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### User: Hello, Herman is an American drama written by John Buffalo Mailer. Michelle Danner directed the film version, starring Norman Reedus, Garrett Backstrom, Rob Estes and Martha Higareda, which appeared at the 16th Annual Hollywood Film Festival in October 2012. Plot Set in the not so distant future, in the United States, sixteen-year-old Herman Howards makes a fateful decision. He enters his suburban school and kills thirty-nine students, two teachers, and a police officer. Just before his arrest he emails his idol, famous journalist Lax Morales, sending him clips of the shootings captured with Herman's own digital camera. In the clipsHerman tells Lax, "I want to tell my story on your show". Lax, haunted by his own past, is now face to face with Herman. Herman is executed in the electric chair. The movie explores why and how a massacre like this can happen in our society, desensitizing in America, youth violence and bullying, the impact the media has on our individual quest for fame, and ultimately our need for connection. Reception Hello Herman holds a 13% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 6 reviews, with a rating average of 4/10. Metacritic has given the film a weighted averagescore of 27/100, based on 5 reviews, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". Sam Adams of Time Out New York said that the most fitting punishment for Hello Herman was to simply ignore its existence: "it barely tries to offer insight into its much-debated subject, content to rip the scab off an ever-fresh wound for the sake of controversy." The Los Angeles Timess Amy Nicholson wrote about the incompetence of the director: "we're not sure what director Michelle Danner, who plays Herman's defensive mother in an uncredited role, wants us to get besides a reminder that angry boys act out for ahost of half-defined reasons." The Village Voices Rob Staeger stated that "the dialogue is all surface: emotions are laid out on the autopsy table for the audience to dissect and analyze, but rarely feel." The New York Timess Jeannette Catsoulis finds that "pointing at everything and elucidating nothing, Hello Herman arrives freighted with the anti-bullying agenda of its director, Michelle Danner." In contrast to other critics, Sam Kashner of Vanity Fair said that “Hello Herman is a powerful and important work, a darkly brilliant tone poem about America’s tango with violence and fame. Herman will get under your skin. Hemay even follow you home. What is certain is you won’t soon forget him.” The Examiner's Courtney Hartmann hit says that “Michelle Danner’s Hello Herman takes a look at the troubled youth of America… the film will definitely spark up conversations that have never really died since Columbine. The issues of teens in America especially when it comes to bullying and retaliation are a problem that need to be addressed far beyond a film.” Danny Miller of MSN Movies called Hello Herman “A powerful film that should be required viewing for adolescents everywhere." Director Michelle Danner issued a statement throughcontributing to the escalating violence in teens, there are a multitude of them. Our world is not safe. I am a mother and feel a responsibility. This breakout violence is not going away. It’s spiraling out of control. There are so many factors that come together for these events to occur. I wanted to start the conversation and not let it die. When a shooting happens the media pounds on us and then they’re on to the next thing. No one does anything and it happens again and again. That’s why I made the film. Nothing changes. We need tokeep seeing movies that deal with these issues. No, it’s not a popcorn film. We can’t drop the ball on this one. This is the world we are leaving to our children and this world is getting more and more dangerous. We have to do something about it." Box office As of July 7, 2013, Hello Herman has earned $8,437 in North America with an estimated budget of $1,500,000. The film earned $5,985 on its opening weekend. Reviews ArkansasOnline Current Movie Reviews DigitalJournal L.A. Times Nerd Reactor New York Times ReelTalk Shreveport Times SlantMagazine TimeOut VillageVoice Interviews BestMoviesEverNews References External ### Assistant:
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### User: William Bradley DuVall (born September 6, 1967) is an American musician, best known as the current co-lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist for the rock band Alice in Chains. DuVall joined Alice in Chains in 2006, replacing the band's original lead singer Layne Staley, who died in 2002, and sharing vocal duties with guitarist/vocalist Jerry Cantrell. To date, DuVall has recorded three albums with the band, 2009's Black Gives Way to Blue, 2013's The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here, and 2018's Rainier Fog. DuVall won an ASCAP Pop Music Award for co-writing the song "I Know" for Dionne Farris in 1996. DuVallis also co-founder, lead singer, guitarist and lyricist for Comes with the Fall. Since 2016, DuVall is the lead vocalist for the supergroup Giraffe Tongue Orchestra. In his long musical career, DuVall has played a role in many bands playing in a variety of genres, an example being the influential punk rock group Neon Christ. DuVall's first solo album, One Alone, was released on October 4, 2019. Biography Early life and career (1983–1992) William Bradley DuVall was born in Washington, D.C. on September 6, 1967. His maternal grandmother was of Dutch, North African and Moors descent. When DuVall was 14years old, he moved to Atlanta, Georgia with his mother and step-father, who had got a job in the city. DuVall has cited Jimi Hendrix as an early influence after listening to his cousin's copy of Band of Gypsys when he was 8 years old and becoming impressed by Hendrix's guitar. DuVall's music career started in the early 1980s Atlanta hardcore punk scene. His first band was Awareness Void of Chaos. In 1983, DuVall helped found the controversial Atlanta-based hardcore punk band Neon Christ, contributing guitars and lyrics to the band's albums. Other members of this band were vocalist RandyChrist originally broke up, DuVall was briefly the second guitarist in the popular Northern California hardcore punk band Bl'ast, contributing a small bit of writing to their second album, It's In My Blood, released on the hardcore punk–alternative label SST Records, founded by Greg Ginn of hardcore punk band Black Flag. DuVall did not, however, stay with the band long enough to record on the album. In 1987, DuVall formed the Final Offering with vocalist Randy Gue (a former Neon Christ roadie), Corrosion of Conformity bassist Mike Dean and drummer Greg Psomas. However, Psomas's heroin habit hindered them from workingconsistently. Dean would go back to work with Corrosion of Conformity; Psomas died of an overdose in 1994. DuVall spent the late 1980s with a Jimi Hendrix-inspired band, No Walls. Other members of this band were jazz bassist Hank Schroy and drummer Matthew Cowley. DuVall gave a demo tape to Living Colour lead guitarist Vernon Reid backstage at a show on their tour with The Rolling Stones in 1989. Subsequently, Reid brought No Walls into the Black Rock Coalition fold and helped arrange some shows for them in New York. They also recorded a demo at Jimi Hendrix's Electric LadyStudios in New York under Reid's mentorship. No Walls released one self-titled album in 1992 and disbanded in the same year. In the late 1980s, DuVall earned a degree in philosophy with an emphasis on religion from Georgia State University. Madfly, Comes with the Fall and Jerry Cantrell (1992–2007) In 1994, DuVall co-wrote along with Milton Davis the song "I Know" for fellow Atlanta musician Dionne Farris. The song stayed on Billboard's Hot 100 chart for 38 weeks, peaking at No. 4, earned Farris a nomination for the Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, and DuVall won anASCAP Pop Music Award for co-writing the song in 1996. In the late 90s, DuVall founded the band Madfly with Nico Constantine, Bevan Davies and Jeffery Blount. He served as guitarist, singer and songwriter. Their efforts included two albums, Get the Silver and White Hot in the Black, the former was released on Killing Floor Recordings, the latter through Blackheart Records and distributed nationally by Mercury Records/PolyGram. In 1999, DuVall, Bevan, and Nico moved on to form Comes With The Fall, adding Adam Stanger as their bassist. CWTF released their first album Comes with the Fall in 2000, and theirsecond album The Year is One in 2001. CWTF began touring as both the opening band and as part of Jerry Cantrell's solo band for his Degradation Trip tours in 2001 and 2002. Follow up releases: Live 2002 CD, companion to their Live Underground 2002 DVD; The Reckoning EP in 2006 and Beyond the Last Light CD in 2007. CWTF's entire catalog was produced by William's DVL Recordings label. In early 2000, Comes With the Fall moved to Los Angeles. Within a week of moving to the city, DuVall met Alice in Chains guitarist/vocalist Jerry Cantrell through a mutual acquaintancewho introduced Cantrell to Comes with the Fall's self-titled debut album. Cantrell started hanging out with the band and occasionally joining them onstage. The following year, Comes with the Fall was both the opening act on Cantrell's tour for his second solo album, Degradation Trip, and also the singer's backing band, with DuVall singing Layne Staley's parts at the concerts from 2001 to 2002. While DuVall's band was on tour with Cantrell, Staley died of a drug overdose on April 5, 2002. Alice In Chains and Giraffe Tongue Orchestra (2006–present) DuVall joined Alice in Chains as lead singer during theband's reunion concerts in 2006, and made his first public performance with the band at VH1's Decades Rock Live concert honoring Heart, in which he sang Alice in Chains' "Rooster". According to Jerry Cantrell, it only took one audition for DuVall to get the gig. For his first rehearsal with the band, DuVall sang Alice in Chains' "Love, Hate, Love". After they finished, drummer Sean Kinney looked at his bandmates and said, "I think the search is pretty much over". According to bassist Mike Inez, DuVall didn't try to emulate Staley, and that's what drew them to him. DuVall revealedthat Ann Wilson of Heart was supposed to sing "Rooster" at the show, but during the camera-blocking rehearsals, he was on stage and Ann hadn't made it downstairs yet, so they said, "Would you sing 'Rooster' for the camera blocking?", and he sang it. When Ann came back and saw him singing, she told DuVall that he should sing the song instead. DuVall thanks Ann Wilson for giving him a spot on the TV show, because that moment served as the coming out party for this incarnation of Alice in Chains, and it wouldn't have happened if Ann hadn't donethat. Initially, Cantrell and the other veteran members of Alice in Chains had said this reunion didn't necessarily foretell a future for the band and that this was just a tribute to Staley and their fans. Drummer Sean Kinney went further, saying at that time he would have liked to change the name and adding, "I don't see continuing as Alice and replacing somebody." DuVall expressed similar sentiments with regards to the task of filling in for Staley. However, the reformed Alice in Chains generated enthusiasm from their fans to convince them to keep the name. DuVall claims to havemet Staley's family, who have all purportedly given the band their blessing. In 2007, Alice in Chains began touring with Velvet Revolver and Kill Hannah. The ReEvolution tour was in two parts. The first took in many European cities and the Eastern United States. The second part, also referred to as "The Libertad Tour", is primarily a cross-country tour that spread into three cities in Canada. For the first time in 15 years Alice In Chains toured Australia as second headliner under Nine Inch Nails on the Soundwave Festival. Personally, it was DuVall's first visit to Australia. It had sincebeen advertised on the official Alice in Chains website that the band – now with DuVall officially noted as lead singer – was working on new material with an album, now known as Black Gives Way to Blue, released on September 29, 2009. The recording process was completed on Cantrell's 43rd birthday, which is also the same day that DuVall's son was born, on March 18, 2009. In the album, DuVall shares vocal duties with lead guitarist/vocalist Jerry Cantrell, who sings lead vocals on most of the songs. "Last of My Kind" is the only song in the album thatfeatures DuVall on lead vocals without harmonizing with Cantrell. Duvall also wrote the lyrics to the song. DuVall also wrote a song called "Tongue Tied" about his friend Sean Costello, who died by suicide in 2008, but the song was cut from the album. In 2011, Alice in Chains took time off after touring more than 30 countries and mourning the death of their original bass player Mike Starr, according to his long-time replacement Mike Inez. However, DuVall stated that there was a possibility of another album in the near future, commenting, "It would be fairly safe to say thatyou don't come this far and do all this work just to stop for another 15 years." In March 2011, it was announced that Alice in Chains would begin recording a new album at the tail end of 2011. In May 2013, the album The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here was released. DuVall sings lead vocals on the songs "Hung on a Hook" and "Phantom Limb". DuVall wrote the lyrics and the guitar solo for "Phantom Limb", the first solo he wrote for Alice in Chains. Cantrell is the primary lead singer of Alice in Chains' post-Staley albums, while DuVall takesStaley's role while performing the old songs in live concerts. In 2016, DuVall released the album Broken Lines with the supergroup Giraffe Tongue Orchestra, founded by lead guitarist Ben Weinman of The Dillinger Escape Plan, and also featuring guitarist Brent Hinds of Mastodon, drummer Thomas Pridgen of The Mars Volta, and bassist Wielbert Collinson of Dethklok and Zappa Plays Zappa. Alice in Chains' sixth studio album (and the third with DuVall), is titled Rainier Fog and was released on August 24, 2018. The album's second single, "So Far Under", was written by DuVall, who also played the guitar solo onthe track. The third single, "Never Fade", was co-written by DuVall and Cantrell, who also share lead vocals, with DuVall singing the verses and the pre-chorus, while Cantrell sings the chorus. The song was inspired by the deaths of DuVall's grandmother and the late Soundgarden lead vocalist Chris Cornell. In December 2018, DuVall and Jerry Cantrell were tied at No. 10 on Total Guitar/MusicRadar's "15 best rock guitarists in the world right now" poll. On January 16, 2019, DuVall along with Jerry Cantrell, Pearl Jam's guitarist Stone Gossard and bassist Jeff Ament, and drummer Josh Freese performed Soundgarden's "Hunted Down"February 2018, Framus Guitars released the "William DuVall Talisman Signature" model designed by DuVall. Discography Videography References External links Comes With The Fall official website Alice in Chains official website Category:1967 births Category:Living people Category:Alice in Chains members Category:Singers from Washington, D.C. Category:Guitarists from Washington, D.C. Category:Musicians from Washington, D.C. Category:Singers from Washington (state) Category:Guitarists from Washington (state) Category:Rhythm guitarists Category:American male guitarists Category:African-American guitarists Category:African-American male singers Category:American male singers Category:African-American rock musicians Category:African-American rock singers Category:Alternative metal musicians Category:Alternative rock guitarists Category:Alternative rock singers Category:American alternative rock musicians Category:American heavy metal guitarists Category:American heavy metal singers Category:American punk ### Assistant:
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### User: Lloyd Schermer (born 1927) is an American businessman and artist. Schermer served in the United States Navy during World War II. He attended Amherst College graduating in 1950, then earned an MBA from Harvard University. Career Early years Schermer entered general management in 1958 at the Star Courier in Kewanee, Illinois. While in Kewanee, the Star Courier received awards from the Illinois Daily Press Association and the Inland Press Association for community service and local community reporting. He moved to Missoula, Montana in 1959 where he became publisher of the Missoulian. This is the town in the book: A River ### Assistant:
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### User: Alpine County Airport is a county-owned public-use airport located three nautical miles (6 km) north of the central business district of Markleeville, in Alpine County, California, United States. It is in the eastern Sierra Nevada range and serves as a general aviation airport. The airport has a single runway, with an apron to park small light aircraft. The airport has no buildings, no lights and is rarely used, averaging only 54 aircraft movements per month. It is the only operational airport in Alpine County. Facilities and aircraft Alpine County Airport covers an area of at an elevation of 5,867 feet ### Assistant:
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### User: The Government of New Zealand (), or New Zealand Government, formally Her Majesty's Government in New Zealand, is the administrative complex through which authority is exercised in New Zealand. As in most parliamentary democracies, the term "Government" refers chiefly to the executive branch, and more specifically to the collective ministry directing the executive. Based on the principle of responsible government, it operates within the framework that "the Queen reigns, but the government rules, so long as it has the support of the House of Representatives". The Cabinet Manual describes the main laws, rules and conventions affecting the conduct and operationthe support of a majority of members in the House of Representatives. The position is determined also by several other factors, such as support agreements between parties and internal leadership votes in the party that leads the Government. The prime minister and other ministers are formally appointed by the governor-general (who is the Queen's representative in New Zealand). Conventionally, the governor-general acts on the advice of the prime minister in appointing ministers. Terminology The term Government of New Zealand can have a number of different meanings. At its widest, it can refer collectively to the three traditional branches of government—thethe government". The Constitution Act 1986, the principal part of New Zealand's constitution, locates the executive government in the Executive Council, which also includes ministers outside Cabinet. The Executive Wing of Parliament Buildings, commonly called the "Beehive" because of the building's shape, houses many government offices and is also where the Cabinet meets. Thus the name Beehive is sometimes used metonymically to refer to the New Zealand Government. History New Zealand was granted colonial self-government in 1853 following the New Zealand Constitution Act 1852, which was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Governments were set up atlines did not appear until 1891, when John Ballance formed the Liberal Party and the Liberal Government. The prime minister became the leader and public face of the governing party. The status of the monarch's representative was upgraded from governor to "Governor-General" in 1917 letters patent. Government and the Crown As stated above, the New Zealand Government is formally termed Her Majesty's Government on the Seal of New Zealand. This is a reference to the monarch, currently Queen Elizabeth II, who is identified as the head of state in the Constitution Act 1986. The legal authority of the state thatis vested in the monarch, known as "the Crown", remains the source of the executive power exercised by the Government. Sovereignty in New Zealand has never rested solely with the monarch due to the English Bill of Rights 1689, later inherited by New Zealand, which establishes the principle of parliamentary sovereignty. Nonetheless, the Constitution Act describes the monarch as the "Sovereign". In many areas the Crown possesses a body of powers known as the royal prerogative. For example, the Royal Assent (the monarch's approval) is required to enact laws and the royal sign-manual gives authority to letters patent and ordersin council. The royal prerogative also includes summoning and dissolving the Parliament in order to call an election, and extends to foreign affairs: the negotiation and ratification of treaties, alliances, international agreements, the right to declare war and peace, and the deployment and armament of defence forces. The Queen rarely personally exercises her executive powers; since the sovereign does not normally reside in New Zealand, she appoints a governor-general to represent her and exercise most of her powers. The person who fills this role is selected on the advice of the prime minister. "Advice" in this sense is a choiceby constitutional convention. Its decisions do not in and of themselves have legal force. However, it serves as the practical expression of the Executive Council, which is New Zealand's highest formal governmental body. The prime minister is responsible for chairing meetings of Cabinet. The governor-general will appoint as prime minister the person most likely to receive the confidence of the House of Representatives to lead the Government. In practice, the appointment is determined by size of each political party, support agreements between parties, and leadership votes in the party that leads the Government. Other ministers are appointed by the governor-general1993 governments have been formed following agreements between a large party and smaller support parties. Government ministers from the support parties are often ministers outside Cabinet. Processes were developed to allow the parties to "agree to disagree" on some issues. Ministers outside the Cabinet have the same overall duties and responsibilities as their senior colleagues inside Cabinet. Departments and other public sector organisations New Zealand's "public service" includes 32 core government institutions—most have ministry or department in their name, e.g. Ministry for Culture and Heritage, or Department of Internal Affairs—which are listed in the first schedule to the State Sectorboards), 17 state-owned enterprises, three officers of Parliament and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. Local government There are two main tiers of elected local authorities—regional councils and territorial authorities—in some places merged into unitary authorities. While the central government deals with issues relevant to New Zealand and its people as a nation, local government exists "to enable democratic local decision-making and action by, and on behalf of, communities", and "to meet the current and future needs of communities for good-quality local infrastructure, local public services, and performance of regulatory functions in a way that is most cost-effective for householdsand businesses." List of successive governments There have been three distinctly different periods of New Zealand government—firstly, the period before responsible government; second, from 1856 to 1890, the period in which responsible government begins; and the third period starting with the formation of political parties in 1891. By convention, a distinct government is named for the largest party that leads it. Current government The current government, since October 2017, is a coalition between the Labour and New Zealand First parties, led by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. A minority government, the coalition is reliant on the support of the Green Party ### Assistant:
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### User: Marie Vermeulin (born 22 November 1983) is a French classical pianist. Biography Born in Courcouronnes, Vermeulin began her piano studies with Jacqueline Dussol, then with Marie-Paule Siruguet at the , before continuing them from 2001 to 2004 at the Conservatoire national supérieur musique et danse de Lyon, where she was a student of Hortense Cartier-Bresson and Edson Elias. At the same time, she studied for four years with Lazar Berman in Florence, then at the Accademia Pianistica Internazionale Imola. She finally perfected her skills with Roger Muraro. She won the first Grand Prize of the International Music Tournament in Decemberother major French cities. She has also given numerous concerts abroad. She alternates solo piano recitals, chamber music, and concertos. She played notably under the baton of Pierre Boulez, Sir Paul Goodwin, Pavel Berman, Eric Geneste, Claire Levacher, Debora Waldman and Salvador Brotons. She is regularly involved in contemporary creation. Discography Olivier Messiaen: Vocalise-Étude for soprano and piano (Marie Vermeulin and Nathalie Manfrino), Universal, 2008 Messiaen: Fantasy for violon and piano (Marie Vermeulin and Daniel Hope), Universal, 2008 Messiaen's Préludes, Vingt Regards sur l'enfant-Jésus & Petites esquisses d'oiseaux (Marie Vermeulin), Paraty 612118, 2013 Debussy's Pour le piano; Estampes; Études, Livres ### Assistant:
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### User: Antoine Marcus Agudio (born January 20, 1985) is an American professional basketball player who last played for the Canton Charge of the NBA Development League. He played college basketball for Hofstra University. High school career Agudio attended Walt Whitman High School in Huntington Station, New York. As a junior in 2001–02, he averaged 22 points per game, and as a senior in 2002–03, he averaged 24.9 points per game, earning All-Long Island honors both years and a pair of Long Island Championships. He also earned first team All-New York State as a senior. College career After redshirting the 2003–04 seasonJuly 2010, Agudio joined the Milwaukee Bucks for the 2010 NBA Summer League. In August 2010, he signed with VOO Verviers-Pepinster of Belgium for the 2010–11 season. On February 10, 2011, he parted ways with VOO Verviers-Pepinster after 15 games. Canton Charge On December 1, 2011, Agudio signed with the Canton Charge for the 2011–12 season. In November 2012, Agudio was reacquired by the Charge. In November 2013, Agudio was reacquired by the Charge. On November 2, 2014, Agudio was again reacquired by the Charge. On October 30, 2015, Agudio returned to Canton. Personal Agudio's father, Alex, also attended Walt ### Assistant:
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### User: Tekkatte Narayan Shanbhag was an Indian scholar, bookseller and the founder of Strand Book Stores, credited with efforts in transforming bookselling into a personal experience, prompting renowned writer, Kushwant Singh, to call Strand, on a BBC show, as the only personal book shop in India. He was honoured by the Government of India in 2003 with Padma Shri, the fourth highest Indian civilian award. Biography Thekkatte Narayan Shanbhag was born in 1925 in Thekkate, a hamlet near Mangalore, in the South Indian state of Karnataka to a wealthy grocer. However, family fortunes turned for the worse with the death ofhis father when Shanbhag was aged just over two and he had a difficult childhood. Unable to pay for the school fees, he appeared for and passed a scholarship examination which paid for his further school education. Later, he took up a part time job and joined St. Xavier's College, Mumbai where he completed his graduate studies. With a passion for books, he started his career in 1948 by opening a small kiosk to sell books at the Strand Cinema, Mumbai, a cinema showing mostly Hollywood movies. After the initial struggles, business began to pick up and Shanbhag moved thebook shop in 1953 to more spacious in Fort, Mumbai. He was reported to have interacted with the customers on a personal level and several dignitaries such as Sir Ambalal Sarabhai, Mirza Ismail, then Diwan of Mysore, T. T. Krishnamachari, Y. B. Chavan and Jawaharlal Nehru were known to have become his customers. He was known to be first bookseller in India to break the Net Book Agreement of 1900 by offering 20 percent discount over the published prices and allowed customers to have unhindered browsing at his shops. The experience is reported to have expanded his customer base whichincluded A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, J. R. D. Tata, Khushwant Singh, V. S. Naipaul, Soli Sorabjee, N. R. Narayana Murthy, Nani Palkhivala, G. D. Birla, Keshub Mahindra and Azim Premji. Shanbhag died, aged 85, at his residence at Pedder Road, Mumbai on 27 February 2009. He is survived by his wife, Asha and two children, both pursuing careers in book publishing. His son, Arun, is the chief executive officer of Rising Book Company, USA and his daughter, Vidya, looks after Strand business in Mumbai, Bengaluru, Mysore, Hyderabad and Pune, as well as two campus stores at Infosys Bengaluru and ### Assistant:
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### User: Sean Aloyisious Bourke (1934–1982) was a petty criminal from Limerick who became internationally famous when he arranged the prison escape of the British spy George Blake in October 1966, helped by Michael Randle and Pat Pottle. Blake had been convicted in 1961 of spying for the Soviet Union. Their motives for helping Blake to escape were their belief that his 42-year sentence was "inhuman" and a personal liking of Blake. Life He was born in Limerick into a large family. Actor Richard Harris was his second cousin and poet Desmond O'Grady was his first cousin. As a boy of 12,stroke and produce brain damage, mainly erase recent memory, to prevent Bourke revealing any intelligence material on return from Moscow to GB. In culture Sean Bourke appears as a character in Simon Gray's play Cell Mates, which tells the story of Blake's escape from Wormwood Scrubs and Bourke's subsequent visit to Moscow. In the original production Bourke was played by Rik Mayall. In the BBC Radio play "After the Break" by Ian Curteis his relationship with George Blake after the escape from Wormwood Scrubs is examined. In it, the epilogue says that he was found dead under a cherry tree ### Assistant:
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### User: [Henry] Hunter White (4 October 1867 – 11 March 1947) was an Australian pastoralist, racehorse owner and breeder. He was a noted philanthropist who supported post-war repatriation with substantial gifts of land and the Church of England in New South Wales. He was born into a socially prominent rural family who had arrived in Sydney in 1826 and owned the Merino sheep and North Devon cattle property Havilah. Birth and early life White was born at Woodlands, near Denman, New South Wales. He was the son of Henry Charles White and his first wife, Isabella Mary Ann (née Lowe). Woodlands,an historic stud and homestead, had been bought by White's grandfather, James White circa 1860 and passed in to his father's hands in 1868. His family moved from Woodlands to Havilah in 1879. White commenced at Newington College in 1883 during the presidency of the Rev Joseph Horner Fletcher and the last year of the headmastership of Joseph Coates. Marriage and children On 19 May 1897, White married Leila Ethel Arguimbau. Known as Lily, the bride was the daughter of Narcissus George Arguimbau, a Knight of the Legion of Honour. Her brothers were all Old Newingtonians as was the groom.Busli, Tippler, Buoyant Bachelor and Fresco. Later life and death In 1919 White bought St Bridgid's at 548 New South Head Road, Double Bay, as his Sydney residence. The house had been designed and built by the English architect Frederick Moore Simpson in 1897. On his death, White left an estate valued at £354,968. St Brigid's was purchased by Woollahra Council in 1951 and was the home of Woollahra Municipal Library from 1957 until 2016. Havilah remains in the ownership of the White family. References Category:1867 births Category:1947 deaths Category:People educated at Newington College Category:Australian people of English descent Category:Australian ### Assistant:
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### User: William Gordon Merrick (3 August 1916 – 27 March 1988) was a Broadway actor, wartime OSS field officer, best-selling author of gay-themed novels, and one of the first authors to write about homosexual themes for a mass audience. Early life William Gordon Merrick was born in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. His father, Rodney King Merrick, was a manager of a truck company who eventually became a bank manager. His mother was the former Mary Cartwright Gordon (b. 26 July 1893, in Natchez, Mississippi). His only sibling was his older brother Samuel. Gordon and Samuel were great-grandsons ofPhiladelphia philanthropist Samuel Vaughn Merrick (1801–1870). Merrick enrolled in Princeton University in 1936, studied French literature, and was active in campus theater. He quit in the middle of his junior year and moved to New York City, where he became an actor, landing the role of Richard Stanley in George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart's The Man Who Came to Dinner. Merrick became Hart's lover for a time, but tired of the theater, with its endless nights playing the same role. Early writing career In 1941, Merrick quit Broadway to become a reporter. Exempt from the draft because of hearingand took up residence in Cannes. Because he spoke excellent French, the OSS gave him papers listing him as a French citizen. He was case officer for the double agent code-named "Forest". In August 1945, Merrick returned to the United States. He again sought work as a reporter, but did not find employment, so he went to Mexico and began writing novels. Merrick's first novel, The Strumpet Wind (1947), was successful in the United States. The somewhat autobiographical novel is about a gay American spy in France during World War II. Homosexual themes are minimized in the novel, which exploresMerrick's works will undoubtedly yield richer understandings of the complex social dynamics that construct networks of control over human sexuality. Later life Gordon Merrick died of lung cancer in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on 27 March 1988, survived by his partner of 32 years, Charles Hulse, and his brother and nephews. Gordon Merrick bibliography The Strumpet Wind. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1947. The Demon of Noon. New York: Julian Messner Inc., 1954. The Vallency Tradition. New York: Julian Messner Inc., 1955. Reprinted as Between Darkness and Day. London: R. Hale, 1957. The Hot Season. New York: William Morrow & ### Assistant:
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### User: Steve Reid (January 29, 1944 – April 13, 2010) was an American jazz drummer who played with Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, James Brown, Fela Kuti, Kieran Hebden, and Sun Ra. He worked as a session drummer for Motown. Biography Born in the South Bronx, Reid started drumming at 16. His family moved to Queens, New York, three blocks away from John Coltrane. Before attending Adelphi University in Garden City, New York, he worked as part of the Apollo Theatre House Band and recorded with Martha and the Vandellas under the direction of Quincy Jones. In 1969, Reid refused to registerfor the draft during the Vietnam War. He was arrested as a conscientious objector and sentenced to a four-year prison sentence at Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary, where he served with Jimmy Hoffa. After his release on parole in 1971, Reid found work as a session musician with Dionne Warwick, Horace Silver, Charles Tyler, Sun Ra, and Freddie Hubbard, in addition to Broadway stage work. In 1974, Reid formed the Legendary Master Brotherhood and his record label, Mustevic Sound. He lived in Lugano, Switzerland, for several years in later life and released several recordings for the English label Soul Jazz and theGerman label CPR. For his final albums, his band included Chuck Henderson (soprano saxophone), Boris Netsvetaev (piano), and Chris Lachotta (double-bass). In 2006, Reid and electronic musician Kieran Hebden, recorded the experimental album The Exchange Session Vol. 1. The duo enjoyed this collaboration so much that they recorded three more albums: The Exchange Session Vol. 2 (2006), Tongues (2007), and NYC (2008). In an interview, Reid referred to Hebden as his "musical soul mate". On April 13, 2010, Reid died in New York of throat cancer. Discography As leader Rhythmatism (Mustevic, 1976) Nova (Mustevic, 1976) Odyssey of the Oblong SquareAfrica One With Frank Lowe Fresh (1975) Out Loud (2014) With Martha and the Vandellas "Dancing in the Street" (Motown, 1964) With Charles Tyler Voyage from Jericho (1975) Live in Europe (Umea, 1977) Saga of the Outlaws (Nessa, 1978) Folk and Mystery Stories (Sonet, 1980) Definite Volume 1 (Storyville, 1982) Definite Volume 2 (Storyville, 1984) At WKCR (2014) With others Lorraine Feather, The Body Remembers (Bean Bag, 1996) Jackiem Joyner, Lil' Man Soul (Artistry, 2009) Dave Koz, Dave Koz (Capitol, 1990) Nelson Rangell, In Every Moment (GRP, 1992) Richard Smith, From My Window (Brainchild, 1994) References External links Steve Reid ### Assistant:
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### User: Gérard Darmon (born 29 February 1948) is a French actor and singer. Personal life He is the second husband of actress Mathilda May. He has three children: Virginie (born 1968) and, by May, daughter Sarah (born 17 August 1994) and son Jules (born 4 March 1997). Darmon also did a cover of "Mambo Italiano". Darmon is of Algerian-Jewish origin. In July 2012, he was naturalized Moroccan by a decree from King Mohamed VI. Theater Filmography Discography Au milieu de la nuit (2003) Dancing (2006) On s'aime (2008) References External links Category:1948 births Category:Male actors from Paris Category:French male film actors ### Assistant:
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### User: 7 dní a 7 nocí (aka Sedm dní a sedm nocí; English: 7 Days and 7 Nights) is a 1994 Czech adventure game released on Windows through Petr Vochozka's Vochozka Trading brand, and published by Pterodon Software. Gameplay and plot This is a creepy erotic comedy inspired by the Leisure Suit Larry series. Jarek Kolář addressed the connections between his game and Leisure Suit Larry by asserting that while Larry acts like an unsuccessful sexual loudmouth, Venca is a self-confident village idiot. Development Creation Originally, the developers had planned to follow Tajemství Oslího ostrova (The Secret of the Donkey Island)with an adventure/RPG set at the time of the colonization of Latin America in the vein of the Quest for Glory series. However the project was shelved when Vochozka requested a game with ready-made graphics. The team built an adventure game editor with ready-made graphics and agreed to switch over projects, and they worked on the project while attending school. Release Vochozka originally planned the game to be released for the Amiga in 1993, and Pterodon completed the PC version in just six months. The game was released in November 1994, the same year as Tajemství Oslího ostrova, and becamethe first Czech adventure video game to play digital music and sounds through Sound Blaster. One popular highlight of the game was an erotic action scene that saw the player press the two mouse buttons alternately to have protagonist Vency Pokyba make the daughters of Mr. Smihta reach climax. According to Petr Ticháček of Games.cz, "I will not even tell you how many mice I have destroyed" playing 7 dní a 7 nocí. References External links Riki preview Excalibur preview Pařeniště review Riki review Score review Excalibur review PC Engine review Category:1994 video games Category:Adventure games Category:Amiga games Category:DOS games ### Assistant:
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### User: World of Noise is the debut album recorded by the band Everclear. It was recorded in a friend's basement for $400 with Art Alexakis on vocals/lead guitar, Craig Montoya on bass, Scott Cuthbert on drums and was released in 1993 by Tim Kerr Records. Album information Alexakis used a beat-up Guild Bluesbird guitar to perform the album. For an amp, Alexakis used a Fender Super Twin with a blown 6L6 tube that would squeal every time Art hit a chord. Often, the amp would overheat and start smoking. When that happened, they would put icepacks on the back and letit cool down, then get back to recording the demo. Despite the problems, Alexakis' amp ended up giving the album a uniquely raucous, noisy sound. The album was originally never meant to be released, but rather a demo. After finishing the initial sessions, the band compiled a cassette and sold it at shows. Once more material was complete, the band swapped out a couple of songs and issued the album on Tim/Kerr. The original self-released cassette included "Drunk Again", which later appeared on the Nervous & Weird EP and lacked "Nervous & Weird". When the band signed with Capitol Recordsin 1994, the label agreed to re-release the album, and remastered it to try to improve the sound. Capitol released their version of the album on November 1, 1994. In the early 2000s, rights to the album reverted to Alexakis, who planned to remix the album and reissue it on his own label, Popularity Recordings. However, problems at his label (and its subsequent closure) shelved the project. The song "Loser Makes Good" was written about an insane homeless man that shot and killed Art's friend, Phillip Bury, better known by his stage name "Buck Naked" of "Buck Naked and the ### Assistant:
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### User: Bradley W. Schenck is an American artist and game designer. Schenck's art is widely recognized for its strong themes and rigorous structure applied to fantastic subjects that is reminiscent of the work of members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. His work has been strongly influenced by traditional Celtic art and the Art Nouveau style. Nonetheless, while his style contains elements and motifs from these styles, Schenck has developed a style which includes a wide range of elements from art both classic and modern which he executes with his own strong sense of line and space. Early work Schenck began his workas an artist at an early age, as a result of moving out of his parents' home to live on his own at the age of 14. He had a strong network of friends that assisted him through his connections in the Society for Creative Anachronism and the role playing game community. He also had a strong work ethic and was stubbornly self-reliant. Some of Schenck's earliest published work can be found in the Arduin role playing game book Welcome to Skull Tower. Schenck's early work can often be identified by his artist's signature "Morno" or the sigil of theform, particularly of people, had improved dramatically. During this time his command of further detail in his work grew with each piece produced. For example, with one piece he became unsatisfied with an idealized presentation of the moon. He reworked the piece after researching the actual appearance of the moon in different phases to present the moon in the piece with a realistic appearance which also bore the stamp of his personal style. During this time his artist signature changed to his monogram: 'BWS'. Much of his work during this time was sold at science fiction conventions and private auctions.Among the most popular of his pieces were watercolors of line art originals. During this time, his pieces often presented moody scenes of stylized Celts in dramatic landscapes, as opposed to his earlier compositions of fairly conventionalized high fantasy motifs. The character expressed in his human forms also became deeper and more expressive, evoking a strong sense of the artist's emotion. Morno used the company name Cosmic Frog Productions, and advertised it as early as 1975, for anyone looking for "fantasy and legendary illustration". He worked for Pete Kerestan as the artist for his company Wee Warriors; one of the2002). Shortly after he began using computers, Schenck took a job as a designer at the Diablo Canyon Power Plant. There he earned a significant wage for designing pipe supports while continuing to develop as an artist in his time outside work. Cold Iron A major commercial project for Schenck in the mid-1980s was the layout, design, and art of the songbook Cold Iron, in which Leslie Fish sets Rudyard Kipling's poems to music. The book was published by Off-Centaur Publications in 1983 and 1987. Schenck also did art for the Centaur Pillow Book, which contained erotic illustrations of fantastic ### Assistant:
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### User: Dönmem Yolumdan (I don't Retract from My Way) is the name of a Turkish album by Asya. It is her fourth studio album, released in Turkey on July 3, 2002. Track listing "Nazara Geldik" (We Were Struck by The Evil Eye) "35 Yaş" (Age of 35) "Dönmem Yolumdan" (I don't Retract from My Way) "Boşver Hayat Kısa" (Never Mind, Life is Short) "Martı Kuşları" (Gulls) "Sönsün Bu Ateş" (Let The Fire Put Out) "Hata Kimde" (Who is Faulty) "Sensiz Saadet" (Happiness without You) "Allah Korkusu" (Fear of God) "İstanbul" (Istanbul) "Beni Unutma" (Don't Forget Me) "Sahnede" (on The Stage) Music ### Assistant:
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### User: Polali Rajarajeshwari Temple is a temple located in Polali, Dakshina Kannada district in Karnataka. The primary deity of the temple is Shri Rajarajeshwari. The temple was constructed in the 8th century AD by King Suratha and has been developed by many dynasties which ruled over the region. The idol of Shri Rajarajeshwari is completely moulded from clay with special medicinal properties. The temple portrays Hindu architecture with roofs adorned with wooden carvings of gods and copper plates. Daily and special poojas are conducted in the temple under the auspices of the head priest madhava bhat. Annual festivals are held inthe temple with much fanfare. Polali Chendu festival is an important festive event where football is played to represent the fight of good over evil. The Chendu festival is followed by the annual festival in March, which lasts for a month and is attended by people from all over the world. Location The temple is located in Polali on the banks of the river Phalguni in Kariyangala village of Bantwal taluk, Dakshina Kannada, Karnataka. The temple is surrounded by lush paddy fields. The Phalguni river flows on the northern side of the temple. The nearest city from the temple isthe main deity of the temple was referred to as Porala Devi. its one of the power full god in dakshina Kannada .... History The temple has been referred to in many ancient inscriptions, including the Markandeya Purana, Ashoka inscriptions and travel accounts of ancient travellers. According to an inscription discovered in the vicinity of the temple, the temple around the clay idol was built in 8th century AD. It is a widely held belief that the temple was built by King Suratha, and that the king offered his own crown, studded with precious jewels, to be placed on the ### Assistant:
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### User: Waitotara School is a small state primary school situated in the rural village of Waitotara, located between Wanganui and Hawera, New Zealand on State Highway 3. The school sits on the banks of the Waitotara River, 47 km south of Ngamatapouri, and was fully refurbished after devastating floods in 2004. These floods destroyed much of the interior of the school buildings as well as furniture and equipment, while many homes in the small community of Waitotara were also badly damaged. Notes External links Waitotara School - Official Website Category:Educational institutions established in 1874 Category:Primary schools in New Zealand Category:South Taranaki ### Assistant:
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### User: George Charles Hurdman (September 23, 1870 – December 22, 1936) was a Canadian lumber merchant and political figure. He represented Ottawa West in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1914 to 1919 as a Liberal member. He was born in Ottawa, Ontario, the son of George Hurdman and Agnes Hurdman. He worked for several lumber firms before establishing his own company in 1899. In that same year, he married Katherine Lynton. Hurdman defeated the incumbent James A. Ellis to win a seat in the provincial assembly in 1914. He served in the local militia and was a lieutenant in the ### Assistant:
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### User: Henri de La Tour d'Auvergne (titular Duke of Bouillon, jure uxoris, comte de Montfort et Negrepelisse, vicomte de Turenne, Castillon, et Lanquais) (28 September 1555 – 25 March 1623) was a member of the powerful (then Huguenot) House of La Tour d'Auvergne, Prince of Sedan and a marshal of France. Biography The vicomte de Turenne was born at the castle of Joze-en-Auvergne, near Clermont-Ferrand in Auvergne. His parents were François de La Tour d'Auvergne, Viscount of Turenne and Eléonore de Montmorency, eldest daughter of Anne, 1st Duc de Montmorency. After the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre in 1572 he participated inconquered Stenay from the Catholic League in 1591. In 1591 Henry IV married him to Charlotte de La Marck, heiress to the duchy of Bouillon and of the Principality of Sedan. In 1592 Henry IV made him Marshal of France. After the death of his wife in 1594, he married Elisabeth of Orange-Nassau, a daughter of William the Silent, by his third wife Charlotte de Bourbon. Defeated at Doullens, Picardy in 1595 by Fuentes, governor of the Spanish Low Countries, he was sent to England to renew the alliance of France with Queen Elizabeth I of England in 1596. Compromisedambassador, Antonio Foscarini, his instructions included an offer of a marriage between Princess Christine, the second Princess of France, and Prince Henry. Anne of Denmark told one of his senior companions that she would prefer Prince Henry married a French princess without a dowry than a Florentine princess with any amount of gold. He died in Sedan in 1623. Issue His only child by Charlotte de La Marck, suo jure Duchess of Bouillon, whom he married on 19 November 1591, was a son who was born and died on 8 May 1594. Children by Elisabeth of Orange-Nassau; married on 15April 1595 Louise de La Tour d'Auvergne (August 1596 - November 1607); Marie de La Tour d'Auvergne (1599 - 24 May 1665) married Henri de La Trémoille, Duke of Thouars and Prince de Talmont, and later King of Jerusalem (1605–1674) and had issue; Juliane Catherine de La Tour d'Auvergne (8 October 1604 - 6 October 1637) married François de La Rochefoucauld, Count of Roucy, and had issue; Frédéric Maurice de La Tour d'Auvergne (22 October 1605 – 9 August 1652) married Eleonora Catharina de Bergh and had issue; Élisabeth de La Tour d'Auvergne (1606 - 1 December 1685) married Guy ### Assistant:
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### User: Philippe Hersant (born 21 June 1948 in Rome) is a French composer. He studied at the Conservatoire de Paris. Selected works Hersant's works are largely published by Éditions Durand. Stage Le Château des Carpathes, Opera in a prologue and 2 scenes (1989–1991); libretto by Jorge Silva Melo after the novel by Jules Verne Wuthering Heights, Ballet in 2 acts (2000–2001); based on the novel by Emily Brontë Le Moine noir, Opera in 8 scenes (2003–2005); libretto by Yves Hersant after the short story The Black Monk by Anton Chekhov Orchestral Aztlan (1983) Stances (1978, revised 1992) Le Cantique des 3viola solo (1987) String Quartet No. 2 (1988) Élégie for string quartet (1990) Duo Séphardim for viola and bassoon (1993) 11 Caprices for 2 violins (or violas) (1994) 8 Duos for viola and bassoon (1995) Niggun for solo bassoon (1995) In nomine for 7 cellos (2001) 3 Nocturnes for flute, viola and harp (2001) Sonata for cello solo (2003) Choral for cello and harp (2004) Tenebrae for viola and piano (2005) 6 Bagatelles for clarinet, viola and piano (2007) Film scores References External links Philippe Hersant website Category:1948 births Category:Living people Category:Conservatoire de Paris alumni Category:French classical composers Category:French male ### Assistant:
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### User: Wen Zengxian (, June 1952–31 January 2020) was a Chinese politician who served as Deputy director-general of the Civil Affairs Department of Hubei Province from 1997 to 2010. Biography Wen was born in Xinye County, Henan. In April 1972, he started to work at Xiangfan Municipal Propaganda Team. In January 1975, he worked as a clerk at Xiangfan Municipal Bureau of Culture. He joined the Communist Party of China in September 1976. Wen entered Wuhan University in February 1977, majoring in Chinese Language and Literature. After earning his bachelor's degree in January 1980, he started to work at Politics Divisionof the Civil Affairs Department of Hubei Province. Later, he served as the President of Hubei Civil Administration School (December 1988–January 1993), Director of the General Office of Hubei Provincial Commerce Department (January 1993–June 1997), then the Deputy director-general of the Civil Affairs Department of Hubei Province (June 1997–February 2010). He was appointed inspector of Civil Affairs Department since February 2010. He was also the President of Hubei Social Organization General Chamber of Commerce. Wen died on 31 January 2020, his death was suspected of being caused by COVID-19 infection. Many Chinese media (including Sina, Sohu, NetEase and Phoenix Television) ### Assistant:
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### User: Vanya Shtereva () is a popular Bulgarian singer and writer. She's known for her eccentric attitude and image. She has written songs for a lot of Bulgarian artists such as Stenli, Antibiotika, Aksiniya, etc. Her first, and to date only, album is called "In Vitro" and was released in 2003. It gained little success due to poor promotion. Today, Vanya is the vocalist of the group MatchPoint. They released their first single in July 2007 charting #1 on MAD TV Bulgaria Top 10. Her first book "Obraztsov dom" was published in 2005 and since then has become one of the ### Assistant:
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### User: {{Infobox |bodyclass = hlist nowraplinks |headerstyle = border-top:1px solid #aaa |header1 = Seasons |data2 = 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 }} The SunRisers Hyderabad (often abbreviated as SRH) are a franchise cricket team based in Hyderabad, Telangana, India, that plays in the Indian Premier League (IPL). The franchise is owned by Kalanithi Maran of the Sun TV Network and was founded in 2012 after the Hyderabad-based Deccan Chargers were terminated by the IPL. The team is currently captained by David Warner and coached by Trevor Bayliss. The primary homeground of the team is the Rajiv Gandhi InternationalCricket Stadium, Hyderabad with a capacity of 55,000. The brand value of the SunRisers Hyderabad was estimated to be in 2019 as the overall brand of IPL was increased to , according to Duff & Phelps. The team made their first IPL appearance in 2013, where they reached the playoffs, eventually finishing in fourth place. The SunRisers won their maiden IPL title in the 2016 season, defeating Royal Challengers Bangalore by 8 runs in the final. The team has qualified for the play-off stage of the tournament in every season since 2016. In 2018, the team reached the finals ofthe Indian Premier League, but lost to Chennai Super Kings by 8 Wickets, following a century by Shane Watson. The team is considered one of the best bowling sides, often admired for its ability to defend low totals. David Warner is the leading run scorer for the side, having won the Orange Cap 3 times, in 2015, 2017, and 2019. Bhuvneshwar Kumar is the leading wicket-taker. Franchise history SunRisers Hyderabad replaced the Deccan Chargers in 2012 and debuted in 2013. The franchise was taken over by Sun Tv network after the Deccan Chronicle went bankrupt. The squad was announced inChennai on 18 December 2012. The team is owned by Sun TV Network who won the bid with per year for a five-year deal, a week after the Chargers were terminated due to prolonged financial issues. Sun TV Network Limited, which is headquartered in Chennai, is one of India's biggest television networks with 32 TV channels and 45 FM radio stations, making it India's largest media and entertainment company. The team jersey was unveiled on 8 March 2013, and the team anthem composed by G. V. Prakash Kumar was released on 12 March 2013. The logo was unveiled on 20December 2012, along with the announcement that the team's management would be led by Kris Srikkanth, now replaced by veteran Muttiah Muralitharan, Tom Moody and V. V. S. Laxman."Sunrisers unveil logo, rope in VVS, Srikkanth, Trevor Baylis ", (20 December 2012). Wisden India. Retrieved 23 January 2013. Team history 2013–2014: Initial years SunRisers Hyderabad made their IPL debut in the 2013 season. They retained 20 players from the Chargers, which left slots open for 13 players (eight Indian, five overseas). They filled six of these with Thisara Perera, Darren Sammy, Sudeep Tyagi, Nathan McCullum, Quinton de Kock and Clint McKay.Kumar Sangakkara captained SRH for nine matches and Cameron White was captain for the remaining seven, as well as the eliminator match in the playoffs. In their inaugural season, the team reached the playoffs but were eliminated after losing against Rajasthan Royals by 4 wickets at Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi on 22 May 2013. The team played all of their home games in Hyderabad. For the 2014 season, Pune Warriors India was defunct and not replaced, leaving only eight teams in the league. The team retained two players, Dale Steyn and Shikhar Dhawan. As a result of this retention,the team had an auction purse of and two right-to-match cards. Shikhar Dhawan and Darren Sammy were named as captain and vice captain respectively. Due to the 2014 Lok Sabha Elections, the season was partially held outside India with the opening 20 matches hosted in the United Arab Emirates and the remaining matches played in India from 2 May onwards. The team finished in 6th place with six wins and eight losses, failing to secure a place in the playoffs. Dhawan led the team for the first ten matches while Sammy led the team for remaining four. 2015–2017: Maiden titleMarch 2019 after he was banned by BCCI to participate in 2018 season due to Australian ball-tampering controversy. SRH decided to stay with Kane Williamson as captain and Bhuvneshwar Kumar as vice-captain. Before start of the season, Williamson was nursing an injury and Kumar lead the team in the first game against Kolkata Knight Riders and from third game till sixth game. SRH ended the 2019 season with 6 wins and 9 losses. They lost against Delhi Capitals in the Eliminator at Dr. Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium in Visakhapatnam. David Warner won the orange cap in thisseason. 2020 Ahead of the auction, SRH retained 18 players and released 5 players. On auction day (19 December 2019) SRH bought 7 new players. SRH parted ways with Tom Moody and Simon Helmot. They have named Trevor Bayliss and Brad Haddin as Head coach and Assistant Coach respectively. On 27 February 2020, David Warner was reinstated as captain of SRH replacing Kane Williamson. Home ground The Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium is the principal cricket stadium in Hyderabad Telangana state, India and is the home ground of the SunRisers Hyderabad. It is owned by the Hyderabad Cricket Association (HCA).It is located in the eastern suburb of Uppal and has a seating capacity of 55,000. In 2015, the 40,000-capacity Dr. Y. S. Rajasekhara Reddy ACA–VDCA Cricket Stadium, which is located in Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, was selected as the secondary home ground for SunRisers Hyderabad. During the 2015 season, the team played their first three home games at this ground. During the 2017 season, as the SunRisers Hyderabad were defending IPL champions, they hosted the season opener and final. SRH selected their primary home ground to host their home games. During the 2019 season, Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium wasselected to host the final after BCCI decided to shift the match from M. A. Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai due to the issues with the locked Stands and after TNCA failed to secure permission to open the three locked stands for the Final of the season. Hyderabad Cricket Association won the award for best ground and pitch during 2019 IPL. Seasons Key DNQ = Did not qualify TBD = To be decided Head Coaches CaptainsLast updated on 9 May 2019 Squad Administration and support staff Former players Kit manufacturers and sponsors Result summary IPL By seasonLast match updated was againstDelhi Capitals on 8 May 2019By opposition Last updated 8 May 2019CLT20 By season By opposition Fixtures and results IPL 2013 season 2014 season 2015 season 2016 season 2017 season 2018 season 2019 season 2020 season CLT20 2013 season Awards and achievements 2013 Indian Premier League Semi-finalists of the 2013 Indian Premier League Hat-trick: (Amit Mishra vs. Pune Warriors) IPL Awards: Most Economic Bowler (Anand Rajan – 5.25) IPL Awards: Most Bowling Dots (Dale Steyn – 211)2013 Champions League Qualified to group stage from qualifying stage 2014 Indian Premier League Highest Team Total of the Tournament (205/5) Best Bowling Figuresof the Tournament (Bhuvneshwar Kumar – 4/14) Best Catches of the Season (Dale Steyn)2015 Indian Premier League Winner of Orange Cap (David Warner – 562 runs) David Warner becomes the first player to score 50+ as a captain Yes Bank Maximum Super Sixes Competition (Moises Henriques – 106 metres) Hat-trick Winning Streak Best Catches of the Season (David Warner) IPL Awards: Most Fours (David Warner – 65) IPL Awards: Best Bowling Average (Moises Henriques – 14.36)2016 Indian Premier League Champions of the 2016 Indian Premier League Player of the Final (Ben Cutting) Winner of Purple Cap (Bhuvneshwar Kumar – 23wickets) Fair Play Award Winner Emerging Player of the Year (Mustafizur Rahman) Ball of the Tournament (Mustafizur Rahman) Vitara Brezza Glam Shot of the Season (David Warner) Longest Six of the Tournament (Ben Cutting – 117 metres) Yes Bank Maximum Super Sixes Competition (David Warner) IPL Awards: Most Fours (David Warner – 88) IPL Awards: Most Bowling Dots (Bhuvneshwar Kumar – 156)2017 Indian Premier League Play-Offs of the 2017 Indian Premier League Winner of Orange Cap (David Warner – 641 runs) David Warner scores the highest run total as a captain in all IPL seasons Winner of Purple Cap (BhuvneshwarKumar – 26 wickets) Vitara Brezza Glam Shot of the Season (Yuvraj Singh) IPL Awards: Highest Individual Score (David Warner – 126) IPL Awards: Most Fours (David Warner – 63) David Warner becomes the first player to score 100+ as a captain as well as for Sunrisers Hyderabad 2018 Indian Premier League Runners-up of the 2018 Indian Premier League Winning Streak: 6, highest in all IPL seasons for SRH Winner of Orange Cap (Kane Williamson – 735 runs) IPL Awards: Most Bowling Dots (Rashid Khan – 167) Kane Williamson scored the most fifties in 2018 IPL season and became thefirst NZ cricketer to win the Orange Cap 2019 Indian Premier League Play-Offs of 2019 Indian Premier League Highest successful chase for Sunrisers Hyderabad in IPL history (199 against Rajasthan Royals at home. Jonny Bairstow became the second player and first keeper-batsmen for Sunrisers Hyderabad to score 100+. David Warner scored his second IPL hundred for SRH. David Warner and Jonny Bairstow become the first opening pair to get 100's each in IPL history and for Sunrisers Hyderabad. It is the 2nd instances in IPL and fourth instances overall of two batsman scoring century in a single innings. David Warner ### Assistant:
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### User: his debut against Lokomotiv Moscow in the UEFA Europa League on 30 October 2011. His second appearance made against Anderlecht in the Europa League on 1 December 2011, but he never had an opportunity in a Superleague Greece match. Stabæk On 23 July 2012 Elfar signed a short-term contract with Stabæk for a free transfer until the end of the year. Randers FC On 31 January 2013, Elfar signed a new short-term contract, this time with Randers FC from Denmark for the spring season of 2013. He became a free agent on 1 July 2013. Breiðablik Elfar signar two-year contractreturn to Iceland. Later the same day AC Horsens announced, that they would not exercise the buying option. However, after the season Bo Henriksen stated the club would have a discussion with Helgason if he wanted to remain. International career Elfar was part of the Icelandic U21 team in the EURO 2011 in Denmark. On 10 August 2011, Elfar made his senior debut for Iceland against Hungary. References External links Profile at ksi.is Category:Living people Category:1989 births Category:Association football central defenders Category:AEK Athens F.C. players Elfar Freyr Helgason Elfar Freyr Helgason Category:Danish Superliga players Category:Expatriate footballers in Denmark Category:Expatriate footballers ### Assistant:
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### User: Yost Ice Arena, formerly the Fielding H. Yost Field House, is an indoor ice hockey arena located on the campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan. It is the home of the Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey team which plays in the Big Ten Conference. The building opened in 1923 and was the home of the men's basketball until the Crisler Center opened in 1967. It was converted for use as an ice arena in 1973 and has been home of the men's ice hockey team since then and to the women's ice hockey club team sincetheir establishment in 1994. History Built in 1923 as a field house, the facility is named in honor of Michigan's longtime football coach and athletic director, Fielding H. Yost. For many years, it housed the men's basketball team until they relocated to the larger Crisler Arena in 1967. It also housed the track teams in the 1950s. In 1973, it was converted into an ice arena, and the Michigan hockey team has used it since. The University of Michigan's Senior and Collegiate synchronized skating and freestyle teams also practice at Yost. In addition, local high school teams, recreational leagues (AAAHA)and the university's intramural hockey league call it home. Yost Ice Arena has hosted NCAA Ice Hockey Tournament games five times in its history, most recently in 2003. In 2017, the rink at Yost was named the Red Berenson Rink after former coach Red Berenson in honor of his 33 seasons of coaching Michigan's ice hockey team, and officially dedicated to Berenson on January 5, 2018. Renovations Yost has undergone a number of renovations to modernize its facilities and improve amenities for spectators. In 1992, a $1 million renovation project replaced the rink floor and refrigeration unit and included thecreated a new balcony directly across from the press box that juts out over existing stands and provides 300 new seats. In the entrance to the new seating level is a lounge that opens up onto a platform in the northeast corner on the arena and overlooks the ice. A new stairwell, new restrooms and a kitchen to serve hot food in the new seating area also were added to improve the amenities for the individuals sitting in the new seats. In addition, a center ice scoreboard and monitors underneath the east and west wing balconies were installed. In thesummer of 2006, a $2 million project involved the building of a new opponent locker room. It is situated at the opposite end of the ice from U-M's locker room, making entering and exiting the ice easier for both teams. The most recent renovation cost the University of Michigan Athletics Department $16 million and was done by Rossetti Architects. The renovation began in the spring of 2012 and was completed in September. The renovation included: ADA accessible seating, new aluminum bench seating throughout, "ice" box seats in the corners of the arena, seat backed premium seating, a new press box,a redesigned concourse with improved concessions, exterior windows and updated lighting and sound systems. These upgrades followed the installation of a new HD video board installed in 2011. Yost Ice Arena's seating was reduced from 6,200 to 5,800, though premium seating was expanded from 300 to 500 and total capacity is approximately 6,600. The Michigan hockey team held a re-dedication ceremony for the newly renovated Yost Ice Arena on November 16, 2012, at their game against Notre Dame. Nearly 80 former players joined the Michigan faithful that night, including Marty Turco and Brendan Morrison. The group took to the iceduring the first intermission, where they cut pieces from a net using oversized scissors, while a packed house waved glowsticks. Statistics Yost Ice Arena: (1973–present) Capacity: 8,100 (1973–74 to 1990–91); 7,235 (1991–92 to 1995–96); 6,343 (1996–97 to 2000–01); 6,637 (2001–02 to 2011–12); 5,800 (2012–13 to present) Constructed: 1923 Dedicated: November 10, 1923 Renovated: 1973, 1992, 1996, 2001, 2006, 2012 Name Changes: Fielding H. Yost Field House (1924–73), Yost Ice Arena (1973–present) First Ice Hockey Game: Nov. 2, 1973, a 6–2 U-M win over Waterloo Lutheran Top single-game crowds 8,411 vs Michigan State: Jan. 29, 1988 8,404 vs Michigan State: Feb.18, 1989 8,396 vs Michigan State: Feb. 17, 1990 Top weekend series crowds 19,114 vs Cornell: Mar. 15–17, 1991 15,528 vs Michigan Tech: Feb. 27–28, 1981 15,240 vs Lake Superior: Jan. 31–Feb. 1, 1992 Top single-game post-renovation crowds (1996–97 to present) 6,986 vs Michigan State: January 19, 2002 6,984 vs Notre Dame: January 18, 2008 6,983 vs Notre Dame: January 31, 2009 References External links Official site (includes ticket information) Official University of Michigan Athletics website Category:Michigan Wolverines men's ice hockey Category:Michigan Wolverines sports venues Category:College ice hockey venues in the United States Category:Defunct college basketball venues in the United ### Assistant:
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### User: Summer Ade is the third extended play (fourth overall) by South Korean girl group DIA. It was released digitally on August 9, 2018, by MBK Entertainment under Interpark's music distribution. The EP includes a total of eight tracks including the lead single "WooWoo". It is the only release with an eight-member group without Eunjin who departed from the group on May 2018, and last release feature of member Jenny who cite their promotions due to the health and knee injury and subsequent departure from the group. Release DIA released on their fourth album Summer Ade on August 9, 2018 with ### Assistant:
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### User: Events from the year 1950 in Pakistan. Incumbents Monarch King George VI (consort – Queen Elizabeth) Federal government Governor-General – Khawaja Nazimuddin Prime Minister: Liaquat Ali Khan Chief Justice: Abdul Rashid Events January 4 January - President of Pakistan recognizes People's Republic of China. April 2 April – Liaquat Ali Khan visits Delhi for meetings with Indian Prime Minister Nehru. 8 April – Liaquat and Nehru sign what becomes known as the Liaquat-Nehru Pact. The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Karachi, originally known as the Diocese of Karachi, erected on 20 May 1948, was elevated as the Archdiocese of Karachi on ### Assistant:
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### User: Yasuji Kiyose (清瀬 保二 Kiyose Yasuji, 13 January 1900 – 14 September 1981) was a Japanese composer. He studied composition privately with Kōsaku Yamada and Kōsuke Komatsu and in 1930, took an active part in organizing the Shinkō Sakkyokuka Renmei, (which later grew into the Japanese section of the ISCM). In 1948, Kiyose took on Hiroyoshi Suzuki and Tōru Takemitsu for a brief period as pupils in composition. His music at times incorporates Japanese pentatonic scales, and other elements of Japanese folk-song; his far better known pupil Takemitsu, developed this tendency further in a great number of his works. Major ### Assistant:
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### User: Normaliz is a free computer algebra system developed by Winfried Bruns, Robert Koch (1998–2002), Bogdam Ichim (2007/08) and Christof Soeger (2009–2016). It is published under the GNU General Public License version 2. Normaliz computes lattice points in rational polyhedra, or, in other terms, solves linear diophantine systems of equations, inequalities, and congruences. Special tasks are the computation of lattice points in bounded rational polytopes and Hilbert bases of rational cones. Normaliz also computes enumerative data, such as multiplicities (volumes) and Hilbert series. The kernel of Normaliz is a templated C++ class library. For multivariate polynomial arithmetic it uses CoCoALib. Normaliz ### Assistant:
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### User: Victor Oluyemi Olatunji (born 5 September 1999) is a Nigerian footballer who plays in Austria for Mattersburg on loan from Slovak club Podbrezová as a forward. Club career FK Železiarne Podbrezová Olatunji made his professional debut for Železiarne Podbrezová against Nitra on 16 February 2019. Olatunji came on after some hour of play, as a replacement for Daniel Pavúk. While on the pitch, Podbrezová sealed off the win 3-1, through a late goal by Lukáš Urbanič. References External links FK Železiarne Podbrezová official club profile Futbalnet profile Fortuna Liga profile Category:1999 births Category:People from Sokoto Category:Living people Category:Nigerian footballers Category:Association ### Assistant:
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### User: The Titusville Area School District is a small, rural public school district located in Titusville, Pennsylvania. The School District comprises Allegheny Township, Cherrytree Township, Oilcreek Township and Pleasantville Borough located in Venango County; and Centerville Borough, Hydetown Borough, Oil Creek Township, Rome Township and Titusville City located in Crawford County; and Southwest Township located in Warren County. The School District covers about . Per the 2000 federal census data, the district serves a resident population of 14,698. In 2009, the district residents' per capita income was $15,872, while the median family income was $37,271. According to District officials, in schoolyear 2007–08 the Titusville Area School District provided basic educational services to 2,216 pupils through the employment of 171 teachers, 130 full-time and part-time support personnel, and 21 administrators. In September 2008, the administration reported there were 319 employees, including 19 administrators, 172 professional/instructional employees and 128 support personnel. The Administration includes; building level principals and assistant principals, six directors of specialized programs which include the following positions: Director of Student Services, Federal Programs and Elementary Curriculum, Special Education, Athletics, Day Care and Vo-Tech. There are four directors of support programs which include: Directors of Food Service and Transportation, Buildings96% in 2010, while it was 95% in 2009. Report Card 2010. Titusville Area Middle School Titusville Middle School opened in 1999, after moving from the High School Complex. The school is located at 415 Water Street, Titusville, PA. Titusville Area High School Titusville Area High School is located at 302 E. Walnut St., Titusville, PA. Academic achievement Titusville Area School District was ranked 292nd out of 498 Pennsylvania school districts in 2011 by the Pittsburgh Business Times. The ranking was based on five years of student academic performance based on the PSSAs for: reading, writing, math and three yearsof science. 2010 – 280th 2009 – 255th 2008 – 204th 2007 – 184th out of 501 Pennsylvania school districts. In 2009, the academic achievement, of the students in the Titusville Area School District, was in the 56th percentile among all 500 Pennsylvania school districts Scale (0–99; 100 is state best) Graduation rate In 2010, the Pennsylvania Department of Education issued a new, 4-year cohort graduation rate. Titusville Area School District's rate was 83% for 2010. According to traditional graduation rate calculations: 2010 – 86% 2009 – 85% 2008 – 80% 2007 – 80% Graduation requirements Titusville Area School Districtend of their senior year. By law, all Pennsylvania high school students must complete a project as a part of their eligibility to graduate from high school. The type of project, its rigor and its expectations are set by the individual school district. For the senior project at Titusville High School, seniors must write a passing (grade minimum 60%) research paper. Seniors in Business Communication complete a business project. All seniors give an oral presentation. A third component of the senior project is focused on preparing a working resume. By Pennsylvania State School Board regulations, for the graduating classes of2016, students must demonstrate successful completion of secondary level course work in Algebra I, Biology, English Composition, and Literature for which the Keystone Exams serve as the final course exams. Students’ Keystone Exam scores shall count for at least one-third of the final course grade. High school In 2010, the high school has declined to Warning AYP status. In 2009, the school achieved AYP status. 11th Grade Reading 2010 – 64% on grade level (21% below basic). In Pennsylvania, 66% of 11th graders are on grade level. 2009 – 66% (20% below basic), State – 65% 2008 – 63% (13%below basic), State – 65% 2007 – 73% (16% below basic), State – 65% 11th Grade Math: 2010 – 50%, on grade level (29% below basic). In Pennsylvania, 59% of 11th graders are on grade level. Boys – 47% on grade level with 31% below basic / Girls – 53% with 28% below basic. 2009 – 53% (24% below basic). State – 56%. 2008 – 46% (26% below basic), State – 56% 2007 – 57% (22% below basic), State – 53% 11th Grade Science: 2010 – 29% on grade level (16% below basic). State – 39% of 11th graders wereon grade level. 2009 – 36% (16% below basic). State – 40% 2008 – 32% (11% below basic), State – 39% College remediation According to a Pennsylvania Department of Education study released in January 2009, 18% of Titusville High School graduates required remediation in mathematics and or reading before they were prepared to take college level courses in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education or community colleges. Less than 66% of Pennsylvania high school graduates, who enroll in a four-year college in Pennsylvania, will earn a bachelor's degree within six years. Among Pennsylvania high school graduates pursuing an associatedegree, only one in three graduate in three years. Per the Pennsylvania Department of Education, one in three recent high school graduates who attend Pennsylvania's public universities and community colleges takes at least one remedial course in math, reading or English. Dual enrollment The high school offers the Pennsylvania dual enrollment program. This state program permits high school students to take courses, at local higher education institutions, to earn college credits. Titusviile High School's program enables students to take a college-level courses at University of Pittsburgh's Titusville campus. The students have full access to all activities and programs at thehigh school. The college credits are offered at a deeply discounted rate. The state offers a small grant to assist students in costs for tuition, fees and books. Under the Pennsylvania Transfer and Articulation Agreement, many Pennsylvania colleges and universities accept these credits for students who transfer to their institutions. The Pennsylvania College Credit Transfer System reported in 2009, that students saved nearly $35.4 million by having their transferred credits count towards a degree under the new system. In 2010, the district received a 10,132 state grant to be used to assist students with tuition, fees and books. Middle schoolIn 2009 and in 2010, the school achieved AYP status. The attendance rate was 95% in 2010. 8th Grade Reading 2010 – 85% on grade level 49% advanced (% below basic). In Pennsylvania, 81% of 8th graders on grade level. Boys 76% on grade level / Girls – 93%. 2009 – 80%, 50% advanced (8% below basic), State – 80% 2008 – 85% (8% below basic), State – 78% 2007 – 63% (5% below basic), State – 75% 8th Grade Math: 2010 – 74% on grade level 50% advanced (4% below basic). In Pennsylvania, 75% of 8th graders are ongrade level. 2009 – 79% 49% advanced (9% below basic), State – 71% 2008 – 71% (11% below basic), State – 70% 2007 – 68% (8% below basic), State – 68% 8th Grade Science: 2010 – 52% on grade level, 15% advanced (17% below basic). State – 57% of 8th graders were on grade level. 2009 – 52%, 14% advanced (21% below basic). State – 55% 2008 – 53%, State – 52% 7th Grade Reading 2010 – 76% on grade level, 33% advanced (7% below basic). In Pennsylvania, 73% of 7th graders on grade level. 2009 – 74%, 37% advanced(5% below basic), State – 71% 2008 – 76%, 34% advanced (8% below basic), State – 70% 2007 – 75% (10% below basic), State – 67% 7th Grade Math: 2010 – 83% on grade level, 58% advanced (5% below basic). In Pennsylvania, 77% of 7th graders are on grade level. 2009 – 83%, 55% advanced (9% below basic), State – 75% 2008 – 83%, 57% advanced (5% below basic), State – 71% 2007 – 83% (10% below basic), State – 67% 6th Grade Reading 2010 – 71% on grade level. 36% advanced, (7% below basic). State – 68% 2009 –activities include: review of group-based data (cumulative records, enrollment records, health records, report cards, ability and achievement test scores); hearing, vision, motor, and speech/language screening; and review by the Instructional Support Team or Student Assistance Team. When screening results suggest that the student may be eligible, the District seeks parental consent to conduct a multidisciplinary evaluation. Parents who suspect their child is eligible may verbally request a multidisciplinary evaluation from a professional employee of the District or contact the Special Education Department. In 2010, the state of Pennsylvania provided $1,026,815,000 for special education services. The funds were distributed to districtsbased on a state policy which estimates that 16% of the district's pupils are receiving special education services. This funding is in addition to the state's basic education per pupil funding, as well as, all other state and federal funding. Titusville Area School District received a $1,546,959 supplement for special education services in 2010. The state provided the same level of funding for 2011–12. Gifted education The District Administration reported that 51 or 2.38% of its students were gifted in 2009. By law, the district must provide mentally gifted programs at all grade levels. The primary emphasis is on enrichmentand acceleration of the regular education curriculum through a push in model with the gifted instructor in the classroom with the regular instructor. Students identified as gifted attending the High School have access to honors and advanced placement courses, and dual enrollment with local colleges. The referral process for a gifted evaluation can be initiated by teachers or parents by contacting the student's building principal and requesting an evaluation. All requests must be made in writing. To be eligible for mentally gifted programs in Pennsylvania, a student must have a cognitive ability of at least 130 as measured on astandardized ability test by a certified school psychologist. Other factors that indicate giftedness will also be considered for eligibility. Bullying and school safety Titusville Area School District administration reported there were no incidents of bullying in the district in 2009–10. The School Board has provided the district's antibully policy in the school district's web site. All Pennsylvania schools are required to have an anti-bullying policy incorporated into their Code of Student Conduct. The policy must identify disciplinary actions for bullying and designate a school staff person to receive complaints of bullying. The policy must be available on the school's websiteand posted in every classroom. All Pennsylvania public schools must provide a copy of its anti-bullying policy to the Office for Safe Schools every year, and shall review their policy every three years. Additionally, the district must conduct an annual review of that policy with students. The Center for Schools and Communities works in partnership with the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime & Delinquency and the Pennsylvania Department of Education to assist schools and communities as they research, select and implement bullying prevention programs and initiatives. Education standards relating to student safety and antiharassment programs are described in the 10.3. Safetyand Injury Prevention in the Pennsylvania Academic Standards for Health, Safety and Physical Education. Virtual Academy The Titusville Virtual Academy provides an online learning experience for K-12 students who reside in Titusville Area School District. Students may earn a Titusville High School diploma and participate in the graduation ceremony. Budget In 2009, the district reports employing over 190 teachers with a starting salary of $39,705 for 180 days for pupil instruction and an additional 5 for teacher inservice. The average teacher salary was $54,940 while the maximum salary is $106,019. As of 2007, Pennsylvania ranked in the top 10 statesin average teacher salaries. When adjusted for cost of living Pennsylvania ranked fourth in the nation for teacher compensation. The school day is limited by the union contract to 37.5 hours per week. Special Education teachers receive additional compensation. Teachers receive a paid lunch time of 30 minutes. Additionally, Titusville Area School District teachers receive a defined benefit pension, health insurance, professional development reimbursement, 2 paid personal days, 10 sick days, paid bereavement days and other benefits. Teachers are paid extra when they are required to work outside of the regular school day hours. Severance includes payment for unused sickdays. Additionally, teacher receive $72.50 for each year they have been a full-time teacher in Pennsylvania. The union receives 12 full days of paid leave to use for union business According to State Rep. Glen Grell, a trustee of the Pennsylvania Public School Employees’ Retirement System Board, a 40-year educator can retire with a pension equal to 100 percent of their final salary. In June 2011, the union and board agreed that the teachers would forego a salary increase for the 2011‑2012 school year. The administration reported this would save $380,423. In 2007, the district employed 154 teachers. The averageteacher salary in the district was $48,979 for 180 school days worked. Titusville Area School District administrative costs per pupil in 2008 was $909.33 per pupil. The district is ranked 96th out of 500 in Pennsylvania for administrative spending. The lowest administrative cost per pupil in Pennsylvania was $398 per pupil. In 2008, Titusville Area School District reported spending $12,067 per pupil. This ranked 267th in the commonwealth. Reserves In 2009, the district reported $1,866,942 in an unreserved-undesignated fund balance. The designated fund balance was reported as $2,124,809. PA school district reserve funds are divided into two categories – designatedand undesignated. The undesignated funds are not committed to any planned project. Designated funds and any other funds, such as capital reserves, are allocated to specific projects. School districts are required by state law to keep 5 percent of their annual spending in the undesignated reserve funds to preserve bond ratings. According to the Pennsylvania Department of Education, from 2003 to 2010, as a whole, Pennsylvania school districts amassed nearly $3 billion in reserved funds. In September 2010, the Pennsylvania Auditor General conducted a performance audit of the district. Significant findings were reported to the administration and school board. Thedistrict is funded by a combination of: a local income tax, a property tax, a real estate transfer tax 0.5%, coupled with substantial funding from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the federal government. Grants can provide an opportunity to supplement school funding without raising local taxes. In the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, pension and Social Security income are exempted from state personal income tax and local earned income tax regardless of the individual's wealth. State basic education funding In 2011–12, the Titusville Area School District will receive $12,943,618 in state Basic Education Funding. Additionally, the district will receive $171,434 in AccountabilityBlock Grant funding. The enacted Pennsylvania state Education budget includes $5,354,629,000 for the 2011–2012 Basic Education Funding appropriation. This amount is a $233,290,000 increase (4.6%) over the enacted State appropriation for 2010–2011. The highest increase in state basic education funding was awarded to Duquesne City School District, which got a 49% increase in state funding for 2011–12. Districts experienced a reduction in funding due to the loss of federal stimulus funding which ended in 2011. In 2010, the district reported that 1,065 pupils received a free or reduced-price lunch due to the family meeting the federal poverty level. For 2010–11,Titusville Area School District received a 2.96% increase in state Basic Education Funding resulting in a $13,962,921 payment. Valley Grove School District received a 3.88% increase, which was the highest increase in BEF in Venango County. Kennett Consolidated School District in Chester County received the highest increase in the state at 23.65% increase in funding for the 2010–11 school year. One hundred fifty school districts received the base 2% increase in 2010–11. The amount of increase each school district receives is determined by the Governor and the Secretary of Education through the allocation set in the state budget proposal madein February each year. In the 2009–2010 budget year the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania provided a 3.45% increase in Basic Education funding for a total of $13,390,165. The state Basic Education funding to the district in 2008–09 was $12,943,618.28. The district also received supplemental funding for English language learners, Title 1 federal funding for low-income students, for district size, a poverty supplement from the commonwealth and more. Franklin Area School District received highest increase in BEF awarded by the Commonwealth, in Venango County, for the 2009–10 school year, a 6.43% increase. Among the 500 school districts in Pennsylvania, Muhlenberg School Districtin Berks County received the highest with a 22.31% increase in funding. According to the Pennsylvania Department of Education, 1,022 district students received free or reduced-price lunches due to low family income in the 2007–2008 school year. Accountability Block Grants Beginning in 2004–2005, the state launched the Accountability Block Grant school funding. This program has provided $1.5 billion to Pennsylvania's school districts. The Accountability Block Grant program requires that its taxpayer dollars are focused on specific interventions that are most likely to increase student academic achievement. These interventions include: teacher training, all-day kindergarten, lower class size K-3rd grade, literacy andmath coaching programs that provide teachers with individualized job-embedded professional development to improve their instruction, before or after school tutoring assistance to struggling students. For 2010–11, the Titusville Area School District applied for and received $465,314 in addition to all other state and federal funding. The district used the funding to provide all-day kindergarten the 6th year, to provide teacher training to provide research based instruction and to increase instruction time for pupils through before and after school tutoring. Classrooms for the Future grant The Classroom for the Future state program provided districts with hundreds of thousands of extra statefunding to buy laptop computers for each core curriculum high school class (English, Science, History, Math) and paid for teacher training to optimize the computers use. The program was funded from 2006 to 2009. Titusville Area School District did not apply for funding for 2006–07 nor in 2007–08. In 2008–09 it received 138,210. Of the 501 public school districts in Pennsylvania, 447 of them received Classrooms for the Future state grant awards. Education Assistance grant The state's EAP funding provides for the continuing support of tutoring services and other programs to address the academic needs of eligible students. Funds areavailable to eligible school districts and full-time career and technology centers (CTC) in which one or more schools have failed to meet at least one academic performance target, as provided for in Section 1512-C of the Pennsylvania Public School Code. In 2010–11 the Titusville Area School District did not apply for this state funding. Federal Stimulus grant The district received an extra $1,600,000 in ARRA – Federal Stimulus money to be used in specific programs like special education and meeting the academic needs of low-income students. The funding is for the 2009–10 and 2010–11 school years. Race to the Topgrant School district officials sent an incomplete application for the Race to the Top federal grant which would have brought the district over one million additional federal dollars for improving student academic achievement. The teachers' union refused to sign the application as was required. Participation required the administration, the school board and the local teachers' union to sign an agreement to prioritize improving student academic success. In Pennsylvania, 120 public school districts and 56 charter schools agreed to participate. Pennsylvania was not approved for the grant. The failure of districts to agree to participate was cited as one reason thatPennsylvania was not approved. Common Cents state initiative The Titusville Area School Board chose to not permit the Pennsylvania Department of Education Common Cents program access to the district records. The program called for the state to audit the district, at no cost to local taxpayers, to identify ways the district could save tax dollars. After the review of the information, the district was not required to implement the recommended cost savings changes. Real estate taxes The Titusville Area School Board set the 2010–11 the property taxes were 38.4600 mills for property owners in Crawford County. Venango County was setat 14.2300 mills while Warren County was – 43.9300 mills. A mill is $1 of tax for every $1,000 of a property's assessed value. Irregular property reassessments have become a serious issue in the commonwealth as it creates a significant disparity in taxation within a community and across a region. Pennsylvania school district revenues are dominated by two main sources: 1) Property tax collections, which account for the vast majority (between 75–85%) of local revenues; and 2) Act 511 tax collections (Local Tax Enabling Act), which are around 15% of revenues for school districts. 2009–10 – 37.1500 mills for CrawfordCounty. 14 mills for Venango County. 42.0800 mills Warren County. 2008–09 – 36.8100 mills for Crawford County. 13.9400 mills for Venango County. 42.0800 mills Warren County. 2007–08 – 35.7900 mills for Crawford County. 12.7300 mills for Venango County. 39.0600 mills Warren County. Act 1 Adjusted index The Act 1 of 2006 Index regulates the rates at which each school district can raise property taxes in Pennsylvania. Districts are not authorized to raise taxes above that index unless they allow voters to vote by referendum, or the school board seeks one or more exceptions from the state's Department of Education. Thepreceding calendar year and the percentage increase in the Employment Cost Index for Elementary and Secondary Schools, as determined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the U.S. Department of Labor, for the previous 12-month period ending June 30. For a school district with a market value/personal income aid ratio (MV/PI AR) greater than 0.4000, its index equals the base index multiplied by the sum of .75 and its MV/PI AR for the current year. The School District Adjusted Index for the Titusville Area School District 2006–2007 through 2011–2012. 2006–07 – 5.8%, Base 3.9% 2007–08 – 5.1%, Base 3.4% 2008–09– 6.5%, Base 4.4% 2009–10 – 6.1%, Base 4.1% 2010–11 – 4.4%, Base 2.9% 2011–12 – 2.1%, Base 1.4% For the school budget year 2011–12, the Titusville Area School Board did not apply for any exceptions to the Act 1 index. Each year, the school district has the option of adopting either 1) a resolution in January certifying they will not increase taxes above their index or 2) a preliminary budget in February. A school district adopting the resolution may not apply for referendum exceptions or ask voters for a tax increase above the inflation index. A specific timeline forthese decisions is publisher each year by the Pennsylvania Department of Education. For the 2011–2012 school year budgets, 247 school districts adopted a resolution certifying that tax rates would not be increased above their index; 250 school districts adopted a preliminary budget. Of the 250 school districts that adopted a preliminary budget, 231 adopted real estate tax rates that exceeded their index. Tax rate increases in the other 19 school districts that adopted a preliminary budget did not exceed the school district's index. Of the districts who sought exceptions 221 used the pension costs exemption and 171 sought a SpecialEducation costs exemption. Only 1 school district sought an exemption for Nonacademic School Construction Project, while 1 sought an exception for Electoral debt for school construction. With the 2011 state education budget, the General Assembly repealed most of the Act 1 tax increase exceptions leaving only special education costs, pension costs and prior voter approved (ballot referendum) debt for construction. The cost of construction projects in the future will go to the voters for approval via ballot referendum. Districts can no longer raise property taxes, beyond their Act 1 index, to cover increasing health insurance costs for employees. Titusville AreaSchool Board did not apply for exceptions to exceed the Act 1 index for the budgets in 2009–10 or in 2010–11. In the Spring of 2010, 135 Pennsylvania school boards asked to exceed their adjusted index. Approval was granted to 133 of them and 128 sought an exception for pension costs increases. Property tax relief In 2011, the Pennsylvania Department of Education announced the district's property tax relief from gambling would be $143 for each of the 3,424 approved properties. This was the lowest amount of property tax relief awarded in Venango County. In 2009, the Homestead/Farmstead Property Tax Relieffrom gambling for the Titusville Area School District was $140 per approved permanent primary residence. In the district, 3,495 property owners applied for the tax relief. This was the lowest tax relief awarded in Venango County. The tax relief was subtracted from the total annual school property on the individual's tax bill. Property owners apply for the relief through the county Treasurer's office. Farmers can qualify for a farmstead exemption on building used for agricultural purposes. The farm must be at least 10 contiguous acres and must be the primary residence of the owner. Farmers can qualify for both thehomestead exemption and the farmstead exemption. The Pennsylvania Auditor General found that 73% of property owners applied for tax relief in Venango County. Pennsylvania awarded the highest property tax relief to residents of the Chester-Upland School District in Delaware County at $632 per homestead and farmstead in 2010. This was the second year Chester Upland School District was the top recipient. Additionally, the Pennsylvania Property Tax/Rent Rebate program is provided for low income Pennsylvanians aged 65 and older; widows and widowers aged 50 and older; and people with disabilities age 18 and older. The income limit is $35,000 for homeowners.The maximum rebate for both homeowners and renters is $650. Applicants can exclude one-half (1/2) of their Social Security income, consequently individuals who have income substantially more than $35,000, may still qualify for a rebate. Individuals must apply annually for the rebate. This can be taken in addition to Homestead/Farmstead Property Tax Relief. Property taxes in Pennsylvania are relatively high on a national scale. According to the Tax Foundation, Pennsylvania ranked 11th in the U.S. in 2008 in terms of property taxes paid as a percentage of home value (1.34%) and 12th in the country in terms of property taxesas a percentage of income (3.55%). Extracurriculars The district offers a wide variety of clubs, activities and sports. These program begin with elementary children and extend through high school athletics. Eligibility to participate in these activities is determined by school board policy. The district also provides recreation activities outside of the regular school year. By Pennsylvania law, all K-12 students in the district, including those who attend a private nonpublic school, cyber charter school, charter school and those home schooled, are eligible to participate in the extracurricular programs, including all athletics. They must meet the same eligibility rules as the ### Assistant:
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### User: (born April 8, 1976) is a Japanese professional wrestler currently competing in Big Japan Pro Wrestling in the Deathmatch division. He is well known for his death match style of wrestling. Career Big Japan Pro Wrestling (1999-present) Ito, whose gimmick is reminiscent of the Mortal Kombat icon Liu Kang, has been known for competing in many deathmatches over the span of his career, including a Cage match variation which saw him defeat Kintaro Kanemura. Ito is perhaps most famous for participating in an infamous "Lightube Lightsaber match" in which he fought and defeated Abdullah Kobayashi. The match has since becomea hit video among hardcore wrestling fans on the website YouTube. In 2008, Ito competed at IWA East Coast's Masters of Pain, where he lost to Thumbtack Jack in the finals after defeating Drake Younger and Danny Havoc. He also wrestled in Chikara at The Global Gauntlet the same year. In addition to his gruesome matches, Ito has accumulated several championships over his career while working for both Big Japan Pro Wrestling and Dramatic Dream Team and has also feuded with both Shadow WX and Men's Teioh over his titles, making him a main eventer within both promotions. Other mediaIto appears as himself in the video game Backyard Wrestling 2: There Goes the Neighborhood, and also appears as himself alongside Daisuke Sekimoto, Abdullah Kobayashi, Takashi Sasaki and Jaki Numazawa in the 2006 movie Dirty Sanchez: The Movie. Ito and the other wrestlers perform wrestling moves on the three main cast members. Championships and accomplishments Big Japan Pro Wrestling BJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship (6 times) BJW Tag Team Championship (2 times, current) – with BADBOY Hido (1) and Abdullah Kobayashi (1, current) WEW Hardcore Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Daisaku Shimoda Yokohama Shopping Street 6-Man Tag Team Championship(2 times) – with Kankuro Guy and Tiger Ten (1), and Daisuke Sekimoto and Jaki Numazawa (1) Ikkitousen Deathmatch Survivor (2013) Combat Zone Wrestling Triangle of Ultraviolence (2011) Dramatic Dream Team DDT KO-D Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Sanshiro Takagi Japan Indie Awards Best Bout Award (2009) vs. Jun Kasai on November 20 Best Bout Award (2016) vs. Kankuro Hoshino on July 24 Tokyo Sports Match of the Year Award (2009) vs. Jun Kasai on November 20 References External links Big Japan Wrestling Fans: Ryuji Ito Ryuji Ito at purolove.com Ryuji Ito at wrestlingzone.ru Category:1976 births Category:Japanese male ### Assistant:
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### User: The Scottish Council for Research in Education (SCRE) was set up by the Scottish teachers’ union (The Educational Institute of Scotland, EIS) and the Association of Directors of Education in 1928. At that time, there were no similar organisations anywhere in the world . The Council itself consisted of some 60 members drawn from a wide range of bodies with an interest in education . This Council appointed a director and arranged for some basic funding to come from government local authorities, but the EIS provided free accommodation and secretarial assistance. For more than 20 years, most of the workfor Research in Education 1928-2003: a Short History, Scottish Educational Review, 44, 59-76. www.scotedreview.org.uk/pdf/348pdf Morris, J.G. (1994) The Scottish Council for Educational Research 1928-1993. Edinburgh University PhD thesis. (Copy available from National Library for Scotland.) Some indication of the scope of the Council's more recent work may be derived from the list below. Although several are not Council publications they indicate the nature of some of the work ... and refer to subsequent developments built upon it. Dockrell, W. B., Broadfoot, P. M. et al. (1977). Pupils in Profile. Edinburgh: Scottish Council for Research in Education. Dockrell, W.B. & Hamilton, ### Assistant:
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### User: Caryn Lynn Mower (born August 21, 1965) is an American actress, stuntwoman, and former professional wrestler. Throughout her career, she performed for various professional wrestling promotions such as Ultimate Pro Wrestling under the ring name Carnidge. She also performed briefly for the World Wrestling Federation as Muffy, the on-screen personal trainer of Stephanie McMahon-Helmsley as part of the McMahon-Helmsley Faction. A longtime performer on stunt shows, most notably for Universal Studios Hollywood, she has also had extensive involvement in film and television as both a stunt performer and stunt coordinator during the 1990s and 2000s. Early life and career Bornin Eau Claire, Wisconsin, Mower grew up in Glendora, California and attended Glendora High School. Both of Mowers parents were physical education teachers. Prior to her stunt and wrestling career, Mower worked as an aerobics instructor and played the role of Red Sonja in a live action show based on Conan the Barbarian. Studying martial arts, she eventually became a second degree black belt in judo, jujutsu, and karate. Meeting stuntmen and others involved in the film industry, she became interested in film fighting and stunt work. By the late-1980s, she appeared as a stunt double on America's Most Wantedand Baywatch. Playing the role of Helen in the Universal Studios Hollywood stunt show Waterworld: A Live Sea World Spectacular, she also made numerous film and television series throughout the 1990s including Red Shoe Diaries, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Ally McBeal, V.I.P., Charmed, Popular, and Family Law. She also began appearing in minor acting roles on Profiler and Crossing Jordan as well as The Contender, Vacancy, and The Last Sentinel. Professional wrestling career Ultimate Pro Wrestling (1999) She got her start in the wrestling world in early 1999 when she went on an audition for a part as a comicthe Middle, Strong Medicine, According to Jim, Birds of Prey, Without a Trace, Leap of Faith, and Firefly as well as The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas, Artificial Intelligence: A.I., and Identity before retiring in 2003 to pursue her stunt career full-time. Post-wrestling Since her retirement from professional wrestling, Mower returned to work as a stunt double in the Pirates of the Caribbean video game, films Collateral and Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest, and television series Huff; Cracking Up; and The Brotherhood of Poland, New Hampshire. In recent years, Mower has appeared in Elizabethtown, Poseidon, Mustang Sally, and ### Assistant:
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### User: Joslyn Tinkle is a professional basketball player who most recently played for Seattle Storm of the WNBA. She is the daughter of men's head coach Wayne Tinkle of Oregon State University. Early life Tinkle was born in Stockholm, Sweden, and she lived in Europe for eight years. Her family then moved to Montana where she attended Big Sky High School in Missoula. Career Tinkle played college basketball for Stanford University. Stanford statistics Source USA Basketball Tinkle was a member of the USA Women's U18 team which won the gold medal at the FIBA Americas Championship in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Theevent was held in July 2008, when the USA team defeated host Argentina to win the championship. Tinkle helped the team win all five games, averaging 7.2 points per game. Professional She signed with Seattle on August 24, 2013. Personal life Joslyn is the daughter of Wayne Tinkle former professional basketball player in Europe and current head coach at Oregon State University. She has a sister, Elle, who played for Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, and a brother, Tres. Joslyn graduated from Stanford with a double major in Communications and Sociology. References External links Category:1990 births Category:Living people Category:American expatriate ### Assistant:
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### User: Daniel "Cheeky" Watson (born 1954) was one of the first white South African rugby union players to participate in a mixed race rugby game, during the period when mixed-race activities were forbidden by apartheid legislation. History Watson grew up on a farm near Somerset East, in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. His father was a lay preacher who taught his sons Daniel, Valence, Ronald, and Gavin that all people are equal. Watson attended Graeme College boarding school in Grahamstown, where he began playing rugby union. He later captained the Graeme College side. After completing compulsory National Service, Watsondeclined an invitation to participate in the trails for the 1976 senior Springbok team. He joined the Spring Rose Rugby Football Club in the black township of New Brighton, Port Elizabeth, which was affiliated with Kwaru. His wing partner was Zola Yeye, later manager of the 2007 Springbok squad On 10 October 1976, Watson and Valence played with 13 black players for Kwaru against the South Eastern Districts Rugby Union (Sedru) in the Dan Qeqe stadium in KwaZakhele township. Local authorities and the Crusaders Rugby Club tried to dissuade him from participating Inter-racial sports meetings were at that time prohibitedNational Order of Ikhamanga in Silver for "his exceptional contribution to the field of sport, in particular rugby”. The South African government said Watson would be recognised for his excellent contribution towards the creation of non-racial rugby and his stand in the struggle for the creation of a non- racial, non-sexist and democratic society. See also Luke Watson Sources Clinton van der Berg and Lauren Cohen. "The gospel according to Luke", Sunday Times Online, 20 May 2007. References Category:1954 births Category:South African rugby union players Category:People from Blue Crane Route Local Municipality Category:Living people Category:Alumni of Graeme College Category:Rugby union ### Assistant:
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### User: The Admiral Apartments, originally the Wheeldon Apartments and also known as the Admiral Hotel Apartments, is a five-story brick Tudor Revival apartment building in downtown Portland, Oregon, United States, that was built in 1909. It has been on the National Register of Historic Places since 1990. History The building was designed by Emil Schacht and Son and built in 1909. The building was originally named after its first manager, Alice Wheeldon, and was renamed the Admiral Apartments in 1929. The apartments were upscale with two to five bedrooms, hardwood floors, and an electric dumbwaiter service. By 1913, the neighborhood wasRent was protected until 2010, and the apartments occupied by low-income elderly and disabled residents. Starting in 2009, the apartments were completely renovated by Walsh Construction using a SERA Architects design. The remodeling was paid for by the Portland Development Commission and Oregon Housing and Community Services Department. Portland's REACH Community Development Corporation was listed as the owner. References External links Category:Residential buildings completed in 1909 Category:National Register of Historic Places in Portland, Oregon Category:Apartment buildings in Portland, Oregon Category:Residential buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Oregon Category:1909 establishments in Oregon Category:Southwest Portland, Oregon Category:Portland Historic Landmarks ### Assistant:
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### User: David W. Márquez (born 1946 in Janesville, Wisconsin) is an American lawyer and politician, and the former attorney general of the state of Alaska. He is currently Senior VP and COO of NANA Development Corporation (NDC) an Alaska native corporation, owned by the Iñupiaq people of northwest Alaska. Márquez graduated from Northwestern University and the University of Wisconsin Law School, and was admitted to the Alaska bar in 1973. After a career working in the oil industry, including jobs doing land title work for the Trans-Alaska Pipeline, as general counsel for the pipeline operator Alyeska Pipeline Service Company and later ### Assistant:
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### User: Mehran University of Engineering and Technology () (Often referred as Mehran University or MUET) is a public research university located in Jamshoro, Sindh, Pakistan focused on STEM education. Established in July 1976, as a campus of the University of Sindh, and a year later was chartered as an independent university. The academician S.M. Qureshi was appointed as the founding Vice Chancellor of the University. It was ranked 6th in engineering category of Higher Education Institutions in the "5th Ranking of Pakistani Higher Education Institutions" in 2016. History Established in 1963 in direct response to industrialization as Sind University Engineering College,it was affiliated with the University of Sindh (est. 1951) at Jamshoro until 1973, Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan Afghan was one of the founding principal of the college, later with his efforts college was granted the charter of "Engineering University" under the title of "Mehran University of Engineering & Technology". The first batch of MUET was inducted in January 1974 with the enrollment of 450 students in civil, mechanical, electrical, electronics, metallurgy, chemical, and industrial engineering. Initially, the classes were started at Government College of Technology, Sakrand Road, Nawabshah, with students residing in college hostels (some classrooms were converted intoresidential dormitory). Some students acquired private houses in the Society area in Nawabshah, where they lived for two years until newly constructed hostel blocks were made available adjacent to the college campus. With the induction of the third batch in 1976, the students of the first batch were shifted to Jamshoro to complete their third year and final year of engineering education. This was predominately due to the availability of well-equipped laboratories and highly qualified faculty at MUET Jamshoro campus, and also due to the shortage of space for classrooms and labs at Nawabshah since the number of students hadrisen to 1500 when the third batch was admitted. The same practice continued for other junior batches who passed their second year of engineering at MUET, Nawabshah, were transferred to MUET Campus at Jamshoro to resume the fifth semester (third year). Academic Profile Undergraduate studies The university offers undergraduate, post-graduate, and doctoral studies in engineering, business and industrial management, humanities, philosophy, and fine arts. Faculty of Engineering Chemical Engineering Industrial Engineering & Management Mechanical Engineering Mechatronics Engineering Metallurgy & Materials Engineering Mining Engineering Petroleum Engineering|Petroleum & Natural Gas Engineering Textile Engineering Faculty of Electrical, Electronics and Computer System Engineering (FEECE)Biomedical Engineering Computer Systems Engineering Electrical Engineering Electronic Engineering Institute of Information & Communication Technologies Software Engineering Telecommunication Engineering Faculty of Architecture & Civil Engineering Architecture City & Regional Planning Civil Engineering Institute of Environmental Engineering & Management Institute of Water Resources Engineering & Management Faculty of Basic Sciences Basic Sciences & Related Studies English Language Development Center Mehran University Institute of Science, Technology & Development Graduate studies The postgraduate courses were started in 1978 leading to the M.E. degree, initially, in three branches. At present, courses are offered in the specialized fields of: Energy & Environmental Engineering Mechatronics Industrialmay be post-graduate diploma (P.G.D.), Master of Engineering (M.E.), Master of Philosophy (M.Phil.) or Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.), depending upon the quality and quantity of the research/work completed. Institutes Following institutes offer postgraduate studies and research programs. Institute of Environmental Engineering and Management Institute of Petroleum & Natural Gas Engineering Institute of Information & Communication Technologies Mehran University Institute of Science & Technology Development Driectorates Office of Research, Innovation & Commercialization (ORIC) Directorate of English Language Development Center Directorate of Postgraduate Studies Directorate of Information & Communication Processing Center Directorate of Management Information Systems (MIS) Directorate of Planning & DevelopmentDirectorate of Sports Directorate of Finance Innovation & Entrepreneurship Center Coal Research & Resource Center Centers USPCASW – U.S.-Pakistan Center for Advanced Studies in Water The USPCASW – U.S.-Pakistan Center for Advanced Studies in Water, has recently been established at the Mehran University of Engineering and Technology (MUET) Jamshoro, with financial support of United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Pakistan under the Cooperative Agreement signed with USAID on December 12, 2014, for five years. The University of Utah (UU), USA is providing technical assistance to MUET for advancing the development and growth of USPCAS-W. The tangible deliverables of theCenter include postgraduate degree programs, applied policy research, facilitation of public-private partnerships, and provision of policy advice in a range of water-related disciplines. The main purpose of the applied research component is to deliver relevant and innovative research to meet the needs of industry, civil society and government. Centre of Excellence in Art & Design (CEAD) This center was initially established as the Federal College of Art and Design (FCAD), and it was handed over to the University of Sindh with the status of an affiliated college. The first batch was admitted to the College in the year 1999. Withthe passage of time, the Federal College of Art and Design (FCAD) was converted into the Centre of Excellence in Art & Design (CEAD) vide Notification No. F. 5-7 /2002-NI—1(.) Dated 19-08-2004, by the Ministry of Education, Government of Pakistan Islamabad and the project was handed over to the Mehran University of Engineering and Technology Jamshoro as its academic part. Following the 18th amendment, vide Notification, No. 4-5/2011-Min.I, dated 5 April 2011, the functions of the Centre of Excellence in art and design retained at the Ministry of Education, Islamabad has also been transferred to the Mehran University of Engineeringand Technology, Jamshoro. The changing structure of the CEAD allowed proper focus to Fine Art, Design and Architecture, education with emphasis to initiate postgraduate studies & research programs leading to the Ph.D. degree. Innovation & Entreprunership Center IEC is established to nurture the innovation and entrepreneurship spirit of students. Programs of IEC are designed to appeal to everyone from students, staff, industry, who are just trying to obtain a primer on entrepreneurship, to serial entrepreneurs. Research Mehran University has published the quarterly Mehran University Research Journal of Engineering and Technology (MURJ) since January 1982; the journal is being abstracted atPakistan Scientific Research Information Center (PASTIC), Islamabad; National Transportation Research Board, USA; American Concrete Institute, USA; HRIS, USA; NTIS, USA; ; and INSPEC, UK, . Societies and clubs IEEE MUET Student Branch IEEE EMBS, MUET Chapter IEEE RAS, MUET Chapter IEEE WiE, MUET Chapter IEEE IES, MUET Chapter Mehranian Materials Advantage Chapter (MMAC) Society for Women Engineers, MUET Chapter (SWE) Society of Petroleum Engineers, MUET Chapter (SPE) American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AICHE) MUET Chapter American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) Mehran University of Engineering and Technology Model United Nation (MUETMUN) Innovation & Entrepreneurship Society (IES) Mehran University Debating andDramatic Society (MUDDS) Mehran University Alumni Association (MUAA) Mehran University Civil Engineering Society (MUCES) Environmental Engineering Student's Organization(EESO-MUET) Mehran Arts And Literature Society (MALS) Rankings According to latest QS World University Rankings 2020 MUET ranks among top 351-400 universities of the Aisa. MUET is ranked among the top ten institutions of higher learning in Pakistan by the Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC). According to latest rankings of HEC, MUET ranks 1st in Sindh and 8th in Pakistan, in engineering category. MUET also ranks as 2nd best public sector university of Pakistan. MUET placed 271st worldwide and second in Pakistanout of 780 institutions in the Universitas Indonesia (UI) GreenMetric World University Ranking for 2019 In 2010's QS World University Rankings, MUET ranked among the top 400 universities of the world. . Affiliated Campuses and Colleges MUET SZAB Campus, Khairpur Mir's Mehran University of Engineering and Technology SZAB Campus is the rural campus of the Mehran University of Engineering and Technology located in Khairpur Mir's. This campus was initially established as constituent College of Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro named as Mehran University College of Engineering & Technology at Khairpur Mirs. In 2009, the Government of Sindh vidits Notification No. SO(C-IV) SGA&CD/4-29/09 dated 2 April 2009 constituted a High Power Board of Director, established a constituent and upgraded it from college to campus and renamed as Mehran University of Engineering and Technology Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Campus. The campus is offering education in various undergraduate and post graduate disciplines. Being a campus of Mehran University of Engineering & Technology, the campus has the same teachings system, courses of studies, rules, and procedures for admissions and examination system as the Mehran University of Engineering and Technology contains. The campus is headed by Pro-VC who will work under theadministrative control of Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro. MUET Jacobabad Campus MUET has decided to establish a sub-campus at Jacobabad to cater the needs of engineering students of the northern Sindh. Groundbreaking ceremony of sub-campus of MUET at Jacobabad was performed by Prof. Dr. Mohammad Aslam Uqaili, Vice-chancellor MUET in February 2018. Regular classes in this sub-campus are expected to start from 2019. Government College of Technology, Hyderabad Government College of Technology, Hyderabad is affiliated with MUET which offers courses in B.Tech.(Pass) and B.Tech.(Hons.) in Civil, Electrical and Mechanical Technologies. MUET conducts the examinations of this college andawards degrees. The Hyderabad Institute of Arts, Science, and Technology, Hyderabad The Hyderabad Institute of Arts, Science, and Technology, Hyderabad offers courses in BS (Information Technology) and MS (Business Information Technology). The Pre-admission Test of the candidates is conducted by the agency prescribed by Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro. Mehran University conducts the examinations and awards the degrees to students of this institute. Mehran College of Science and Technology, Hyderabad Mehran College of Science and Technology, Hyderabad offers courses in B.Tech.(Pass) and B.Tech.(Hons.) in Civil, Electrical and Mechanical Technologies. Mehran University conducts the examinations of this college andawards degrees. Membership and Association Memberships Association of Commonwealth Universities (ACU) U.K., 1998–99. UNESCO International Centre for Engineering Education (UICEE), Australia, 2000. Federation of the Universities of the Islamic World (FUIW), Rabat, Morocco, 1999. Community of Science (COS) USA, 2001. Commonwealth Universities Study Abroad Consortium (CUSAC), U.K., 2000–2001. Pakistan National Committee on Irrigation and Drainage (PANCID), 2001. Associations The Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission Azarbaijanian Industrial Institute of Ministry of Education of Azerbaijanian Republic IUBAT International University of Business Agricultural and Technology, Bangladesh National Institute of Public Administration (NIPA) Karachi University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign Colorado St. University, at Fort CollinsUniversity of Central Florida, Orlando University of Leeds, UK University of Nottingham Mountain University, Leoben, Austria Kyushu Institute of Technology, Japan University of Mauritius, Mauritius University of Putra, Malaysia University of Natal, South Africa MoUs Universiti Teknologi Malaysia International Islamic University Malaysia University of Southampton Beijing Technology and Business University Technische Universität Darmstadt Al-Futtaim Technologies Sui Southern Gas Company Pakistan Bait-ul-Mal ISO Certification MUET is certified as having ISO 9000 compliant business processes since 2003. The university is also a member of Association of Commonwealth Universities of the United Kingdom. On April 28, an independent audit by a team ofthe Provincial Assembly of Sindh since June 2008. Danish Nawaz sitcom actor. References External links Facebook Page of Mehran University of Engineering and Technology Admissions at Mehran University of Engineering and Technology MUET Alumni Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Mehran University of Engineering and Technology Faculty of Mehran University of Engineering and Technology Mehran University College of Engineering and Technology, Khairpur Mir's Centre of Excellence Art & Design, MUET Society of Petroleum Engineers, MUET IEEE EMBS-MUET Chapter IEEE RAS-MUET Chapter Category:Engineering universities and colleges in Pakistan Category:Universities and colleges in Jamshoro District Category:Public universities and colleges in Sindh Category:1963 ### Assistant:
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### User: The Dallas International Film Festival, presented by the Dallas Film Society, is an annual film festival that takes place in Dallas, Texas, each spring. History 2007 The Dallas International Film Festival began in 2007 as the AFI Dallas International Film Festival. 2008 In 2008, the AFI DALLAS International Film Festival was held March 27 to April 6, 2008. The Opening Night Gala film was Helen Hunt's directorial debut film, Then She Found Me. The Closing Night Gala film was Stuart Townsend's Battle in Seattle. Mickey Rooney attended a presentation of the 70th anniversary of Boys Town. Helen Hunt, Mickey Rooneyand Charlize Theron each received the AFI DALLAS Star Award. 2009 The 3rd annual festival was held from March 26 to April 2, 2009. Kathryn Bigelow was presented with the AFI DALLAS Star Award prior to a screening of her film, The Hurt Locker. Adrien Brody was presented with the AFI DALLAS Star Award prior to the screening of the Opening Night Gala film, The Brothers Bloom. Robert Towne received the AFI DALLAS Star Award at a presentation of the 35th anniversary of the film, Chinatown. 2010 In 2010, the name of the festival was changed to the Dallas InternationalFilm Festival after the contract with AFI expired. Amber Heard received the inaugural DALLAS Shining Star Award and writer/director Frank Darabont received the DALLAS Star Award. The 4th annual festival was held from April 8 to April 18, 2010. 2011 In 2011, the 5th annual festival was held from March 31 to April 10, 2011. Opening night was held at the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House in the AT&T Performing Arts Center, a location in the Arts District of downtown Dallas. The festival was dedicated to founder and chairman emeritus Liener Temerlin. 2012 The 6th annual festival was heldfrom April 12 through April 22, 2012. 2013 In 2013, the 7th annual festival was held from April 4 through April 14, 2013, and presented more than 160 features, documentaries, shorts, and student films from 28 countries. 2014 The 8th annual festival was held from April 3 through April 13, 2014. 2015 In 2015, the 9th annual festival was held from April 9 to 19, 2015., and featured 165 films. The opening night film was I'll See You in My Dreams, starring Blythe Danner, who was present to accept the Dallas Star Award. Director John Landis (An American Werewolf inLondon, Coming to America, National Lampoon's Animal House, Blues Brothers) was also present to accept the Dallas Star Award. Texas writer/producer/actor L.M. Kit Carson (Paris, Texas and David Holzman's Diary) was presented with a posthumous Dallas Star Award. 2016 The 10th annual festival was held from April 14 through April 24, 2016. The opening night film was The Land, starring Erykah Badu. The Dallas Star Award was presented to cinematographer Ed Lachman and the inaugural L.M. Kit Carson Maverick Filmmaker Award was presented to Monte Hellman. 2017 In 2017, the 11th annual festival was held from March 30 through April8, 2017. The Dallas Shining Star Award was presented to Zoey Deutch (Before I Fall). A posthumous Dallas Star Award was presented to Bill Paxton. The L.M. Kit Carson Maverick Filmmaker Award was presented to David Gordon Green. 2018 The 12th annual festival was held from May 3 through May 10, 2018. In 2018, the festival screened more than 130 films from 22 countries, including several movies that were released nationwide later in the year: Eighth Grade, Won’t You Be My Neighbor, Dead Pigs, and Blindspotting. 2019 In 2019, the 13th Dallas International Film Festival powered by Capital One washeld from April 11 through April 18, 2019. The festival screened more than 130 films from more than 35 countries, including five world premieres, one U.S. premiere, 37 Texas premieres, and 15 Dallas premieres. World premieres included: After So Many Days, El Corazón de Bolívar (Bolivar's Heart), Hurdle, The Pursuit, and This World Won't Break. Awards 2007 Target Filmmaker Award - Documentary: New Year Baby Target Filmmaker Award - Narrative Feature: Shut Up and Shoot Me Grand Jury Prize - Documentary: Iron Ladies of Liberia Grand Jury Prize - Texas: A Lawyer Walks into a Bar Student Competition: Redemption MaddieNight in Mississippi Target Filmmaker Award - Narrative Feature: Gigantic Grand Jury Prize - Best Short Film: Princess Margaret Blvd. Grand Jury Prize - Texas Competition: The Other Side of Paradise Student Competition: Hug Grand Jury Prize - Texas Film: St. Nick Special Jury Prize - Best Feature Film: Against the Current Current Energy Filmmaker Award: Crude Audience Award - Best Short: Lucy: A Period Piece Audience Award - Narrative Feature: Skin Audience Award - Documentary Feature: Rock Prophecies Dallas Star Award: Kathryn Bigelow 2010 Target Filmmaker Award - Documentary: Waste Land Grand Jury Prize - Texas Competition (In-Competition): Holdand Carried Away Special Jury Prize - Special Achievement (Direction): Careful What You Wish For - Tim Vogel Special Jury Prize - Documentary Feature: The Last Survivor Audience Award - Narrative Feature: Brotherhood Dallas Star Award: Amber Heard 2011 Target Filmmaker Award - Narrative Feature: 5 Time Champion Grand Jury Prize - Best Short Film: The Legend of Beaver Dam Grand Jury Prize - Best Short Film (In-Competition): Crazy Beats Strong Every Time Student Competition: The Robbery Environmental Visions Grand Jury Prize: If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front Special Jury Prize - Special Achievement (Direction):The Birds Upstairs - Christopher Jarvis Special Jury Prize - Special Mention for Directing: Green Crayons - Kazik Radwanski Special Jury Prize - Special Achievement (Acting): Surrogate Valentine - Goh Nakamura Audience Award - Best Feature: Snowmen 2012 Grand Jury Prize - Best Short Film: Nani Grand Jury Prize - Documentary: Tchoupitoulas Grand Jury Prize - Texas Competition: Wolf Grand Jury Prize - Narrative Feature: Faith, Love and Whiskey Special Jury Prize - Silver Heart Award: The Invisible War Silver Heart Award (In-Competition): 5 Broken Cameras Audience Award - Best Short: Nani Audience Award - Documentary Feature: First Position Dallas"Bob" Dobbs and the Church of the SubGenius Grand Jury Award - Narrative Feature: 'Ms. Purple Special Jury Prize - Narrative Short: Okaasan Special Jury Prize - Documentary Feature: Caballerango Special Jury Prize - Documentary Short: Gli anni Special Jury Prize - Narrative Feature, Screenplay: Sister Aimee Special Jury Prize - Texas Competition: Shoot the Moon Right Between the Eyes Audience Award - Documentary Feature: Alice Cooper: Live from the Astroturf Audience Award - Documentary Short: The Queen's New Clothes Audience Award - Narrative Feature: This World Won't Break Dallas County Historical Commission (DCHC) Historical Film: Seadrift References External links ### Assistant:
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### User: James Wenneker von Brunn (July 11, 1920 – January 6, 2010) was an American man who perpetrated the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum shooting in Washington, D.C. on June 10, 2009. Security guard Stephen Tyrone Johns was killed in the shooting, and von Brunn was wounded by two security guards who returned fire. Von Brunn was named the prime suspect in the shooting, and was charged with first-degree murder and firearms violations. While awaiting trial, von Brunn died on January 6, 2010. Von Brunn was a white supremacist, neo-Nazi and Holocaust denier who had written numerous antisemitic essays, created an"inside job". Life Von Brunn was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the first of two children. His father was a native of Houston, Texas, and a superintendent at the Scullin Steel Mill in Houston during World War II. His mother was a piano teacher and homemaker. Von Brunn enrolled in Washington University in St. Louis in August 1938, and received his Bachelor of Science degree in journalism in April 1943. During his time at the university, von Brunn was said to have been president of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter, and a varsity football player. He served in the UnitedStates Navy from 1943 to 1957, and was the commanding officer of PT boat 159 during the Pacific Theatre of World War II, receiving a commendation and three battle stars. Von Brunn had worked as an advertising executive and producer in New York City for twenty years. In the late 1960s, he relocated to the Eastern Shore of Maryland, where he continued to do advertising work and resumed painting. In the early 1970s, Von Brunn briefly worked for Noontide Press, the publishing arm of the Holocaust-denying Institute for Historical Review. Arrest history Von Brunn's arrest history dates back at leastrates" during the incident and was disarmed without any shots being fired, after threatening a security guard with a .38 caliber pistol. He reportedly claimed he had a bomb, which was found to be only a device designed to look like a bomb. He was convicted in 1983 for burglary, assault, weapons charges, and attempted kidnapping. Von Brunn's sentence was completed by September 15, 1989, after he had served six and a half years in prison. After he was released he successfully tested for and joined Mensa International; however, he was eventually dropped from membership for failing to pay hisannual dues. Von Brunn was a member of the American Friends of the British National Party, a group that raised funds in the United States for the far right and "rights for whites" British National Party (BNP). The group had been addressed on at least two occasions by Nick Griffin, an ex-member of the National Front and chairman of the BNP. A BNP spokesperson claimed after the shooting that the party had "never heard of" von Brunn. In 2004 and 2005 he lived in Hayden Lake, Idaho, the town where Aryan Nations—a neo-Nazi organization led by Richard Butler—was based untilfour which made him eligible for the death penalty. In September 2009, a judge ordered von Brunn to undergo a competency evaluation to determine whether or not he could stand trial. Von Brunn had the Federal Bureau of Prisons ID# 07128-016 and was incarcerated at the Federal Correctional Complex in Butner, North Carolina. On January 6, 2010, von Brunn died in a hospital located near the prison. According to a statement by his attorney, von Brunn had "a long history of poor health," including sepsis and chronic congestive heart failure. Reaction The Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C. condemned the attack.don't, they win. It's a form of terrorism." In a statement, von Brunn's son, Erik, expressed sorrow and horror about the shooting. In an article he wrote for ABC News, he stated: The younger von Brunn, who was 32 at the time of the 2009 shooting, did not meet his father until he was nearly 11 years old, after the elder von Brunn completed his prison term for the Federal Reserve incident. References External links "Kill the Best Gentiles!", James von Brunn's book United States Holocaust Memorial Museum official website Criminal Complaint U.S. v. von Brunn (June 11, 2009), by ### Assistant:
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### User: WEFT Champaign 90.1FM is a listener-supported community radio station in Champaign, Illinois, founded in 1981 and owned by Prairie Air, Inc., a not-for-profit corporation. WEFT typically broadcasts 24 hours per day and 7 days per week. It has a wide range of programming, including music from a range of genres, local and nationally produced public affairs programming, live music, spoken word, and more. WEFT's mission is to be "an accessible, responsible, and responsive radio alternative, serving the diverse communities of radio listeners in East-Central Illinois". History WEFT had its beginnings in 1975 as community members began work to create anew radio station. In 1980 WEFT began to broadcast on the local cable TV network and acquired studio space at 113 N. Market Street in Champaign. This location is still the WEFT operations base. On September 26, 1981 WEFT went on the air as an FM radio station broadcasting at 90.1MHz. Initially WEFT was a less–than–1,000–watt station with the transmitter and antenna located atop a nearby hotel. In 1991 WEFT/Prairie Air Inc. purchased the building at 113 N. Market Street and within 9 years paid off the mortgage. In 1988 WEFT acquired a 10,000–watt transmitter and new broadcast antenna designedyear. There are two lecture-based training sessions followed by two studio-based sessions. Once training is complete a new Airshifter may fill in as a substitute host and/or propose to the Programming Committee an idea for an available time slot. Over 90% of operations funding is provided by listeners and underwriters. Prairie Air, Inc. owns WEFT and its board of directors oversees operation of the radio station. Affiliations WEFT is a member of the National Federation of Community Broadcasters. See also List of community radio stations in the United States References External links EFT Category:Community radio stations in the United States ### Assistant:
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### User: Black Notley is a village and civil parish in Essex, England. It is located approximately south of Braintree and is north-northeast from the county town of Chelmsford. According to the 2011 census including Young's End it had a population of 2,478. History The place-name 'Notley' is first attested in a Saxon charter of 998 as Hnutlea, and appears as 'Nutlea' in the Domesday Book of 1086. The name means 'nut wood'. 'Black Notley' is first attested in 1240. The parish church is dedicated to both St. Peter and St. Paul, and has walls of flint and pebble. The nave wasconstructed in the 12th century and the chancel was rebuilt around the 16th century when also the south porch and bell-turret were added. Around 100 yards to the south of the church is the 15th century Grade II listed Black Notley Hall. Geography The village is in the district of Braintree, but as of 2010, forms part of the parliamentary constituency of Witham. It has its own parish council, and is part of the wider Cressing, Black Notley, White Notley and Faulkbourne parish cluster. The Cressing railway station, on the Braintree Branch Line, is around half a mile from the ### Assistant:
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### User: Winifred Davidson born as Winifred Hall and writing as Yetta Kay Stoddard (24 February, 1874 – 20 February, 1964) was an American writer of children's short stories and poetry. She was also credited with co-creating a large archive of information about San Diego in California. She was President of the American Literary Association and vice-President of the British Poetry Society. Life Davidson was born in north-east Philadelphia to Catherine and Russell Hall. In the 1920s she wrote for The Brownies' Book which existed for 24 monthly issues under the leadership of Jessie Redmon Fauset. It was aimed at a multiracial ### Assistant:
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### User: French orthography encompasses the spelling and punctuation of the French language. It is based on a combination of phonemic and historical principles. The spelling of words is largely based on the pronunciation of Old French c. 1100–1200 CE and has stayed more or less the same since then, despite enormous changes to the pronunciation of the language in the intervening years. This has resulted in a complicated relationship between spelling and sound, especially for vowels; a multitude of silent letters; and many homophones (e.g., ///// (all pronounced ), // (all pronounced )). Later attempts to respell some words in accordancewith their Latin etymologies further increased the number of silent letters (e.g., vs. older – compare English "tense", which reflects the original spelling – and vs. older ). Nevertheless, there are rules governing French orthography which allow for a reasonable degree of accuracy when pronouncing French words from their written forms. The reverse operation, producing written forms from a pronunciation, is much more ambiguous. Alphabet The French alphabet is based on the 26 letters of the Latin alphabet, uppercase and lowercase, with five diacritics and two orthographic ligatures. {| class="wikitable" !Letter !Name !Name (IPA) !Diacritics and ligatures |- | Aof ai in place of oi where pronounced rather than . The most significant effect of this was to change the spelling of all imperfect verbs (formerly spelled -ois, -oit, -oient rather than -ais, -ait, -aient), as well as the name of the language, from françois to français. Modern French In October 1989, Michel Rocard, then-Prime Minister of France, established the High Council of the French Language () in Paris. He designated experts — among them linguists, representatives of the Académie française and lexicographers — to propose standardizing several points, a few of those points being: The uniting hyphen inwere submitted to Belgian and Québécois linguistic political organizations. They were likewise submitted to the Académie française, which endorsed them unanimously, saying: "Current orthography remains that of usage, and the 'recommendations' of the High Council of the French language only enter into play with words that may be written in a different manner without being considered as incorrect or as faults." The changes were published in the Journal officiel de la République française in December 1990. At the time the proposed changes were considered to be suggestions. In 2016, schoolbooks in France began to use the newer recommended spellings, with ### Assistant:
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### User: Keith N. Morgan is an architectural historian and professor emeritus of American and European architecture at Boston University. Morgan earned his B.A. at the College of Wooster in 1971, his M.A. at the University of Delaware in 1973, and his Ph.D. at Brown University in 1978. Morgan taught at Boston University from 1980 to 2016. He was director of the Boston University Graduate Studies program in the History of Art and Architecture Department (1987–89, 1996–97, 2005-8) and Director of Architectural Studies in the History of Art & Architecture Department (2009–16). He previously also served as director of the Preservation StudiesProgram and of the American and New England Studies Program. He served as the chairman of the History of Art and Architecture Department (1989–94, 1997–99). Morgan's books include Boston Architecture, 1975-1990 (co-authored with Naomi Miller), Charles A. Platt: The Artist as Architect, and Shaping a New American Landscape: The Art and Architecture of Charles A. Platt. Morgan is the editor and one of the principal authors for Buildings of Massachusetts: Metropolitan Boston (a volume in the Buildings of the United States series sponsored by the Society of Architectural Historians). Morgan was the architecture editor for The Encyclopedia of New England.Morgan was president of the Society of Architectural Historians from 1994 to 1996. Books Morgan, Keith N. and Miller, Naomi, Boston Architecture, 1975-1990, Munich: Prestel-Verlag, 1990, Morgan, Keith N., Charles A. Platt: The Artist as Architect, New York: Architectural History Foundation; Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1985, Morgan, Keith N., Shaping an American Landscape: The Art and Architecture of Charles A. Platt, Hanover, N.H.: Hood Museum of Art and University Press of New England, 1995, , External links Boston University faculty Category:Living people Category:American architecture writers Category:American male non-fiction writers Category:American architectural historians Category:Boston University faculty Category:Brown University alumni Category:University of ### Assistant:
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### User: Dr. Adriana Janette Umaña-Taylor is a professor of education in the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Prior to this, she was a faculty member in the T. Denny Sanford School of Social and Family Dynamics at Arizona State University, where she worked from 2004 until 2017, starting as an assistant professor and advancing through the ranks of associate professor and full professor, eventually being named a Foundation Professor. Dr. Umaña-Taylor's first position after graduate school was at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign in the Human and Community Development Department. Education and Research She earned her bachelor's and master's degreesin Psychology and Child Development and Family Relationships, respectively, from the University of Texas and her Ph.D. in Human Development and Family Studies at the University of Missouri in Columbia in 2001. Dr. Umaña-Taylor is most known for her research on Latino adolescent adjustment and ethnic-racial identity development. Awards 2017 - Umaña-Taylor was conferred a fellow of the National Council on Family Relations. 2018 - Umaña-Taylor was recognized "renowned psychologist" and elected to the governing Council of Representatives of the American Psychological Association, in Division 45, Society for the Psychological Study of Culture, Ethnicity and Race. References External links https://www.gse.harvard.edu/faculty/adriana-umana-taylor ### Assistant:
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### User: Vermont Route 16 (VT 16) is a state highway in northern Vermont, United States. It begins at VT 15 in Hardwick and heads northward to U.S. Route 5 (US 5) in Barton. From Barton, it heads eastward to VT 5A in Westmore. The portion of VT 16 east of US 5 is town-maintained and signed east-west. The remainder of the route is signed north-south. West of Barton, the road used to be part of New England Interstate Route 12. The segment of VT 16 from Barton to Westmore was once Vermont Route 56. Route description Vermont Route 16 begins atan intersection with Vermont Route 15 in the town of Hardwick, about two miles (3 km) east of the town center. It proceeds north about to the village of East Hardwick, roughly paralleling the path of the Lamoille River upstream. It continues for several miles through the Lamoille River valley into the village of Greensboro Bend within the town of Greensboro. As VT 16 continues north, it soon passes by Horse Pond, the source of the Lamoille River, clipping the town of Wheelock briefly before returning to Greensboro. After about a mile, VT 16 enters the town of Glover, passingthrough a mountain pass within the Black Hills, soon reaching Clarks Pond, the source of the Barton River. VT 16, now known as Dry Pond Road then follows the Barton River downstream as it continues its northward journey. Several miles later, still following the Barton river, VT 16 meets its first major intersection, Vermont Route 122, about a mile and a half south of Glover center. The road name changes to Glover Street at this point and continues towards Glover center. After passing through Glover center, VT 16 enters the town of Barton, then has a junction with I-91 (atExit 25) about later. VT 16 enters the village of Barton, becoming Church Street until an intersection with U.S. Route 5 in the village square. VT 16 then turns south along US 5 along a short wrong-way concurrency to Eastern Avenue, where VT 16 continues eastward. After leaving the village, the road name becomes Willoughby Lake Road and runs for another six miles (10 km) skirting around Barton Mountain as it heads into the town of Westmore. It ends just after entering Westmore at an intersection with Vermont Route 5A, about one mile north of the Westmore center at thenorth shore of Lake Willoughby. History The portion of VT 16 west of US 5 was originally numbered in 1922 as part of Route 12 of the New England road marking system. Route 12 was a multi-state route known as the "Keene Way" that began in New London, Connecticut, passing through Worcester, Massachusetts and Keene, New Hampshire before entering Vermont. In Vermont, it passed through Montpelier and continued north through the village of Barton, ending at the city of Newport. When the Vermont state highway system was officially created in 1931, New England Route 12 became Vermont Route 12, runningfrom Ascutney to the city of Newport. In 1955, a new route from Montpelier to Morrisville was added to the state highway system as the "Montpelier-Morrisville State Highway". At around the same time, the road from Barton village to Westmore center had been designated as VT 56. On May 1, 1960, several changes took place to the state route designations in the area. North of Montpelier, VT 12 was relocated to use the Montpelier-Morrisville State Highway. The original VT 12 alignment north of Montpelier was split into two routes. The Montpelier-Hardwick segment was assigned as an extension of Vermont Route ### Assistant:
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### User: Jake David Charles (born 16 February 1996) is a professional footballer who plays as a striker or winger for Stafford Rangers. Club career Huddersfield Town Charles was born in Mirfield, West Yorkshire. He began to play football when he was three and joined Battyeford Juniors and Garforth Villa's youth academy before joining Huddersfield Town's U11 side when he was 10. Having progressed through the academy, Charles signed his first professional contract with the club on 28 February 2013 and started his first years scholars. With his contract set to expire at the end of the 2013–14 season, Charles signed aHe made 45 appearances in all competitions, scoring 12 goals, as Stalybridge finished in 22nd place in the table. He left the club at the end of 2017–18. Stafford Rangers In October 2018, Charles joined Northern Premier League side Stafford Rangers and scored on his debut. International career Charles has represented Wales at under-16, under-17 and under-19 and under-21 levels. After making his debut for the Wales under-17 side, Charles became the fourth member of his family to play for the country after his grandfather, his great-uncle Mel and his cousin Jeremy. He was capped three times by the under-17sin 2012, before appearing three times for the under-19s in 2014. Charles was called up to the Wales under-21 squad for their 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship match against Bulgaria on 31 March 2015. He made his debut on 4 September as an 81st-minute substitute in a 3–1 away won over Luxembourg in 2017 UEFA European Under-21 Championship qualifying. He finished his under-21 career with nine appearances from 2015 to 2016. Style of play A versatile forward, Charles can play both as a striker or as a winger. Personal life Charles is the grandson of Wales international player John Charles. ### Assistant:
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### User: Alan Charles Jardine (born September 3, 1942) is an American musician, singer, and songwriter who co-founded the Beach Boys. He is best known as the band's rhythm guitarist and for occasionally singing lead vocals on songs such as "Help Me, Rhonda" (1965), "Come Go with Me" (1978), and "From There to Back Again" (2012). His song "Lady Lynda" became a UK top 10 hit for the group in 1978. Following the death of fellow band member Carl Wilson in 1998, Jardine left the touring Beach Boys and has since performed as a solo artist. He has released one solo studioalbum, A Postcard from California (2010). In 1988, Jardine was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of the Beach Boys. Early life Alan Charles Jardine was born in Lima, Ohio, but his family moved to Rochester, New York, where his father worked for Eastman Kodak and taught at the Rochester Institute of Technology. His family later moved to San Francisco and then to Hawthorne, California. At Hawthorne High School, he was a second-string fullback on the football team, soon befriending teammate Brian Wilson who was the team's backup quarterback. Jardine soon watched Brian andbrother Carl Wilson singing at a school assembly. After attending Ferris State University during the 1960–61 academic year, Jardine registered as a student at El Camino College in 1961. There, he was reunited with Brian and first presented the idea of forming a band as the two worked through harmony ideas together in the college's music room. Jardine's primary musical interest was folk and he learned banjo and guitar specifically to play folk music. When the Beach Boys formed at Wilson's home, he first tried to push the band toward folk but was overruled in favor of rock 'n' roll.An all-rounder on string instruments, Jardine played stand-up bass on the Beach Boys' first recording, the song "Surfin'" (1961). Jardine fully rejoined the Beach Boys in the summer of 1963 at Brian Wilson's request and worked alongside guitarist David Marks with the band until October 1963, when Marks quit the Beach Boys after an altercation with the band's manager, Murry Wilson. Career 1960s–80s Jardine played bass on the Beach Boys' first (and only) record for Candix Records. Although he left in 1961 to pursue a career in dentistry, Jardine filled in on bass for Brian during concerts and returned full-timein 1963 following David Marks' departure after an argument with Murry Wilson. Jardine is the band's rhythm guitarist and middle-range harmony vocalist. He first sang lead on "Christmas Day," on 1964's The Beach Boys' Christmas Album and followed shortly after with the Number 1 hit "Help Me, Rhonda". It was at Jardine's suggestion that the Beach Boys recorded a cover of the Kingston Trio's folk standard Sloop John B, which Brian Wilson rearranged and produced for their Pet Sounds album in 1966. After Brian Wilson discontinued touring in late 1964, Jardine took on a more prominent role as a leadvocalist during live performances with the group. Beginning with his contributions to the Friends album, Jardine also became a songwriter and wrote or co-wrote a number of songs for the Beach Boys. "California Saga: California" from the Holland album, charted in early 1973. Jardine's song for his first wife, "Lady Lynda" (1978), scored a Top Ten chart entry in the UK. Increasingly from the time of the Surf's Up album, Al became involved alongside Carl Wilson in production duties for the Beach Boys. He shared production credits with Ron Altbach on M.I.U. Album (1978) and was a significant architect (withMike Love) of the album's concept and content. As with "Lady Lynda" and his 1969 rewrite of Lead Belly's "Cotton Fields," "Come Go with Me" and "Peggy Sue" on the M.I.U. Album were Jardine productions, the first being a measurable hit in the UK. Jardine instigated the Beach Boys' recording of a remake of the Mamas and the Papas' song "California Dreamin'" (featuring Roger McGuinn), reaching No. 8 on the Billboard adult contemporary chart in 1986. The associated music video featured in heavy rotation on MTV and secured extensive international airplay. The video featured all the surviving Beach Boys andtwo of the three surviving members of the Mamas and the Papas, John Phillips and Michelle Phillips (Denny Doherty was on the East coast and declined), along with former Byrds guitarist Roger McGuinn. 1990s–present Following Carl Wilson's death in 1998, Jardine left the touring version of the Beach Boys, leaving Love as the only original member in the group playing live concerts. Jardine continued to tour and recorded with his Endless Summer Band, in a line-up that comprised several musicians who toured with the Beach Boys, including Billy Hinsche of Dino, Desi and Billy; Ed Carter; Bobby Figueroa; and Jardine'ssons, Matt and Adam. In 2002, Jardine's band released Live in Las Vegas. Jardine toured under the banners "Beach Boys Family & Friends", "Al Jardine, Beach Boy" and "Al Jardine of the Beach Boys" during this time. Former bandmate Mike Love decided to sue him in order to prevent the use of the Beach Boys name, which he had licensed in 1999. The courts ruled in Love's favor, denying Jardine the use of the Beach Boys name in any fashion. Jardine proceeded to appeal this decision in addition to seeking $4 million in damages. The California Court of Appeal ruledthat Love acted wrongfully in freezing Jardine out of touring under the Beach Boys name, allowing Jardine to continue with his lawsuit. The case ended up being settled outside of court with the terms not disclosed In late 2006, Jardine joined Brian Wilson's band for a short tour celebrating the 40th anniversary of Pet Sounds. In March 2008, Jardine settled a lawsuit brought against him by Love and the estate of Carl Wilson regarding use of the "Beach Boys" name. Love had leased the Beach Boys name, and it was deemed that Jardine's newly formed band, called the Beach BoysFamily & Friends (featuring sons Matt and Adam Jardine, Carnie and Wendy Wilson, Daryl Dragon, Billy Hinsche and others), was a breach of title use. In 2009, Jardine's lead vocal on "Big Sur Christmas" was released on MP3 download, produced by longtime Red Barn Studios engineer Stevie Heger under Heger's band's name, Hey Stevie. The track also was released on the Hey Stevie album, Eloquence. Jardine released A Postcard from California, his solo debut, in June 2010 (re-released with two extra tracks on April 3, 2012). The album features contributions from Beach Boys Brian Wilson, Carl Wilson (a posthumous track),Bruce Johnston, David Marks and Mike Love. There are also guest appearances from Glen Campbell, David Crosby, Neil Young, Stephen Stills, Steve Miller, Scott Mathews, Gerry Beckley and Dewey Bunnell (members of America) and Flea. A spoken intermission written by Stephen Kalinich, called "Tidepool Interlude", features actor Alec Baldwin. Jardine made his first appearance with the Beach Boys in more than 10 years in 2011 at a tribute concert for Ronald Reagan's 100th birthday, where he sang "Help Me, Rhonda" and "Sloop John B". In December 2011, it was announced that Brian Wilson, Mike Love, Al Jardine, Bruce Johnston andDavid Marks would reunite for a new Beach Boys album and The Beach Boys 50th Anniversary Reunion Tour in 2012. The album, titled That's Why God Made the Radio, was released in June 2012 and features the song "From There to Back Again" with Jardine in the lead vocals with Wilson. Critics have acclaimed Jardine's performance in the song, with Ryan Reed of Paste magazine praising his "stand-out lead vocal", while John Bush of Allmusic deemed the song the "most beautiful" in the album, having been "impeccably" framed by Wilson around Jardine's "aging but still sweet" voice. In September 2012,it was announced that Jardine, Wilson and Marks would no longer tour with the band. Love returned the lineup to its pre-Anniversary Tour configuration, with Love as the only original member (Bruce Johnston joined in 1965). As a result, it was announced that Jardine would appear with Marks and Wilson, along with Wilson's band, for a short summer tour in 2013, featuring the three. Continuing in collaboration with Wilson, Jardine and Marks contributed to Wilson's solo album, No Pier Pressure, which was released in April 2015. Jardine also contributed to Wilson's Pet Sounds 50th Anniversary World Tour. In July 2016,Jardine appeared in an episode of the Adult Swim series Decker, playing the role of the President's "science advisor". Jardine and his son, Matt, contributed backing vocals to John Mayer's "Emoji of a Wave", which was released in 2017. In 2018 Jardine began performing solo storyteller concerts called "Al Jardine – A Postcard From California - From the Very First Song With a Founding Member of the Beach Boys" which featured his son Matt and long time Peter Asher associate Jeff Alan Ross, Jardine continues to tour these shows into 2019, while still performing with the Brian Wilson band. InApril 2019, Jardine was inducted into the Rochester Music Hall of Fame. Book Jardine has authored one book, Sloop John B: A Pirate's Tale (2005), illustrated by Jimmy Pickering. The book is a children's story about a boy's Caribbean adventure with his grandfather, reworded from the original folk lyric of the song "Sloop John B". It also includes a free CD with singalong acoustic recording by Jardine. Discography Singles References External links Al Jardine Interview NAMM Oral History Library (1987) Category:1942 births Category:Living people Category:20th-century American guitarists Category:21st-century American guitarists Category:American male bass guitarists Category:American male guitarists Category:American male singer-songwriters ### Assistant:
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### User: Blood Glacier (also known as Blutgletscher, Glazius, and The Station) is a 2013 Austrian horror film directed by Marvin Kren. The movie had its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6, 2013 and had a limited theatrical release in the United States on May 2, 2014. It stars Gerhard Liebmann as a researcher faced with a strange liquid that poses a threat to anything living. Synopsis Janek (Gerhard Liebmann) is a technician who works at a research station in the Austrian Alps. Small teams of scientists come to the station to study global warming. It seemsthe liquid and the potential dangers it poses. His caution is soon proven to be warranted, as the group begins to fall prey to the hybrids created by the liquid. A supervisory visit by the climate minister is scheduled, and Janek is horrified when he finds that a former girlfriend of his is among the newcomers. Cast Gerhard Liebmann as Janek Edita Malovcic as Tanja Brigitte Kren as Ministerin Bodicek Santos as Tinni Hille Beseler as Birte Peter Knaack as Falk Felix Römer as Harald Wolfgang Pampel as Bert Krakauer Murathan Muslu as Luca Michael Fuith as Urs Adina Vetteras an eco-horror film, as multiple reviewers praised it for not being a "preachy diatribe" and for its monsters. The A.V. Club noted that while the film was very similar to other movies in the same genre, this worked in Blood Glacier's favor as it was "a movie viewers have seen dozens of times before, and will see again, with slight variations, because it embodies a fundamental quality of B-horror entertainment." Awards Austrian Film Award for Best Actor at Viennale (2014, won - Gerhard Liebmann) Austrian Film Award for Best Makeup Best Makeup at Viennale (2014, won) Austrian Film Award ### Assistant:
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### User: Portsmouth Community Library, also known as the Portsmouth Colored Community Library, is a historic library building located at Portsmouth, Virginia. It was built in 1945 at 804 South Street. It is a one-story, three bay, brick building with a hipped roof. It was built to provide for the reading needs of Portsmouth's African Americans. In 1959, two local dentists, Dr. James Holley and Dr. Hugo A. Owens, successfully sued the City of Portsmouth and the Portsmouth Public Library to integrate the public library, which resulted in the closure of the Portsmouth Community Library. The building has been relocated twice sinceit was closed in 1962 after integration of the public library system; first in 1967 to the parking lot of Ebenezer Baptist Church, 730 Effingham Street, then since August 2007, it has been located at the present location, 904 Elm Avenue. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010. The library is now operated as a museum of local African-American history by the City of Portsmouth. Displays include photographs and memorabilia, as well as African-American books and journals from the former library. The African American Historical Society of Portsmouth led efforts to dedicate the historic library ### Assistant:
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### User: Ana y Bruno is a 2017 Mexican computer-animated horror-comedy-drama film based on the novel, Ana by Daniel Emil. It is produced by Altavista Films and Lo Coloco Films, and co-produced by Ítaca Films and Ánima Estudios. After 13 years of production, the film was released in Mexico on 31 August 2018, receiving favorable reviews. It is described to be the most expensive animated film in the Mexican film industry with the budget of $104 million pesos (est. $5.35 million USD). The film has won three "Best Animated Feature" awards including one from the 61st Ariel Awards in which the filmhas also earned nominations for "Adapted Screenplay" and "Original Score". Plot A young girl named Ana searches for her father to help save her troubled mother. Voice cast Galia Mayer as Ana Marina de Tavira as Carmen Damián Alcázar as Ricardo Armando Ürtusuaztegui as Bruno Julieta Egurrola as Martita Regina Orozco as Rosi Héctor Bonilla as Dr. Mendez Daniel Carrera Pasternac as Daniel Release The film has its premiere at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival on 17 June 2017, and later Morelia International Film Festival on 28 October 2017. The film was released in theaters in Mexico on 31August 2018, distributed by Corazon Films. It later premiered exclusively on the Pantaya digital platform in the United States. Box-office Ana y Bruno debuted at #6, grossing $16.8 million pesos in its first week, bombing at the national box-office. It grossed a total of $21.3 million pesos (est. $1.1 million USD) Reception Prior to its release, the film has received praise from other acclaimed Mexican film directors, including Alfonso Cuarón and Guillermo del Toro. The film received favorable reviews from critics upon release, with many praising the story and theme, while criticism is focused on the animation and content. OnRotten Tomatoes, the film currently has a 71% "Fresh" rating. Controversy Despite favorable feedback, the film also drew criticism from parents which many call "unsuitable" for younger viewers, and even caused some to leave early during the film's showings. The film has been given an "A" rating, allowing attendance of viewers of all ages (equivalent to the "G" MPAA rating) by the RTC, Mexico's film rating system, drawing backlash. The nature of the film's plot is focused on real-life situations such as mental illness and death, and has a "dark tone" which parents call "depressing". The designs of certain charactersin the film have also received criticism, with parents referring to them as "terrifying". However, many other parents praised the film's story and writing, while otherwise criticizing the content. It is believed that the film's controversy is the cause of its underperformance. Awards and nominations References External links IMCINE profile (in Spanish) Category:Mexican films Category:Mexican animated films Category:2017 computer-animated films Category:Spanish-language films Category:2017 animated films Category:2017 films Category:2010s comedy-drama films Category:2010s fantasy-comedy films Category:2010s monster movies Category:Films about dysfunctional families Category:Films based on Mexican novels Category:Films about depression Category:Films directed by Carlos Carrera Category:Films using computer-generated imagery Category:Ánima Estudios films ### Assistant:
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### User: Cyana is a genus of moths in the family Erebidae. Species are well distributed in Africa, Madagascar, China, India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Sumatra, Java and Borneo. The genus was erected by Francis Walker in 1854. Description Palpi slender and upturned. Antennae ciliated. Forewing of the male with a more or less strongly developed fringe of hair from the centre of costa on upperside and lobe on underside, which much distorts the sub-costal nervures. Vein 5 absent in male. Vein 6 usually absent in female. Veins 7 to 9 stalked. Hindwing with veins 3 and stalked. Vein 5 above angle ofspecies and subspecies of Cyana Walker, 1854 (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae: Lithosiinae) from the collection of the Royal Museum for Central Africa. Journal of Afrotropical Zoology 6: 117-127. 2009: A new species of Cyana from Northern Luzon (Philippines) belonging to the lunulata group, with an analysis of differential features and evaluation of elements for group recognition (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae: Lithosiinae). Nachrichten des Entomologischen Vereins Apollo, N.F. 30 (3): 147-160. 2011: Six new Philippine species of the genus Cyana Walker, 1854 and a review of the geminipuncta-group, with emphasis on endemic development lines on various islands (Lepidoptera: Arctiidae, Lithosiinae). Nachrichten des Entomologischen Vereins Apollo, ### Assistant:
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### User: Ra Ra Rajasekhar is an upcoming Tamil thriller film directed by Balaji Sakthivel and produced by Thirupathi Brothers. The film features newcomers Mathi in the leading role, while Siddhartha Nuni is the cinematographer. The film began production in early 2014. Cast Mathi Sruthi Hariharan Subiksha Vijay Murugan Vela Ramamoorthy Badree R Gowtham Sri Ram Saravanan Production Following the success of Vazhakku Enn 18/9, Thirupathi Brothers agreed to produce Balaji Sakthivel's next film, Ra Ra Rajeskhar, a movie about fear and anxiety that is inherent in human beings when faced with trouble and danger. Mathi, the son-in-law of producer N. Linguswamy'sbrother, was revealed to be playing the lead role while Sakitha Baanu, a child actress who had previously appeared in Anandham (2001), was revealed as the film's heroine. Vijay Murugan, who made a breakthrough as an actor with Goli Soda (2014), was also picked to play a supporting role. Sruthi Hariharan revealed in March 2015 that she was part of the film, replacing Sakitha. The film's first schedule began in June 2014 and revealed that filming would progress in Korangani, Madurai, and the hilly regions of Kerala, Theni and Suruli Falls. In July 2014, the team started a forty-day schedule ### Assistant:
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### User: Nihar Ranjan Ghosh (born 11 August 1955) is an Indian politician serving as Chairman of English Bazar Municipality and Member of Legislative Assembly from English Bazar constituency. He was joined All India Trinamool Congress party in November 2017. Early life Ghosh was born into Suresh Ghosh who was a middle class person in Malda district. Ghosh passed 12th from Akrumoni Coronation Institution. Political career Ghosh is many times councillor in English Bazar Municipality as an Independent and his wife is also a councillor with his support. In 2016 West Bengal Legislative Assembly general election he won the English Bazar (Vidhan ### Assistant:
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### User: Terry Callan (born 30 August 1938) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Callan, a back pocket, played his early football with Geelong Amateurs and Old Xaverians. After making seven appearances in his debut season, Callan played 17 games for Geelong in 1961. He also represented Victoria at interstate football in 1961. He was a regular fixture in the side again in 1962 and played in Geelong's drawn preliminary final against Carlton and preliminary final replay, which they lost. Callan appeared in the opening 17 rounds of the 1963 VFL season ### Assistant:
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### User: Vasiliy Osipovich Bebutov (, , ) (1 January 1791 – April 7, 1858) was an Imperial Russian general and a member of a Georgian-Armenian noble family of Bebutashvili/Bebutov Bebutov was in the military since 1809. Served in the Russo-Turkish War of 1806–1812 and the Patriotic War of 1812. Since 1816 he was Adjutant General of the H. I. M. Retinue and served with A. P. Yermolov. During the Russo-Turkish War of 1828–29 he participated in the takeover of Akhaltsikhe and commanded the defense thereof against an attempt by Ahmed Pasha of Adjara to recapture it for the Ottomans. In 1830(1849) Order of St. Andrew (1854) External links Recipients of the Military Order of St. George: biography in Russian Nordisk familjebok Crimean War from Encyclopædia Britannica Old Caucasian War Category:1791 births Category:1858 deaths Category:Imperial Russian Army generals Category:Georgian generals in imperial Russian service Category:Georgian generals with the rank "General of the Infantry" (Imperial Russia) Category:Armenian nobility Category:Russian nobility Category:Russian people of Armenian descent Category:Georgian Armenians Category:Nobility of Georgia (country) Category:People from Tbilisi Category:Members of the State Council of the Russian Empire Category:Recipients of the Order of the White Eagle (Russian) Category:Recipients of the Order of St. Vladimir, 2nd class Category:Recipients ### Assistant:
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### User: Jawan Mohabbat is a 1971 Bollywood romance film directed by Bhappi Sonie. The film stars Shammi Kapoor, Asha Parekh and Pran. The film was unsuccessful at the box office due to its weak and unconvincing plot. Cast Asha Parekh as Komal Mathur Shammi Kapoor as Rajesh Sareen Balraj Sahani as Dr. Naresh Sareen Nirupa Roy as Mrs. Sunita Sareen Pran as Vinod Rajendra Nath as Tommy Shashikala as Mala Raj Mehra as DIG Mathur Sarika as Baby Rekha Plot Dr. Sarin lives with his wife, Sunita, young daughter, Rekha, and his brother, Rajesh. Rajesh is an eligible bachelor, and on ### Assistant:
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### User: Strikeforce: Cormier vs. Mir was a planned mixed martial arts event that was to be held by Strikeforce. The event was scheduled to take place on November 3, 2012 at the Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Background The main event was expected to be see Strikeforce Heavyweight Grand Prix champion Daniel Cormier face former UFC Heavyweight Champion Frank Mir. However, Mir was forced to withdraw due to injury. Though fellow UFC fighters Matt Mitrione (who declined the fight) & Pat Barry were possible replacements for Mir, the bout was eventually cancelled. The Cormier/Mir bout would eventually take placeat UFC on Fox: Henderson vs. Melendez in April 2013, following Strikeforce's closure and Cormier's signing with the UFC. In the rescheduled match-up, Cormier won by unanimous decision. A middleweight championship bout between champion Luke Rockhold and Lorenz Larkin was originally scheduled for this event, but was called off due to an injury to Rockhold. The bout was rescheduled for the promotion's last event Strikeforce: Marquardt vs. Saffiedine in January 2013, but both Rockhold and Larkin were replaced by Ronaldo Souza and UFC middleweight Ed Herman due to their own respective injuries. On October 12, 2012, Strikeforce announced it wascancelling this event, the second in a row. Injuries to headliner Frank Mir, as well as co-headliner and middleweight champion Luke Rockhold were cited as the deciding factors for the cancellation. Following the cancellation, the bout between Tim Kennedy & Trevor Smith was rescheduled for Strikeforce: Marquardt vs. Saffiedine in January 2013, where Kennedy won via third round submission. Cancelled fight card Main card (Showtime) Middleweight bout: Tim Kennedy vs. Trevor Smith Lightweight bout: Jorge Masvidal vs. Bobby GreenMiddleweight Championship bout: Luke Rockhold (c) vs. Lorenz Larkin'''Heavyweight bout: Daniel Cormier vs. Frank Mir''' References See also List of Strikeforce events ### Assistant:
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### User: Olivier Le Cour Grandmaison (born 19 September 1960), is a French politist and author whose work chiefly centres on colonialism. He is best known for his book Coloniser, Exterminer - Sur la guerre et l'Etat colonial. Le Cour Grandmaison is a professor of political science at the Évry-Val d'Essonne University, and a teacher at the Collège International de Philosophie. He is president of the October 17, 1961 Association Against Oblivion, which advocates official recognition for the crimes committed by the Fifth Republic during the 1961 Paris massacre. Coloniser, Exterminer In his book Coloniser, Exterminer (2005) Le Cour Grandmaison states thattechniques and concepts used during the period of late 19th-century New Imperialism were later used during the Holocaust. He points to both Tocqueville and Michelet who spoke of "extermination" during the colonization of the Western United States and the removal of Native American tribes. He quotes Tocqueville's 1841 comment on French conquest of Algeria: "In France I have often heard people I respect, but do not approve, deplore [the army] burning harvests, emptying granaries and seizing unarmed men, women and children. As I see it, these are unfortunate necessities that any people wishing to make war on the Arabs mustaccept... I believe the laws of war entitle us to ravage the country and that we must do this, either by destroying crops at harvest time, or all the time by making rapid incursions, known as raids, the aim of which is to carry off men and flocks" "Whatever the case, continued Tocqueville, we may say in a general manner that all political freedoms must be suspended in Algeria." According to LeCour Grandmaison, "De Tocqueville thought the conquest of Algeria was important for two reasons: first, his understanding of the international situation and France’s position in the world, and, second,Movement (UMP), which required that teachers promote "positive values" of French presence abroad, "in particular in North Africa". The law was not only accused of interfering with the autonomy of Universities within the state, but also of being an obvious case of historical revisionism. The legislation was repealed by president Jacques Chirac in 2006 following criticisms in France from historians and the left-wing, and from abroad, including Algerian president Abdelaziz Bouteflika and Négritude writer Aimé Césaire. Bibliography Major works (with C. Wihtol de Wenden), Les Citoyennetés en Révolution (1789-1794), PUF, 1992 (thesis –- preface of Madeleine Rebérioux) Les étrangers dansla cité. Expériences européennes, Paris, La Découverte, 1993 Le 17 octobre 1961 – Un crime d’État à Paris, collectif, Éditions La Dispute, 2001. Haine(s) – Philosophie et Politique, PUF, 2002 (preface by Étienne Balibar) (article on this book) Coloniser, Exterminer - Sur la guerre et l'Etat colonial, Fayard, 2005, (Table of contents) La République impériale. Politique et racisme d'Etat, Fayard, 2009. Douce France. Rafles. Rétentions. Expulsions, Seuil/Resf, 2009. De l'indigénat. Anatomie d'un "monstre" juridique:le droit colonial en Algérie et dans l'empire français, Zones/La Découverte, 2010. free access http://www.editions-zones.fr/spip.php?page=lyberplayer&id_article=113 Articles See also Colonialism French rule in Algeria Paris massacre of 1961 ### Assistant:
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### User: Heimar Lenk (born 17 September 1946 in Tallinn) is an Estonian journalist and politician. He has supported the Estonian Centre Party since 1994. Biography Lenk studied at Tallinn Polytechnic Institute as well as at Moscow State University. He then went on to work for Estonian newspapers such as Säde, Õhtuleht, Rahva Hääl and Noorte Hääl. In 1974 he worked in Estonian Radio and Estonian Television, he also covered Russian radio and television stories for the Estonian audience. In 1999 he was the voice of the Driving Centre Party newspaper "Kesknädal" becoming editor in chief . He has been a member ### Assistant:
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### User: sympathies of his brother Joseph, and after a French revolutionary army annexed Savoy to France in 1792, he left the service, and eventually took a commission in the Russian army. He served under Alexander Suvorov in his victorious Austro-Russian campaign and accompanied the marshal to Russia in 1796. By then, Suvorov's patron Catherine II of Russia had died, and the new monarch Paul I dismissed the victorious general (partly on account of the massacre of 20,000 Poles after he conquered Warsaw). Xavier de Maistre shared the disgrace of his general, and supported himself for some time in St. Petersburg by ### Assistant:
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### User: Lyalevo or Lyalyovo () is a former village in southernmost western Bulgaria which ceased to exist in 1960. Lyalevo is known as the only village within the modern borders of Bulgaria that was inhabited by Greek Muslims (Vallahades). Lyalevo lay in the southeastern part of the Pirin mountains, in the southern part of the region of Pirin Macedonia. It was located at the foot of the Lalevski Vrah or Sveta Elena (Saint Helena) summit, from the town of Gotse Delchev (Nevrokop). Today, its ruins fall administratively within Bulgarian Blagoevgrad Province's Hadzhidimovo Municipality, close to the border with Greece and thethe village as Lyaluhu and calls its residents "Greek Pomaks". Serbian scholar Stefan Verković notes that Lyalyuvo had 90 households or a population 300 Greek Muslims in 1889. Vasil Kanchov's study of 1900 records the population of Lalyovo as 620 Greek Muslims. After the Second Balkan War of 1913, Lyalevo's population moved to Greece because the village (as with all of Pirin Macedonia) became part of the Kingdom of Bulgaria. Some of the original inhabitants returned in 1916 only to abandon it forever in 1928, this time to settle in Turkey, while Bulgarian refugees from Greek Macedonia were settled in ### Assistant:
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### User: Béla Linder (Majs, 10 February 1876 – Belgrade, 15 April 1962), Hungarian colonel of artillery, Secretary of War of Mihály Károlyi government, minister without portfolio of Dénes Berinkey government, military attaché of Hungarian Soviet Republic based in Vienna, finally the mayor of Pécs during the period of Serb occupation. Secretary of War for nine days The father of Béla Linder was of Jewish origin, and was "part of the inner circle of Franz Ferdinand, and when the heir to the throne was assassinated, Linder was (…) kicked out of the military leadership staff". Presumably after this incident he was activelyDue to the full disarmament of its army, Hungary was to remain without a national defence at a time of particular vulnerability. Military and political events drastically and rapidly changed after the Hungarian disarmament. On 5 November 1918, the Serbian army, with the help of the French army, crossed southern borders. On 8 November, the Czechoslovak Army crossed the northern borders, and on 13 November, the Romanian army crossed the eastern borders of the Kingdom of Hungary. On 13 November, Károlyi signed an armistice with the Allied nations in Belgrade. It limited the size of the Hungarian army to sixlead the negotiations for the preparations of the peace treaty. On 7 November there were already negotiations in Belgrade between the delegation led by Mihály Károlyi and the commander of eastern Entente troops, general Franchet d'Esperey. On 13 November, Linder signed the Armistice of Belgrade together with General Henrys (commander of French Eastern Army) and voivode Živojin Mišić (commander general of the Serb army). During the period of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, he was engaged in numerous diplomatic moves as the military attaché of the Ministry of Military in Vienna (2 May – 5 August 1919). Activities in Baranya, fleeinglived in Yugoslavia till his death. The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslavia honoured him for his activities between 1918-1919, and he received state funeral and a honorary tomb in Belgrade. However, Hungarians condemn him as he had a significant part in the borders of the Republic of Hungary being set disadvantageously at the Treaty of Trianon and Hungary had no armies to counter the inordinate demands of the Little Entente. References Árpád Hornyák: "Nem akarok több katonát látni" : Linder Béla – Egy politikai kalandor portréja, [Rubicon 16. évf. 9. sz.] Romsics Ignác: Dalmáciai ### Assistant:
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### User: Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA) is computer software for conducting statistical analysis of molecular evolution and for constructing phylogenetic trees. It includes many sophisticated methods and tools for phylogenomics and phylomedicine. It is licensed as proprietary freeware. The project for developing this software was initiated by the leadership of Masatoshi Nei in his laboratory at the Pennsylvania State University in collaboration with his graduate student Sudhir Kumar and postdoctoral fellow Koichiro Tamura. Nei wrote a monograph (pp. 130) outlining the scope of the software and presenting new statistical methods that were included in MEGA. The entire set of computer programswas written by Kumar and Tamura. The personal computers then lacked the ability to send the monograph and software electronically, so they were delivered by postal mail. From the start, MEGA was intended to be easy-to-use and include solid statistical methods only. MEGA version 2 (MEGA2), which was coauthored by an additional investigator Ingrid Jakobson, was released in 2001. All the computer programs and the readme files of this version could be sent electronically due to advances in computer technology. Around this time, the leadership of the MEGA project was taken over by Kumar (now at Temple University) and Tamura ### Assistant:
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### User: Thiobenzophenone is an organosulfur compound with the formula (C6H5)2CS. It is the prototypical thioketone. Unlike other thioketones that tend to dimerize to form rings and polymers, thiobenzophenone is quite stable, although it photoxidizes in air to form benzophenone and sulfur. Thiobenzophenone is deep blue and dissolves readily in many organic solvents. Structure The C=S bond length of thiobenzophenone is 1.63 Å, which is comparable to 1.64 Å, the C=S bond length of thioformaldehyde, measured in the gas phase. Due to steric interactions, the phenyl groups are not coplanar and the dihedral angle SC-CC is 36°. A variety of thiones withstructures and stability related to thiobenzophenone have also been prepared. Synthesis One of the first reported syntheses of thiobenzophenone involves the reaction of sodium hydrosulfide and diphenyldichloromethane": Ph2CCl2 + 2 NaSH → Ph2C=S + 2 NaCl + H2S An updated method involves sulfiding of benzophenone: Ph2C=O + H2S → Ph2C=S + H2O In the above reaction scheme, a mixture of gaseous hydrogen chloride and hydrogen sulfide are passed into a cooled solution of benzophenone in ethanol. Thiobenzophenone can also be produced by a Friedel-Crafts reaction of thiobenzoyl chloride and benzene. Reactivity Due to the weakness of the C=S bond, thiobenzophenone ### Assistant:
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### User: Ebchester railway station served the village of Ebchester, County Durham, England from 1867 to 1953 on the Derwent Valley Railway. History The station opened on 2 December 1867 by the North Eastern Railway. The station was situated on the east side of Ebchester Hill on the B6309. The site of the station had a large station yard and worker's cottages. The station closed to both passengers and goods traffic on 21 September 1953. The station cottages have survived today. References External links Category:Disused railway stations in County Durham Category:Former North Eastern Railway (UK) stations Category:Railway stations opened in 1867 Category:Railway ### Assistant:
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### User: Kristina Olson is a psychologist and an associate professor at the University of Washington in Seattle. She is known for her research on the development of social categories, transgender youth, and variation in human gender development. Olson was recipient of the 2016 Janet Taylor Spence Award from the Association for Psychological Science for transformative early career contributions, and the 2014 SAGE Young Scholars Award. Olson received the Alan T. Waterman Award from the National Science Foundation in 2018, and was the first psychological scientist to receive this prestigious award honoring early-career scientists. Olson is a member of the 2018 cohortof MacArthur "Genius" fellows. Biography Kristina Olson received her B.A. in Psychology and African and African-American Studies from Washington University in 2003. She completed her PhD from Harvard University in 2008, where she worked with Elizabeth Spelke, Mahzarin Banaji, and Carol S. Dweck. After graduating from Harvard, Olson joined the faculty of Yale University. In 2013, she subsequently moved to the Department of Psychology at the University of Washington where she directs the Social Cognitive Development Lab. Olson's research has been funded through the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, and the Arcus Foundation. TransYouth Project Olson directsThe TransYouth Project, which is the largest-to-date longitudinal research study of transgender children, with over 350 children enrolled from across the United States and Canada. The TransYouth Project "aims to help scientists, educators, parents, and children better understand the varieties of human gender development." Recent findings from this project indicate that transgender children are not confused, delayed, pretending, or oppositional with regards to their gender identity. On tasks, such as the Implicit Association Test (IAT), which measure social knowledge, attitudes, and stereotypes about gender, transgender children respond similarly to "typical" cisgender children who match their gender identity (i.e., their expressed ### Assistant:
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### User: Maurice Amollo Ouma (first name also spelt Morris) (born November 8, 1982) is a Kenyan cricketer and a former limited over captain. He is a right-handed batsman and also plays as a wicket-keeper. He has played for the Kenyan cricket team since 2000. International career Ouma represented Kenya in the Under-19 World Cups of both 2000 and 2002, while maintaining his position at the top of the middle-order. He made his next step up at the ICC Six Nations Challenge, in which Kenya came out victorious in the final in Windhoek. He then played in the 2003 edition of the ### Assistant:
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### User: Napoléon Joseph Ney, 2nd Prince de la Moskowa, (1803–1857) was a French politician. Ney was the elder son of Michel Ney. Born in Paris in 1803, his godfather was Emperor Napoléon I. He married in 1828 the daughter of the banker Pierre Laffite. In November 1831 he was created a peer of France in a batch of thirty-six lifetime peers. Sources Souvenirs et récits par le Prince de la Moskowa (in French) Arrêt Prince Napoléon (in French) Blog of the Ney family (in French) Category:1803 births Category:1857 deaths Category:19th-century French people Category:Princes de la Moskowa Category:Politicians from Paris Category:Members of ### Assistant:
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### User: Makan Dioumassi (born July 21, 1972 in Paris) is a basketball player from France, who won the silver medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics with the Men's National Team. Playing as a shooting guard he was on the national side that claimed the bronze medal at the 2005 European Championships. He is currently playing for Saba Battery BC in the Iranian Super League. References External links Euroleague Statistics Category:1972 births Category:Living people Category:ASVEL Basket players Category:Basketball players at the 2000 Summer Olympics Category:Real Betis Baloncesto players Category:French men's basketball players Category:French expatriate sportspeople in Spain Category:HTV Basket players Category:Le Mans ### Assistant:
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### User: Belitung (or in English, Billiton) is an island on the east coast of Sumatra, Indonesia in the Java Sea. It covers , and had a population of 271,868 in 2014. Administratively, it forms part of the province of Bangka-Belitung Islands. The island is known for its pepper and for its tin. It was in the possession of the United Kingdom from 1812 until Britain ceded control of the island to the Netherlands in the Anglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824. Its main town is Tanjung Pandan. Demography The population was 262,357 at the 2010 Census; the latest official estimate (as in 2014)is 271,868. The population is centred in several small towns; the largest are Tanjung Pandan in the west and Manggar in the east, which are the respective capitals of the two Regencies (Belitung and Belitung Timur) into which the island is administratively divided. While ethnic Bangka Malays people make up the largest percentage along with Chinese people, Belitung has significant populations of Bugis, Sundanese, and Javanese people who formerly worked for the Dutch, mining tin. There is also a small population of Madurese who were settled there in the Suharto era transmigration. Religion Before the arrival of Dutch missionaries, theusing Garuda Indonesia. Flag carrier Garuda Indonesia has four direct flights from Singapore. The Singapore - Tanjung Pandan direct flight operates 4 times weekly - leaving at 5:20 pm on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, and 5:30 pm on Sundays. Belitung island has four ports, three in Belitung Regency and one in East Belitung Regency, serving cargo ships and ferry ships. Online taxi services such as Go-Jek and Grab are available, as well as regular taxicab such as the Taxi Bandara (Airport Taxi) and Street Taxi. Geography Belitung is a medium-sized island, at about ; it consists of moderately rugged terrain ### Assistant:
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### User: Semeliškės () is a town in Elektrėnai municipality, Vilnius County, east Lithuania. According to the Lithuanian census of 2011, the town has a population of 580 people. The town has a church of Catholics and Orthodox church of St. Nicolas. Its alternate names include Sameliškės, Semelishkes, Semelishkis, Semeliškių, Sumelishki, Sumilishki, Siemieliszki, and Sumiliszk. History On October 6, 1941, 962 Jews of the town were murdered in a mass execution perpetrated by an Einsatzgruppen of local policemen and Lithuanian collaborators. References External links The murder of the Jews of Semeliškės during World War II, at Yad Vashem website. Category:Towns in Vilnius ### Assistant:
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### User: off his horse, he put a diadem on his head. Following this incident, he gave the crown to the third son, Tigranes. However, the latter was distressed about the incident and waged war against his father. He was defeated and fled to Phraates. Because of all this, Tigranes did not want to fight any more when Pompey got near Artaxata. The young Tigranes took refuge with Pompey as a suppliant with the approval of Phraates, who wanted Pompey's friendship. The elder Tigranes submitted his affairs to Pompey's decision and made complaint against his son. Pompey called him for a meeting.8; in Cilicia and Coele Syria, 20; in Palestine the one which is now Seleucis. Kings conquered: Tigranes the Armenian, Artoces the Iberian, Oroezes the Albanian, Darius the Mede, Aretas the Nabataean, Antiochus of Commagene." There were two-horse carriages and litters laden with gold or ornaments, including the couch of Darius, the son of Hystaspes, the throne and scepter of Mithridates. There were 75,100,000 drachmas of silver coin and 700 ships were brought to the port. Appian also related that "Pompey himself was borne in a chariot studded with gems, wearing, it is said, the cloak of Alexander the Great, ### Assistant:
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### User: Afghan Film also known as Afghan Film Organization (AFO) is Afghanistan's state-run film company, established in 1968. The current president is Sahraa Karimi, who attained a PhD in Cinema from the Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava and is its first female president. It is also a film archive. Many of its contents were destroyed by the Taliban, although some staff members saved valuable films risking their own lives. A number of rescue and archival efforts were chronicled in the 2015 documentary A Flickering Truth. An eight-day film festival was launched on August 3, 2019, showcasing 100 films around different ### Assistant:
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### User: Khulo () is a district of Georgia, in the autonomous republic of Adjara. Its main town is Khulo. Population: 23,327 Area: 710 km² Administrative divisions Khulo Municipality is divided into 1 borough (დაბა, daba), 12 communities (თემი, temi), and 78 villages (სოფელი, sopeli): Boroughs Khulo Communities Agara Dek'anashvilebi Didach'ara Diok'nisi Vashlovani Tkhilvana Riq'eti Satsikhuri Skhalti Pushruk'auli Ghorjomi Khikhadziri Villages Agara Dek'anashvilebi Ganakhleba Godgadzeebi Gudasakho Diak'onidzeebi Duadzeebi K'urtskhali Okruashvilebi Uchkho Kedlebi Dzirk'vadzeebi Elelidzeebi Didach'ara Boghauri Iremadzeebi Diok'nisi Beghleti Geladzeebi Iakobadzeebi Kort'okhi Maniaketi P'aksadze T'abakhmela Ghorjomeladzeebi Ghurt'a Jvariketi Kveda Vashlovani Zeda Vashlovani Tago Skhandara Shurmuli Chao Zeda Tkhilvana Bako Mtisubani Kvemo Tkhilvana ### Assistant:
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### User: Michael Kohlhaas is a novella by the German author Heinrich von Kleist, based on a 16th-century story of Hans Kohlhase. Kleist published fragments of the work in volume 6 of his literary journal Phöbus in June 1808. The complete work was published in the first volume of Kleist's (novellas) in 1810. Both the theme (a fanatical quest for justice) and the style (existentialist detachment posing as a chronicle) are surprisingly modern. They resonated with other authors more than a century after they were written. The historical Kohlhase The merchant Hans Kohlhase lived in Cölln on the Spree (now incorporated intocommitted further acts of terror. In 1540 he was finally captured and tried, and was publicly broken on the wheel in Berlin on 22 March 1540. From this history Kleist fashioned a novella that dramatized a personal quest for justice in defiance of the claims of the general law and the community. Political background In the early 19th century, defeats in the war against Napoleon and unsettled domestic conditions (as the rulers of German kingdoms and principalities pursued various strategies of accommodation with Napoleon) contributed to a mood of dissatisfaction in Prussia. Kleist clearly opposed France and was committed todes Pallières were direct adaptations of Kleist's story. The 1999 film The Jack Bull by John Badham was loosely based on this book which was also a major source of inspiration for Andrey Zvyagintsev's 2014 film Leviathan. References External links Michael Kohlhaas in The German Classics: Masterpieces of German Literature Translated into English, Vol. 4 (c. 1914), p. 308. Translated by Frances H. King. (see also Project Gutenberg version). Michael Kohlhaas in Tales from the German, Comprising Specimens from the Most Celebrated Authors (1844), p. 165. Translated by John Oxenford and C. A. Feiling. Category:1810 German novels Kohlhaas, Michael Category:German ### Assistant:
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### User: Catherine Crouch is an American film director, screenwriter, producer, cinematographer, and actor. She has been active in independent film-making for over two decades. Most of her work explores gender, race, and class in lesbian and queer lives. She is known for Stranger Inside (2001), Stray Dogs (2002), and The Gendercator (2007). The Gendercator controversy The Gendercator is a 2007 short film described as "a satirical take on surgical body modification and gender. The story uses the 'Rip Van Winkle' model to extrapolate from the feminist 70s to a frightening 2048 where politics and technology have conspired to mandate two gendersuper 8mm, miniDV - (2009) A Pirate in Alphabet City - HD Animation - (2010) Screenplays Slaves of the Saints (2011) Directed by Kelly Hayes; written by Catherine Crouch. "Slaves of the Saint is an ethnographic documentary about Afro-Brazilian religions, which combine elements of African religions, folk Catholicism, and Spiritualism...Eschewing an all-knowing narrator in favor of participants' own testimony--and featuring an interview with a bawdy pomba gira--Slaves of the Saint shows the importance of these spirits in the lives of their devotees and offers an inside account of popular but often maligned spiritual practices." The Taste of Dirt (2003) Directedby Yvonne Welbon; written by Catherine Crouch. The Taste of Dirt "depicts a young African American girl who struggles with the role race plays in her relationships" Stranger Inside (2001) Directed by Cheryl Dunye; Screenplay by Cheryl Dunye and Catherine Crouch; "A mother daughter reunion set in the harsh reality of a women's correctional facility" "In 2001, Stranger Inside won the Audience Awards at the Seattle Lesbian & Gay Film Festival, the San Francisco International Film Festival, L.A. Outfest and the Philadelphia Film Festival. It also won the Breakthrough Award at the Gotham Awards (for Yolonda Ross) and the SpecialJury Award at the Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival. In 2002, the film was nominated for several awards including a GLAAD Media Award, three Independent Spirit Awards and five Black Reel Awards. It won the Audience Award and Special mention at the Créteil International Women's Film Festival. For producing the film, Effie Brown won the Producer's Award at the 2003 Independent Spirit Awards." Cinematography and Sound Living with Pride: Ruth Ellis @ 100 (1999) Director & Producer: Yvonne Welbon; Camera & Sound: Catherine Crouch "Winner of 10 Best Documentary Awards, "Living With Pride: Ruth Ellis @ 100" is athe San Francisco International Gay and Lesbian Film Festival in 1999." Acting Ms. Stevens Hears the Mermaids Singing (2004) - Supporting, Dorthea Miller (directed by Linda Thornbug) The Undergrad (2003) - Featured, Revered Crouch (written and directed by Mahoney) Pretty Ladies (2002) - Supporting, The Priestess Vanilla Lament (1997) See also List of female film and television directors List of lesbian filmmakers List of LGBT-related films directed by women References External links Catherine Crouch Official Website Catherine Crouch at BFI Catherine Crouch at Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Centre "On the gaydar: Catherine Crouch", Variety, July 10, 2001 Stray Dogs on IMDb ### Assistant:
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### User: Derek Christopher Mayer (born May 21, 1967) is a Canadian professional ice hockey coach and former professional ice hockey player. He played 17 games for the Ottawa Senators of the National Hockey League (NHL). He was also a member of the Canadian team at the 1994 Olympics. He played most of his professional playing career in Europe and currently is an assistant coach for Starbulls Rosenheim in Germany's third-tier Oberliga. Playing career Drafted by the Detroit Red Wings in the 1986 NHL draft (43 overall), he graduated from the University of Denver in 1988 and the spent some time inthe Canadian national team system. Mayer then signed with AHL's Adirondack Red Wings for the 1989-90 season, where he spent a total of three season, interrupted and followed by stints with the San Diego Gulls of the IHL (1990–91 and 1991–92). Mayer made his NHL debut with the Ottawa Senators during the 1993-94 season. He played a total of 17 games in the NHL. He played at the 1993 World Championships and won silver at the 1994 Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway, with the Canadian national team. From 1996 to 2001, Mayer played for Eisbären Berlin in the German top-flight ### Assistant:
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### User: The Franklin Delano Roosevelt Bridge is an international bridge, which connects Maine State Route 189 in the community of Lubec, Maine in the United States with New Brunswick Route 774 on Campobello Island in the Canadian province of New Brunswick across the Lubec Narrows. The decked steel beam bridge is named for Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the 32nd President of the United States, who maintained a summer retreat on Campobello (now preserved as Roosevelt Campobello International Park). It is the island's only road connection to the mainland of North America; all of the island's transportation connections to the rest of NewBrunswick are by ferry. The easternmost physical manifestation of the Canada–United States border, which the bridge spans, is a plaque in its middle. Border crossing U.S. Customs and Border Protection and Canada Border Services Agency stations are located at each end of the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Bridge, forming the Lubec-Campobello Border Crossing. Although a ferry connected Lubec with Campobello Island for many years, permanent border inspection facilities were not deployed until the bridge was completed in 1962. The US operated out of a mobile home for the first two years. History In 1958, the Canadian government passed the Campobello-Lubec Bridge ### Assistant:
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### User: Robert Charlebois, OC, OQ (born June 25, 1944) is a Québecois author, composer, musician, performer and actor. Charlebois was born in Montreal, Quebec. Among his best known songs are Lindberg (the duo with Louise Forestier in particular), Ordinaire, Les Ailes d'un Ange and Je reviendrai à Montréal. His lyrics, often written in joual, are funny, relying upon plays on words. He won the Sopot International Song Festival in 1970. In 1970 he sang with Italian singer Patty Pravo the Italian song La solitudine. In the same year, he performed at the Festival Express train tour in Canada, but did notbought by Japanese beer brewing giant Sapporo in 2006. Honours In 1994, Charlebois received a Governor General's Performing Arts Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement for his contribution to music in Canada. In 1999, he was appointed an Officer of the Order of Canada. In 2008, he was made an Officer of the National Order of Quebec. Charlebois was one of the four musicians who were pictured on the second series of the Canadian Recording Artist Series issued by Canada Post stamps on July 2, 2009. On June 21, 2010, Charlebois received an honorary doctorate from Concordia University in Montreal. InLaure, Jeanne Moreau C.R.A.Z.Y. (2004) by Jean-Marc Vallée with Michel Côté and Marc-André Grondin Gabrielle (2013) by Louise Archambault with Mélissa Désormeaux-Poulin and Alexandre Landry Brief album discography 1965 - Volume 1 1966 - Volume 2 1967 - Demain l'hiver... 1968 - Robert Charlebois avec Louise Forestier 1969 - Québec Love 1971 - Un gars ben ordinaire 1971 - Le Mont Athos 1972 - Fu Man Chu 1973 - Solidaritude 1974 - Je rêve à Rio 1976 - Longue Distance 1977 - Swing Charlebois Swing (featuring guitar by Frank Zappa on Petroleum) 1979 - Solide 1981 - Heureux en amour? ### Assistant:
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### User: The Model 610 is a six-shot, double-action revolver chambered for the 10mm Auto cartridge. The 610 was manufactured by Smith & Wesson on the N-frame, similar to the Smith & Wesson Model 29 in .44 Magnum, and the Model 27/28 in .357 Magnum. The 10mm Auto is a rimless automatic pistol cartridge so moon clips are used to hold cartridges when loading and extracting spent cases en bloc. Since the .40 Smith & Wesson is a shorter, less powerful variant of the 10mm Auto but has the same diameter, the Model 610 can chamber and fire .40 Smith & Wessonrounds. History The Model 610 debuted in 1990, but shortly after its introduction, popularity of the 10mm round was declining and slow sales caused Smith & Wesson to retire the model in 1992. After a 6-year hiatus it was reintroduced in 1998 for competitive shooting matches with a few changes. The firing pin was moved from the hammer to inside the frame and an internal safety lock was added. This reintroduction was at the behest of members of the International Practical Shooting Confederation but the Model 610 is more commonly used in International Defensive Pistol Association matches. In 2019 Smith ### Assistant:
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### User: Michigan Stars Football Club is an American soccer team based in Metro Detroit. The team was established in 1982 and currently plays in the National Independent Soccer Association (NISA). The team formerly played in the National Premier Soccer League (NPSL). History The Michigan Stars was established circa 1998 as Windsor FC Spartans, then joined the National Premier Soccer League as FC Sparta Michigan. However in 2014 the team was purchased by Dearborn Sports Enterprise (DSE) in January 2014 and rebranded Michigan Stars FC. In November 2018, the team was purchased 50% and it began to rebuild operations and came backto play in the NPSL 2019 season. After the 2019 NPSL league season was over, Michigan Stars then took part in the NPSL Members Cup 2019. The Members Cup was a tournament that extended the NPSL season. The Members Cup contained six teams in total. In the beginning of September, the team was then purchased in a whole and on September 21, 2019, Michigan Stars FC were announced as a National Independent Soccer Association expansion team that would take part in the league's Spring season alongside fellow Member's Cup teams. Players and staff Current roster {| class="wikitable sortable" |- ! ### Assistant:
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### User: Sir Roger Manwood's School is a selective grammar school located in Sandwich, Kent, England. The school was judged 'Outstanding' in all categories by Ofsted in 2012, including its boarding provision in 2018. History The school was founded in 1563 by Sir Roger Manwood, an eminent barrister, jurist and supporter of the reformation of the Church in England. Manwood's intention was to create a free grammar school to make education more accessible to the local townspeople. The original location of the school was at Ash Road in Sandwich but it was moved to its current location at Manwood Road in 1895.Harold Buchanan Ryley, M.A. (Oxon.), (1901-1905) Rev. George Edward Battle, M.A. (Dublin), (1905-1914) Rev. William Burton, M.A. (Cantab.), (1914-1935) Ephraim Parker Oakes, M.A. (Cantab.), (1935-1960) John Frederick Spalding, M.Sci. (London), J.P., (1960–1978) Howell Griffiths (1978–1990) Ian Mellor (1991–96), then Stockport Grammar School from 1996–2005 Christopher Morgan (1996–2013) Lee Hunter (September 2013 -) Sport Facilities include a full size sports hall, a gym, a half sized hockey astroturf and a tarmac'd area, and three sports fields one with a pavilion. Sports offered include gymnastics, badminton, football, basketball, trampolining and table tennis, in addition to the main sports of rugby, hockey, netball,Newton, theatre director Richard Ovenden, Associate Director at the Bodleian Library Gale Pedrick, Scriptwriter, author and broadcaster Dr Ken Riley, Physicist, Senior Tutor at Clare College, Cambridge and Emeritus Lecturer in Physics at Cambridge University. Jack Scanlon, child actor Keith Stock, pole-vaulter who competed at the 1984 Olympics References External links Sir Roger Manwood's School website Further reading John Cavell & Brian Kennett (1963). A History of Sir Roger Manwood's School Sandwich 1563-1963. Cory, Adams & Mackay. Category:Sandwich, Kent Category:Grammar schools in Kent Category:Educational institutions established in the 1560s Category:Boarding schools in Kent Category:1563 establishments in England Category:Academies in Kent ### Assistant:
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### User: "Quagmire's Dad" is the 18th episode of the eighth season of the animated comedy series Family Guy. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on May 9, 2010. The episode features Quagmire after his father, Dan Quagmire, returns to Quahog and states he is "a woman trapped in a man's body". Dan has decided to have sex reassignment surgery to become physically female. Meanwhile, Brian travels to a seminar and, upon returning, has a sexual affair with "Ida," who he does not realize is Quagmire's post-operative father. The episode was written by Tom Devanney and directed by Peteand Lois' bed, but Quagmire finds him and brutally beats him up, ordering him to stay away from him and his family. As Quagmire leaves, Brian retaliates by telling him "Hey, I fucked your dad", before slamming the door shut. Production and development The episode was written by Tom Devanney and directed by series regular Pete Michels. It is the second episode of the season Devanney and Michels worked on, the first being "Brian's Got a Brand New Bag", before the conclusion of season 8. The episode saw the introduction of Quagmire's father, Lieutenant Commander Dan Quagmire, a former officerwith the United States Navy who later becomes Ida Quagmire. The character was voiced by main cast member, series creator and executive producer Seth MacFarlane. Series regulars Peter Shin and James Purdum served as supervising directors, with Andrew Goldberg and Alex Carter working as staff writers for the episode. Composer Ron Jones, who has worked on the series since its inception, returned to compose the music for "Quagmire's Dad". The original design of Ida Quagmire was created by MacFarlane, and designed to resemble English actor Paul Bettany. It was later adapted upon by Pete Michels. "Quagmire's Dad", along with theeleven other episodes from Family Guys eighth season, was released on a three-disc DVD set in the United States on December 13, 2011. The sets include brief audio commentaries by various crew and cast members for several episodes, a collection of deleted scenes and animatics, a special mini-feature which discussed the process behind animating "And Then There Were Fewer", a mini-feature entitled "The Comical Adventures of Family Guy – Brian & Stewie: The Lost Phone Call", and footage of the Family Guy panel at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con International. In addition to the regular cast, voice actor Wally Wingertbest Family Guy episodes in order of "yukyukyuks" and praised Brian's line of 'Hey... I fucked your dad' after Quagmire attacks him, describing it as "amazing". The episode was criticized for its portrayal of people who identify as transgender, particularly regarding the way Ida was treated by other characters. Food that Ida prepared for the dinner party at the Griffin house was thrown out and Brian's learning of her sex-reassignment surgery after he had sex with her caused him to "violently" vomit for 30 unbroken seconds. Speaking with LGBT media website AfterElton.com in January 2010, series creator Seth MacFarlane mentioneda gay guy looks at a vagina and goes, 'Oh, my God, that's disgusting.'" Eames (Digital Spy) believed the episode was "surprisingly kind" to the transgender community for "Family Guy standards". The Parents Television Council, a conservative campaigning group and frequent critic of MacFarlane's work, named "Quagmire's Dad" as its "Worst TV Show of the Week" citing Dan Quagmire's "outrageously stereotyped gay" character, violence and sexual innuendo. The PTC specifically cited the innuendo-laced dialogue throughout the episode, a "straight 30 straight seconds " of vomiting after Brian learns of Ida's previous identity, Quagmire's erection while embracing Ida and the violence ### Assistant:
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### User: Martin Stoyanov Stoev (; born 3 October 1971 in Sofia) is a Bulgarian volleyball coach and former player. He currently is head coach of the Romanian team CVM Tomis Constanța. He played volleyball from 1984 until 2005, with over 200 caps with the Bulgarian national team. He was a 3 time National champion of Bulgaria (twice with the team of Levski Siconco, one with Minior Buhovo). From 2005 to 2008 he was the head coach of the Bulgaria men's national volleyball team, finishing 3 consecutive times in top 5 of the World League. External links Category:1971 births Category:Living people Category:Bulgarian ### Assistant:
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### User: "Love at the Five and Dime" is a song written and originally recorded by Nanci Griffith and later recorded and released by American country music artist Kathy Mattea. It was released in April 1986 as the first single from Mattea's album Walk the Way the Wind Blows. The song was Mattea's breakthrough hit, becoming her first top 10 hit and eventually peaking at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. The song was featured on Nanci Griffith's album The Last of the True Believers, also released in 1986. The song inspired the album's cover art, which ### Assistant:
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### User: The Tri-City Americans are a major junior ice hockey team of the Western Hockey League, based in Kennewick, Washington. The team plays its home games at the Toyota Center. Every game is broadcast locally on the Tri-City Americans flagship radio station 870 AM KFLD, and each game can also be heard streaming live at KFLD's UStream Channel, as well as from time-to-time being telecast on Saturday nights on KVEW 42.2. The Tri-City Americans have also been featured in the television series "Z Nation" episode "Day One". History The Tri-City Americans franchise is an original franchise of the WHL. They begangold in Women's Ice Hockey at the 2010 Winter Olympics playing for Canada. During the 2007–08 WHL season, the Americans won the US Division regular season championship for the first time after a March 15, 2008 game against division rival Spokane Chiefs in Kennewick, Washington at the Toyota Center. The Americans won the Western Conference regular season championship, and the Scotty Munro Memorial Trophy for the best overall regular season record in the WHL. The 2009–10 Season marked the third straight year the Americans won the US Division. At their annual New Year's Eve game against the Spokane Chiefs onJason Marshall Josef Melichar Steve Passmore Stephen Peat Ronald Petrovicky Alexander Pechurskiy Carey Price Michael Rasmussen Terry Ryan Terran Sandwith Ray Schultz Todd Simpson Dan Smith Sheldon Souray Jaroslav Svejkovsky Billy Tibbetts Juuso Valimaki Terry Virtue Vladimir Vujtek B. J. Young Bret Festerling Clayton Stoner Retired numbers 8 - Brian Sakic 14 - Stu Barnes, Todd Klassen 33 - Olaf Kolzig References External links Tri-City Americans website Tri-City Herald coverage of Tri-City Americans Tri-City Americans flagship radio station Tri-City Americans celebrate 25 years | Tri-City Herald Category:Ice hockey teams in Washington (state) Category:Kennewick, Washington Category:Sports in the Tri-Cities, Washington Category:Western ### Assistant:
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### User: The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway E5 Class was a class of 0-6-2T side tank steam locomotive designed by Robert Billinton. They were introduced in 1902 and were a larger version of the E4 Class intended for semi-fast secondary passenger work. History As the weight of passenger trains continued to grow steadily during the 1890s and 1900s Robert Billinton decided to enlarge his radial tank classes still further by introducing a wheeled version incorporating the C2 class boiler. Thirty E5 locomotives were built by Brighton Works between November 1902 and November 1904. In addition to more power and a ### Assistant:
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### User: Xianshui River () — a river in Sichuan province, southern China. Geography The Xianshui River has three river sources, the Da-chu river (Chinese characters:达曲) and Nyi-chu river (Chinese characters:泥曲). After the confluence of the two rivers in Luhuo, the name becomes the Xianshui River. A dam and hydroelectric plant on it in Luhuo was completed in 2009. Yangtze River The Xianshui River flows into the Yalong River at Yajiang. Via the Yalong River confluence, the Xianshui is a tributary of the Yangtze River (Chang Jiang). See also Xianshuihe fault system Index: Tributaries of the Yangtze River References Category:Rivers of Sichuan ### Assistant:
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### User: Arthur Lassiter (January 27, 1928 – August 4, 1994) was an American singer, known for his work with Ike Turner. Early life Lassiter was born in 1928 in North Carolina. His parents were cotton sharecroppers, and Lassiter began singing after joining his uncles' gospel group. At the age of 14, he moved to Newark, New Jersey to live with his mother, who had moved there for work. While in Newark, Lassiter performed with the Jubilaires. Lassiter married his first wife, Neaty Ann (née Butler), with whom he had two children Etta D. and Arthur F. Art Lassiter later joined theUnited States Army and served during the Korean War. While stationed in the Far East, he performed in officers' clubs and took up boxing, competing under the name Artie Wilkins (taking his step-father's surname). Career After leaving active service, Lassiter returned to the United States. During a cross-country drive, he broke down in St. Louis. While there he sang at an amateur club night, and was given a permanent booking. He often sang covers of Ray Charles songs, and formed The Bel-Airs with brothers George and Murrey Green and Douglas Martin. By late 1955, the band renamed themselves The Trojanslocal blues festivals and local venues acquiring a substantial local following. Lassiter spent his final years with his third wife, Ruth Lindgren and two children Miriam and Linnea. He died on August 4, 1994 from throat cancer. Lassiter had a son, Andre Montgomery (1961–1995) with his former background vocalist Robbie Montgomery. Andre Montgomery's son, Andre Montgomery Jr., later starred in the reality television series Welcome to Sweetie Pie's. Discography 1955: The Trojans, Ike Turner & Orch. – "As Long As I Have You" / "I Wanna Make Love To You" (RPM 446) 1956: The Rockers – "Why Don't You Believe" ### Assistant:
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### User: Deceptive Fifty was a various artists compilation album issued by Deceptive Records to celebrate fifty releases on the label. It was released in 1998. Track listing "Thundersley Invacar" (by Collapsed Lung) "Stutter" (by Elastica) "Alkaline" (by Scarfo) "Come and Gone" (by Snuff) "I See Red" (by Unun) "Give Me Daughters" (by Jonathan Fire*Eater) "Annihilate Now" (by Idlewild) "Drowning by Numbers" (by Placebo) "Be My Light Be My Guide" (by Gene) "That Good One" (by Meices) "Teenage Girl Crush" (by Angelica) "Mea Culpa Blues (It's My Fault)" (by Colouring Lesson) "Smile It's Sugar" (by Spare Snare) "Shine on Me" (by Prisoners) ### Assistant:
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### User: Giving Back to Africa is a 501(c)(3) Bloomington, Indiana based non-profit organization dedicated to the long-term mission of educating young people in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In partnership with local Congolese educational institutions and non-governmental organizations, its goal is to empower GBA beneficiaries - through service-centered education - to become servant-leaders capable of taking control of their own lives while serving as change agents in their local communities and throughout the Democratic Republic of Congo. The organization was featured in the Bloom Magazine, December 2008/January 2009 issue. References External links youtube.com/watch?v=7fKxYKiqCOQ From the Heart of Indiana to the Heart ### Assistant:
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### User: The 33rd Golden Raspberry Awards, or Razzies, was a parodic award ceremony that honored the worst films the film industry had to offer in 2012. Nominations were revealed on January 8, 2013. Unlike the previous year, when the winners were announced on April Fools' Day, the winners were announced on February 23, one day before the Academy Awards ceremony, reverting to Razzie tradition. The nominees of worst remake/sequel were selected by the general public via Rotten Tomatoes. Winners and nominees Films with multiple nominations The following five films received multiple nominations: References Category:Golden Raspberry Awards ceremonies Razzie Awards Category:2013 in ### Assistant:
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### User: The Istituto Adriano Olivetti di studi per la gestione dell'economia e delle aziende, known as ISTAO is a business school in Ancona, established in 1967 by the Italian economist Giorgio Fuà. ISTAO organizes post-graduate and executive courses as well as it gives its contribution in the field of Economy and Finance. ISTAO is named upon the name of Adriano Olivetti, the well-known entrepreneur who created and managed the Olivetti company and worked with Fuà during the '40s. ISTAO has been established in 1967 within the new Faculty of Economics of Ancona whereas a group of people, led by Giorgio Fuà,started to gain interest in finding new methodologies and techniques in teaching and research fields. According to this proposition, ISTAO developed during the years a methodology that makes it completely different from the Italian academic system and nowadays the business school is characterized by its tight link with the regional economic network (The "productive model") and by the managerial style of its teaching. History Since the very first period of activity of the school, Fuà and his colleagues underlined the need of a professional preparation over the academic one. During the '70s the base of the society is widened throughin partnership with several foreign universities such as Ohio University and Masaryk University. The admission procedure involves different tests and interviews with a pool of ISTAO's professionals and representatives of companies and universities. Premises From 1967 to 1969: palazzo Arcivescovado, Ancona From 1969 to 1970: via Oddo Di Biagio 2, Ancona From 1970 to 1972: Corso Garibaldi 78, Ancona From 1972 to 1998: Villa Beer, via dell Grazie 7, Ancona From 1999: Villa Favorita, via Zuccarini 15, Ancona. Presidents From 1967 to 1997: Giorgio Fuà, Economist From 1997 to 2000: Sabino Cassese, jurist and judge of Italian Constitutional Court From ### Assistant:
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### User: Tankut Öktem (1941, Istanbul - 5 December 2007, İstanbul) was a Turkish sculptor well known especially for his monumental works. Early years He was born 1941 in Istanbul and his childhood was spent moving from one location in Turkey to another following the successive assignments of his parents, who were veterinaries employed by the state. By his teens, he was already recognized as a child prodigy in sculpture and painting, and he concentrated on the former discipline after his enrollment in the ceramics branch of Istanbul State College of Fine and Applied Arts (). While at the third grade ofthe school, he received the first prize in a "World Contest for Young Sculptors". He completed his training in Germany at Porzellanfabrik Schönwald in 1962. Career After graduating in 1965, he became an assistant the next year in the same institution, where he was educated pursuing a teacher's career. In 1970, he was admitted to the teaching staff. The institution became Faculty of Fine Arts at Marmara University in 1983. Oktem established the Sculpture Department and became professor in 1986. Tankut Öktem became well known in Turkey after the 1970s, especially with monumental works of Atatürk or the Turkish Warof Independence as theme, and which are remarkable especially with their high number of figurines. In 1999, he was awarded the title State Artist by the Turkish government. He created a bust of Atatürk in Budapest, Hungary and a victory monument in Libya in addition to numerous statues and monuments in Northern Cyprus and Turkey. He is also holder of various awards at home and abroad. His workshop at Küçükkumla village in Gemlik, Bursa Province was burnt down in 2006. Death Tankut Öktem died on 5 December 2007 in a traffic accident in Üsküdar, İstanbul, at which also his wife ### Assistant:
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### User: The 2017 Portland State Vikings football team represented Portland State University during the 2017 NCAA Division I FCS football season. They were led by third-year head coach Bruce Barnum and played their home games at Providence Park, with one home game at Hillsboro Stadium. They were a member of the Big Sky Conference. They finished the season 0–11, 0–8 in Big Sky play to finish in last place. Schedule Despite also being a member of the Big Sky Conference, the game with UC Davis on September 16 is considered a non-conference game. Game summaries at BYU at Oregon State UC ### Assistant:
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