", "\nHe also opposed the indiscriminate use of radiation in medical and industrial fields.", "\nMax Ludwig Henning Delbrick applied his knowledge of theoretical physics to biological systems such as bacterial viruses called bacteriophages, or phages, and gene replication during the twentieth century in Germany and the US. Delbr\u00fcck demonstrated that bacteria undergo random genetic mutations to resist phage infections. Those findings linked bacterial genetics to the genetics of higher organisms", "\nIn the mid-twentieth century, Delbr\u00fcck helped start the Phage Group and Phage Course in the US, which further organized phage research.", "\nCamillo Golgi studied the central nervous system during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in Italy, and he developed a staining technique to visualize brain cells. Called the black reaction, Golgi\u2019s staining technique enabled him to see the cellular structure of brain cells, called neurons, with much greater precision", "\nGolgi also used the black reaction to identify structures within animal cells like the internal reticular apparatus that stores, packs, and modifies proteins, later named the Golgi apparatus in his honor.", "\nJohn Bertrand Gurdon (1933- )\nSir John Bertrand Gurdon further developed nuclear transplantation, the technique used to clone organisms and to create stem cells, while working in Britain in the second half of the twentieth century. Gurdon's research built on the work of Thomas King and Robert Briggs in the United States, who in 1952 published findings that indicated that scientists could take a nucleus from an early embryonic cell and successfully transfer it into an unfertilized and enucleated egg cell.", "\nHilde Mangold (1898-1924)\nHilde Mangold, previously Hilde Proescholdt, was a German embryologist and physiologist who became well known for research completed with Hans Spemann in the 1920s. As a graduate student, Mangold assisted Spemann and together they discovered and coined the term the \"organizer.\" The organizer discovery was a crucial contribution to embryology that led to further understanding of the pattern of embryo differentiation of amphibians.\nRoger Wolcott Sperry (1913\u20131994)", "\nRoger Wolcott Sperry\nstudied the function of the nervous system in the US during the\ntwentieth century. He studied split-brain patterns in cats and\nhumans that result from separating the two hemispheres of the\nbrain by cutting the corpus callosum, the bridge between the two\nhemispheres of the brain. He found that separating the corpus\ncallosum the two hemispheres of the brain could not communicate\nand they performed functions as if the other hemisphere did not\nSolomon A. Berson (1918-1972)", "\nSolomon A. Berson helped develop the radioimmunoassay (RIA) technique in the US during the twentieth century. Berson made many scientific contributions while working with research partner Rosalyn Yalow at the Bronx Veterans Administration (VA) hospital, in New York City, New York. In the more than twenty years that Berson and Yalow collaborated, they refined the procedures for tracing diagnostic biological compounds using isotope labels.\nSidney Q. Cohlan (1915-1999)", "\nSidney Q. Cohlan studied birth defects in the US during the twentieth century. Cohlan helped to discover that if a pregnant woman ate too much vitamin A her fetus faced a higher than normal risk of teratogenic effects, such as cleft palate. A teratogen is a substance that causes malformation of a developing organism. Cohlan also identified the teratogenic effects of several other substances including a lack of normal magnesium and prenatal exposure to the antibiotic tetracycline.", "\nMargaret Ann Bulkley, under the male pseudonym James Barry, was one of the first female obstetricians in early nineteenth century British Empire. She was the first person to perform a cesarean section in South Africa. Cesarean section is a procedure in which a doctor cuts into the uterus of a pregnant woman to retrieve the fetus during complicated births. Bulkley hid her gender and lived life as the male Barry to practice medicine, an opportunity not allowed to women at the time.\nIan Donald (1910\u20131987)", "\nIan Donald was an obstetrician who developed the technology and therapy of ultrasound diagnostics during the twentieth century in Europe. Ultrasound is a medical diagnostic technique that uses sound waves to produce images of the inside of the body. During the early 1900s, physicians had no way to see inside a woman\u2019s uterus during pregnancy. Donald developed the first method of scanning human internal anatomy in real time, which enabled doctors to diagnose potentially fatal tumors and cysts.", "\nJosef Warkany studied the environmental causes of birth defects in the United States in the twentieth century. Warkany was one of the first researchers to show that factors in the environment could cause birth defects, and he helped to develop guidelines for the field of teratology, the study of birth defects. Prior to Warkany\u2019s work, scientists struggled to explain if or how environmental agents could cause birth defects", "\nWarkany demonstrated that a deficiency or excess of vitamin A in maternal nutrition could cause birth defects.", "\nRita Levi-Montalcini (1909-2012)\nRita Levi-Montalcini is a Nobel Laureate recognized for her work in the discovery and characterization of nerve growth factor. Nerve growth factor (NGF) promotes the growth and maintenance of the nervous system in a developing system. The majority of her career has been devoted to investigating the many aspects of NGF.\nStazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, Naples, Italy", "\nThe Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn (Anton Dohrn Zoological Station) is a public research institute focusing on biology and biodiversity. Hereafter called the Station, it was founded in Naples, Italy, in 1872 by Anton Dohrn. The type of research conducted at the Station has varied since it was created, though initial research focused on embryology. At the turn of the twentieth century, researchers at the Station established the sea urchin (Echinoidea) as a model organism for embryological research.", "\nSubject: Organizations, People, Places\nClifford Grobstein (1916-1998)\nClifford Grobstein was a traditional, influential, and highly innovative biologist of the mid-twentieth century, gifted with many character facets and pragmatic talents. His early adulthood passion of linking classical embryology with developmental anatomy and medicine was joined by his later pursuit of combining research ethics and science education with public policy.\nGeorgeanna Seegar Jones (1912-2005)", "\nGeorgeanna Seegar Jones was a reproductive endocrinologist who created one of America' s most successful infertility clinics in West Virginia and eventually, along with her husband Howard W. Jones MD, performed the first in vitro fertilization in America, leading to the birth of Elizabeth Jordan Carr. Jones was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on 6 July 1912. Her father, Dr. John King Beck Emory Seegar, was a practicing physician at the time working in the field of obstetrics.\nEdward Donnall Thomas (1920-2012)", "\nEdward Donnall Thomas, an American physician and scientist, gained recognition in the scientific community for conducting the first bone marrow transplant, a pioneering form of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Bone marrow transplants are considered to be the first successful example of tissue engineering, a field within regenerative medicine that uses hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) as a vehicle for treatment", "\nPrior to Thomas's groundbreaking work, most blood-borne diseases, including certain inherited and autoimmune diseases, were considered lethal.", "\nMultiple theories about what determines sex were tested at the turn of the twentieth century. By experimenting on germ cells, cytologist Nettie Maria Stevens collected evidence to support the connection between heredity and the sex of offspring. Stevens was able to interpret her data to conclude that chromosomes have a role in sex determination during development", "\nFor her time, she was an emerging breed: a woman of science making the leap from the world of data collection to that of male-dominated interpretive work.", "\nJulius von Sachs (1832-1897)\nJulius von Sachs helped establish plant physiology through his experiments in latter nineteenth-century Germany. Sachs infused the inchoate discipline of plant physiology with experimental techniques and a mechanistic stance, both of which cemented his place as one of the discipline s founders. Sachs trained a generation of plant physiologists, and his stress on experimentation and mechanism influenced biologists in other disciplines, especially embryologist Jacques Loeb.", "\nMother Teresa, a Roman Catholic nun known for her charitable work and attention to the poor, was born 26 August 1910. The youngest child of Albanian parents Nikola and Drane Bojaxhiu, she was christened Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu and spent her early life in the place of her birth, present-day Skopje, in the Republic of Macedonia", "\nIn addition to her unwavering devotion to serve the sick and the poor, Mother Teresa firmly defended traditional Catholic teachings on more controversial issues, such as contraception and abortion.", "\nVictor Ambros is a professor of molecular medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, and he discovered the first microRNA (miRNA) in 1993. Ambros researched the genetic control of developmental timing in the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans and he helped describe gene function and regulation during the worm\u2019s development and embryogenesis. His discovery of miRNA marked the beginning of research into a form of genetic regulation found throughout diverse life forms from plants to humans", "\nJames Edgar Till is a biophysicist known for establishing the existence of stem cells along with Ernest McCulloch in 1963. Stem cells are undifferentiated cells that can shift, or differentiate, into specialized types of cells and serve as a repair system in the body by dividing indefinitely to replenish other cells", "\nTill\u2019s work with stem cells in bone marrow, which produces the body\u2019s blood cells, helped form the field of modern hematology, a medical discipline that focuses on diseases related to the blood."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "embryo.asu.edu", "date_download": "2021-04-10T21:09:00Z", "digest": "sha1:UOBUZZOLGVWV7BR22MJ5S4FGZC75TYVU", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 11102, 11102.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 11102, 15907.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 11102, 53.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 11102, 212.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 11102, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 11102, 211.9]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 11102, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 11102, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 11102, 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45,329,055 | https://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/[email protected]/Lookup/6416.0Main+Features1Dec%202003?OpenDocument= |
6416.0 - House Price Indexes: Eight Capital Cities, Dec 2003
DECEMBER QTR KEY FIGURES
Sep Qtr 03 to Dec Qtr 03
Dec Qtr 2002 to Dec Qtr 2003
Established house prices, Quarterly % change
Established house prices, Quarterly % change—December quarter 2003
DEC | ["EMBER QTR KEY POINTS\nThe price index for established houses in Australia rose 6.0% in the December quarter 2003, compared with an increase of 3.4% in the September quarter 2003. This was the largest quarterly increase since March quarter 1989.", "\nPrices rose in all capital cities: Brisbane (+12.0%), Darwin (+6.7%), Canberra (+6.6%), Adelaide (+6.4%), Sydney (+5.3%), Perth (+5.1%), Melbourne (+3.8%) and Hobart (+3.2%).\nContributing to the increase this quarter was a compositional shift towards sales at the middle to upper end of the market (see note on page 2).\nANNUAL CHANGES\nOver the year to December quarter 2003, established house prices rose 18.9%.", "\nAnnual increases in the capital cities were: Brisbane (+35.1%), Canberra (+25.3%), Adelaide (+24.2%), Perth (+22.2%), Hobart (+21.4%), Sydney (+15.5%), Darwin (+13.2%) and Melbourne (+12.5%).\nCOMPOSITIONAL CHANGE IN ESTABLISHED HOUSE PRICE INDEX IN DECEMBER QUARTER 2003", "\nAs noted in paragraph 8 of the Explanatory Notes of this publication, movements in the average price of established houses derived from sales data in each period can be influenced by compositional changes. That is, the prices from one period to the next can relate to houses of different quality and there may be price index movements resulting from a greater or lesser number of transactions at the upper or lower end of the market", "\nIt appears that this has been a significant factor in the increase in the established house price index in the December quarter 2003.", "\nAnalysis of recent sales data indicates that, in most capital cities, the number of transactions of properties at the lower end of the market in the December quarter 2003 has decreased compared with the September quarter 2003, while the number of transactions of properties at the middle to upper end of the market has increased over this period.", "\nIndustry analysts have indicated there is still strong demand for houses in the middle to upper end of the market, which is being influenced by existing home owners looking to upgrade to higher priced homes. In conjunction with this, there has been a gradual reduction in the number of housing finance commitments by first home buyers as a proportion of the total number of housing finance commitments in most States and Territories over the past twelve months", "\n(Housing finance commitments data is published monthly in Housing Finance for Owner Occupation, Australia (cat. no. 5609.0).) First home buyers typically enter the housing market at the lower end.", "\nFor further information about these and related statistics, contact the National Information and Referral Service on 1300 135 070 or Steve Whennan on Canberra 02 6252 6251.\nThis page last updated 20 June 2006"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.abs.gov.au", "date_download": "2021-04-10T21:58:20Z", "digest": "sha1:RGLMWKQLL7LBZUAR7DJRDSMKZIQBCHOQ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 2964, 2964.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 2964, 4388.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 2964, 19.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 2964, 105.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 2964, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 2964, 296.7]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 2964, 0.29032258]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 2964, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 2964, 0.17007673]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 2964, 0.07203751]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 2964, 0.07203751]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 2964, 0.07203751]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 2964, 0.02728048]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 2964, 0.02131287]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 2964, 0.04049446]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 2964, 0.02983802]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 2964, 0.03395586]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 2964, 0.27164686]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 2964, 0.43551797]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 2964, 4.95983087]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 2964, 4.84933402]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 2964, 473.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 86, 0.0], [86, 111, 0.0], [111, 140, 0.0], [140, 185, 0.0], [185, 252, 0.0], [252, 276, 0.0], [276, 499, 1.0], [499, 674, 1.0], [674, 819, 1.0], [819, 834, 0.0], [834, 911, 1.0], [911, 1103, 1.0], [1103, 1182, 0.0], [1182, 1750, 1.0], [1750, 2097, 1.0], [2097, 2756, 1.0], [2756, 2929, 1.0], [2929, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 86, 0.0], [86, 111, 0.0], [111, 140, 0.0], [140, 185, 0.0], [185, 252, 0.0], [252, 276, 0.0], [276, 499, 0.0], [499, 674, 0.0], [674, 819, 0.0], [819, 834, 0.0], [834, 911, 0.0], [911, 1103, 0.0], [1103, 1182, 0.0], [1182, 1750, 0.0], [1750, 2097, 0.0], [2097, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2929, 0.0], [2929, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 61, 9.0], [61, 86, 4.0], [86, 111, 7.0], [111, 140, 7.0], [140, 185, 5.0], [185, 252, 7.0], [252, 276, 4.0], [276, 499, 36.0], [499, 674, 23.0], [674, 819, 26.0], [819, 834, 2.0], [834, 911, 12.0], [911, 1103, 24.0], [1103, 1182, 11.0], [1182, 1750, 98.0], [1750, 2097, 58.0], [2097, 2756, 106.0], [2756, 2929, 27.0], [2929, 2964, 7.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 61, 0.16363636], [61, 86, 0.0], [86, 111, 0.16666667], [111, 140, 0.28571429], [140, 185, 0.0], [185, 252, 0.06349206], [252, 276, 0.0], [276, 499, 0.0744186], [499, 674, 0.13492063], [674, 819, 0.0070922], [819, 834, 0.0], [834, 911, 0.09722222], [911, 1103, 0.16783217], [1103, 1182, 0.05128205], [1182, 1750, 0.0088968], [1750, 2097, 0.02339181], [2097, 2756, 0.00776398], [2756, 2929, 0.11764706], [2929, 2964, 0.17142857]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 86, 0.0], [86, 111, 0.0], [111, 140, 0.0], [140, 185, 0.0], [185, 252, 0.0], [252, 276, 0.0], [276, 499, 0.0], [499, 674, 0.0], [674, 819, 0.0], [819, 834, 0.0], [834, 911, 0.0], [911, 1103, 0.0], [1103, 1182, 0.0], [1182, 1750, 0.0], [1750, 2097, 0.0], [2097, 2756, 0.0], [2756, 2929, 0.0], [2929, 2964, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 61, 0.1147541], [61, 86, 0.84], [86, 111, 0.16], [111, 140, 0.13793103], [140, 185, 0.04444444], [185, 252, 0.04477612], [252, 276, 0.83333333], [276, 499, 0.02690583], [499, 674, 0.05142857], [674, 819, 0.00689655], [819, 834, 0.86666667], [834, 911, 0.02597403], [911, 1103, 0.046875], [1103, 1182, 0.81012658], [1182, 1750, 0.01056338], [1750, 2097, 0.00864553], [2097, 2756, 0.01669196], [2756, 2929, 0.04624277], [2929, 2964, 0.05714286]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 2964, 0.26214707]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 2964, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 2964, 0.03227401]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 2964, -187.53677037]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 2964, -15.35253928]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 2964, 51.56486944]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 2964, 39.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,125 | http://www.heraldtribune.com/news/20080130/gag-order-denied-in-denise-lee-murder-case | Gag order denied in Denise Lee murder case | ["Gag order denied in Denise Lee murder case\nGag order denied in Denise Lee murder case\nBy TODD RUGER\nInvestigators and others connected to the murder case may talk to the media without hindering suspect Michael King's right to a fair trial, a judge ruled Tuesday.\nSARASOTA COUNTY -- A circuit judge in the Denise Lee murder case on Tuesday rejected a request for a gag order and a 60-day delay in releasing public records.", "Gag order denied in Denise Lee murder case\nProhibiting anyone involved with the case against Michael King from talking to any news media is not necessary to protect his right to a fair trial, Circuit Judge Deno Economou wrote in a two-page opinion.\n\"The judge followed the law,\" said media attorney Rachel Fugate, who represented the Herald-Tribune Media Group in court on Monday. \"The law clearly sets out a certain standard that the defense had to meet to restrict access to discovery material, even temporarily.\"", "Gag order denied in Denise Lee murder case\nThe gag order had been requested by defense attorneys, who argued that King's right to a fair trial was being jeopardized by extensive coverage of the case.\nWhile denying the gag order, Economou \"strongly advised\" attorneys to follow already established rules against making prejudicial statements that could reasonably end up in the media.", "Gag order denied in Denise Lee murder case\nThose rules also require attorneys not to assist anyone in making prejudicial statements about the case, and require them to exercise reasonable care to prevent investigators, employees or others associated with the case from making such statements.\nKing, 36, is charged in the abduction and murder of Lee, 21. Investigators say he sexually assaulted her and drove her to a wooded area near Toledo Blade Boulevard and Interstate 75, where she was found buried with a gunshot to the head.", "Gag order denied in Denise Lee murder case\nIn arguing the motion Monday, Fugate said the facts of the case are \"not pretty\" but \"that does not mean the coverage of those facts has been inflammatory or hostile.\""] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.heraldtribune.com", "date_download": "2018-08-14T07:48:44Z", "digest": "sha1:HDMTEPQPLWECUANNQLDQFFCMXC3VS6IB", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1848, 1848.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1848, 4060.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1848, 11.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1848, 157.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1848, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1848, 316.0]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1848, 1.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1848, 0.40114613]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1848, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1848, 0.04066667]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1848, 0.02933333]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1848, 0.02333333]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1848, 0.016]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1848, 0.024]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1848, 0.01432665]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1848, 0.12034384]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1848, 0.53921569]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1848, 4.90196078]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1848, 4.72133996]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1848, 306.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 57, 0.0], [57, 220, 1.0], [220, 379, 1.0], [379, 585, 1.0], [585, 852, 0.0], [852, 1009, 1.0], [1009, 1193, 1.0], [1193, 1443, 1.0], [1443, 1681, 1.0], [1681, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 57, 0.0], [57, 220, 0.0], [220, 379, 0.0], [379, 585, 0.0], [585, 852, 0.0], [852, 1009, 0.0], [1009, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1681, 0.0], [1681, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 43, 8.0], [43, 57, 3.0], [57, 220, 27.0], [220, 379, 28.0], [379, 585, 35.0], [585, 852, 42.0], [852, 1009, 27.0], [1009, 1193, 26.0], [1193, 1443, 37.0], [1443, 1681, 43.0], [1681, 1848, 30.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 57, 0.0], [57, 220, 0.0], [220, 379, 0.0130719], [379, 585, 0.0], [585, 852, 0.0], [852, 1009, 0.0], [1009, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1681, 0.02597403], [1681, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 57, 0.0], [57, 220, 0.0], [220, 379, 0.0], [379, 585, 0.0], [585, 852, 0.0], [852, 1009, 0.0], [1009, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1443, 0.0], [1443, 1681, 0.0], [1681, 1848, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 43, 0.06976744], [43, 57, 0.71428571], [57, 220, 0.02453988], [220, 379, 0.11320755], [379, 585, 0.03398058], [585, 852, 0.03370787], [852, 1009, 0.01273885], [1009, 1193, 0.01086957], [1193, 1443, 0.004], [1443, 1681, 0.02941176], [1681, 1848, 0.01796407]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1848, 0.84670067]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1848, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1848, 0.71521324]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1848, 30.85502531]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1848, 64.29118596]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1848, 47.37384608]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1848, 11.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,715 | https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/09/american-horror-story-season-6/500126/ |
American Horror Story Realizes Simple Is Scary
Season 6’s show-within-a-show concept may seem complicated, but the premiere kept its terrors nicely streamlined.
Spencer Kornhaber | ["", "\nAt last, at last, American Horror Story aired an episode that was simply an American horror story\u2014not an American fever dream and tonal pastiche featuring supernatural rapists, non-essential enema scenes, muddled social commentary, and the misuse of Broadway\u2019s most venerated talents", "\nThe theme for the sixth season had been kept a secret ahead of time, but the greatest revelation of the premiere wasn\u2019t about setting but about the power of restraint: Here were simply three main characters, getting scared, and getting scared well.", "\nThough, really, it was six main characters. The show\u2019s creators, Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk, have either sown the seeds of overcomplication or found a useful governor for their own ambitions by fabricating a true-crime documentary series, with actors reenacting a terrifying tale told by \u201creal\u201d people", "\nThis allows American Horror Story to continue accessing its rolodex of great character actors without necessarily adding more characters: The likes of Lily Rabe and Sarah Paulson get tons of screentime, but by playing the same people. The concept will probably also launch dozens of graduate theses on post-modern double consciousness, meta-fictional framing devices, and the renaissance of Cuba Gooding Jr.", "\nThe faux docu-series is called My Roanoke Nightmare, which is apparently also the subtitle for this season of American Horror Story despite the fact that it\u2019s a few more syllables than the previous anthologies\u2019 names were", "\nIt follows the present-day married couple Shelby (the \u201creal\u201d version played by Rabe, giving an interview to a camera; the \u201cfake\u201d played by Paulson, re-enacting the story) and Matt (played by Andr\u00e9 Holland, played by Gooding Jr.), who move to a remote North Carolina mansion after a run-in with crime sours them on city life. Supernatural disturbances ensue, leading Matt\u2019s ex-cop sister Lee (played by Adina Porter, played by Angela Bassett) to visit and experience the mayhem first-hand.", "\nMurphy and Falchuk have always excelled at creating moments and concepts but struggled at A-to-B plot mechanics, which means the tell-not-show nature of documentary narration here is actually an asset, allowing them to coherently move from one set piece to the next. And those set pieces are, so far, pretty righteous", "\nThe premiere served up a clutch of genuine frights and, as importantly, instantly memorable images: a mysterious wine bottle rolling down a hallway, a hailstorm of human teeth, found footage involving a pig\u2019s head, a zombified Kathy Bates rising from a darkened roadside holding a knife glinting in headlights", "\nNone of it innovated on horror tradition\u2014echoes of The Blair Witch Project, The Hills Have Eyes, and The Amityville Horror abounded\u2014but the creep-outs were executed with careful timing and visual flair.", "\nThe documentary aspect and the limited cast size thus far has also offered convincing, grounded characterization of the leads\u2014and more importantly, characterization of their relationships. This means there\u2019s potential for a compelling family drama, which means there\u2019s potential for compelling dramatic stakes, both of which the show has increasingly lacked since its first and best season, Murder House", "\nIn fact, that season seems like a clear and heartening reference point for this one in ways explicit (the historical Roanoke Colony mystery figures into both) and implied (both seasons follow a family trying to find peace by moving across the country \u2026 and into a haunted house).", "\nThe secrecy ahead of the premiere might have just been a promotional gimmick: FX put out two dozen teaser-trailers, with only one of them actually tipping what the series would be about (turns out, the correct spot was the one with a wind chime made of teeth\u2014so obvious, right?). But watching the debut episode did offer a feeling that\u2019s become rare in modern film culture: true surprise, the thrill of not even knowing what the setting would be and which actors would be showing up", "\n(It was a small delight when Wes Bentley and Chaz Bono made momentary appearances, and the end credits named the yet-unseen Denis O\u2019Hare, Evan Peters, and Cheyenne Jackson as being part of the main cast.) This was bona fide event viewing, and the unusually focused, limited scope of the story in the first hour allowed the premiere to cleanly satisfy the hype in a way that American Horror Story rarely has\u2014though fans were deprived of one of the show\u2019s classic pleasures, a title sequence.", "\nOf course, future episodes will not be able to ambush the audience so effectively (there are real preview clips now), and the show\u2019s habit for squandering good premises with ever-growing amounts of plot clutter is well established. But perhaps the documentary format will keep the creators in line: They have to make a show that they could imagine someone other than themselves daring to make.\nSpencer Kornhaber is a staff writer at The Atlantic covering pop culture and music."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.theatlantic.com", "date_download": "2018-12-10T17:13:58Z", "digest": "sha1:3S23UM42SJQ6X4HL3GPWWAQPYTOD22ES", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 5108, 5108.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 5108, 6635.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 5108, 11.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 5108, 111.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 5108, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 5108, 338.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 5108, 0.37851406]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 5108, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 5108, 0.0100647]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 5108, 0.0227654]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 5108, 0.01150252]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 5108, 0.00401606]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 5108, 0.14457831]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 5108, 0.57248157]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 5108, 5.12653563]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 5108, 0.00100402]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 5108, 5.58909455]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 5108, 814.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 161, 1.0], [161, 179, 0.0], [179, 713, 1.0], [713, 1426, 1.0], [1426, 2138, 1.0], [2138, 2971, 1.0], [2971, 3656, 1.0], [3656, 4631, 1.0], [4631, 5025, 1.0], [5025, 5108, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 161, 0.0], [161, 179, 0.0], [179, 713, 0.0], [713, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 2138, 0.0], [2138, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3656, 0.0], [3656, 4631, 0.0], [4631, 5025, 0.0], [5025, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 47, 7.0], [47, 161, 15.0], [161, 179, 2.0], [179, 713, 83.0], [713, 1426, 108.0], [1426, 2138, 114.0], [2138, 2971, 131.0], [2971, 3656, 106.0], [3656, 4631, 169.0], [4631, 5025, 65.0], [5025, 5108, 14.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 161, 0.00925926], [161, 179, 0.0], [179, 713, 0.0], [713, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 2138, 0.0], [2138, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3656, 0.0], [3656, 4631, 0.0], [4631, 5025, 0.0], [5025, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 47, 0.0], [47, 161, 0.0], [161, 179, 0.0], [179, 713, 0.0], [713, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 2138, 0.0], [2138, 2971, 0.0], [2971, 3656, 0.0], [3656, 4631, 0.0], [4631, 5025, 0.0], [5025, 5108, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 47, 0.14893617], [47, 161, 0.00877193], [161, 179, 0.11111111], [179, 713, 0.01685393], [713, 1426, 0.02664797], [1426, 2138, 0.03511236], [2138, 2971, 0.0240096], [2971, 3656, 0.01021898], [3656, 4631, 0.02051282], [4631, 5025, 0.00761421], [5025, 5108, 0.04819277]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 5108, 0.92217171]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 5108, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 5108, 0.93810242]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 5108, -172.02133713]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 5108, 104.77539545]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 5108, -30.36418004]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 5108, 25.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,682 | http://www.statistics.gov.uk/hub/release-calendar/index.html?newquery=*&uday=0&umonth=0&uyear=0&title=The+Supply+Side+of+Tourism&pagetype=calendar-entry&lday=&lmonth=&lyear=&format=hi-vis |
Past editions of 'The Supply Side of Tourism'
The Supply Side of Tourism - The Geography of Tourism Employment, 2011
Summary: This report includes an estimate of employment in tourism industries for the regions and sub-regions of the UK in 2011.
The Suppl | ["y Side of Tourism - 2009\nSummary: This report includes a national level analysis of Gross Value Added (GVA), turnover and employment in the tourism industries."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.statistics.gov.uk", "date_download": "2014-04-16T19:32:56Z", "digest": "sha1:ZNCFUX4WPYWWLBG6ESRJFDNRKPAB6KZQ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 414, 414.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 414, 4637.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 414, 5.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 414, 279.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 414, 0.88]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 414, 268.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 414, 0.25316456]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 414, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 414, 0.20658683]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 414, 0.14071856]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 414, 0.10778443]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 414, 0.11676647]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 414, 0.13473054]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 414, 0.02531646]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 414, 0.18987342]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 414, 0.5]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 414, 5.06060606]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 414, 3.22155068]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 414, 66.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 117, 0.0], [117, 246, 1.0], [246, 280, 0.0], [280, 414, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 117, 0.0], [117, 246, 0.0], [246, 280, 0.0], [280, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 46, 8.0], [46, 117, 11.0], [117, 246, 21.0], [246, 280, 6.0], [280, 414, 20.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 117, 0.05970149], [117, 246, 0.032], [246, 280, 0.12903226], [280, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 117, 0.0], [117, 246, 0.0], [246, 280, 0.0], [280, 414, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 46, 0.10869565], [46, 117, 0.11267606], [117, 246, 0.03100775], [246, 280, 0.11764706], [280, 414, 0.05970149]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 414, 0.00534463]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 414, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 414, 0.00025207]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 414, -32.90903094]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 414, -10.34398043]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 414, 11.92418356]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 414, 2.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,683 | http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/05/bob-dylan-tells-fans-his-china-concert-was-not-censored/238872/ |
Bob Dylan Tells Fans His China Concert Was Not Censored
Eleanor Barkhorn May 13 2011, 12:30 PM ET | ["", "\nWhen Bob Dylan played a concert in China last month, fans and critics alike were quick to point out the irony: The famous protest singer was performing in a country notorious for its suppression of free speech", "\nThe backlash intensified when reports came out that the Chinese government had censored his playlist, requiring him to cut out any songs that would \"hurt the feelings of the Chinese people.\" Indeed, the songs Dylan performed at the April 6th show were apolitical\u2014he included none of the message-driven hits that marked his early career, like \"The Times They Are A-Changin'\" or \"With God On Our Side.\" (For more background on the backlash and counter-backlash, see James Fallows' piece, \"Dylan, Dowd, and China: Did Bob Really Sell Out?.\")", "\nDylan responded to his critics today in a message on his official website. He claimed that the reason he didn't play political songs wasn't because the Chinese government insisted, but because the audience was too young to know those '60s and '70s classics: \"They were young and my feeling was that they wouldn't have known my early songs anyway.\"", "\nHe then addressed the question of censorship directly:As far as censorship goes, the Chinese government had asked for the names of the songs that I would be playing. There's no logical answer to that, so we sent them the set lists from the previous 3 months. If there were any songs, verses or lines censored, nobody ever told me about it and we played all the songs that we intended to play. Read the full post at BobDylan.com.\nEleanor Barkhorn is a former senior editor at The Atlantic.", "\nFollow @eleanorbarkhorn\nThe Subversive Awkwardness of Four Weddings and a Funeral Andrew Wallace Chamings\nFX Brings Fargo (Back) to Life Christopher Orr\nThe Universal Appeal of Science Fiction Chris Beckett"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.theatlantic.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T19:45:02Z", "digest": "sha1:MQ2P4HPLP7NTKUYKVEN2BYVLLKPLZ2DB", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1891, 1891.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1891, 11720.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1891, 10.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1891, 361.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1891, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1891, 268.5]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1891, 0.35340314]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1891, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1891, 0.02640264]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1891, 0.03960396]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1891, 0.03036304]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1891, 0.01308901]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1891, 0.14921466]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1891, 0.62695925]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1891, 4.7492163]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1891, 4.95289425]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1891, 319.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 98, 0.0], [98, 848, 0.0], [848, 1196, 0.0], [1196, 1625, 1.0], [1625, 1685, 1.0], [1685, 1709, 0.0], [1709, 1791, 0.0], [1791, 1838, 0.0], [1838, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 98, 0.0], [98, 848, 0.0], [848, 1196, 0.0], [1196, 1625, 0.0], [1625, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1709, 0.0], [1709, 1791, 0.0], [1791, 1838, 0.0], [1838, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 56, 10.0], [56, 98, 8.0], [98, 848, 124.0], [848, 1196, 59.0], [1196, 1625, 78.0], [1625, 1685, 10.0], [1685, 1709, 2.0], [1709, 1791, 12.0], [1791, 1838, 8.0], [1838, 1891, 8.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 98, 0.25641026], [98, 848, 0.00139082], [848, 1196, 0.01190476], [1196, 1625, 0.00239808], [1625, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1709, 0.0], [1709, 1791, 0.0], [1791, 1838, 0.0], [1838, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 56, 0.0], [56, 98, 0.0], [98, 848, 0.0], [848, 1196, 0.0], [1196, 1625, 0.0], [1625, 1685, 0.0], [1685, 1709, 0.0], [1709, 1791, 0.0], [1791, 1838, 0.0], [1838, 1891, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 56, 0.17857143], [56, 98, 0.16666667], [98, 848, 0.044], [848, 1196, 0.01149425], [1196, 1625, 0.02097902], [1625, 1685, 0.06666667], [1685, 1709, 0.04166667], [1709, 1791, 0.1097561], [1791, 1838, 0.17021277], [1838, 1891, 0.13207547]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1891, 0.59881651]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1891, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1891, 0.98154485]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1891, -21.54146226]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1891, 14.85629471]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1891, -25.47691227]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1891, 13.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,684 | http://www.washjeff.edu/news/announcements/748?page=7&order=created&sort=asc&term_node_tid_depth= |
Filter by Department: Title Post date Author W&J Conservation in the Amazon "Jake Meyers is an undergraduate studying biology... 08/02/2013 Sustainability Casual Fridays at W&J Human Resources is pleased to announce the start of... 08/07/2013 Benefits, Hu | ["man Resources, Payroll WashJeffSports.TV Returns For Second Year WASHINGTON, Pa. \u2013 For a second-straight year,... 08/15/2013 Athletics Mark Your Calendars - Highmark Direct Tour is Coming Attention Faculty and Staff:", "\nMark your calendars... 08/16/2013 Benefits, Human Resources FAFSA for 2014-2015 Have you done your FAFSA for next year?", "\nIf not,... 08/21/2013 Business & Finance New Benefit Provider Over the last several months we have been exploring... 08/22/2013 Benefits, Human Resources September New Faces & New Roles We would like to welcome the following employees to W... 09/02/2013 Human Resources September Service Anniversaries We would like to extend our congratulations to the... 09/02/2013 Human Resources OPEN OFFICE HOURS WITH THE VICE PRESIDENT & DEAN OF STUDENT LIFE When: Mondays..", "\n09/05/2013 Student Life Guest Speaker: Alan Bristow \"Wave, Wiggles and Quantum Phenomena: Using... 09/09/2013 Physics Department Student research at AFS featured in Environmental Monitor Magazine Semester-long student research at the Abernathy Field... 09/09/2013 Abernathy Field Station, Biology Department, Sustainability Highmark Direct Tour Event The Highmark Mobile unit will be on campus in front of..", "\n09/13/2013 Benefits, Human Resources The Physics Department now has a 3D printer! 09/18/2013 Physics Department Thank you for attending the Highmark Wellness Event! The Human Resources Department would like to give a... 09/26/2013 Human Resources Thank you for attending the Highmark Wellness Event! Thank you for attending the Wellness Event!", "\nThe... 09/26/2013 Human Resources Campus Jobs If you are work study eligible and are looking for a job... 09/26/2013 Financial Aid October New Faces and New Roles We would like to welcome the following new employee... 09/30/2013 Human Resources October Service Anniversaries We would like to extend our congratulations to the... 09/30/2013 Human Resources Employee Assistance Program (EAP) Provider Change Effective October 1st, Health Advocate is the new... 10/01/2013 Benefits, Human Resources John A", "\nSwanson, Founder of ANSYS, to Speak at W&J ... 10/03/2013 Sustainability Poverty Simulation - Oct 22 2013 Poverty Simulation with Community Action... 10/07/2013 Volunteer Programs SAB Off-Campus Events presents: Rich's Fright Farm on Oct. 18 @ 5:30 pm Email... 10/09/2013 Student Activities Wednesday, Oct. 9: Mid-Term Munchies Take a break from your studying for midterms and... 10/09/2013 Student Activities SAB Off-Campus Events presents: Sign-ups for We Will Rock You starting Oct", "\n24 at 6 pm Show is at the Benedum Center in Pittsburgh on Nov 3,... 10/10/2013 Student Activities SAB Off-Campus Events presents: Sign-ups for Overly's Country Christmas starting on Nov. 14 at 6 pm Show is on Nov 22 and the van will be departing at 5:... 10/10/2013 Student Activities \u00ab first"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.washjeff.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T19:11:58Z", "digest": "sha1:ZQMZJ734ZXIEVOB7K5M4CLJKXSHAZ272", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 3092, 3092.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 3092, 4502.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 3092, 4.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 3092, 74.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 3092, 0.87]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 3092, 310.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 3092, 0.1867284]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 3092, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 3092, 0.05057096]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 3092, 0.18066884]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 3092, 0.16231648]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 3092, 0.16231648]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 3092, 0.16231648]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 3092, 0.08319739]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 3092, 0.07422512]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 3092, 0.04486134]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 3092, 0.02120718]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 3092, 0.0462963]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 3092, 0.34876543]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 3092, 0.50446429]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 3092, 5.47321429]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 3092, 0.03703704]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 3092, 5.06347633]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 3092, 448.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 472, 0.0], [472, 592, 1.0], [592, 1810, 1.0], [1810, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 472, 0.0], [472, 592, 0.0], [592, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 472, 65.0], [472, 592, 18.0], [592, 1810, 171.0], [1810, 3092, 194.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 472, 0.05429864], [472, 592, 0.14414414], [592, 1810, 0.07049608], [1810, 3092, 0.09296482]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 472, 0.0], [472, 592, 0.0], [592, 1810, 0.0], [1810, 3092, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 472, 0.11440678], [472, 592, 0.125], [592, 1810, 0.11576355], [1810, 3092, 0.08892356]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 3092, 6.258e-05]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 3092, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 3092, 0.04619533]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 3092, -556.30366977]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 3092, -233.94188631]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 3092, -231.55819733]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 3092, 37.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
21,948,357 | https://cis.eku.edu/insidelook/six-fast-growing-careers-taking-over-us |
Six Fast-Growing Careers Taking Over the U.S.
This just in from Terri Williams at Yahoo!Education...
Despite the delicate economy, these jobs are projected to experience significant growth until at least 2020.
Whether you are fresh out of college, unemplo | ["yed, or considering a mid-career change, you want to land a job in a field that's growing.", "\nMany careers throughout the country are experiencing modest growth, but some quickly expanding fields are seeing at least a 30 percent projected growth between 2010 and 2020, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.\nIntrigued? Keep reading to learn more about six careers that are sweeping the nation.\nEKU's Computer Information Systems program prepares students for leadership success in these high-demand careers\n#2 Career: DATABASE ADMINISTRATOR -Projected Job Growth 2010-2020: 31 percent*", "\nEducation: Bachelor's degree in management information systems or a computer-related field. Companies with large databases may prefer an MBA.\nFind out more about AFIS's:\nComputer Information Systems majors\n#6 Career: SOFTWARE DEVELOPER -Projected Job Growth 2010-2020: 30 percent*\nEducation: Bachelor's degree in computer science, software engineering, or a related subject.\nRead Terri Williams' complete article from Yahoo!Education..."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "cis.eku.edu", "date_download": "2018-11-12T18:54:56Z", "digest": "sha1:A6AAXZJN6D7JM3UM5LCUXINLPC45JS3L", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1278, 1278.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1278, 2736.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1278, 14.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1278, 94.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1278, 0.9]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1278, 330.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1278, 0.28225806]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1278, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1278, 0.06333973]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1278, 0.05182342]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1278, 0.04990403]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1278, 0.04990403]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1278, 0.04435484]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1278, 0.14285714]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1278, 0.24596774]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1278, 0.64130435]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1278, 5.66304348]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1278, 0.01612903]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1278, 4.60002173]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1278, 184.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 46, 1.0], [46, 101, 1.0], [101, 210, 1.0], [210, 346, 1.0], [346, 564, 1.0], [564, 650, 1.0], [650, 763, 0.0], [763, 842, 0.0], [842, 984, 1.0], [984, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1123, 0.0], [1123, 1217, 1.0], [1217, 1278, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 101, 0.0], [101, 210, 0.0], [210, 346, 0.0], [346, 564, 0.0], [564, 650, 0.0], [650, 763, 0.0], [763, 842, 0.0], [842, 984, 0.0], [984, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1123, 0.0], [1123, 1217, 0.0], [1217, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 46, 7.0], [46, 101, 8.0], [101, 210, 16.0], [210, 346, 24.0], [346, 564, 34.0], [564, 650, 14.0], [650, 763, 14.0], [763, 842, 10.0], [842, 984, 19.0], [984, 1012, 5.0], [1012, 1048, 4.0], [1048, 1123, 10.0], [1123, 1217, 12.0], [1217, 1278, 7.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 101, 0.0], [101, 210, 0.03773585], [210, 346, 0.0], [346, 564, 0.04716981], [564, 650, 0.0], [650, 763, 0.0], [763, 842, 0.15277778], [842, 984, 0.0], [984, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1123, 0.16176471], [1123, 1217, 0.0], [1217, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 46, 0.0], [46, 101, 0.0], [101, 210, 0.0], [210, 346, 0.0], [346, 564, 0.0], [564, 650, 0.0], [650, 763, 0.0], [763, 842, 0.0], [842, 984, 0.0], [984, 1012, 0.0], [1012, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1123, 0.0], [1123, 1217, 0.0], [1217, 1278, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 46, 0.17391304], [46, 101, 0.09090909], [101, 210, 0.00917431], [210, 346, 0.00735294], [346, 564, 0.02293578], [564, 650, 0.02325581], [650, 763, 0.05309735], [763, 842, 0.3164557], [842, 984, 0.04225352], [984, 1012, 0.17857143], [1012, 1048, 0.08333333], [1048, 1123, 0.28], [1123, 1217, 0.0212766], [1217, 1278, 0.08196721]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1278, 0.03193623]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1278, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1278, 0.01804197]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1278, -121.88309771]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1278, -20.86696922]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1278, -51.74776739]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1278, 16.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
21,948,630 | http://abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/[email protected]/allprimarymainfeatures/D463997DBB0C50C9CA2573CD00049839?opendocument |
1301.0 - Year Book Australia, 1927
Topography of Australia (Feature Article)
Year Book Australia provides a detailed statistical overview of various aspect of the economy and social conditions in Australia. In addition it contains descriptive matter deali | ["ng with Australia's geography and climate, government, international relations, defence, education and health and welfare support systems.", "\nThis publication has been scanned from the paper version using character recognition software. This provides a full-text searching capability once downloaded.\nUsers are warned that historic issues of this publication may contain language or views which, reflecting the authors' attitudes or that of the period in which the item was written, may be considered to be inappropriate or offensive today.\nThis page last updated 11 January 2008"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "abs.gov.au", "date_download": "2017-11-17T17:26:53Z", "digest": "sha1:54YTRQP24J5GW2JQNVJKYXQIZPSGJI7O", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 831, 831.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 831, 1888.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 831, 6.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 831, 56.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 831, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 831, 262.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 831, 0.33333333]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 831, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 831, 0.02308802]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 831, 0.04906205]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 831, 0.17021277]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 831, 0.74789916]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 831, 5.82352941]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 831, 4.34384421]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 831, 119.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 77, 0.0], [77, 394, 1.0], [394, 553, 1.0], [553, 793, 1.0], [793, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 77, 0.0], [77, 394, 0.0], [394, 553, 0.0], [553, 793, 0.0], [793, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 35, 5.0], [35, 77, 5.0], [77, 394, 42.0], [394, 553, 21.0], [553, 793, 39.0], [793, 831, 7.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 35, 0.3], [35, 77, 0.0], [77, 394, 0.0], [394, 553, 0.0], [553, 793, 0.0], [793, 831, 0.15789474]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 35, 0.0], [35, 77, 0.0], [77, 394, 0.0], [394, 553, 0.0], [553, 793, 0.0], [793, 831, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 35, 0.08571429], [35, 77, 0.0952381], [77, 394, 0.01892744], [394, 553, 0.01257862], [553, 793, 0.00416667], [793, 831, 0.05263158]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 831, 0.03976268]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 831, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 831, 0.0739994]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 831, -39.80620918]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 831, 5.45858188]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 831, 14.47086512]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 831, 7.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
4,733,811 | https://www.hindlish.com/act%20of%20law-sentence-in-hindi | "act of law" sentence in Hindi | ["act of law sentence in Hindi\n\u0939\u093f\u0902\u0926\u0940 Mobile\nHome > Sentence > \"act of law\" sentence\nact of law sentence in Hindi\n\"act of law\" meaning in Hindi\nSentences Mobile\nWhat we lack is the concrete rules that regulate the acts of law enforcers,\nPWA was one of the first groups ever to be prosecuted under this act of law.\nConsequently, the volume number is not assigned to acts of law published since 1 January 2012.\nAs the ultimate legislative body in Malaysia, the Parliament is responsible for passing, amending and repealing acts of law.", "act of law sentence in Hindi\nThe medal was established in 1970 ( though it has been given retroactively ) by act of law in the Knesset.\nAt present, the Bumiputra privileges both enshrined in Article 153 and as set out by other acts of law, remain in force.\nThis Convention safeguards human rights of individuals, what means that also every single disabled person is subject of this act of law.\nLois is then framed for several acts of law-breaking, and they tries to make it seem like Lois is having a mental breakdown.", "act of law sentence in Hindi\nIn 1916, a board of five Army generals on the retired list convened under act of law to review every Army Medal of Honor awarded.\nAs a local paper editorialized, \" We regard the hanging of Leo M . Frank in Cobb County as an act of law-abiding citizens .\"\nA proposed act of law begins its life when a particular government minister or ministry prepares a first draft with the assistance of the Attorney-General's Department.", "act of law sentence in Hindi\nSeveral acts of law regulate the freedoms granted by Article 10, such as the Official Secrets Act, which makes it a crime to disseminate information classified as an official secret.\nThe \"'Dutch nobility \"'is regulated by act of law in the Nobility Act, passed into law on 1 August 1994, and is overseen by the, an official state institution of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.", "act of law sentence in Hindi\nAn Individual's \"'status \"'is a legal position held in regard to the rest of the community and not by an act of law or by the capacities should be recognised wherever the person may later travel.\nCharles VII tried to emphasise his government in Frankfurt with numerous acts of law, such as the grant of imperial privilege to the University of Erlangen in 1743 and the creation of several new imperial nobles.", "act of law sentence in Hindi\nDespite the name of the act of law which created it, there is no requirement that a class-A station be an independent or community broadcaster, and some class-A stations are simply used as broadcast translators for other stations.\nThe medal was established in 1970 by the Knesset in an act of law as a replacement for the \" Hero of Israel \" military decoration that was awarded during the 1947-48 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine and the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.", "act of law sentence in Hindi\nUsing arcane treaties, obscure acts of law and a brain-numbing array of legal tactics, McLaren and 20 like-minded followers are attempting to form their own sovereign nation, called the Davis Mountains Land Commission, in the weathered peaks 13 miles west of town.", "act of law sentence in Hindi\nThe Solicitor General had submitted that under the Constitution, only acts of law inconsistent with the Constitution that were passed after independence would be void, while Article 162 excepted legislation passed prior to independence . ( Clause 6 of Article 162 permits a court to apply the pre-independence legislation by modifying it as required to conform with the Constitution . who wrote:", "act of law sentence in Hindi\n\"act of honour\" sentence, \"act of hostility\" sentence, \"act of indecency\" sentence, \"act of indemnity and oblivion\" sentence, \"act of insolvency\" sentence, \"act of parliament\" sentence, \"act of parliament of the united kingdom\" sentence, \"act of party\" sentence, \"act of providence\" sentence,\nact of law sentences in Hindi. 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4,733,858 | https://sentence.yourdictionary.com/altered | Uses of Altered in Sentences | ["Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHow to use Altered in a sentence\nHe altered his path for the kitchen.\nShe'd altered her own future, based on what he showed her.\nEven if it was Bird Song where she stayed, the place must have been altered a dozen times in the last century.\nThe information was beyond valuable, and on a level that further altered Gabe's perception on Deidre.\nHis attention was riveted on her as he altered his course to stop at the table in front of her.\nThe dockyard was altered and improved by Charles I.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt would have been a first anyway, because the buggy had been altered so two horses could pull it.\nDarian saw and altered their path.\nOwing to the variable illumination of the selenium thus produced, the resistance of the latter, and therefore the intensity of the current sent through the line to the receiving station by the battery, will be altered accordingly.\nHe altered his course and coasted down to the edge of the field.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nOne day he gave a banquet to his friends, and after it they sallied forth with torches, singing through the streets, Francis being crowned with garlands as the king of the revellers; after a time they missed him, and on retracing their steps they found him in a trance or reverie, a permanently altered man.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nMen leave their customary pursuits, hasten from one side of Europe to the other, plunder and slaughter one another, triumph and are plunged in despair, and for some years the whole course of life is altered and presents an intensive movement which first increases and then slackens.\nThe suit jacket had not been altered to accommodate Jonathan's short arms.\nNowadays, not even the models looked alike, altered by porches and additions and a variety of landscaping tastes.\nThe map had been altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe bridge by which the Via Aemilia crossed the river Parma, from which it probably takes its name, is still preserved, but has been much altered.\nThe fa\u00e7ade has been considerably altered, but the campanile, erected in 1178-1180, still exists; it is 252 ft.\nThe situation was entirely altered by the death of Edward III.\nMatthew edited anew the works of Abbot John de Cella and Roger of Wendover, which in their altered form constitute the first part of his most important work, the Chronica majora.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe statutes of the Order were altered to suit the new conditions, and a whole system of administration arose.\nThe chancel of the church at Repton is assigned to the second half of the 10th century, though subsequently altered, and the crypt beneath is supposed to be earlier still; its roof is supported by four round pillars, and it is approached by two stairways.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nUnder the manorial system, the rise of which preceded the Norman Conquest, communal methods of husbandry remained, but the position of the cultivator was radically altered.\nIn the five subsequent years the proportion was fundamentally altered, so that with a greatly increased importation of grain, that of meal and flour was in the proportion of about one-ninth.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nSuch deviations from the practice of merely selling grain and meat off the farm have much extended in recent years, and will probably continue to do so under the altered conditions of British agriculture, determined by very large imports of grain, increasing imports of meat and of other products of stock-feeding, and very large imports of cattle-food and other agricultural produce.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe last part of Bruce's life, from 1315 to 1329, began with an attempt which was the most striking testimony that could have been given to the effect of Bannockburn, and which, had it succeeded, might have altered the future of the British Isles.\nSieyes now sketched its outlines in vaguely republican forms; thereupon Bonaparte freely altered them and gave them strongly personal touches.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nKeeping the electoral machinery almost unchanged (save that the lists of notables were to be permanent) Bonaparte entirely altered the upper parts of the constitutional pyramid reared by the philosopher.\nWe may mention also graphiticschists containing dark scaly graphite (often altered forms of carbonaceous shales), and haematite-schists which may represent beds of ironstone.\nThe limits were altered subsequently, but the net debt has continued to rise.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe Chronicler, we must suppose, altered the name because Tadmor was a city more familiar and renowned in his day, or possibly because he wished to increase the extent of Solomon's kingdom.\nThe relationship of landlord and tenant may be altered either voluntarily, by the act of the parties, or involuntarily, by the operation of law, and may also be dissolved.\nThe contract of tenancy may also be altered by operation of law.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe land, on the expiration of the tenancy, becomes at common law the absolute property of the landlord, no matter how it may have been altered or improved during the occupation.\nThe relationship of landlord and tenant is created, altered and dissolved in the same way, and the rights and duties of parties are substantially identical.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn later editions the title of this book was altered to Die Osmanen and die spanische Monarchic. It was now his ambition to continue his exploration of the new world thus opened to him.\nThe position of the reversing link is altered by means of a cord, passing over two pulleys, fixed respectively in the engine-house and on the derrick.\nIn reading the service he altered or omitted phrases which seemed to him untrue, and in reading the Scriptures pointed out errors in the translation.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn 1900, 95.5% were native born, 43' 7% were coloured (including 479 Chinese, Japanese and Indians), and in 1905 the percentages were little altered.\nUpon the next vacancy after the courts were thrown open, the crown altered the precedence and placed the queen's advocate after the attorneyand solicitor-general.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe restored church of St Nicholas, dating from the 13th century, though much altered in the 15th, contains'a window given by Queen Victoria in 1866 in memory of her father, the duke of Kent, who lived at Woolbrook Glen, close by, and died there in 1820.\nClevedon Court is a remarkable medieval mansion, dating originally from the early part of the 14th century, though much altered in the Elizabethan and other periods.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis has proved to be erroneous; it is non-metallic in character, and its name was altered to silicon, from analogy with carbon and boron.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nWhile polysymmetry is solely conditioned by the manner in which the mimetic twin is built up from the single crystals, there being no change in the scalar properties, and the vector properties being calculable from the nature of the twinning, in the case of polymorphism entirely different structures present themselves, both scalar and vector properties being altered; and, in the present state of our knowledge, it is impossible to foretell the characters of a polymorphous modification.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn Phoenician itself and in the other Semitic alphabets the position of the middle legs of the W is altered so that the symbol takes such forms as or V or w, ultimately ending sometimes in a form like K laid sideways, he.\nThe church of St Leonard, founded before 1451, was frequently altered before it was rebuilt in1866-1868in the Perpendicular style.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBabeuf now returned to Paris, and on the 3rd of September 1794 published the first number of his Journal de la liberte de la presse, the title of which was altered on the 5th of October to Le Tribun du peuple.\nFor not only has the weight been more than quadrupled in some of the larger breeds, and the structure of the skull and other parts of the skeleton greatly altered, but the proportionate size of the brain has been reduced and the colour and texture of the fur altered in a remarkable manner.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThey would never have died out, however, had not circumstances altered, and a new mental attitude been taken up. The spirit of philosophical and theological speculation and of ethical reflection, which began to spread through the churches, did not know what to make of the old hopes of the future.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe change was brought about by two causes - first, Greek theology, which reached the West chiefly through Jerome Rufinus and Ambrose, and, second, the new idea of the church wrought out by Augustine on the basis of the altered political situation of the church.\nHe altered the constitution of the praetorian guard, in which only Italians, formed into nine cohorts, were enrolled.\nGayarre, coming down to the war, based on deep and scholarly research, and greatly altered in successive editions.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe character of this body was altered in 1890, and in 1898, in which latter year its functions were reduced to the essentially judicial.\nThe war, which broke out in 1743, was waged with varying fortunes, and the peace by which it was concluded on the 5th of September 1746, beyond stipulating for a few privileges for Persian pilgrims to the holy places, altered nothing in the settlement arranged ten years before with Murad IV.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe situation was however materially altered by the end of August 1826; for the Greeks, driven to desperation, had formally invited the mediation of England, thereby removing Canning's objection to an unasked intervention.\nThe crisis which ended in 1841, however, materially altered the situation from the Russian point of view.\nTo this suggestion, which would have excluded the Treaty of Kuchuk Kainarji, the emperor Nicholas replied by a haughty demand that nothing should be altered in the status quo.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAmid all the variation in their details, and the apparent confusion introduced by Napoleon's habit of suggesting alternatives and discussing probabilities, and in spite of the preparations ostensibly made for an expedition to Ireland, which was to have sailed from Brest and to have carried 30,000 troops commanded by Augereau, the real purpose of Napoleon was neither altered nor concealed.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nA remarkable change occurs when many albumins are boiled with water, or treated with certain acids, their solubility and general characters being entirely altered, and the fluid becoming coagulated.\nThe secular fashions altered with changes of taste; but the Church retained the dress with the other traditions of the Roman Empire.\nThe \" pectens \" have become more firmly chitinized and probably somewhat altered in shape as compared with their condition in the aquatic ancestral scorpions.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe whole series was evidently deposited in shallow water on the summit of a submarine volcano standing in its present isolation, and round which the ocean floor has probably altered but a few hundred feet since the Eocene age.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAs to the third complaint, that the compilers of the Digest altered the extracts they collected, cutting out and inserting words and sentences at their own pleasure, this was a process absolutely necessary according to the instructions given them, which were to prepare a compilation representing the existing law, and to be used for the actual administration of justice in the tribunals.\nThe ideas of the French Revolution profoundly influenced him, and wholly altered his career.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nA sum of Lioo,000 was bequeathed by Mr Andrew Usher (1826-1898) for a hall to be called the Usher Hall and to supplement I The original Tolbooth was completed in 1501, but a new one took its place in 1563-1564, and was subsequently altered.\nWe may grant further that the medieval offices have been deliberately altered to exclude this view.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nA group of highly inclined quartzites, altered conglomerates and jasperoid rocks which crop out on the Umhlatuzi river, between Melmoth and Nkandhla and on the White Umfolosi river above Ulundi Ph ins, is considered by Anderson to represent some portion of the Lover Witwatersrand series.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThere were enough inconsistencies in his creed to enable both sides in the recent controversies to claim him as one who if he were still alive would have supported their case in the altered circumstances; but, from the biographical point of view, these issues are hardly relevant.\nThis forcible intrusion of a nonAryan race altered the whole history of Europe; but its peculiar significance lay in the fact that it permanently divided the northern from the southern and the eastern from the western Sla y s.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nMeanwhile, the earlier events of the war had so altered the political situation that any idea which the diet at Debreczen had cherished of a compromise with Austria was destroyed.\nThe form of (3) shows immediately that, if a and b be altered, the co-ordinates of any characteristic point in the pattern vary as a-'- and b-1.\nIf we now suppose half the grating cut away, so as to leave 1000 lines in half an inch, the dispersion will not be altered, while the brightness and resolving power are halved.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAt one time the Turkish script was altered, with the result that officers were unable to read their reports or orders; then the Enverie, a highly unpractical head-covering, reminiscent of a child's paper hat, was invented and introduced; in March 1914 he demanded and obtained the hand of Princess Nadjie, the Sultan's niece, made himself general of a division, and began, moreover, to take thought for his financial future.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHis name, originally Lacanal, was altered to distinguish him from his Royalist brothers.\nPelouze in 1838, who observed that when paper or cotton was immersed in cold concentrated nitric acid the materials, though not altered in physical appearance, became heavier, and after washing and drying were possessed of self-explosive properties.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nUnder this division some of the recognized administrative units were greatly altered in area or even abolished, and the capital status of several cities was apparently affected.\nNot only is this true of epithelial cells, but - the connective tissuecells of the supporting structure of cancerous growth, after repeated transplantation, may become so altered that a gradual evolution of apparently normal connective tissue into sarcomatous elements takes place, these giving rise to \" mixed tumours.\"", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe foregoing hypotheses have all sought the origin of new growths in some intrinsic cause which has altered the characters of the cell or cells which gave rise to them, but none of them explain the direct exciting cause.\nThe vitality of these cells being altered there is imbibition and accumulation of watery fluid in their cytoplasm, causing swelling and vacuolation of the cells.\nThe bursting of several of these altered cells is the method by which the skin vesicles are formed in certain conditions.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe whole system of treatment of tubercular disease has been altered by the discovery of the tubercle microphyte.\nThe main facade of the cathedral was largely altered in 1491, to which date the statues upon it belong; the portico in front was added in 1497.\nThe existing palace was finished by John Nash in 1835, but did not meet with approval, and was considerably altered before Queen Victoria occupied it in 1837.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt is curious that the only two existing copies of Agas's map 2 were published in the reign of James I., although apparently they had not been altered from the earlier editions of Elizabeth's reign which have been lost.\nThe maps show us much that remains somewhat the same as it was, but also much that has greatly altered.\nEven when the outcrop is oxidized, and Surface the mineral character and richness of the deposit is Explora- altered thereby, it is possible to determine variations tion.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn the case of such altered deposits surface exploration alone is likely to be misleading, and it is important to push the underground exploration far enough to reach the unaltered part of the deposit, or at least deep enough to make it certain that there is a sufficient quantity of altered or enriched ore to form the basis of profitable mining operations.\nLuke has also slightly altered the position of the call of the first disciples in the sequence of events.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nOn the other hand, while in the older crown and flint glasses the relation between refraction and dispersion had been practically fixed, dispersion and refraction increasing regularly with the density of the glass, in some of the new glasses introduced by Abbe and Schott this relation is altered and a relatively low refractive index is accompanied by a relatively high dispersion, while in others a high refractive index is associated with low dispersive power.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe eighth guru was the second son of Har Rai, but he died when a child and too young to leave any mark on in his favour and also in favour of the next guru for having altered a line of the Granth to please the emperor Aurangzeb.\nThe discovery of coal in the neighbourhood stimulated and altered its industries.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nWhen revising his scheme of chronology in 1900, Rost abandoned his suggested emendation of Sennacherib's figure, but by decreasing his reduction of the length of Dynasty III., he only altered his date for the beginning of Dynasty I.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe hour of Bestuzhev's triumph coincided with the peace congress of Aixla-Chapelle, which altered the whole situation of European politics and introduced fresh combinations, the breaking away of Prussia from France and a rapprochement between England and Prussia, with the inevitable corollary of an alliance between France and the enemies of Prussia.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis was a blockhouse built for coast defence by Henry VIII., but became the official residence of the Lords Warden of the Cinque Ports, and was in consequence much altered from its original condition.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nSince Howard published his invention the vacuum pan has been greatly improved and altered in shape and power, and especially of recent years, and the advantages of concentrating in vacuo having been acknowledged, the system has been adopted in many other industries, and crowds of inventors have turned their attention to the principle.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn the majority of cases the good results obtained are more particularly due to the setting free of \" dormant \" or \" latent \" food constituents and to the amelioration of the texture of the soil, so that its aeration, drainage, temperature and water-holding capacity are altered for the better.\nWithin the limits imposed by the nature of his task, his treatment of his sources is remarkably free, the details unsuited for poetic handling being passed over, or, in some instances, boldly altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAny change in the resistance of the arc, either by lengthening, due to the sinking of the charge in the crucible, or by the burning of the carbon, affected the proportion of current flowing in the two shunt circuits, and so altered the position of the iron cylinder in the solenoid that the length of arc was, within limits, automatically regulated.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe southern boundary never greatly altered; it did at times reach the Kur and the Aras, but on that side the Khazars were confronted by Byzantium and Persia, and were for the most part restrained within the passes of the Caucasus by the fortifications of Dariel.\nContrary to historical tradition, Italy is supposed to have been his ancestral inheritance, of which he has been deprived by Odoacer, or by Ermanaric, who in his altered character of a typical tyrant appears as his uncle and contemporary.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nOf these the most important are Alexander of Macedon and Charlemagne, while alongside of them Priam and other heroes of the Trojan war appear during the middle ages in strangely altered guise.\nThe last completely altered the aspect of the me, considerably reducing its height.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHaematemesis is vomiting of blood, the colour of which may be altered by digestion, as is also the case in melaena, or passage of blood with the faeces, in which the blood becomes dark and tarrylooking from the action of the intestinal fluids.\nIt was true that the bent of his genius was slightly altered, in a direction which seemed less purely and austerely that of the highest art; but his concessions to public taste vastly added to the width of the circle he now addressed.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe exterior has been altered in French taste.\nThe church of St Oswald, originally conventual, is Early English and Decorated, but has been greatly altered by restoration.\nOne or two of the circle of Catullus survived into that age; but an entirely new spirit came over the literature of the new period, and it is by new men, educated indeed under the same literary influences, but living in an altered world and belonging originally to a different order in the state, that the new spirit was expressed.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn the Eclogues and Georgics Virgil is the idealizing poet of the old simple and hardy life of Italy, as the imagination could conceive of it in an altered world.\nThucydides expressly describes the predominance of Athens as riyEgovia (leadership, headship), not as apyi 7 (empire), and the attempts made by Athenian orators during the second period of the Peloponnesian War to prove that the attitude of Athens had not altered since the time of Aristides are manifestly unsuccessful.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis was the original proportion, and it has not been altered in spite of the decline of the Druses and increase of the Maronites.\nThese arms. are then altered until on raising or depressing the battery key there is no sudden deflection either way of the galvano meter.\nBut it was so altered by the pope's successor.\nIn 1662 the rubric was altered and it was substituted for the Apostles' Creed.\nIn June 1849 the constitution of the council was altered to comprise ten nominated and eight elected members.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt is a fine Romanesque building in grey stone, built in the form of a Greek cross, with a dodecagonal dome over the centre slightly altered by Margaritone d'Arezzo in 1270.\nIt was as easy to send copies of the French, and thus give no ground for the suspicion that the Scots letters were altered on the basis of information acquired between May and October 1568, and that the French versions were made to fit the new form of the Scots copies.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe cathedral is in origin Romanesque,' but has been much altered, and was restored in 1888 by Count Giuseppe Sacconi (1855-1905).\nThe instrument so altered was in use at the Cape Observatory from March 1881 till 1887 in determining the parallax of some of the more interesting southern stars.\nHe then altered the magnifying power by sliding the field lens of the eye-piece (which was fitted with a slipping tube for the purpose) along the eye-tube, till the images were brought into contact.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe chapel of St Julian, where French Anglican services are held, is of transitional Norman architecture, greatly altered by restoration.\nBut not only is the character of the Reformation differently conceived from what it once was; our notions of the process of change are being greatly altered.\nThey may exclude one another, exist so to speak in a condition of armed neutrality to one another, without being positively thereby related to one another or altered by any change taking place in any of them.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe relation of the Americas to each other and to the rest of the world, as the home of plants and animals, is greatly affected by the breadth of the adjacent oceans, and also by the geologically recent changes of altitude whereby the breadth of the narrower parts of the lands and the oceans has been significantly altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nOf the churches the Stadtkirche (parish church), of which Herder became pastor in 1776, is a Gothic building dating from about 1400, but much altered in detail under \"classical\" influences.\nIn combining these two and using them as a framework for the poems, the compilers have altered, added and omitted.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThough a place of considerable antiquity - being mentioned in 1086 as the meeting-place of insurgents against Knud, the saint - Randers has few remains of old buildings and bears the stamp of a compact, modern manufacturing town that owes its importance to its distilleries, manufactories of gloves, railway carriages, &c. St Marten's church dates from the 14th century, but was frequently altered and enlarged down to 1870.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAbout the 10th century the name was altered into Agenardus, and then to Eginhardus, or Eginhartus, but, although these variations were largely used in the English and French languages, the form Einhardus, or Einhartus, is unquestionably the right one.\nThat the text has been much adapted and altered is certain; not less obvious are the corruptions due to carelessness and accident.\nIn nature it is frequently altered to limonite with the separation of native sulphur.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe necessity, for administrative or other purposes, of tabulating separately the returns for so many cross-divisions of the country constitutes one of the main difficulties of the English census operations, more particularly as the boundaries of these areas are frequently altered.\nThe later editions of the earlier volumes are much enlarged and altered, and a new edition was published at Stuttgart in 1882.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAnother important result of the investigation was that the phase of vibration of the fork was not altered by bowing it, the amplitude alone changing.\nThis implies that the disturbance is so small that the length is not appreciably altered.\nThe advent of a Liberal administration under Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman in Great Britain in December 1905 completely altered the political situation in the late Boer states.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nStaffordshire, the diorites of Warwickshire, the phonolite of the Wolf Rock (to which he first directed attention), the pitchstones of Arran and the altered igneous rocks near the Land's End were investigated and described by him during the years1869-1879in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society and in the Geological Magazine.\nIf the load is in the bay D'E' and is carried by a rail girder which distributes it to cross girders at D'E', the part of the influence line under this bay is altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIndustry was thus in many ways compensated for the paralysis of trade with private buyers in the home market and for the closing of foreign markets, and it would have been able to continue quietly on the old lines but for the emergence of a new factor which fundamentally altered the conditions.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe price of tobacco and the tariff of the State railways were considerably increased, special war increases were introduced in the direct taxes, and in April 1916 an entirely new tax was imposed - the \" war profits tax,\" the name of which was subsequently altered to \" war tax.\"\nBut since then much has been altered both in the Church and her secular environment.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt was not till tie following day that the sovereign's style was altered to Victoria simply, and this necessitated the issuing of a new declaration and a re-signing of the peers' roll.\nHaving given her sanction to a measure, that it be not arbitrarily altered or modified by the minister.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBut about the r3th century the Roman formula was altered, and the council of Trent (1551) declared that the \"form\" and power of the sacrament of penance lay in the words Ego to absolvo, &c., and that the accompanying prayers are not essential to it.\nThe inland shire-boundary has varied with the altered course of the Rother.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThey are rarely metamorphosed to the point of recrystallization, though locally shales are altered to roofing slates, sandstones are indurated, limestones slightly marblized, and coals, originally bituminous, are changed to anthracite in northern Pennsylvania, and to graphite in Rhode Island.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe shunted voltameter was then inserted in series with the electric supply mains leading to the house or building taking electric energy, and the current which passed dissolved the zinc from one plate and deposited it upon the other, so that after a certain interval of time had elapsed the altered weight of the plates enabled the quantity of electricity to be determined from the known fact that an electric current of one ampere, flowing for one hour, removes 1.2533 grammes of zinc from a solution of sulphate of zinc", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHence the quantity in amperehours passing through the electrolytic cell being known and the fraction of the whole quantity taken by the cell being known, the quantity supplied to the house was determined.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe boundary between Dakota Territory and Nebraska was slightly altered in 1870 and 1882.\nThus many of the words procured from foreign sources, not excluding Bali and Sanskrit, are more or less mutilated in pronunciation, though the entirely suppressed or altered letter is still retained in writing.\nAragonite is the least stable form; crystals have been found altered to calcite.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nWe shall make the natural supposition that motion of the aether, say with velocity (u,v,w) at the point (x,y,z), is simply superposed on the velocity V of the optical undulations through that medium, the latter not being intrinsically altered.\nIt survived, however, in spite of royal decrees, but in an altered sense.\nIt has since been maintained in altered form.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe churches of the Lombards, West Goths, Franks and Anglo-Saxons, all counted themselves parts of the Catholic Church; but the Catholic Church had altered its condition; it lacked the power of organization, and split up into territorial churches.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nUnder the Empire the bishop of Rome had possessed in the Church an authority recognized and protected by the State; respect for Rome and for the successor of Saint Peter was not forgotten by the new territorial churches, but it had altered in character; legal authority had become merely moral authority; its wielder could exhort, warn, advise but could not command.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBut the Teutonic elements maintained their place in the law of the Frankish Church; and this was not altered by the fact that, since Christmas Boo, the king of the Franks and Lombards had borne the title of Roman emperor.\nThe Palazzo del Capitano, by Giuliano da Maiano (1472), has been entirely altered.\nThe cathedral of the 15th century contains an octagonal marble canopy with sculptures in relief, with a font below it belonging to the 8th century, but altered later.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nUntil 1820 the south-eastern district of Pechersk was the industrial and commercial quarter; but it has been greatly altered in carrying out fortifications commenced in that year by Tsar Nicholas I.\nFarther away from the granite the slates are not so much altered, but generally show small rounded or ovoid spots, which may be darker or lighter in colour than the matrix.\nIt has an old castle, much altered and restored, especially by the Gonzaga family of Mantua in the 16th century.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nMary and Elfleda is one of the finest examples in England of a great Norman church little altered by later builders.\nThe resistance in circuit with the fine wire is then altered until the galvanometer shows no deflexion.\nThus, according to Jewish tradition, there are eighteen7 passages in which the older scribes deliberately altered the text on the ground that the language employed was either irreverent or liable to misconception.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nOne branch seeks to determine the scope, purpose and character of the various books of the Old Testament, the times in and conditions under which they were written, whether they are severally the work of a single author or of several, whether they embody earlier sources and, if so, the character of these, and the conditions under which they have reached us, whether altered and, if altered, how; this is Literary Criticism.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nObviously, the archetype placed Hebrews between Galatians and Ephesians, but the scribe altered the order and put it between 2 Thess.\nThere is a governing body chosen from among the islanders, the constitution of which has been altered more than once owing to internal jealousies, &c. The island produces sweet potatoes, yams, melons, bananas and other fruits, arrowroot and coffee.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nDuring this long period he occupied himself with completing the constitutions by incorporating certain declarations, said to be Ignatian, which explained and sometimes completely altered the meaning of the original text.\nThe first to take advantage of these altered conditions was William Tyndale, \" to whom,\" as Dr Westcott says,' \" it William has been allowed more than to any other man to give W Tyndale.i ts characteristic shape to the English Bible.\"", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis is one of the very few records that remain of their undertaking.4 \" (1) The ordinary Bible read in the Church, commonly called the Bishops' Bible,' to be followed, and as little altered as the truth of the original will permit.\nBut the arrival of Fabius Valens altered the aspect of affairs.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn the rubric in question words are altered here and there in a way which shows that its reappearance can hardly be a mere printer's error; but in any case its importance is very slight, for the Act of Uniformity specially provides that the English service alone is to be used for the Eucharist.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe archbishops gave their decision on the 1st of May 1900 in two separate judgments, to the effect that, in Dr Temple's words, \"the Church of England does not at present allow reservation in any form, and that those who think that it ought to be allowed, though perfectly justified in endeavouring to get the proper authorities to alter the law, are not justified in practising reservation until the law has been so altered.\"", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nArcheozoic (Archean) Group.The oldest group of rocks, called the Archean, was formerly looked upon, at least in a tentative way, as the original crtist of the earth or its downward extension, much altered by the processes of metamorphism.\nThis feature is the existence of a supreme instrument of government, a document, enacted by the people, which controls, and cannot be altered by, any or all of the ordinary organs of government.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nSmall as the regular force has always been, its organization has been altered some two score of times in all.\nIn 1868 a militia system for the whole Dominion was organized, the tariff altered and systematized, and a Civil Service Act passed.\nThis doubtless would be an advantage morphologically, though for human descriptive anatomy the present nomenclature is not likely to be altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn order, however, to impute the whole work to Anaximenes, Spengel took one of the most inexcusable steps ever taken in the history of scholarship. Without any manuscript authority he altered the very first words \" three genera \" (T pia -yin) into \" two genera \" (Suo -ybni), and omitted the words \" one declamatory \" (rO SE E7rLSEtKrucOv).", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAmong several places of worship the chief is St Mary Magdalene's church; this has a north porch and windows dating from the 14th century, besides a lofty and slender spire; but it has been much altered by restoration.\nIf we suppose the lower part of the instrument replaced by a uniform bar of the same sectional area as the stem and of volume V, the indications of the instrument will be in no respect altered, and the bottom of the bar will be at a distance of N scale-divisions below the zero of the scale.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt was at first intended that these troops should act against Java or Mauritius; their destination was, however, altered to Egypt, with a view to co-operation with Sir Ralph Abercromby's expedition, and Baird was placed in command.\nThe monument has unfortunately been altered.!\nTo save the constitution an appeal was made to the German Confederation, which Hanover had joined in 1815; but the federal diet declined to interfere, and in 1840 Ernest altered the constitution to suit his own illiberal views.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAs originally platted by Joseph Ellicott, the plan of Buffalo somewhat resembled that of Washington, but the plan was much altered and even then not adhered to.\nThoroughly American, and a lover of the people, he greatly altered the attitude of the Roman Catholic Church toward the Knights of Labor and other labour organizations, and his public utterances displayed the true instincts of a popular leader.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nPerot's number is now definitely adopted to define the Angstrom, and need never be altered, for should at some future time further researches reveal a minute error, it will be only necessary to change slightly the temperature or pressure of the air in which the wave-length is measured.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe question could not be settled by experiments made at the same temperature, and if the temperature is altered the question is complicated by the distinction which would probably have to be drawn between the number of collisions and their intensity.\nThe fluorescent bands in this case appear to shift rapidly when the period of the incident vibration is altered, though the change may be small.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe author, no doubt correctly, remarks that the shift does net indicate a change of frequency but a change of relative intensity, consisting of a great number of fine lines; when the maximum intensity of the distribution of light is altered, the appearance is that of a shift.\nIf the forced vibration is suddenly stopped, the free periods will appear but not necessarily with the same intensity when the period of the original forced vibration is altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis was the position of affairs when Amalric died, in 1174; but, as Nureddin died in the same year, the position was soon altered and Saladin began the final attack on the kingdom.\nTheir general tendency was distinctly in a Catholic as opposed to a Puritan direction, and the two thousand Puritan incumbents who vacated their benefices on St Bartholomew's Day rather than accept the altered Prayer Book bear eloquent testimony to that fact.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe accession of James, was, however, contrary to the will of Henry VIII., which favoured the heirs of his younger sister Mary, wife of Charles Brandon, duke of Suffolk, whose succession would probably have marvellously altered the complexion of both Scottish and English history.\nSan Miguel chapel was built probably in the middle of the 17th century, was destroyed in 1680, and was rebuilt in 1710, but has been greatly altered in recent times.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHaving, however, in consequence, lost his professorship at Jena, he gradually altered his views, until at length he decided that God is not mere moral order, but also reason and will, yet without consciousness and personality; that not mankind but God is the absolute; that we are only its direct manifestations, free but finite spirits destined by God to posit in ourselves Nature as the material of duty, but blessed when we relapse into the absolute; that Nature, therefore, is the direct manifestation of man, and only the indirect manifestation of God; and, finally, that being is the divine idea or life, which is the reality behind appearances.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe fairs granted in 1553 for the 1st of February and the 10th of September are now held on altered dates.\nThe situation was altered by the mental derangement of the king, and the birth of his son in 1453.\nWhen we recover knowledge we are in an altered world.\nGrey says it had been, within the memory of old people, abundant in every part of that country, 2 This generic term was subsequently altered by Van der Hoeven, rather pedantically, to Stringops, a spelling now generally adopted.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe case is somewhat altered by the discovery of several other early houses, of similar character, but not identical in plan; at Mycenae and elsewhere in Greece; these do not, for example, show the duplication of the essential parts of the house found at Tiryns.\nAltered circumstances and tendencies of opinion called for a policy of conciliation.\nWith his accession the situation altered; for he no longer made the Turkish 464 -Is71.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nViolated by the Liberal constitution of 1867, which granted religious liberty, depotentiated by laws setting up lay jurisdiction over matrimonial cases and state control of education, it was abrogated in 1870 by Austria, who alleged that the proclamation of papal infallibility had so altered the status of one of the contracting parties that the agreement was void.\nAfter the consecration of Cranmer to the archbishopric of Canterbury in 1533 Latimer's position was completely altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe next change took place in the central provinces; the ra-tags were altered into cerebral dentals, and the ya-tags became c. Later on the superscribed letters and finals d and s disappeared, except in the east and west.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis threefold succession is apparently an imitation or a debased form of the ancient legend of heavenly, earthly and human rulers, which was carried into Persia and China, and from the latter country into Japan and Tibet - the relative number of kings being altered in the last-named countries to suit local convenience and the small amount of truth which they contain.\nThey appear in some cases to be altered limestones and in others altered glauconitic sandstones.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nNo change occurred till 1859, when the system of Belgian defence was radically altered by the dismantlement of seventeen of the twenty-two fortresses constructed under Wellington's supervision in 1815-1818.\nThe parish church, in which Luther often preached, was built in the 14th century, but has been much altered since Luther's time.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn The Kingdom of God (1889), which first encountered serious hostile criticism in his own communion, he accounted for some of the differences between the first and third evangelists on the principle of accommodation - maintaining that Luke had altered both the text and the spirit of his sources to suit the needs of those for whom he wrote.\nIn Roman times it was altered in such a way as to distribute the rooms into (apparently) four quarters, each having an atrium with six or four columns.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nLater Roman hands I again enlarged and altered the building, which may perhaps have been used for the reception of Roman governors.\nIt was revived in 1708 by the elector palatine, John William of Neuberg, and its constitution was altered at various times, its final form being given by the elector Maximilian Joseph, first king of Bavaria, in 1808.\nSimpliciano, too, though originally Romanesque, is now in the main Gothic, and has been much altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nWhen he entered upon this office he intended to have prelected upon the tragedies of Sophocles; but he altered his intention and made choice of Aristotle's rhetoric. His lectures on this subject, having been lent to a friend who never returned them, are irrecoverably lost.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAs in other cell-walls, so here the older membranes may be altered by deposits of various substances, such as resin, calcium oxalate, colouring matters; or more profoundly altered throughout, or in definite layers, by lignification, suberization (Trametes, Daedalea), or swelling to a gelatinous mucilage (Tremella, Gymnosporangium), while cutinization of the outer layers is common.\nIn April 1894 the new electoral law altered the whole system.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAnother canal, to the west of Leczyca, connects the Bzura, a tributary of the Vistula, with the Ner and the Warta; and the bed of the former has been altered so as to obtain regular irrigation of the meadows along its banks.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe systole is not altered in length, but the diastole is very much prolonged, and since this is the period not only of cardiac rest but also of cardiac \"feeding\" - the coronary vessels being compressed and occluded during systole - the result is greatly to benefit the nutrition of the cardiac muscle.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nCohen, who regarded the pipes as of the nature of a mud volcano, and the blue ground as a kimberlite breccia altered by hydrothermal action, thought that the diamond and accompanying minerals had been brought up from deep-seated crystalline schists.\nThe latter is now generally believed to be altered diamond.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe divergence is expressed left to right, the other is right to left, in the altered laminae or of the enlarged petiolary sheath, or of stipules, as in the fig and magnolia, or of one or two of these parts combined.\nThe act of 1891, has, however, altered this method of recovering tithes, and substituted another intended to shift the burden of responsibility from the occupier to the landowner, by making the latter directly and solely responsible, but giving the remedy against the land.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt reappeared in 1634, with the date of the dedication altered, as if then newly written.\nThe date of the dedication to the young earl of Devonshire was altered from 1641 to 1646.\nObtaining an unbound copy of the De corpore, he saw by the mutilated appearance of the sheets that Hobbes had repeatedly altered his demonstrations before he issued them at last in their actual form, grotesque as it was, rather than delay the book longer.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBut the editors omitted, altered, added, separated, combined and so forth entirely at their pleasure, actually making some changes which seem to have been thought improvements of style.\nThe foreign commercial relations of Germany were again altered by the general and conventional customs tariff, which came into force on the 1st of March 1906.\nZuyder Zee, though the topography of the district has greatly altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nTo avoid any possible modification of a situation so satisfactory, Count Buol, the Austrian president of the diet, was instructed to announce that the constitution as fixed by the Final Act, and guaranteed by Europe, must be regarded as final; that it might be interpreted, but not altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBy Articles 56 and 57, however, it was laid down that constitutions could only be altered by constitutional means; that the complete authority of the state must remain united in its head; and that the sovereign could be bound to co-operate with the estates only in the exercise of particular rights.\nIt was bitterly opposed by the Liberals, especially by Bamberger; all essential features were altered by the Reichstag, and it was withdrawn by the government after it had passed the third reading.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe government at the end of 1889 introduced a new law, which was altered in some minor matters, and which was to be permanent.\nIt was a sign of mostserious import for the future that in 1897 thc e,lgctoral law in the kingdom of Saxony was altered with thc express purpose of excluding the Socialists from the Saxon Landtag.\nOf this structure the only remains are the western tower and the choir, which, greatly altered as well as repaired early in the 19th century, now forms the parish church.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThroughout his term of office he was supported by the finance minister Count Cambray Digny, who forced through parliament the grist tax proposed by Quintino Sella, though in an altered form from the earlier proposal.\nThe Danish observers at Tasiusak (10) in 1898-1899 observed this phenomenon occasionally in a slightly altered form.\nThe many vicissitudes which have attended this development have not, however, altered the European position of Austria, which has remained the same for over a thousand years.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAt the same time the number of members was increased to 353, but the proportion of representatives from the different territories was maintained and the system of election was not altered.\nThe nature of the assigned revenue was altered, the land I tax being substituted for those previously assigned, that tax being chosen as it had a greater character of stability than any other source of revenue.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt is not known at what time the practice of having the amount due settled by the community was altered into that according to which it was settled by the governor, or at what time the practice of deducting from the total certain expenses necessary for the maintenance of the community was abandoned.\nThe cathedral of St Mary, also on King's Island, was originally built in 1142-1180, and exhibits some Early English work, though largely altered at dates subsequent to that period.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBut the volume of the cell is not appreciably altered, despite the change of its shape, for its one diameter increases in proportion as its other is diminished.\nThe complex fat of the myelin becomes altered chemically, while the other components of the sheath break down.\nSome of the subjects are borrowed in altered form from the old mythology, while a few derive from Christian legend, and many deal with national history.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt is of course written in Greek, and consists of parts of the substance of the Codex and the Digest, thrown together and often altered in expression, together with some matter from the Novels and imperial ordinances posterior to Justinian.\nHowever, he won the seat by a large majority at the General Election in 1880 and, after the Reform bill of 1884 had altered the constituency, sat for Tyneside for a few months in 1885-6.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAnother followed in the next reign; and in 115, during Trajan's sojourn in the place with his army of Parthia, the whole site was convulsed, the landscape altered, and the emperor himself forced to take shelter in the circus for several days.\nThe market day was altered to Tuesday in 1662, and Sir William Fenwick, then lord of the manor, received a grant of a cattle market on the Tuesday after the feast of St Cuthbert in March and every Tuesday fortnight until the feast of St Martin.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nOmissions of a few passages written from memory at a time of profound nervous depression would have altered the whole character of the book.\nIn that region the Silurian rocks have been invaded by large bosses of granite and have undergone a variable amount of metamorphism which has in some places altered them into hard crystalline schists.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe highest summit in the south of Scotland - Merrick (2764 ft.) - consists of Silurian strata much altered by proximity to the granite, while the rest of the more prominent heights (all in Kirkcudbrightshire) - Rinns of Kells (2668 ft.), Cairnsmuir of Carsphairn (2612), and Cairnsmore of Fleet (2331) - are formed of granite.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBy the Reform Act of 1832 the number of Scottish representatives in the Commons was raised to fifty-three, the counties under a slightly altered arrangement returning thirty members as before, and the burghs, reinforced by the erection of various towns into parliamentary burghs, twenty-three; the second Reform Act (1867) increased the number to sixty, the universities obtaining representation by two members, while two additional members were assigned to the counties and three to the burghs; by the Redistribution of Seats Act in 1885 an addition of seven members was made to the representation of the counties and five to that of the burghs, the total representation being raised to seventy-two.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThey may be altered for the purposes of the registrar-general, and for police purposes part of the area of one county may be brought into the area of another.\nHe altered the constitution in a more Liberal direction, and struck various blows at the Clerical party, among other things abolishing the concordat with Rome.\nThe old Tiburtine Sibylla went through edition after edition, in each case being altered so as to apply to the government of the monarch who happened to be ruling at the time.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe route of the cables has been several times altered.\nWhen the site of the Great North Road was altered, towards the end of the 11th century, a bridge was built across the Ure, about half a mile above the Roman bridge at Aldborough, and called Burgh bridge or Ponteburgem.\nHe sometimes altered and contorted the facts; he very often unduly simplified his problems; he was very apt when he had proved a favourite opinion true to infer it to be the whole truth.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHe wrote a great work on the doctrines of the Pythagoreans, and tried to show that the successors of Pythagoras had made no additions to the views of their founder, but had merely borrowed and altered the phraseology.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHe painted with unceasing diligence, treating none but sacred subjects; he never retouched or altered his work, probably with a religious feeling that such as divine providence allowed the thing to come, such it should remain He was wont to say that he who illustrates the acts of Christ should be with Christ.\nThis old and simple conception of Indulgences had been greatly altered since the beginning of the 13th century.\nIt was erected in 1773-1792 and radically altered in 1835 and 1851.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis appears to be the beginning of a new anticlinal which has altered the levels of the Balkh plain, and is indicative of those elevating processes which Afghan tan, together with the minor dependencies of the provinces.\nThe bleached rhubarb, which has a very delicate flavour, is altered by covering the young leaves, as they sprout from the soil, with loose stones or an empty jar.\nBut long before the earliest Vindhyan rocks were laid down the Transition rocks had been altered and contorted.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nEvery time, therefore, that a speculum is repolished, the future quality of the instrument is at stake; its focal length will probably be altered, and thus the value of the constants of the micrometer also have to be redetermined.\nThe island has largely retained the old French laws, the codes civil, de procedure, du commerce, and d'instruction criminelle being still in force, except so far as altered by colonial ordinances.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBoltzmann Suggested That A Diatomic Molecule Regarded As A Rigid Dumb Bell Or Figure Of Rotation, Might Have Only Five Effective Degrees Of Freedom, Since The Energy Of Rotation About The Axis Of Symmetry Could Not Be Altered By Collisions Between The Molecules.\nHardly any remains of its once extensive ramparts and towers are now to be seen; but the castle, founded by William the Conqueror and completed by Henry I., is still employed as barracks, though in a greatly altered condition.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn 18 3 a select committee of the House of Commons went into the whole subject of secondary punishment and reported that, as the difficulties in the way of an effective classification of prisoners were insurmountable, they were strongly in favour of the confinement of prisoners in separate cells, recommending that the whole of the prisons should be altered accordingly and the expense borne by the public exchequer.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nYazid discovered soon that the system of taxation as regulated by Hajjaj could not be altered without serious danger to the finances of the empire, and that he could not afford the expenses which his prodigal manner of life involved.\nThis exceptional procedure does not simply go back to the rule that persons who had been tenants of the king ought not to have their condition altered for the worse in consequence of a royal grant.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe views of life held by the ordinary mortal as well as his aims and motives must be radically altered; and simultaneously a change must take place in his modes of speech, conduct and thought.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn the Eschenhagen pattern instrument, in which a single quartz fibre is used for the suspension, two magnets are placed in the vicinity of the suspended magnet and are so arranged that their field partly neutralizes the earth's field; thus the torsion required to hold the magnet with its axis perpendicular to the earth's field is reduced, and the arrangement permits of the sensitiveness being altered by changing the position of the deflecting magnets.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nSedgwick attacked the problem in the Snowdon district, where the rocks are highly altered and displaced and where fossils are comparatively difficult to obtain; Murchison, on the other hand, began to work at the upper end of the series where the stratigraphy is simple and the fossils are abundant.\nIn 1917 a detailed survey was made of the coast of Ellesmere Land from Cape Sabine to Clarence Head, which considerably altered the charts based on the rough surveys of Inglefield, Kane and Hayes.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIt is easily seen from (6) that if the configuration of a system of particles be altered by homogeneous strain (see ELASTICITY) the new position of the mass-centre will be at that point of the strained figure which corresponds to the original mass-centre.\nHence the altered angular momentum about Ox will be X+OX+(is+Ou)(rOt)+ (v+Oe)qOt.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAn eccentric may be made capable of having its eccentricity altered by means of an adjusting screw, so as to vary the extent of the reciprocating motion which it communicates.\nIn the Peloponnesus the face of things was completely altered by the Dorian conquest, no trace of which is found in Homer.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn these tribes the bold and active habits, the striking colours, or the fantastic diversities of structure,have so long attracted remark that recent investigations, while adding a multitude of new species and supplying the specialist with an infinity of new details, have not materially altered the scientific standpoint.\nSome changes were made in the \"York Rules\"; and so altered, the body of rules was adopted at the last-named conference, and was styled the \"York and Antwerp (or York-Antwerp) Rules.\"", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe Revival of Learning must be regarded as a function of that vital energy, an organ of that mental evolution, which brought into existence the modern world, with its new conceptions of philosophy and religion, its reawakened arts and sciences, its firmer grasp on the realities of human nature and the world, its manifold inventions and discoveries, its altered political systems, its expansive and progressive forces.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe colour in the case of red wines is first altered from red to brown, and in bad cases disappears altogether, leaving an almost colourless solution.\nOn the whole, both their merits and their defects are such as we should expect to find in the work of the poet celebrated by Bmda, and it seems possible, though hardly more than possible, that we have in these pieces a comparatively little altered specimen of Cmdmon's compositions.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIts earliest form is a rough ellipse transfixed by an upright line, cp. In various Semitic alphabets this has been altered out of recognition, apparently from the writing of the symbol in cursive handwriting without lifting the pen.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAs the population of Scotland had doubled since the Reformation, and its distribution had been completely altered in many counties, while the number of parish churches remained unchanged, and meeting-houses had only been erected where seceding congregations required them, the need for new churches was very great.\nThe act of 1905 has altered the circumstances of the churches in this regard.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHe found that the momentary dissipation was proportional to the degree of electrification at the time, and that, when the charge was moderate, its dissipation was not altered in bodies of different kinds or shapes.\nThis was entrusted to Bacon, who drew up a Declaration of the Practices and Treasons attempted and committed by Robert, late Earl of Essex, his first draft being extensively altered and corrected by the queen and council.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nSant' Antonino, which was the cathedral church till 877, is supposed to have been founded by St Victor, the first bishop of Piacenza, in the 4th century, and restored in 903; it was rebuilt in 1104, and altered in 1857.\nHe refused to crown Elizabeth because she would not have the coronation service accompanied with the elevation of the Host; and ecclesiastical ceremonies and doctrine could not, in Heath's view, be altered or abrogated by any mere national authority.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nSome of these altered conditions are to be regretted.\nThe domestic Indian buffalo (Bos bubalus) exists as a wild animal in North Australia; it is very liable to revert to a wild state, being little altered from its still-existing wild ancestor.\nIt was asserted that Camden altered his original narrative in order to please James I., and, moreover, that the account which he is said to have given to his friend, the French historian, Jacques de Thou, differed substantially from his own.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThere is, however, no truth in the story that the word einiges was altered by an imperial servant into ewiges, thus making the phrase \"without any imprisonment\" in the treaty of surrender to read \"without perpetual imprisonment.\"\nThe first volume was a slightly altered reprint of the earlier issue; the second consisted of a series of chapters forming a commentary parallel to those into which the original work was now first divided.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBut it is darkest just before the dawn; and Kant, the Copernicus of philosophy, had really altered the aspects of the doctrine of ideas.\nThe customs duties were, however, altered several times in accordance with market prices and ruling circumstances.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe result of the negotiations was published in a so-called \" communique,\" dated the 24th of March 1903, in which, among other things, it was proposed that the relations of the separate consuls to the joint ministry of foreign affairs and the embassies should be arranged by identical laws, which could not be altered or repealed without the consent of the governments of the two countries.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nAt the board of control Grant was primarily responsible for the act of 1833, which altered the constitution of the government of India.\nThe radii, thicknesses and distances are continually altered until the errors of the image become sufficiently small.\nBut Philips assassination in 336 fundamentally altered the situation.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe structure of New Persian has hardly altered at all since the Shahuama; but the original purism of Firdousi, who made every effort to keep the language Iree from Semitic admixture, could not long be maintained.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nOne of the great difficulties in the way of applying this treatment is that in all probability many of the ferments or enzymes are altered during the process of absorption in the same way as the normal ferments of digestion, and unless the tissue enzymes can be isolated and injected subcutaneously the desired results will not be obtained.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn the period which has elapsed since the establishment of British rule at the Cape the law has been considerably modified and altered, both by legislation and by judicial decisions, and it is not too much to say that at the present time there exists hardly any material difference in principle over the greater part of the field of jurisprudence between the law of England and the law of South Africa.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBy a law of 1882 aliens could be naturalized and enfranchised after a residence in the country of five years, but between 1890 and 1894 the franchise laws were so altered as to render it practically impossible for any foreigner to become a burgher.\nThe economic situation had in the meantime considerably altered, and the Transvaal was able to bring pressure upon Portugal to permit the recruiting of many thousands more Kaffirs from Mozambique province.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nTheir number was thereby reduced to twenty and their name altered to Vigintiviri (\"the twenty\").\nThe Spiti shales are succeeded conformably by Cretaceous beds (Gieumal sandstone below and Chikkim limestone above), and these are followed without a break by Nummulitic beds of Eocene age, much disturbed and altered by intrusions of gabbro and syenite.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe Committee of 1903 was appointed to inquire, inter alia, whether the limits of age-25 to 50 - for candidates should be altered, and whether service as a vice-consul for a certain period should be required to qualify for promotion to the rank of consul; whether means could not be adopted to give consular officers opportunities of increasing their practical knowledge of commercial matters and to bring them more into personal contact with the commercial community.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHe then, by means of rings of iron-wire, disks and other contrivances, altered the form of certain parts of the,surface of the oil.\nThe surface-tension of mercury is greatly altered by slight changes in the state of the surface.\nHe also showed that the bactericidal action takes place in the absence of food materials, thus proving that it is not merely a poisoning effect of the altered medium.\nThe town hall was built in the 17th and altered in the 18th century.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nBut the altered name of Lombard also denoted henceforth some of the proudest of Italians; and, though the Lombard speech had utterly perished their most common names still kept up the remembrance that their fathers had come from beyond the Alps.\nHitherto the Pathan kings had been content with the ancient Hindu capital, altered and adorned to suit their tastes.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nHis successors carried still farther the practice of dressing up the rather bald chronicles of earlier writers with all the ornaments of rhetoric. The old traditions were altered, almost beyond the possibility of recognition, by exaggerations, interpolations and additions.\nThey altered the Lower Palaeozoic rocks on their edges, and were once thought to have converted wide areas of Lower Palaeozoic rocks into schists and gneisses.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nGranites and granodiorites were intruded at this period into the older rocks, and altered the adjacent Devonian beds into slates and quartzites, and formed gold-quartz veins, which have been worked in the Devonian rocks at Yalwal.\nBut he altered this patronymic, for the sake of euphony, to Petrarca, proving by this slight change his emancipation from usages which, had he dwelt at Florence, would most probably have been imposed on him.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe festival of Bellona, which originally took place on the 3rd of June, was altered to the 24th of March, after the confusion of the Roman Bellona with her Asiatic namesake.\nBut in the year 1836, when the Highway Act 1835 came into operation, the law was altered.\nThe character of the Muir was greatly altered by an earthquake in 1899.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nIn harmony with this political change the trade routes have been completely altered, and the traffic which used to follow the well-beaten track from Nyangwe and the Lualaba across Tanganyika to Ujiji, or round the lake to Zanzibar, now goes down the Congo to Stanley Pool and the Atlantic.\"\nFrancesco also dates from the end of the 13th century, but has been altered.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThe cinchotannic acid apparently becomes altered by atmospheric oxidation into a red-colouring matter, known as cinchono-fulvic or cinchona red, which is very abundant in some species, as in C. succirubra.\nThe character of the shore of the eastern crescent has been much altered by the new harbour works, which with the wharves and warehouses have absorbed the Villa del Popolo, or People's Park, originally constructed on land reclaimed from the bay.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nA leaf-trace, as it passes through the cortex, has a collateral structure, the protoxylem being situated at the inner edge of the xylem; when it reaches the leaf-base the position of the spiral tracheids is gradually altered, and the endarch arrangement (protoxylem internal) gives place to a mesarch structure (protoxylem more or less central and not on the edge of the xylem strand).\nThe Hall, called Westminster Hall, was built by William Rufus and altered by Richard II.\nAungier altered all this.", "Uses of Altered in Sentences\nThis is not strictly the case, however, for such gases and vapours as exhibit well-defined bands of absorption in the spectrum, as these bands are altered in character by compression."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "sentence.yourdictionary.com", "date_download": "2022-08-17T14:33:35Z", "digest": "sha1:M4YZQ54X4ERP4KJLAY5MF7OM4U7YSWNT", "quality_signals": 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4,733,879 | https://www.archindy.org/criterion/national/07-18-canada.html | Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage' | ["Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage'\nHome: The Criterion: National and world news\nPope describes Canada trip as 'penitential pilgrimage'\nVATICAN CITY (CNS) -- Asking for prayers ahead of his visit to Canada July 24-29, Pope Francis described the trip as a \"penitential pilgrimage\" as part of a commitment to healing and reconciliation with the country's Indigenous people.", "Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage'\n\"Unfortunately, in Canada, many Christians, including some members of religious institutes, contributed to the policies of cultural assimilation that, in the past, have severely harmed native communities in various ways,\" the pope said July 17, referring particularly to the involvement of dioceses and religious orders in running residential schools.", "Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage'\nFrom the 1870s to the 1990s, the Canadian government, usually in partnership with Christian churches, operated a residential school system to which over 150,000 First Nation, M\u00e9tis and Inuit students were sent. Their language and customs were banned, and they often suffered malnourishment and physical, emotional and sexual abuse.", "Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage'\nAddressing pilgrims in St. Peter's Square after the recitation of the Angelus prayer, Pope Francis said the church's involvement in the schools was the reason why he met in late March and early April at the Vatican with \"representatives of Indigenous peoples, to whom I expressed my sorrow and solidarity for the harm they have suffered.\"", "Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage'\n\"And now I am about to embark on a penitential pilgrimage, which I hope, with God's grace, will contribute to the journey of healing and reconciliation already undertaken,\" the pope said.\nWith his mobility still limited because of knee trouble, Pope Francis' itinerary is very light, although he will visit the site of a former residential school, a parish for Indigenous people, a popular pilgrimage site in Edmonton and another in Quebec, and will meet Inuit elders and young people in Iqaluit, Nunavut.", "Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage'\nHe will celebrate a public Mass July 26 at Commonwealth Stadium in Edmonton and another July 28 at the National Shrine of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupr\u00e9 outside of Quebec. But the Catholic bishops, who are organizing the visit, are giving priority for places at both liturgies to residential school survivors and other members of the Indigenous communities.", "Pope's Canada Trip Described as 'Penitential Pilgrimage'\nAddressing his \"dear brothers and sisters of Canada,\" Pope Francis half apologized for not being able to meet everyone. \"As you know, I will come among you especially in the name of Jesus to meet and embrace the Indigenous peoples.\"\n\"I thank you in advance for all the work of preparation and for the welcome you will give me,\" the pope said. \"And I ask you to please accompany me in prayer.\""] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.archindy.org", "date_download": "2022-08-17T12:46:00Z", "digest": "sha1:PVQLTQUBELSJ2M5CF4YKNFHQAMF5PRKF", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 2607, 2607.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 2607, 5798.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 2607, 11.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 2607, 162.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 2607, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 2607, 177.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 2607, 1.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 2607, 0.4020202]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 2607, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 2607, 0.02080378]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 2607, 0.01560284]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 2607, 0.01891253]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 2607, 0.01818182]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 2607, 0.15959596]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 2607, 0.53140097]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 2607, 5.10869565]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 2607, 4.87963936]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 2607, 414.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 100, 0.0], [100, 336, 1.0], [336, 688, 1.0], [688, 1020, 1.0], [1020, 1359, 0.0], [1359, 1547, 1.0], [1547, 1865, 1.0], [1865, 2215, 1.0], [2215, 2448, 0.0], [2448, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 100, 0.0], [100, 336, 0.0], [336, 688, 0.0], [688, 1020, 0.0], [1020, 1359, 0.0], [1359, 1547, 0.0], [1547, 1865, 0.0], [1865, 2215, 0.0], [2215, 2448, 0.0], [2448, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 45, 7.0], [45, 100, 7.0], [100, 336, 37.0], [336, 688, 49.0], [688, 1020, 49.0], [1020, 1359, 56.0], [1359, 1547, 31.0], [1547, 1865, 52.0], [1865, 2215, 54.0], [2215, 2448, 40.0], [2448, 2607, 32.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 100, 0.0], [100, 336, 0.01785714], [336, 688, 0.00588235], [688, 1020, 0.04334365], [1020, 1359, 0.0], [1359, 1547, 0.0], [1547, 1865, 0.0], [1865, 2215, 0.01166181], [2215, 2448, 0.0], [2448, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 100, 0.0], [100, 336, 0.0], [336, 688, 0.0], [688, 1020, 0.0], [1020, 1359, 0.0], [1359, 1547, 0.0], [1547, 1865, 0.0], [1865, 2215, 0.0], [2215, 2448, 0.0], [2448, 2607, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 45, 0.08888889], [45, 100, 0.03636364], [100, 336, 0.08474576], [336, 688, 0.01136364], [688, 1020, 0.02409639], [1020, 1359, 0.03539823], [1359, 1547, 0.0212766], [1547, 1865, 0.02830189], [1865, 2215, 0.04571429], [2215, 2448, 0.03433476], [2448, 2607, 0.01886792]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 2607, 0.91861981]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 2607, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 2607, 0.94206947]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 2607, 29.38349039]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 2607, 43.08484654]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 2607, 4.99082473]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 2607, 14.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
4,733,892 | https://island.lk/shameless-shirkers/ | Shameless shirkers - Island | ["Shameless shirkers - Island\nShameless shirkers\nSaturday 26th September, 2020\nCynics pooh-poohed the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority\u2019s boastful claim that Sri Lanka was the Wonder of Asia. But we are convinced of the veracity of that slogan. In fact, this country is not just the Wonder of Asia\u2019; it is the Wonder of the World, for it survived the yahapalana government without becoming a hotbed of ISIS terrorism.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nOn seeing the shameful conduct of the former rulers and their erstwhile trusted lieutenants, blaming one another for their collective failure to prevent the Easter Sunday carnage, people must be feeling ashamed that they were once ruled by those imbeciles. Under the yahapalana government, national security became nobody\u2019s business and the Defence Ministry a playpen of politicians and mandarins who knew next to nothing about defence; they even did not know what to do with vital intelligence.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nHemasiri Fernando would have us believe that during his tenure as the Defence Secretary, the then President Maithripala Sirisena purposely kept him out of the loop, and, therefore, he should not be held responsible for the circumstances that led to the Easter Sunday carnage. He thinks the blame for the terror strikes should be laid solely on his former boss, Sirisena.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nEx-IGP Pujith Jayasundera says former President Sirisena should take the full responsibility for the yahapalana lapses that enabled the National Thowheed Jamaath (NTJ) terrorists to carry out the Easter Sunday carnage. He insists that he had written to all those below him, informing them of the intelligence warning of the impending attacks, and they should have taken action. He pretends that he did not have full control over the police, and Sirisena interfered with transfers", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nBut as far as we can remember, he controlled the police with an iron fist, and there was no way anyone could bypass him or conceal anything from him. It may be recalled that he ensured that his sil campaign was a success, and went so far as to rough up an elevator operator at the Police Headquarters for not observing sil. It is not possible that anyone would have dared ruffle his feathers. The blame for his subordinates\u2019 failure to take action on the warning should be apportioned to him.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nJayasundera has said his phone was tapped by the SIS, and he was under surveillance while he was the IGP. We thought the yahapalana government did not resort to such measures. No wonder the state intelligence agencies, stuck neck deep in political work, had little time to spy on terrorists and ensure public safety.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nSDIG Nilantha Jayawardena claims that, as the State Intelligence Service Chief, he had conveyed the intelligence warning of the terror attacks to everyone in the Defence establishment except President Sirisena. Curiouser and curiouser! It has now been revealed he used to call President Sirisena almost daily.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe entire yahapalana government and the police top brass who stooped so low as to do dirty political work should be held responsible for having created conditions for the rise of Islamic extremism and terror. Their witch hunt against the military and intelligence personnel who had been instrumental in defeating LTTE\u2008terrorism brought about a situation where nobody in the intelligence community was willing to go beyond the call of duty to neutralise the NTJ", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nTime was when intelligence officers sprang into action, upon receiving information about possible terror attacks, and dealt with the terrorists without wasting time on writing memos", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIf those brave, efficient officers and men, who served the country faithfully, risking as they did life and limb, had not been arrested, harassed or hounded out of their jobs, following the 2015 regime change, Zahran would not have been able to explode even the Kanthankudy motorcycle bomb, which was a dry run of the Easter Sunday bombings.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe yahapalana shirkers responsible for their failure to prevent the Easter Sunday attacks are lucky that they are not living in a country like Saudi Arabia, where a Sri Lankan girl\u2014Rizana Nafeek\u2014who worked as a housemaid was beheaded, in 2013, for the death of a baby, in her care, due to her negligence. Their lapses led to more than 250 deaths.\nAmerica votes\nRoaring millers and whining lions\nTrickery and duplicity\nWednesday 17th August, 2022", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe SLPP MPs are said to be divided on provision in the 22nd constitutional amendment Bill for the dissolution by the President of Parliament two and a half years after the formation of a government. The ruling party MPs loyal to the Rajapaksas are reportedly demanding that the constitutionally prescribed period be extended to four and a half years, but the dissident SLPP MPs and the Opposition are said to be convinced otherwise; they reportedly favour the current time limit.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nAdversity or expediency may make strange bedfellows but they do not necessarily trust one another in cloak-and-dagger politics. They see more devils than vast hell can hold, and are ready to sink their poniards in each other\u2019s back if they feel that is the way they could protect their interests. What happened during the now infamous Yahapalanaya may serve as an example.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe political marriage of convenience between the SLFP and the UNP in 2015 brought a group of highly ambitious politicians together but these elements were suspicious of one another and had their long knives at the ready and put them to good use three years later", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe then President Maithripala Sirisena, who won the 2015 presidential race with the help of UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe, sacked the latter as the Prime Minister and appointed their mutual enemy Mahinda Rajapaksa to that post in a bid to appoint an SLFP-led government at the expense of the UNP.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nSirisena went so far as to dissolve Parliament only to have his executive order quashed by the Supreme Court. He made that deplorable move because he felt that the UNP was undermining him politically.\nThe SLPP, which made Wickremesinghe the President, seems to fear that he might do a Sirisena in case he falls out with the Rajapaksas.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe 20th Amendment has strengthened the executive presidency, and President Wickremesinghe is far more powerful than President Sirisena was during the Yahapalana government. Ironically, most of the SLPP MPs who voted en bloc for the 20th Amendment, enabling President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to dissolve Parliament after the expiration of two and a half years of its life, are all out to prevent President Wickremesinghe from doing so!", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe Rajapaksas made Wickremesinghe the President to keep him on a string and have caused the Sword of Medamulna to hang from a saataka over his head. They will not be able to control the President if he can dissolve Parliament, for he will not hesitate to leverage this power in case of the SLPP trying to undermine him. He will be able to use of the ruling party MPs\u2019 fear of Parliament being dissolved to make them fall in line: most SLPP lawmakers know that their chances of re-election are remote.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe only way to prevent the President from exercising his or her power to dissolve Parliament is to move an impeachment motion against him or her. But it is highly unlikely that the SLPP will resort to such a course of action: it has lost its two-thirds majority in the House", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nHaving witnessed the disastrous situation during the latter stages of the Yahapalana government, especially the neglect of national security and the resultant Easter Sunday carnage, one can only hope that the Executive and the ruling party will not be at loggerheads again.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe government has delisted some expatriate Tamil groups considered sympathetic to the LTTE\u2019s cause, and drawn heavy flak from a section of the ruling SLPP and the nationalistic organisations that backed it to the hilt at the past several elections. The SLPP leadership has chosen to remain silent on the issue, and it will be interesting to know its stance on the delisting of the Tamil groups that it once demonised. It made Ranil Wickremesinghe the President to do its bidding", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nWhy were the aforesaid Tamil organisations banned? Have the factors that led to their proscription ceased to be, over the past few years, for them to be delisted under the present dispensation, which is an extension of the Rajapaksa rule in all but name", "Shameless shirkers - Island\n? If not, what has prompted the government to delist them, and doesn\u2019t its action amount to an admission that those outfits were wrongfully proscribed, or it has acted out of expediency rather than principle or any concern for the national interest, which it claims to protect?", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIt was the Mahinda Rajapaksa government (2005-2015) that initiated action to proscribe some expatriate Tamil groups, claiming that they posed a threat to national security. The SLPP led by the Rajapaksas campaigned on a national security platform at the presidential election (2019) and the parliamentary polls (2020) and secured huge popular mandates to govern the country in keeping with its national security strategy among other things", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nDoes the SLPP think the delisting of the Tamil groups at issue is consistent with its mandates, on the basis of which it continues to rule the country?", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe SLPP, which elected President Wickremesinghe, with whose blessings the delisting in question has been effected, owes an explanation to the public.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIt will be interesting to see the reaction of Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena, who represents the nationalistic forces that made the SLPP\u2019s victory possible and are full of praise for President Wickremesinghe for having got tough with the Galle Face protesters and stood up to the Colombo-based western diplomats, to the government\u2019s volte-face on the proscription of the pro-Eelam groups.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nNeedless to say, when a government does exactly the opposite of what it promises in its election manifesto, for which it obtains popular support, its mandate becomes delegitimised. The key pledges in SLPP presidential candidate Gotabaya Rajapaksa\u2019s policy programme presented to the people and what the government is doing at present are like chalk and cheese, to say the least", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nOne is reminded of a ruse in days of yore; some men, on their wedding days, much to their surprise, found that their brides were the elder sisters of the pretty women they had agreed to marry! Something similar has happened to the Sri Lankans who voted for Gotabaya; they have got Ranil Wickremesinghe as the President courtesy of the SLPP!", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThe leaders and members of the Tamil expatriate groups that have been delisted will now be able to visit this country. But war-time Defence Secretary Gotabaya, who became the President, has fled the country and is in self-exile. President Wickremesinghe has gone on record saying that he does not think the time is opportune for Gotabaya to return home. Speculation is rife that some former LTTE members in detention will be released as part of a political deal the government has cut with the TNA", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIf the government carries out its pledge to the TNA, those ex-Tigers will walk free. Is it that Gotabaya, as the President, did something far worse than unleashing or supporting terrorism", "Shameless shirkers - Island\n? All the SLPP politicians who were also responsible for bankrupting the country are still in the incumbent government, and some of them are Cabinet ministers although most of them should be behind bars. So much for the change the Aragalaya has brought about!", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nSri Lanka is like a storm-tossed bark struggling to remain afloat in an ocean of economic trouble; it is lucky to have avoided a head-on collision with a massive Chinese vessel, Yuan Wang 5 (YW-5), a ballistic missile and satellite-tracking ship, which is on its way to Hambantota. Colombo has finally stopped dillydallying and decided to allow the vessel to make a port call. India and the US have softened their collective stance on the Chinese ship\u2019s visit", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIt was thought that the YW-5 issue would lead to a bitter diplomatic row with India, and if what was feared had come to pass with New Delhi cranking up pressure on Colombo to deny YW-5 permission to dock, it would have been a double whammy for Sri Lanka, which is dependent on the restructuring of Chinese debt to secure the much-needed IMF bailout package, and cannot afford to antagonise India, which is propping up its economy. All\u2019s well that ends well.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nThere are lessons to be learnt from the ship controversy. Colombo was initially all at sea. The Rajapaksa-Wickremesinghe government seemed divided on the issue with vital information one needed to figure out the provenance of the issue being suppressed. So, the arguments and counterarguments anent the issue were based on surmises, hunches, assumptions, hearsay, etc. Thankfully, the Foreign Ministry has put the record straight albeit belatedly.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIt behoves Sri Lanka to be mindful of India\u2019s security concerns in handling maritime affairs. Perhaps, it is not the scheduled arrival of YW-5 as such that New Delhi was concerned about but the possibility of China continuing to use the Hambantota Port to berth more such vessels in the future. (China would not have secured a port in a strategic location in the Indian Ocean for nothing!) It is only natural that India and its QUAD allies think China is testing the water.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIt is the voice of the QUAD that one has heard through the critics of the YW-5 voyage. There is reason to believe that they are promoting a US-led drive to isolate China internationally. YW-5 embarked on its current voyage amidst a Chinese naval exercise near Taiwan in response to US Speaker Nancy Pelosi\u2019s recent controversial visit to Taipei notwithstanding objections from Beijing.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nColombo has acted tactfully by reportedly asking India and the US to specify the reasons for their misgivings about the Chinese vessel\u2019s port call. However, it defies comprehension why Colombo requested Beijing to defer the arrival of YW-5 at Hambantota for replenishment, after granting permission.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nMeanwhile, the argument that China is sending its survey vessel all the way to Hambantota to spy on South India does not sound tenable. In fact, it reflects naivety on the part of those who make that claim, for China is equipped to spy on its rivals without taking the trouble of deploying its ships and drawing international attention to such missions unnecessarily", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIn this day and age, technology is so advanced that information about even what lies at the edge of the universe, as it were, could be gathered without any craft ever getting anywhere near it.", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nSri Lanka is already battered and bruised enough economically and certainly does not want any diplomatic rows to contend with. It has to get its foreign policy right", "Shameless shirkers - Island\nIt had better take steps to avoid issues like the docking of YW-5 in the future lest it should become a victim of the big-power rivalry, which is intensifying; it ought to decide what types of ships will be allowed to berth at its ports, formulate a policy to that effect and make it known to the rest of the word so that unnecessary controversies could be averted, and hegemonic nations bent on projecting their power on a global scale will not be able to flex their naval muscles at the expense of Colombo."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "island.lk", "date_download": "2022-08-17T14:06:06Z", "digest": "sha1:TF3AZ4TWFXOARSLQJC2ZVERCX27LHA32", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 15236, 15236.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 15236, 18409.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 15236, 40.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 15236, 170.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 15236, 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4,733,909 | http://vk-agency.com/arrowhead.html | Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish | ["Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nVirginia Kidd\nHistorical Notes\nArrowhead is the name that literary agent and science fiction writer Virginia Kidd, along with science fiction writer and critic James Blish, gave to their home in Milford, Pennsylvania when they moved there in 1953.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nVirginia Kidd wrote poetry and short stories, including some works that were published under James Blish's name. She founded the world's first all science-fiction literary agency at Arrowhead; in addition to the expected business of a literary agency which is of course getting books published, Virgina Kidd served as mentor to at least three generations of writers, literary agents and even a translator here and there", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nHer daughter Elizabeth fondly recalls learning the ropes, then selling her first work as an agent herself. This was one of Anne McCaffery's juvenile \"dragon\" books \u2014 a book which, like many books that bear the touch of the Virginia Kidd Agency, went on to become so popular as to be a force unto itself", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nMany others have learned the craft of being a literary agent at Arrowhead, and it is no exaggeration to say that the entire science fiction and fantasy genre owes a significant debt to Virginia Kidd, and Arrowhead.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nVirginia Kidd said: \"There was a time when the introduction to book after book, as signed by the author or editor, and placed and dated, bore the name of the town of Milford.\"", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nToday, a very large number of copyright acknowledgements reference either Virginia Kidd or the Virginia Kidd Agency, but there is no other hint that it is Arrowhead, one of the original wellsprings of the golden age of science fiction, still enriching our reading experiences: One gossamer idea after another encouraged to fly free at the banks of the Sawkill.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nJames Blish wrote 27 books and innumerable short stories and poems at Arrowhead prior to his move to England. His best known works from the period included A Case of Conscience (Hugo awards, 1959 and 2004), Cities in Flight, Fallen Star, and Titan's Daughter. The rash of \"pulp\" science fiction magazines that came out of the second quarter of the 1900's were succeeded by a few standouts, in particular Amazing Stories, Galaxy, IF, and Analog", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nShould one look through a stack of these magazines, it is virtually impossible to go more than a very few issues before the name of James Blish is peering back at you from the cover. James Blish was an extremely productive writer.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nArrowhead, long ago...\nArrowhead deserves substantial credit for serving as a magnificent place to work from, as well as a significant focal point for writers and their ideas. James Blish's office was in the basement where the view of the Sawkill creek flowing through the back yard served as muse. A moment's pause in that space by an open window in the summer gifts the listener with gentle sounds of the Sawkill's waters; a calming remedy as potent as any medical concoction today.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nAs well as having been home to one of Science Fiction's founding fathers and the first science fiction literary agency, Arrowhead has been a focal point for science fiction writers for over fifty-five years. The formation of SFWA was partially conceived at Arrowhead; hundreds of gatherings of science fiction writers who were later prominent SFWA members took place there in those early days.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nWriters and other members of the science fiction community were welcomed in a most open manner during the sixties and consequently Arrowhead occasionally took on many aspects of a commune, though perhaps it is fairer to describe those manifestly hospitable moments as a bed-and-breakfast for the literati", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nA constant stream of the erudite, the famous, and the frankly hopeful made the afternoons and evenings at Arrowhead merry and stimulating \u2014 and one of the best places in the entire world to get your copy of an award-winning book or story cheerfully signed by the author.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nThere were sleeping bags on the expansive porches, various writer-folk sitting around the kitchen table come morning through evening, and many a story idea was expounded, dissected, and fleshed out. Folk songs were sung, guitars and an upright piano backed decidedly non-professional voices who made up in enthusiasm what they lacked in technique. But Arrowhead also served as a focal point for professional level music", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nFelicity Joinson, an exquisite folk singer from Scotland, spent many hours at Arrowhead, and no one who heard her perform is ever likely to forget it. A voice like satin combined with solid instrumental skills kept Arrowhead's denizens spellbound late into many evenings. Rock bands practiced and jammed in Arrowhead's basement ad-hoc studio space during the 1970's", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nOne alumnus of these sessions, Damon Knight's son Christopher, went on to found the Los Angeles Recording Workshop, one of the largest and most elaborate recording instruction facilities in the world. There are very old reel-to-reel tapes of some of this, but no attempt has been made to recover them as of 2021; they have become very fragile with time and there will probably be only one chance to make such an effort.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nAt one point during the late 1960s, the downstairs bathroom received a small graffiti from James Blish and Virginia Kidd's son, Ben. Instead of the cleaning and reprimand that one might reasonably expect, the entire bathroom slowly became covered floor to ceiling by remarks from eminent science fiction writers, agents, and not a few fans", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nThe walls, the ceiling, the shower stall, even the sides of the bathtub did not escape from the onslaught of writers who found a tabula rasa, no matter if it was only a tiny clear space. Unfortunately, these were painted over in the 1980s. Only one graffito escaped the purge, and still remains as of 2005; an electronic diagram of a low power pirate radio station on the back of the bathroom medicine cabinet door", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nInstructions have been given by the owners of the Virginia Kidd Literary Agency that this last graffito never be removed or painted over, and that the cabinet itself be retrieved in the event that the agency is forced to move to new quarters.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nThe history of Arrowhead, the building, is nothing if not colorful. The grounds and structure were seriously flooded in 1955 by the remains of Hurricane Diane and then again in 2004 as a consequence of the deluges that accompanied the profoundly busy hurricane season that year. In the spring of 2005, the waters rose yet again and the scramble to save years of science fiction history began anew", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nEach time, evacuation, reconstruction and retrenchment followed; the building is manifestly sturdy, the oldest portions dating back to the 1700s. Remnants of Arrowhead's original electrical wiring (no longer carrying power) are still visible in less accessible areas of the building. As it was directly associated with the mill across the street, informed speculation has it that it may have been the first home to be electrified in the entire town", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nArrowhead was rewired in modern fashion in the 1970's \u2014 until that point, turning on more than two major appliances was somewhat of a gamble.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nArrowhead's informal and somewhat commune-like openness was complemented by a huge, brooding mansion a mile or so away called The Anchorage. For a time, this was the home of Damon Knight and Kate Wilhelm, and served as the focal point where the Science Fiction Writers of America was conceived by Damon Knight, James Blish and Judith Merril", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nSFWA, as this organization became known, grew to become the single most important organization in science fiction writing; every year, the writer's conference meetings at The Anchorage grew larger. It was only because the building was incredibly outsized that there was any chance at all of accommodating the influx of SF persons", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nArrowhead, naturally enough, saw a large proportion of the same people during the various writer's conference events, serving as a venue for some functions while others went on at the Anchorage. The Anchorage, sadly, succumbed to fire. Yet Arrowhead remains to commemorate Milford's science fiction heritage.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nIn the 1970s, the US government instantiated the Tocks Island Dam project. This was to be a dam that blocked the flow of the Delaware River, and when completed, would flood a huge area that included where Arrowhead still stands as of 2005. Consequently, Virginia Kidd was forced to sell the building to the government. Despite this, she was able to negotiate an agreement whereby she could remain there until the dam was completed and the property actually in danger of flooding", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nTo make a long story short, the Tocks Island Dam project was never completed, and the US park service obtained jurisdiction over all the properties that had been taken.", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nVirginia Kidd passed away in early 2003, yet her literary agency remains there to this day as a manifest part of her legacy to the science fiction community. James Blish passed away in 1975.\nThe Virginia Kidd Literary Agency has been operating continuously at Arrowhead since its founding over fifty years ago.\nThe following is a partial list of science fiction and fantasy personages Arrowhead has been privileged to house or host over the years:\nPiers Anthony\nJames Blish\nBen Bova", "Arrowhead: Home of Virginia Kidd and James Blish\nRodgers Clemens (Roger Lovin)\nLester Del Rey\nSamuel R Delany\nGordon Dickson\nTom Disch\nGardner Dozois\nGeorge Alec Effinger\nCarol Emshwiller\nHugo Gernsback\nRobert A Heinlein\nL Ron Hubbard\nDamon Knight\nCyril M. (C.M.) Kornbluth\nKeith Laumer\nJudith Ann Lawerence\nUrsula K Le Guin\nFritz Leiber\nWalt and Lee Richmond\nBob Lowndes\nJoan Matheson\nMarek Obtulowicz\nHenri-Luc Planchat\nJane Rose (Sallis)\nJoanna Russ\nJames Sallis\nJosephine Saxton\nClifford Simak\nNorman Spinrad\nAnne McCaffery\nJudith Merril\nWard Moore"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "vk-agency.com", "date_download": "2022-08-17T13:44:45Z", "digest": "sha1:5IAZZLCYQSLNM5JGGXLMW73O7BHFGZDI", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 9796, 9796.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 9796, 9943.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 9796, 60.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 9796, 70.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 9796, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 9796, 267.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 9796, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 9796, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 9796, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 9796, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 9796, 0.41217672]], 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46,832,138 | http://studentorgs.kentlaw.iit.edu/cklawreview/2011/07/18/862-and-863-are-printing/ |
Chicago-Kent Law Review
Published by the Students of the Chicago-Kent College of Law
All-Symposium Format
Faculty Advisers
Live Symposia
Why Law Review?
Summer Candidacy Program
Past Staff
Issues 86:2 and 86:3 are Printing
LibTech July 18, 2011 Announceme | ["nts", "\nI am happy to report that Volume 86, Issue 2 of the Chicago-Kent Law Review, Symposium on Comparative Jury Systems, is now printing. The issue should be available in hard copy at your local law library and in electronic form on our website on on WestLaw and LexisNexis by mid-August. Congratulations to everyone involved! It looks to be an excellent academic exchange re different approaches to the jury systems and mixed courts spanning the globe", "\nThe symposium editor, Nancy Marder (an ex-SCOTUS clerk herself), believes the issue will allow Justice Breyer and Justice Scalia to continue their debate about whether U.S. courts should look to foreign sources for inspiration. Although these two Justices have carried on this debate in the realm of constitutional law, she believes the debate could be extended to our jury system as well.", "\nI am also happy to report that Volume 86, Issue 3 of the Chicago-Kent Law Review, Symposium on Medical Malpractice and Compensation in Global Perspective, Part I, is complete and should begin print production within the next week or so. It is the first part of a special double issue (the second part will be published this winter as 87:1) that includes comparative analysis of tort law \u2013 in the context of medical malpractice and compensation \u2013 in 14 countries/regions from around the globe", "\nCountries appearing in 86:3 include Austria, Germany, France, South Africa, Poland, New Zealand, and Canada. The issue should be available in hard copy at your local law library and in electronic form on our website and on WestLaw and LexisNexis by the end of summer. Again, congratulations to all involved!", "\nAnnoucement Archives Select Month March 2019 February 2019 July 2018 June 2018 April 2018 March 2018 February 2018 January 2018 July 2017 June 2017 April 2017 December 2016 July 2016 May 2016 April 2016 September 2015 July 2015 June 2015 May 2015 April 2015 March 2015 January 2015 December 2014 July 2014 June 2014 May 2014 April 2014 February 2014 January 2014 December 2013 November 2013 October 2013 September 2013 August 2013 July 2013 June 2013 May 2013 April 2013 March 2013 August 2012 July 2012 June 2012 April 2012 March 2012 October 2011 August 2011 July 2011 June 2011 March 2011 October 2010 July 2010 June 2010 May 2010 February 2010 January 2010 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009 August 2009 July 2009 June 2009", "\nAnnouncement Tags\nAlumni Back Issues congratulations Contact Information Corrections Elections Email Event Executive Board gradeon Introduction Issues law review Live Symposia New Issue new member new members News Resources Social Media Staff Writing Student Writing summer Summer Candidacy summer program Symposium Table of Contents Vol. 88 Vol. 88:3 Vol. 89 Vol. 89.2 Vol. 89:1 Vol. 89:2 write-on\nAdmin. Info\nWant to receive email updates about the Law Review's recent posts?", "\nEnter your email address to subscribe receive updates when the Law Review posts new content to the website.\n\u00a9 2019 Chicago-Kent Law Review"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "studentorgs.kentlaw.iit.edu", "date_download": "2019-03-19T10:59:49Z", "digest": "sha1:J53D5AFUE5I5JL5NUK25OULO2FSGPBF2", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 3290, 3290.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 3290, 3690.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 3290, 21.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 3290, 43.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 3290, 0.95]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 3290, 305.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 3290, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 3290, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 3290, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 3290, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 3290, 0.23701299]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 3290, null]], 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46,832,152 | http://scr2019.caltech.edu/ |
Sponsorship & Booths
Southern California Robotics Symposium
Caltech, April 27, 2019
Registration and paper submission is now open! | ["", "\nThe Southern California Robotics Symposium (SCR) is a one-day technical symposium that aims to bring together roboticists from around Southern California. With a high density of academic institutions, research centers, and industry players, SCR is expected to have a large audience with broad expertise and interests. It will also be a showcase for established and up-and-coming robot companies as well as a recruitment opportunity for local companies and startups.", "\nAfter hosting SCR 2017 and SCR 2016, we hope to continue the success of this annual conference. The symposium will once again feature an amazing line-up of speakers from academia and industry, robotics demos, and industry booths. In addition, feature poster/demo sessions will foster discussion on recent developments in robotics.\nRegister for the symposium!\nThe speaker list for 2019 is still being finalized.\nAaron D. Ames\nProfessor, Caltech\nAnimashree Anandkumar\nThomas Bewley\nProfessor, UCSD\nJorge Cort\u00e9s", "\nEmel Demircan\nAssistant Professor, CSULB\nMorteza Gharib\nSatyandra K. Gupta\nProfessor, USC\nElliot Hawkes\nAssistant Professor, UCSB\nAndreas Kolling\nPrincipal Robotics Scientist, iRobot\nMichael Lohnert\nInvesting Director, Boeing HorizonX Ventures\nAaron Parness\nGroup Supervisor, JPL\nBenjamin T Pipenberg\nStefan Scherer\nCTO, Embodied\nRyan Sinnet\nCTO/Co-Founder, Miso Robotics\nSolmaz S. Kia\nAssistant Professor, UC Irvine\nVandi Verma\nThe schedule for 2019 is still being finalized.\nCheck-in and Breakfast", "\nFirst Session of Talks\nSecond Session of Talks\nSpotlight Talks\nThird Session of Talks\nReception, Exhibitions and Live Demos\nIf you want to present your research at SCR 2019 you need to submit a two-page extended abstract. We will select a limited number of contributions to be presented in the poster session and as short spotlight talks.\nPaper length: max 2 pages including references\nWe recommend the IEEE conference template\nSubmission deadline: March 23, 2019", "\nAuthors of accepted contributions will have the option to have them published online with a DOI\nWe gladly accept submissions of work that has already been accepted to other conferences such as ICRA, IROS, and ACC\nExhibition Booths and Sponsorship\nWe would like to invite your company or university to be part of the Booth Exhibition which will take place in front of Ramo Auditorium and support SCR2019.\nMore details at: Call for Sponsorship and Booths\nRegister your booth\nRamo Auditorium", "\n1200 East California Boulevard\nThe symposium will be held in the Ramo Auditorium at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, CA.\nDirections to Caltech.\nFor any questions about the symposium or sponsorship opportunities, please contact [email protected].\nSoon-Jo Chung\nVincenzo Capuano\nPostdoc, Caltech\nPetter Nilsson\nRobotics Research Technologist, JPL\nSorina Lupu\nResearch Engineer, Caltech\nRenaud Detry\nResearch Scientist, JPL\nAdrian Stoica\nSenior Research Scientist, JPL\nJoel Burdick", "\nPaolo Pirjanian\nFounder, Embodied\nSCR 2019 is made possible by these organizations and companies.\nThe Metropolitan LA joined Chapter for SMC and RAS\nAaron D. Ames Professor, Caltech", "\nBio: \ufeff\ufeffAaron D. Ames is the Bren Professor of Mechanical and Civil Engineering and Control and Dynamical Systems at the California Institute of Technology. Prior to joining Caltech, he was an Associate Professor in Mechanical Engineering and Electrical & Computer Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Dr. Ames received a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering and a B.A. in Mathematics from the University of St. Thomas in 2001, and he received a M.A. in Mathematics and a Ph.D", "\nin Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences from UC Berkeley in 2006. He served as a Postdoctoral Scholar in Control and Dynamical Systems at Caltech from 2006 to 2008, and began is faculty career at Texas A&M University in 2008. At UC Berkeley, he was the recipient of the 2005 Leon O. Chua Award for achievement in nonlinear science and the 2006 Bernard Friedman Memorial Prize in Applied Mathematics. Dr. Ames received the NSF CAREER award in 2010, and is the recipient of the 2015 Donald P", "\nEckman Award recognizing an outstanding young engineer in the field of automatic control. His research interests span the areas of robotics, nonlinear control and hybrid systems, with a special focus on applications to bipedal robotic walking\u2014both formally and through experimental validation. His lab designs, builds and tests novel bipedal robots, humanoids and prostheses with the goal of achieving human-like bipedal robotic locomotion and translating these capabilities to robotic assistive devices.", "\nAnimashree Anandkumar Professor, Caltech\nThomas Bewley Professor, UCSD\nJorge Cort\u00e9s Professor, UCSD\nResource-Aware Coordination Algorithms of Multi-Agent Systems", "\nAbstract: The inherently tight coupling between physical processes (e.g., sampling, actuation, motion) and cyber processes (e.g., communication, computation, storage) in current networked cyber-physical systems points to the need for the efficient use of the available resources. This talk discusses the framework of opportunistic state-triggered control as a paradigm for the synthesis of resource-aware coordination algorithms", "\nThe overall idea is to abandon periodic sampling/control implementations in exchange for deliberate, aperiodic executions while still guaranteeing a desired quality of service, leading to more efficient and autonomous systems in the face of uncertainty and evolving task specifications. We illustrate this thinking in robotic deployment problems and human-robot collaboration for multiobjective optimization.", "\nBio: Jorge Cortes is a Professor with the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the University of California, San Diego. He received the Licenciatura degree in mathematics from the Universidad de Zaragoza, Spain, in 1997, and the Ph.D. degree in engineering mathematics from the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain, in 2001. He held postdoctoral positions at the University of Twente, The Netherlands, and at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA", "\nHe was an Assistant Professor with the Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics at the University of California, Santa Cruz from 2004 to 2007. He is the author of \u201cGeometric, Control and Numerical Aspects of Nonholonomic Systems\u201d (New York: Springer-Verlag, 2002) and co-author of \u201cDistributed Control of Robotic Networks\u201d (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009)", "\nHe received a NSF CAREER award in 2006 and was the recipient of the 2006 Spanish Society of Applied Mathematics Young Researcher Prize. He has co-authored papers that have won the 2008 IEEE Control Systems Outstanding Paper Award, the 2009 SIAM Review SIGEST selection from the SIAM Journal on Control and Optimization, and the 2012 O. Hugo Schuck Best Paper Award in the Theory category", "\nHe is an IEEE Fellow and, at the IEEE Control Systems Society, he has been a Distinguished Lecturer (2010-2014), and is currently its Director of Operations and an elected member (2018-2020) of its Board of Governors. His current research interests include distributed control and optimization, network neuroscience, reasoning and decision making under uncertainty, resource-aware control, and multi-agent coordination in robotic, power, and transportation networks.", "\nBio: Dr. Emel Demircan joined the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at California State University, Long Beach as an Assistant Professor in Fall 2015. Dr. Demircan obtained her Ph.D in Mechanical Engineering from Stanford University in 2012. She was a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford from 2012 to 2014 and a visiting assistant professor at University of Tokyo from 2014 to 2015", "\nShe is also a part-time scientist at Lucile Salter Packard Children\u2019s Hospital Gait Analysis Lab at Stanford University. Dr. Demircan\u2019s research focuses on the application of dynamics and control theory for the simulation and analysis of biomechanical and robotic systems", "\nHer research interests include experimental and computational approaches for the study of human movement, rehabilitation robotics, sports biomechanics, human motion synthesis, natural motion generation in humanoid robotics and human motor control. In 2014, Dr", "\nDemircan established an IEEE RAS Technical Committee on \u201cHuman Movement Understanding.\u201d She is actively collaborating with clinical, athletic and industrial partners and is involved in professional and outreach activities within the IEEE Robotics Society (RAS).", "\nMorteza Gharib Professor, Caltech\nBio: Professor Gharib\u2019s research interests cover a range of topics in conventional fluid dynamics and aeronautics. These include vortex dynamics, active and passive flow control, nano/micro fluid dynamics, bio-inspired wind and hydro energy harvesting, as well as advanced flow imaging diagnostics.", "\nIn addition, Professor Gharib is heavily involved in the bio-mechanics and medical engineering fields. His research activities in these fields can be categorized into two main areas: the fluid dynamics of physiological machines (such as the human circulatory system and aquatic breathing/ propulsion), and the development of medical devices (such as heart valves, cardiovascular health monitoring devices, and drug delivery systems).\nSatyandra K. Gupta Professor, USC", "\nRealizing Smart Robotic Assistants through Advances in Artificial Intelligence -->", "\nAbstract: In most traditional applications of industrial robots, humans program robots to carry out tasks and robots simply repeat the predefined motions. It takes a considerable amount of human effort to program a robot to perform a new task. Robots cannot automatically adapt their actions in response to changes in the task or ensure safe operations in the presence of uncertainties in the workspace. These challenges drastically limit the number and types of applications where robots can be employed", "\nMany emerging robotics applications require the use of multiple collaborating robots to operate under human supervision. To be useful in such applications, robots will need to act as smart assistants by (1) programming themselves, (2) efficiently learning from the observed performance, (3) safely operating in the presence of uncertainty, (4) appropriately calling for help during the execution of challenging tasks, and (5) effectively communicating with humans", "\nThis presentation will provide an overview of the advances in artificial intelligence that are being used to enable robots to automatically make decisions to meet aforementioned requirements. First, we will present an approach for automatically generating near-optimal trajectories in real-time to enable robots to program themselves from task descriptions", "\nSecond, we will describe self-directed learning methods to equip robots with the ability to learn from observing the performance of previously-executed tasks and adapting their plans. Third, we will describe methods for robots to operate safely in the presence of uncertainty by generating contingency-aware plans. Fourth, we will discuss computational methods for endowing robots with introspective capabilities so that they can seek help from humans on challenging tasks", "\nFinally, we will present augmented reality-based interfaces for enabling robots to elicit human guidance during the decision making process. The use of a team of smart robotic assistants can significantly improve human productivity and eliminate the need for human involvement in tasks that pose risks to human safety. Assembly, composite layup, finishing, and material handling tasks will be used as illustrative examples to show how smart robotic assistants can be used in manufacturing applications.", "\nBio: Dr. Satyandra K. Gupta is Smith International Professor in the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering in Viterbi School of Engineering at the University of Southern California (USC) and the founding Director of USC\u2019s Center for Advanced Manufacturing. He served as a program director for the National Robotics Initiative at the National Science Foundation from September 2012 to September 2014. Dr", "\nGupta\u2019s interests are in the area of physics-aware decision making to facilitate and advance the state of automation. He has published more than three hundred fifty technical articles. He is a fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) and editor of the ASME Journal of Computing and Information Science in Engineering. Dr. Gupta has received numerous honors and awards for his contributions to the scientific community", "\nRepresentative examples include: the Young Investigator Award from the Office of Naval Research in 2000, Robert W", "\nGalvin Outstanding Young Manufacturing Engineer Award from the Society of Manufacturing Engineers in 2001, CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation in 2001, Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers (PECASE) in 2001, Invention of the Year Award at the University of Maryland in 2007, Kos Ishii-Toshiba Award from ASME Design for Manufacturing and the Life Cycle Committee in 2011, Excellence in Research Award from ASME Computers and Information in Engineering Division in 2013, and Distinguished Alumnus Award from Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee in 2014", "\nHe has also received ten best paper awards at international conferences.", "\nElliot Hawkes Assistant Professor, UCSB\nAdding Soft to Robotics: From gecko-inspired wall-climbing to vine-inspired navigation", "\nAbstract: Natural systems, such as climbing geckos and wandering vines, are incredibly robust, adaptable, and capable of handling uncertainty in their environments. These traits are unfortunately not currently true about engineered robotic systems. I will discuss efforts to learn from nature by incorporating compliance, or softness, into robots to create new functionality", "\nI will show results from work, including gecko-inspired adhesives that allow a human to climb a glass wall and vine-inspired robots that \u201cgrow\u201d through challenging environments, such as a forest of nails or, potentially, the tortuous pathways inside the human body.", "\nAndreas Kolling Principal Robotics Scientist, iRobot\nMichael Lohnert Investing Director, Boeing HorizonX Ventures\nAaron Parness Group Supervisor, JPL\nClimbing Robots for Extreme Environments\nBenjamin T Pipenberg AeroVironment\nDesign and development of the Mars Helicopter Rotor System and Airframe", "\nAbstract: The Mars Helicopter is a small-scale rotorcraft technology demonstrator baselined to fly with the Mars 2020 mission. Through five short autonomous flights above the Martian surface, the vehicle will demonstrate the basic functionality required for future aerial planetary exploration missions. The flight vehicle has a mass of 1.8 kg, stands 0.5 m tall, and has a coaxial, counter-rotating rotor system with a diameter of 1.21 m", "\nPower is provided by an on-board Lithium Ion battery which is recharged daily by a solar panel mounted above the rotors. Flight control and navigation software is hosted by multiple on-board computers which make use of optical and inertial sensors as well as a laser rangefinder. In this talk the presenter will describe the design and development of the primary vehicle structure, rotor system and control mechanisms, propulsion motors, and landing gear.", "\nStefan Scherer CTO, Embodied\nLearning Representations of Human Behavior", "\nAbstract: Advances in computational behavior analyses and machine learning provide an opportunity to profoundly impact a wide range of professions that heavily rely on the interpretation of human behavior (e.g., customer profiling, targeted advertising, interpersonal skill training, and mental health screening)", "\nFor example, automatic algorithms to detect impairments in social-emotional functioning from individuals\u2019 behavior have the potential to increase the objectivity, accessibility, and efficiency of mental health care. In other words, automatic techniques can provide professionals with a different set of eyes and ears that produce quantified and objective assessments where otherwise only subjective information would be available.", "\nWithin this presentation I discuss how we can automatically learn meaningful and discriminatory representations of human behavior while leveraging both (1) explicit descriptors of human behavior motivated by top-down knowledge about human nature as well as (2) advanced machine learning techniques that derive representations automatically and directly from the data; combining the best of both worlds (1) better interpretability of human behavior and (2) exceptional performance in tasks with large quantities of data.", "\nRyan Sinnet CTO/Co-Founder, Miso Robotics\nSolmaz S. Kia Assistant Professor, UC Irvine\nUWB-based decentralized cooperative localization for Infrastructure-free localization in GPS-denied Environments", "\nAbstract: Cooperative localization is a technique that uses inter-agent relative measurements to improve the localization accuracy of a group of communicating mobile agents. This technique has a promising prospect in fully or partially GPS-denied environments where other techniques such as SLAM cannot be used due to poor access to external landmarks and features", "\nThis talk discusses the challenges in design of decentralized cooperative localization algorithms and presents solutions for an UWB-based cooperative localization for a group of agents in harsh environments. The results contribute to the development of a rapidly deployable infrastructure-free localization system to track firefighters in harsh indoor\u202fenvironments.", "\nBio: Bio- Solmaz S. Kia is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, Irvine (UCI). She has a joint appointment with the Computer Science Department of UCI. She obtained her Ph.D. degree in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering from UCI, in 2009, and her M.Sc. and B.Sc. in Aerospace Engineering from the Sharif University of Technology, Iran, in 2004 and 2001, respectively", "\nShe was a senior research engineer at SySense Inc., El Segundo, CA from Jun. 2009-Sep. 2010. She held postdoctoral positions in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at the UC San Diego and UCI. She was the recipient of UC President\u2019s Postdoctoral Fellowship from 2012-2014. She is also a recipient of 2017 NSF CAREER award. Dr. Kia\u2019s main research interests, in a broad sense, include nonlinear control theory, distributed optimization/coordination/estimation, and probabilistic robotics.", "\nVandi Verma Group Supervisor, JPL\nAutonomous Target Selection and Observation for Curiosity and Mars 2020 rovers", "\nAbstract: This talk will discuss the current operational capability and ongoing development of autonomous targeting for Mars rovers. AEGIS (Autonomous Exploration for Gathering Increased Science) is being used onboard NASA\u2019s Curiosity Mars rover to autonomously select scientifically interesting targets and acquire geochemical spectra using the ChemCam instrument. Ongoing work will enable autonomous terrain modeling and robotic arm positioning on selected targets for the Mars 2020 rover.", "\nBio: Vandi Verma joined the Mobility and Robotics Systems Section at JPL in 2007. She is interested in Robotic software that enables autonomy and commanding under uncertainty for co-ordinated manipulation, mobility, sampling, and science. She is working on the design and development of Mars 2020 rover Sample Caching System algorithms and flight software, and flight software simulation for rover operations", "\nSince 2008 she has been driving Mars rovers (MER, MSL) and operating the robotic arm and sampling system. She has worked on numerous research robotics projects and has deployed robots in the Arctic, Antarctic and Atacama."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "scr2019.caltech.edu", "date_download": "2019-03-19T09:53:50Z", "digest": "sha1:LCXL7XTHCQMKKNM7E3B2CFWEHYPPU6UX", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 19924, 19924.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 19924, 20702.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 19924, 113.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 19924, 182.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 19924, 0.91]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 19924, 247.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 19924, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 19924, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 19924, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 19924, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 19924, 0.2935381]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 19924, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 19924, 0.02402221]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 19924, 0.0862506]], 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46,832,159 | https://csc.asu.edu/2015/07/10/jabhat-al-nusra-rebukes-islamic-state-for-killing-alan-henning/ |
Jabhat al-Nusra rebukes Islamic State for killing Alan Henning
by Charles Cameron | Jul 10, 2015 | Monitor |
[ by Charles Cameron — I hav to say, the senseless death of Alan Henning makes me very sad ]
In the first issue of its magazine, al-Risalah, Jabha | ["t al-Nusra attacks al-Baghdadi\u2019s supposed caliphate.\nThe item that caught my eye, though, was a section in the article Khilafa One Year On titled The Murder of Alan Henning. We read:", "\nNext, we have the murder of Alan Henning, a forty-seven year old British humanitarian aid worker in Syria, who was abducted by the \u2018Islamic State\u2019 and beheaded on camera. Although he was a disbeliever, we mention his case here because he was under the protection of the Muslims. Abu Salaam al-Britani, an aid worker who worked alongside Henning, pleaded to Baghdadi to have him released:", "\n\u201cI appeal and request in general to all of the members of ad-Dawlah al-Islamiyyah and specifically to Shaykh Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and Abu \u2018Ali al-Anbari to release Alan Henning as he had been given an Amana (security) from two sets of believing parties. Henceforth in the light of the Shari\u2019ah he is considered a Mu\u2019ahid and it is impermissible to harm him\u2026\u201d", "\nA footnote at this point leads us to Al-Britani\u2019s A personal account of Alan Henning and the covenant of security (Amana) afforded to him by Muslims, in which we read the full version of al-Britani\u2019s appeal. Following a detailed account of this \u201cwonderful man called Alan Henning\u201d, he writes:\nFrom your brother in Islam Abu Salaam al-Britani,", "\nI appeal and request in general to all of the members of ad-Dawlah l-Islamiyyah and specifically to Shaykh Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and Abu \u2018Ali al-Anbari to release Alan Henning as he had been given an Amana (security) from two sets of believing parties henceforth in the light of the Shari\u2019ah he is considered a Mu\u2019ahid and it is impermissible to harm him.", "\nThe first Amana was given by me and the rest of the brothers travelling in the aid convoy. We reassured and informed Alan he will be safe and not harmed as he is with a group of Muslims who are going deliver aid to the people of Syria.\nThe second Amana was given by indigenous people of ad-Dana they had sent several men to escort us once we entered Syria through the Bab al-Hawa border crossing. They assured us all we will be under their protection and escorted us to the town of ad-Dana.", "\nI ask you by Allah to honour these covenants as our Lord said in the Qur\u2019an\n\u201cO you who believe, honour your covenant (\u2018uqud)\u201d\n[Surat Al-M?\u2019idah, Ayah 1]\nThe Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) also said:\n\u201cIf anyone kills a \u2018Mu\u2019ahid\u2019 \u2018i.e. a person guaranteed protection\u2019 without a just cause, Allah will prevent him from even smelling the fragrance of Paradise\u201d.\n[Sahih Sunan an-Nasai No .4422].", "\n\u201cOn the Day of Judgment, I will be protesting against anyone who oppresses a \u2018mu\u2019ahid\u2019 \u2018i.e. a person guaranteed protection\u2019, belittles him, charges him to do things beyond his ability, or extorts anything from him.\n[Sahih Sunan Abi Dawud, No. 2626]\nAny Muslims is entitled to give protection on their behalf, and that this type of protection can be given to the non-Muslim by any individual from the Muslims whether a male or a female, a nobleman or a poor, a righteous or an evil-doer.", "\nAsh-Shaybani said in as-Siyar, vol.1, pg.175:\n\u201cThe security covenants that a free Muslim man, whether virtuous or immoral, gives are binding to all the other Muslims because of the Hadith, \u201cMuslims are equal in respect of blood. They are like one hand over against all those who are outside the community. The lowest of them is entitled to give protection on their behalf.\u201d The meaning of \u201cprotection\u201d is the security covenant whether it is temporary or permanent.", "\nZaynab, the daughter of the Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him), granted protection to her husband Abu al-\u2018As bin Rabi\u2019ah, and the Prophet (saw) approved of her protection.\nIt was reported that Umm Hani said:", "\n\u201cI granted asylum to two non-Muslim relatives of mine, and then Ali bin Abi Talib (may Allah be pleased with him) came upon them to kill them. So I told him, you are not going to kill them unless you kill me first! Then, I locked my door on them and went to the Messenger of Allah (saw) and told him about what happened.\nHe (saw) said: \u201cAli is not allowed to kill them. We grant asylum and protection to the ones you have granted asylum and protection.\u201d", "\nConsidering the powerful significance of Ali bin Abu Talib \u2014 born in the Kaaba, the son-in-law and cousin of the Prophet, distinguished at the Battle of Badr and subsequent battles, victor in his duel with Amru ibn Abd Wudd, fighter with the sword Zulfiqar of whom it was said, \u201cThere is no brave youth except Ali and there is no sword which renders service except Zulfiqar\u201d, named \u201cLion of God\u201d by the Prophet, fourth of the Rashidun Caliphs and also first Imam of the Shiites \u2014 this last is indeed a powerful citation.", "\nI don\u2019t intend to draw any conclusions here, just to say that this reminds me of OBL\u2019s reproof of Faysal Shahzad in his letter to Atiyya, which I discussed in my post, Key bin Laden para raises translation and other questions."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "csc.asu.edu", "date_download": 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46,832,161 | https://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/retire-the-way-you-want/ |
Retire the way you want
Six secrets to a dream retirement
You know about maxing out your 401(k), but there are other investment moves to make that are at least as important. More
Save money for retirement. That's an order
Behavioral economist Meir Statman | [" once thought friendly persuasion could get people to save for retirement. Now he advocates stronger stuff.\nHealthy living: Key to a happy retirement", "\nPeople with a healthy lifestyle have lower health care costs and spend their retirement savings more slowly.\nHow to manage the second half of your career\nYou can't afford to be complacent in the last years of your career. You have a long retirement to finance.\nBalancing retirement with supporting adult children\nFamily financial obligations can cut into retirement savings. Identify early on what you can pay and save money.\nRebuild your nest egg after a divorce", "\nDivorce or having a spouse die young makes it much harder to save the way you did when you were a married couple.\nDon't let debt kill your retirement\nHigh-cost debt is especially dangerous in retirement. With a lower income you boost the chance of outliving your money.\nHow much will you need for retirement?\nAre you a millionaire in the making?\nAsset allocation: Fix your mix\nCan you retire early?\nQuick Vote\nWhat's the minimum amount you'd need to retire today?\n$500k to $1 million\n$1 million to $2 million", "\nOver $2 million\nFollow Money on Facebook\nKeep up with the latest personal finance news. More", "\nMin $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $50,000 $100,000 $130,000 $150,000 $200,000 $250,000 $300,000 $350,000 $400,000 $450,000 $500,000 $550,000 $600,000 $650,000 $700,000 $750,000 $800,000 $850,000 $900,000 $950,000 $1M $1.1M $1.2M $1.25M $1.4M $1.5M $1.6M $1.7M $1.75M $1.8M $1.9M $2M $2.25M $2.5M $2.75M $3M $3.5M $4M $5M $10M $20M to $10,000 $20,000 $30,000 $50,000 $100,000 $130,000 $150,000 $200,000 $250,000 $300,000 $350,000 $400,000 $450,000 $500,000 $550,000 $600,000 $650,000 $700,000 $750,000 $800,000 $850,000 $900,000 $950,000 $1M $1.1M $1.2M $1.25M $1.4M $1.5M $1.6M $1.7M $1.75M $1.8M $1.9M $2M $2.25M $2.5M $2.75M $3M $3.5M $4M $5M $10M $20M Max", "\nAny type Single-Family Home Condo Townhome Coop Apartment Loft TIC Apt/Condo/Twnhm Mobile/Manufactured Farm/Ranch Lot/Land Multi-Family Home Income/Investment Houseboat Unspecified\nFind a home in:\nNew York | Atlanta | Chicago | Los Angeles\nWashington D.C | Houston | Philadelphia | More options"] | null | {"partition": 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20,028,740 | https://mk.ca/south-africa-loses-kosher-giant/ | South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels Z"TL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021 | ["South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nRABBI DESMOND MAIZELS Z\u201dTL\nArticles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nJan. 21 2021 / 8 Shvat 5781\nOn Erev Shabbos, Parshas VaEira, the world woke up to shocking news, the passing of a huge icon in the world of Kashrus, Rabbi Desmond Maizels, of Capetown, South Africa. Having had the opportunity of working in conjunction with Rabbi Maizels for over 35 years, the shock is still setting in and is deeply felt in so many ways.", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nRabbi Maizels was a one-man show who was relied upon by Kashrus organizations throughout the world. He could be called upon at any time, any place, to serve as a Rabbi, a Mohel, a Shochet, a friend or anything else that was required of him. His warmth and pleasant personality endeared him to every single human being with whom he came into contact. One often hears the expression that certain people only keep Kosher at home", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nRabbi Maizels personified this in a different way, by keeping Kosher in his entirety, Kosher in his heart and Kosher in the way in which he conducted his daily life. He was a walking Kiddush Hashem. The lay workers at facilities bearing his Kosher supervision, respected him immensely and honored his every word.", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nCrossing the entire globe, Rabbi Maizels visited hundreds of facilities on an annual basis, ensuring that their Kashrus level was up to par. He set high standards for Kashrus and if a company was not able to manufacture something to his values, he would not certify them as Kosher.", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nAn example comes to mind, that of Kashering wine companies which is complex. At the very onset, Rabbi Maizels would explain the procedure of Koshering the non-Kosher wine tanks by Milui vErui (filling them to the top with water and emptying them every 24 hours, and repeating three times). Only if the company agreed, would he certify them as Kosher. He explained this procedure using his gentle approach, thus the workers admired and revered him", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nThe thorough way of dealing with all issues at a company was remarkable. He achieved universal acclaim as one of the most reliable people in Kashrus.", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nAnother trait we can learn from Rabbi Maizels, is that he wasn\u2019t there to flaunt his own standards. If another Kashrus organization wanted him to carry out a Chumra on their behalf, he would make every effort to do so by respecting the needs of that organization.", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nEach minute of every hour of his daily life was lived in a Kosher way. He was extremely careful not to spend communal funds when traveling or carrying out any work. He would look for the cheapest flights, cheapest modes of transport and would say, this is \u201choly\u201d money and one must treat it as such. Yashrus in Kashrus, honesty and integrity in Kashrus, was his motto, and he was a living example of this.", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nThe Cape Town community is now bereft of its leader in Kashrus, who knew every file of every company that he dealt with off by heart, including the manufacturing protocols, number of products and whether these were produced for Pesach or all year round.", "South Africa Loses Kosher Giant: Rabbi Desmond Maizels ZTL | Articles of Interest | January 25th, 2021\nThere is much to learn from Rabbi Desmond Maizels, whether by example of his work ethics, his standards of Kashrus, his respect of the kashrus agency in which he served, or through his pleasant manner in which he dealt with people. Rabbi Maizels had a great sense of humor and always made the other person feel good by taking the time to listen to him.\nMay the Mishpacha be comforted amongst those of Zion and Yerushalayim and may they know no further sorrow.\nRabbi Saul Emanuel"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "mk.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-27T06:49:59Z", "digest": "sha1:7DMGB7N6FGQ26CS6IEPGCR7E2IKLMA32", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 3532, 3532.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 3532, 6454.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 3532, 15.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 3532, 114.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 3532, 0.99]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 3532, 331.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 3532, 0.45571429]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 3532, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 3532, 0.02955665]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 3532, 0.0200563]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 3532, 0.01337087]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 3532, 0.00857143]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 3532, 0.12142857]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 3532, 0.50406504]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 3532, 4.62113821]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 3532, 5.17611741]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 3532, 615.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 69, 0.0], [69, 97, 0.0], [97, 425, 1.0], [425, 1165, 1.0], [1165, 1447, 1.0], [1447, 2045, 1.0], [2045, 2309, 1.0], [2309, 2715, 1.0], [2715, 2969, 1.0], [2969, 3322, 1.0], [3322, 3429, 1.0], [3429, 3448, 0.0], [3448, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 69, 0.0], [69, 97, 0.0], [97, 425, 0.0], [425, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1447, 0.0], [1447, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2715, 0.0], [2715, 2969, 0.0], [2969, 3322, 0.0], [3322, 3429, 0.0], [3429, 3448, 0.0], [3448, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 27, 4.0], [27, 69, 6.0], [69, 97, 6.0], [97, 425, 59.0], [425, 1165, 129.0], [1165, 1447, 49.0], [1447, 2045, 101.0], [2045, 2309, 47.0], [2309, 2715, 75.0], [2715, 2969, 44.0], [2969, 3322, 65.0], [3322, 3429, 18.0], [3429, 3448, 3.0], [3448, 3504, 6.0], [3504, 3532, 3.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 69, 0.15789474], [69, 97, 0.45833333], [97, 425, 0.00628931], [425, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1447, 0.0], [1447, 2045, 0.00343053], [2045, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2715, 0.0], [2715, 2969, 0.0], [2969, 3322, 0.0], [3322, 3429, 0.0], [3429, 3448, 0.0], [3448, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 27, 0.0], [27, 69, 0.0], [69, 97, 0.0], [97, 425, 0.0], [425, 1165, 0.0], [1165, 1447, 0.0], [1447, 2045, 0.0], [2045, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2715, 0.0], [2715, 2969, 0.0], [2969, 3322, 0.0], [3322, 3429, 0.0], [3429, 3448, 0.0], [3448, 3504, 0.0], [3504, 3532, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 27, 0.81481481], [27, 69, 0.07142857], [69, 97, 0.07142857], [97, 425, 0.04878049], [425, 1165, 0.02702703], [1165, 1447, 0.0248227], [1447, 2045, 0.02508361], [2045, 2309, 0.02272727], [2309, 2715, 0.01724138], [2715, 2969, 0.01968504], [2969, 3322, 0.01983003], [3322, 3429, 0.03738318], [3429, 3448, 0.15789474], [3448, 3504, 0.10714286], [3504, 3532, 0.17857143]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 3532, 0.87405562]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 3532, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 3532, 0.62317258]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 3532, 103.17674873]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 3532, 87.37020221]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 3532, 48.45599374]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 3532, 29.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,167 | https://www.pcs.nsw.edu.au/middle-school-student-wellbeing/middle-school-awards |
We have an awards system at PCS built on the foundations of acknowledging and rejoicing in the growth of the whole child. Awards may be given across any category and are cumulative over the student's years at school.
The main categories are:
Personal Lear | ["ning - such as an improved mark, a high quality assignment\nChristian Character - such as being kind to others, displaying patience\nService - such as involvement in various school or community activities.\nPRESENTATION DAY - AWARD CRITERIA", "\nDux Award \u2013 Year 7 and Year 8\nThese are awarded to the students with the highest total of points based on: three points for a first place, two points for a second and one point for a third place in the core academic courses.\nThese Awards are determined by calculating the overall assessment mark for a subject for the year. Each subject is then weighted, determined by the amount of time spent studying this area. These weighted marks are used to provide a score.\nExcellence in a Subject", "\nThis is awarded to the student who gained first place in that subject based on assessment over the year.\nAcademic Improvement\nThis is awarded to students whose mark has improved twenty per cent or more from the Half Yearly to Yearly Exams, per subject.\nStuart Ayres All Rounder Award\nThis is awarded to a Year 8 student in recognition of their consistent effort and achievement across multiple areas such as: academic, arts, social and sporting activities.\nThe Bob Barton Community Service Award", "\nThis award seeks to recognise and reward someone who has displayed an unselfish attitude to serving others \u2013 someone who has gone out of their way for the good of those around them.\nLindsay Award\nThis is awarded to a student who has shown a determination to succeed.\nPersonal Learning Award\nAn award given to a student who has shown High Academic Achievement across all subjects.\nChristian Character Award", "\nAn award given to a student who has consistently displayed Christian Character throughout the school community.\nAn award given to a student actively involved in service to the school, peers and community.\nPastor\u2019s Award\nA student who demonstrates both Christian character and a lifestyle which honours God.\nExcellence in Personal Presentation Award\nIn recognition of a student who has consistently worn the school uniform correctly and neatly.\nOutstanding Contribution to School Event Technology Award", "\nThis is awarded to a member of the School Technology Team who shows hard work and dedication to the school by providing assistance to staff and students; and, making sure technology for school events runs smoothly.\niCentre Award\nThis is awarded to a student who has effectively and appropriately utilised the iCentre.\nTony Cox Service to Missions Award", "\nThis is awarded to a young person who shows us what it means to \u2018go beyond\u2019. This person uses their skills in leadership and initiative to represent Christ and our School, and to help others.\nBest and Fairest (Sportsmanship) Award", "\nThis award is presented to a male and female student who have displayed strong Christian character and sportsmanship on and off the sporting arena all year. Whilst these students were amongst the best players in the sport teams they were involved in, they always displayed humility and always put the team first.\nSportsperson of the Year Award\nThis is awarded to the male and female student who excelled within the sporting arena and often over a range of disciplines, representing the School at various levels."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.pcs.nsw.edu.au", "date_download": "2019-03-19T10:46:58Z", "digest": "sha1:7CTWNOOK4A3RHFC72YJJCEHZO6Q7OQXG", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 3480, 3480.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 3480, 8581.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 3480, 38.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 3480, 302.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 3480, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 3480, 315.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 3480, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 3480, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 3480, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 3480, 0.0]], 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9,217,306 | http://www.valleycollege.edu/about-sbvc/history/History-1939-1958 | 1942-1958 — San Bernardino Valley College | ["1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nOffice of the PresidentMission & ValuesHistorySuccess StoriesNewsOfficesFacilitiesMaps, Directions & Parking Campus Safety & SecuritySBVC FoundationCampus CommitteesAdmissions & RecordsFinancial AidScholarshipsClass ScheduleAcademic CalendarCollege CatalogDegrees & CertificatesCareer & Technical TrainingTransfer Preparation & General EducationOnline ClassesEvening & Weekend ClassesSpecialized ProgramsBig Bear Mountain CenterDivisional OfficesBrowse All Online ClassesSucceeding in Online ClassesComputer Requirements & SupportOnline Courses Access (UAP)Handbook for Online StudentsInternational Students and Online ClassesBlackboard Access & InformationAre Online Classes For Me?Online ResourcesLearn to Learn OnlineFaculty Resources: Comprehensive Quality Control ProcessOnline Program CommitteeOut-of-State Online StudentsOffice of the Vice President of Student ServicesCounselingStudent LifeLibraryTutoring & Academic SupportTransfer and Career ServicesSpecialized Counseling ServicesFood ServicesPolicies &", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nStudentsOffice of the Vice President of Student ServicesCounselingStudent LifeLibraryTutoring & Academic SupportTransfer and Career ServicesSpecialized Counseling ServicesFood ServicesPolicies & Procedures", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nThe fall of France in 1940 and the passage and implementation of the Selective Service Act had a sobering effect on the campus. After the country's entry into the war, the number of male students on the campus decreased drastically. Total daytime enrollment dropped to less than 200 during the 1943-1944 year, with the vast majority of that number being women. In the spring of 1943, the contracts of seven instructors were terminated, and the following year four more were released", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nMany of the male faculty went off to war. Eleven instructors were granted leave to enter military service, and two others were given leave to take war-related civilian jobs. The war effected the college in other direct ways, in both curriculum and campus activities. The vocational building, completed in the fall of 1941, was used to house a number of \"Off Reservation Training\" (ORT) courses. Courses in the repair of radio equipment and battery maintenance were also offered", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nDuring the first months of the war, rigid security regulations were imposed on those assigned in the ORT program. A stockade-like fence was constructed around the shop building, with armed sentries on guard. One of the more interesting assignments undertaken by the college during the war years were the teaching of English to Italian war prisons at Camp Ono, north of San Bernardino. The war also made itself felt in the regular academic courses", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nClasses were scheduled so that students could more easily graduate in a year and a half, including summer sessions, rather than in the normal two-year period. The nursing program increased its tempo to provide training of the Nurses' Cadet Corps in a 30-month period. Pre-induction courses in mathematics, physics, meteorology and astronomy were offered. The war affected campus life in many other ways. Students promoted the sale of war stamps and bond drives", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nReceptacles were placed on the campus to deposit articles of clothing for the Red Cross and other war relief agencies, and to college scrap metal. A Red Cross workshop was set up in Science Building to teach students to fold bandages during their free periods. Knitting lessons were given for those who wanted to make apparel for those in the service. In the last months of the war, after the defeat of Germany, the tempo subsided", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nThe first veterans were back on the campus as early as the fall of 1944, when a Veterans' Club was organized. By the fall of 1945, the faculty men who had been on military leave began to return, and veterans enrolled in the campus in ever-increasing numbers. A big expansion in enrollment came a year later, in 1946, with the addition of many new faculty members and a rapidly growing student body. The Lounsbury Presidency: 1942-1958", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nDr. Ricciardi resigned in March 1942 to accept a similar position at Sacramento Junior College. Dr. John B. Lounsbury, President of Long Beach City College, was appointed as Valley College's fourth president. The first four Lounsbury years were those in which war considerations were paramount. But beginning in 1946 and lasting for the remainder of his tenure, Valley College experienced a period of continuing growth and intense activity", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nTo accommodate the student population, it was necessary to schedule many classes in the late afternoon hours. War surplus buildings were also brought to the campus to provide additional offices, classrooms and space for student services. These buildings were located in the Quad to the east of the Administration Building, and some of them remained in use for many years", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nA bond was passed in April 1946 to provide for the construction of an engineering building, a student center and a fine arts building, a new science building, a business education building, and an addition to the library. Top priority was given to the construction of a large technical-engineering, home economics and music building", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nThe contract was awarded in February 1949 and, except for the radio broadcasting area, the building (now North Hall) was ready for occupancy at the beginning of the fall 1950 semester. Construction of the Student Life Building did not begin until April 1954. The half-million dollar structure was completed about a year later. The old wooden Social Hall was then remodeled and moved to serve as an auxiliary gymnasium for the use of women students. In 1947, a clock was added to the Auditorium tower", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nIt was a gift from John F. Vondey of Vondey Jewelers in San Bernardino. In 1954, a carillon unit of Westminster chimes was presented by the Associated Student Body as a memorial to the more than one hundred Valley College students who lost their lives in World War II and the Korean conflict. Residential property to the north, south and east of the campus was purchased to convert into parking. Construction of a Chemistry Building began in late 1957", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nIncreased enrollment and a change in age and interest of the post-war students was reflected in changes in the curriculum. A larger percentage of students were interested in achieving immediate occupational goals, so additional courses in the business and technical fields were offered. An application to the Federal Communication Commission was made for a license to operate an FM station was made in early 1954, and when approved, station KVCR-FM came into being", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nThe political climate of the Cold War years was reflected in the activities of the college. All employees were required to take a loyalty oath, and applicants for teaching positions were questioned about their political beliefs. Trustees' relationships with the administration and the faculty were quite personal, with most teaching applicants meeting with one or more Board members before employment", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nDepending upon their training, interest or experience, each Board member assumed responsibility for a specific area: budget and finance, buildings, grounds, insurance or personnel. Citizen attendance at Board meetings was unusual, and most meetings were held in the Presidents office. The campus was the center of social life for many students. Dances were held throughout the year, with big-name bands sometimes furnishing the music. Athletic events were well attended", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nBeginning in 1950, \"College Nights,\" free to all ASB cardholders, were regularly scheduled. These events featured a full-length movie, followed by a dance, and ending at midnight with the closing of the student \"Snack Shack.\" A number of entertainers and political figures made campus appearances. A Bob Hope show, with Dorothy Lamour, Jerry Colonna, and Desi Arnaz and his orchestra, was broadcast from the Auditorium state in the spring of 1947", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nEdgar Bergen, with Charlie McCarthy, and Dinah Shore followed a year later. Senatorial candidates Richard Nixon and Helen Gahagan Douglas both appeared on campus during their 1950 election campaign, and Estes Kefauver stopped by to speak in 1955. Enthusiasm and support for the college athletic programs reached their zenith during the Lounsbury years. This was especially true during the football season, when all student activities seemed to focus on the weekend game", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nThe annual homecoming was a major event, with a bonfire rally, an alumni tea, a downtown parade, the selection of a homecoming queen and her court, a coronation ball, and the football game. Two valuable unusual collections were given to the college during the Lounsbury years", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nIn 1949, the Southwest Museum donated a collection of lantern slides of the southwest collected by George Wharton James, an early traveler and a friend and companion of such men as John Muir, Joseph LeConte, and Major John Wesley Powell. The collection remains in the custody of the Geology Department. In 1954, Wilson C. Hanna's collection of bird eggs was donated to the college, along with a contribution of $25,000 from the California Portand Cement Company for the construction of special display cases", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nThis collection was eventually transferred to the San Bernardino County Museum. President Lounsbury's last two years gave an indication of the changes that were in store for future administrations. A dispute over control over the \"Fountain Room\" was eventually resolved by the appointment of a committee that recommended minor changes that permitted a feeling of greater student involvement", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nA public dispute occurred during 1956-1957, when it was revealed that an engineering instructor from Turkey did not have the background to be credentialed. In March of 1958, Dr. Lounsbury indicated his intention to retire at the end of the academic year. During his sixteen years as president, the student body had grown from one of less than 200 to one of nearly 2,000 day and 4,500 evening students. Two major buildings had been added to the campus and a new construction program was underway. Next Page", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\n1926-19421942-19581958-19671967-199985th Anniversary Video\nGoogle Map\u2122\n701 South Mount Vernon Ave.\nA college of the San Bernardino Community College District\nCopyright \u00a9 2015 San Bernardino Valley College.\nAccreditation | Tech\nSupport | Accessibility | Annual Security Report | Donate to SBVC | Contact", "1942-1958 \u2014 San Bernardino Valley College\nConnect to SBVC San Bernardino Community College District does not discriminate on the basis of age, color, creed, religion,disability, marital status, veteran status, national origin, race, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression.\nComplaint Procedure"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.valleycollege.edu", "date_download": "2015-05-22T11:31:11Z", "digest": "sha1:W7GOTIJYOQLNWYLMNZHMO2IS4VBFYEZG", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 10528, 10528.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 10528, 10779.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 10528, 15.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 10528, 31.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 10528, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 10528, 226.5]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 10528, 2.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 10528, 0.3457052]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 10528, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 10528, 0.00855096]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 10528, 0.01213312]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 10528, 0.00415993]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 10528, 0.00300439]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 10528, 0.01431601]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 10528, 0.15853659]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 10528, 0.45227698]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 10528, 5.39862757]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 10528, 5.67577696]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 10528, 1603.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 1063, 0.0], [1063, 1103, 0.0], [1103, 1169, 0.0], [1169, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 9952, 0.0], [9952, 10011, 0.0], [10011, 10023, 0.0], [10023, 10051, 1.0], [10051, 10110, 0.0], [10110, 10158, 1.0], [10158, 10179, 0.0], [10179, 10255, 0.0], [10255, 10509, 1.0], [10509, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 1063, 0.0], [1063, 1103, 0.0], [1103, 1169, 0.0], [1169, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 9952, 0.0], [9952, 10011, 0.0], [10011, 10023, 0.0], [10023, 10051, 0.0], [10051, 10110, 0.0], [10110, 10158, 0.0], [10158, 10179, 0.0], [10179, 10255, 0.0], [10255, 10509, 0.0], [10509, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 37, 7.0], [37, 1063, 86.0], [1063, 1103, 5.0], [1103, 1169, 9.0], [1169, 3909, 458.0], [3909, 9952, 965.0], [9952, 10011, 3.0], [10011, 10023, 2.0], [10023, 10051, 5.0], [10051, 10110, 9.0], [10110, 10158, 7.0], [10158, 10179, 2.0], [10179, 10255, 9.0], [10255, 10509, 34.0], [10509, 10528, 2.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 1063, 0.0], [1063, 1103, 0.25], [1103, 1169, 0.25806452], [1169, 3909, 0.01682243], [3909, 9952, 0.01557474], [9952, 10011, 0.62962963], [10011, 10023, 0.0], [10023, 10051, 0.11538462], [10051, 10110, 0.0], [10110, 10158, 0.08695652], [10158, 10179, 0.0], [10179, 10255, 0.0], [10255, 10509, 0.0], [10509, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 1063, 0.0], [1063, 1103, 0.0], [1103, 1169, 0.0], [1169, 3909, 0.0], [3909, 9952, 0.0], [9952, 10011, 0.0], [10011, 10023, 0.0], [10023, 10051, 0.0], [10051, 10110, 0.0], [10110, 10158, 0.0], [10158, 10179, 0.0], [10179, 10255, 0.0], [10255, 10509, 0.0], [10509, 10528, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 37, 0.16216216], [37, 1063, 0.12378168], [1063, 1103, 0.175], [1103, 1169, 0.13636364], [1169, 3909, 0.02153285], [3909, 9952, 0.03061393], [9952, 10011, 0.03389831], [10011, 10023, 0.16666667], [10023, 10051, 0.14285714], [10051, 10110, 0.10169492], [10110, 10158, 0.10416667], [10158, 10179, 0.0952381], [10179, 10255, 0.14473684], [10255, 10509, 0.03937008], [10509, 10528, 0.10526316]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 10528, 0.24831074]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 10528, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 10528, 0.75162041]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 10528, -120.61551172]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 10528, 108.1212052]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 10528, 401.22002538]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 10528, 85.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
9,217,308 | http://contentdm.auctr.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/based/mode/all/order/subjec/page/2 | CONTENTdm | ["CONTENTdm\n20 50 100 200 Thumbnail Title Subject Description Collection The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1897 no. 87 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friends and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is December 1897, no. 87. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1897 no", "CONTENTdm\n86 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friends and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is November 1897, no. 86. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1899 no", "CONTENTdm\n102 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friends and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is June 1899, no. 102. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1899 no", "CONTENTdm\n104 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friends and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is November 1899, no. 104. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1901 no", "CONTENTdm\n123 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friends and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is December 1901, no. 123. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1900 no", "CONTENTdm\n120 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friends and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is June 1901, no. 120. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1900 no", "CONTENTdm\n111 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friends and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is June 1900, no. 111. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1902 no", "CONTENTdm\n129 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is June 1902, no. 129. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1902 no", "CONTENTdm\n130 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is October 1902, no. 130. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1902 no", "CONTENTdm\n132 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is December 1902, no. 132. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1903 no", "CONTENTdm\n133 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is January 1903, no. 133. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1904 no", "CONTENTdm\n143 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is February 1904, no. 143. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1905 no", "CONTENTdm\n159 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is December 1905, no. 159. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1904 no", "CONTENTdm\n148 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is October 1904, no. 148. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1904 no", "CONTENTdm\n142 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is January Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1905 no", "CONTENTdm\n156 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is June 1905, no. 156. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1907 no", "CONTENTdm\n169 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is January 1907, no. 169. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1906 no", "CONTENTdm\n164 Periodical illustrations; Periodicals; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is May 1906, no. 164. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1907 no", "CONTENTdm\n173 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is May 1907, no. 173. Digital Collection of Robert W. Woodruff Library (AUC) The bulletin of Atlanta University, 1908 no", "CONTENTdm\n178 Periodicals; Periodical illustrations; Newspapers; Universities & colleges; The bulletin of Atlanta University was a publication sent to faculty, friend and alumni of the institution; Telling of the institution's progress and present needs. This issue is January 1908, no. 178. Digital Collection of Robert W. 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9,217,312 | http://events.uis.edu/2013/08/uis-friday-night-star-parties-start.html | UIS Events: UIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th | ["UIS Events: UIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th\nUIS Events\nUpcoming activities and events\nUIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th\nThe University of Illinois Springfield\u2019s popular Friday Night Star Parties will resume the Friday after Labor Day and run through the end of October. Those dates include: September 6, 13, 20, and 27 and October 4, 18, and 26. Please note that there is not a Star Party on October 11. Friday Night Star Parties are held from 8 to 10 p.m., weather permitting, at the UIS observatory on the roof of Brookens Library.", "UIS Events: UIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th\nStar Parties are hosted by Dr. John Martin, associate professor of Astronomy/Physics. The observatory\u2019s telescopes will be used to view a number of celestial objects, including the Moon, when visible; the Ring Nebula; globular star clusters M13 and M15; and other double stars and star clusters.", "UIS Events: UIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th\nA typical Star Party begins with a presentation as visitors ascend the stairs to the observatory, learning about galaxies, the sun and stars along the way. On the roof observation deck visitors are invited to view the skies through telescopes and ask questions. Participants are welcome to arrive and leave as they wish between 8 to 10 p.m.", "UIS Events: UIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th\nFriday Night Star Parties are free and open to the public. Reservations are not required and groups are encouraged to attend. The entrance to the campus observatory is located outside Brookens Library on the southeast corner of the building.", "UIS Events: UIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th\nStar Parties may be canceled for cloudy weather. Questions about whether the weather is suitable for viewing should be directed to 217/206-8342 at 7 p.m. on the evening of the Star Party. Updates will also be posted on the UIS Observatory Twitter page. For more information on Star Parties, contact John Martin at [email protected] or visit www.uis.edu/astronomy/about/starparties.html.Labels: community, Faculty, Science\nposted by Blake Wood at 9:27 AM\nEvents Home Page \u00bb", "UIS Events: UIS Friday Night Star Parties start September 6th\nUIS Visual Arts Gallery begins new exhibition seas...\nUIS welcomes new students on Freshman Move-In Day\nLocal businesses and organizations invited to the ...\nUIS Theatre announces upcoming 2013-14 season\nUIS co-hosts meteor shower event at Dickson Mounds...\nUIS and Lincoln Memorial Gardens to host Perseid m...\nUIS Speaker Series explores Thomas Jefferson's his...\nGirl Tech teaches middle schoolers about technolog...\nFormer Governor Jim Edgar part of panel discussion..."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "events.uis.edu", "date_download": "2015-05-22T11:28:59Z", "digest": "sha1:PNIZGFFLPZD7AHZOOH5F2MFMTPYAXHXY", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": 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48,105,685 | https://www.dol.gov/ebsa/regs/aos/ao2001-07a.html |
All DOL Search EBSA
Employee Benefits Security Administration
DOL > EBSA > Laws & Regulations > Advisory Opinion
Advisory Opinion
Alan B. Cabral, Esq.
Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson
One Century Plaza, Suite 3300
2001-07A
ERISA Sec. 3(32)
Dear Mr. | [" Cabral:\nThis responds to your request for an advisory opinion concerning the\napplicability of Title I of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of\n1974, as amended (ERISA), to the Santa Clara County (county) Transit", "\nDistrict Amalgamated Transit Union Pension Plan (plan). Specifically, you\npropose that the plan, which now covers approximately 1,620 employees of\nSanta Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA), will be modified to also\ncover three employees of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 265 (LU 265),\nwhich is the labor union representing VTA employees who participate in the plan.\nBased on your representations and documents submitted, you request an", "\nopinion concluding that the plan, as so modified, would meet the definition\nof a governmental plan\" in ERISA \ufffd 3(32) and, thus, be excluded from\nTitle I coverage by ERISA \ufffd 4(b)(1).\nVTA, an independent transit district, was established in 1972 through a county-wide\nelection as provided for by California statute. See Cal. Pub. Util. Code\n\ufffd\ufffd 100040-100050. On behalf of the county and cities within the county,\nVTA operates virtually all county transit services, which include bus and", "\nlight rail systems, transit planning, and highway projects. It exercises the\npower of eminent domain and, as authorized by county election, may issue\nbonds. Cal. Pub. Util. Code \ufffd\ufffd 100130, 100400-100413. 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48,105,686 | http://getty.edu/art/exhibitions/looking_east/mapofworld_enlarge.html |
Orbis Terrarum (Map of the World)
Petrus Plancius
Dutch, 1594
Hand-colored map
16 1/8 x 23 1/16 in. (41 x 58.5 cm) Courtesy of and reproduced by permission of The Huntington Library, San Marino, California
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48,105,687 | http://agdev.anr.udel.edu/CANRConnect/tag/graduate-school/ |
HomeDirectoryProfileActivityEditFriendsRequests
CANR Connect
Sustaining the world through science and technology
Categories CANR News
Spotlight on Success
CANR Communications Office
UD College of Agriculture & Natural Resources
University of Delaware Coop | ["erative Extension\nAdditional CANR Social ItemsTalk of Townsend Student Blog\nCANR YouTube Channel\nCANR Alumni Facebook Page\nWordPress.org\tCANR Summer Institute starts scholars on road to grad school\nJune 6, 2011 under CANR News", "\nOnly in its third year, the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources (CANR) Summer Institute at the University of Delaware is achieving its goal by seeing a large number of participants attend graduate school.\nThe 10-week long summer program, which is geared at underrepresented populations of undergraduate students who have an interest in pursuing graduate degrees in the agriculture and natural resource sciences, will see some of its past participants graduate and head off to graduate school this fall.", "\nMaria Pautler, CANR Summer Institute program coordinator, said she is encouraged by the success rate of the program. Of the 11 student participants since the inaugural year of 2009, five have been accepted into graduate programs. She said she looks forward to assisting the five students selected for the 2011 CANR Summer Institute, which runs June 6-Aug. 12, to ensure they have a great experience as they \u201cget to know the ropes\u201d of going to graduate school.", "\nKishana Williamson, a senior animal science and wildlife conservation double major, participated in the program in 2009 and will be headed to graduate school to get her master\u2019s degree in public health microbiology and emerging infectious disease at George Washington University. Williamson said that the CANR Summer Institute helped prepare her for graduate school by giving her experience in hands-on research", "\n\u201cHaving research experience in general, regardless of what it is, is always helpful because then people know that you\u2019ve done a project and contributed.\u201d", "\nDuring her time at the CANR Summer Institute, Williamson was paired with Jacob Bowman, associate professor of entomology and wildlife ecology, and she worked with Bowman\u2019s graduate students doing bird surveys to determine species diversity and tracking deer to determine migration patterns. She said of the CANR Summer Institute, \u201cI think it\u2019s a really great experience, just the ability to get your hands dirty in a research laboratory", "\nI think research in general is great but if you don\u2019t have time during the school year, the summer is a perfect time to do it. They pay you, you get somewhere to stay and you learn a lot \u2014 it\u2019s a really good opportunity.\u201d", "\nAnother student headed to graduate school after participating in the program is Shurnevia Strickland, a senior in the Department of Animal and Food Sciences. Strickland attended the CANR Summer Institute in 2010 and will be attending graduate school at the University of Delaware where she will study genetics and take classes such as biochemistry and bioinformatics.", "\nShe called the CANR Summer Institute a very positive experience that helped her decide that she wanted to go on to graduate school. \u201cThe CANR Summer Institute showed me what it would be like working in a lab, similar to what I\u2019d be doing in graduate school. From there, I knew that if I wanted a successful, long-lasting career in genetics, I\u2019d need to get a master\u2019s degree.\u201d", "\nStrickland recommends the CANR Summer Institute to those who are unsure of their plans after graduation, especially those who have not had experience with hands-on research. \u201cResearch is one of those things that you\u2019ll either love or hate, and it\u2019ll help narrow down not only the type of work, but the subject you want to work in as well.\u201d", "\nShe also said, \u201cThe earlier you participate in a program like this, the better. The Summer Institute is really a hidden gem within the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources.\u201d", "\nKristopher Dewberry, a pre-veterinary medicine and biosciences major with minors in biology and wildlife conservation, attended the summer program in 2009 and said that he researched the Marek\u2019s disease virus. His favorite part of the program was \u201cthe opportunity to work for a professor directly and on a real research project", "\nI learned a magnitude of research techniques that assisted me in future research endeavors as well as a better understanding of the real scientific community and what research has to offer.\u201d", "\nEchoing Strickland\u2019s thoughts, Dewberry said that he would recommend the program to anybody who has an interest in research but hasn\u2019t had the opportunity to have hands on experience. \u201cThe CANR Summer Institute gives its participants an excellent insight into doing research on a graduate school level, as well as the opportunity to interact with faculty on a professional level", "\nI know these experiences helped me mature and have an idea on what graduate and professional schools were looking for in candidates.\u201d", "\nDewberry will be attending Cornell University in the fall as a first year doctor of veterinary medicine candidate. Tom Sims, CANR deputy dean, said the college \u201cis thrilled by the successes of our former CANR Summer Institute scholars and wishes them all the best in their graduate education programs. We also greatly appreciate the wonderful mentoring provided to the Summer Institute scholars by our faculty.\u201d", "\nSims added that CANR \u201cis appreciative of the initial grant funding provided by the UD Office of Graduate and Professional Education. Their help allowed us to begin what is now a permanent CANR program that is now successfully supporting the efforts of students from underrepresented populations to pursue graduate and professional degrees.\u201d\nFor more information on the CANR Summer Institute, visit the website.\nArticle by Adam Thomas\nPhoto by Danielle Quigley", "\nThe original posting of this article can be viewed on UDaily\ncomments: 0 \u00bb\ttags: CANR Summer Institute, graduate school, Maria Pautler, Tom Sims\tPowered by WordPress. \u00a9 designed by mythem.es"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "agdev.anr.udel.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T19:08:05Z", "digest": "sha1:DMUFHRU6ED6FBA4VLHNB6WJFMEJYL754", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 6044, 6044.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 6044, 7301.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 6044, 31.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 6044, 99.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 6044, 0.95]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 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0.13043478], [5828, 5854, 0.11538462], [5854, 5915, 0.04918033], [5915, 6044, 0.10077519]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 6044, 0.18382072]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 6044, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 6044, 0.46165961]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 6044, -272.30432802]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 6044, 82.39836858]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 6044, -247.73325271]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 6044, 38.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,688 | http://injury.research.chop.edu/peer-reviewed-publications?f[keyword]=73&f[author]=101&s=author&o=asc |
Found 0 results [ Author] Title Year Filters: Keyword is Risk Assessment and Author is Rivara, Frederick P [Clear All Filters]A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z No items foundModify or remove your filters and try again. Home | [""] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "injury.research.chop.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T19:46:23Z", "digest": "sha1:E4FP7WZI4XJSFTA5OBA5KERW546EOKMH", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 241, 241.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 241, 25760.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 241, 1.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 241, 38.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 241, 0.85]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 241, 243.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 241, 0.125]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 241, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 241, 0.421875]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 241, 0.125]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 241, 0.91071429]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 241, 3.17857143]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 241, 3.90157541]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 241, 56.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 241, 56.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 241, 0.00429185]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 241, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 241, 0.18257261]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 241, -1.001e-05]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 241, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 241, -1.001e-05]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 241, -35.95512168]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 241, -21.89471257]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 241, -23.06444387]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 241, 2.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,689 | http://library.med.utah.edu/WebPath/RENAHTML/RENAL159.html |
In this case of drug-induced interstitial nephritis, there are some scattered eosinophils, along with neutrophils and mononuclear cells in the inflamed interstitium. The classic example of this occurs occasionally with the antibiotic methicillin, but can | ["occur with a variety of drugs such as thiazide diuretics and the H2 blocker cimetidine. The immune mechanism may be either type I or type IV hypersensitivity.\nQuestion: What drugs may be associated with AiN?", "\nAnswerThe most common is the antibiotic methicillin. Other penicillins and cephalosporins may also be implicated. Any of the NSAIDS, furosemide, thiazides, allopurinol, cimetidine, and sulfonamides can also cause AIN."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "library.med.utah.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T20:16:11Z", "digest": "sha1:RJ4Z7EKGQDUXG5YEL35BBSIEWTWPHRSN", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 680, 680.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 680, 697.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 680, 3.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 680, 3.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 680, 0.89]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 680, 170.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 680, 0.38461538]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 680, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 680, 0.0460177]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 680, 0.08495575]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 680, 0.04273504]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 680, 0.14529915]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 680, 0.70707071]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 680, 5.70707071]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 680, 4.08288227]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 680, 99.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 414, 1.0], [414, 463, 1.0], [463, 680, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 414, 0.0], [414, 463, 0.0], [463, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 414, 62.0], [414, 463, 8.0], [463, 680, 29.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 414, 0.00246305], [414, 463, 0.0], [463, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 414, 0.0], [414, 463, 0.0], [463, 680, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 414, 0.01690821], [414, 463, 0.08163265], [463, 680, 0.05990783]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 680, 0.9797883]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 680, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 680, 0.00103247]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 680, -12.28333621]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 680, -1.36988774]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 680, -6.68171116]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 680, 7.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,861 | https://www.media.mit.edu/people/jkinney/overview/ |
With over twenty years of combined neuroscience and engineering training, Kinney has worked on methods for the automated reconstruction of the anatomical structure of the brain from nanoscale-resolution images, as well as scalable neural recording technol | ["ogies for obtaining high-speed electrical signals from sites distributed throughout the brain. Kinney designed and built a tool for performing closed-loop ultraprecise, automated craniotomies. Kinney was a postdoctoral researcher in Dr", "\nSejnowski's lab before he joined as a postdoctoral associate the lab of Ed Boyden in the Media Lab at MIT. ( Georgia Institute of Technology, B.S. Mechanical Engineering \u201898 / Georgia Institute of Technology, M.S. Mechanical Engineering \u201899/ University of California- San Diego, Terrence Sejnowski Lab at Salk Institute, Ph.D. Biomedical Engineering \u201809)."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.media.mit.edu", "date_download": "2020-09-19T03:49:45Z", "digest": "sha1:OZKCJT7QJS3SRH4A56JEPJR4E3NXXJQ2", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 861, 861.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 861, 2525.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 861, 2.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 861, 61.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 861, 0.93]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 861, 205.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 861, 0.2516129]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 861, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 861, 0.0140056]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 861, 0.05042017]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 861, 0.07843137]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 861, 0.03870968]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 861, 0.20645161]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 861, 0.68067227]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 861, 6.0]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 861, 4.20724323]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 861, 119.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 861, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 14, 2.0], [14, 861, 117.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 861, 0.00733496]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 14, 0.0], [14, 861, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 14, 0.14285714], [14, 861, 0.0472255]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 861, 0.14118946]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 861, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 861, 0.02342081]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 861, -61.3879842]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 861, -21.03214052]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 861, 0.71017277]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 861, 11.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,865 | https://www.niagara.edu/confidentiality-and-privacy/ |
NU Policies
Privacy & Procedures
Affirmative Consent
Non-Discrimination Policy & Statement | ["", "\nOn campus, only Health Services, Counseling Services, and Campus Ministry's ordained priests acting in their official capacity can truly be confidential. All other NU employees have an obligation to immediately report any incident of discrimination, including sexual assault and intimate partner violence, to the Office for Equity & Inclusion and Title IX Coordinator. There, your privacy will be respected as much as possible.", "\nThe Office for Equity & Inclusion (OEI) will respect a complainant's (and every person's) privacy as much as possible. In cases of sexual assault, stalking, domestic/dating violence, the complainant is in control of whether any action or investigation moves forward, and the complainant's identity can remain private", "\nOnly in instances of imminent danger to the campus or the threat of a repeated attack by the perpetrator will any action take place without the complainant's request, and even then, will be done so in a way to protect the complainant's identity as much as possible and will never force a complainant to participate in the investigation.", "\nMinor and moderate student conduct violations and crimes that are revealed in reports to the Office for Equity & Inclusion (OEI) will not be pursued or prosecuted by campus officials. This especially applies to alcohol and drug possession violations. In most cases, these violations will not even be disclosed, except insofar as they are relevant to investigations and/or witness reports. This applies to victims, complainants, respondents, witnesses, the accused, and/or anyone providing information", "\nNew York State Police have also indicated that they have a similar view as to the prosecution of minor crimes that are revealed during sex assault and intimate partner violence investigations.", "\nStatute of Limitations:\nThere is no statute of limitations (or time limit) for when a complainant can file a claim with the OEI, even if the incident occurred years prior. There are, however, statutes of limitations on bringing criminal cases against defendants; for more info on criminal law statutes of limitations, contact the Title IX Coordinator or the police directly.\nRetaliation:", "\nRetaliation, which is materially adverse action taken against a person for reporting or objecting to discrimination, sexual harassment, sexual assault, dating/domestic violence or for participating in an investigation or other proceeding related to discrimination, sexual harassment, sexual assault, dating/domestic violence is a violation of this Policy, whether or not it occurred.", "\nThis applies to any activity on or off campus, through direct or indirect conduct, via electronic means or social media, or through third parties. Reports of retaliation will be accepted, evaluated and handled under the same processes and procedures set forth in this Policy. Any action that would keep an individual from coming forward to make or support a claim of unlawful harassment or discrimination may constitute retaliation", "\nSuch retaliation is unlawful under federal, state, and (where applicable) local law. For example, both the New York State Human Rights Law and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 protect individuals who engage in \u201cprotected activity.\u201d", "\nProtected activity occurs when a person has:\nMade a complaint of sexual harassment, either internally or with any anti-discrimination agency;\nTestified or assisted in a proceeding involving sexual harassment under Title VII, the Human Rights Law, or other anti-discrimination law;\nOpposed sexual harassment by making a verbal or informal complaint to management, or by simply informing a supervisor or manager of harassment;\nReported that another employee has been sexually harassed; or", "\nEncouraged a fellow employee to report sexual harassment.", "\nEven if the alleged discrimination, sexual harassment, sexual assault, dating/domestic violence does not rise to the level of a violation of law, the individual is protected from retaliation if the person had a good faith belief that the practices were unlawful. 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41,140,839 | http://alabamamoments.alabama.gov/sec06bib.html |
| Home | Contents | | Transportation and Alabama Rivers |
Alabama Moments in American History
| Quick Summary | Details | Bibliography | Primary Source | Map 1 | Map 2 |
Transportation and Alabama Rivers
Jackson, Harvey H. III. Rivers of History: Life on | ["the Coosa, Tallapoosa, Cahaba, and Alabama. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1995.", "\nAn overview of the history of the Alabama River System, with special attention paid to the way people lived along the streams. Beginning with Native Americans, the narrative covers the DeSoto expedition, European settlement, the age of the steamboats, Civil War, the coming of the railroads, the building of hydroelectric dams, and the modern uses of the rivers.", "\n__________. Putting \"Loafing Streams\" to Work: The Building of Lay, Mitchell, Martin, and Jordan Dams, 1910-1929. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1997.\nAn account of the men and the company that built Alabama's first major hydroelectric dams. Constructed in remote parts of the Coosa and Tallapoosa valleys, the projects required whole towns to be built and maintained. It is a story of how men worked under primitive conditions to bring Alabama into the twentieth century.", "\nDoster, James F. and David C. Weaver. Tenn-Tom Country, the Upper Tombigbee Valley in History and Geography. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1987.\nA historical and geographic account of the changes that came with the development of this region. Special attention is paid to the Tenn-Tom Waterway.\nDavidson, Donald. The Tennessee, the Old River, Frontier to Secession. New York: Rhinehart and Company, 1946; and The Tennessee, the New River, Civil War to TVA. New York: Rhinehart and Company, 1948.", "\nOlder books but full of great stories about the river and its people."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "alabamamoments.alabama.gov", "date_download": "2018-10-15T17:17:19Z", "digest": "sha1:TKLY32NMUQ5EGEESM5X6EUSUPE7SDR53", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1768, 1768.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1768, 1841.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1768, 12.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1768, 12.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1768, 0.87]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1768, 263.6]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1768, 0.26271186]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1768, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1768, 0.11023622]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1768, 0.02863278]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1768, 0.04724409]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1768, 0.06227631]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1768, 0.01694915]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1768, 0.25141243]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1768, 0.55185185]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1768, 5.17407407]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1768, 4.50173069]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1768, 270.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 58, 0.0], [58, 94, 0.0], [94, 170, 0.0], [170, 204, 0.0], [204, 346, 1.0], [346, 709, 1.0], [709, 870, 1.0], [870, 1192, 1.0], [1192, 1348, 1.0], [1348, 1498, 1.0], [1498, 1699, 1.0], [1699, 1768, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 58, 0.0], [58, 94, 0.0], [94, 170, 0.0], [170, 204, 0.0], [204, 346, 0.0], [346, 709, 0.0], [709, 870, 0.0], [870, 1192, 0.0], [1192, 1348, 0.0], [1348, 1498, 0.0], [1498, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 58, 6.0], [58, 94, 5.0], [94, 170, 10.0], [170, 204, 4.0], [204, 346, 21.0], [346, 709, 58.0], [709, 870, 21.0], [870, 1192, 53.0], [1192, 1348, 23.0], [1348, 1498, 24.0], [1498, 1699, 32.0], [1699, 1768, 13.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 58, 0.0], [58, 94, 0.0], [94, 170, 0.03278689], [170, 204, 0.0], [204, 346, 0.03076923], [346, 709, 0.0], [709, 870, 0.08823529], [870, 1192, 0.0], [1192, 1348, 0.02758621], [1348, 1498, 0.0], [1498, 1699, 0.04301075], [1699, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 58, 0.0], [58, 94, 0.0], [94, 170, 0.0], [170, 204, 0.0], [204, 346, 0.0], [346, 709, 0.0], [709, 870, 0.0], [870, 1192, 0.0], [1192, 1348, 0.0], [1348, 1498, 0.0], [1498, 1699, 0.0], [1699, 1768, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 58, 0.0862069], [58, 94, 0.11111111], [94, 170, 0.10526316], [170, 204, 0.08823529], [204, 346, 0.11971831], [346, 709, 0.03305785], [709, 870, 0.0931677], [870, 1192, 0.02173913], [1192, 1348, 0.11538462], [1348, 1498, 0.03333333], [1498, 1699, 0.12437811], [1699, 1768, 0.01449275]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1768, 0.5603562]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1768, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1768, 0.57081628]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1768, -52.52152195]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1768, -16.31983126]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1768, 67.979572]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1768, 24.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,841 | https://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/26939 |
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report, Vol. 44, no. 35, September 8, 1995
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report ; v. 44, no. 35
Communicable Diseases/Epidemiology/United States
Communicable Diseases/Statistics/United States
Disease Notificatio | ["n/United States\nMortality/Statistics/United States\nPopulation Surveillance/Statistics/United States", "\nArboviral Disease - United States, 1994 -- Update: Influenza Activity - Worldwide, 1995 -- Notice to Readers NIOSH Alert: Request for Assistance in Preventing Deaths and Injuries of Adolescent Workers -- Errata: Vol. 44, No. 32 -- Erratum: Vol. 44, No. 34 -- Erratum: Vol. 43, No. 38 -- Monthly Immunization Table.\nMorbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR)\nMMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report, Vol. 45, no. 36, September 13, 1996", "\nMMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report, Vol. 44, no. 22, June 9, 1995\nEnhanced Detection of Sporadic Escherichia coli O157:H7 Infections - New Jersey, July 1994 -- Escherichia coli O157:H7 Outbreak at a Summer Camp - Virginia, 1994 -- Estimated Expenditures for Core Public Health Functions - Selected States, October 19...", "\nState-Specific Pregnancy and Birth Rates Among Teenagers - United States, 1991-1992 -- Fatalities From Motor-Vehicle Collisions With Trains - Kansas, 1990-1994 -- Economic Costs of Birth Defects and Cerebral Palsy - United States, 1992 -- Notifiable ...\nHuman Rabies - Washington, 1995 -- Blood Lead Levels Among Children in a Managed-Care Organization - California, October 1992-March 1993 -- Notice to Readers \"Immunization Update\" Video Conference -- Hypertension Among Mexican Americans - United Stat..."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "stacks.cdc.gov", "date_download": "2018-02-17T22:20:19Z", "digest": "sha1:CJJINZTEKRFJ26IAGPPWO4J2B5NSK5ZJ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1632, 1632.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1632, 8062.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1632, 14.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1632, 140.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1632, 0.75]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1632, 275.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1632, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1632, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1632, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1632, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1632, 0.07739938]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1632, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1632, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1632, 0.1546875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1632, 0.12890625]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1632, 0.1]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1632, 0.06875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1632, 0.06875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1632, 0.046875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1632, 0.08203125]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1632, 0.10546875]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1632, 0.03095975]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1632, 0.21428571]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1632, 0.41176471]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1632, 0.61165049]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1632, 6.21359223]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1632, 0.00928793]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1632, 4.5754646]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1632, 206.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 140, 0.0], [140, 189, 0.0], [189, 236, 0.0], [236, 271, 0.0], [271, 306, 0.0], [306, 355, 0.0], [355, 670, 1.0], [670, 715, 0.0], [715, 796, 0.0], [796, 871, 0.0], [871, 1125, 1.0], [1125, 1379, 1.0], [1379, 1632, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 140, 0.0], [140, 189, 0.0], [189, 236, 0.0], [236, 271, 0.0], [271, 306, 0.0], [306, 355, 0.0], [355, 670, 0.0], [670, 715, 0.0], [715, 796, 0.0], [796, 871, 0.0], [871, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1632, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 80, 13.0], [80, 140, 10.0], [140, 189, 3.0], [189, 236, 3.0], [236, 271, 3.0], [271, 306, 2.0], [306, 355, 3.0], [355, 670, 44.0], [670, 715, 6.0], [715, 796, 13.0], [796, 871, 13.0], [871, 1125, 33.0], [1125, 1379, 30.0], [1379, 1632, 30.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 80, 0.125], [80, 140, 0.0754717], [140, 189, 0.0], [189, 236, 0.0], [236, 271, 0.0], [271, 306, 0.0], [306, 355, 0.0], [355, 670, 0.07272727], [670, 715, 0.0], [715, 796, 0.1369863], [796, 871, 0.13432836], [871, 1125, 0.07725322], [1125, 1379, 0.08810573], [1379, 1632, 0.05240175]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 80, 0.0], [80, 140, 0.0], [140, 189, 0.0], [189, 236, 0.0], [236, 271, 0.0], [271, 306, 0.0], [306, 355, 0.0], [355, 670, 0.0], [670, 715, 0.0], [715, 796, 0.0], [796, 871, 0.0], [871, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1379, 0.0], [1379, 1632, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 80, 0.0875], [80, 140, 0.08333333], [140, 189, 0.10204082], [189, 236, 0.10638298], [236, 271, 0.11428571], [271, 306, 0.11428571], [306, 355, 0.10204082], [355, 670, 0.11111111], [670, 715, 0.17777778], [715, 796, 0.08641975], [796, 871, 0.09333333], [871, 1125, 0.1023622], [1125, 1379, 0.1023622], [1379, 1632, 0.1027668]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1632, 0.0128147]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1632, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1632, 0.22507066]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1632, -135.2582941]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1632, -71.81901798]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1632, -15.9104333]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1632, 22.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,846 | http://edition.cnn.com/2013/08/29/business/bright-sun-bright-future-africa/index.html?iid=article_sidebar |
Bright sun, bright future: Can Africa unlock its solar potential?
By Teo Kermeliotis, for CNN
Photos: Bright sun, bright future: Can Africa unlock its solar potential?
Solar power projects in Africa – Renewable energy firm SolarReserve has 238 megawatts ( | ["MW) of solar projects in construction in South Africa, including the Jasper Power Project, which has Google as an investor. Pictured here, the company's 75 MW Lesedi project near Kimberly.", "\nSolar power projects in Africa \u2013 Jasper is scheduled to enter into operation at the end of next year. Pictured here, SolarReserve's Letsatsi Power Project in Bloemfontein.\nSolar power projects in Africa \u2013 Moroccan King Mohammed VI attends the official launch of the construction of a 160 MW solar power plant near the city of Ouarzazate on May 10.", "\nSolar power projects in Africa \u2013 A view of the panels of the solar power station of Ain Beni Mathar near Oujda in Morocco. The country wants to produce 2,000 MW of solar energy by 2020.\nSolar power projects in Africa \u2013 In April, the government of Mauritania and renewable energy company Masdar inaugurated the largest solar photovoltaic plant in Africa.", "\nSolar power projects in Africa \u2013 Based in the capital city of Nouakchott, the 15 MW facility is designed to account for 10% of Mauritania's energy capacity, according to Masdar.\nSolar power projects in Africa \u2013 Vodacom Century City building was recently honored as the winner in the category for African Solar Project of the Year by Africa Energy.\nSolar power projects are increasingly being announced across Africa\nExperts say that Africa can use solar power to fuel its future growth", "\nLack of awareness and financing are still major challenges\nIndustry insiders also call for new policies to help the sector to take off\n(CNN) Which country boasts the world's fastest growing clean energy investment? Germany? No. United States? Think again.\nJumping from a few hundred million dollars to $5.7 billion, South Africa recorded last year the world's highest growth in renewable energy investment, according to the U.N. Environment Program (UNEP).", "\nThe spectacular surge, led largely by investments in solar power projects, comes as South Africa moves to reduce its dependency on coal, which accounts for around 86% of its energy. To achieve that, the country has set the ambitious target of generating 18 gigawatts (GW) of clean energy by 2030.", "\nAs a result, a series of investments have trickled into the country, including Google's first foray into Africa's solar power market. The internet giant, which has spent more than $1 billion in renewable energy projects in the United States and Europe in recent years, announced in late May its decision to back the Jasper Power Project, a 96 MW solar photovoltaic (PV) plant in Northern Cape, with a $12 million investment.\nRead this: 'Solar sisters' spreading light in Africa\nSolar power facilitates learning", "\nSolar power facilitates learning 00:59\nSolar school is a shining example\nSolar school is a shining example 02:34\n\"We only pursue investments that we believe make financial sense,\" said Rick Needham, Google's director of energy and sustainability. \"South Africa's strong resources and supportive policies for renewable energy make it an attractive place to invest.\"\nAbundance of sun", "\nOnce completed, Jasper is expected to be one of the biggest solar installations in the continent, capable of generating enough power for some 30,000 homes.\nIt's no secret that Africa has plentiful sunshine, with many parts of the continent enjoying daily solar radiation of between 4 kWh and 6 kWh per square meter. But it's no secret, either, that Africa has the world's lowest electricity access rates, with more than half of its countries experiencing daily -- and costly -- power outages.", "\nAmid such conditions, experts say investments in large-scale solar power projects could transform a continent faced with fast-rising populations and increasing demand for energy to support its economic growth.\n\"Six out of the 10 fastest economies in the world (over the past decade) were in Africa, and that requires much more energy, at a faster-growing pace than we've seen before,\" says Frank Wouters, deputy director-general of the International Renewable Energy Agency.", "\nThe governments in Africa should change their attitude of thinking that solar is too expensive.\nDickens Kamughisa, AFIEGO chief executive\nAmbitious projects\nAnd some countries have already taken notice. While South Africa is clearly setting the pace, projects are being announced across the continent as more countries look to unlock their massive solar potential.", "\nIn late April, Mauritania launched what's described as Africa's biggest solar PV plant so far, a 15 MW facility that is designed to account for 10% of the country's energy capacity, according to its developers. In early May, Morocco began the first phase of the construction of a 160 MW concentrated solar power technology plant near Ouarzazate as part of the country's efforts to produce 2,000 MW of solar energy by 2020.", "\nAnd late last year, British company Blue Energy announced plans to build the Nzema Project in Ghana, a 155 MW facility. Construction at the $400 million project is expected to begin in the first quarter of next year, while the plant should become fully operational by the end of 2015.", "\nYet, despite such ambitious schemes, experts say the continent is far from exploiting its massive solar energy potential. According to the International Energy Agency, coal, oil and gas together accounted for 81% of Africa's total power generation in 2009, with nuclear power making up 2%, hydropower 16% and all other renewable sources accounting for just 1%.\nRead this: Harnessing pedal power to light up Africa", "\nWouters says that a lack of awareness about the current price competitiveness of solar technology, coupled with wider inefficiencies in the performance of most power utilities across the continent, is preventing African countries from scaling up their solar energy production.\nAnother problem is financing, as higher up-front capital costs, longer payback periods and a lack of solar-project experience in the banking sector make access to funds more challenging.", "\n\"You need to involve banks and for many banks in Africa this is also new, so again you have to raise awareness,\" says Wouters. \"Money typically comes with a risk premium which makes it more expensive than necessary.\"\nSolar needs to be at the table, with all of the other technologies.\nMark Hankins, African Solar Designs\nOthers say, however, that it's inadequate policies and a lack of political commitment that prevent solar from taking off.", "\n\"The governments in Africa should change their attitude of thinking that solar is too expensive,\" says Dickens Kamughisa, chief executive of Uganda-based NGO Africa Institute for Energy Governance. \"Every decision should be based on research that can help in allocating the energy budgets.\"", "\nLast year, a UNEP report said that Africa's power sector needs to install an estimated 7,000 MW of new generation capacity each year. It warned that \"unless stronger commitments and effective policy measures are taken to reverse current trends,\" half the population of sub-Saharan Africa will be without electricity in 2030.", "\nMark Hankins, director of Kenya-based African Solar Designs, says that in order for Africa to tap its clean energy potential, solar must take center stage in the continent's energy discussions.", "\n\"There needs to be a serious reassessment of how to do policy and finance to help solar meet its potential in Africa,\" says Hankins. \"This means not just addressing the needs of poor people -- it means using solar to address the energy sector needs for on and off grid and ... using it to help business,\" he adds. \"Solar needs to be at the table, with all of the other technologies.\""] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "edition.cnn.com", "date_download": "2018-02-17T21:49:41Z", "digest": "sha1:C4LGY67FKT5Y5VDRJFJWIK7J3KYPP6Q6", "quality_signals": 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47,013,534 | https://insolvencynotices.asic.gov.au/browsesearch-notices/notice-details/CKGT-GROUP-PTY-LTD-169733859/1bee7710-24d3-4c5e-ad9b-ef2e68f7fee7 |
CKGT GROUP PTY LTD.
This notice does not mean that the company was deregistered. To check whether the company was deregistered following publication of this notice, search the ASIC database using the ASIC Connect function on ASIC's website www.asic.gov.au | [""] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "insolvencynotices.asic.gov.au", "date_download": "2018-11-14T00:51:16Z", "digest": "sha1:SFZNCPBNVEZB24WCEWM7JM7U4XAJ2FY4", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 255, 255.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 255, 4866.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 255, 2.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 255, 152.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 255, 0.89]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 255, 303.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 255, 0.34]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 255, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 255, 0.0952381]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 255, 0.12380952]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 255, 0.23809524]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 255, 0.14]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 255, 0.14]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 255, 0.76923077]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 255, 5.38461538]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 255, 3.30810155]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 255, 39.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 20, 1.0], [20, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 20, 4.0], [20, 255, 35.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 255, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 20, 0.75], [20, 255, 0.06382979]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 255, 0.06168151]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 255, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 255, -9.66e-06]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 255, -4.95530411]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 255, 2.72020472]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 255, 3.74758398]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 255, 6.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
47,013,536 | https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007%2F978-3-540-69400-7 |
Elasticity and Plasticity of Large Deformations
Albrecht Bertram
Mathematical Preparation
Balance Laws
The Principles of Material Theory
Internal Constraints
Hyperelasticity
The valuable input of students and colleagues has enabled the author to make many | [" improvements to the first edition of this book, without, however, changing the main structure of the book.", "\nAs a result, the second edition \"Elasticity and Plasticity of Large deformations\" still offers a careful introduction to modern non-linear mechanics. It presents in detail the used mathematical tools, such as tensor algebra and analysis. The general theory of mechanical behavior is particularized for the broad and important classes of elasticity and plasticity. The book is intended to bring the reader close to the fields of today's research activities", "\nA list of notations and an index help the reader to find specific topics. The book is based on three decades of teaching experience in this field.", "\ncontinuum mechanics deformation large (finite) deformations material theory mechanics non-linear continuum mechanics plasticity\n1.Otto-von-Guericke-Univ. Inst. MechanikGermany\nCopyright Information Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2008"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "link.springer.com", "date_download": "2018-11-14T00:09:55Z", "digest": "sha1:LS47PLWL6WGNVKLN2AI3VDXSE2BWIRPE", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1203, 1203.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1203, 2941.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1203, 12.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1203, 101.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1203, 0.87]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1203, 316.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1203, 0.30049261]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1203, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1203, 0.08325074]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1203, 0.08325074]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1203, 0.03865213]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1203, 0.06838454]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1203, 0.04955401]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1203, 0.00492611]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1203, 0.13793103]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1203, 0.61538462]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1203, 5.9704142]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1203, 4.29997723]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1203, 169.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 65, 0.0], [65, 90, 0.0], [90, 103, 0.0], [103, 137, 0.0], [137, 158, 0.0], [158, 174, 0.0], [174, 363, 1.0], [363, 967, 1.0], [967, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1143, 0.0], [1143, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 65, 0.0], [65, 90, 0.0], [90, 103, 0.0], [103, 137, 0.0], [137, 158, 0.0], [158, 174, 0.0], [174, 363, 0.0], [363, 967, 0.0], [967, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1143, 0.0], [1143, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 48, 6.0], [48, 65, 2.0], [65, 90, 2.0], [90, 103, 2.0], [103, 137, 5.0], [137, 158, 2.0], [158, 174, 1.0], [174, 363, 31.0], [363, 967, 96.0], [967, 1095, 13.0], [1095, 1143, 3.0], [1143, 1203, 6.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 65, 0.0], [65, 90, 0.0], [90, 103, 0.0], [103, 137, 0.0], [137, 158, 0.0], [158, 174, 0.0], [174, 363, 0.0], [363, 967, 0.0], [967, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1143, 0.02439024], [1143, 1203, 0.06779661]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 65, 0.0], [65, 90, 0.0], [90, 103, 0.0], [103, 137, 0.0], [137, 158, 0.0], [158, 174, 0.0], [174, 363, 0.0], [363, 967, 0.0], [967, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1143, 0.0], [1143, 1203, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 48, 0.08333333], [48, 65, 0.11764706], [65, 90, 0.08], [90, 103, 0.15384615], [103, 137, 0.11764706], [137, 158, 0.0952381], [158, 174, 0.0625], [174, 363, 0.00529101], [363, 967, 0.01490066], [967, 1095, 0.0], [1095, 1143, 0.125], [1143, 1203, 0.1]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1203, 0.45012152]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1203, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1203, 0.06552011]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1203, -35.44407313]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1203, 2.3775909]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1203, 14.34983537]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1203, 11.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
47,013,544 | https://letsmove.obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/blog/all/all?page=85 |
Last Stop of the Summer: MOVE IT MOVEMENT TOUR
Posted by Jessica Larson on August 6, 2012 | ["", "\nCalling all Houstonians -- the Move It Movement Tour is coming to your city. In support of First Lady Michelle Obama\u2019s Let\u2019s Move! initiative, the President\u2019s Council on Fitness, Sports & Nutrition has partnered with the Cartoon Network to launch the third annual Move It Movement Tour, a national campaign to get kids moving more and eating healthy in a fun and interactive outdoor environment. Think your kid won\u2019t like it", "\n? Think again! Kids have been eager to try different activities at every stop. Our favorite quotes: \u201cThis is the best day of summer camp yet!\u201d and \u201cI wish this was here every day.\u201d After hosting events in several cities around the country, the tour wraps up on August 12 in Houston, Texas. The First Lady appeared on the Cartoon Network on May 28 to inform kids and families how they can get involved with Let\u2019s Move! through the Presidential Active Lifestyle Award (PALA+) program", "\nThe tour officially kicked off in Atlanta on June 10, and at each of the 17 stops, families have been able to enjoy a wide range of active games, such as basketball and soccer shootouts, football and golf drills, and sidewalk art creation stations. By exposing kids to various activities, families can learn more about different ways they can lead a healthy, active lifestyle.", "\nAn Olympic Mom at Let\u2019s Move! London\nPosted by Dara Torres on August 6, 2012", "\nEd note: This guest post was provided by Dara Torres, who competed in five Olympic games and won 12 medals for Team USA. My daughter Tessa and I really had such an amazing experience traveling to London together for the first week of the Olympics. Although I was hoping to be there as an athlete (having just missed making the team by nine one hundredths of a second), it was still fun to be there as a spectator", "\nWhen we talk about all the wonderful things we did over there, the one thing that stands out in both our minds was the Let's Move event put on by the First Lady and Nickelodeon.", "\nBehind the Scenes: Michelle Obama and the Presidential Olympic Delegation at Let's Move! London\nPosted by Colleen Curtis on August 6, 2012", "\nEd. Note: This article was first published on Whitehouse.gov Go behind the scenes with First Lady Michelle Obama and members of Team USA past and present, as they join military kids and 2,000 American military children and American and British students at Let\u2019s Move! London, an event held to spread the spirit of the Olympic Games in London", "\nAnd make sure to check out the Storify gallery we put together of the great tweets from people who were at the event in London with the First Lady, which is included below:", "\nGo for the Gold this Summer with MyPlate and Let's Move!\nPosted by Dr. Robert Post on August 3, 2012", "\nAs we watch and are inspired by Team USA's 2012 Olympic results in London, we can all take a cue from our team and strive to live a little more like athletes ourselves. A nutritious diet and regular physical activity are the building blocks to peak performance. This summer, MyPlate and Let\u2019s Move! are encouraging Americans to make healthier eating choices and include physical activity into their daily routine to support Team USA and celebrate the Olympic Games", "\nChooseMyPlate.gov can help answer your questions about nutrition, weight management, physical activity, food safety, and building healthier meals. The website can help you make daily food decisions by providing information about food groups and portions sizes, and offering simple recipes that reflect the Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2010 recommendations. We encourage you to check out the 10 Tips Nutrition Education Series", "\nTopics include \u201cEating Better on a Budget,\u201d \u201cHealthy Eating for Vegetarians,\u201d and many more.", "\nGardening at 9,500 Feet!\nPosted by Adam Keyes on August 2, 2012", "\nEd. Note: This article is a cross post from USDA's Blog With gas prices on the rise and the trip to the nearest large grocery store clocking in at 50 miles, Mark Platten realized an opportunity much closer to home", "\nPlatten, the Colorado State University Extension Director for Teller County, began brainstorming and came up with the idea for a program that would engage young people in gardening, put fresh food on the table, and facilitate community service opportunities in the town of Cripple Creek, Colorado \u2013 a small town situated in the Rocky Mountains at an elevation of 9,500.", "\n4-H Youth Leaders Motivate Campers toward Good Health", "\nEd. Note: This article is a cross post from USDA's Blog The Louisiana State 4-H Food and Fitness Camp is joining the Let\u2019s Move! initiative to combat childhood obesity through improved nutrition and increased physical activity. As a camp for fourth and fifth graders designed and run by high school 4-H teens, the program motivates campers to eat healthier and move more", "\nThis year, the 4-H Food and Fitness Camp incorporated a jungle safari-themed experience, showing campers that eating right and exercising can be fun! Dressed in wild animal costumes and surrounded by fake vines, the campers and counselors played games and learned about nutrition.", "\nYour Stories: Celebrating Lets Move! Olympic Fun Day Across The USA\nPosted by Kasie Coccaro on August 1, 2012", "\nWhile First Lady Michelle Obama was in London leading the U.S. Delegation to the 2012 Olympic Games, communities back at home showed their support for Team USA by dancing, jumping and running their way to a healthier lifestyle. Thousands of people from nearly all 50 states got together to celebrate Let\u2019s Move! Olympic Fun Day on Saturday, July 28th by getting active and having fun", "\nFrom tug-of-war in Eagle, Wisconsin to badminton in Porterville, CA and from soccer in New York City to relay races in Cornish, ME, we were thrilled by the response! We hope all the fun and activity inspires your family and community to get moving too! And even though our Olympic Fun Day has passed, you can join or host a Let's Move! Meetup in your community year-round. Have a look at some of the coverage, stories, photos and tweets from events that took place around the country:", "\nFirst Lady Michelle Obama Leads Presidential Delegation to the Olympics\nPosted by Colleen Curtis on July 30, 2012\nEd note: This was originally published on whitehouse.gov First Lady Michelle Obama was in the stands on Saturday as Team USA scored its first gold medal in the 2012 Olympic Games in London. In her unofficial capacity as First Fan, Mrs. Obama had the chance to cheer on swimmer Ryan Lochte as he won the men's 400 meter individual medley.\nFirst Lady Michelle Obama Hosts Let's Move! London", "\nPosted by Marissa Duswalt, Associate Director for Policy and Events of the Lets Move! Initiative on July 27, 2012", "\nEd note: This post originally appeared on the blog at whitehouse.gov Today, First Lady Michelle Obama joined 2,000 American military children and American and British students at Let\u2019s Move! London, an event held to spread the spirit of the Olympic Games in London. The First Lady is leading the U.S. Delegation to the Summer Games and Let\u2019s Move! London was designed to turn the inspiration of the Olympic and Paralympic Games into action by encouraging kids to get moving. \u201cThat\u2019s what Let's Move is all about", "\nIt\u2019s about helping kids like you live happier, healthier lives,\u201d Mrs. Obama told the crowd gathered at the U.S. Ambassador's Residence in London. \u201cAnd that\u2019s really why we brought you all here today\u2026 because we want you to see that there all kinds of ways that you can stay active and have fun doing it. You don't have to be an Olympian. You don't have to join a team. But there are so many ways that you can have fun and keep yourselves moving.\u201d", "\nTomorrow is Let\u2019s Move! Olympic Fun Day\nPosted by Ari Isaacman Astles, Digital Strategy Analyst on July 27, 2012", "\nTo celebrate the start of the Summer Games in London, First Lady Michelle Obama is calling on communities around the country to support Team USA on Saturday, July 28, not just by cheering from the couch, but by taking inspiration from their hard work and dedication to get active. Cities, towns and organizations across America have signed on to support tomorrow's Let\u2019s Move! Olympic Fun Day with activities that promote healthy living. From a day of dancing on the National Mall in Washington, D.C", "\nto a Fitness and Nutrition Expo in Atlanta, Georgia, and from an Olympic-style relay in Bluffton, Indiana to a workout on the 3rd Street Promenade in Santa Moncia, California, there are more than 200 Let's Move! Olympic Fun Day events being planned on Meetup in more than forty states."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "letsmove.obamawhitehouse.archives.gov", "date_download": "2018-11-14T01:29:14Z", "digest": "sha1:GXDVA6FS3BONA3ZSDNJNEYOF6ZZALQX7", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 8601, 8601.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 8601, 9448.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 8601, 29.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 8601, 74.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 8601, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 8601, 235.5]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 8601, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 8601, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 8601, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 8601, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 8601, 0.35465448]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 8601, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 8601, 0.04882276]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 8601, 0.10559006]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 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47,013,551 | https://www.bw.edu/academics/undergraduate/health-physical-education/ |
Small class sizes, personalized attention and mentoring are at the core of the health and physical education major.
> Health & Physical Education
Kerry Bebie, Ph.D., Program Coordinator
Make a positive impact in helping today's youth achieve fitness and w | ["ellness. A major in health and physical education offers rewarding career opportunities.", "\nBW's program combines comprehensive coursework, theoretical study and practical experiences. You'll gain skills for effectively planning, implementing and evaluating physical education programs.", "\nThis major is designed for individuals interested in teaching health and physical education. Through BW's outstanding teacher education program, you can qualify for a multi-age (P-12) licensure in health and physical education. Graduates of the program gain the knowledge and skills to effectively teach in today's ever-changing education environment.", "\nThe broad-based curriculum includes courses in education, anatomy and physiology, exercise physiology, nutrition, human sexuality, community health, first aid and more.\nSmall class sizes, personalized attention and mentoring are at the core of the health and physical education major. You'll learn from faculty with decades of teaching experience who bring real-world perspectives into the classroom.", "\nExperiential learning bridges classroom study with real-world opportunities. BW's 20-minute proximity to Cleveland puts you within easy access to field experiences, community outreach initiatives and more.\nParticipating in professional organizations enables you to distinguish yourself early in your career. BW students won the Golden Shoe Award for the third year in a row at the 2016 Ohio Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance (OAHPERD) College Cup Competition.", "\nBW's School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. The program is approved by the Ohio Board of Regents and the State of Ohio Department of Education. BW is also a member of SHAPE America (Society of Health and Physical Educators) and the Ohio Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance.\nFour-Year Dual Licensure", "\nBW is one of a few degree programs in Ohio offering a dual licensure program that enables students to graduate in four years. Most other Ohio programs require a fifth year of study to complete two programs.\nAbout the School of HPESS\nDiscover more majors from the School of Health, Physical Education & Sport Sciences and read the HPESS newsletter for recent highlights from the school.\nRecreation director/instructor\nFitness instructor/director\nCamp counselor", "\nOffered as a major, health and physical education is a comprehensive program. It is affiliated with BW's School of Education for multi-age (P-12) licensure.", "\nThe faculty in the School of Health, Physical Education and Sport Sciences along with the School of Education are committed to a strong performance-based program of teacher education. Individuals meet a rigorous set of standards on their way to license eligibility. As a result, they perform very well on the licensure exam requirements set by the State of Ohio.", "\nStudents are encouraged to supplement their licensure with a secondary teaching area. Students interested in coaching are encouraged to complete the athletic coaching minor.", "\nBaldwin Wallace is accredited by The Higher Learning Commission (HLC), a commission of the North Central Association. Undergraduate programs in elementary, secondary and all-grades education are accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) and approved by the State of Ohio Department of Education and the National Association for Sport and Physical Education.\nThe health and physical education major prepares students to:", "\nObtain a multi-age license to teach health and physical education by successfully completing this major, the applicable requirements for licensure as outlined by the School of Education and the state licensure exams\nDemonstrate the knowledge and skills required for the planning, implementation, and evaluation of health and physical education programs for learners ages three through twenty-one and pre-kindergarten through grade twelve", "\nCourse descriptions, requirements for the major and additional information can be found in the University Catalog.\nHands-on learning is an integral part of health and physical education. Nearly all education courses and many physical education courses have planned field experiences.", "\nThis organization promotes the professional teacher education interests of traditional and non-traditional students on campus. It keeps members informed of educational activities on and off campus and of up-to-date course and state requirements. At the annual Honors Ceremony in the spring, recognitions include:\nBonnie Raye Graduate Scholarship (in honor Bonnie Raye, who taught at BW and was the women's basketball coach, 1980-89).", "\nDr. Lee J. Tressel Scholarship (in honor of Dr. Lee Tressel '48, who taught and was BW's football coach, 1957-80).\nDave R. & June Demmerle Scholarship (in honor of Dr. Dave Demmerle, who taught for 36 years and coached football/track and field).\nHower-Stover Award (in honor of Dr. Marjorie Hower, who was a professor at BW, 1947-80, and Myrta Stover, who coached and taught at BW, 1943-68).\nRecent BW Health and Physical Education majors are finding their success at:", "\nJosiah Holt \u201915, health & physical education, is a member of the Cleveland Gladiators Arena Football Team.\nBrian Ellis '12, health & physical education, is strength and conditioning assistant for the San Diego Chargers.\nTaylor Roth '11, health & physical education, is assistant basketball coach at Alfred University.\nAmy Jo Sutterluety\nAssociate Dean, Health and Physical Education\nCassandra August\nM.S., Kent State University\nKerry A. Bebie\nCharles Campisi\nPh.D., University of Minnesota\nTony Dick", "\nJaimy M. Dyer\nMegan Frank\nKaryn Gentile\nProgram Director for Athletic Training Program\nM.S., Syracuse University\nErin Sweeney Hutzelman\nM.Ed., George Mason University\nWendy Hyde\nM.Ed., Springfield College\nPh.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign\nJames Mattern\nM.S., Lock Haven University of Pennsylvania\nDale Sheptak\nD.S.Sc., University of Leicester\nElizabeth Walters\nM.S., Springfield College"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.bw.edu", "date_download": "2018-11-14T01:00:11Z", "digest": "sha1:MNQZEJY2FM55OFTS5T7IIX64RQMMV24A", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 6309, 6309.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 6309, 14349.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 6309, 60.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 6309, 458.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 6309, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 6309, 220.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 6309, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 6309, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 6309, 2.0]], 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47,013,562 | https://government.cornell.edu/news/worlds-largest-public-opinion-archive-holds-key-election-insights |
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Government Events Li | ["st\nAffiliated Programs & Resources\nDepartment Administration & Contacts\nDepartment of Government\nWorld's largest public opinion archive holds key election insights\nBy: Susan Kelley, Cornell Chronicle\nMon, 04/25/2016", "\nThis election year, the mainstream media are trying to figure out what\u2019s behind the rise of outsider presidential candidates Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders, and what voters think about immigration, a female president, terrorism, the influence of Wall Street and a host of other issues.", "\nThey will find clues to those questions and legions more at the world\u2019s largest public opinion archive, the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research. Affiliated with the Cornell Institute for Social and Economic Research, the Roper Center has 22,000 datasets from more than 100 countries dating back to 1935 that can be sliced and diced according to respondents\u2019 age, race, political party affiliation, state, gender and more", "\niPOLL, a database of more than 650,000 survey questions, gives users up-to-the-minute results from all major U.S. polls.", "\n\u201cWe are the archive for the national election exit polls, and these are very popular all the time, but especially during the election year, as people look back at earlier exit polls to understand the electorate,\u201d said Kathleen Weldon, director of member relations and communications.", "\nAdam Seth Levine, assistant professor of government, recently analyzed exit poll data to compare turnout in the 2016 and 2008 Democratic primaries and caucuses. He wrote about his findings in two articles for The Washington Post, on low voter turnout in 2016 and what factors might be driving it.", "\n\u201cThere is growing recognition that some of the major problems we face \u2013 such as political polarization here in the United States and climate change around the globe \u2013 demand the very best understanding of the opinions that people hold and why they matter. The Roper Center\u2019s on-campus resources, as well as its exciting new initiatives to bring experts from around the globe to speak on campus, are invaluable to understanding, and solving, those problems,\u201d Levine said.", "\nPeter Enns, the center\u2019s executive director and an associate professor of government, used archive data in a recent talk about the presidential election. Discussing public opinion about the economy, Enns pointed to a 1974 poll that showed most people said they had the most confidence in President Gerald Ford to when it came to handling the economy and inflation; business leaders were sixth down the ladder", "\nA similar question asked 40 years later, in 2014, flipped that response; people trusted business leaders most, with President Barack Obama coming in third.", "\n\u201cThis doesn\u2019t fully explain Donald Trump\u2019s popularity,\u201d Enns said. \u201cBut if we look at changes over time, we can start to get a sense of the political climate and how the public\u2019s mind is shifting. Without the Roper Center, we couldn\u2019t do that.\u201d", "\nUsers interested in the election also search for data about issues raised by political campaigns, Weldon said. \u201cAny time a topic enters the news, whether it\u2019s a Supreme Court nomination, immigration, healthcare or Wall Street, our users will check the database for recent and historical data to put that issue into context,\u201d she said.", "\nSimilarly, faculty and other scholars profit from the archive in a myriad of ways. Julilly Kohler-Hausmann, assistant professor of history, will use the archive to explore the relationship between the punitive crime policy, declining voter participation, and reduced faith in government during the 1970s and 1980s.. \u201cIt is amazing to have the Roper Center at Cornell as I embark on this research,\u201d she said.", "\nEnns used archive data to trace how the public\u2019s changing attitudes about punishment in the criminal justice system contributed to the rise of mass incarceration, findings he described in his 2016 book, \u201cIncarceration Nation: How the United States Became the Most Punitive Democracy in the World.\u201d", "\nIt\u2019s a notable finding, Enns said, given that most of the scholarly literature says public opinion had nothing to do with the advent of mass incarceration. \u201cIn addition to analyzing hundreds of public opinion questions from the Roper Center, I also looked at internal memos from President Richard Nixon\u2019s 1968 campaign, and they were talking about the polls and public concern with crime,\u201d he said", "\n\u201cBeing able to access of historical and contemporary public opinion polls offers a crucial window into the most critical issues of the past and today.\u201d", "\nThis article originally appeared in the Cornell Chronicle.\nWhy Trump\u2019s immigration rhetoric may not help Republicans at the polls\nGlobal Grand Challenges event to spark faculty dialogue\nUp Next for PSAC: Sonal Pandya, University of Virginia\nDefining 'the people,' expanding the vote\nBecome a Government Major\nApply to A&S\nSee the Campus\nVisit A&S\nGive to Government\nGovernment is a diverse and inclusive department. Twitter 214 White Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853607-255-3549 \u2022 [email protected]", "\nIf you have a disability and are having trouble accessing information on this website or need materials in an alternate format\ncontact [email protected] for assistance."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "government.cornell.edu", "date_download": "2018-11-14T00:53:39Z", "digest": "sha1:K7FW375ETQE2YOHRWLN43G73MEPSXD5C", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 5438, 5438.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 5438, 6083.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 5438, 39.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 5438, 73.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 5438, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 5438, 301.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 5438, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 5438, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 5438, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 5438, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 5438, 0.35546875]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 5438, 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47,013,564 | https://dr.ntu.edu.sg/handle/10220/13317 |
School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences (SPMS)
SPMS Journal Articles
Photoinduced phase transition and relaxation in bare SrTiO3 single crystals.
Photoinduced phase transition and relaxation in bare SrTiO3 single crystals.pdf (838.9Kb)
Jin, K. X.
Luo | [", B. C.\nLi, Y. F.\nChen, C. L.\nWu, T.\nSchool of Physical and Mathematical Sciences", "\nThe photoinduced insulator-metal phase transition and relaxation characteristics have been investigated in bare SrTiO3 single crystals. The photoinduced relaxation time constant after the irradiation shows an increase with increasing temperatures. The SrTiO3 single crystal has a cutoff wavelength and an absorption edge of spectrum at about 385\u2009nm, which agrees well with the band gap. The photocurrent responsivity is 1.36\u2009\u00d7\u200910\u22125\u2009A/W at 300\u2009nm wavelength", "\nThe relative change in resistance is more than above six orders at room temperature, possessing potential applications in ultraviolet sensitive and detecting devices", "\n\u00a9 2013 AIP Publishing LLC. This paper was published in Journal of Applied Physics and is made available as an electronic reprint (preprint) with permission of AIP Publishing LLC. The paper can be found at the following official DOI: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4815950]. One print or electronic copy may be made for personal use only", "\nSystematic or multiple reproduction, distribution to multiple locations via electronic or other means, duplication of any material in this paper for a fee or for commercial purposes, or modification of the content of the paper is prohibited and is subject to penalties under law."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "dr.ntu.edu.sg", "date_download": "2018-11-14T01:15:14Z", "digest": "sha1:YKDUHFZXE24MW632U52IBPLWYEOBHCHC", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1612, 1612.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1612, 2928.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1612, 13.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1612, 63.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1612, 0.89]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1612, 312.0]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1612, 0.26031746]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1612, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1612, 0.17351598]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1612, 0.14764079]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1612, 0.08828006]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1612, 0.08828006]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1612, 0.08828006]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1612, 0.03652968]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1612, 0.04109589]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1612, 0.06392694]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1612, 0.05714286]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1612, 0.23809524]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1612, 0.61764706]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1612, 5.5210084]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1612, 4.73037588]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1612, 238.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 74, 0.0], [74, 151, 1.0], [151, 241, 0.0], [241, 252, 1.0], [252, 263, 1.0], [263, 273, 1.0], [273, 285, 1.0], [285, 292, 1.0], [292, 337, 0.0], [337, 961, 0.0], [961, 1577, 1.0], [1577, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 74, 0.0], [74, 151, 0.0], [151, 241, 0.0], [241, 252, 0.0], [252, 263, 0.0], [263, 273, 0.0], [273, 285, 0.0], [285, 292, 0.0], [292, 337, 0.0], [337, 961, 0.0], [961, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 52, 7.0], [52, 74, 3.0], [74, 151, 10.0], [151, 241, 11.0], [241, 252, 3.0], [252, 263, 3.0], [263, 273, 3.0], [273, 285, 3.0], [285, 292, 2.0], [292, 337, 6.0], [337, 961, 90.0], [961, 1577, 96.0], [1577, 1612, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 74, 0.0], [74, 151, 0.01333333], [151, 241, 0.05882353], [241, 252, 0.0], [252, 263, 0.0], [263, 273, 0.0], [273, 285, 0.0], [285, 292, 0.0], [292, 337, 0.0], [337, 961, 0.0228013], [961, 1577, 0.03035413], [1577, 1612, 0.53846154]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 52, 0.0], [52, 74, 0.0], [74, 151, 0.0], [151, 241, 0.0], [241, 252, 0.0], [252, 263, 0.0], [263, 273, 0.0], [273, 285, 0.0], [285, 292, 0.0], [292, 337, 0.0], [337, 961, 0.0], [961, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 52, 0.15384615], [52, 74, 0.27272727], [74, 151, 0.05194805], [151, 241, 0.05555556], [241, 252, 0.27272727], [252, 263, 0.27272727], [263, 273, 0.3], [273, 285, 0.25], [285, 292, 0.28571429], [292, 337, 0.08888889], [337, 961, 0.02083333], [961, 1577, 0.03896104], [1577, 1612, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1612, 0.02257586]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1612, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1612, 0.39953452]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1612, -136.49968364]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1612, -46.81880479]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1612, -32.60836125]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1612, 31.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
47,013,572 | https://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/16/world/asia/new-chinese-leader-offers-few-hints-of-a-shift-in-direction.html?_r=0 |
Asia Pacific|A Promise to Tackle China’s Problems, but Few Hints of a Shift in Path
https://nyti.ms/U1Mz0f
Asia Pacific | News Analysis
A Promise to Tackle China’s Problems, but Few Hints of a Shift in Path
By IAN JOHNSON NOV. 15, 2012
Xi Jinping, China’s | [" new leader, called on his party to fight corruption and promised to continue the country\u2019s \u201crejuvenation.\u201d Credit Feng Li/Getty Images", "\nBEIJING \u2014 China\u2019s new leader, Xi Jinping, impressed many people with a plain-spoken promise to address problems in the country\u2019s ruling party on Thursday, but his new leadership team offered few clues as to a clear shift in direction.", "\nMr. Xi, who formally took over from Hu Jintao as general secretary of the Communist Party on Thursday, was presented to foreign and domestic reporters after a highly scripted party congress intended mainly to laud the work of Mr. Hu and set very broad priorities for Mr. Xi\u2019s tenure.\nAccording to tradition, Mr. Xi appeared onstage the day after the congress ended with other members of the party\u2019s Politburo Standing Committee, the seven-member body that effectively runs China.", "\nMr. Xi then gave a speech on live television that avoided most of the slogans that characterized Mr. Hu\u2019s recent addresses. In fact, he did not mention Mr. Hu or any of his predecessors, instead calling on the party to fight corruption and promising to continue China\u2019s \u201crejuvenation.\u201d", "\n\u201cInside the party, there are many problems that need to be addressed, especially the problems among party members and officials of corruption and taking bribes, being out of touch with the people, undue emphasis on formalities and bureaucracy and other issues,\u201d Mr. Xi said.", "\nHe also pledged to improve citizens\u2019 lives, including offering \u201cbetter schooling, more stable jobs, more satisfying incomes, more reliable social security, higher levels of health care, more comfortable housing conditions and a more beautiful environment,\u201d so they can \u201clook forward to their children growing up in better circumstances, finding better work and living in better conditions.\u201d\n\u201cPeople\u2019s striving for a better life is the goal we are struggling for,\u201d he added.", "\nReflecting his upbringing as the son of a high-ranking official in Beijing, Mr. Xi spoke in clear Mandarin Chinese, making him one of the first modern Chinese leaders whose speech does not bear the heavy accents of an upbringing in one of China\u2019s provinces.", "\nMr. Xi takes office with more titular authority than any Chinese leader in history. He will now be the chief of the ruling Communist Party and will take over sooner than expected from Mr. Hu as the chairman of the Central Military Commission, the top overseer of China\u2019s armed forces. Next spring, he will assume the position of state president. Other leaders in the post-Mao era have had more staggered transitions into the top posts.", "\nEven so, Mr. Xi will have to contend with numerous other well-connected princelings, or sons and daughters of influential past leaders, and a factionalized Communist Party that tends to operate by consensus rather than strongman rule. He is unlikely to have the sweeping authority of Mao Zedong or Deng Xiaoping.", "\nAlthough Mr. Xi\u2019s appointment has been expected since 2007, when he was essentially named Mr. Hu\u2019s successor, it was the first chance for the Chinese to see him in action. Li Zhong, a retired county leader in Hebei Province who served there at the same time as Mr. Xi in the early 1980s, noted that Mr. Xi had not repeated many of Mr. Hu\u2019s slogans.", "\nPassengers on a Shanghai subway on Thursday watch Xi Jinping deliver his first speech as China\u2019s new leader. Credit Peter Parks/Agence France-Presse \u2014 Getty Images\n\u201cInstead, he stressed the party\u2019s responsibilities to the masses and the heroism of the people, as well as the need to root out corruption in the party,\u201d Mr. Li said. \u201cHe was very frank and showed his consideration for the people.\u201d", "\nHis speech was also widely discussed on China\u2019s social media sites, which largely reflect an educated urban population.\nHe Bing of the China University of Political Science and Law in Beijing wrote on the Weibo microblog, \u201cHe speaks with a human touch.\u201d\nOthers were more critical.", "\n\u201cI read Xi\u2019s speech,\u201d Jian Heng, a guest professor at Shantou University in Guangdong Province, wrote on Weibo. \u201cHe mentioned the word \u2018party\u2019 20 times; \u2018people\u2019 appeared 19 times; \u2018responsibility\u2019 was said 10 times and \u2018problems\u2019 3 times. Didn\u2019t use anything related to law. No \u2018law,\u2019 no \u2018constitution,\u2019 no \u2018rule of law\u2019 nor \u2018democracy,\u2019 no \u2018freedom.\u2019 \u201d", "\nNo one can know for sure whether Mr. Xi favors fundamental political changes of that kind \u2014 he has given no clear indication that he does. What is clear is that his fellow members of the Standing Committee are longtime party veterans whose track records provide no evidence of a strong impulse to change the way China is governed, and whose ages mean they will probably have relatively short careers in the country\u2019s top ruling body.", "\nMr. Xi is 59 and his No. 2, Li Keqiang, who is expected to take control of the bureaucratic apparatus of government as prime minister next spring, is 57. But the other five members are all in their mid-60s. Under the party\u2019s internal rules, that means they are all likely to retire at the next party congress in five years. Given the intensely consuming task of negotiating top leadership slots among competing factions, finding suitable replacements for these five could take up much of Mr", "\nThe other members of the Standing Committee are Zhang Dejiang, 65; Liu Yunshan, 65; Wang Qishan, 64; Yu Zhengsheng, 67; and Zhang Gaoli, 65.\n\u201cThis is quite a mediocre lineup, and we\u2019ll have to wait and see what they do,\u201d said Pu Zhiqiang, a Beijing-based lawyer who often handles human rights cases. \u201cThe way of Chinese politics means that their past performances don\u2019t show what they\u2019ll do in the future.\u201d", "\nAnother problem is that the leadership reflects the strong hand of Mr. Hu\u2019s predecessor, Jiang Zemin. Although Mr. Jiang, 86, retired a decade ago, he has close ties with at least four of the seven members. That means he was able to override Mr. Hu and place his people in top slots even though he has no formal position in the party.", "\n\u201cThe bad news from looking at the political system is that it really seems to have thrown a wrench in our understanding of institutionalization,\u201d said Joseph Fewsmith, a professor at Boston University who specializes in Chinese politics. \u201cThis whole institutional idea that people retire and then don\u2019t play much of a role seems to have been pretty well demolished.\u201d", "\nMr. Xi did keep one tradition, however. Like Mr. Hu, who gave almost no interviews to foreign reporters during his 10 years in office, Mr. Xi left without taking any questions from the scores of waiting journalists.\nJonathan Ansfield contributed reporting. Shi Da contributed research.", "\nA version of this news analysis appears in print on November 16, 2012, on Page A19 of the New York edition with the headline: A Promise to Tackle China\u2019s Problems, but Few Hints of a Shift in Path. Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe\nChina\u2019s New Leadership: Full Coverage\nIn China, a New Beginning NOV. 15, 2012\nThe Politburo\u2019s Growing Number of Influential Leaders NOV. 15, 2012\nThe New Members of China\u2019s Ruling Body NOV. 14, 2012\nChanging of the Guard in China NOV. 7, 2012", "\nEnding Congress, China Presents New Leadership Headed by Xi Jinping NOV. 14, 2012\nCorruption in China Military Poses Test NOV. 14, 2012\nOpinion Op-Ed Contributor\nBeijing\u2019s Dangerous Self-Protection NOV. 15, 2012\nOpinion Patrick Chappatte\nChina\u2019s New Leader, Xi Jinping NOV. 15, 2012"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nytimes.com", "date_download": "2018-11-14T00:07:31Z", "digest": "sha1:TWV2OFBQJ4MGOOP6OO6G4EQA7UHNS5BG", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 7646, 7646.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 7646, 10984.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 7646, 43.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 7646, 202.0]], 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\"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 7646, -341.91730273]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 7646, 264.63240704]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 7646, -227.84953104]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 7646, 86.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,690 | http://now.dartmouth.edu/2013/03/happy-birthday-dr-seuss-american-public-media/ |
Happy Birthday, Dr. Seuss (American Public Media) Posted on March 4, 2013 American Public Media takes note March 2 of the birthday of Dr. Seuss, otherwise known as Theodor “Ted” Geisel, considered by many the most beloved children’s book writer in history | [". Geisel, a Dartmouth graduate of the Class of 1925, died in 1991.", "\nGeisel, who majored in English while an undergraduate at Dartmouth, holds the record among best-selling children\u2019s book writers, American Public Media notes, and is famous for revolutionizing the way children learned to read with The Cat in the Hat and his many other books.\nIn April 2012, the Dartmouth Medical School was renamed The Audrey and Theodor Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, in honor of Audrey and Theodor Geisel.", "\nRead the full story, published 3/2/13 in American Public Media\u2019s The Writer\u2019s Almanac With Garrison Keillor.\nCategories: In the News\tTags: Alumni \u2022 Books \u2022 Dr. Seuss \u2022 Geisel School of Medicine \u2022 Theodor Geisel\tAbout"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "now.dartmouth.edu", "date_download": "2014-04-16T19:26:55Z", "digest": "sha1:O7AKVF3V5MFFNZNFJTO2LA2JDO6GKZMT", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 971, 971.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 971, 2691.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 971, 5.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 971, 70.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 971, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 971, 178.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 971, 0.26865672]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 971, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 971, 0.07142857]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 971, 0.07270408]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 971, 0.05612245]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 971, 0.23383085]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 971, 0.58125]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 971, 4.9]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 971, 4.22891879]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 971, 160.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 322, 1.0], [322, 597, 1.0], [597, 755, 1.0], [755, 864, 1.0], [864, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 322, 0.0], [322, 597, 0.0], [597, 755, 0.0], [755, 864, 0.0], [864, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 322, 54.0], [322, 597, 44.0], [597, 755, 26.0], [755, 864, 16.0], [864, 971, 20.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 322, 0.04530744], [322, 597, 0.0], [597, 755, 0.02597403], [755, 864, 0.03846154], [864, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 322, 0.0], [322, 597, 0.0], [597, 755, 0.0], [755, 864, 0.0], [864, 971, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 322, 0.06521739], [322, 597, 0.03272727], [597, 755, 0.09493671], [755, 864, 0.09174312], [864, 971, 0.13084112]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 971, 1.442e-05]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 971, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 971, 0.01225257]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 971, -102.44329526]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 971, -21.73922843]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 971, -6.16385246]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 971, 9.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,691 | http://nps.edu/About/News/Aviator-Dick-Rutan-Tells-of-Record-Breaking-Flight-Aboard-the-Voyager.html |
About NPS
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Graduate School of Operational & Information Science | ["s (GSOIS)\nSchool of International Graduate Studies (SIGS)\nModeling, Virtual Enviroments, and Simulation (MOVES) Institute\nWayne E. Meyer Institute of Systems Engineering\nCebrowski Institute\nCenter for Materials Research\nAOCOE\nDRCSI\nCRUSER", "\nCivilian Institutions Programs Office Executive Education\nNPS Energy Academic Group\nProvost's Bio\nChief of Staff's Bio\nOther Leadership\nFleet & Family\nRules and SOPs\nMWR\nPolice & Emergencies\nNPS PAO NPS Monterey Housing\nAviator Dick Rutan Tells of Record-Breaking Flight Aboard the Voyager\tNPS > About NPS", "\n> News Article By: Amanda Stein In early April, renowned aviator and retired Air Force Lt. Col. Richard Glenn \u201cDick\u201d Rutan spoke to a packed audience in the MAE Auditorium at NPS about his time in the Armed Forces and his record-breaking flight around the world", "\nRutan made aviation history in 1986 when he flew the first non-stop flight around the world alongside Jeana Yeager aboard the Voyager, an airplane designed by his brother Burt Rutan, and built by Burt, Dick and Jeana.On December 14, 1986, the Voyager took off from Edwards Air Force Base and returned to the same airport nine days, three minutes and 44 seconds later, without stopping to refuel", "\nThe team traveled 24,986 miles, breaking the distance record of 12,532 miles previously held by a B-52 Stratofortress bomber", "\nThe flight secured their place in aviation history, and earned the Voyager a spot in the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum, where the record-setting aircraft is on permanent display.With a passion for flying that was ignited as a child, Rutan spoke about his time in the Air Force during the Vietnam War, and the code of conduct that has stuck with him since his retirement from the service. \u201cI still remember what it said: \u2018I\u2019m an American fighting man", "\nAnd I serve in the force, which guards my country and my way of life. And I am willing to give my life in their defense.\u2019\u201d He added, \u201cWhat a profound statement. What a huge meaning that is", "\nThat you are willing to give your life for the flag, for your liberty, and for what it means.\u201d Rutan took his oath to heart and flew over 100 high-risk classified missions, and was even shot down over North Vietnam in 1968.After 20 years of service, 325 missions, and being awarded the Silver Star, five Distinguished Flying Crosses, 16 Air Medals and a Purple Heart, Rutan retired from the Air Force in 1978 and joined his younger brother\u2019s aircraft company, Rutan Aircraft Factory, in Mojave, Calif", "\nWith few safety regulations and restrictions for aviation in the early 80s, the barren high desert proved to be a great place to try new things and push the boundaries of design and performance.It was there that Dick\u2019s brother Burt had established himself as an innovative aircraft designer, and thrived on doing the seemingly impossible. \u201cMy brother, he is a visionary. He is a consummate designer, thinking, trying to do something different,\u201d said Rutan", "\n\u201cOne of his faults is that he won\u2019t do anything that anyone else has done. Whether it\u2019s better than what [someone else] did or not, it\u2019s gotta be different.\u201dIt was no surprise then when Yeager and the Rutan brothers were out to lunch together one day in 1980 and Burt brought up the idea of building a plane that could fly non-stop around the world", "\nA quick sketch on a napkin was the start of a six-year project that took over 50 volunteers and dozens of private donations to see to fruition.Burt designed the plane, with a 110-ft. wingspan and 17 fuel tanks. \u201cI laid up every single strand of carbon fiber on that airplane personally. I thought if this thing breaks or if there\u2019s a mistake made in the structure, when the airplane is spinning in, there will be only one person to blame, and that will be myself,\u201d said Rutan", "\n\u201cBesides that, we didn\u2019t have any money to hire anybody.\u201d Designed for maximum fuel efficiency, there were doubts about the structural integrity of an aircraft weighing only 939lbs (unloaded) and carrying 7,011lbs of fuel. After two years of construction, the Voyager began extensive test flights.With every ounce of weight being accounted for, the team was forced to cut out any excess fuel or material that might weigh the plane down", "\n\u201cThere was a big argument between my brother and I about the amount of fuel. I thought he was too conservative and I ordered 300 more pounds of fuel be put aboard the plane. It increased the risk in getting airborne, but I thought it was a greater risk to run out of fuel in Mexico and have to do the whole darn thing over again", "\nI wanted the darn thing over with.\u201dAfter a mishap on a test run left the cabin filled with fuel fumes, Rutan landed safely and wondered if he would ever see the Voyager complete the trip around the world. \u201cI landed, I got out of the airplane, and I thought: It\u2019s gonna take us a year to fix this. I\u2019ve got another year to live.\u201d He said, \u201cI really, honestly thought that I would die in this airplane", "\nI didn\u2019t think that there was any way it could fly ten days without a major malfunction of the airplane itself. We had no backups for anything. Everything had to be absolutely ultralight.\u201dThe weight factor also forced the team to equip the plane with minimal safety gear, should they need to jump to safety. The plane held two small pouches with an inflatable navy life raft and parachutes that were barely adequate for a safe water landing", "\nFlexible wings and rough handling also added to the stress of flying the Voyager. \u201cThe airplane was really a handful to fly,\u201d said Rutan, \u201cI hated flying it. In fact, I loathed flying it.\u201dAfter 68 test flights and 360 hours in the air, the weather team gave the go-ahead and the crew scrambled to get everything ready for takeoff. On December 14, 1986, the Voyager took off to circumnavigate the globe", "\nWith limited resources and a heightened sense of anxiety, Rutan and Yeager got little sleep in the cramped cabin space and the controls needed constant attention to correct it if the plane started to gallop. Set on a route largely determined by the weather, they maintained an average altitude of 11,000 ft, and kept a sharp eye for cumulus clouds that threatened to tear the wings off of their fragile plane. \u201cEvery time the sun would come up, I was totally amazed that we were still flying", "\nWe\u2019re little homebuilders. We\u2019re not a government, space program, or some multi-billion dollar contract going on out there. We\u2019re just a couple of homebuilders with this hokey little airplane,\u201d said Rutan. \u201cWe had done it, and I absolutely could not believe it. It was actually successful.\u201dAfter nearly nine days in the air, Rutan prepared to touch down at Edwards Air Force Base for the successful end to what he long expected to be the final flight of his life", "\nWith only 18 gallons of fuel remaining, a few wing tips missing, a broken fuel pump and a dehydrated and exhausted crew, the Voyager had covered 24, 986 miles in 9 days. Upon completing the monumental flight, Rutan and Yeager were flooded with offers for interviews, endorsements and opportunities. Not expecting any attention, let alone attention of this magnitude, they were ill prepared for big corporations looking to take advantage of them and to monopolize on the Voyager story", "\nCourt battles ensued, but for Rutan, knowing that they had succeeded was enough of a reward.\u201cThe airplane hangs in the National Air and Space Museum as a tribute to free spirit. If you can dream it, you can do it if you\u2019ve got enough guts to try it. Anytime I feel sorry for myself, I walk into the museum and I look up at that airplane, and realize that we built it.\u201d He said, \u201cI built that son of a gun, and I flew it around the world. And that\u2019s the only thing that matters", "\nAnd that\u2019s the only thing that those attorneys and those agents couldn\u2019t steal from us. And that turned out to be the only thing that was worth a darn. And that\u2019s the Voyager story.\u201dPosted 4/14/2010.\tThis is an official U.S. Navy website. All information contained herein has been approved for release by the NPS Public Affairs Officer. 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48,105,693 | http://sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mwmuseum/index.php/Lawrence,_James_Roland |
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Lawrence, James Roland
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Jump to: navigation, search James Lawrence, Photo courtesy of the Royal Australasian College of Physicians | ["MM ad eundem gradum 2001 MB BS (Adel) 1954 Hon D Med Sc (USM) FACP (Hon) FRCPE", "\nJames (Jim) Lawrence was the inaugural Director of the Renal Unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in 1964. In this capacity, he was a leader in the first successful renal transplant in Australia. He was Founding Director of the Australian Kidney Foundation. Jim was born in Mt Gambier, South Australia in 1930. He studied medicine at the University of Adelaide and graduated in 1954, after which he became Resident Medical Officer at the Royal Adelaide Hospital and the Adelaide Children\u2019s Hospital", "\nHe worked as a Lecturer in Pathology at the University of Adelaide in 1956 and as a Medical Registrar at the Royal Adelaide Hospital in 1957. A year later, he was a Barker Research Fellow in the University of Adelaide\u2019s Department of Medicine.", "\nJim made the decision to specialise in the emerging field of renal medicine in the late 1950s. This was \u201ca case of good timing because artificial kidneys had just become available, transplants were occurring, and kidney biopsies and immunology were unravelling renal disease\u201d.[1] Jim obtained a scholarship from the Royal Australasian College of Physicians to undertake renal medicine research in Chicago, and from 1958 to 1959 he was a Research Assistant and Fellow at the University of Illinois", "\nMoving to the United Kingdom in 1961, Jim was a Research Fellow in the Department of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh and then in the Medical Unit of University College Hospital Medical School in London.", "\nHe returned to Adelaide in 1964 as Director of the new Renal Unit at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital. He was offered this position at the young age of 33 \u201cbecause at the time there weren\u2019t many senior doctors who knew much about the new specialty of kidney disease\u201d.[1] In this capacity in 1965, he was part of the first team in Australia to perform a successful renal transplant", "\nHe established a renal unit providing care of end-stage renal failure using newly developed long-term dialysis, and in 1965 the first successful renal transplant in Australia was performed in the Unit. The Unit introduced the concepts of integrated multidisciplinary team care, and embarked on collaborative studies of newly recognised renal disease based on renal biopsy and immunology as well as analgesic nephropathy. National networks were built for transplant donor exchange and tissue typing", "\nJim and his interstate colleagues worked to establish the new medical specialty in Australia and New Zealand, and for many years attracted outstanding academic and clinical trainees in renal medicine from across Australia and Southeast Asia. His energy and leadership saw him elected as founding Vice President, and then President of the Australian and New Zealand Society of Nephrology 1966 to 1970. Australia made major contributions to the rapidly evolving field of renal disease and its management", "\nAs a founding Director of the Australian Kidney Foundation, Jim served on the Board from 1983 to 1999 and was Vice president from 1983 to 1999.", "\nIn 1976, he was appointed Professor of Medicine at the University of Sydney and Foundation Chair at the Repatriation General Hospital, Concord, which he remained until 1997. As an enthusiastic teacher and leader he played a major role in establishing the Clinical School at CRGH, together with his Academic and Staff Specialist colleagues. From 1988 to 1991, he was Head of the Department of Medicine at the University of Sydney.", "\nJim was active in the Royal Australasian College of Physicians, as Censor from 1967 to 1979, Councillor for eight years from 1980, and Chairman and Honorary Director of the Board of Continuing Education 1981 to 1988. He was a Member of the Asian Pacific Committee from 1981 to 2001 and convened the Scientific Program RACP International Golden Jubilee Meeting.", "\nLawrence made a particular contribution to the evolution of more modern integrated undergraduate and post graduate teaching and assessment in the Faculty. In 1977, he became a Member of the University\u2019s Postgraduate Committee in Medicine, and was Honorary Director from 1989 to 2000. Since its inception in 1978 and until 2000, he convened the Basic Physician Training Program, the Committee\u2019s flagship course", "\nHis role in continuing education also extended to the Australian Postgraduate Federation in Medicine, of which between 1980 and 2001, he served as Councillor, Vice President, and President. He was a member of the NSW Postgraduate Medical Council from 1989 to 1994.", "\nBetween 1992 and 1998, Jim was Deputy Chair of the Academic Board and Chair of the Committee for Graduate Studies at the University of Sydney. A tribute to Jim and his contribution in these roles was given at his last Academic Board meeting in 1998:", "\n\u2026 Jim Lawrence has so unstintingly and generously given of his time, experience, unfailing tact and wisdom to the collegial life and good governance of the University\u2026 As Chair of the Graduate Studies Committee for seven years, Jim Lawrence has been committed to both ensuring that our graduate students are nourished and cherished and that the degrees with which they graduate have the highest possible currency", "\nIn this position, Jim also developed the Postgraduate Studies Handbook and instituted the program for supervisor training in collaboration with the Centre for Teaching and Learning. He oversaw the enhancement of the postgraduate review process and was responsible for the selection of examiners in consultation and assessment of appeals. His time as Chair was one of reform and resulted in increased accountability of supervisors and standards across all Faculties", "\nThroughout his career Jim has been an effective member of numerous other Faculty and University committees. He was Associate Dean of the Undergraduate Medical Program and International affairs from 1995 to 2001. In 1985, under the auspices of IDP, he began an association with University Sains Malaysia and for 10 years from 1995, was Senior Consultant Advisor to the USMUS (University Sains Malaysia, University of Sydney) postgraduate exchange education program", "\nIn 2005, Jim was recognised for his contribution to the growth of the School of Medical Sciences in USM with the award of an Honorary Doctorate", "\nFrom 1998 Jim was a Visiting Professor of Medicine at Canterbury Hospital for two years, and Visiting Professor (Physician Education) at Westmead Hospital for four years. Between 2000 and 2004, he was a member of the Academic Council International Medical University, Malaysia", "\nJim was made an Officer of the Order of Australia for \u201cservice to medical education and to nephrology\u201d in 1993.[1] In 2002 he was appointed Emeritus Professor in the Faculty of Medicine and remains active within the University of Sydney. LinksAlumni Record", "\nCitation: Mellor, Lise (2008) Lawrence, James Roland. Faculty of Medicine Online Museum and Archive, University of Sydney.\nAn alternate version appears in: Mellor, L. 150 Years, 150 Firsts: The People of the Faculty of Medicine (2006) Sydney, Sydney University Press.\nRetrieved from \"http://sydney.edu.au/medicine/museum/mwmuseum/index.php/Lawrence,_James_Roland\"", "\nCategories: People in Nephrology | Male | 1960 to 1980 | Biographies | Alumni biographies\t\u00a9 2002-14 The University of Sydney, NSW 2006 Australia. Phone: +61 2 9351 2222. ABN: 15 211 513 464. CRICOS Number: 00026A.\nAuthorised by: Executive Officer, Sydney Medical School. 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48,105,694 | http://www.ars.usda.gov/research/projects/projects.htm?ACCN_NO=411687&showpars=true&fy=2009 |
Project Team Castlebury, Lisa Crouch, Joanne Vacant, Rl, Project Annual Reports 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 Project Publications Publications Related National Programs Plant Diseases (303) ARS Office of International Research Programs ARS Office of Internati | ["onal Research Programs Regional Contacts ARS Food Security Research ARS International Research Partnerships ARS Biosecurity Engagement Research Research Project: SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY OF INVASIVE AND EMERGING PLANT PATHOGENIC FUNGI", "\nCharacterize and analyze phylogenetic relationships for important disease-causing basidiomycetes with emphasis on smut and bunt fungi on cultivated grains and turf grasses, and rust fungi as pathogens of crops. Characterize and analyze phylogenetic relationships of ascomycetous pathogens based on morphological and molecular characteristics with emphasis on canker and related anthracnose fungi causing diseases of tree fruit crops and forest trees.", "\nSmut and bunt fungi associated with turf grasses, cultivated grains, and weedy plants in the genera Tilletia, Ustilago, and Urocystis will be collected, cultured and characterized with morphological and molecular data. A wide range of rusts on weedy and crop plant hosts will be collected and characterized with DNA sequence data in order to determine both higher-level relationships and species relationships. Taxon-specific PCR primers will be developed for genes of interest when necessary", "\nFor both rusts and smuts PCR will be performed to amplify ribosomal and protein-coding genes, including ITS, LSU, SSU, EF1-alpha, and RNA polymerase gene regions. Species concepts will be defined based on multi-gene phylogenetic trees and morphological data when possible. Fungal pathogens of tropical hosts will be characterized with molecular data and ribosomal gene regions will be used to determine their relationships", "\nSequence data will be used to develop rapid methods for identification and correlated with morphological data when available. Diaporthalean taxa, including Diaporthe-Phomopsis and Valsa-Cytospora and taxa in the Nectria family of the Hypocreales will be collected and characterized morphologically. PCR will be performed to amplify ribosomal and protein-coding genes, including ITS, LSU, SSU, EF1-alpha, and RNA polymerase gene regions", "\nSpecies concepts will be defined based on multi-gene phylogenetic trees in combination with morphological data. As new pathogens in these groups emerge, species previously unknown to science yet related to known pathogens in these groups will be described, illustrated and characterized. Taxonomic monographs will be published and made available as online resources.", "\nThis research uses molecular and morphological approaches to classify and characterize taxonomically difficult groups of disease-causing fungi. Agricultural crops and forest trees are threatened by fungal pathogens that cause over $20 billion damage each year. Rust and bunt fungi are relatively unstudied especially using molecular approaches to understand species-level relationships. Similarly, canker and anthracnose diseases caused by ascomycetes are relatively unknown", "\nAs new pathogens in these groups emerge, often they represent species that were previously unknown to science", "\nCharacterizing and defining relationships of new and emerging diseases in these groups of plant pathogenic fungi are essential for accurate identification in order to control the diseases these fungi cause, to breed for resistance, and to alleviate potential plant quarantine including import/export issues.The bunt fungi in the genus Tilletia are an important but poorly known group of plant pathogens", "\nResearch is continuing in collaboration with a scientist at Washington State University to discover, describe and phylogenetically characterize the bunt fungi on cereal crops in the United States.Research on canker causing fungi has resulted in monographic accounts of several genera as well as a number of newly discovered species. A paper on the leaf-inhabiting genera was published. Research is continuing on the wood-inhabiting species with a number of additional taxa discovered", "\nResearch to define the genera within this family has been completed. The new generic concepts are based on a classification determined by the analyses of sequences from several genes. The redefined genera include those species related to the type species. In most cases the traditional definition of the genus based on characters of ascospore septation and stromatal features must be altered", "\nNew and subtle morphological characters as well as host plant are used to define these genera.Research on canker-causing fungus in the Hypocreales has progressed with a monographic account of the genus Nectria soon to be submitted for publication. Several new fungal pathogens in the United States have been discovered and reported. Japanese apple rust was discovered for the first time in the mid-Atlantic states. Research on this group of rust fungi is progressing", "\nAlso, new parasitic fungi on the biofuel switchgrass and sugarcane were identified and reported.", "\nJapanese apple rust discovered in eastern United States. Rust fungi are a large and diverse group of parasites that attack crop and forest plants. Accurate knowledge of the distribution of rusts is important for tracking the movement of these disease-causing fungi. In this research a rust fungus that infects apples and other plants in the same genus was discovered for the first time in the North America. The rust was observed on leaves of crab apple in Delaware and Pennsylvania", "\nUntil now, this rust species was known only from Asia. Knowledge of the distribution of plant pathogenic fungi is useful to agronomists and plant pathologists as well as plant regulatory and quarantine officials.", "\nMonograph of leaf-blight fungi related to chestnut blight. Fungi are a group of organisms that cause billions of dollars damage to agricultural and forest resources in the United States each year. One group of fungi includes the species that caused chestnut blight in the eastern United States killing all of the chestnut trees. In this research leaf-blight fungi are described and illustrated in a family related to chestnut blight fungi. A key for identification is provided", "\nRelationships between these species were determined based on DNA sequences. Many of these species occur on hardwood trees in North America and cause serious anthracnose diseases. This paper will be used by forest pathologists to determine the fungi that cause diseases on hardwood trees.", "\nNew parasitic fungi reported on biofuel switchgrass. Switchgrass is a fast-growing plant that is being considered for large-scale production as a source of biofuels. Knowledge of the plant pathogens that cause diseases of this plant is limited. In growing a wide range of switchgrass in Texas and Tennessee, two parasitic diseases were discovered not previously known to those regions. One is a rust fungus to which all cultivars are susceptible", "\nThe other is a bunt fungus that completely replaces the host seed tissue. These fungi were sequenced to determine their accurate identification. This research will be used by plant pathologists who are developing strategies to control the disease caused by these parasitic fungi.", "\nCarris, L.M., Castlebury, L.A. 2008. The first report of the Rye Smut, Tilletia secalis, from North America. North American Fungi. 3(7):147-159.\nRossman, A.Y. 2008. The impact of invasive fungi on agricultural ecosystems\nBiological Invasions. 92:1376-1386.\nThomas, S.E., Crozier, J., Aime, M.C., Evans, H.C., Holmes, K.A. 2008. Molecular characterization of fungal endophytic morphospecies associated with the indigenous forest tree, Theobroma gileri in Ecuador. Mycological Research. 112:852-860.", "\nFreshour, L., Agarwal, S., Sorochan, J., Zale, J., Ownley, B., Gwinn, K., Castlebury, L.A., Carris, L.M. 2008. First report of Puccinia emaculata on switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) in Tennessee. Plant Disease. 92:1710.\nYun, H., Minnis, A., Rossman, A.Y. 2009. First report of Gymnosporangium yamadae, Japanese apple rust, on Malus from North America. Plant Disease. 93:430.", "\nSogonov, M.V., Castlebury, L.A., Rossman, A.Y., Mejia, L.C., White, J.F. 2008. Leaf-inhabiting Genera of the Gnomoniaceae, Diaporthales. Studies in Mycology. 62:1-79.\nCarris, L.M., Castlebury, L.A., Zale, J. 2008. First report of Tilletia pulcherrima on switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) in Texas. Plant Disease. 92:1707.\nYun, H., Rossman, A.Y., Byrne, J. 2009. First report of Gymnosporangium sabinae, European pear rust, on Bradford pear in Michigan. Plant Disease. 93(8):841.", "\nDe Silva, H., Castlebury, L.A., Green, S., Stone, J.K. 2009. The phylogenetic relationship between Anisogramma virgultorum and A. anomala within the Diaporthales (Ascomycota). Mycological Research. 113:73-81.\nCline, E., Rossman, A.Y. 2007. Septoria malagutii sp. nov., cause of annular leaf spot of potato. Mycotaxon. 98:125-135.", "\nSchoch, C., Blackwell, M., Bonito, G., Castlebury, L.A., Crous, P., Geiser, D., Lutzoni, F., O Donnell, K., Rossman, A.Y., Spatafora, J. 2009. The Ascomycota tree of life: A phylum wide phylogeny clarifies the origin and evolution of fundamental reproductive and ecological traits. Systematic Biology. 58(2):224-239. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syp020. Chavarria, E., Subiros, F., Vega, J., Ralda, G., Glynn, N.C., Comstock, J.C., Castlebury, L.A. 2009", "\nFirst report of Orange Rust of Sugarcane Caused by Puccinia kuehnii in Costa Rica and Nicaragua. Plant Dis. 93:425."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.ars.usda.gov", "date_download": "2014-04-16T20:00:04Z", "digest": "sha1:IOOG2BENW57DHE4JJYFAL3HHNF3UJ7ZS", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 9588, 9588.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 9588, 10852.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 9588, 20.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 9588, 94.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 9588, 0.9]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 9588, 313.7]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 9588, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 9588, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 9588, 3.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 9588, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 9588, 0.25842076]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 9588, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 9588, 0.04379562]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 9588, 0.1285696]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 9588, 0.07888334]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 9588, 0.06069919]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 9588, 0.05224741]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 9588, 0.04379562]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 9588, 0.01152516]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 9588, 0.00998847]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 9588, 0.00845179]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 9588, 0.06681391]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 9588, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 9588, 0.22032027]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 9588, 0.36606498]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 9588, 5.63826715]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 9588, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 9588, 5.53620522]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 9588, 1385.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 534, 0.0], [534, 985, 1.0], [985, 2707, 1.0], [2707, 5141, 1.0], [5141, 5838, 1.0], [5838, 6604, 1.0], [6604, 7331, 1.0], [7331, 7476, 1.0], [7476, 7552, 0.0], [7552, 7588, 1.0], [7588, 7829, 1.0], [7829, 8050, 1.0], [8050, 8205, 1.0], [8205, 8372, 1.0], [8372, 8527, 1.0], [8527, 8684, 1.0], [8684, 8893, 1.0], [8893, 9014, 1.0], [9014, 9588, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 534, 0.0], [534, 985, 0.0], [985, 2707, 0.0], [2707, 5141, 0.0], [5141, 5838, 0.0], [5838, 6604, 0.0], [6604, 7331, 0.0], [7331, 7476, 0.0], [7476, 7552, 0.0], [7552, 7588, 0.0], [7588, 7829, 0.0], [7829, 8050, 0.0], [8050, 8205, 0.0], [8205, 8372, 0.0], [8372, 8527, 0.0], [8527, 8684, 0.0], [8684, 8893, 0.0], [8893, 9014, 0.0], [9014, 9588, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 50, 5.0], [50, 534, 62.0], [534, 985, 60.0], [985, 2707, 246.0], [2707, 5141, 356.0], [5141, 5838, 113.0], [5838, 6604, 120.0], [6604, 7331, 113.0], [7331, 7476, 21.0], [7476, 7552, 11.0], [7552, 7588, 3.0], [7588, 7829, 30.0], [7829, 8050, 32.0], [8050, 8205, 23.0], [8205, 8372, 21.0], [8372, 8527, 22.0], [8527, 8684, 23.0], [8684, 8893, 26.0], [8893, 9014, 18.0], [9014, 9588, 80.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 534, 0.04831933], [534, 985, 0.0], [985, 2707, 0.00118977], [2707, 5141, 0.00083403], [5141, 5838, 0.0], [5838, 6604, 0.0], [6604, 7331, 0.0], [7331, 7476, 0.09448819], [7476, 7552, 0.05633803], [7552, 7588, 0.32258065], [7588, 7829, 0.06046512], [7829, 8050, 0.05347594], [8050, 8205, 0.06521739], [8205, 8372, 0.0647482], [8372, 8527, 0.07352941], [8527, 8684, 0.07246377], [8684, 8893, 0.05913978], [8893, 9014, 0.11428571], [9014, 9588, 0.0625]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 534, 0.0], [534, 985, 0.0], [985, 2707, 0.0], [2707, 5141, 0.0], [5141, 5838, 0.0], [5838, 6604, 0.0], [6604, 7331, 0.0], [7331, 7476, 0.0], [7476, 7552, 0.0], [7552, 7588, 0.0], [7588, 7829, 0.0], [7829, 8050, 0.0], [8050, 8205, 0.0], [8205, 8372, 0.0], [8372, 8527, 0.0], [8527, 8684, 0.0], [8684, 8893, 0.0], [8893, 9014, 0.0], [9014, 9588, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 50, 0.86], [50, 534, 0.23347107], [534, 985, 0.00443459], [985, 2707, 0.03484321], [2707, 5141, 0.01314708], [5141, 5838, 0.02008608], [5838, 6604, 0.02219321], [6604, 7331, 0.01375516], [7331, 7476, 0.10344828], [7476, 7552, 0.05263158], [7552, 7588, 0.05555556], [7588, 7829, 0.07883817], [7829, 8050, 0.11312217], [8050, 8205, 0.09677419], [8205, 8372, 0.1257485], [8372, 8527, 0.09677419], [8527, 8684, 0.08917197], [8684, 8893, 0.0861244], [8893, 9014, 0.05785124], [9014, 9588, 0.09756098]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 9588, 0.84476358]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 9588, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 9588, 0.3978163]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 9588, -516.84119256]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 9588, -97.0253257]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 9588, 130.35955014]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 9588, 193.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,695 | http://www.forbes.com/global/2008/0915/183.html |
Help | Connect | Sign up|Log in Naazneen Karmali, Forbes Staff
I write about India's wealth creators.
Paper Tigress | ["", "\nShobhana Bhartia broke through gender traditions when she joined Hindustan Times. She continues to shake up India\u2019s media world. In 1985, when industrialist Krishna Kumar Birla announced that Shobhana Bhartia, the youngest of his three daughters, would be joining his group\u2019s media empire, it caused a minor earthquake. \u201cEveryone in the family was shell-shocked because traditionally the Birla women had never worked,\u201d smiles Bhartia", "\nThe Birlas are Marwaris, a community of traders and entrepreneurs whose womenfolk aren\u2019t encouraged to pursue careers. But Bhartia, then 28 and already married with two sons, had a mind of her own. Says she: \u201cMy heart was in journalism.\u201d That passion has played out well. Today Bhartia, 51, is the driving force behind HT Media, whose marquee newspaper, the Hindustan Times, is India\u2019s second-largest English daily, with a circulation of 1.2 million copies", "\n(The largest is the Times of India, published by Bennett, Coleman & Co. and chaired by billionaire Indu Jain.) Headquartered in Delhi, HT is a household name in the nation\u2019s capital and much respected by the political establishment. It also publishes Hindustan, a Hindi-language newspaper that sells over 1.3 million copies. A recent addition to the portfolio is Mint, a business daily launched in 2007 in association with the Wall Street Journal", "\nSince taking charge as vice chairman and editorial director in 1999, Bhartia has pushed new frontiers at the family\u2019s 84-year-old media company, which her father, now 90, still chairs. Venturing out of Delhi, its long-standing home market, the Hindustan Times has sought to establish a national footprint with multiple editions, notably in Mumbai and Chandigarh", "\nApart from the mainstay newspaper business, HT Media has expanded into FM radio (in partnership with Virgin Radio) and added a slew of Web portals to its portfolio. \u201cHT\u2019s dynamism of the last decade and its embracing of new media and technology is Shobhana\u2019s doing. She has a futuristic vision and is utterly committed to it,\u201d says Jyotiraditya Scindia, minister of state for communications and it, who\u2019s one of Bhartia\u2019s close pals", "\nIn pursuing her vision Bhartia has broken with tradition in a way someone from an older generation could not have. Last year she surprised observers by partnering with Bennett, Coleman (her biggest rival) to launch Metro Now, a morning tabloid in Delhi aimed at younger readers. Industry analysts see this as a bid by the two media giants to preempt emerging competitors like Daily News & Analysis, a paper backed by TV baron Subhash Chandra", "\nBhartia says matter-of-factly, \u201cThis is the age of \u2018co-opetition.\u2019\u201d A similar pragmatism has dictated HT Media\u2019s recently forged affiliations. In 2002, when foreign investors were permitted to buy up to 26% in local newspapers, Bhartia was among the first media magnates to strike a deal, selling a 16% stake in HT Media to private equity firm Henderson Global Investors", "\nWhen a proposed partnership between the Wall Street Journal and the Times of India was called off, Bhartia jumped at the opportunity, inking the Mint agreement in a record four months. In 2005 she oversaw HT\u2019s IPO, raising $92 million; that came in handy for her expansionist ambitions. Consider those as landmark moves. India\u2019s print media sector, ironically, is the last bastion of protectionism and has been slow to liberalize. Foreign newspapers aren\u2019t allowed to publish 100%-owned Indian editions", "\nThe rule isn\u2019t expected to change anytime soon. Reportedly, local incumbents have used their political clout to ward off external competition. Bhartia is candid: \u201cIndian media owners resisted the entry of foreign media to protect their business interests. Newspapers were monopolies, needing neither technology nor capital. Now technology has rapidly evolved, and competition has come in through digital media, which nobody can control.\u201d Even so, there are limits to what she\u2019s willing to concede", "\nWhile she\u2019s open to foreign investment being increased from 26% to 49%, anything beyond that, she says diplomatically, \u201cneeds more debate.\u201d For now Bhartia is enjoying a lucky break. India\u2019s buoyant economy is fueling a media boom. Newspapers are thriving as advertisers continue flocking to them. Media barons are lining up new editions and products. That\u2019s set off a scramble for journalists who are being swamped with job offers. It\u2019s a far cry from the troubled state of the newspaper industry elsewhere", "\nRiding the wave, HT Media\u2019s revenues have increased 25% on a compounded basis for the last four years. Bhartia foresees growth leveling off as the economy slows and inflation pushes up costs. Newsprint prices, she sighs, have gone up 70% this year. But she\u2019s more worried about hiring the best people and retaining them than the fact that Mint or HT\u2018s newer editions are losing money. \u201cOf course we aren\u2019t profitable yet! Any new paper has a gestation period of two to three years,\u201d she acknowledges", "\nAlthough mindful of being answerable to investors now, she notes that HT was always considered as a cause rather than a business by her family. It was started at Mahatma Gandhi\u2019s behest as a crusade against the colonial rulers. Her grandfather Ghanshyam Das Birla, who was a close associate of Gandhi\u2019s, initially financed the paper, then eventually acquired it. Bhartia\u2019s conservative upbringing in Kolkata in eastern India gave no clue about her unconventional future", "\nRather than attend the local Birla-run school, she was enrolled in Loreto House, a convent school where, she says, \u201cmy surname was no advantage.\u201d At 18, while she was at college pursuing a degree in education, her marriage to businessman Shyam Bhartia was arranged. On her family\u2019s insistence, she dutifully dropped out of college. (She graduated later through a correspondence course.) But she was nursing a secret ambition, which she decided to pursue after her sons were born", "\nShe started by scrutinizing the family paper and giving her father feedback every morning. When Bhartia was inducted, she became the third generation to be involved with HT. She quickly hit her stride. Preparing to take on more responsibilities, she sought an appointment with Katharine Graham of the Washington Post", "\n, whom she\u2019d always admired. That meeting resulted in a long association. After taking charge of HT, Bhartia enlisted an art director from the Post to redesign the paper. \u201cWe adopted two mantras: change with continuity and content is king,\u201d wrote Bhartia in a book celebrating HT\u2018s 75th anniversary. \u201cThe paper was run like a government bureaucracy, with no place for merit or professional management", "\nIt was a massive ocean liner which she succeeded in turning around slowly and skillfully,\u201d says Vir Sanghvi, whom Bhartia hired as editor to revamp HT. The mandate: Make the paper reader-friendly without dumbing it down. Sanghvi, who remains editorial director, insists he was given a free hand to run it. But a recent churn in HT\u2018s top editorial ranks has fueled stories about Bhartia micromanaging. Bhartia maintains that HT is professionally run and that she\u2019s not involved in day-to-day operations", "\nBut she remains hands-on editorially and scans the next day\u2019s headlines every night. (Her two sons both work with her and sit on HT Media\u2019s board.) Outside HT, Bhartia\u2019s nomination as a member of parliament has meant more public appearances. A vegetarian and fitness fanatic, she works out daily at her home gym. Bhartia remains focused: \u201cMy dream is to make HT a world-class, multimedia company.\u201d Gandhi would have approved."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.forbes.com", "date_download": "2014-04-16T20:11:47Z", "digest": "sha1:JR2BG5BLWFIUV5FFLQMW7VNVFZUZWF6L", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 7679, 7679.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 7679, 9672.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 7679, 5.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 7679, 101.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 7679, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 7679, 274.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 7679, 0.36345776]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 7679, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 7679, 0.00320256]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 7679, 0.00544436]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 7679, 0.00480384]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 7679, 0.01702685]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 7679, 0.17681729]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 7679, 0.52042484]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 7679, 5.10212418]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 7679, 5.82154339]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 7679, 1224.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 102, 1.0], [102, 116, 0.0], [116, 6349, 0.0], [6349, 7679, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 102, 0.0], [102, 116, 0.0], [116, 6349, 0.0], [6349, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 63, 9.0], [63, 102, 6.0], [102, 116, 2.0], [116, 6349, 992.0], [6349, 7679, 215.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 102, 0.0], [102, 116, 0.0], [116, 6349, 0.00840613], [6349, 7679, 0.00154799]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 63, 0.0], [63, 102, 0.0], [102, 116, 0.0], [116, 6349, 0.0], [6349, 7679, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 63, 0.12698413], [63, 102, 0.05128205], [102, 116, 0.14285714], [116, 6349, 0.02984117], [6349, 7679, 0.03157895]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 7679, 0.88326067]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 7679, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 7679, 0.96863341]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 7679, -318.18381156]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 7679, 202.52584308]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 7679, -163.70397633]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 7679, 80.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,696 | https://www.metrostate.edu/academics/courses/hist-348 |
U.S. Legal History: A Survey
4 Undergraduate credits
Effective December 15, 2012 – Present | ["", "\nThis course is a survey of U.S. legal history from the colonial origins of the U.S. Constitution to the \"rights revolution\" of the 1960s and 1970s and the \"revival\" of conservative constitutionalism in the 1970s and 1980s. The course will emphasize the tension between two ideological perspectives on the role of government. Should government function primarily to ensure collective rights and provide social control or to protect individual rights and liberties", "\n? These two perspectives on the function of government are evident in the shaping of law and public policy over the course of U.S. history. Students will learn how the concepts of individualism, rights, and equality have changed over time and how collective behavior and social movements have recast constitutional principles and judicial practices", "\nWe will explore these concepts and developments through consideration of the following subjects: commerce and the industrial state, civil rights and civil liberties, women and citizenship, and liberal versus conservative constitutionalism.", "\nThe political principles and assumptions underlying the U.S. Constitution;\nthe foundation of the U.S. political system;\nhow the concepts of individualism, equality, rights, and liberty have changed over time;\nhow collective behavior and social movements have recast constitutional principles and judicial practices.\nMinnesota Transfer Curriculum\nGoal 5: History and the Social and Behavioral Sciences", "\nEmploy the methods and data that historians and social and behavioral scientists use to investigate the human condition.\nExamine social institutions and processes across a range of historical periods and cultures.\nUse and critique alternative explanatory systems or theories.\nDevelop and communicate alternative explanations or solutions for contemporary social issues.\nGoal 9: Ethical and Civic Responsibility\nExamine, articulate, and apply their own ethical views.", "\nUnderstand and apply core concepts (e.g. politics, rights and obligations, justice, liberty) to specific issues.\nAnalyze and reflect on the ethical dimensions of legal, social, and scientific issues.\nRecognize the diversity of political motivations and interests of others.\nIdentify ways to exercise the rights and responsibilities of citizenship."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.metrostate.edu", "date_download": "2018-12-10T17:40:36Z", "digest": "sha1:OKYS2MARPBZTFBYNJTS7TW2WUM3D4265", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 2358, 2358.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 2358, 5812.0]], 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0.01351351], [2285, 2358, 0.01369863]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 2358, 0.31846321]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 2358, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 2358, 0.32504034]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 2358, -86.61977971]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 2358, 12.90306596]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 2358, 36.75436995]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 2358, 30.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,716 | http://collections.uakron.edu/cdm/ref/collection/p15960coll21/id/76683/ |
Home PsycCRITIQUES Drugs and Behavior: A Scientific Update.
Drugs and Behavior: A Scientific Update.
Review Title Drugs and Behavior: A Scientific Update.
Month Jan | ["", "\nAbstract Reviews the book, Behavioral Pharmacology. 2nd ed by Susan D. Iversen and Leslie L. Iversen (1981). This book is an index of the scientific progress made on various drugs during the six years separating the two editions. For example, the coverage of the amphetamines and the opiates has been extensively revised and expanded, reflecting in large part the advances made in the understanding of the brain mechanisms upon which these drugs act (i.e , those involving the catecholamines and endorphins)", "\nThere are certain characteristics of this book that may prove annoying to some readers. The authors place a strong emphasis on the use of operant conditioning techniques for the assessment of drug effects on behavior. The experimental details of the operant studies are often described at length; although useful, this detailing sometimes makes for slow going and may obscure the major points for the inexperienced reader. However, the good qualities of the book strongly outweigh these minor problems", "\n(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "collections.uakron.edu", "date_download": "2018-12-10T17:24:33Z", "digest": "sha1:R46VK5CVCKHHH4YPMEWC6222HXG7MWCG", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1237, 1237.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1237, 3024.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1237, 5.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1237, 101.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1237, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1237, 322.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1237, 0.35874439]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1237, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1237, 0.09772952]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1237, 0.09772952]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1237, 0.02467917]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1237, 0.04738401]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1237, 0.05034551]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1237, 0.02690583]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1237, 0.14798206]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1237, 0.65968586]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1237, 5.30366492]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1237, 4.47452286]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1237, 191.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 60, 1.0], [60, 101, 1.0], [101, 155, 1.0], [155, 165, 0.0], [165, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 101, 0.0], [101, 155, 0.0], [155, 165, 0.0], [165, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 60, 8.0], [60, 101, 6.0], [101, 155, 8.0], [155, 165, 2.0], [165, 1237, 167.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 101, 0.0], [101, 155, 0.0], [155, 165, 0.0], [165, 1237, 0.00862069]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 101, 0.0], [101, 155, 0.0], [155, 165, 0.0], [165, 1237, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 60, 0.26666667], [60, 101, 0.12195122], [101, 155, 0.12962963], [155, 165, 0.2], [165, 1237, 0.02425373]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1237, 0.32340074]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1237, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1237, 0.11061096]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1237, -47.77392757]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1237, -3.02652704]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1237, 16.14512463]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1237, 15.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,851 | http://www.aum.edu/events/all?page=1&mini=2018-02 |
Events for 2018-09-18
Warhawk Welcome
During this event you'll be able to tour the campus and residence halls, explore our academic offerings, learn about financial aid and scholarships, and even take advantage of our fast-track admissions!
This half-day | ["event takes place from 8:00 a.m. - 12:30 p.m.\nRegister for Warhawk Welcome!\nSaturday, October 20, 2018 - 8:00am\n221-223 Taylor Center\nThanks Giving Around the World", "\nHousing and Residence Life is ready to celebrate the beginning of the holiday season with Thanks Giving Around the World, an AUM annual celebration of food, family, and gratitude!\nThursday, November 1, 2018 - 6:00pm\nTaylor Center 221\u2013223\nA Day In The Life of A Warhawk\nWhat is it really like to be a student at AUM? Find out by talking with current students and hearing from AUM Faculty from your area of study. You'll also be able to tour our lovely campus and one residence hall.", "\nThis event takes place from 9:00 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.\nRegister for A Day in the Life of a Warhawk!\nHot Topics Caf\u00e9: Hot or Not?\nWhich do you prefer: Kylie Jenner or Kim Kardashian? Chris Pine or Chris Hemsworth? What makes someone \"hot?\" Who decides what hot is? Housing and Residence Life wants to hear from you! Join us in our final Hot Topics Caf\u00e9 conversation for the Fall semester and weigh in.\nRefreshments will be served.\nThe Landing in the Nest\nDothan College Night", "\nAUM is coming to a town near you! This is your opportunity to discover more about AUM without ever having to leave home. Learn about admission requirements, scholarships, student life, and so much more! We can't wait to meet you! Register for a College Night!\nRSVP by November 12, 2018\n250 S Oates St.\nThere will be no classes from Monday, Nov. 19 - Friday, Nov. 23, 2018 for Thanksgiving Break. Classes will resume on Monday Nov. 26, 2018.\nWednesday, November 21, 2018 - 8:00am"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.aum.edu", "date_download": "2018-09-18T17:16:13Z", "digest": "sha1:Y347BAPPZNHEM3VFMCNKBPVKLLH3BTSG", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1887, 1887.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1887, 5462.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1887, 26.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1887, 232.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1887, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1887, 321.7]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1887, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1887, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1887, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1887, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1887, 0.29342723]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1887, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1887, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1887, 0.06630582]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1887, 0.03112314]], 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41,140,853 | http://help.legalnature.com/41945-faqs/where-can-i-find-my-properties-legal-description |
Real Estate Purchase Agreement
Where can I find my property's legal description?
A legal description is a specific way of identifying a particular plot of real estate and the legal geographic location of its boundaries. You can find the legal description | ["on the property's current or previously recorded deeds, your County Register or Recorder of Deeds Office (often online), property tax assessments, websites such as Zillow.com, your mortgage contract, or your land title.", "\nThe legal description is NOT the same as a property\u2019s street address, as this may change from time to time. However, it is still recommended to include the street address on a deed, for sake of clarity. Depending on the type of property, the legal description might be in the form of a simple lot and block reference, or it may be in a survey format giving a detailed measurement of the plot. It is crucial to get the legal description correct to complete a sale or transfer.\nWhat is a security interest?", "\nWhat is an easement?\nWhat is an encumbrance on real estate?\nWhat is the difference between sole ownership and co-ownership?\nA security interest is an interest in property\u2014real estate or other...\nAn easement is a type of property right wherein the holder of the e...\nA real estate encumbrance is a right to or claim against real estat..."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "help.legalnature.com", "date_download": "2018-10-15T17:21:16Z", "digest": "sha1:CVVJG5KGBNHJEFSMOECSCIDCNWGNMQ6D", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1316, 1316.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1316, 3261.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1316, 11.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1316, 82.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1316, 0.93]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1316, 193.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1316, 0.41762452]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1316, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1316, 0.09082308]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1316, 0.07190161]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1316, 0.01915709]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1316, 0.27272727]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1316, 0.11877395]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1316, 0.5]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1316, 4.71875]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1316, 0.01149425]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1316, 4.31373544]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1316, 224.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 81, 1.0], [81, 475, 1.0], [475, 951, 1.0], [951, 980, 1.0], [980, 1001, 1.0], [1001, 1040, 1.0], [1040, 1104, 1.0], [1104, 1175, 1.0], [1175, 1246, 1.0], [1246, 1316, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 81, 0.0], [81, 475, 0.0], [475, 951, 0.0], [951, 980, 0.0], [980, 1001, 0.0], [1001, 1040, 0.0], [1040, 1104, 0.0], [1104, 1175, 0.0], [1175, 1246, 0.0], [1246, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 31, 4.0], [31, 81, 8.0], [81, 475, 61.0], [475, 951, 88.0], [951, 980, 5.0], [980, 1001, 4.0], [1001, 1040, 7.0], [1040, 1104, 9.0], [1104, 1175, 11.0], [1175, 1246, 14.0], [1246, 1316, 13.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 81, 0.0], [81, 475, 0.0], [475, 951, 0.0], [951, 980, 0.0], [980, 1001, 0.0], [1001, 1040, 0.0], [1040, 1104, 0.0], [1104, 1175, 0.0], [1175, 1246, 0.0], [1246, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 81, 0.0], [81, 475, 0.0], [475, 951, 0.0], [951, 980, 0.0], [980, 1001, 0.0], [1001, 1040, 0.0], [1040, 1104, 0.0], [1104, 1175, 0.0], [1175, 1246, 0.0], [1246, 1316, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 31, 0.12903226], [31, 81, 0.04], [81, 475, 0.02030457], [475, 951, 0.01470588], [951, 980, 0.03448276], [980, 1001, 0.04761905], [1001, 1040, 0.02564103], [1040, 1104, 0.015625], [1104, 1175, 0.01408451], [1175, 1246, 0.01408451], [1246, 1316, 0.01428571]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1316, 0.01126122]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1316, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1316, 0.03520465]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1316, -60.21803595]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1316, -9.72355611]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1316, -66.69443164]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1316, 15.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,863 | http://www.college.ucsb.edu/node/979 |
2011 Convocation initiates freshman class and transfer students | ["", "\nConvocation is the annual ceremony that welcomes all freshmen and transfer students to UC Santa Barbara. The first of many rites of passage for UCSB students, it is celebrated with appropriate pomp and circumstance -- faculty in academic regalia and the ringing of the Storke Tower carillion \u2013but is also has an informal tone, with students dressed casually, seated on folding chairs or on the grass", "\nOn September 19th , the 4,000 freshmen members of the class of 2015 and the 1,500 transfer students joining the class of 2013 assembled to begin their UCSB careers.", "\nPomp & Circumstance: the College's leaders. From left to right, Pierre Wiltzius, Dean of Science, David Marshall, Executive Dean and Dean of Humanities & Fine Arts, Melvin Oliver, Dean of Social Sciences, and Mary Nisbet, Dean of Undergraduate Education.", "\nDefining \u201cconvocation\u201d as a \u201ccalling together\u201d, David Marshall, Executive Dean of the College of Letters and Science, told the students that \u201ccollege is meant to be a perpetual convocation. We call you together today to begin an ongoing conversation", "\nWe call upon you to join the acts of inquiry, research, production, and creation in which we are engaged, to be collaborators in the work of the university.\u201d He stressed that when choosing courses and majors, students should expand their horizons and develop their skills in critical thinking, empirical reasoning, and communication, all of which would help to prepare them for jobs that might not even exist today.", "\nChancellor Henry Yang told the students that they are a highly select group joining a major research university, a theme echoed by Associated Students President Harrison Weber, who said that many of the incoming undergraduates had fought hard to get here, but many more had been unable to gain admission to the university. New students should make the most of their UCSB experience \u0336 academically, socially, performing community service, or through campus activism", "\n\u201cThe clock starts ticking today,\u201d Weber said, \u201cand the experience starts now. Find your passion and then choose an academic path to help you realize it.\u201d", "\nJohn Park, Professor of Asian American Studies and Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education, giving the keynote speech.", "\nThe keynote address, by John Park, Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education and Professor of Asian American Studies in the College of Letters and Science, hit similar notes. Park spoke of his own college experience as humbling and at times difficult. He told the students that they could face academic difficulties, or might take an academic path different than the one they envisioned today", "\nTherefore, rather than choosing a specific major, Park suggested choosing a problem and finding the best way to solve it. Someone interested in fighting malaria, for example, could pursue a degree in microbiology or try for medical school to find a cure for the disease. But that might not be possible, maybe because the student has a problem passing organic chemistry", "\nInstead of giving up, the student could become a public health educator, or work for a non-profit distributing bed nets, or become a journalist writing about the problems caused by malaria. \u201cSo you can be sad that medical school might not be in your future, but think again about [the] the problem,\u201d he said. \u201cYou must not give up. \u2026 If you struggle here, if you persist here, if you can remain focused here, you will get a most wonderful education.\u201d", "\nSelected from more than 49,000 freshmen and 14,000 transfer applicants, the new students \u2013 90% of whom are enrolled in the College of Letters and Science \u2013 come from diverse backgrounds and have a range of interests as wide as the 80 majors and 38 minors offered by the College. Some 41% are the first members of their families to attend college", "\nClose to two-thirds have declared a major, with more than half having selected a subject in the sciences, but this will change as the students are exposed to different classes and majors. A small number \u2013 210 \u2013 have been admitted to the College Honors Program, based on their outstanding academic records, but more can become eligible after their first year if they meet the program\u2019s criteria", "\nSome 360 students participated in the Freshman Summer Start Program (FSSP), which gave them the opportunity to take summer session classes and get a jump start on their college experience.", "\nOver the summer, a very small group of students, contacted at random, agreed to talk about their reasons for choosing UCSB. If the members of this group are indicative of their larger class, then they may have found their passion already and are making a good start toward a \u201cmost wonderful education.\u201d", "\nRobert Luttrell, from San Diego, chose UCSB because of its reputation in physics, his admission into the College Honors Program, and the beautiful location. A participant in FSSP, he has chosen to major in physics because \u201cI want to research the universe and possibly discover the properties of unknown matter in the ever expanding universe.\u201d", "\nAnna Bontrager, from Santa Cruz, chose UCSB for its academic reputation, her admission to the Honors Program, and the location near the ocean. She has chosen to major in Environmental Studies \u201cbecause I am very interested in how humans can change their behavior and lifestyles in order to not only stop damaging the environment, but also to reverse the damage that has already been done.\u201d", "\nJasper Brezsny-Feldman, from Eugene, Oregon, has come to UCSB because of its many research possibilities and its \u201cincredible study-abroad program.\u201d She \u201cliked that UCSB is a highly academic school, but balances an active social reputation. And although UCSB always gets high rankings in academics, it does not have the snooty attitude of an ivy league school", "\nAlso the location is practically perfect.\u201d She initially declared an environmental studies major but has already changed to communication because it offers many varied career opportunities, possibly in marketing and media.", "\nHaley Rae Davis, from San Francisco, chose UCSB over UC Berkeley and UC Davis after visiting the campus during Spring Insight and being accepted into the Honors Program, which was a major factor in her decision. She has declared English as her major \u201cbecause I've always had a passion for it. My English teacher in high school was amazing, and he instilled a real desire in me to continue my studies in literature.\u201d", "\nNicole Pedregon, from Southern California, took part in FSSP and plans to major in anthropology, \u201cbecause I\u2019ve always wanted to learn about different cultures and how societies are formed.\u201d She chose UCSB because of its strong anthropology department, its location, and because \u201cthis university has better academic programs and research opportunities than both of the private schools I was considering at a fraction of the cost.\u201d", "\nIvan Deryugin, from San Diego, admits frankly that UCSB was not his first choice, but it was the best school he was admitted to. An economics and accounting major who has been admitted to the Honors Program, he hopes to attend business school after college and have a career on Wall Street. He plans to be actively involved in campus organizations so that he can help make a difference both on campus and in the broader community.", "\nAudrey De Los Reyes, from Long Beach, was valedictorian of a class of 65 from an all-girls, private, Catholic high school in Anaheim. She chose UCSB for its academic reputation, research and academic opportunities, and because she was admitted to the Honors Program. \u201cWhen I stepped on the campus, I just knew,\u201d she says. Currently undeclared, she is interested in biopsychology and may choose that major after completing some of her general education courses.", "\nAlexandra Bowers, from San Jose, was accepted by every other UC but turned them down because UCSB was the best fit for her, with its \u201cterrific marine biology program.\u201d She fell in love with the campus \u201cvibe\u201d at Spring Insight, \u201ca relaxed one that is still focused on academics and studies.\u201d She has been admitted to the Honors Program, received a Regents Scholarship, and took part in FSSP. She is a pre-biology major and plans on declaring the field of aquatic biology during her third year."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.college.ucsb.edu", "date_download": "2018-09-18T17:27:27Z", "digest": "sha1:ZW4Q4SAM2NEI24IKA6IENODYV2GIC6LI", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 8310, 8310.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 8310, 9696.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 8310, 18.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 8310, 75.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 8310, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 8310, 219.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 8310, 0.41398866]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 8310, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 8310, 0.07534044]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 8310, 0.0330077]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 8310, 0.01894612]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 8310, 0.00518058]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 8310, 0.01184133]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 8310, 0.01065719]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 8310, 0.01953371]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 8310, 0.14807813]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 8310, 0.41642229]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 8310, 4.95307918]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 8310, 0.00063012]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 8310, 5.64850992]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 8310, 1364.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 630, 1.0], [630, 885, 1.0], [885, 1552, 1.0], [1552, 2172, 1.0], [2172, 2293, 1.0], [2293, 3508, 1.0], [3508, 4439, 1.0], [4439, 4742, 1.0], [4742, 5085, 1.0], [5085, 5474, 1.0], [5474, 6057, 1.0], [6057, 6473, 1.0], [6473, 6903, 1.0], [6903, 7334, 1.0], [7334, 7795, 1.0], [7795, 8288, 1.0], [8288, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 630, 0.0], [630, 885, 0.0], [885, 1552, 0.0], [1552, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2293, 0.0], [2293, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 4439, 0.0], [4439, 4742, 0.0], [4742, 5085, 0.0], [5085, 5474, 0.0], [5474, 6057, 0.0], [6057, 6473, 0.0], [6473, 6903, 0.0], [6903, 7334, 0.0], [7334, 7795, 0.0], [7795, 8288, 0.0], [8288, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 64, 8.0], [64, 630, 93.0], [630, 885, 37.0], [885, 1552, 107.0], [1552, 2172, 99.0], [2172, 2293, 17.0], [2293, 3508, 205.0], [3508, 4439, 159.0], [4439, 4742, 52.0], [4742, 5085, 55.0], [5085, 5474, 65.0], [5474, 6057, 87.0], [6057, 6473, 73.0], [6473, 6903, 66.0], [6903, 7334, 77.0], [7334, 7795, 74.0], [7795, 8288, 86.0], [8288, 8310, 4.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 64, 0.06349206], [64, 630, 0.0326087], [630, 885, 0.0], [885, 1552, 0.0], [1552, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2293, 0.0], [2293, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 4439, 0.02631579], [4439, 4742, 0.0], [4742, 5085, 0.0], [5085, 5474, 0.0], [5474, 6057, 0.0], [6057, 6473, 0.0], [6473, 6903, 0.0], [6903, 7334, 0.0], [7334, 7795, 0.0044843], [7795, 8288, 0.0], [8288, 8310, 0.44444444]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 630, 0.0], [630, 885, 0.0], [885, 1552, 0.0], [1552, 2172, 0.0], [2172, 2293, 0.0], [2293, 3508, 0.0], [3508, 4439, 0.0], [4439, 4742, 0.0], [4742, 5085, 0.0], [5085, 5474, 0.0], [5474, 6057, 0.0], [6057, 6473, 0.0], [6473, 6903, 0.0], [6903, 7334, 0.0], [7334, 7795, 0.0], [7795, 8288, 0.0], [8288, 8310, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 64, 0.015625], [64, 630, 0.03180212], [630, 885, 0.10196078], [885, 1552, 0.01649175], [1552, 2172, 0.02580645], [2172, 2293, 0.08264463], [2293, 3508, 0.01975309], [3508, 4439, 0.02148228], [4439, 4742, 0.01980198], [4742, 5085, 0.04956268], [5085, 5474, 0.03598972], [5474, 6057, 0.03602058], [6057, 6473, 0.05769231], [6473, 6903, 0.03488372], [6903, 7334, 0.0324826], [7334, 7795, 0.04121475], [7795, 8288, 0.04665314], [8288, 8310, 0.04545455]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 8310, 0.59355521]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 8310, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 8310, 0.60349405]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 8310, -184.25527174]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 8310, 155.49392856]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 8310, -120.43713877]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 8310, 57.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
41,140,878 | http://www.dartmouth.edu/~commence/news/speeches/2013/canada-address.html |
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Geoffrey Canada | [", Commencement Address", "\nGood morning and thank you President Folt, trustees, faculty, parents, loved ones, and especially to the Class of 2013. I am honored and humbled to be this year's Commencement speaker. This is a special day for you all, but my message today is to the graduates. Today you are graduating from one of the most prestigious schools in the country. There are some institutions that have a reputation so stellar, that just saying you received a degree from them, makes people think you are really smart", "\nAnd if by some means you are graduating today and you are not really smart, please try to keep that hidden from the public\u2014your classmates and alma mater will appreciate it.", "\nThirty-eight years ago, I received my graduate degree from the Harvard Graduate School of Education and I remember it like yesterday. Armed with that degree that certified to the entire world how brilliant I was, I couldn't wait to demonstrate to any and all who had the misfortune of working with me how talented I was. My peers were not impressed. I was young, but I was convinced that my generation would make America a better country and we would be the best generation ever. I had my eyes on the top spot", "\nThat spot belonged to my mother's generation. They are called the \"greatest generation.\" They won the war, defeated the Nazis, ended the Holocaust, and accelerated the Industrial Revolution. I was determined that my generation would do better.", "\nYou see, I have always been deeply moved by the sacrifices that others have made to make our country the greatest nation on Earth. I loved the ideal of America while grappling with its imperfect reality. I knew right out of college what many people still don't understand; countries don't become great by themselves\u2014it takes heroic sacrifice. Our country was created, molded, and improved by men and women whose moral compass was not moved by the influence of wealth, prestige, or notoriety", "\nThey believed that America stood as a beacon for the world on what true freedom, true democracy meant. These leaders became my role models and upon graduation I sought them out for inspiration. I made a promise to myself that I would be like them. I would challenge America to become a better place for its children.", "\nIn 1975, when I graduated, it was evident to me that America needed to become a better place for its children. Growing up in the South Bronx, which was the poorest congressional district in the United States, I saw firsthand what can happen when people are desperately poor; not just financially poor, but poor in spirit, and without hope. I saw the crime, the violence, the filth, the drugs", "\nAnd I made a promise to myself that if God allowed me to survive that place, I would bring an end to children growing up in places other Americans wouldn't be caught \"dead\" in. I knew the kind of changes I envisioned making would be a tough task. I looked to my role models for guidance.", "\nMy first role model who called me to a life of service was Rosa Parks. Her story known by all inspired a poor boy to believe that an individual courageous act could change the world. While I was still in elementary school, President John F", "\nKennedy at his inauguration challenged the nation to \"Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.\" When I was a young boy, he meant so much to me because he stood up for civil rights, he challenged segregation and Jim Crow, an evil practice that would, if left unchecked, destroy America. He sacrificed his life for our country when he was assassinated in Dallas in 1963. I was in the sixth grade.", "\nBobby Kennedy picked up his brother's mantle. He forced America to see the impact of poverty and he continued to challenge the prejudice and racism that at that time infected our nation like the most pernicious and virulent of viruses. Real equality for former slaves proved resistant to more than 100 years of efforts to eradicate it. Bobby Kennedy knew that he was risking his life fighting for this cause; but he was a great American. He was assassinated in 1968. An even larger role model for me, Dr", "\nMartin Luther King Jr., was assassinated in the same year, 1968. I was in the 10th grade.", "\nSo just imagine what I was experiencing. I'm in high school and Americans are going to jail, they're being cursed and beaten, and being killed, so that one day I might get a good education, live in a decent home, and get a decent job. People with everything to lose\u2014money, fame, loving families\u2014lost it all for the ideals of this country. Who could not feel obligated to continue their work, to ensure their deaths would not be in vain", "\n? With these men and women as my role models you can see why I felt compelled to make this country a better place. The promise I made as a teen, that I would get a great education and come back and rescue the children trapped in our urban ghettos is something that I took seriously. And I have spent my entire life trying to keep that promise.", "\nThere is something I want you to remember: I could never have created the Harlem Children's Zone by myself. My partner Stan Druckenmiller is a Wall Street titan. We built the Zone together. The hundreds of millions of dollars we have raised over my tenure came from businesses, philanthropists, foundations, and government. To me, this is the greatness of America: men and women, coming from different walks of life to join together in a common cause, to make this a better country", "\nSteve Mandel, class of '78 and chair of the Board, has been a major contributor and a supporter of the Harlem Children's Zone.", "\nAnd Mitch Kurz, Dartmouth class of '73, has been a member of my board for over 20 years. Mitch doesn't know this but he is also a role model for me. I first met Mitch when he was a captain of industry. He was the CEO of a Fortune 500 company. At the top of his power and influence, he decided he would leave his corner office and swap it for a math classroom in the South Bronx, and dedicate his life to helping poor children prepare for college and have an opportunity to pursue the American dream", "\nI would like to take a special moment and thank Steve, and Mitch, and Dartmouth for all they have done to help me in my work.", "\nI would love to say to you that my generation has accomplished my dream of being a better generation than my parents. Alas, we have not. While my generation has done real good and made real progress, we have also left you a real mess. We have damaged our world environment. We have child poverty rates that are staggering with more than 16 million American children living in poverty. Thirty-eight percent of all black children are poor in America. Over 46 million Americans are on food stamps", "\nChildren who are poor in this country can still not get a quality education. Our country locks up more people per capita than any place on the face of the earth.", "\nIf that wasn't bad enough, when you look at the leadership in this country you see politicians so indebted to special interests that even the death of 20 five- and six-year-olds in the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., couldn't convince our Congress to pass even weak handgun controls.", "\nSo I wish I could stand before you today and say that my generation is leaving you a country that is better than the one we inherited from our parents. It's not like we haven't done any good. We eradicated polio, created technology that is revolutionary; we've improved civil rights, gay rights, women's rights. But we haven't kept my promise to eliminate those places where our children don't have a chance. America's children are more imperiled than ever.", "\nBut I am not worried about my promise to America's children because let me tell you what else my role models taught me. The best of America is yet to come. The work we don't complete that attempts to makes this a better country, the next generation will finish it. Susan B. Anthony, another one of my role models, courageously fought to end slavery, and then led the women's suffrage movement. In 1900 when she was asked when women would get the right to vote, she said, \"it will come, but I shall not see it ..", "\nIt is inevitable. We can no more deny forever the right of self-government to one-half our people than we could keep the Negro forever in bondage. It will not be wrought by the same disrupting forces that freed the slave, but come it will, and I believe within a generation.\" Fourteen years after her death, the 19th Amendment granting women the right to vote was passed.", "\nPeople believe Dr. King's \"I Have a Dream\" speech was his greatest. I don't agree. I was always most moved by the speech Dr. King gave in Memphis, Tenn., right before he was assassinated, which was later called the \"Mountaintop\" speech. In that speech, Dr. King confirmed what I believe today: the work of making this a better country is often started by someone, but left to others to complete. In that speech Dr. King said, \"And then I got into Memphis", "\nAnd some began to say the threats, or talk about the threats that were out. What would happen to me from some of our sick white brothers?", "\n\"Well I don't know what will happen now. We've got some difficult days ahead. But it really doesn't matter with me now, because I've been to the mountaintop.\n\"And I don't mind.", "\n\"Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place. But I'm not concerned about that now. I just want to do God's will. And he's allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I've looked over. And I've seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we as a people will get to the Promised Land! I'm not worried about anything. I'm not fearing any man. Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord!\"", "\nThey assassinated Dr. King the next morning at the Lorraine Motel.", "\nWe named our schools Promise Academy because I promised our children and their parents that we would fulfill Dr. King's vision of what America could become to our children in Harlem. I promised we would be there for them from birth through graduating college. My problem today is that my 11,000 children believe me. You see, to my children, I'm 8 feet tall and a superstar. My children know I must be a star, because they saw me on Oprah", "\nTwice! So when I walk around my schools my children point and they say, \"It's Mr. Canada. It's Mr. Canada.\" They want to shake my hand or give me a hug. It's really the cutest thing you've ever seen. They love me and I love them. My children know I would risk it all; I would give them anything and do anything to save them. By saving these children I hope I can set an example that inspires America to save all children.", "\nThere's one problem though. I'm 61. My seven-year-olds think that I will be there when they graduate from high school, and then sit here like you, graduating from prestigious colleges and graduate schools. In all likelihood I will not. My time is coming to an end. Others will have to finish this work. Someone else will have to pick up the mantle and say no matter what else I do as a career, I will make sure I leave my country a better place than was left to me", "\nI promised my kids that America could be and would be a better place for them. I need you to promise me that you will do your part. I'm not asking you to take a vow of poverty; some of you will have to make money; a lot of money. I have to raise a lot of money each year, so I know a lot of wealthy people. I tried raising money from poor people; it didn't work out so well. I'm just saying, everyone must play their part. Together you can finish what we have begun.", "\nI don't feel bad about my unfinished work. You see, I've had a great career. Today I have more recognition than I am comfortable with. I have celebrity friends and get \"A list\" invitations. It's quite a distraction. But a distraction nevertheless. I try to keep my eye on the prize, that promised land for my children that isAmerica's future. That dream that Dr. King talked about. We are close but my time is running out and there is still much to do", "\nI'm at a place now where the famous poem by Robert Frost, takes on new meaning.", "\nThe woods are lovely, dark, and deep,\nBut I have promised to keep,\nAnd miles to go before I sleep,\nAnd miles to go before I sleep.", "\nTen years from now when I'm puttering around my house, and playing with my grandchildren, I know I will be constantly smiling. My wife, Yvonne, knowing how serious I am about things will ask me why I'm so happy. And I'll say, \"Because my children will be saved.\" And she'll say, \"But how do you know", "\n? You haven't been to work in years.\" And I'll say, \"Because those young people were so smart and talented. The best we have. And they promised. They could do anything they wanted with their lives; they graduated from Dartmouth, and they promised. My promise to my kids will be kept. I know it.\" And I'll look at my wife and say, \"I think they might be the greatest generation yet. You'll see.\"", "\nGod Bless and God speed the Dartmouth Class of 2013."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.dartmouth.edu", "date_download": "2018-09-18T17:54:31Z", "digest": "sha1:AUZW6VOHQNNJKLZ6D2ELT3JZ7DA5HSHB", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 13345, 13345.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 13345, 13749.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 13345, 38.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 13345, 60.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 13345, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 13345, 191.0]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 13345, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 13345, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 13345, 2.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 13345, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 13345, 0.45283019]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 13345, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 13345, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 13345, 0.0192546]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 13345, 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41,140,842 | http://www.nrao.edu/pr/1995/sgalaxy/ |
National Radio Astronomy Observatory
P.O. Box O, Socorro, New Mexico 87801-0387
For Release 5:00 p.m. MST
Contact: Dave Finley (505) 835-7302
VLBA Observations Reveal Tremendous Mass Concentration
at the Heart of Strange Galaxy | ["", "\nA dense whirling mass orbiting what almost certainly is a black hole of truly Brobdingnagian proportions has been discovered at the heart of an active galaxy some 21 million light years from Earth. The astronomical observations were made by an international team of Japanese and American astronomers using a continent-wide radio telescope funded by the National Science Foundation. The work is reported in the January 12th issue of Nature", "\nThe tremendous concentration of mass, equivalent to 40 million suns, in the center of the galaxy NGC4258 in the constellation Canes Venatici, was revealed by the apparent rotation of a molecular disk that surrounds it. The observations showed that the disk of dense material is orbiting within the galaxy's nucleus at velocities -- up to 650 miles per second -- that require the gravitational pull of such a massive object", "\nThe high angular resolution and sensitivity of the Very Long Baseline Array of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory allowed precise measurements of the differential rotation of the material in the disk, which provides the most direct and definitive evidence to date for the presence of a supermassive black hole in the center of another galaxy", "\nBlack holes, so dense that nothing -- not even light -- can escape their gravitational fields, have long been thought to be present in the centers of active galaxies, where they would act as central engines driving a variety of exotic and energetic phenomena that are seen on much larger scales, such as jets and powerful X ray emission", "\nNGC 4258, a spiral some 90,000 light-years across, is known to have jets of gas that are twisted into the shape of a helix emerging from the nucleus at speeds of 400 miles per second", "\nMakoto Miyoshi of Japan's Mizusawa Astrogeodymanics Observatory; James Moran, James Herrnstein and Lincoln Greenhill of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, MA; Naomasa Nakai of Japan's Nobeyama Radio Observatory; Philip Diamond of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Socorro, NM; and Makoto Inoue, also of Nobeyama, presented their discovery today to the 185th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Tucson, Arizona.", "\n\"The beautiful definition of the motion in the disk and its structure, and the high density of the central object -- at least ten thousand times that of any known star cluster -- convinces us that this must be a black hole.'' says James Moran. \"The dynamics of the disk are fairly simple, and we suspect it may offer us a laboratory for measuring a host of other fundamental phenomena in astrophysics.'' Miller Goss, assistant director of NRAO for VLBA/", "\nVLA Operations comments, ''this is a sensational result, showing the excellent science that comes from skilled use of the highest-", "\nresolution instrument available to astronomers... It's particularly nice to see such valuable contributions coming from the early use of the VLBA.\" The team of astronomers used the VLBA to study a disk of molecules deep within the nucleus of NGC 4258. The disk, tiny compared to the galaxy, contains heated water molecules that amplify microwave radio emissions in a manner similar to the way in which a laser amplifies light", "\nThe disk is oriented fortuitously so that pencil-like beams of microwaves are directed toward the earth. These powerful naturally-occurring microwave amplifiers, called masers, were discovered in the galaxy in 1982. In 1992 Nakai, Inoue and Miyoshi, using a radio telescope at Nobeyama, Japan, made the surprising discovery that some of the masers had very high velocities with respect to the galaxy. The large apparent velocities they observed could not be accounted for by the galaxy's normal rotation", "\nAt that time, the Japanese researchers suggested that the masers might be orbiting a black hole. Research by Greenhill and colleagues, using the technique of Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), provided preliminary support for this hypothesis. The VLBA, an instrument built specifically for VLBI, now has confirmed the hypothesis and allowed astronomers to paint a surprisingly clear picture of activity in the depths of this galactic nucleus", "\nSince microwaves are not attenuated by the gas and dust that naturally lie in galactic nuclei, radio astronomers are able to look more deeply than are optical astronomers. The astronomers calculate that the density of the central object is at least 100 million solar masses per cubic light-year. If this mass were in the form of a star cluster, the stars would be separated by average distances only somewhat greater than the diameter of the Solar System", "\nSuch a cluster could probably not survive the inevitable collisions between the stars, leading to the conclusion that the central mass is probably a black hole. The mass density estimated to lie in this central region is at least ten times greater than that of any other black-hole candidate. \"The properties of this disk provide compelling evidence for the presence of a massive black hole,\" the astronomers wrote in their paper in Nature", "\nIndependent measurements, made at the Haystack Observatory and at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Germany, of the gravitational acceleration of the masers as they are swept along in the disk also allowed the astronomers to determine the distance to the galaxy with greater precision than had been done before. Previous estimates of the galaxy's distance ranged from about 11 million to nearly 23 million light years", "\nIncorporating these VLBA observations, the astronomers obtained a distance estimate of 20.8 million light years, plus or minus 4.2 million light-years. This direct geometric distance estimate provides an important reference point in the ongoing work to measure the size and age of the universe.", "\nThe group will continue to observe the disk over the next few years with the VLBA. Inoue comments, \"We predict that the masers should move relative to one another by about 35 microarcseconds in one year. The rotation should be clearly evident with the tremendous angular resolution of the VLBA. This will allow a precise trigonometric determination of the distance to the galaxy, as well as a detailed look at the orbit of the molecular disk.\"", "\nThe VLBA observations were made at a radio frequency of 22 GHz. The VLBA, dedicated in 1993, is a system of ten 82-foot-diameter (25 meter) dish antennas located across the U.S. from Hawaii to the Virgin Islands. All ten antennas work as a single instrument and are controlled from the NRAO's Array Operations Center in Socorro, New Mexico. The VLBA is providing astronomers with unprecedented opportunities to make routine, high- quality radio observations", "\nFor the observations of NGC 4258, the VLBA was joined by the Very Large Array (VLA), a 27-antenna radio telescope in New Mexico. The VLBA and the VLA are facilities of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, operated by Associated Universities, Inc., under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.", "\nMoran said that the VLBA correlator, the special-purpose processor that combines the data from each telescope and forms the heart of the multi-antenna radio telescope, \"is at least 50 times more powerful than any previous correlator. It is really awesome to see the data zip through the correlator. As a system, the VLBA represents a major advance for the field in terms of data capacity, sensitivity, dynamic range and ease of use.\"", "\nThe galaxy NGC 4258 is also known as Messier 106, and is visible in moderate-sized amateur telescopes in the nighttime winter sky of the northern hemisphere, near the Big Dipper.", "\nAn optical image in H-alpha light of the central part of NGC 4258, which shows jet-like structures emerging from the core on a scale of a kiloparsec (3260 light-years). The inset shows the newly discovered molecular disk that contains water vapor masers. Their velocities are color coded (blue for approaching, red for receding and green for stationary with respect to the galaxy) and define nearly perfect Keplerian motion around an unseen object of 40 million solar masses", "\nOptical image courtesy of Gerald Cecil and Holland Ford.", "\nThe National Radio Astronomy Observatory\nis a facility of the National Science Foundation,\noperated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nrao.edu", "date_download": "2015-07-28T21:49:35Z", "digest": "sha1:I2RGMCMWDURCX5ZVT3PAZ66L754MVTZK", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 8543, 8543.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 8543, 8642.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 8543, 18.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 8543, 22.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 8543, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 8543, 211.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 8543, 0.37642586]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 8543, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 8543, 0.04618474]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 8543, 0.01635112]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 8543, 0.02008032]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 8543, 0.0157774]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 8543, 0.02366609]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 8543, 0.02471483]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 8543, 0.13941698]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 8543, 0.40381791]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 8543, 5.11894273]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 8543, 0.00063371]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 8543, 5.4398997]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 8543, 1362.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 80, 0.0], [80, 106, 0.0], [106, 142, 0.0], [142, 197, 0.0], [197, 228, 0.0], [228, 2423, 1.0], [2423, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 6015, 1.0], [6015, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 7237, 1.0], [7237, 7671, 0.0], [7671, 7850, 1.0], [7850, 8383, 1.0], [8383, 8424, 0.0], [8424, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8543, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 80, 0.0], [80, 106, 0.0], [106, 142, 0.0], [142, 197, 0.0], [197, 228, 0.0], [228, 2423, 0.0], [2423, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 6015, 0.0], [6015, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 7237, 0.0], [7237, 7671, 0.0], [7671, 7850, 0.0], [7850, 8383, 0.0], [8383, 8424, 0.0], [8424, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 37, 4.0], [37, 80, 7.0], [80, 106, 5.0], [106, 142, 5.0], [142, 197, 6.0], [197, 228, 6.0], [228, 2423, 347.0], [2423, 2877, 78.0], [2877, 3008, 20.0], [3008, 6015, 477.0], [6015, 6459, 76.0], [6459, 7237, 122.0], [7237, 7671, 72.0], [7671, 7850, 30.0], [7850, 8383, 86.0], [8383, 8424, 5.0], [8424, 8474, 8.0], [8474, 8543, 8.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 80, 0.24324324], [80, 106, 0.13636364], [106, 142, 0.32258065], [142, 197, 0.0], [197, 228, 0.0], [228, 2423, 0.01304753], [2423, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 6015, 0.00814388], [6015, 6459, 0.0045977], [6459, 7237, 0.02133333], [7237, 7671, 0.00475059], [7671, 7850, 0.04022989], [7850, 8383, 0.01926782], [8383, 8424, 0.0], [8424, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 37, 0.0], [37, 80, 0.0], [80, 106, 0.0], [106, 142, 0.0], [142, 197, 0.0], [197, 228, 0.0], [228, 2423, 0.0], [2423, 2877, 0.0], [2877, 3008, 0.0], [3008, 6015, 0.0], [6015, 6459, 0.0], [6459, 7237, 0.0], [7237, 7671, 0.0], [7671, 7850, 0.0], [7850, 8383, 0.0], [8383, 8424, 0.0], [8424, 8474, 0.0], [8474, 8543, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 37, 0.10810811], [37, 80, 0.1627907], [80, 106, 0.19230769], [106, 142, 0.08333333], [142, 197, 0.16363636], [197, 228, 0.09677419], [228, 2423, 0.03416856], [2423, 2877, 0.030837], [2877, 3008, 0.03053435], [3008, 6015, 0.02294646], [6015, 6459, 0.02927928], [6459, 7237, 0.08611825], [7237, 7671, 0.02534562], [7671, 7850, 0.03910615], [7850, 8383, 0.02439024], [8383, 8424, 0.12195122], [8424, 8474, 0.06], [8474, 8543, 0.04347826]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 8543, 0.95226699]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 8543, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 8543, 0.83293951]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 8543, -77.10568389]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 8543, 126.38715017]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 8543, 215.30924619]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 8543, 61.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
13,161,667 | https://baripedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_concept_of_domination_in_international_relations&action=edit§ion=15 | The concept of domination in international relations | ["The concept of domination in international relations\n== The symbiotic colonizer-colonized relationship == Colonialism in its complexity must be considered. According to Nandy, there are two forms of colonialism: *that of bandits, raptors and profit: a form of exploitation that refers to the first forms of colonialism; *that of the liberals, rationalists and modernists referring to that of civilization: colonialism has sometimes been thought of in a positive way in order to get people somewhere because they would not be ready to govern themselves", "The concept of domination in international relations\nIn relation to populations, there will be justifications. Colonialism should not be seen simply as something to be seen. For Nandy, \"This colonialism colonizes minds in addition to bodies and liberates forces within colonized societies to change their cultural priorities once and for all. At the same time, it helps to generalize the concept of the modern West from a geographical and temporal entit\u00e9\u0301 to a psychological category", "The concept of domination in international relations\nThe West is now everywhere, inside and outside the West; in structures and in people's minds. There is a dimension that is sometimes found in independence movements, but also in movements that react to certain situations. Part of postcolonial thinking shows that this is an illusion, one cannot escape the ways of thinking that have had an effect for hundreds of years. Danger is the thought of the authentic by returning to something that has not been \"corrupted\"", "The concept of domination in international relations\nPostcolonial thinking is always relevant because we are in a situation where everything has been changed. At one point in history, the West takes many forms. Colonialism makes it a universal category. In social science, when we think in comparative terms, the categories that come first, such as the State and citizenship, are Western ways of thinking presented as universal modes. Colonialism has had an effect on how we think", "The concept of domination in international relations\nIt is a specific production that has become dominant in Western countries, but it has had an effect on ways of thinking. In Colonialism's Culture. Anthropology, Travel and Government, Thomas writes: \"Although we are generally sympathetic to the suffering of the colonized, this view frequently exaggerates colonial power, thus reducing the degree and extent of indigenous resistance and accommodation in the formation of colonial histories", "The concept of domination in international relations\nIn many cases what may appear to be the exercise of colonial hegemony - the imposition of Christianity, for example - is in fact better understood as the appropriation of introduced institutions, material objects or speech for strategic reasons by colonized peoples or by particular groups within them. When we think about colonialism, it is not necessarily an imposition, it can be an instrumentalisation, especially of elites who wish to improve or take power", "The concept of domination in international relations\nOften we tend to think that the colonizer arrives and everything submits. Romain Bertrand shows that historiography in the Javanese language only mentions the Dutch from the 19th century onwards, whereas formally the Dutch Indies only existed since the 18th century. How to explain a disjunction between knowledge production and reality", "The concept of domination in international relations\n? Naivety comes from giving too much power to one and rejecting the power capacity of the other. The Javanese elites used the Dutch in their quest for power. In The Intimate Enemy. Loss and Recovery of Self under Colonialism, Nandy shows that there are also effects on the colonizer, in particular the production of hypermasculinity, which leads to the delegitimization of \"female\" constructions in the public sphere. This is part of a construction that is not necessarily specific to the West", "The concept of domination in international relations\nThe second effect is that there is a false sense of cultural homogeneity, that is, believing oneself to be a homogeneous whole. In G\u00e2ndh\u00ee's mind, one of the first acts was to reach out to the English working classes, some of which were linked to cotton production to show them that they are also among those exploited by the colonial system. The British working classes thought they were part of this empire when they were part of those exploited by this system", "The concept of domination in international relations\nNandy underlines the omnipresence of colonial ideology in spheres other than politics such as religion and morality. In morality, we can show very strong links on how to conceive the poor. The notion of development is mainly thought of at the domestic level and has been brought to the colonial populations, but there is a discourse around the function of development. Thucydides underlines the Athenians' taste for risk, Nandy highlights the false sense of omnipotence and permanence"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "baripedia.org", "date_download": "2022-08-15T09:31:21Z", "digest": "sha1:CALWFFL2HI6XV7KIZL23CZGKLNBX2AMM", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 4607, 4607.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 4607, 6786.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 4607, 1.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 4607, 48.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 4607, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 4607, 217.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 4607, 0.49045346]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 4607, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 4607, 0.02121453]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 4607, 0.00795545]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 4607, 0.00848581]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 4607, 0.01166799]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 4607, 0.11217184]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 4607, 0.45135135]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 4607, 5.09594595]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 4607, 5.11480315]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 4607, 740.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 4607, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 4607, 740.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 4607, 0.00088692]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 4607, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 4607, 0.01606251]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 4607, 0.90496796]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 4607, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 4607, 0.59352231]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 4607, 46.01185321]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 4607, 117.29221093]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 4607, 62.81738163]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 4607, 36.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
13,161,669 | https://www.motorauthority.com/news/1054916_f1-driver-robert-kubica-breaks-multiple-bones-in-high-speed-rally-crash | F1 Driver Robert Kubica Breaks Multiple Bones In High-Speed Rally Crash | ["F1 Driver Robert Kubica Breaks Multiple Bones In High-Speed Rally Crash\nF1 Driver Robert Kubica Breaks Multiple Bones In High-Speed Rally Crash\nNelson Ireson February 6, 2011 Comment Now!\nAn off-season rally bid has ended in disaster for Formula 1 driver Robert Kubica this morning. During a stage of the Ronde di Andora rally, he veered off-course and collided with a guard rail and wall, causing multiple fractures of his right arm, hand, and leg.", "F1 Driver Robert Kubica Breaks Multiple Bones In High-Speed Rally Crash\nLotus-Renault GP, Kubica's F1 team for the 2011 season, released two statements this morning, one confirming the accident, the second updating on his condition. Kubica underwent surgery for multiple fractures at the Santa Corona Hospital in Pietra Ligure. A press conference on the matter was held two hours ago by Daniel Morelli, Kubica's manager, at the hospital.", "F1 Driver Robert Kubica Breaks Multiple Bones In High-Speed Rally Crash\nMorelli told the press that surgeons are trying to restore the functionality of his right hand, indicating the damage was severe. Surgery was done to restore blood flow to the arm and hand, and restore muscle function, according to Morelli.\nNeither his team nor his management have said how the injuries will impact Kubica's 2011 F1 season, but it's likely to keep him off the grid for several months at the least, even if he makes a full recovery.", "F1 Driver Robert Kubica Breaks Multiple Bones In High-Speed Rally Crash\nCompeting in other forms of motorsports during the off-season has become commonplace among F1's younger ranks, with Kimi Raikkonen famously competing in snowmobile races and rally before his move out of F1. Mark Webber, on the other hand, has suffered injuries both during the season and in the off-season while riding his mountain bike.\nWhether Kubica's off-season accident will lead to teams placing restrictions on the off-season antics of their drivers remains to be seen, but it wouldn't be surprising."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.motorauthority.com", "date_download": "2022-08-15T09:10:57Z", "digest": "sha1:XQA7FUSTBIZGKUCBYDFS4WBUY4AXGWWX", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1747, 1747.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1747, 5597.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1747, 10.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1747, 140.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1747, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1747, 232.5]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1747, 0.38309859]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1747, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1747, 0.0106383]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1747, 0.02553191]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1747, 0.02535211]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1747, 0.16056338]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1747, 0.5979021]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1747, 4.93006993]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1747, 4.84299129]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1747, 286.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 116, 1.0], [116, 378, 1.0], [378, 744, 1.0], [744, 985, 1.0], [985, 1193, 1.0], [1193, 1531, 1.0], [1531, 1701, 1.0], [1701, 1733, 0.0], [1733, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 116, 0.0], [116, 378, 0.0], [378, 744, 0.0], [744, 985, 0.0], [985, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1733, 0.0], [1733, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 72, 11.0], [72, 116, 7.0], [116, 378, 46.0], [378, 744, 57.0], [744, 985, 40.0], [985, 1193, 39.0], [1193, 1531, 54.0], [1531, 1701, 26.0], [1701, 1733, 3.0], [1733, 1747, 3.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 72, 0.01428571], [72, 116, 0.12195122], [116, 378, 0.00395257], [378, 744, 0.01416431], [744, 985, 0.0], [985, 1193, 0.02475248], [1193, 1531, 0.00607903], [1531, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1733, 0.11538462], [1733, 1747, 0.07142857]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 72, 0.0], [72, 116, 0.0], [116, 378, 0.0], [378, 744, 0.0], [744, 985, 0.0], [985, 1193, 0.0], [1193, 1531, 0.0], [1531, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1733, 0.0], [1733, 1747, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 72, 0.16666667], [72, 116, 0.11363636], [116, 378, 0.02671756], [378, 744, 0.04371585], [744, 985, 0.01244813], [985, 1193, 0.01442308], [1193, 1531, 0.02071006], [1531, 1701, 0.01176471], [1701, 1733, 0.15625], [1733, 1747, 0.21428571]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1747, 0.71630919]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1747, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1747, 0.42374521]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1747, 2.17643018]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1747, 34.95914634]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1747, 8.97236982]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1747, 14.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
9,217,313 | http://extension.usu.edu/htm/publications/by=author/char=C/author=22 | Page Not Found | Utah State University | ["Page Not Found | Utah State University\nAll | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z Browse by AUTHOR: Michael Coe View Details"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "extension.usu.edu", "date_download": "2015-05-22T11:35:56Z", "digest": "sha1:6F5EMOH56DXA3ZZ6WSTZ2LMOGPXDO7TQ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 150, 150.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 150, 8832.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 150, 1.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 150, 331.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 150, 0.81]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 150, 6.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 150, 0.01639344]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 150, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 150, 0.44262295]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 150, 0.44262295]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 150, 1.0]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 150, 1.88235294]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 150, 3.52636052]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 150, 34.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 150, 34.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 150, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 150, 0.25333333]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 150, 4.315e-05]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 150, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 150, 0.06692892]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 150, -60.51377103]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 150, -61.72319099]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 150, -24.25779327]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 150, 1.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
9,217,316 | http://news.stanford.edu/news/2008/july9/vibrate-070908.html | You’ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News | ["You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nSkip to content News Menu\nFind a Story\nFor Journalists About Us Stanford Report, July 3, 2008\nResults of research on atomic collisions fly in the face of conventional wisdom\nBy Louis Bergeron\nL.A. Cicero", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nRichard Zare, the Marguerite Blake Wilbur Professor in Natural Science, and postdoctoral researcher Jianyang Zhang peer into the recesses of the vacuum chamber where the team\u2019s experiments discovered that near misses of hydrogen atoms and deuterium molecules produce an unexpected transfer of energy. Collisions have consequences. Everyone knows that. Whether it's between trains, planes, automobiles or atoms, there are always repercussions", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nBut while macroscale collisions may have the most obvious effects\u2014mangled steel, bruised flesh\u2014sometimes it is the tiniest collisions that have the most resounding repercussions.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nSuch may be the case with the results of new experimental research on collisions between a single hydrogen atom and a lone molecule of deuterium\u2014the smallest atom and one of the smallest molecules, respectively\u2014conducted by a team led by Richard Zare, a professor of chemistry at Stanford University.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nWhen an atom collides with a molecule, traditional wisdom said the atom had to strike one end of the molecule hard to deliver energy to it. People thought a glancing blow from an atom would be useless in terms of energy transfer, but that turns out not to be the case, according to the researchers.\n\"We have a new understanding of how energy can be transferred in collisions at the molecular scale,\" said Zare, senior author of a paper presenting the results in the July 3 issue of Nature.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nEvery atom or molecule, even if it has no charge, has electrostatic forces around it\u2014sort of like the magnetic field of the Earth. Those chemical forces exert a pull on any other atom or molecule within range, trying to form a chemical bond.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nWhat Zare and his team found is that a speeding hydrogen atom does not have to score a direct hit on a deuterium molecule, a form of molecular hydrogen made up of two heavy isotopes of hydrogen, to set the molecule vibrating. It only needs to pass closely enough to exert its tiny chemical force on the molecule. Vibrating molecules matter because they are more energized, making them more reactive. Thus, energy transfer effectively softens them up for future reactions.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\n\"This has changed a very simple idea that we cherished\u2014that to make a molecule highly vibrationally excited, you basically had to crush it, squeeze it, hit it over the head. Compress some bond and the molecule would snap back,\" Zare said. \"We found quite the opposite.\"\nOne could compare it to the difference between a punch in the stomach and a caress on the cheek. Both can set the senses tingling, but in very different fashions.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nZare's team discovered that as a hydrogen atom passed close to a deuterium molecule, the chemical forces tugged on the nearest of the deuterium atoms in the molecule, pulling it away from the other deuterium atom. But if the tug was not strong enough to break the two deuterium atoms apart, as the hydrogen atom moved farther away its hold on the deuterium atom would weaken", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nThe deuterium atom would eventually slip from its grip and snap back toward the other deuterium atom, initiating an oscillation, or vibration.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\n\"What we are really seeing is the result of a frustrated chemical reaction,\" Zare said. \"The molecule wants to react. It just didn't get into the right position with the right conditions so that it could react.\"", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nZare went on to picture this process as follows: \"The deuterium molecule is in a happily married state until the hydrogen atom flies by and attracts the nearest deuterium atom. This deuterium atom in the middle is in a giant tug of war. It is being fought over by two lovers, two highly similar atoms that are both attracted to the middle deuterium atom. This affair is a love triangle. In energy transfer, the original spouse wins out", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nThe middle deuterium atom decides not to stray and rebounds to the other deuterium atom\u2014its first love\u2014setting both to vibrate rapidly.\"", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nThe new findings may have ramifications for understanding what happens in any chemical reaction, in addition to interactions between chemicals that do not result in a reaction but instead result in energy transfer. So far, one instance has been discovered, but Zare believes that this behavior is likely to be found in many other collision systems.\n\"This is very fundamental stuff as to what happens in transformations of matter from one state to another,\" Zare said. \"It's very fundamental chemistry.\"", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nComparing the ramifications of the new findings to a ripple spreading out from a pebble dropped into a pond, Zare said, \"Maybe this will be the sound of one hand clapping, if the ripple doesn't go anywhere. Taken together, the only way we advance is making these ripples and following them as they spread outward.\"", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nZare's group did the experiments that revealed the energy transfer occurring during \"soft\" collisions between the hydrogen atom and the deuterium molecule by using techniques and equipment for measuring the molecular interactions that had previously been developed in his laboratory. The experimental work is a major portion of the doctoral thesis of his graduate student Noah T. Goldberg, who was assisted in these measurements by Jianyang Zhang, a postdoctoral researcher, and graduate student Daniel J", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nMiller. The theoretical calculations that provided the model used to explain the observations is the result of work done by co-authors Stuart Greaves of the University of Bristol and Eckart Wrede of the University of Durham, both in Britain.", "You\u2019ve requested a page that no longer exists | Stanford News\nThe research done at Stanford was funded by the National Science Foundation. 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20,028,742 | https://rumorhasitlegends.com/2016/08/07/three-men-are-using-the-bathroom-but-watch-how-the-cowboy-reacts-to-the-other-two/?src=bottomxpromo&ro=3&et=mxp&eid=72776&pid=49571&t=mxp | Three Men Are Using The Bathroom But Watch How The Cowboy Reacts To The Other Two | ["Three Men Are Using The Bathroom But Watch How The Cowboy Reacts To The Other Two\nThree men are using the bathroom, but watch how the cowboy reacts to the other two\nIn the men's bathroom, an accountant, a lawyer and a cowboy were standing side-by-side using the urinal.\nThe accountant finished, zipped up and started washing and literally scrubbing his hands, clear up to his elbows. He used 10 paper towels before he finished. He turned to the other two men and commented, \"I graduated from the University of Michigan and they taught us to be clean.\"", "Three Men Are Using The Bathroom But Watch How The Cowboy Reacts To The Other Two\nThe lawyer finished, zipped up and quickly wet the tips of his fingers, grabbed one paper towel and commented, \"I graduated from the University of California and they taught us to be environmentally conscious.\"\nThe cowboy zipped up and as he was walking out the door said, \"I graduated from Texas Tech University and they taught us not to piss on our hands.\"\nBold! Make sure to Like and Share this one if you liked it!"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "rumorhasitlegends.com", "date_download": "2023-03-27T08:10:14Z", "digest": "sha1:QTLJHF44QYHAWGNCFNOYCCJFZR6BMANG", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 888, 888.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 888, 1798.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 888, 6.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 888, 31.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 888, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 888, 244.2]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 888, 0.44864865]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 888, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 888, 0.17045455]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 888, 0.17045455]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 888, 0.11647727]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 888, 0.11647727]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 888, 0.03409091]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 888, 0.046875]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 888, 0.06392045]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 888, 0.01621622]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 888, 0.13513514]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 888, 0.55063291]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 888, 4.4556962]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 888, 4.16383057]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 888, 158.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 188, 1.0], [188, 470, 0.0], [470, 681, 0.0], [681, 829, 0.0], [829, 888, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 188, 0.0], [188, 470, 0.0], [470, 681, 0.0], [681, 829, 0.0], [829, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 83, 16.0], [83, 188, 17.0], [188, 470, 49.0], [470, 681, 34.0], [681, 829, 29.0], [829, 888, 13.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 188, 0.0], [188, 470, 0.00732601], [470, 681, 0.0], [681, 829, 0.0], [829, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 188, 0.0], [188, 470, 0.0], [470, 681, 0.0], [681, 829, 0.0], [829, 888, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 83, 0.01204819], [83, 188, 0.00952381], [188, 470, 0.0212766], [470, 681, 0.01895735], [681, 829, 0.03378378], [829, 888, 0.06779661]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 888, 0.98722154]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 888, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 888, 0.34211648]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 888, 41.82517213]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 888, 27.00353238]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 888, 9.36980109]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 888, 8.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
12,021,756 | https://www.silk-road-tours.com/kyrgyzstan-useful-info/formalities-of-the-kyrgyz-people.html | Exploring the Formalities and Traditions of the Kyrgyz People | ["Exploring the Formalities and Traditions of the Kyrgyz People\nFormalities of the Kyrgyz people\nRituals are an essential part of each country's culture, and Kyrgyzstan is no exception. In turn, we would like to notify travelers that their tour will undoubtedly be fascinating because it will be planned by our specialists with the best car rent.", "Exploring the Formalities and Traditions of the Kyrgyz People\nTravelers who travel to the country usually rent a car in Kyrgyzstan and drive straight to the locals to feel the rituals, or in other words, the state's customs and traditions. The origins of rituals may be traced back to the time of the Turkic tribes in ancient times. Because the Kyrgyz people used to live a nomadic existence, their ceremonies reflected that lifestyle.", "Exploring the Formalities and Traditions of the Kyrgyz People\nWe are delighted to tell you about the traditions associated with birthing as part of your Kyrgyzstan car rent tour. The first is known as suiunchu - or the occasion of giving joyful news to the parents while they wait for gifts. The korunduk ceremony follows, which entails offering money to the parents when they visit the infant. The other occasion is beishik toi, which commemorates the birth of a child", "Exploring the Formalities and Traditions of the Kyrgyz People\nIt's the time of year when a large number of people gather to prepare wonderful traditional meals and burn archa. The occasion of a baby taking their first steps is known as Tushoo kesuu. When this occurs, close family and friends are requested to bind the baby's legs together, and when the other older kids reach him in the challenge, they undo the ropes.", "Exploring the Formalities and Traditions of the Kyrgyz People\nWeddings are the next type of custom that may be seen on a car rent tour, with or without a driver. Wedding and engagement traditions are given a great deal of importance and significance in our society. Today, the major goal is to invite as many people as possible, even if it means incurring significant financial losses. The ancient rites are based on ala kachuu, a now-prohibited ceremony. It is the act of kidnapping the bride, which is occasionally carried out by an unknown individual", "Exploring the Formalities and Traditions of the Kyrgyz People\nIn the event of kidnapping, the bride has no choice except to remain at the groom's home. Then there's nike kyiuu, which means \"engagement.\" According to Muslim customs, it is recognized as the licensing of marriage. Kyz uzatuu is the ceremony in which the bride is the focus of attention and all of her friends and family bid her farewell. 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12,021,757 | http://waywiser.rc.fas.harvard.edu/collections/543/exhibit-2011cold-war-in-the-classroom;jsessionid=C7D746F2460D29CE7DBCCBEADB66F80E | "Cold War in the Classroom: Science Education and the Race for Global Supremacy" | ["Cold War in the Classroom: Science Education and the Race for Global Supremacy\nIn 1956, the head of the Atomic Energy Commission, Lewis Strauss, declared that the United States was waging a \"Cold War of the Classroom\" against the Soviet Union. By the mid-1950s, it was increasingly evident among politicians and national leaders that global supremacy was not simply a matter of military prowess. The United States would also need to train generations of Americans capable of defending and promoting the values of the \"free\" world", "Cold War in the Classroom: Science Education and the Race for Global Supremacy\nSuch sentiments turned the nation's classrooms into a Cold War crucible, forging citizens with the habits, virtues and skills required to successfully confront a range of intellectual, moral, and political challenges.", "Cold War in the Classroom: Science Education and the Race for Global Supremacy\nCold War in The Classroom uses archival film, photographs, models, laboratory demonstrations, and period textbooks to explore the meaning and nature of scientific pedagogy during this unique period in American and world history. Guest curators Jeremy Blatter and Christopher Phillips have transformed the CHSI Special Exhibitions Gallery into a mid-century classroom that tells the story of a nation with a mission, one in which science education became a crucial weapon of politics and society."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "waywiser.rc.fas.harvard.edu", "date_download": "2022-11-29T06:52:03Z", "digest": "sha1:A567D753VFUZFSITSI42IYK2USUVFNEZ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1165, 1165.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1165, 2371.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1165, 2.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1165, 45.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1165, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1165, 168.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1165, 0.34299517]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1165, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1165, 0.01559252]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1165, 0.03118503]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1165, 0.00483092]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1165, 0.13043478]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1165, 0.66853933]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1165, 5.40449438]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1165, 4.43068736]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1165, 178.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 670, 1.0], [670, 1165, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 670, 0.0], [670, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 670, 104.0], [670, 1165, 74.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 670, 0.01228879], [670, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 670, 0.0], [670, 1165, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 670, 0.03134328], [670, 1165, 0.03434343]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1165, 0.85247427]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1165, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1165, 0.32802594]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1165, 2.05529175]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1165, 26.99530183]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1165, 52.34290405]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1165, 6.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
18,978,174 | https://www.californiatelegraph.com/news/273420568/authorities-search-for-motive-in-california-lunar-new-year-massacre | Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre | ["Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nAuthorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nMONTEREY PARK, California - Authorities searched for a motive for the gunman who killed 10 people at a Los Angeles-area ballroom dance club during Lunar New Year celebrations, slayings that sent a wave of fear through Asian American communities and cast a shadow over festivities nationwide.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nThe suspect, 72-year-old Huu Can Tran, was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound Sunday in the van that authorities say he used to flee after attempting to attack a second dance hall. The mayor of Monterey Park said Tran may have frequented the first dance hall that he targeted.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nThe massacre was the nation's fifth mass killing this month, and it struck one of California's largest celebrations of a holiday observed in many Asian cultures, dealing another blow to a community that has been the target of high-profile violence in recent years.\nIt was also the deadliest attack since May 24, when 21 people were killed in an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nStephanie Kozofsky, 31, leaves flowers and candles to honor the victims killed in Saturday's ballroom dance studio shooting in Monterey Park, California, Jan. 22, 2023.\nLaw enforcement officials said the rampage could have been even deadlier. A man whose family runs the second dance hall confronted the assailant in the lobby and wrested the gun from him, The New York Times reported.\nAuthorities have shared little about Tran.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\n'We do understand that he may have had a history of visiting this dance hall and perhaps the motivation has to do with some personal relationships. But that's something that I think investigators are still uncovering and investigating,' said Monterey Park Mayor Henry Lo. Public records show Tran once had addresses in the city and neighboring ones.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nBut the mayor and L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna stressed that the motive remained unclear for the attack, which also wounded 10 people. Speaking at a Sunday evening news conference, Luna said all of the people killed appeared to be over 50. No other suspects were at large, according to the sheriff.\nThe suspect was carrying what Luna described as a semi-automatic pistol with an extended magazine, and a second handgun was discovered in the van where Tran died.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nWithin three minutes of receiving the call, officers arrived at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio in Monterey Park, according to Monterey Park Police Chief Scott Wiese.\nThere, they found carnage inside and people trying to flee through all the doors.\n'When they came into the parking lot, it was chaos,' Wiese said.\nAbout 20 minutes after the first attack, the gunman entered the Lai Lai Ballroom in the nearby city of Alhambra.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nBrandon Tsay was in the lobby at the time, and he told ABC's 'Good Morning America' that he thought he was going to die.\n'Something came over me. I realized I needed to get the weapon away from him, I needed to take this weapon, disarm him or else everybody would have died,' Tsay said. 'When I got the courage, I lunged at him with both my hands, grabbed the weapon and we had a struggle.'\nOnce Tsay seized the gun, he pointed it at the man and shouted: 'Get the hell out of here, I'll shoot, get away, go!'", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nThe assailant paused, but then headed back to his van, and Tsay called the police, the gun still in his hand.\nWhile Luna told reporters on Sunday that two people wrested the weapon away from the attacker, Tsay, who works a few days a week at the dance hall his grandparents started, told The New York Times that he acted alone. Stills from security footage shown on 'Good Morning America' showed only the two men struggling for the gun.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nThe suspect's white van was found in Torrance, another community home to many Asian Americans.\nA forensic lab investigator takes her gloves off as the body of Huu Can Tran is retrieved from a van by the Los Angeles County coroner in Torrance, California, Jan. 22, 2023.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nAfter surrounding the vehicle for hours, law enforcement officials swarmed and entered it. A person's body appeared to be slumped over the wheel and was later removed. Members of a SWAT team looked through the van's contents before walking away.\nCongresswoman Judy Chu said she still has questions about the attack but hopes residents now feel safe.\n'The community was in fear thinking that they should not go to any events because there was an active shooter,' Chu said Sunday at a news conference.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\n'What was the motive for this shooter?' she said. 'Did he have a mental illness? Was he a domestic violence abuser? How did he get these guns and was it through legal means or not?'\nResidents walk across a Lunar New Year festival site after it was canceled due to a mass shooting nearby in Monterey Park, California, Jan. 22, 2023.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nMonterey Park is a city of about 60,000 people on the eastern edge of Los Angeles and is composed mostly of Asian immigrants from China or first-generation Asian Americans. The shooting happened in the heart of its downtown where red lanterns decorated the streets for the Lunar New Year festivities. A police car was parked near a large banner that proclaimed 'Happy Year of the Rabbit!'", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nThe celebration in Monterey Park is one of California's largest. Two days of festivities, which have been attended by as many as 100,000 people in past years, were planned. But officials canceled Sunday's events following the shooting.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nAn Associated Press/USA Today database on mass killings in the U.S. shows that 2022 was one of the nation's worst years, with 42 such attacks - the second-highest number since the creation of the tracker in 2006. The database defines a mass killing as four people killed, not including the perpetrator.\nGet a daily dose of California Telegraph news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nPublish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to California Telegraph.\nFog in Sacramento/Executive\nUS woman sentenced to 13 days in jail after protesting on Red Square\nMOSCOW, Russia: Russian state-run TASS news agency has reported that a US woman was detained and fined by a Russian ...\nSettlement reached in long-running Airbus, Qatar Air legal dispute", "Authorities Search for Motive in California Lunar New Year Massacre\nPARIS, France: Following an 18 month controversy that exposed the workings of the global jet market, Airbus and Qatar Airways ...\n\u00a9 Copyright 1999-2023 California Telegraph. 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18,978,176 | http://centuryone.org/pixner-q-a.html | CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion | ["CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nBargil Pixner, OSB\nChurch of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nJerusalem: The Circuit of the Walls\nPalestine Explored: Mount Zion\nJerusalem's Essene Gateway: Where the Community Lived In Jesus' Time\nBooks by Bargil Pixner:\nWith Jesus Through Galilee: According to the Fifth Gospel\nWith Jesus In Jerusalem: His First and Last Days in Judean", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nCenturyOne: There are those that feel the ancient traditions suggesting that Mt. Zion was the Cradle of Christianity and its ancient synagogue the mother of all churches, stand on very doubtful foundations and should be reconsidered. Can you go into more detail on the conclusions you made in the article Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nPixner: Even though the New Testament does not give the exact location where the Last Supper and the Pentecost event took place, it seems clear that they must have been inside the walls of Jerusalem (cfr.Mark 14:13; John 18:1 etc.). The ancient tradition places these events on Mt. Zion and there is no reasonable alternative. Why doubt it?", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nWhen most of the twelve apostles left Jerusalem after the persecution of Agrippa I (A.D. 42), it was members of the family of Jesus who took up the reins of the Natzorean community in Jerusalem. The first leader of the group (bishop-mebakker?) was James, the \"brother of the Lord\", who after his martydom in A.D. 62 was followed by Simon Bar-Kleopha, a cousin of Jesus. Both had come from Nazareth with Mary, his mother. We possess the names of thirteen Jewish bishops who followed them", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThe historian Eusebius speaks of \"a very large assembly (magiste ekklesia Judaion) of Jews\" in Jerusalem up to the year A.D. 135.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nAfter the terrible destruction of the city and its temple by the Roman soldatesca in A.D. 70, there was no complete absense of Jewish inhabitants in Jerusalem. They surely were much reduced in numbers, but knowing the tenacity by which jews cling to the holy city, their total absence is hardly believable. If that had been the case, the statement by the Church Fathers that all Jews had to leave Jerusalem after the Bar-Kochba revolt in A.D", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\n135, would not make sense.Even this information, that all Jews were banished from Jerusalem at that time, is only reported by acclesiastical sources (it could be biased) and cannot be proven otherwise. Even then, I do not believe, the exodus was complete. It is also doubtful, whether the Judeo-Christians were included in the expulsion order. They had been persecuted by Bar-Kochba, since they refused to join the revolt", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThey had their Messiah and were not inclined to follow the advise of Rabbi Akiba regarding Bar Kochba's messianic claim. Most sites of Jewish religious traditions were paganized by Hadrian (i.e. substituted by pagan idols): e.g. the Temple area, Siloam, Mambre, David's Tomb in the city of David was used as a quarry; but also Christ's sepulchre and Golgotha were covered up to make place for the Forum Hadriani, the grotto of Bethlehem became the grove of Adonis; surprisingly Mt", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nZion did not receive any pagan structure, although it was in the area of influence of the Xth Legion. If the ex-voto painting of a boat (with the inscription: Domine ibimus) in the Armenian excavation of the Holy Sepulchre has indeed, according to recent stuies, been pre-Hadrianic, then there could be some truth to the information that one of the Jewish bishops of Jerusalem, Juda Kyriakos, had rebuilt the Golgotha.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nI believe that even in the case that the Judeo-Christians were included in Hadrian's expulsion order, they seem to have drifted back into the city under the lenient reign of emperor Antoninus Pius (138-161). The ossuaries of Mt. of Olives and Talpiot are evidence of their presence.\nCenturyOne: Does archaeology give us any indications?", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nPixner: In our excavations beneath our monastery [Dormition Abbey] on Mt. Zion we found evidence that the destruction of the year 70 also extended to the remote area of the south-western hill (just as Josephus Flavius said). But underneath that debris we found a Roman layer of rather poor houses along a street leading northward and a mikweh(ritual bath) in one of the houses. They could well have been the living quarters of the impoverished first Christian community", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThe church historian Eusebius and Epiphanius report that this community left Jerusalem during the great war on account of a prophecy (Possibly the one mentioned in Mark's gospel). The interesting fact in that excavation was that the latest issue of coins found were of the second year of the revolt (76/68). One of them I found on top of the step of the mikweh. The next three years were missing", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThough not conclusive, it could be an indication that the Judeo-Christian community left before the arrival of the Romans in 68 A.D. They fled to Pella beyond the Jordan and into the mountains of Gilead and Bashan.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThey were wandering around in expectation of their Messiah Jesus to come back (see Ascensio Isaiae). When Jerusalem had fallen, and some years had passed, they returned to Jerusalem under the leadership of Simon Bar-Cleopha, according to one report, the fourth year of Vespian (73/74).", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThey found Jerusalem utterly destroyed, the original centre of their community, the Cenacle building, in ruins. Since by now they were convinced that the parousia (the second coming of Christ) would be delayed they built on the ancient ruins their synagogue Alito (\"Upper Room\"). (Luke might still have seen it, for he called in surprisingly with the article to hyperoon (Acts 1;13). The building was no more directed towards the temple, which had been destroyed, but towards the place of the resurrection", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThis apostolic synagogue from the end of the first century is still visible today and surrounds the pseudo-tomb of David, erected by the Crusaders. According to the Israeli archaeologist J. Pinkerfeld the lower layers date back to the Roman period and seem to be of Herodian origin.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nMeasuring these huge, well cut ashlars I found the same size of stones amon the ruins of the Temple. Since it can be seen that these stones were evidently in second usage it does not seem unreasonable that the returnees from Pella used Temple material to rebuild their prayer house with the express intention to transfer here ideologically Holy Zion. A rival Jewish Christian author, who wrote the Odes of Salomon about that period, we outraged by such an endeavour and wrote in his ODE IV:", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nNo one can change Thy Holy Place, my God. And there is none, who could change and transfer it to another place, For no one has power over it. For Thou hast chosen Thy sanctuary before Thou hast made other places. The ancient location shall not be altered by those, who are inferior than Thou.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThis was the last stage of the odyssee of Zion: David had conquered the jebusite Fortress of Zion over the Gihon Fountain (metzudat Zion) (Zion I), Salomon had built to the north of it the Temple, which drew the toponym Zion to itself, as testified in Isaiah, the Psalms and the Book of the Maccabees (Zion II), and soon after the destruction of the Temple it wandered to the south-western hill (Zion III), where the Cenacle and the Dormition Abbey now stand.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nWho else had caused this transfer, if not those Jews, who considered that hill the cradle of Christianity and their synagogue the Mother of all the Churches?", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nAnother archaeological indication of the presence of Judeo-Christians on Mt. Zion is the middle of the three tiered gate sills in our Essene Gate excavation area (See my article in BAR 23,2). Ceramic material extracted from below the middle sill has been identified as belonging to the Aelia Capitolina period (135-325)", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nIt is a very poorly constructed gate, which in my opinion was the southern entrance in a Ghetto wall, that the Judeo-Christians had built around their quarters as a protection against the gentiles of the Aelia Capitolina and later against the influence of the Byzantine Church. In 333 A.D", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nthe anonymus Pilgrim of Bordeaux, coming from Siloam and passing the ruins of the Caiaphas palace, entered the wall around Zion (murus Sion), saw there the synagogue (evidently Jewish-Christian) and left the wall through another gate.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nSince the Judeo-Christians did not join the Council of Nicea (325), but guarded their own autonomy, they were ostracized and soon considered heretics of followers of Arius. The Byzantine literature of the fourth century has nothing good to say of the inhabitants of Mt. Zion, although the Church Fathers must acknowledge that those brothers were guarding the throne of St. James", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nThis downgrading of all traditions, which originated from the Judeo-Christians, is the main reason that traditions originating from areas under their control (Mt. Zion, Tomb of Mary, Gethsemani) were suspect and are reported in the Byzantine literature only towards the end of the 4th century.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nA change came about, when a Jewish-Christian from Thessalonike in Greece, by the name of Porphyrios, became an influential member of the community on Mt. Zion.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nIt was probably the year 394, when he brought about a reconciliation with the imperial church led by Bishop John II of Jerusalem. On the occasion of Yom Kipper of that year an octagonal church )the altar was called kapporet) was inaugurated by John II, who in his sermon (which is preserved in Armenian) was full of praise for Porphyrios. Two years later Porphyrios was made bishop of Gaza.", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\nBut from that time on the Judeo-Christians kept gradually loosing their identity, which, I believe, was a loss for Christianity as a whole, which lost its Jewish counterbalance and became more and more hellenized.\nTop of Page The Mt. Zion Project\nCenturyOne Foundation Main Page\nActivities of the Foundation | Making A Difference | Articles of Interest | Bookstore | Contact", "CenturyOne: Bargil Pixner on the Church of the Apostles Found on Mt. Zion\n\ufffd1999-2003 CenturyOne Foundation, Inc.\ufffd a Nonprofit Organization All Rights Reserved.All materials contained in the CenturyOne Foundation Web Site are protected by copyright and trademark laws and may not be used for any purpose whatsoever other than private, non-commercial viewing purposes. 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46,832,168 | https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/notablealumni/164/ |
Digital Repository @ Maurer Law
Home > History and Archives > NOTABLEALUMNI > 164
Robert Paul Kassing | ["", "\nRobert Paul Kassing was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, on August 3, 1937. A 1955 graduate of Concordia Lutheran High School in Fort Wayne, Indiana, Kassing then enrolled at Indiana University. Kassing received his B.S. degree in Business in 1959, before enlisting in the U.S. Army. Once discharged, in 1961, Kassing returned to Indiana University and enrolled in the school of law", "\nWhile in law school he served on the student editorial board of the Indiana Law Journal (v.38 no.3-4) before becoming Articles Editor for volume 39. Kassing received his JD from the law school in 1964.", "\nKassing joined the Indianapolis law firm of Bose McKinney & Evans after graduation and remained with the firm for more than 40 years. He became a partner in 1969 and served as managing partner from 1971 to 2004. Kassing oversaw tremendous growth at the firm, chairing the firm\u2019s management committee and directing several firm and partner organization functions. As managing partner, he initiated the firm\u2019s sponsorship of the Sherman Moot Court Competition at the IU School of Law", "\nSince 2004, he has directed the firm\u2019s mentoring program for new partners from other firms. Kassing has alwyas had a passion for entrepreneurial endeavors and has served as a trusted counselor for many Indianapolis companies as they developed and expanded.", "\nKassing is an active member of serval philanthropic organizations and has served on multiple boards of businesses, many created by his clients. Kassing served on the law school\u2019s Alumni Board from 1982 to 1989 (including as President in 1987/88) and has been a member of the school\u2019s Board of Visitors for more than 15 years. Kassing has also served on the school's Entrepreneurship Law Clinic Advisory Board.", "\nRobert Paul Kassing was inducted into the Indiana University School of Law Academy of Law Alumni Fellows in 2006. He was awarded the Indiana University Partners in Philanthropy Cornerstone Award in 2008 and the IU Foundation President\u2019s Medallion in 2009.\nMaurer Alumni, Academy of Law Alumni Fellows, Bryan Cave\nEntrepreneurial and Small Business Operations | Law | Legal Biography | Legal Profession\nTo learn more about Robert Paul Kassing, see the liks below:\nAcademy of Law Alumni Fellows program, 2006", "\nBose McKinney & Evans profile\nIndiana University Honors & Awards\n\"Robert Paul Kassing\" (1937). Notable Alumni. 164.\nhttps://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/notablealumni/164\nPrivacy Copyright Copyright \u00a9 2019 The Trustees of Indiana University"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.repository.law.indiana.edu", "date_download": "2019-03-19T10:23:02Z", "digest": "sha1:IHEP7TXPLSHFOVAUIEXWAFWHXFVA3EMH", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 2585, 2585.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 2585, 3289.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 2585, 16.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 2585, 63.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 2585, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 2585, 192.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 2585, 0.29268293]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 2585, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 2585, 0.03559563]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 2585, 0.04841006]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 2585, 0.04034172]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 2585, 0.02562886]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 2585, 0.01829268]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 2585, 0.21544715]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 2585, 0.48737374]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 2585, 5.32070707]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 2585, 4.78826255]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 2585, 396.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 82, 0.0], [82, 102, 0.0], [102, 686, 1.0], [686, 1426, 1.0], [1426, 1836, 1.0], [1836, 2092, 1.0], [2092, 2149, 0.0], [2149, 2238, 0.0], [2238, 2299, 0.0], [2299, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2373, 0.0], [2373, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2459, 1.0], [2459, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 82, 0.0], [82, 102, 0.0], [102, 686, 0.0], [686, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 2092, 0.0], [2092, 2149, 0.0], [2149, 2238, 0.0], [2238, 2299, 0.0], [2299, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2373, 0.0], [2373, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2459, 0.0], [2459, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 32, 4.0], [32, 82, 6.0], [82, 102, 3.0], [102, 686, 96.0], [686, 1426, 117.0], [1426, 1836, 67.0], [1836, 2092, 40.0], [2092, 2149, 9.0], [2149, 2238, 10.0], [2238, 2299, 11.0], [2299, 2343, 7.0], [2343, 2373, 4.0], [2373, 2408, 4.0], [2408, 2459, 7.0], [2459, 2516, 1.0], [2516, 2585, 10.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 82, 0.06976744], [82, 102, 0.0], [102, 686, 0.04821429], [686, 1426, 0.02472527], [1426, 1836, 0.03990025], [1836, 2092, 0.04743083], [2092, 2149, 0.0], [2149, 2238, 0.0], [2238, 2299, 0.0], [2299, 2343, 0.0952381], [2343, 2373, 0.0], [2373, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2459, 0.1627907], [2459, 2516, 0.06382979], [2516, 2585, 0.05797101]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 82, 0.0], [82, 102, 0.0], [102, 686, 0.0], [686, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 1836, 0.0], [1836, 2092, 0.0], [2092, 2149, 0.0], [2149, 2238, 0.0], [2238, 2299, 0.0], [2299, 2343, 0.0], [2343, 2373, 0.0], [2373, 2408, 0.0], [2408, 2459, 0.0], [2459, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2585, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 32, 0.125], [32, 82, 0.32], [82, 102, 0.15], [102, 686, 0.06335616], [686, 1426, 0.02702703], [1426, 1836, 0.03170732], [1836, 2092, 0.08984375], [2092, 2149, 0.14035088], [2149, 2238, 0.1011236], [2238, 2299, 0.06557377], [2299, 2343, 0.09090909], [2343, 2373, 0.13333333], [2373, 2408, 0.11428571], [2408, 2459, 0.09803922], [2459, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2585, 0.10144928]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 2585, 0.00138324]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 2585, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 2585, 0.84326977]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 2585, -176.9075239]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 2585, -13.29972974]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 2585, 25.37381271]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 2585, 31.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,146 | http://www.stthom.edu/About/Online_Newsroom/News_Detail.aqf?0=0&Source_URL=%2FOnline%5FNewsroom%2FCampus%5FNews%2FIndex%2Eaqf%3FNewsScriptAction%3DSimple%5FSearch%26AQ%5FYear%3D2011&Content_ID=11318 |
WCS Lecture Examines Mill�s �Subjection of Women�
Back to News Features << Return to News Features | ["", "\n2/9/2011The University of St. Thomas Women, Culture and Society Program will present, \"Counting on Women and Why Women Count: A New Look at John Stuart Mill\u2019s \u2018Subjection of Women,'\" a lecture by Dr. Curtis Hancock, professor of philosophy at Rockhurst University. The event will be held at 7 p.m., Thursday, March 3, in Ahern Room, Crooker Center, 3909 Graustark. A reception will precede the lecture at 6 p.m", "\nHancock will address the debate in relation to Carol Gilligan's work in women\u2019s studies, over whether women have certain psychological traits and dispositions that, as a rule, differentiate them from men. Gilligan argues that women are aware that the moral experience is so intimately connected with care and nurture, whereas male philosophers are tempted to such reductionism", "\nSome feminists claim that John Stuart Mill is such a reductionist in his 19th century classic, \u201cSubjection of Women.\u201d Hancock will argue that a deeper of this classic shows how Mill\u2019s stance embraces not only the concern for the justice and equality but also further concerns that are of great relevance to us today. Hancock is the Joseph M. Freeman Chair of Philosophy at Rockhurst University in Kansas City, Missouri", "\nThe author of numerous books and articles on the Catholic intellectual tradition, Hancock is the president of the Gilson Society, director of the Great Books Academy and former president of the American Maritain Association. The event is free and open to the public. Parking is available for $2 in the Moran Center at Graustark and West Alabama. For more information, contact Dr. Brooke Deely at 713-525-3148. << Return"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.stthom.edu", "date_download": "2016-10-21T11:18:14Z", "digest": "sha1:YKF6B35BAHJRHNW4LMEXEYSW3G4QKWRQ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1728, 1728.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1728, 3709.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1728, 3.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1728, 97.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1728, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1728, 191.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1728, 0.33918129]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1728, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1728, 0.04717655]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1728, 0.01072194]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1728, 0.0200143]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1728, 0.03288063]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1728, 0.01169591]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1728, 0.1871345]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1728, 0.61732852]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1728, 5.05054152]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1728, 4.79700073]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1728, 277.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 99, 0.0], [99, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 99, 0.0], [99, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 50, 7.0], [50, 99, 8.0], [99, 1728, 262.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 99, 0.0], [99, 1728, 0.01646612]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 99, 0.0], [99, 1728, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 50, 0.16], [50, 99, 0.12244898], [99, 1728, 0.04972376]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1728, 0.06047016]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1728, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1728, 0.55168122]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1728, -80.72831699]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1728, 1.37886672]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1728, -28.45638774]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1728, 20.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,148 | https://malegislature.gov/Bills/188/House/H2577/Text |
Bill H.2577 188th (2013 - 2014) An Act relative to an inventory tax commission Bill Title: An Act relative to an inventory tax commission By Mr. Frost of Auburn, a petition (accompanied by bill, House, No. 2577) of Paul K. Frost for an investigation by a | ["special commission (including members of the General Court) relative to the tax revenue impact on cities and towns with businesses conforming with federal entity classification rules. Revenue. Sponsors: Paul K. Frost", "\nA special commission is hereby established to study the revenue impact on cities and towns of businesses conforming with federal entity classification rules. The commission shall consider the amount of personal property tax revenue lost by individual cities and towns, the amount of revenue gained by the state, and ways to incentivize businesses to become domestic corporations while cities and towns are held harmless", "\nThe commission shall consist of 11 members, as follows: the chairs of the joint committee on revenue, who shall chair the commission; the commissioner of revenue, or her designee; 1 designee appointed by the governor; the house chair of ways and means, or his designee; the senate chair of ways and means, or his designee; the secretary of administration and finance, or his designee; the auditor, or her designee; the treasurer or his designee; the house minority leader, or his designee; and the senate minority leader, or his designee", "\nSaid commission shall report its findings, together with drafts of any legislation it recommends, to the senate and house clerks no later than July 1, 2014. Actions for Bill H.2577"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "malegislature.gov", "date_download": "2016-10-21T11:43:42Z", "digest": "sha1:6LQUOIYCC35NXCRMWC5HSS63OXEMP3RC", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1639, 1639.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1639, 6393.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1639, 3.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1639, 284.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1639, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1639, 299.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1639, 0.33015873]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1639, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1639, 0.28054299]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1639, 0.239819]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1639, 0.19607843]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1639, 0.11161388]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1639, 0.05279035]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1639, 0.02262443]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1639, 0.05882353]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1639, 0.04826546]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1639, 0.01904762]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1639, 0.18730159]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1639, 0.42585551]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1639, 5.0418251]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1639, 4.31020676]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1639, 263.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 472, 0.0], [472, 1613, 0.0], [1613, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 472, 0.0], [472, 1613, 0.0], [1613, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 472, 76.0], [472, 1613, 183.0], [1613, 1639, 4.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 472, 0.0421286], [472, 1613, 0.01080108], [1613, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 472, 0.0], [472, 1613, 0.0], [1613, 1639, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 472, 0.05084746], [472, 1613, 0.00701139], [1613, 1639, 0.15384615]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1639, 0.30160213]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1639, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1639, 0.03288007]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1639, -32.80506795]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1639, -0.40227097]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1639, 22.93244736]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1639, 14.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,154 | https://www.brookings.edu/browse/?start=1&sort=ContentDate&expert=Charles+K.+Ebinger&topic=Religion%2C+Policy+and+Politics&geo=India |
Charles K. Ebinger
View All Experts Charles K. Ebinger
Senior Fellow - Foreign Policy, Energy Security and Climate Initiative Twitter
@CharlesEbinger Share by Email | ["", "\nCharles K. Ebinger is a senior fellow in the Energy Security and Climate Initiative at Brookings. He served as the initiative\u2019s director from 2008 to October of 2014. Previously, Ebinger served as a senior advisor at the International Resources Group where he advised over 50 governments on various aspects of their energy policies, specializing in institutional and economic restructuring of their utility sectors", "\nEbinger has special expertise in South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, but has also worked in the Far East, Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and Latin America. He was also previously an adjunct professor at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service and the Johns Hopkins University's Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.", "\nEbinger has 30 years of experience advising the highest levels of governments on a variety of projects funded by the U.S. Agency for International Development, World Bank, Asian Development Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, and European Bank for Reconstruction and Development", "\nThese projects addressed the restructuring of electricity, natural gas, and petroleum state-owned companies; the creation of regulatory regimes; energy pricing reforms; institutional strengthening of energy ministries and state-owned utilities; and enactment of energy efficiency programs. Ebinger has also been involved in most of the domestic energy and environmental policy debates since 1975, testifying before Congress and other federal and state administrative agencies", "\nIn 1975, as a foreign affairs officer in the Federal Energy Administration, Ebinger helped establish the International Energy Agency and its oil-sharing mechanism.", "\nFrom 1976 to 1979, Ebinger served as vice president of Conant and Associates, an international oil, gas, and electricity political risk consulting company advising European, Japanese, and Middle Eastern oil, natural gas, and electric utility companies. In 1979, he became the founding director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Energy and Strategic Resources Program and served as director until 1987", "\nDuring this time, Ebinger was involved in all of the policy debates surrounding the restructuring of the U.S. electricity and natural gas industries, the Soviet gas pipeline dispute, the development of alcohol and other biomass fuels, the development of compressed natural gas as an alternative transportation fuel, and lifting the ban on the export of Alaskan oil. From 1987 to 1988, he was a senior consultant at Putnam Hayes & Bartlett specializing in the restructuring of U.S. and U.K", "\nelectricity and natural gas markets. From 1988 to 1999, he served as executive vice president at the International Resources Group (IRG), advising governments around the world on restructuring their state-owned energy sectors and setting up regulatory regimes.", "\nIn 1999, Ebinger joined Stone Webster Management Consultants as the director of the International Energy Practice, where he was deeply involved on utility projects in Venezuela, Indonesia, the Gambia, and Nigeria", "\nFrom 2000 to 2004, he held several positions at Nexant (a Bechtel-owned company), including vice president and director of international utility services; senior vice president for Middle East, Central Asia, and Africa; and senior vice president for global privatization, restructuring, and regulation. During this time, his major engagements were in Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Jordan, Nigeria, Egypt, Pakistan, Nepal, and India", "\nBefore joining Brookings in June 2008, Ebinger returned to IRG to lead projects helping to strengthen and restructure the Afghan, Nepali, and Liberian energy sectors from 2004 to 2008. Charles has served on two presidential commissions on energy policy, and is the author of six books and scores of articles on a host of international energy and foreign policy issues", "\nHis most recent book, \"Energy Security in South Asia towards Cooperation or Conflict\" (Brookings Institution Press, 2011) draws on his 35 years of experience in the region, including having advised every energy parasitical institution in Pakistan since 1979. He also produced an edited volume of \"Business and Non Proliferation: Industry's Role in Safeguarding a Nuclear Renaissance\" (Brookings Institution Press, 2011) with Brookings Nonresident Senior Fellow John Banks.", "\nEbinger has served on the boards of oil and gas companies and several non-profits, including serving as chairman at both the Chemical and Biological Arms Control Institute and Americans for Energy Independence. He is a former president of the national capitol chapter of the U.S. Association of Energy Economists. In 2011, he was appointed as an advisor to the National Academy of Sciences Panel on Energy Innovation", "\nHe has also been noted by the Nuclear Energy Institute as a leading voice on nuclear energy policy issues. Ebinger has sat on the boards of directors of energy companies, including North Coast Energy, an independent oil and natural gas producer, and Kokomo Gas and Fuel Company, a natural gas distribution company, as well as a number of non-profit organizations. He currently serves on the boards of the Jackson Hole Center for Global Affairs and the Energy Research Institute of India.", "\nEbinger is well known throughout the energy industry where he is a frequent speaker at both domestic and international conferences. His views are frequently solicited from the public media and the energy trade press. Ebinger received his bachelor\u2019s degree, cum laude from Williams College and his master\u2019s and doctorate degrees from the Fletcher School of International Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University, where he graduated first in his class.\nThe Energy and Resources Institute, board member", "\nHoover Institution, Arctic Security Working Group, member\nHoward Baker U.S.-Japan Energy Forum, editorial board member\nJackson Hole Center for Global Affairs, board member\nNational Petroleum Council Advisory Group on U.S.-Arctic Policy, member\nUnited States Energy Association, member", "\nCharles K. Ebinger is a senior fellow in the Energy Security and Climate Initiative at Brookings. He served as the initiative\u2019s director from 2008 to October of 2014. Previously, Ebinger served as a senior advisor at the International Resources Group where he advised over 50 governments on various aspects of their energy policies, specializing in institutional and economic restructuring of their utility sectors", "\nEbinger has special expertise in South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, but has also worked in the Far East, Southeast Asia, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and Latin America. He was also previously an adjunct professor at Georgetown University\u2019s School of Foreign Service and the Johns Hopkins University\u2019s Nitze School of Advanced International Studies.", "\nFrom 1976 to 1979, Ebinger served as vice president of Conant and Associates, an international oil, gas, and electricity political risk consulting company advising European, Japanese, and Middle Eastern oil, natural gas, and electric utility companies. In 1979, he became the founding director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies\u2019 Energy and Strategic Resources Program and served as director until 1987", "\nDuring this time, Ebinger was involved in all of the policy debates surrounding the restructuring of the U.S. electricity and natural gas industries, the Soviet gas pipeline dispute, the development of alcohol and other biomass fuels, the development of compressed natural gas as an alternative transportation fuel, and lifting the ban on the export of Alaskan oil. From 1987 to 1988, he was a senior consultant at Putnam Hayes & Bartlett specializing in the restructuring of U.S. and U.K", "\nelectricity and natural gas markets. From 1988 to 1999, he served as executive vice president at the International Resources Group (IRG), advising governments around the world on restructuring their state-owned energy sectors and setting up regulatory regimes.", "\nIn 1999, Ebinger joined Stone Webster Management Consultants as the director of the International Energy Practice, where he was deeply involved on utility projects in Venezuela, Indonesia, the Gambia, and Nigeria", "\nFrom 2000 to 2004, he held several positions at Nexant (a Bechtel-owned company), including vice president and director of international utility services; senior vice president for Middle East, Central Asia, and Africa; and senior vice president for global privatization, restructuring, and regulation. During this time, his major engagements were in Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Jordan, Nigeria, Egypt, Pakistan, Nepal, and India", "\nBefore joining Brookings in June 2008, Ebinger returned to IRG to lead projects helping to strengthen and restructure the Afghan, Nepali, and Liberian energy sectors from 2004 to 2008. Charles has served on two presidential commissions on energy policy, and is the author of six books and scores of articles on a host of international energy and foreign policy issues", "\nHis most recent book, \u201cEnergy Security in South Asia towards Cooperation or Conflict\u201d (Brookings Institution Press, 2011) draws on his 35 years of experience in the region, including having advised every energy parasitical institution in Pakistan since 1979. He also produced an edited volume of \u201cBusiness and Non Proliferation: Industry\u2019s Role in Safeguarding a Nuclear Renaissance\u201d (Brookings Institution Press, 2011) with Brookings Nonresident Senior Fellow John Banks.", "\nEmail\t202.797.6306\t\u2014 Energy Security and Climate Initiative\tTopics\nDomestic and international energy policy\nForeign assistance\nSenior Advisor, International Resources Group (2003-2008)\nVice President for Middle East and South Asia, Nexant (2000-2003)\nVice President for International Energy Group, Stone and Webster Management Consulting (1999-2000)\nExecutive Vice President, International Resources Group (1987-1999)\nSenior Advisor, Putnam, Hayes and Bartlett (1987-1988)", "\nDirector of the Energy Program, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University (1979-1987)\nVice President, Conant and Associates (1976-1979)\nForeign Affairs Officer, Federal Energy Administration (1975-1976)\nPh.D. (1981), MALD (1972), M.A. (1971), Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University\nB.A., Williams College, 1970\nIndia\u2019s energy and climate policy: Can India meet the challenge of industrialization and climate change?\nAn assessment of U.S. natural gas exports", "\nTim Boersma, Charles K. Ebinger, and Heather L. Greenley\nCoal markets in motion\nJohn P. Banks, Tim Boersma, Charles K. Ebinger, and Heather L. Greenley\nThe presidential candidates\u2019 views on energy and climate\nTim Boersma, Charles K. Ebinger, and Heather Greenley\nPlanetPolicy\n6 years from the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill: What we\u2019ve learned, and what we shouldn\u2019t misunderstand\nWhen the champagne is finished: Why the post-Paris parade of climate euphoria is largely premature", "\nTim Boersma and Charles K. Ebinger\nThe post-Paris clean energy landscape: Renewable energy in 2016 and beyond\n10:30 AM EDT\tWashington, DC\tMon\nThe halfway point of the U.S. Arctic Council chairmanship\nLessons from energy transitions in Germany and Japan\nMore from Charles K. Ebinger\nDoes decarbonization mean de-coalification? Discussing carbon reduction policies\nJohn P. Banks, Tim Boersma, and Charles K. Ebinger\nClean power beyond 2015: A decisive moment for the future of renewable energy", "\n11:00 AM EDT\tWashington, DC\tYesterday, the Northern Lights went out: The Arctic and the future of global energy\nThe evolving electric power industry: Lessons and future trends\n3:00 PM EDT\tWashington, DC\tLifting the U.S. ban on crude oil exports: Let\u2019s use data over ideology\nCharles K. Ebinger and Heather L. Greenley\nThe U.S. still needs Arctic energy\nContact Charles K. Ebinger"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.brookings.edu", "date_download": "2016-10-21T13:02:10Z", "digest": "sha1:3BPV5362LETUPSY4EX2M2OQLQBDO2JV5", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 11983, 11983.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 11983, 17228.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 11983, 57.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 11983, 220.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 11983, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 11983, 115.1]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 11983, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 11983, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 11983, 1.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 11983, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 11983, 0.26478617]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 11983, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 11983, 0.52594172]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 11983, 0.60097472]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 11983, 0.58412022]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 11983, 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20,028,743 | http://moca.virtual.museum/autogallery2016/autogallery_hansen/comments.htm | Kimberly R. Hansen's AutoGallery exhibit | ["Kimberly R. Hansen's AutoGallery exhibit\nKimberly R. Hansen\nIn 1999, Fractalicious\u00ae founder Kimberly Hansen had a devastating car accident that changed her life. Breaking her back, and twisting her spinal cord in her upper back, she had to re-invent herself and her life, as she could no longer work at her current job. A wife and mother of one, she was determined to find some way to productively fill her time, to find a way to contribute as she had before, re- learning to do it all paralyzed in a wheelchair.", "Kimberly R. Hansen's AutoGallery exhibit\nWith a background in writing, theater, dance and photography, she knew in her heart she wanted to do something creative. Something she was not able to explore as freely before her injury, but now she had time.\nDuring her soul searching, she discovered fractal art, a digital art form based upon mathematics, full of abstract shapes and infinitely, repeating lines and spirals. Something just clicked. She had found her artistic calling, outlet, and medium. Soon after, a dream was born.", "Kimberly R. Hansen's AutoGallery exhibit\nKimberly began selling her art, traveling to art shows, and building up her reputation as 'the fractal lady' in the western United States.\nHer artwork has been featured in jurried art shows and galleries across the Western United States, hangs in homes and businesses across North America, and is featured on licenced products, worldwide and is the proud owner of the registered trademark brand, Fractalicious...\nKimberly R. Hansen's AutoGallery exhibit\nKimberly R. Hansen's website"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "moca.virtual.museum", "date_download": "2023-03-27T07:59:53Z", "digest": "sha1:6IJOYLLVDLJ6SGA5XMQLY4WRGDCCODRD", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1441, 1441.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1441, 1476.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1441, 8.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1441, 8.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1441, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1441, 292.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1441, 0.38541667]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1441, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1441, 0.02076125]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1441, 0.01903114]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1441, 0.03806228]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1441, 0.01388889]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1441, 0.125]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1441, 0.15972222]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1441, 0.59166667]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1441, 4.81666667]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1441, 0.00347222]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1441, 4.58768998]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1441, 240.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 472, 1.0], [472, 682, 1.0], [682, 959, 1.0], [959, 1098, 1.0], [1098, 1372, 1.0], [1372, 1413, 0.0], [1413, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 472, 0.0], [472, 682, 0.0], [682, 959, 0.0], [959, 1098, 0.0], [1098, 1372, 0.0], [1372, 1413, 0.0], [1413, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 19, 3.0], [19, 472, 83.0], [472, 682, 37.0], [682, 959, 43.0], [959, 1098, 23.0], [1098, 1372, 42.0], [1372, 1413, 5.0], [1413, 1441, 4.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 472, 0.00909091], [472, 682, 0.0], [682, 959, 0.0], [959, 1098, 0.0], [1098, 1372, 0.0], [1372, 1413, 0.0], [1413, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 472, 0.0], [472, 682, 0.0], [682, 959, 0.0], [959, 1098, 0.0], [1098, 1372, 0.0], [1372, 1413, 0.0], [1413, 1441, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 19, 0.15789474], [19, 472, 0.01324503], [472, 682, 0.00952381], [682, 959, 0.01444043], [959, 1098, 0.02158273], [1098, 1372, 0.02554745], [1372, 1413, 0.12195122], [1413, 1441, 0.10714286]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1441, 0.79504603]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1441, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1441, 0.3610912]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1441, 34.2008199]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1441, 10.18444126]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1441, 3.70485719]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1441, 15.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
4,733,873 | https://loftport365.ru/page27467318.html | A Taste of Scotland | ["A Taste of Scotland\nA Taste of Scotland\nThe Truth is a Cave\nIt was the readiness with which he spoke of them. It was the context. He knew that I had arrived in Scotland, for my first visit, just an hour earlier.\nFrontmatter, or preliminaries, is the first section of a book and is usually the smallest section in terms of the number of pages. Each page is counted, but no folio or page number is expressed or printed, on either display pages or blank pages.", "A Taste of Scotland\nEach page is counted, but no folio or page number is expressed or printed, on either display pages or blank pages.\nBook design is the art of incorporating the content, style, format, design, and sequence of the various components of a book into a coherent whole. In the words of Jan Tschichold, \"methods and rules upon which it is impossible to improve, have been developed over centuries.\"", "A Taste of Scotland\nBook design is the art of incorporating the content, style, format, design, and sequence of the various components of a book into a coherent whole. In the words of Jan Tschichold, \"methods and rules upon which it is impossible to improve, have been developed over centuries. To produce perfect books, these rules have to be brought back to life and applied.\"\nFollow Lucy Newton on Twitter and join the mailing list"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "loftport365.ru", "date_download": "2023-03-25T04:41:04Z", "digest": "sha1:P4WXK3G2FB6AEATENID4LIAR22VL6VWT", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 1243, 1243.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 1243, 1993.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 1243, 8.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 1243, 13.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 1243, 0.94]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 1243, 103.0]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 1243, 0.42745098]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 1243, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 1243, 0.63525836]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 1243, 0.63525836]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 1243, 0.63525836]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 1243, 0.63525836]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 1243, 0.63525836]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 1243, 0.63525836]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 1243, 0.01519757]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 1243, 0.0212766]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 1243, 0.03039514]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 1243, 0.00784314]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 1243, 0.13333333]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 1243, 0.43438914]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 1243, 4.46606335]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 1243, 4.24295723]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 1243, 221.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 40, 0.0], [40, 192, 1.0], [192, 438, 1.0], [438, 553, 1.0], [553, 829, 0.0], [829, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 40, 0.0], [40, 192, 0.0], [192, 438, 0.0], [438, 553, 0.0], [553, 829, 0.0], [829, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 20, 4.0], [20, 40, 5.0], [40, 192, 30.0], [192, 438, 44.0], [438, 553, 21.0], [553, 829, 46.0], [829, 1188, 61.0], [1188, 1243, 10.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 40, 0.0], [40, 192, 0.0], [192, 438, 0.0], [438, 553, 0.0], [553, 829, 0.0], [829, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 20, 0.0], [20, 40, 0.0], [40, 192, 0.0], [192, 438, 0.0], [438, 553, 0.0], [553, 829, 0.0], [829, 1188, 0.0], [1188, 1243, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 20, 0.15], [20, 40, 0.15], [40, 192, 0.03289474], [192, 438, 0.00813008], [438, 553, 0.00869565], [553, 829, 0.01449275], [829, 1188, 0.01392758], [1188, 1243, 0.07272727]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 1243, 0.92958999]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 1243, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 1243, 0.04901558]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 1243, 35.06461103]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 1243, 18.5729168]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 1243, 15.6683342]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 1243, 12.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,697 | http://www.edugazette.com/news/nisod-and-community-college-of-allegheny-87430.htm |
Education News / NISOD
NISOD and Community College of Allegheny County to Co-Host Two Regional Workshops
Updated 1:05 PM CDT, Mon, September 17,2018
Educators in the Northeast United States have the opportunity to attend two NISOD regional workshops. | ["", "\nAustin, TX -- (ReleaseWire) -- 09/17/2018 -- The National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development (NISOD) and Community College of Allegheny County (CCAC) announced they will co-host regional workshops scheduled for November 30, 2018, and March 22, 2019, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.", "\nNISOD's regional workshops bring professional development closer to faculty, administrators, and staff through intensive one-day gatherings held in strategic locations throughout the country. These localized options help bring some of NISOD's outstanding resources closer to colleges in an effort to save them time and money.", "\nThe regional workshop scheduled for November 30, 2018, titled Emotional Intelligence, Efficacy, and Success, will explore the ways faculty can increase students' success, professional growth, and collaboration skills by improving their attitudes toward work, relationships, and learning. Executive Director of Organizational Development at Mohawk Valley Community College, David R. Katz III, will facilitate the first workshop.", "\nThe regional workshop scheduled for March 22, 2019, titled Strategies for Student Learning and Success: Relational Teaching and Classroom Community Building, will teach faculty how to build a sense of community within their classrooms by emphasizing dialogic approaches to teaching the whole student and relational teaching pedagogy. Director of the Michigan Community Scholars Program, author, and University of Michigan sociology faculty member, Dr. David Schoem, will facilitate the second workshop.", "\n\"NISOD is thrilled to partner with CCAC to help faculty help students achieve their educational goals,\" said Edward J. Leach, NISOD's executive director. \"These types of partnerships enable NISOD to produce high-quality, low-cost professional learning opportunities for community college educators.\"", "\nVisit http://www.nisod.org/ccac1 and http://www.nisod.org/ccac2 for more information about the workshops, including workshop descriptions, registration fees, lodging options, and a schedule for each days' events.\nAbout NISOD", "\nThe National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development (NISOD) is a membership organization committed to promoting and celebrating excellence in teaching, learning, and leadership at community and technical colleges. For community and technical colleges that want to make the most of their professional development dollars, NISOD provides budget-friendly, high-quality, and faculty-focused programs and resources", "\nFor over 40 years, NISOD's customer-focused approach has helped align our wide array of benefits with the needs of our members, which explains why the American Association of Community Colleges named NISOD, \"The country's leading provider of professional development for community college faculty, staff, and administrators.\"", "\nFor more information about NISOD, visit http://www.nisod.org.\nPlease contact Edward Leach at [email protected] or 512=232-1430 for additional information or to arrange to have a workshop brought to your campus or region.\nhttp://www.releasewire.com/press-releases/nisod-and-community-college-of-allegheny-county-to-co-host-two-regional-workshops-1049089.htm\nLeigh-Anne Truitt\nEmail: Click to Email Leigh-Anne Truitt\nWeb: https://www.nisod.org/"] | null | 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48,105,698 | https://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/01/sports/ncaafootball/college-football-playoff-may-be-a-boon-or-just-a-pandoras-box.html |
College Football|College Football Playoff May Be a Boon, or Just a Pandora’s Box
Sports of The Times
College Football Playoff May Be a Boon, or Just a Pandora’s Box
Jimbo Fisher, Florida State's coach, during a news conference on Wednesday in Los Angeles. | [" Fisher said that because of the impact of social media, recruiting had already become \u201ccrazy.\u201dCreditCreditNick Ut/Associated Press\nBy William C. Rhoden\nPASADENA, Calif. \u2014 This is what we wanted.", "\nA full-blown college football playoff, a system for determining a national football champion that comes as close as possible to basketball\u2019s March Madness model. No computers, no polls. Just four perennial powerhouses, who will square off in two semifinal games.", "\nIn New Orleans, Ohio State meets Alabama in one semifinal. Here in Pasadena, an Oregon team led by the 2014 Heisman Trophy winner, Marcus Mariota, plays the defending national champion, Florida State. The Seminoles are led by last year\u2019s Heisman winner, quarterback Jameis Winston, and have won a phenomenal 29 consecutive games.\nThanks to the new playoff, New Year\u2019s Day has once again become the holy day of college football.", "\nThe new system has also instantly raised the stakes in the multibillion-dollar industry the college game has become. Those who clamored for playoffs will get what they wanted \u2014 excitement, pageantry and top-notch competition", "\nAnd those of us who have covered intercollegiate athletics for decades know where this is going \u2014 greater commercialism, more ruthless recruiting battles, higher salaries for coaches and an increased sense of entitlement among impressionable athletes who will become more important than ever.", "\nIn other words, all those elements of the sport that so many critics have complained about are only going to intensify.\nDuring a news conference here on Wednesday I asked Jimbo Fisher, the Florida State coach, if he thought the new playoff system would put even more pressure on coaching staffs to recruit.\nIn his response, Fisher said that because of the impact of social media, recruiting had already become \u201ccrazy.\u201d", "\n\u201cIt\u2019s an amazing thing how recruiting to me has taken a life \u2014 it\u2019s its own season,\u201d he said.", "\nIn fact, next season is already here. Jim Harbaugh, who became the former coach of the San Francisco 49ers after their season ended, was immediately hired by the University of Michigan at a base salary of $5 million. Two other coaches \u2014 Texas A&M\u2019s Kevin Sumlin and Texas\u2019 Charlie Strong \u2014 also make $5 million annually. Still, those three men are tied for only fourth place on the coaches\u2019 compensation list. And the way things are going, others will also end up making more than they do.", "\nAlabama\u2019s Nick Saban, the highest-paid college football coach, with an annual compensation of over $7 million, gave an interesting answer this week when asked about the money that Harbaugh will be getting. Saban said an institution like Michigan must ask what kind of value it creates for itself by paying one individual millions of dollars a year.", "\n\u201cIf you create value for the university, and you look at it from that standpoint,\u201d Saban said, \u201cthen I think that there\u2019s a relative amount that someone\u2019s worth based on that.\u201d\nSaban is no doubt aware that each of the four teams taking part in the semifinal games will earn $6 million for their respective conferences. That\u2019s pretty good payback for those huge salaries.", "\nBut what about the value of the student-athletes who play for these universities? As the playoff expands \u2014 and expand it will \u2014 here is a question colleges will be forced to answer and to deal with in tangible ways: Just what are the athletes getting out of all this?\nN.C.A.A. Fan Map: How the Country Roots for College Football", "\nWe\u2019ve published maps showing where fan support for one team begins and another ends for baseball and basketball. Now we\u2019re pleased to offer another one: the United States according to college football fans.\nAfter all, for all of the talk about colleges beginning to resemble the N.F.L., one of the most significant differences between these two mammoth enterprises is that the N.F.L. has embraced the sharing of revenue as a means of collective survival in a way that colleges have not.", "\nIn this respect, college football \u2014 where the big universities get richer while the others struggle to keep up, and where coaches grow wealthy but athletes certainly do not \u2014 simply reflects a disturbing trend in the United States, where the income gap continues to widen. The new playoff may only enhance these inequities.\nActually, the inherent tension between athletics and schoolwork, and the question of whether the marriage of the two is good or evil, is hardly a new one.", "\nWay back in February 1894 an audience gathered at an event sponsored by the Contemporary Club in Philadelphia to hear two scholars debate the vexing question: \u201cOught the game of foot ball be encouraged.\u201d", "\nWoodrow Wilson, who would become the 28th President of the United States, was a Princeton professor. Burt G. Wilder taught at Cornell. Wilder argued that colleges should not partake in organized athletics. Wilson, who had coached the Wesleyan football team before accepting a position at Princeton, argued that athletic competition built character.", "\nBoth men, of course, would be amazed by what intercollegiate athletics looks like more than a century later. Still, the fundamental question \u2014 just what benefits college sports bestow on athletes who are supposed to be students \u2014 remains.\nI am an advocate of intercollegiate athletics and agree with Wilson that competition, in its purest form, builds character and can facilitate education. There are of course, exceptions.", "\nA front-page New York Times article this week that addressed the new playoff cited a Twitter post in which the Ohio State quarterback Cardale Jones questioned why college athletes had to go to class in the first place.\nBut the reality is that each year thousands of student-athletes \u2014 including a lot of football players \u2014 do in fact go to class. For every Cardale Jones, there are many more who have used athletic scholarships as launching pads for successful careers in an array of professions.", "\nIntercollegiate athletics, in and of itself, is not the problem. The issue, as always, is the adults who administer and coach the programs or who loom over them in countless other ways.\nIn pursuit of wealth, power and prestige, they have combined to distort a system that, at its essence, helps create opportunities for many who might not attend college otherwise.", "\nSo while the new playoff will inevitably create even more interest in college football and make the big universities work even harder to get to the top, for those very reasons it will probably make all the distortions even worse.\nCritics of past methods of determining a national champion have clamored for a playoff. Now we have one. But as we celebrate a new year and watch the dawn of a new era of college football, we also have to brace for all the baggage that may come with it.\nEmail: [email protected]", "\nA version of this article appears in print on , on Page B11 of the New York edition with the headline: Playoff May Be a Boon, or Just a Pandora\u2019s Box. Order Reprints | Today\u2019s Paper | Subscribe\nWhat Made College Football More Like the Pros? $7.3 Billion, for a Start\nAt Ohio State, an Overabundance Lines Up Under Center\nAlluring Matchup in Cotton Bowl Has One Man\u2019s Name Written All Over It\nShifting Fortunes, and Reputations, in Rose Bowl Game"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.nytimes.com", "date_download": "2018-12-10T17:43:00Z", "digest": "sha1:TW34FI3QSCD6ORTXK63TDBFM655ILF2F", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 7471, 7471.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 7471, 9518.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 7471, 40.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 7471, 207.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 7471, 0.96]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 7471, 276.4]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 7471, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 7471, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 7471, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 7471, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 7471, 0.41013514]], 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0.12328767], [7293, 7347, 0.14814815], [7347, 7418, 0.16901408], [7418, 7471, 0.11320755]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 7471, 0.83295608]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 7471, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 7471, 0.86075705]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 7471, -313.55043333]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 7471, 185.72181631]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 7471, -172.60948276]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 7471, 72.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,699 | https://news.belmont.edu/belmont-hosts-fifth-annual-read-with-me-family-literacy-day/ |
Belmont Hosts Fifth Annual “Read With Me” Family Literacy Day
April 12, 2005 Press Releases, Special Events | ["", "\nRead With Me, Belmont University\u2019s fifth annual Family Literacy Day, is scheduled for Saturday, April 16 from 1\u20134:00 pm, on the Belmont campus, rain or shine. The event is aimed at children from pre-kindergarten through grade 6 and their families and is designed to celebrate the joys of reading", "\nThe primary focus of the event are the Reading Circles, hosted by various groups on campus such as the Black Student Alliance, the foreign language majors, the Student Athlete Council and numerous fraternities and sororities.", "\nEach group picks a different theme and has variety of books for all ages. When children visit a circle and listen to or read a book, they receive a sticker. After collecting two stickers, children can visit the games area or crafts area where they can play a reading related game or make a reading related craft such as a book mark or even their own book. They can also visit the refreshment area for a treat.", "\nWhen a child has collected six stickers by visiting six different Reading Circles, they can pick out a book of their choice from hundreds of new children\u2019s books donated by Book\u2019em. In addition, throughout the afternoon, there will be drawings for a variety of door prizes, as well as balloons, face-painting and plenty of fun to go around.", "\nThe event is made possible through the financial support of the Dollar General Literacy Foundation and significant participation by NashvilleREAD, Book\u2019em, Pencil Foundation and Sodexho.\nBelmont\u2019s Family Literacy Day is one of many components of the Belmont Volunteers for Literacy program, along with ongoing tutoring programs at Carter-Lawrence School, Sevier Park Community Center and English tutoring with children and adults through the YMCA Hispanic Achievers program.", "\nFamily Literacy Day is designed to serve as a celebration of the year\u2019s activities, giving the children and student participants of the ongoing programs a chance to have fun and reflect on their accomplishments. It also serves as a way of encouraging additional Belmont students, faculty and staff to get involved in the literacy effort in the community. It provides a way for Belmont to give back in a small way to the community of which it is a part and from which it receives so much.", "\nBelmont University\u2019s fifth annual Family Literacy Day\nMaddox Grand Atrium\nFor additional information about Belmont\u2019s Family Literacy Day, contact Tim Stewart, Coordinator of Community Service, Belmont University, 1900 Belmont Blvd., Nashville, TN, 37212, 615-460-5431, [email protected]."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "news.belmont.edu", "date_download": "2018-12-10T18:36:53Z", "digest": "sha1:KPFANLO3H2LFIBX3WSSRDJZS35MQ3ZFK", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 2640, 2640.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 2640, 9019.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 2640, 11.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 2640, 66.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 2640, 0.95]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 2640, 252.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 2640, 0.35952849]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 2640, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 2640, 0.04351852]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 2640, 0.04351852]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 2640, 0.04351852]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 2640, 0.03888889]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 2640, 0.04722222]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 2640, 0.02638889]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 2640, 0.00392927]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 2640, 0.15520629]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 2640, 0.52122642]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 2640, 5.09433962]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 2640, 4.95565725]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 2640, 424.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 62, 0.0], [62, 108, 0.0], [108, 631, 1.0], [631, 1041, 1.0], [1041, 1382, 1.0], [1382, 1569, 1.0], [1569, 1857, 1.0], [1857, 2345, 1.0], [2345, 2399, 0.0], [2399, 2419, 0.0], [2419, 2640, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 62, 0.0], [62, 108, 0.0], [108, 631, 0.0], [631, 1041, 0.0], [1041, 1382, 0.0], [1382, 1569, 0.0], [1569, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2345, 0.0], [2345, 2399, 0.0], [2399, 2419, 0.0], [2419, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 62, 10.0], [62, 108, 7.0], [108, 631, 84.0], [631, 1041, 77.0], [1041, 1382, 58.0], [1382, 1569, 25.0], [1569, 1857, 41.0], [1857, 2345, 87.0], [2345, 2399, 7.0], [2399, 2419, 3.0], [2419, 2640, 25.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 62, 0.0], [62, 108, 0.13953488], [108, 631, 0.01375246], [631, 1041, 0.0], [1041, 1382, 0.0], [1382, 1569, 0.0], [1569, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2345, 0.0], [2345, 2399, 0.0], [2399, 2419, 0.0], [2419, 2640, 0.09268293]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 62, 0.0], [62, 108, 0.0], [108, 631, 0.0], [631, 1041, 0.0], [1041, 1382, 0.0], [1382, 1569, 0.0], [1569, 1857, 0.0], [1857, 2345, 0.0], [2345, 2399, 0.0], [2399, 2419, 0.0], [2419, 2640, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 62, 0.16129032], [62, 108, 0.10869565], [108, 631, 0.04015296], [631, 1041, 0.0097561], [1041, 1382, 0.01466276], [1382, 1569, 0.07486631], [1569, 1857, 0.07291667], [1857, 2345, 0.01434426], [2345, 2399, 0.09259259], [2399, 2419, 0.15], [2419, 2640, 0.07692308]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 2640, 0.09002525]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 2640, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 2640, 0.04576033]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 2640, -152.05844037]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 2640, 16.22302705]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 2640, -21.29438243]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 2640, 18.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,700 | https://www.diversity.pitt.edu/education-training/odi-offered-trainings |
Working and providing services in a diverse environment requires a knowledge and understanding of cultural differences, values, and behaviors. This fun, yet informative session will help participants to gain understanding to enhance the quality of their i | ["nteractions with international and diverse students, faculty, and staff at the University and elsewhere", "\nTopics include the cultural adjustment process and core cultural variables that shape the way people look at their world; for example, concepts of time, communication style, and status and hierarchy. Session will include interactive exercises. Register for Cross-Cultural Awareness and Understanding training.", "\nWorkforce diversity in the 21st century focuses less on what group a person is identified with and more on the unique diversity of each person as an individual. This workshop is an overview intended to help participants increase their awareness of diversity issues and to gain a better understanding of acceptance and appreciation of the differences between us. Participants will learn to identify and examine one\u2019s own stereotypes and prejudices and how these may guide behaviors and responses", "\nLearn how recognizing barriers to accepting diversity can help to remove them and create an environment for academic and workplace success. Participants will identify at least one way to promote respect and dignity for others. For information about the content of the workshop, review the \"Different Like You\" slides. Then register for this session.", "\nFostering a Diverse and Inclusive Environment: The WHY and HOW", "\nWhen we talk about Diversity and inclusion, diversity is the more familiar topic. The discussion must go beyond seeking and building a diverse workforce to include how we make those whom we work with feel both valued and included. Workshop participants will discuss the differences between diversity, inclusion, and exclusion. They will also leave this workshop with a heightened awareness of the importance of inclusion to a successful workplace and, how to promote inclusion in their workplace", "\nThis training is part of the DICP Program; register for courses offered this semester.", "\nFostering Diversity and Inclusion in the Workplace: A Supervisor's Role\nNote: This workshop is available via video conference to Pitt\u2019s branch campuses. Specific room details sent via email prior to workshop date.\nWho Should Attend: Individuals who directly manage or supervise the work of other staff members.", "\nThe workshop is designed to help supervisors gain insight and learn the foundational concepts of diversity and how to foster an environment that makes employees feel valued and included. Participants will define and discuss terms such as diversity, micro-aggression, implicit bias and other relevant terms and through dialogue, videos, and exercises, will examine the ways they impact the workplace", "\nParticipants will discuss the benefits of diversity and inclusion in the workplace and review the additional resources and training opportunities available at the University. Register for the Fostering Diversity and Inclusion in the Workplace: A Supervisor's Role training.", "\nThis workshop explores the negative consequences of harassment covering such topics as age, race, sexual orientation, political affiliation, pregnancy, ethnicity, sexual harassment, and much more. Participants will learn the definition of harassing behavior and the various types of harassment in the workplace through the use of personalized stories, legal and policy definitions, group activities, and discussion. Participants will also learn specific University policies and what to do if they are harassed", "\nTo get an idea of the content of the workshop, review the \"Is that really harrassment\" slides. This workshop is available for presentation to individual departments by contacting the Office of Diversity and Inclusion at 412-648-7860.", "\nFor the first time, we have as many as five different generations working together in a single workplace. This workshop presents methods for bridging the gap between generations and shows participants how to avoid conflict and increase productivity in their generationally diverse workplaces. Workshop participants will learn about generational differences, generational similarities, how generational traits impact the workplace, and how good communication skills can develop a more respectful workplace", "\nRegister for the Please Respect My Generation training.", "\nPreventing Sexual Misconduct: Understanding Your Responsibility", "\nThis workshop is designed to promote a common and consistent understanding and application of the University of Pittsburgh policies, standards, and processes with regard to Title IX. The workshop facilitator will address required timeliness that all potential responders must adhere to upon becoming aware of sexual harassment, sexual misconduct, discrimination, and harassment", "\nParticipants will leave this workshop with an enhanced awareness of the various forms of harassment, sexual misconduct and domestic violence as well as their responsibility to promote a culture of prevention and safety for all. This training is part of the DICP Program; register for courses offered this semester.", "\nThe workplace is a common site of interpersonal conflict. Some conflict is a natural outgrowth of interpersonal differences; other conflict is a result of repeated behavior meant to intimidate, degrade, or offend others. Workplace bullying creates feelings of defenselessness and robs individuals of their right to respect and dignity at work. This workshop will define bullying behavior, its causes and effects, and resources available to those who have experiences it", "\nTitle IX: Understanding Compliance at the University of Pittsburgh", "\nThis workshop is designed to promote a common and consistent understanding and application of Pitt policies, standards, and processes with regard to Title IX. The workshop facilitator will address required timeliness that all potential responders must adhere to upon becoming aware of sexual harassment, sexual misconduct, discrimination, and harassment. Participants will leave this workshop with an enhanced awareness of the various forms of harassment, sexual misconduct and domestic violence", "\nRegister for Title IX: Understanding Compliance at the University of Pittsburgh training."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.diversity.pitt.edu", "date_download": "2018-12-10T18:55:59Z", "digest": "sha1:7XH4JPU7T77CNZ7Y7MDUKLIECB4BXOPK", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 6502, 6502.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 6502, 9499.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 6502, 19.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 6502, 140.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 6502, 0.93]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 6502, 303.6]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 6502, 9.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 6502, 0.38152985]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 6502, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 6502, 0.20066152]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 6502, 0.23980154]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 6502, 0.23980154]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 6502, 0.23337008]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 6502, 0.2216097]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 6502, 0.2216097]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 6502, 0.02425579]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 6502, 0.01286292]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 6502, 0.01157663]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 6502, 0.00932836]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 6502, 0.11660448]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 6502, 0.36238045]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 6502, 5.78320935]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 6502, 5.09510585]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 6502, 941.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 713, 1.0], [713, 733, 1.0], [733, 1579, 1.0], [1579, 1642, 0.0], [1642, 2226, 1.0], [2226, 2298, 0.0], [2298, 2440, 1.0], [2440, 2537, 1.0], [2537, 3211, 1.0], [3211, 3238, 1.0], [3238, 3983, 1.0], [3983, 4012, 0.0], [4012, 4574, 1.0], [4574, 4638, 0.0], [4638, 5332, 1.0], [5332, 5849, 1.0], [5849, 5916, 0.0], [5916, 6502, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 713, 0.0], [713, 733, 0.0], [733, 1579, 0.0], [1579, 1642, 0.0], [1642, 2226, 0.0], [2226, 2298, 0.0], [2298, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2537, 0.0], [2537, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3238, 0.0], [3238, 3983, 0.0], [3983, 4012, 0.0], [4012, 4574, 0.0], [4574, 4638, 0.0], [4638, 5332, 0.0], [5332, 5849, 0.0], [5849, 5916, 0.0], [5916, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 43, 4.0], [43, 713, 92.0], [713, 733, 3.0], [733, 1579, 132.0], [1579, 1642, 10.0], [1642, 2226, 91.0], [2226, 2298, 10.0], [2298, 2440, 22.0], [2440, 2537, 15.0], [2537, 3211, 97.0], [3211, 3238, 4.0], [3238, 3983, 107.0], [3983, 4012, 4.0], [4012, 4574, 77.0], [4574, 4638, 6.0], [4638, 5332, 101.0], [5332, 5849, 76.0], [5849, 5916, 9.0], [5916, 6502, 81.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 713, 0.0], [713, 733, 0.0], [733, 1579, 0.00239521], [1579, 1642, 0.0], [1642, 2226, 0.0], [2226, 2298, 0.0], [2298, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2537, 0.0], [2537, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3238, 0.0], [3238, 3983, 0.01381215], [3983, 4012, 0.0], [4012, 4574, 0.0], [4574, 4638, 0.0], [4638, 5332, 0.0], [5332, 5849, 0.0], [5849, 5916, 0.0], [5916, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 43, 0.0], [43, 713, 0.0], [713, 733, 0.0], [733, 1579, 0.0], [1579, 1642, 0.0], [1642, 2226, 0.0], [2226, 2298, 0.0], [2298, 2440, 0.0], [2440, 2537, 0.0], [2537, 3211, 0.0], [3211, 3238, 0.0], [3238, 3983, 0.0], [3983, 4012, 0.0], [4012, 4574, 0.0], [4574, 4638, 0.0], [4638, 5332, 0.0], [5332, 5849, 0.0], [5849, 5916, 0.0], [5916, 6502, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 43, 0.09302326], [43, 713, 0.01492537], [713, 733, 0.15], [733, 1579, 0.01182033], [1579, 1642, 0.17460317], [1642, 2226, 0.01883562], [2226, 2298, 0.09722222], [2298, 2440, 0.02816901], [2440, 2537, 0.04123711], [2537, 3211, 0.01780415], [3211, 3238, 0.14814815], [3238, 3983, 0.01342282], [3983, 4012, 0.13793103], [4012, 4574, 0.01423488], [4574, 4638, 0.09375], [4638, 5332, 0.02017291], [5332, 5849, 0.01353965], [5849, 5916, 0.10447761], [5916, 6502, 0.02559727]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 6502, 0.13609141]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 6502, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 6502, 0.06606036]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 6502, -133.09500516]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 6502, 21.64088485]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 6502, -50.53022298]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 6502, 48.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
48,105,701 | https://www.usna.edu/Library/sca/arc-findingaids/view.php?f=RG405-3-3_e182a |
Office of the Commandant/Records of the Office of Midshipmen Activities: Records Relating to the Masqueraders, 1867-2001: Finding Aid
Published in March 2013
History of the Office of the Commandant of Midshipmen
History/Section From Command History V, 197 | ["3-1974\nCorrespondence/File of Officer Representative to Masqueraders, 1972-1973\nMasqueraders' Program, 1867-1915\nMasqueraders' Album, 1967-1968\nPrograms, Photographs, Correspondence, 1971-1972\nPrograms, Photographs, 1972-1973\nGeneral File, 1973-1974", "\n\"Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\" - Photographs and Program, 1973-1974\n\"Promises, Promises\" - Photographs and Programs, 1973-1974\n\"Diary of a Scoundrel\" - Photographs, 1974-1975\n\"Two Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest\" - Programs and Photographs, 1974-1975\n\"Anything Goes\" - Programs and Photographs, 1974-1975\nMasqueraders, 1976-1981\n\"The Inspector General\", 1963\n\"The Gamblers\", 1968\n\"Hamlet\", 1968\n\"Playboy of the Western World\", 1969\n\"Becket\", 1969\n\"Hamp\", 1971\n\"Child's Play\", 1972", "\n\"The Devil's Disciple\", 1972\n\"As You Like It\", 1972\n\"A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum\", 1973\n\"The Crucible\", 1973\n\"Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead\", 1974\n\"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest\", 1975\n\"The Diary of a Scoundrel\", 1975\n\"Anything Goes\", 1975\n\"Othello\", 1975\n\"The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial\", 1976\n\"Our Town\", 1978\n\"A Midsummer's Night Dream\", 1979\n\"The Three Musketeers\", 1980\n\"Wild Oats\" and \"The Lark\", 1981\n\"The Government Inspector\", 1982\n\"You Can't Take it With You\", 2000", "\n\"On the Town\", 2001\nVHS - \"Arsenic and Old Lace\" and \"David Copperfield\", 1994, 1997\nMidshipmen Reviews - \"Arsenic and Old Lace\", 1994\nMidshipmen Reviews - \"David Copperfield\", 1997\nMidshipmen at the Kennedy Center, 1974, undated\nMiscellaneous Brochures, 1967-1974\nNewspaper Articles, 1972-1978\nPress Releases, 1971-1975\nPhotographs, undated\nCall number: RG 405.3.3 Entry 182a\nTitle: Office of the Commandant/Records of the Office of Midshipmen Activities: Records Relating to the Masqueraders", "\nSize: 3 linear feet (7 manuscript boxes)\nCreator: United States Naval Academy. Commandant of Midshipmen\nAbstract: Records relating to the midshipman theater group, the Masqueraders, dating through 2001.", "\nAlthough not specifically provided for in the original plan for the Naval School at Fort Severn, the Office of the Commandant actually dates from the opening days of the school when Lt. James H. Ward served as executive officer and instructor in gunnery and steam", "\nUnder the provisions of the reorganization plan of 1850, an experienced lieutenant or commander was to serve as executive officer to the Superintendent and instructor in naval tactics and practical seamanship, and was to be known as the Commandant of Midshipmen. Later, during the time in which students at the Academy were referred to as naval cadets, he was known as the Commandant of Cadets.", "\nThe Office of the Commandant also included responsibility for insuring the \"preservation of discipline\" and \"general security\" at the Academy. Line officers of the Navy were detailed as assistants to the Commandant as the responsibilities of the office increased with the growth of the school. Another of the duties of the Office of the Commandant was the command of the annual summer practice cruises and maintenance of its records, under the instructions of the Superintendent", "\nFor most years from 1861 to 1909, the Commandant served as commander of the cruise.", "\nVarious records pertaining to the activities of the Naval Academy's midshipman theater group, the Masqueraders. The records, which pertain to various Masqueraders' productions, consist of performance programs, photographs, newspaper clippings, reviews by midshipmen, audio-visual recordings, and a limited amount of correspondence.", "\nTheatrical activity at the Naval Academy dates back to the Academy's founding days, with the production of \"The Lady of Lyons\" by the Spirits Club in 1846. In 1908, the Academy's dramatic group came to be known as the Masqueraders, named for the title of the first production staged in the then brand new Mahan Hall. In 1914, the job of producing Gilbert and Sullivan operettas, which had formerly fallen to the Masqueraders, was transferred to the Musical Club", "\nIn 1968, the two organization merged, retaining the name Masqueraders.", "\nArranged in rough chronological order in multiple sequences.\nAdditional material pertaining to theatrical activities and the Masqueraders can be found in the correspondence of the Office of the Superintendent RG 405.2.1.\nOffice of the Commandant/Records of the Office of Midshipmen Activities: Records Relating to the Masqueraders, RG 405.3.3 Entry 182a\nCollection inventory prepared by Alice Gilliland in 2013. Historical sketch prepared by Geraldine N. Phillips and Aloha South in 1975.", "\nTheater -- United States.\nUnited States Naval Academy -- Masqueraders\nUnited States Naval Academy. 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48,105,702 | http://www.lassp.cornell.edu/news/2015-04?page=8 |
Uyen Nguyen's Origami Art Featured in VOGEL Fashions
UPDATE Aug 5, 2015
Check out the article in the Chronicle and the new video...
Uyen Nguyen's origami art is part of a VOGEL collection that features creased textiles. For info on the collection see http | ["s://www.indiegogo.com/projects/send-vogel-to-vancouver-fashion-week--3#/story. Nguyen works in the Cohen group studying the mechanical properties of Origami and designing materials with tailored mechanical properties.", "\nVengalattore group develop novel quantum resonators\nMukund Vengalattore's group has developed a novel method of manipulating mechanical resonators to be sensitive enough to work at the quantum scale.\nRead more in the Chronicle and in The Times of India and the article in Physics Review Letters.\nMcEuen group twists and folds graphene like paper", "\nPhysicists in the McEuen research group use the principles of kirigami to manipulate graphene, laying the groundwork for future nano-machines. Both Co-Directors of KIC, Paul McEuen and David Muller, contributed to the July article in Nature. Read more and see videos of the graphene kirigami in action in the Cornell Chronicle.\nPhysics professor Chris Henley dies at 59\nBy Anne Ju\nReprinted from The Chronicle.", "\nChristopher L. Henley, professor of physics in the College of Arts and Sciences, died June 29 after an illness. He was 59 years old.\nHenley joined the Cornell faculty in 1989 as an assistant professor of physics, was promoted to associate professor in 1993, and became a full professor in 2001. Before that, he was an assistant professor at Boston University and also worked at AT&T Bell Laboratories.", "\nAt Cornell, Henley's research was in the theory of frustrated magnetism, both classical and quantum; interacting electron systems; quasicrystals; and biological physics.\nIn interacting electron systems, Henley's research group worked on the border of analytic theory and computation. They studied the ground states of a spinless fermion lattice model with supersymmetry. They also worked on phenomenology of scanning tunneling microscopy measurements in high-temperature superconductors.", "\nIn biological physics, Henley led projects in pattern formation and mechanics, specifically a large project about the physical bases of left/right symmetry breaking in various animals including snails; in plants; or in assemblies of single cells. He also was fascinated by the exterior shell geometry of viruses and worked to model the mechanics of plant roots.\nPaul McEuen, the John A. Newman Professor of Physical Science, called Henley a \u201cbrilliant scientist.\u201d", "\n\u201cHe was interested in almost anything, unafraid of applying his careful and precise approach to wild and wooly problems in fields ranging from quantum physics to biology,\u201d McEuen said.\n\u201cHe was a productive colleague, dedicated mentor and deeply committed to intellectual and academic pursuits,\u201d said Jeevak Parpia, professor of physics. \u201cHe will be missed by all of us.\u201d", "\nLast September, Henley's colleagues and friends came together to celebrate his 59th birthday and his contributions to the field of theoretical solid-state physics. The symposium included an international panel of speakers.", "\nHenley was born Sept. 24, 1955, in Washington, D.C., to Norman F. and Nancy Henley. He received a bachelor's degree in physics and mathematics from the California Institute of Technology in 1977 and his doctorate in physics from Harvard University in 1983. He was a fellow of the American Physical Society and was the recipient of many professional honors, including an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship and a Presidential Young Investigator Award.", "\nWhen young, according to his mother, he had a strong interest in maps and was a precocious navigator for his family's trips. In adulthood, Henley ran, swam or bicycled every day, and enjoyed hiking, reading, contra dancing, classical music and Scrabble, among other things.\nHenley was given a natural burial in Chesterfield, Massachusetts. He is survived by his mother, son, aunt and cousins.\nEun-Ah Kim group finds new insights to entanglement entropy", "\nEun-Ah Kim's group reported in May 22 issue of Physical Review Letters that the poster child non-Fermi liquid state found at filling factor \u03bd = \u00bd shows strongly enhanced quantum entanglement as a result of strong correlations in the system. The \u03bd = \u00bd composite fermion non-Fermi liquid state occurs when extremely clean two dimensional electron gas is subject under magnetic field such that there are two flux quanta per electron", "\nThis state has long been viewed as a prototypical example of fermions coupled to emergent gauge field which mediates strong interaction. However the state does not show any broken symmetry and hence cannot be described using conventional order parameter formalism. Kim group and collaborators used state of art numerical scheme to calculate the bi-partite entanglement entropy which measures the quantum mechanical entanglement between a sub-region and the rest of the system", "\nThey report two unforeseen aspects: 1) there is no change in the scaling of the entaglement 2) the scaling factor which counts number of free channels for free fermions is greatly enhanced. The results can be found at:", "\nhttp://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.206402\nVisualizing how radiation bombardment boosts superconductivity\nUpdate - July 2, 2015\nSee the Chronicle article on Trapping Vortices", "\nA precision spectroscopic-imaging scanning tunneling microscope (SI-STM) developed by Davis is the first tool that can map out those three characteristics on the same material", "\nUnder Davis' guidance, Brookhaven Lab postdoctoral fellow Freek Massee (now at University Paris-Sud in France) and Cornell University graduate student Peter Sprau -- the two lead co-authors on the paper -- used the instrument's fine electron-tunneling tip to scan over the material's surface, imaging the atomic structure of the landscape below and the properties of its electrons, atom by atom", "\nThe precision allows the scientists to scan the same atoms repeatedly under different external conditions -- such as changes in temperature and ramped up magnetic fields -- to study the formation, movement, and effects of quantum vortices.", "\nTheir atomic-scale imaging studies reveal that vortex pinning -- the ability to keep those disruptive eddies in place -- depends on the shape of the high-energy ion damage tracks (specifically whether they are point-like or elongated), and also on a form of \"collateral damage\" discovered by the researchers far from the primary route traversed by each ion", "\nCollaborating theorists at the University of Illinois are now using the experimental results to develop a descriptive framework the scientists can use to predict and test new approaches for materials design.", "\n\"These studies will really help us solve at which temperature which type of defects will be best for carrying a particular current,\" Kwok said. \"The ability to achieve critical current by design is one of the ultimate goals of the Center for Emergent Superconductivity.\""] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": 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46,832,158 | https://transition.fcc.gov/Speeches/Abernathy/Statements/2001/stkqa109.html |
Text | Acrobat
SEPARATE STATEMENT OF COMMISSIONER KATHLEEN ABERNATHY
In re: Section 68.4 of the Commission's Rules Governing Hearing Aid-Compatible Telephones, WT Docket No. 01-309, RM-8658, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (rel. November 14, 2001). | ["", "\nI write to give my strong support for today's Notice. It is past time that we evaluate whether it is appropriate to uphold hearing aid compatibility exemptions for public mobile services. Not only is hearing aid accessibility an important issue for many members of the American public, but review of these exemptions is long overdue.", "\nThere are more than 28 million Americans with hearing loss. We can only expect that number to increase in future years, because of noise exposure and people living longer lives.1 Thirty percent of people between the age of 65 and 74 experience difficulty hearing. Moreover, wireless telephony - inaccessible to many people with hearing loss - continues to grow in importance, providing an essential means for connecting employees, friends, and family members", "\nToday roughly 124 million Americans use wireless telephones. 2 Unfortunately, despite countless advances in wireless telephony technology over the past decade, the FCC failed to review mobile services' ability to provide access to Americans with hearing loss. Indeed, it has been twelve years since the Commission has looked at hearing aid accessibility exemptions. This failure to act conflicts with our statutory obligations", "\nCongress, in the Hearing Aid Compatibility Act, mandated that \"the Commission shall periodically assess\" whether or not it should continue the exemptions.3 It is unlikely that Congress contemplated a 12-year period between assessments. I am disappointed by the fact that over the past decade time and resources were devoted to many discretionary proceedings, while Congress's mandate for a review of hearing aid accessibility exemptions went unanswered.", "\nA critical statutory policy goal is at issue here. Congress provides a clear guide for the Commission's priorities: \"a provider of telecommunications service shall ensure that the service is accessible to and usable by individuals with disabilities, if readily achievable.\"4 Congress laid out a policy map for the FCC, yet we have failed to follow the legislators' explicit directives. Just as troubling is the fact that the Commission ignored its own guidelines", "\nIn 1989, the FCC declared that, regardless of technological developments, it would review hearing aid access exemptions at least once every five years.5 Thus, even by our own timetable today's review comes seven years late. Failing to live up to our own commitments undermines our credibility and effectiveness.", "\nI am, therefore, pleased to vote in favor of this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, and I look forward to a full record on hearing aid compatibility - and a prompt decision by the Commission.\n1 Comment of Self Help for Hard of Hearing People (SHHH), In the Matter of Reallocation of the 216-220 MHz (filed February 15, 2001).\n2 Cellular Telecommunications and Internet Association web site (http://www.wow-com.com/).\n3 47 U.S.C. \ufffd 610.", "\n5 Access to Telecommunications Equipment and Services by the Hearing Impaired and Other Disabled Persons, 4 FCC Rcd 4600 (1989)."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "transition.fcc.gov", "date_download": "2016-10-21T12:42:54Z", "digest": "sha1:VJNQJDSPSWJV5XBF6P2VJ5V5KNL7GBG4", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 3260, 3260.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 3260, 3478.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 3260, 11.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 3260, 12.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 3260, 0.93]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 3260, 260.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 3260, 0.32512315]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 3260, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 3260, 0.02631579]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 3260, 0.02593985]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 3260, 0.01954887]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 3260, 0.03448276]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 3260, 0.20197044]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 3260, 0.56136821]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 3260, 5.35211268]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 3260, 5.21369219]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 3260, 497.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 69, 0.0], [69, 247, 1.0], [247, 581, 1.0], [581, 1923, 1.0], [1923, 2699, 1.0], [2699, 2888, 1.0], [2888, 3022, 1.0], [3022, 3113, 1.0], [3113, 3132, 1.0], [3132, 3260, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 69, 0.0], [69, 247, 0.0], [247, 581, 0.0], [581, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2699, 0.0], [2699, 2888, 0.0], [2888, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3113, 0.0], [3113, 3132, 0.0], [3132, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 15, 2.0], [15, 69, 6.0], [69, 247, 25.0], [247, 581, 55.0], [581, 1923, 198.0], [1923, 2699, 120.0], [2699, 2888, 33.0], [2888, 3022, 24.0], [3022, 3113, 9.0], [3113, 3132, 5.0], [3132, 3260, 20.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 69, 0.0], [69, 247, 0.11111111], [247, 581, 0.0], [581, 1923, 0.01068702], [1923, 2699, 0.00793651], [2699, 2888, 0.0], [2888, 3022, 0.104], [3022, 3113, 0.0125], [3113, 3132, 0.42857143], [3132, 3260, 0.08064516]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 69, 0.0], [69, 247, 0.0], [247, 581, 0.0], [581, 1923, 0.0], [1923, 2699, 0.0], [2699, 2888, 0.0], [2888, 3022, 0.0], [3022, 3113, 0.0], [3113, 3132, 0.0], [3132, 3260, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 15, 0.13333333], [15, 69, 0.88888889], [69, 247, 0.10674157], [247, 581, 0.01497006], [581, 1923, 0.01862891], [1923, 2699, 0.0193299], [2699, 2888, 0.03174603], [2888, 3022, 0.11940299], [3022, 3113, 0.04395604], [3113, 3132, 0.15789474], [3132, 3260, 0.1015625]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 3260, 0.08023155]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 3260, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 3260, 0.4560591]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 3260, -164.23183534]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 3260, -3.41388927]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 3260, -63.52233852]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 3260, 35.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,164 | https://rarediseases.info.nih.gov/diseases/2513/resources |
Glycogen storage disease type 0, liver
GARD Answers
Glycogen storage disease type 0, liver Title
Liver GSD 0; Liver glycogen storage disease 0; Hepatic glycogen synthase deficiency; Liver GSD 0; Liver glycogen storage disease 0; Hepatic glycogen synthase | ["deficiency; Liver glycogen synthase deficiency\nCongenital and Genetic Diseases; Metabolic disorders", "\nGlycogen storage disease type 0, liver (liver GSD 0), a form of glycogen storage disease (GSD), is a rare abnormality of glycogen metabolism (how the body uses and stores glycogen, the storage form of glucose).[1] Unlike other types of GSD, liver GSD 0 does not involve excessive or abnormal glycogen storage, and causes moderately decreased glycogen stores in the liver.[2] Symptoms typically begin in infancy or in early childhood and may include drowsiness, sweating, lack of attention, fasting hypoglycemia associated with hyperketonemia, seizures, and other findings.[2][1] It is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme glycogen synthetase in the liver, due to mutations in the GYS2 gene", "\nIt is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. Treatment involves a specific diet that includes frequent meals with high protein intake during the day, and uncooked starch in the evening. The prognosis is usually favorable when the disease is correctly managed.[1] This condition differs from another form of GSD 0 which chiefly affects the muscles and heart (Glycogen storage disease type 0, muscle) and is thought to be caused by mutations in the GYS1 gene.[3]", "\nThe Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO) provides the following list of features that have been reported in people with this condition.\nMuch of the information in the HPO comes from Orphanet, a European rare disease database. If available, the list includes a rough estimate of how common a feature is (its frequency).\nFrequencies are based on a specific study and may not be representative of all studies. You can use the MedlinePlus Medical Dictionary for definitions of the terms below.", "\nApproximate number of patients (when available)\nAutosomal recessive inheritance\nFasting hypoglycemia\nIncreased serum lactate\nNeonatal hypoglycemia\nPostprandial hyperglycemia", "\nYes, genetic testing is available for glycogen storage disease type 0. GeneTests lists the names of laboratories that are performing genetic testing for this condition. To view the contact information for the clinical laboratories conducting testing click here", "\nPlease note: Most of the laboratories listed through GeneTests do not accept direct contact from patients and their families; therefore, if you are interested in learning more, you will need to work with a health care provider or a genetics professional.", "\nLast updated: 2/23/2011 Treatment\nThe resources below provide information about treatment options for this condition. If you have questions about which treatment is right for you, talk to your healthcare professional.\nManagement Guidelines\nOrphanet Emergency Guidelines is an article which is expert-authored and peer-reviewed that is intended to guide health care professionals in emergency situations involving this condition. Do you have updated information on this condition? Let us know.", "\nNonprofit support and advocacy groups bring together patients, families, medical professionals, and researchers. These groups often raise awareness, provide support, and develop patient-centered information. Many are the driving force behind research for better treatments and possible cures. They can direct people to research, resources, and services. Many groups also have experts who serve as medical advisors. Visit their website or contact them to learn about the services they offer", "\nInclusion on this list is not an endorsement by GARD.", "\nOrganizations Supporting this Disease\nAssociation for Glycogen Storage Disease\nPO Box 896 Durant, IA 52747 Telephone: 1-563-514-4022 E-mail: [email protected]\nWebsite: http://www.agsdus.org\nAssociation for Glycogen Storage Disease UK\nOld Hambledon Racecourse Sheardley Lane Droxford, Hampshire, SO32 3QY United Kingdom\nTelephone: 0300 123 2790 (Office hrs, Mon-Thurs) or 0300 123 2799 (Out of hours) Website: http://www.agsd.org.uk/\nChildren Living with Inherited Metabolic Diseases (CLIMB)", "\nClimb Building 176 Nantwich Road Crewe CW2 6BG United Kingdom\nToll-free: 0800 652 3181 Telephone: 0845 241 2173 E-mail: [email protected]\nWebsite: http://www.climb.org.uk\nChildren's Fund for Glycogen Storage Disease Research, Inc.\n917 Bethany Mountain Road Cheshire, CT 06410 Telephone: 203-272-2873 E-mail: [email protected]\nWebsite: http://www.cureGSD.org\nDo you know of an organization? Send us your suggestions.", "\nLiving with a genetic or rare disease can impact the daily lives of patients and families. These resources can help families navigate various aspects of living with a rare disease.\nGenetics Resources", "\nTo find a medical professional who specializes in genetics, you can ask your doctor for a referral or you can search for one yourself. Online directories are provided by GeneTests, the American College of Medical Genetics, and the National Society of Genetic Counselors. If you need additional help, contact a GARD Information Specialist. You can also learn more about genetic consultations from Genetics Home Reference.", "\nThese resources provide more information about this condition or associated symptoms. The in-depth resources contain medical and scientific language that may be hard to understand. You may want to review these resources with a medical professional.\nGenetics Home Reference (GHR) contains information on Glycogen storage disease type 0, liver. This website is maintained by the National Library of Medicine.\nIn-Depth Information", "\nMedscape Reference provides information on this topic. You may need to register to view the medical textbook, but registration is free.", "\nThe Monarch Initiative brings together data about this condition from humans and other species to help physicians and biomedical researchers. Monarch\u2019s tools are designed to make it easier to compare the signs and symptoms (phenotypes) of different diseases and discover common features. This initiative is a collaboration between several academic institutions across the world and is funded by the National Institutes of Health. Visit the website to explore the biology of this condition.", "\nOnline Mendelian Inheritance in Man (OMIM) is a catalog of human genes and genetic disorders. Each entry has a summary of related medical articles. It is meant for health care professionals and researchers. OMIM is maintained by Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Orphanet is a European reference portal for information on rare diseases and orphan drugs. Access to this database is free of charge.", "\nPubMed is a searchable database of medical literature and lists journal articles that discuss Glycogen storage disease type 0, liver. Click on the link to view a sample search on this topic.\nQuestions sent to GARD may be posted here if the information could be helpful to others. We remove all identifying information when posting a question to protect your privacy. If you do not want your question posted, please let us know.\nSubmit a new question", "\nI have a patient who is suspected of having glycogen storage disease type 0. Is genetic testing for this condition available?\nHave a question? Contact a GARD Information Specialist.\nR. Froissart. Glycogen storage disease due to hepatic glycogen synthase deficiency. Orphanet. September 2009; http://www.orpha.net/consor/cgi-bin/OC_Exp.php?lng=EN&Expert=2089. Accessed 6/11/2015.", "\nL Ierardi-Curto. Glycogen-Storage Disease Type 0. Medscape Reference. February 14, 2014; http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/944467-overview. Accessed 6/11/2015.\nV A. McKusick. GLYCOGEN STORAGE DISEASE 0, MUSCLE. OMIM. May 12, 2014; http://omim.org/entry/611556. Accessed 6/11/2015.\nDo you know of a review article? 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46,832,171 | https://www.bnl.gov/newsroom/print/friendly.php?a=1684 |
Contacts: Karen McNulty Walsh, (631) 344-8350 or Peter Genzer, (631) 344-3174Print
Tiny Tubes and Rods Show Promise as Catalysts, Sunscreen
New ways to make, modify titanium oxide nanostructures for industrial, medical uses | ["", "\nUPTON, NY - Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory have developed new ways to make or modify nanorods and nanotubes of titanium oxide, a material used in a variety of industrial and medical applications. The methods and new titanium oxide materials may lead to improved catalysts for hydrogen production, more efficient solar cells, and more protective sunscreens", "\nThe research is published in two papers now available online, one in Advanced Materials (August 22, 2007), and the other in the Journal of Physical Chemistry (September 8, 2007).", "\nIn the first study, the scientists enhanced the ability of titanium oxide to absorb light. \"Titanium dioxide's ability to absorb light is one the main reasons it is so useful in industrial and medical applications,\" said Wei-Qiang Han, a scientist at Brookhaven's Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN) and lead author on both papers", "\nIt is used as a photocatalyst for converting sunlight to electricity in solar cells and also has applications in the production of hydrogen, in gas sensors, in batteries, and in using sunlight to degrade some environmental contaminants. It is also a common ingredient in sunscreen.", "\nMany scientists have explored ways to improve the light-absorbing capability of titanium oxide, for example, by \"doping\" the material with added metals. Han and his coworkers took a new approach. They enhanced the material's light-absorption capability by simply introducing nanocavities, completely enclosed pockets measuring billionths of a meter within the 100-nanometer-diameter solid titanium oxide rods", "\nTransmission electron micrographs of nanocavity-filled titanium oxide nanorods (bottom) and iron-doped titanate nanotubes (top). Both are being investigated as photocatalysts for reactions to produce hydrogen gas. The improved light-absorption of the nanocavity-filled nanorods also makes them ideal new materials for sunscreen. (Click image for hi-res version)", "\nThe resulting nanocavity-filled titanium oxide nanorods were 25 percent more efficient at absorbing certain wavelengths of ultraviolet A (UVA) and ultraviolet B (UVB) solar radiation than titanium oxide without nanocavities.", "\n\"Our research demonstrates that titanium oxide nanorods with nanocavities can dramatically improve the absorption of UVA and UVB solar radiation, and thus are ideal new materials for sunscreen,\" Han said. The cavity-filled nanorods could also improve the efficiency of photovoltaic solar cells and be used as catalysts for splitting water and also in the water-gas-shift reaction to produce pure hydrogen gas from carbon monoxide and water. The method for making the cavity-filled rods is simple, says Han", "\n\"We simply heat titanate nanorods in air. This process evaporates water, transforming titanate to titanium oxide, leaving very densely spaced, regular, polyhedral nanoholes inside the titanium oxide.\"", "\nIn the second paper, Han and his collaborators describe a new synthesis method to make iron-doped titanate nanotubes, hollow tubes measuring approximately 10 nanometers in diameter and up to one micrometer (one millionth of a meter) long. These experiments were also aimed at improving the material's photoreactivity. The scientists demonstrated that the resulting nanotubes exhibited noticeable reactivity in the water-gas-shift reaction.", "\n\"Although the activity of the iron-doped nanotubes was not as good as that of titanium oxide loaded with metals such as platinum and palladium, the activity we observed is still remarkable considering that iron is a much less expensive metal and its concentration in our samples was less than one percent,\" Han said.\nThe scientists also observed interesting magnetic properties in the iron-doped nanotubes, and will follow up with future studies aimed at understanding this phenomenon.", "\nWei-qiang Han (foreground), Lijun Wu, Zhen Xian, Yimei Zhu, and Wen Wen (click image to download hi-res version).\nMaterials developed in these studies were analyzed using several of Brookhaven Lab's unique tools and methods for the characterization of nanostructures, including transmission electron microscopy and various techniques using x-ray and infrared beams at the Lab's National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS).", "\nThis research, which has clear connections to improved energy technologies, was funded by the Office of Basic Energy Sciences within the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. Collaborators on the Advanced Materials paper include Lijun Wu, Robert F. Klie, and Yimei Zhu, all of Brookhaven's Center for Functional Nanomaterials (CFN)", "\nFor the Journal of Physical Chemistry paper, collaborators include Brookhaven chemists Wen Wen and Jonathan Hanson; Ding Yi, Mathew Maye, and Oleg Gang of the CFN; Zhenxian Liu of the Carnegie Institution of Washington; and Laura Lewis, formerly at the CFN and now at Northeastern University.", "\nNote to local editors: Wei-Qiang Han lives in East Setauket, New York.\nTags: catalysisCFNchemistrynanotechnology\n2007-684 | Media & Communications Office\nThis is a print-friendly version of this news release. To see the full content, go to: http://www.bnl.gov/newsroom/news.php?a=1684"] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.bnl.gov", "date_download": "2016-10-21T11:31:04Z", "digest": "sha1:D747W7RPNMFT3FHP6Y2BDLBTOPU423QY", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 5410, 5410.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 5410, 6355.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 5410, 19.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 5410, 29.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 5410, 0.92]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 5410, 308.9]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 5410, 0.30408774]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 5410, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 5410, 0.05765766]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 5410, 0.02072072]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 5410, 0.03806306]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 5410, 0.01351351]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 5410, 0.00585586]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 5410, 0.01794616]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 5410, 0.18544367]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 5410, 0.45918367]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 5410, 5.66326531]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 5410, 5.33162257]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 5410, 784.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 140, 0.0], [140, 224, 0.0], [224, 806, 1.0], [806, 820, 0.0], [820, 1440, 1.0], [1440, 2212, 0.0], [2212, 2437, 1.0], [2437, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3585, 1.0], [3585, 3902, 1.0], [3902, 4071, 1.0], [4071, 4185, 1.0], [4185, 4491, 1.0], [4491, 5126, 1.0], [5126, 5197, 1.0], [5197, 5239, 0.0], [5239, 5280, 0.0], [5280, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 140, 0.0], [140, 224, 0.0], [224, 806, 0.0], [806, 820, 0.0], [820, 1440, 0.0], [1440, 2212, 0.0], [2212, 2437, 0.0], [2437, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3585, 0.0], [3585, 3902, 0.0], [3902, 4071, 0.0], [4071, 4185, 0.0], [4185, 4491, 0.0], [4491, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5197, 0.0], [5197, 5239, 0.0], [5239, 5280, 0.0], [5280, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 83, 11.0], [83, 140, 9.0], [140, 224, 12.0], [224, 806, 89.0], [806, 820, 2.0], [820, 1440, 98.0], [1440, 2212, 101.0], [2212, 2437, 30.0], [2437, 3145, 104.0], [3145, 3585, 61.0], [3585, 3902, 53.0], [3902, 4071, 23.0], [4071, 4185, 18.0], [4185, 4491, 41.0], [4491, 5126, 97.0], [5126, 5197, 12.0], [5197, 5239, 2.0], [5239, 5280, 4.0], [5280, 5410, 17.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 83, 0.2739726], [83, 140, 0.0], [140, 224, 0.0], [224, 806, 0.01960784], [806, 820, 0.0], [820, 1440, 0.0], [1440, 2212, 0.00403226], [2212, 2437, 0.00917431], [2437, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3585, 0.0046729], [3585, 3902, 0.0], [3902, 4071, 0.0], [4071, 4185, 0.0], [4185, 4491, 0.0], [4491, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5197, 0.0], [5197, 5239, 0.0], [5239, 5280, 0.2], [5280, 5410, 0.03448276]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 83, 0.0], [83, 140, 0.0], [140, 224, 0.0], [224, 806, 0.0], [806, 820, 0.0], [820, 1440, 0.0], [1440, 2212, 0.0], [2212, 2437, 0.0], [2437, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3585, 0.0], [3585, 3902, 0.0], [3902, 4071, 0.0], [4071, 4185, 0.0], [4185, 4491, 0.0], [4491, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5197, 0.0], [5197, 5239, 0.0], [5239, 5280, 0.0], [5280, 5410, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 83, 0.09638554], [83, 140, 0.12280702], [140, 224, 0.01190476], [224, 806, 0.04123711], [806, 820, 0.21428571], [820, 1440, 0.02258065], [1440, 2212, 0.00906736], [2212, 2437, 0.04], [2437, 3145, 0.01836158], [3145, 3585, 0.00909091], [3585, 3902, 0.00630915], [3902, 4071, 0.00591716], [4071, 4185, 0.0877193], [4185, 4491, 0.03921569], [4491, 5126, 0.09133858], [5126, 5197, 0.11267606], [5197, 5239, 0.0952381], [5239, 5280, 0.07317073], [5280, 5410, 0.01538462]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 5410, 0.79935718]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 5410, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 5410, 0.63127512]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 5410, -230.13769426]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 5410, -15.65326309]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 5410, 62.31978571]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 5410, 41.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
46,832,173 | https://www.ferc.gov/industries/gas/gen-info/fastr/htmlall/066175_000100/066175_000100_000183.htm |
Original Sheet No. 180 Original Sheet No. 180
Service Agreement No. _________
Transaction No. _________
Under Rate Schedule PAL
Park and Loan Service
Reference is made to that PAL Service Agreement by and between Company
and ______________________________ | ["__ (Shipper), dated ________________,\n______.\nCompany and Shipper, pursuant to the referenced service agreement, agree\nto the following terms:\nTerm of PAL Agreement*:\nService beginning on __________________, _____\nService ending on __________________, _____", "\nDaily Charge: ___________________________\nPoint of Transaction ________________________\nTotal Quantity __________________________\nSchedule for Service**:\nDaily Quantity Daily Quantity\nBeginning Ending Delivered to Company Received from Company\nDate Date Dth Dth\n_________ _________ _____________________ _____________________\nSpecial terms and conditions: _________________________________________\n*If Shipper's account balance is not zero on the last day of the agreed", "\nupon term as set forth in this PAL Agreement and it is operationally\nfeasible, Company and Shipper may mutually agree to extend the agreed\nupon term in order to reach a zero balance.\n**The daily quantity 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46,834,736 | https://books.google.com.sg/books?qtid=747e78e2&dq=editions:OXFORDN13242770&id=znQIAAAAQAAJ&output=html_text&lr=&sa=N&start=50 | editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books | ["editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\nThackeray, one of his masters, was wont to say of him, that he was a boy of so active a mind, that if he were left naked and friendless on Salisbury Plain, he would, nevertheless, find the road to fame and riches.\nMemoirs of the Life, Writings and Correspondence of Sir William Jones - Page 21\nby John Shore Baron Teignmouth - 1806 - 531 pages\nThe pursuit of knowledge under difficulties [by G.L. Craik]. Continuation\nGeorge Lillie Craik - 1865", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...in amount with his prescribed tasks ; and Dr. Thackeray, one of his masters, was wont to say of him, that he was a boy of so active a mind, that if he...would, nevertheless, find the road to fame and riches. At this time he was frequently in the habit of devoting whole nights to study, when he would generally...\nThe Boy Makes the Man: a Book of Anecdotes and Examples for the Use of Youth\nWilliam Henry Davenport Adams - Ability - 1867 - 208 pages", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...have perused with pleasure the narrative of his early years. His master, Dr. Thackeray, said of him, that he was a boy of so active a mind, that if he...he would, nevertheless, find the road to fame and fortune. Before he was twenty years old, he had not only attained a thorough knowledge of Greek and...\nLaw and Lawyers: Curious Facts and Characteristic Sketches\nDavid Laing Purves - Law - 1868 - 154 pages", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...the Temple in 1770. Dr. Thackeray, his master at Harrow, said : \" So active was the mind of Jones, that if he were left naked and friendless on Salisbury...would nevertheless find the road to fame and riches.\" PUNCTILIOUS ECONOMY. 95 Ersldne first went to sea, then changed to the army ; and when with his regiment...\nGOLDEN SHEAVES\nH.A. CLEVELAND - 1869", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...prescribed task. Such was his activity at school, that one of his masters was wont to say of him, \" that if he were left naked and friendless on Salisbury...would, nevertheless, find the road to fame and riches.\" At this time he was frequently in the habit of devoting whole nights to study, when he would generally...\nThe Bench and Bar of New-York: Containing Biographical Sketches of ..., Volume 1\nLucien Brock Proctor - Judges - 1870 - 779 pages", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...tardy; but he soon began to gain rapidly in his studies. It was said of Sir William Jones in his youth that he was a boy of so active a mind, that if he...naked and friendless on Salisbury Plain, he would find his way to fame. This remark might well have applied to young Hoffman. He soon became one of the...\nChambers's Miscellany of Instructive & Entertaining Tracts, Volumes 17-18\nWilliam Chambers, Robert Chambers - Anthologies - 1871", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...prescribed task. Such was his activity at school, that one of his masters was wont to say of him, ' that if he were left naked and friendless on Salisbury...would nevertheless find the road to fame and riches.\" At this time he was frequently in the habit of devoting whole nights to study, when he would generally...\nChambers's miscellany of instructive & entertaining tracts, Volume 18\nChambers W. and R., ltd - 1871", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...prescribed task. Such was his activity at school, that one of his masters was wont to say of him, ' that if he were left naked and friendless on Salisbury...would nevertheless find the road to fame and riches.' At this time he was frequently in the habit of devoting whole nights to study, when he would generally...\nThe new cyclop\u00e6dia of illustrative anecdote [by E.S.P.].\nE S. P - 1872", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...one of his masters, used to say that he was a boy of so active a mind, that if he were left destitute and friendless on Salisbury Plain, he would nevertheless find the road to fame and riches. At this time he was frequently in the habit of devoting whole nights to study, when he would generally...\nBiography, exemplary and instructive\nWilliam Chambers - Biography - 1873 - 304 pages", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...prescribed task. Such was his activity at school, that one of his masters was wont to say of him, ' that if he were left naked and friendless on Salisbury...would, nevertheless, find the road to fame and riches.' At this time he was frequently in the habit of devoting whole nights to study, when he would generally...\nMen Whom India Has Known: Biographies of Eminent Indian Characters\nJ. J. Higginbotham - British - 1874 - 498 pages", "editions:OXFORDN13242770 - Google Books\n...head-master at the time, Dr. Thackeray, had a high opinion of him, and \u00absed to say that \"if Jones were left naked and friendless on Salisbury Plain,...nevertheless find the road to fame and riches.\" Dr. Sumner succeeded Thackeray, and had an equally high opinion of Jones ; he declared \"that Jones knew..."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "books.google.com.sg", "date_download": "2020-08-05T17:17:57Z", "digest": "sha1:RNJALCIGO4H3ARHMPNPEKHJKJPMWCOST", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 4506, 4506.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 4506, 5195.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 4506, 33.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 4506, 66.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 4506, 0.98]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 4506, 250.0]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 4506, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 4506, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 4506, 0.0]], 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46,032,792 | https://www.mansfieldtexas.gov/1394/Wyatts-Chapel-Cemetery |
Wyatt's Chapel Cemetery is located on the corner of Highway 287 and F.M. 157 in northern Mansfield, in the parking lot behind Applebee's restaurant.
Thomas L. Cope and his wife, Elizabeth, deeded to ED.L. Tims, as Trustee of Methodist Episcopal Church Sou | ["th, 22 acres of land to be used as a public burial ground, known as Wyatt's Chapel Cemetery on May 1, 1880.", "\nWyatt's Chapel became a community church for all denominations as deeded. There are known to be people of both Methodist and Catholic faith buried at Wyatt's Chapel Cemetery. There are two Civil War veterans buried at the site: John Joseph. Hard, a Confederate soldier and John Bell Mabry, a Union solider.", "\nAlthough none of the Wyatt family is recorded as being buried in Wyatt's Chapel, the cemetery was used from 1882 (earliest recorded internment) to 1912 (last recorded internment). Until the original deed from Cope to the Methodist Church Trustees was discovered by Beryl S Gibson of the Mansfield Historical Society in 1984, the Methodist Conference was unaware they owned the cemetery. In 1999, the Methodist Church of Mansfield sold the cemetery property for development.", "\nSubsequent to the sale, Kossman Development Co. of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, conducted an archeological survey. Research by the Maserang Family and the Mansfield Historical Society listed twelve known burials. After excavation, 43 burials were plotted in the cemetery.\nCurrent Day", "\nThe remaining stones are likely located somewhere within the 27 undeveloped acres surrounding the cemetery, having succumbed to vandalism.The cemetery dedication on approximately 1 3/4 acres was removed and the 1/4 acre containing the graves will become a Memorial Park with a commercial development.", "\nWyatt's Chapel received a Official Texas Historical Cemetery Designation from the Texas Historical Commission in 2001. The redevelopment of the property around the cemetery and the construction of a Memorial Park to commemorate the history of the site are tributes to the preservation of heritage in the Mansfield community."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.mansfieldtexas.gov", "date_download": "2020-05-26T00:52:57Z", "digest": "sha1:JD4AEYV6PDPULBSFZE6BD5BLHZPIXUNG", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 2050, 2050.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 2050, 3181.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 2050, 8.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 2050, 68.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 2050, 0.97]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 2050, 225.3]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 2050, 0.34635417]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 2050, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 2050, 0.04290822]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 2050, 0.03575685]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 2050, 0.03456496]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 2050, 0.015625]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 2050, 0.1796875]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 2050, 0.5375]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 2050, 5.24375]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 2050, 4.68615902]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 2050, 320.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 149, 1.0], [149, 363, 1.0], [363, 670, 1.0], [670, 1144, 1.0], [1144, 1413, 1.0], [1413, 1425, 0.0], [1425, 1726, 1.0], [1726, 2050, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 149, 0.0], [149, 363, 0.0], [363, 670, 0.0], [670, 1144, 0.0], [1144, 1413, 0.0], [1413, 1425, 0.0], [1425, 1726, 0.0], [1726, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 149, 24.0], [149, 363, 39.0], [363, 670, 51.0], [670, 1144, 74.0], [1144, 1413, 37.0], [1413, 1425, 2.0], [1425, 1726, 44.0], [1726, 2050, 49.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 149, 0.04225352], [149, 363, 0.03465347], [363, 670, 0.0], [670, 1144, 0.03463203], [1144, 1413, 0.00769231], [1413, 1425, 0.0], [1425, 1726, 0.02372881], [1726, 2050, 0.01246106]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 149, 0.0], [149, 363, 0.0], [363, 670, 0.0], [670, 1144, 0.0], [1144, 1413, 0.0], [1413, 1425, 0.0], [1425, 1726, 0.0], [1726, 2050, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 149, 0.05369128], [149, 363, 0.07943925], [363, 670, 0.06188925], [670, 1144, 0.0443038], [1144, 1413, 0.04832714], [1413, 1425, 0.16666667], [1425, 1726, 0.01328904], [1726, 2050, 0.04320988]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 2050, 0.86889774]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 2050, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 2050, 0.62633401]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 2050, -59.94883134]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 2050, -3.17991242]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 2050, 80.02338328]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 2050, 22.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
13,161,671 | http://www.laurelendo.net/articles/general/503603-abscessed-tooth | Treatment of an Abscessed Tooth | ["Treatment of an Abscessed Tooth\nTreatment of an abscessed tooth\nAn abscessed tooth is a pocket of pus, usually caused by some kind of infection and the spread of bacteria from the root of the tooth to the tissue just below or near the tooth.", "Treatment of an Abscessed Tooth\nIn general, a tooth that has become abscessed is one whose underlying pulp (the tooth's soft core) has become infected or swollen. The pulp contains nerves, blood vessels and connective tissue, and lies within the tooth. It extends from the crown of the tooth, to the tip of the root, in the bone of the jaws.\nAn abscessed tooth can be an extremely painful condition.", "Treatment of an Abscessed Tooth\nIn some cases, antibiotics are administered in an attempt to kill an infection. If antibiotics are ineffective and an abscess is shown to be damaging the pulp or lower bony structures, a root canal procedure may be needed to remove the dead pulp and restore the tooth to a healthy state."] | null | {"partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "www.laurelendo.net", "date_download": "2022-08-15T09:30:15Z", "digest": "sha1:64WDRRXJJO6KPXS53O7CZLWY26XK4XOJ", "quality_signals": "{\"ccnet_length\": [[0, 865, 865.0]], \"ccnet_original_length\": [[0, 865, 1641.0]], \"ccnet_nlines\": [[0, 865, 5.0]], \"ccnet_original_nlines\": [[0, 865, 48.0]], \"ccnet_language_score\": [[0, 865, 0.95]], \"ccnet_perplexity\": [[0, 865, 250.8]], \"ccnet_bucket\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_curly_bracket\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_ldnoobw_words\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_lorem_ipsum\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_stop_word_fraction\": [[0, 865, 0.44571429]], \"rps_doc_ut1_blacklist\": [[0, 865, null]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams\": [[0, 865, 0.0433526]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram\": [[0, 865, 0.05780347]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram\": [[0, 865, 0.06936416]], \"rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram\": [[0, 865, 0.03468208]], \"rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words\": [[0, 865, 0.10285714]], \"rps_doc_frac_unique_words\": [[0, 865, 0.52564103]], \"rps_doc_mean_word_length\": [[0, 865, 4.43589744]], \"rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio\": [[0, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_doc_unigram_entropy\": [[0, 865, 4.00210787]], \"rps_doc_word_count\": [[0, 865, 156.0]], \"rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 210, 1.0], [210, 520, 1.0], [520, 578, 1.0], [578, 865, 1.0]], \"rps_lines_javascript_counts\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 210, 0.0], [210, 520, 0.0], [520, 578, 0.0], [578, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_num_words\": [[0, 32, 5.0], [32, 210, 35.0], [210, 520, 56.0], [520, 578, 9.0], [578, 865, 51.0]], \"rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 210, 0.0], [210, 520, 0.0], [520, 578, 0.0], [578, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint\": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 210, 0.0], [210, 520, 0.0], [520, 578, 0.0], [578, 865, 0.0]], \"rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction\": [[0, 32, 0.03125], [32, 210, 0.00561798], [210, 520, 0.00967742], [520, 578, 0.01724138], [578, 865, 0.00696864]], \"rps_doc_ml_palm_score\": [[0, 865, 0.74315447]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score\": [[0, 865, null]], \"rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score\": [[0, 865, 0.02472568]], \"rps_doc_books_importance\": [[0, 865, 18.5154521]], \"rps_doc_openwebtext_importance\": [[0, 865, 24.61482674]], \"rps_doc_wikipedia_importance\": [[0, 865, 29.45266204]], \"rps_doc_num_sentences\": [[0, 865, 7.0]]}"} | RedPajama-Data-V2 |
13,161,672 | https://www.alamance-nc.com/library/book-reviews/the-foundling/ | Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me | ["Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\n\u2013 The Foundling\nThe Foundling\nPosted on May 03, 2022| By\talamancelibraries\t| In Book Reviews\n\u201cThe Foundling: The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\u201d by Paul Joseph Fronczak, New York: Howard Books, 2017", "Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\nPaul Joseph Fronczak first learned of his murky paternity as a 10-year-old after stumbling over yellowed newspaper articles describing the kidnapping of a 1-day old infant from his reputed parents, Chicago couple Dora and Chester Fronczak. After being cautioned by adults not to ask probing questions, young Paul then set out to become \u201cthe detective of my own life\u201d.", "Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\nAs an adult, Paul lives a very disjointed, nomadic lifestyle of multiple moves, multiple job changes, and two divorces. In The Foundling, he has become a middle-aged baby boomer on a quest for his origins after being abandoned as a small child and adopted into the Fronczak family, whose biological child was kidnapped from the hospital by an unknown woman posing as a maternity nurse.", "Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\nThe search for the Fronczak baby played out in the media for almost 2 years starting in 1964, before Dora and Chester adopted Paul, who had been found abandoned in his stroller at a public shopping venue in another state. At the time, genetic testing was so rudimentary that the Fronczaks could not be assured that the young foundling was the same baby that had been kidnapped from them.", "Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\nAs a teenager, Paul felt increasingly distanced from his adoptive parents and their younger biological son, whom he perceived as being the favored child. After becoming a parent himself of a young daughter, Paul initiates a search for his identity via commercial DNA testing. He soon establishes that he could not be the kidnapped child of his biological parents, but that leaves the mystery of why his own birth parents chose to abandon him and who they were.", "Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\nPaul receives the help of celebrity genealogical researcher Cece Moore and her team of experts and is able to establish his birth name and that he was the result of a multiple birth. Then comes the further mystery of what happened to his biological twin and what really became of the Fronczak\u2019s stolen baby. Were either still alive and well?", "Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\nThis is a fascinating memoir because of the aspects of family history, new technology, and true crimes. Some puzzles remain unanswered at the end, but a quick Google search after reading this whodunnit will answer with some new information that has been revealed in the five years since this book was published.\nThis memoir was written with the assistance of a print journalist and represents a fascinating jaunt through the many aspects of what we might call \u201cidentity and the search for self\u201d.", "Book Review: The Foundling - The true story of a kidnapping, a family secret, and my search for the real me\nLisa Kobrin is the Local History and Reference Librarian at May Memorial Library. 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