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### User: Along the River During the Qingming Festival, also known by its Chinese name as the Qingming Shanghe Tu, is a painting by the Song dynasty painter Zhang Zeduan (1085–1145). It captures the daily life of people and the landscape of the capital, Bianjing (present-day Kaifeng) during the Northern Song. The theme is often said to celebrate the festive spirit and worldly commotion at the Qingming Festival, rather than the holiday's ceremonial aspects, such as tomb sweeping and prayers. Successive scenes reveal the lifestyle of all levels of the society from rich to poor as well as different economic activities inrural areas and the city, and offer glimpses of period clothing and architecture. The painting is considered to be the most renowned work among all Chinese paintings, and it has been called "China's Mona Lisa." As an artistic creation, the piece has been revered and court artists of subsequent dynasties made re-interpretive versions, each following the overall composition and the theme of the original but differing in details and technique. Over the centuries, the Qingming scroll was collected and kept among numerous private owners, before it eventually returned to public ownership. The painting was a particular favorite of Puyi, theLast Emperor, who took the Song dynasty original with him when he left Beijing. It was re-purchased in 1945 and kept at the Palace Museum in the Forbidden City. The Song dynasty original and the Qing versions, in the Beijing and Taipei Palace Museums respectively, are regarded as national treasures and are exhibited only for brief periods every few years. The Song original The scroll is in height and long. In its length there are 814 humans, 28 boats, 60 animals, 30 buildings, 20 vehicles, 8 sedan chairs, and 170 trees. Only about twenty women appear in the Song dynastymany of the same features of life in the capital. Exhibition In a rare move, the Song original was exhibited in Hong Kong from June 29 to mid-August 2007 to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Hong Kong's transfer to the People's Republic of China. It is estimated that the costs of shipping the painting ran into tens of millions of dollars in addition to an undisclosed cost of insuring this piece of priceless art. From January 2–24, 2012, the painting was exhibited in the Tokyo National Museum as the centerpiece of a special exhibition to mark the 40th anniversary ofnormalized diplomatic relations between China and Japan, with the Japanese museum officials providing the "highest security standards" for the work. Copies The original painting is celebrated as the most famed work of art from the Song dynasty. It was a pride of the personal imperial collections of emperors for centuries. These emperors commissioned copies, or reproductions, reinterpretations and elaborations, over forty of which are in museums in China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, the United Kingdom, North America, and France. A large modern reproduction is displayed in the entrance of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing. An early copy, generally considered1737. This version, shown below, was later moved, along with many other artifacts, to the National Palace Museum in Taipei in 1949. There are many more people, over 4,000, in the Qing remake, which also is much larger (at 11 metres by 35 cm, or 37 ft by 1 ft). The leftmost third of this version is within the palace, with buildings and people appearing refined and elegant. Most people within the castle are women, with some well-dressed officials. On the contrary, in the original Song version, the leftmost side is still the busy city. Associated poem In April 1742,a poem was added to the right-most end of the Qing remake. The poem apparently was composed by the Qianlong Emperor; the calligraphy is in the running script style, and is in the hand of Liang Shizheng (梁詩正), a prominent court official and frequent companion of the Qianlong Emperor. The poem reads as follows: Digital version For a three-month period in the World Expo 2010 presented at the China Pavilion, the original painting was remade into a 3D animated, viewer-interactive digital version, titled River of Wisdom; at 128 m x 6.5 m, it is roughly 30 times the size ofand displayed at the Expo Dome in Taipei from July 1 to September 4, 2011. From December 7, 2011 to February 6, 2012, in an exhibition titled A Moving Masterpiece: The Song Dynasty As Living Art, the digital reproduction was exhibited at the Singapore Expo. The digital version was also put on display at the River City Bangkok, The Anchor of Arts and Antiques, Bangkok in January 2019. Today, it is on permanent exhibition at the China Art Museum in Shanghai. Gallery Analysis and questions Scholars have studied the painting carefully in the second half of the twentieth and beginningOver the River During the late 1960s, the Taipei Palace Museum released a series of books (later digitized as CD-ROM), videos, and stamps about the scroll that translated it loosely as A City of Cathay. Meaning and content Three things have been accepted about the original painting: The city depicted is Kaifeng It was painted before the fall of the Northern Song dynasty in 1127 It depicts the Qingming Festival Some recent scholarship challenges each of those assertions: The city depicted is an idealized non-existent city It was painted after the fall of the Northern Song dynasty in 1127 ItReferences External links The Palace Museum, Beijing The National Palace Museum, Taiwan The Place of "Qingming Shanghe Tu" in the Historical Geography of Song Dynasty Dongjing Interactive paintings from the Harvard University one and two Along the River During the Qingming Festival at the Columbia University Full interactive painting of the Qing remake on the National Palace Museum website Along the River During the Qingming Festival at China Online Museum Category:Bridges in art Category:Camels in art Category:Culture in Kaifeng Category:Farming in art Category:Maritime paintings Category:Paintings by Zhang Zeduan Category:Paintings in China Category:Religious festivals in China Category:Song dynasty paintings Category:Works about ### Assistant:
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### User: Unusually Thicke is a Canadian-American mockumentary television series, which premiered in 2014. Billed as a "reality-sitcom hybrid", the series combines a reality television format with improvisational comedy to present a fictionalized portrayal of the family life of actor Alan Thicke. The core cast consists of Thicke, his wife Tanya Callau and his teenage son Carter. His adult sons, businessman Brennan Thicke and pop singer Robin Thicke, make some appearances but are not full-time cast members. Guest performers in the series have included Bob Saget, David Hasselhoff, Wayne Gretzky, John Stamos, Bill Maher and Thicke's former Growing Pains co-stars Joanna Kerns,Jeremy Miller and Tracey Gold. Produced by Canadian firm Peacock Alley Entertainment, the series airs on Pop in the United States and Slice in Canada. In June 2014, after the series completed its first season run, its renewal for a second season was announced. The series garnered a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Reality/Competition Program or Series at the 3rd Canadian Screen Awards. The second season aired in Canada under the title Unusually Thicke: Under Construction, and centred on Thicke and his family doing a renovation project on their home. In Canada, Under Construction aired on HGTV in 2015,although in the United States it aired on Pop under the original Unusually Thicke title beginning in September 2016. Thicke died of a heart attack on December 13, 2016, soon after the second season completed its U.S. television run. Pop subsequently announced plans to rerun the entire series between December 19 and December 23 in tribute to Thicke. Peacock Alley initially left open the possibility that the show could continue production with the focus shifted to other surviving family members, but as of 2019 no new episodes of the show have been produced. Episode list Season 1 1. Hoarders 2. ### Assistant:
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### User: Fernando (Ferran) Jaumandreu Obradors (1897–1945) was a Spanish composer. Obradors was taught piano by his mother, but taught himself composition, harmony and counterpoint. He became conductor of the Gran Canaria Philharmonic Orchestra, and later taught at Las Palmas Conservatory. Between 1921 and 1941 he wrote four volumes of arrangements of classic Spanish poetry, "Canciones clásicas españolas". He is best known for the song cycle which is volume one. One of the poems, "La casada infiel", was written by his friend Federico García Lorca. Although he wrote many works for the theatre, none have held their place in the repertoire. Hisorchestral work "El Poema de la Jungla" is inspired by The Jungle Book stories by Rudyard Kipling. Many of his contemporaries left Spain to find fame in France, but Obradors remained true to his Catalan roots. His first surname is sometimes split into two Catalan names – Jaume Andreu. References External links Canciones clásicas españolas, Volumen 1 para canto y piano. Contents: 'La Mi Sola, Laureola', 'Al Amor', 'Corazon?, Por Que Pasais.' Music Sales America. 1994 - 30 pages. Mondavi Center > Events > Anton Belov, baritone at www.mondaviarts.org Classical Net Review - Obradors/Rodó - El Poema de la Jungla/Symphony ### Assistant:
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### User: No Future No Hope is the first LP from the American anarcho street punk band Defiance, released in the U.S. by Mind Control and in Europe by Skuld Releases. Track listing Fuck Them All - 3:37 Fodder - 2:33 No Future No Hope - 4:46 How Much Longer - 3:28 You Got It All Wrong - 4:15 Anti Social - 4:55 Fuck This City - 4:04 Hands of the Few - 2:18 I Hate Everything - 4:57 Self Imposed Slavery - 3:25 Burn - 3:48 Rip Off - 2:47 Police Oppression - 2:21 (Angelic Upstarts cover) Category:Defiance (punk band) albums ### Assistant:
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### User: Tablas de Daimiel National Park (Parque Nacional de las Tablas de Daimiel) is a wetland on the La Mancha plain, a mainly arid area in the province of Ciudad Real. With an area of about 3,000 ha, the park is the smallest of Spain's fifteen national parks. The protected area is in the process of being expanded outside the original nature reserve to include neighbouring dryland farming areas. The expansion is part of efforts to improve the condition of the wetland, which has been damaged by over-exploitation of water resources. As well as having national park status, the site enjoysas a foundation for an international convention on wetlands. The draft called for the protection of wetlands habitats rather than species. The Tablas de Damiel were declared a National Park in 1973. In 1980 the national park was extended and UNESCO included Las Tablas in a biosphere reserve. In 1982 Las Tablas were included on the list of the Ramsar Convention (an international treaty for the conservation and sustainable utilization of wetlands). In 1987 Las Tablas were declared a Special Protection Area for birds (Zona de Especial Protección para las Aves in Spanish) under the European Union's Birds Directive. CharacteristicsThe park is the last surviving example of floodplain wetlands located in the arid central part of the Iberian peninsula. Being located downstream from the Upper Guadiana Basin, TDNP play an important role in nutrient biogeochemistry. The wetland landscape is characterized by recurrent seasonal inundation which until recently was maintained by both river flooding and groundwater discharges. The park's surface is 19.28 km², and the highest inundation comprises around 17 km2. TDNP is one of the most important aquatic ecosystems of Spain and was probably the main inland wetland. It is important too because of the great amount of migratoryTypha, Scirpus lacustris, Scirpus maritimus) and Rush (g. Juncus) in the least deep areas. Charophytes' grasslands are one of the most characteristic formations of the National Park, formed by different members of genus Chara (Chara hispida, Chara major, Chara canescens), also known locally as "ovas", and are able to form an almost continuous tapestry. The only trees present are the tamarisk (Tamarix gallica, Tamarix canariensis). Fauna Migratory fauna Purple Heron (Ardea purpurea), Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea), Little Egret (Egretta garzetta), Black-crowned Night Heron (Nycticorax nycticorax), Great Bittern (Botaurus stellaris), Red-crested Pochard (Netta rufina), Northern Shoveler (Anas clypeata), Wigeon (Anas penelope),resources. Secondly because it aimed at replacing the natural hydric system, a principle that is too anti-natural to be easily accepted. Various conservation groups expressed the view that the solution should be found within the Guadiana basin. Various ecological groups have suggested that the national park's designation as a biosphere reserve (within Mancha Húmeda) should be withdrawn as its ecosystem has been broken. In June 2008, a UNESCO report recommended that the national park lose its biosphere status or, alternatively, that Spain be given an ultimatum to reverse the degradation. In the event, Spain was given time to reverse theaccount the water use efficiency. In May 2009 a plan was announced to reverse the decline in the wetland area using recycled water. However, some skepticism was shown by environmentalists who noted that the aquifer was not going to be replenished. In the hot summer of 2009, smouldering dry peat fires broke out in the area. Such fires were not a new phenomenon in the region; they had affected the peatlands alongside the Guadiana in previous years, but by reappearing in the National Park, the fires represented another symptom of the wetland's degradation. Early in 2010 the situation was improvedby heavier rainfall than had been experienced for several years. However, analysis clearly show that there will be no notable improvement in the situation without considerably reducing the surface of irrigated cereals while maintaining without increase the surface of traditional crops suited to arid conditions (agricultura de secano in Spanish) and of horticulture (the latter being the most efficient crop in terms of extended water footprint). The Plan also includes buying water rights. This gives scope to use water for the benefit of the national park and also to reassign water quotas in favour of more efficient use than cerealproduction, including hitherto illegal users, essentially small producers of vines and horticulture which have been found more efficient in water use and generate more income per cubic meter of water used. Still, in the context of Spain's economic crisis, funds have been lacking for this operation. European subsidies are attributed in priority to reforesting land after forests were felled for the production of cereals during the preceding generations. Moreover, within the frame of Europe's present Common Agricultural Policy (in 2010) cereals get more subsidies than other crops. A revision of that politic is due in 2013. The choices that willbe made then will be determinant for the future of the Mancha Húmeda. Another determining factor is the developing of other local economics such as solar electricity, ecotourism, better quality agricultural products, and environmental services (carbon sinks for example). See also Lagunas de Ruidera. References External links Ministry of the Environment - official website in Spanish UNESCO - Biosphere Reserve Information Further reading Guía de las Aves de O Caurel, Jose Guitian et al. 152 pages. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona, 2004. Category:National parks of Spain Category:Birdwatching sites in Spain Category:Ramsar sites in Spain Category:Special Protection Areas of Spain Category:Protected areas established ### Assistant:
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### User: Zhang Xinlin (; born 4 June 1992) is a Chinese football player who currently plays for China League Two side Taizhou Yuanda. Club career In 2014, Zhang Xinlin started his professional footballer career with Jiangsu Sainty in the Chinese Super League. He made his Super league debut on 25 May 2014 in a game against Shanghai East Asia, coming on as a substitute for Ji Xiang in the 86th minute. He was sent to the Suning reserved team in 2018. On 23 February 2019, Zhang was loaned to League Two newcomer Taizhou Yuanda for the 2019 season. Career statistics Statistics ### Assistant:
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### User: Richard Bartlot (Bartlet, Barthlet) (1471–1557), was an English physician. Bartlot was a fellow of All Souls' College, Oxford and took the degree of M.B. at Oxford in 1501, and supplicated for that of M.D. in 1508. He was the first fellow admitted into the College of Physicians after its foundation in 1518, and he was president in 1527, 1528, 1531, 1548. He lived in Blackfriars, and was buried in the church of St. Bartholomew the Great. Dr. Caius, as president, with the whole college attended his funeral. He had considerable landed property, and endowed All Souls with his estate at ### Assistant:
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### User: William Richard (Rich) Stevens (February 5, 1951September 1, 1999) was a Northern Rhodesia-born American author of computer science books, in particular books on UNIX and TCP/IP. Biography Richard Stevens was born in 1951 in Luanshya, Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), where his father worked for the copper industry. The family later moved to Salt Lake City, Hurley, New Mexico, Washington, D.C. and Phalaborwa, South Africa. Stevens attended Fishburne Military School in Waynesboro, Virginia. He received a bachelor's degree in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Michigan in 1973 and both a master's degree (in 1978) and PhD (in 1982) in SystemsEngineering from the University of Arizona. He moved to Tucson in 1975 where he was employed at Kitt Peak National Observatory as a computer programmer until 1982. From 1982 until 1990 he was Vice President of Computing Services at Health Systems International in New Haven, Connecticut. Stevens moved back to Tucson in 1990 where he pursued his career as an author and consultant. He was also an avid pilot and a part-time flight instructor during the 1970s. Stevens died in 1999, at the age of 48. In 2000, he was posthumously awarded the Usenix Lifetime Achievement Award. Books 1990 -UNIX Network Programming - 1992 - Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment - 1994 - TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1: The Protocols - 1995 - TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 2: The Implementation (with Gary R. Wright) - 1996 - TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 3: TCP for Transactions, HTTP, NNTP, and the UNIX Domain Protocols - 1998 - UNIX Network Programming, Volume 1, Second Edition: Networking APIs: Sockets and XTI - 1999 - UNIX Network Programming, Volume 2, Second Edition: Interprocess Communications - 2003 - UNIX Network Programming Volume 1, Third Edition: The Sockets Networking API - (with Bill Fenner, and Andrew M. Rudoff)2005 - Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment, Second Edition - (with Stephen A. Rago) 2011 - TCP/IP Illustrated, Volume 1: The Protocols (2nd Edition) - (with Kevin R. Fall) 2013 - Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment, Third Edition - (with Stephen A. Rago) RFCs Stevens also co-authored several IETF Request for Comments (RFC) documents informational documents for IPv6 updates to the Berkeley sockets API and a standards document for TCP congestion control. Stevens, W. R., and Thomas, M. 1998. "Advanced Sockets API for IPv6," RFC 2292 Gilligan, R. E., Thomson, S., Bound, J., and Stevens, W. R. 1999."Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6," RFC 2553 Allman, M., Paxson, V., Stevens, W. R. 1999. "TCP Congestion Control," RFC 2581 References External links Stevens' former homepage Guru of the Unix gurus by Rachel Chalmers (September 1, 2000) at Salon.com Prentice Hall interview with Rich Stevens, author of Unix Programming, Volume 1: Networking APIs, Sockets and XTI, 2/e Category:1951 births Category:1999 deaths Category:Zambian people of British descent Category:Zambian people of English descent Category:Zambian emigrants to South Africa Category:Zambian emigrants to the United States Category:American technology writers Category:People from Luanshya Category:University of Michigan College of Engineering alumni Category:Unix people Category:Fishburne Military ### Assistant:
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### User: Birch Island Run is a stream in Cameron County and Clinton County, Pennsylvania in the United States. It is a tributary of the West Branch Susquehanna River and is long. There are a number of coal seams in the Birch Island Run watershed, as well as iron ore. Mining has been done in the watershed. The watershed is 15.3 square miles in area and is almost entirely forested. The stream's tributaries include Little Birch Island Run and Amos Branch. Parts of the watershed are affected by acid mine drainage. However, brook trout live in the stream. Course Birch Island Runstarts in Grove Township, in Cameron County. It flows a short distance southeast before exiting Cameron County and entering Clinton County. In Clinton County, the stream enters West Keating Township and continues southeast through Sproul State Forest. It picks up the tributary Amos Branch near the central part of West Keating Township. As the stream continues southeast, its valley gets progressively deeper. It flows past several strip mines and picks up Little Birch Island Run within of its mouth. Birch Island Run empties into the West Branch Susquehanna River at the border between Clinton County and Centre County, near aConrail railroad. Tributaries Named tributaries of Birch Island Run include Amos Branch and Little Birch Island Run. There are also a number of unnamed tributaries to the stream. Hydrology The daily load of manganese in Birch Island Run is at the site BIR01, which is located at the confluence of Little Birch Island Run with Birch Island Run and at the site BIR02, which is located near the stream's mouth. The load of acidity is per day at BIR01, per day at BIR02, and per day at site BIR03, which is located at the confluence of Amos Branch with BirchIsland Run. The concentration of sulfates is below 20 milligrams per liter in the upper reaches of Birch Island Run. However, an unnamed stream that experiences acid mine drainage and is a tributary of Little Birch Island Run has a sulfate concentration of 255 milligrams per liter. The pH of this unnamed tributary ranges from 3.9 to 4.2. At the mouth of Little Birch Island Run, the sulfate concentration is 40 milligrams per liter and the concentration at the mouth of Birch Island Run is 25 milligrams per liter. On Little Birch Island Run, at site LBIR01, which is locatednear its mouth, the daily load of aluminum is and the daily load of manganese is . The daily load of acidity is at LBIR01 and at site LBIR02. The discharge of Birch Island Run at its confluence with Amos Branch is 1548 gallons per minute. The discharge is 5881.43 gallons per minute at its confluence with Little Birch Island Run. At the mouth of Birch Island Run, the discharge is gallons per minute. At the confluence of Amos Run with Birch Island Run, the latter stream's pH ranged from 4.9 to 6.2 in 2002, with an average of 5.3.At the confluence of Little Birch Island Run with Birch Island Run, the latter stream's pH ranged from 4.7 to 5.7, with an average of 5.1. At the stream's mouth, the pH ranged from 4.8 to 5.5, with an average of 5.1. In the upper reaches of Birch Island Run, the pH is naturally low, as opposed to being low due to acid mine drainage. The alkalinity level of the upper parts of the stream is low. There are two sources of acid mine drainage in the Birch Island Run watershed. Both discharge into Little Birch Island Run within of2.3 square miles. State Forests occupy most of the northern part of the Birch Island Run watershed. State Game Lands occupy some of the southern part of the watershed. Abandoned mining lands are mostly located in the southern and eastern areas of the watershed. Geography and geology The headwaters of Birch Island Run are at an elevation of . The mouth is at an elevation of . The stream is located in the Appalachian Plateau. The watershed is located in the Snow Shoe Northwest USGS quadrant map. Several coal seams are located in the Birch Island Run watershed. They areIsland Run. History In 1835, Samuel Grove visited the Birch Island Run watershed for a number of weeks. He searched unsuccessfully for silver in the area. Parts of the Birch Island Run watershed have been mined. A number of permits for surface mining have been issued. However, there has been no mining in the watershed since the 1980s. The TMDL for the stream was publicly discussed in Clearfield on July 14, 2004. In 2010, a 135-acre tract of grassland partially in the Little Birch Island Run watershed was created as an elk habitat. Biology There are brook trout living insome streams in the Birch Island Run watershed, including Birch Island Run itself. In 1915, a total of 1000 brook trout were observed in the stream. All of the streams in the watershed are considered high-quality coldwater fisheries. Almost all of the fish species in the watershed are brook trout. However, a number of scuplins have been found in the lower reaches of the stream. A smallmouth bass was also once observed near the stream's mouth. Mayflies and stoneflies are macroinvertebrates that are found on Birch Island Run. See also List of rivers of Pennsylvania References Category:Rivers of Clinton County, ### Assistant:
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### User: Miss Korea () is a national beauty pageant in South Korea. The current titleholder is Kim Se-yeon, she won the title on July 11, 2019 in Seoul. History The first Miss Korea competition took place in 1957 and was sponsored by the Korean newspaper Hankook Ilbo. Each year, approximately fifty women compete in Seoul, South Korea, and seven are selected by a panel of judges. The winner "Jin" (진) is crowned as the official Miss Korea. Additionally, there are two "Sun" (선) finalists (equivalent to 1st runners-up), who go on to compete in Miss International or Miss Earth. Lastly, four"Mi" (미) finalists (equivalent to semi-finalists) are chosen. On March 16, 2011, the president of the Miss World Organization, Julia Morley, announced the newly launched Miss World Korea pageant. Until 2010, Miss Korea would also select the representative to Miss World, but starting with Miss World 2011, a separate competition has been held to choose the contestant who will represent Korea. In 2015, Hanju E&M took over Miss Korea Organization. Since 2016, Miss Korea organization no longer send South Korea's representative to Miss Universe. Titleholders Color key Miss International Korea Korea debuted at Miss International in 1960. One of theKorea debuted at Miss Universe in 1954, three years before the first Miss Korea pageant. Since 2016, Korean representatives at Miss Universe have been chosen in a separate pageant, Miss Universe Korea, and the Miss Korea Organization no longer sends South Korea's representative to Miss Universe. Miss World Korea Korea debuted at Miss World in 1959. The 1st Runner-up of Miss Korea represented the nation at Miss World. Since 2011, Korean representatives at the Miss World are chosen in a separate pageant Miss World Korea, that separate contest is to only focus on Miss World. See also Miss Queen Korea ### Assistant:
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### User: Moses Carter (c.1801 – 8 July 1860), known as 'The Histon Giant', was a strongman who lived in the village of Histon, near Cambridge in the United Kingdom. During his life Carter was famous locally for a number of feats of strength, the best-known today being his carrying of a large boulder from a ballast hole on Park Lane to 'Boot corner'. The stone remains there today, in the garden of The Boot Public House. In 1998, a memorial to Carter was unveiled at St Andrew's church in the village, on what was the 138th anniversary of his death. Carter ### Assistant:
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### User: "One Honest Heart" is a song written by David Malloy, Gary Baker and Frank J. Myers, and recorded by American country music artist Reba McEntire. It was released on March 30 1999 as the fourth and final single from her album, If You See Him. The song reached #7 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart in July 1999. She promoted the song by singing it on A&E's Reba Live by Request and the 1999 Academy of Country Music Awards. Chart performance Year-end charts References External links Category:1999 singles Category:1998 songs Category:Reba McEntire songs Category:Songs written by Gary ### Assistant:
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### User: John Alexander Wilkinson (September 14, 1789 – September 17, 1862) was a judge and political figure in Upper Canada. He was born in Dublin, Ireland in 1789. He came to Canada as a member of the British Army in 1814 and later settled at Sandwich (Windsor). He was named judge in the Surrogate Court for the Western District in 1836. He represented Essex in the 9th, 10th and 12th parliaments. References Becoming Prominent: Leadership in Upper Canada, 1791-1841, J.K. Johnson (1989) Category:1789 births Category:1862 deaths Category:Members of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada Category:Irish emigrants to pre-Confederation Ontario Wilkinson, John ### Assistant:
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### User: The 2018 United States Senate election in Texas was held on November 6, 2018, along with other elections to the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives in additional states. Incumbent Republican U.S. Senator Ted Cruz ran successfully for re-election to a second term against Democratic candidate Beto O'Rourke. The primary for all parties was held on March 6, 2018, making it the first primary of the 2018 season. As Cruz and O'Rourke both won majorities in their primaries, they did not participate in the May 22 runoff primary that was held for some nominations in Texas.No Democrat has won a general election for statewide office in Texas since Bob Bullock was reelected as lieutenant governor in 1994, with election pre-predictions declaring it a safe Republican seat at the beginning of the 2018 cycle. However, O'Rourke gradually closed the gap, and the race was considered unexpectedly competitive. On Election Day, Cruz defeated O'Rourke by a margin of 50.9 to 48.3 percent; the race was the closest U.S. Senate race in Texas since 1978. O'Rourke earned over four million votes, surpassing Hillary Clinton's total of 3.87 million in the 2016 election. He received more votes than anyother Democrat in Texas history and came closer to winning than any other Democratic U.S. Senate candidate in Texas has since 1988. O'Rourke raised $80 million for the campaign, which is the highest amount ever raised by a U.S. Senate candidate to date. Background In 2012, after a stunning upset victory in the Republican primary, then-Solicitor General of Texas Ted Cruz defeated then Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst by a 16-point margin (56%–40%). Texas has not elected a Democratic senator since 1988. As conservatives began turning to the Republican Party in once strongly Democratic areas, Democratic voters became concentrated in SouthernTexas (which hold majority minority counties) and large metropolitan cities, such as Houston, Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas, as well as the far western majority-minority city of El Paso, which O'Rourke represented in the U.S. House. Since 1990, Texas has voted for Republican statewide candidates in all elections, whether it be presidential, gubernatorial, or senatorial, often by large margins. In 1998, Governor George W. Bush won re-election by 37 points over his Democratic challenger, Garry Mauro. In 2004, President Bush won Texas over Senator John Kerry by 23 points, winning rural areas by landslide margins and capturing urban zones. DemocratBarack Obama was defeated by margins of 12 points in 2008, against John McCain, and 16 points in 2012, against Mitt Romney, respectively. However, in 2016, Donald Trump defeated Democrat Hillary Clinton by only a 9-point margin, demonstrating a possible shift away from the Safe Republican status it had held for over a decade. This has led Democrats to begin targeting Texas as a potential future swing state. It should also be noted that Ted Cruz defeated Donald Trump in the Texas Republican primary for U.S. President in 2016. As of June 2018, Senator Cruz held a 49%–44% approval ratingTexas Land Commissioner (running for re-election) Michael McCaul, U.S. Representative Dan Patrick, Lieutenant Governor of Texas (running for re-election) Rick Perry, Secretary of Energy, former Governor of Texas and candidate for president in 2012 and 2016 Katrina Pierson, national spokesperson for the 2016 Donald Trump presidential campaign and candidate for House district TX-32 in 2014 Endorsements Polling {| class="navbox collapsible collapsed" style="text-align:left; border:0; margin-top:0.2em;" |- ! style="background:#cff; font-weight:normal;"| Hypothetical polling |- | style="border:solid 1px silver; padding:8px; background:white;"| Results Democratic primary Candidates Nominee Beto O'Rourke, U.S. Representative Eliminated in primary Sema Hernandez, activist and organizer for the Poor People's Campaign, baseballof 2018, O'Rourke raised $38.1 million. To date, this amount is the largest quarterly total raised by a U.S. Senate candidate in history. Cruz and O'Rourke combined to raise a record-setting total of $114.8 million during the 2018 campaign. Polling {| class="navbox collapsible collapsed" style="text-align:left; border:0; margin-top:0.2em;" |- ! style="background:#cff; font-weight:normal;"| Hypothetical polling |- | style="border:solid 1px silver; padding:8px; background:white;"| Results On November 6, 2018, Ted Cruz defeated Beto O'Rourke. However, O'Rourke gave Democrats their best performance in a Texas statewide election since Ann Richards was elected governor in 1990. In addition, O'Rourke flipped several counties in Texas that Donald ### Assistant:
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### User: Ephraim Mashaba (born 6 August 1950) is a South African football manager and former player. Career He was previously the manager of the Swaziland national side, where he was appointed in May 2008. Mashaba has previously managed the South Africa national side, but was sacked from the team on the eve of the 2004 African Cup of Nations in January 2004 after previously having been suspended. Mashaba has also managed club sides Vaal Reef Stars and Black Leopards. He was appointed as manager of the South African national team in July 2014. He was suspended for disciplinary reasons in November ### Assistant:
Nodes:[["Ephraim Mashaba", {"description":'Association footballer'}], ["South Africa", {}]] Relations:[["Ephraim Mashaba", "country of citizenship", "South Africa"]]
### User: Plectrophora is a genus of flowering plants from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. It is native to Central and South America. Species accepted as of June 2014: Plectrophora alata (Rolfe) Garay - Chiapas, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia Plectrophora calcarhamata Hoehne - Matto Grosso Plectrophora cultrifolia (Barb.Rodr.) Cogn. in C.F.P.von Martius - French Guinea, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Brazil Plectrophora edwallii Cogn. in C.F.P.von Martius - Goiás Plectrophora iridifolia (Lodd. ex Lindl.) H.Focke - the Guianas, Venezuela, Brazil Plectrophora schmidtii Jenny & Pupulin - Matto Grosso Plectrophora suarezii Dodson & M.W.Chase - Ecuador Plectrophora triquetra (Rolfe) Cogn. in C.F.P.von Martius - Ecuador, ### Assistant:
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### User: Michael Funke (born 26 September 1969 in Meerbusch) is a German auto racing driver. Career Funke finished third in the German Touring Car Challenge in 1999 and 2000, and was runner-up in 2001. The championship became the DMSB Produktionswagen Meisterschaft in 2004, and Funke finished third for Hotfiel Sport. Hotfiel moved to the new World Touring Car Championship in 2005, and Funke was test and reserve driver. He replaced Thomas Jäger for the final five rounds of the season, scoring a best finish of tenth position. Funke has since competed in ADAC GT Masters. Racing record Complete World Touring Car ### Assistant:
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### User: Bereket District () (formerly Gazanjyk District) is a district of Balkan Region in Turkmenistan. The administrative center of the district is the city of Bereket. Founded in January 1925 as a district of Kazandjik Kazandzhiksky Poltoratsky District Turkmen SSR centered on Cazangic station. In August 1926 was abolished Poltoratsky County and Kazandzhiksky District passed under the direct supervision of the Turkmen SSR. In November 1939 Kazandzhiksky District went to the newly formed Krasnovodsk Oblast. In January 1947 Krasnovodsk Oblast was abolished and the area was transferred to the Ashgabat Oblast. In April 1952 Krasnovodsk Oblast has been restored and re-enteredthe Kazandzhiksky District in its composition. In December 1955 Krasnovodsk Oblast was again abolished and the area again became a part of the Ashkhabad Oblast. In May 1959, Ashgabat Oblast was abolished and the region was under the direct supervision of the Turkmen SSR. In December 1973 the district was transferred to rebuilt Krasnovodsk Oblast. In 1988 Krasnovodsk Oblast again was abolished and the region was under the direct supervision of the Turkmen SSR. In 1992 Kazandzhiksky District became part of the Balkan Region was renamed in Gazandzhyksky Etrap first, and then in Bereket district. Populated places in Bereket District ### Assistant:
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### User: Tragopogon dubius (yellow salsify, western salsify, western goat's-beard, wild oysterplant, yellow goat's beard, goat's beard, goatsbeard, common salsify, salsify) is a species of salsify native to southern and central Europe and western Asia and found as far north and west as northern France. Although it has been reported from Kashmir and India, recent evidence suggests that specimens from these areas may be a different species. Western salsify has been introduced into North America where it has become widespread, being reported from all the continental United States except for a few in the far south-east, and all provinces of Canada exceptoyster plant (T. porrifolius), the western salsify hybridises readily with both, and in North America its hybrids have given rise to the new alloploid hybrid species T. mirus and T. miscellus. Because western salsify is a widespread plant, it has a large number of alternative common names. They include western goat's beard, wild oysterplant, yellow salsify, yellow goat's beard, meadow goat's beard, goat's beard, goatsbeard, common salsify, or salsify. Some of these are also, or more commonly, used for other species, and are better avoided. A synonym, Tragopogon major, may also be encountered. The basal leaves can be eaten rawor cooked. References Mavrodiev, E. V., Nawchoo, I., Soltis, D. E., & Soltis, P. S. (2006). Molecular data reveal that the allotetraploid Tragopogon kashmirianus Singh, a narrow endemic of Kashmir, is distinct from the North American T. mirus. Poster presented at the conference of the Botanical Society of America. Mavrodiev, E. V., Tancig, M., Sherwood, A. M., et al. (2005). Phylogeny of Tragopogon L. (Asteraceae) based on internal and external transcribed spacer sequence data. International Journal of Plant Sciences, 166, 117-133. Maxwell, C. D., Zobel, A., & Woodfine, D. (1994). Somatic polymorphism in the achenes of Tragopogon dubius. Canadian Journal ### Assistant:
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### User: "Gusheshe" is a song by South African hip hop recording artist Cassper Nyovest, released as the first single from his debut studio album Tsholofelo. It was released on 19 April 2013 and features a guest verse from Okmalumkoolkat. The song was written by Nyovest and Okmalumkoolkat. It was produced by Ganja Beatz with co-production from Nyovest. The artwork, released on April 17, 2013, features a pink 1983 BMW 325i coupé, known commonly as a "gusheshe" in South Africa. Upon its debut, the song received high rotation on radio stations including YFM and 5FM. Due to its positive reception, Nyovest won ### Assistant:
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### User: Øksfjord Church () is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Loppa Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Øksfjord. It is main church for the Loppa parish which is part of the Alta prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The stone church was built in a long church style in 1954 by the architect Hans Magnus. The church seats about 210 people. Media gallery See also List of churches in Finnmark References Category:Loppa Category:Churches in Finnmark Category:Stone churches in Norway Category:20th-century Church of Norway church buildings Category:Churches completed in ### Assistant:
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### User: Lithuania, Belarus, and the Ukraine, all began competing in Group C in 1993. Kazakhstan also began competing in 1993, but they participated in the Asian Junior Championships. Tournament Awards Top Scorer Peter Forsberg (17 points) Top Goalie: Milan Hnilicka Top Defenceman:Roman Hamrlík Top Forward: Alexei Kovalev Group B Played March 23–30 in Jaca, Spain. The hosts were winless until they beat the Dutch on the final day, avoiding relegation. First round Group 1 Group 2 Final round Championship round Placing round Switzerland was promoted to Group A and the Netherlands was relegated to Group C, for 1992. Group C Played ### Assistant:
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### User: Janet Hinostroza is a television journalist from Ecuador. Her work focuses on the exposure of government corruption. She is the anchor on a morning news program, La Mañana de 24 Horas, and was the creator and anchor of the long-running investigative news program 30 Plus, which aired on Teleamazonas for more than a decade, investigating such subjects as human trafficking, arms trafficking, government and police corruption, and extrajudicial killings. Hinostroza has been a major target and opponent of the Ecuadorian government, and has also been a recurring topic of President Rafael Correa's weekly TV and radio talks, which usually lastseveral hours. Correa has referred to her dismissively as "blondie." In 2012, after Hinostroza reported on a suspicious loan by the state bank Cofiec to a businessman allegedly associated with a cousin of Correa, she received death threats and took a leave of absence for safety reasons. Due to this she was offered security surveillance by the Minister of the Interior José Serrano to which Hinostroza gratefully did not accept. In 2013, she was awarded the International Press Freedom Award of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists. Early life and education Hinostroza is from Quito, the next to youngestof seven children of Quiteño and Ibarreña Hinostroza. "I always wanted to be a journalist since I can remember," she has said. "I was always a very shy girl, so when I announced my desire to be a journalist, my family, and especially my father, were very surprised." She studied at the International University of Ecuador while working as a reporter and presenter for Teleamazonas. Career After her graduation, Hinostroza found work as a national news reporter on TC TV, a cable TV channel in Ecuador. She spent eight years as a reporter in Colombia, where her encounter with investigativejournalism led her to feel that her own country “needed more investigative journalism.” After her return to Ecuador, she created a program dedicated to investigative journalism, “30 Plus,” which aired on the private Teleamazonas channel. She was the anchor of “30 Plus” from 2004 to 2014. It was the only program of its type in Ecuador. Hinostroza stated that “30 Plus” had no competition, but added that she wished it did, because the Ecuadorian people needed more of this kind of television fare. Hinostroza is also the longtime host of the morning news program “La Mañana de 24 Horas,” whichis broadcast daily on Teleamazonas. In addition, shea radio program on 98.1 FM Mundo, is the local correspondent for the international TV network Univision, and writes a column for the newspaper Hoy. She manages a production company that produces journalistic programming and audiovisual products. She has stated that she prefers behind-the-scenes investigative journalism to interviewing on camera. Hinostroza reported in 2011 on a woman who had been charged with showing disrespect to Correa and his government. After the report was broadcast, the government ordered Teleamazonas to devote 10 minutes of Hinostroza's program time to a rebuttal by an official governmentspokesman. Hinostroza has been frequently targeted with such pre-emptions. When Correa offered asylum to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in September 2012, Hinostroza called it "a good move politically for Ecuador—because Assange represents not only freedom of expression, but someone who stands up to America and Correa is using him to hurt the US. … it's not about press freedom." Bank scandal and leave of absence After presenting a report on an apparent case of government corruption on La Mañana de 24 Horas in 2012, Hinostroza received a number of anonymous, threatening phone calls. After receiving a call from an unidentifiedstranger who detailed her young son's daily movements and threatened to kidnap him, Hinostroza decided to take a leave of absence from the news program, which was temporarily taken off the air. She explained that she had spent years enduring insults, but that her family should not have to endure them. The threat to her son, she stated, was “the drop that spilled the cup” (i.e., the straw that broke the camel’s back). The case in question involved a loan by the state-owned Cofiec Bank, then headed by Pedro Delgado Campaña, an Argentinian second cousin of Correa, to a businessman,Gastón Duzac, who later defaulted on the loan. Hinostroza's reporting uncovered irregularities in the loan and linked Delgado to Duzac. After her report was broadcast, the government compelled her to devote ten minutes of her program to a speech in which a government representative accused her of disrespecting the president. Hinostroza has said that Ecuador's then interior minister, José Serrano, after hearing about the threats that forced her off the air, immediately offered her protection, but she turned down the offer because "I do not think that an honest journalist should have to do his or her job with bodyguards."Correa himself maintained that the government was "seriously investigating" the threats against Hinostroza and "expressed solidarity" with her, but he added that he still considered her "a politician disguised as a journalist." Hinostroza said that despite the threats, "we won't give up, this is an opportunity to invent new ways to do journalism and in Ecuador we are figuring out how to do it." She added that the only thing that could weaken Correa's power to silence the media would be if "the money runs out, and I don't know if we are near it." During Hinostroza's absence from LaMañana de 24 Horas, she continued to appear on 30 Plus and on special news reports. State Department briefing In November 2013, the U.S. State Department hosted Hinostroza, who briefed officials on "press freedom challenges." The officials "expressed concerns about the plight of journalists worldwide and reaffirmed the United States' commitment to freedom of expression." Acting Assistant Secretary of State Uzra Zeya praised Hinostroza and other awardees for their "courage" and "commitment to speaking truth to power." End of 30 Plus run 30 Plus ended its nearly 11-year run on January 11, 2014. Hinostroza explained that investigative journalism "has neverto do many good things for people but is violating the law. So that's why they need a silent press." Hinostroza has complained about the Ecuadoran government’s introduction of the legal concept of "media lynching," meaning "a concerted effort of media and journalists to damage the reputation of a public institution or an individual." She has explained this concept as follows: "if I break some story about corruption of a public official or a public entity, and that investigation is followed" by reports on the same matter by another news outlet, Ecuadoran law considers this "a concerted effort to disseminateinformation that damages the reputation of an individual or entity" and, thus, a punishable offense. Correa, according to Hinostroza, "has viewed the press as the enemy from the moment he took office. He considers us his only enemy because there is no political opposition" and "says we conspire against him, but all we've done is expose corruption in his government or been critical." In December 2015 the Toronto Star reported that Hinostroza had made her cell phone available to computer security experts at Citizen Lab, at the University of Toronto, who found it had been hacked with software designed tospy on her. In particular they asserted that the brazen-ness of the software strongly suggested that the perpetrators were government security officials. Other professional activities Hinostroza spoke at the Oslo Freedom Forum in May 2014. Honors and awards She has received 3 international awards and 11 national awards for her journalism. In 2013, she won the International Press Freedom Award of the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). When she traveled to New York City to accept the award, pro-Correa protesters picketed outside the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel "chanting and carrying signs branding Hinostroza a traitor and a liar." In Ecuador, "virulent attackson social media spiked against her." Some of the Ecuadoran protesters outside the Waldorf-Astoria described Hinostroza as "a shill for the U.S. government" whose "activities were undermining their country." Upon accepting the CPJ award, Hinostroza described 30 Plus as "the only investigative show currently on the air in Ecuador," adding that "I cannot air very controversial issues as I did in the past," partly because “the government has banned officials from talking to the press, and it's not allowing access to information." She also stated that Ecuador was "going through a difficult time," when powerful people had "taken over theword and … turned the right to express oneself freely into a public service, bound and controlled by political power." In a video made in connection with the CPJ award, Hinostroza noted that there were no longer any investigative units in any Ecuadorian media companies, owing largely to government pressure. After Hinostroza was presented with the CPJ award, Sen. Patrick Leahy paid tribute to her on the floor of the U.S. Senate during the 2013–14 session, describing her as "a courageous Ecuadoran journalist." 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### User: Alex Prentice QC is a leading Scottish lawyer. He has held senior posts at the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service, the body which normally carries out prosecutions in Scotland. He became an assistant Principal Advocate Depute in 2009, and then the Principal Advocate Depute. After a restructuring on 1 August 2011 he became the senior crown counsel. He qualified as a solicitor in 1983 and as a Solicitor Advocate in 1994. He practised as a defence solicitor for 21 years. In 2004 he became the first Solicitor Advocate from outside the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service to be ### Assistant:
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### User: Kronet Til Konge (Norwegian for "Crowned To Be King") is the debut studio album by Norwegian black metal band Dødheimsgard. It was released in 1995, through Malicious Records. Kronet Til Konge was re-released in 1999 on Century Media Records. Track listing "Intro" – 0:59 "Å Slakte Gud" – 6:09 "En Lrig å Seire" – 4:58 "Jesu Blod" – 4:51 "Midnattskogens sorte kjerne" ("The Black Core of the Midnightforest") – 6:47 "Kuldeblest Over Evig Isøde" – 4:13 "Kronet til konge" ("Crowned to Be King") – 4:35 "Mournful, Yet and Forever" – 7:05 "Når Vi Har Dolket Guds Hjerte" – 4:47 "Starcave, ### Assistant:
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### User: Brendan John Guest (born 19 December 1958) is an English former professional footballer who made 104 appearances in the Football League playing for Lincoln City as a right back. With Forest Green Rovers, he won the 1982 FA Vase at Wembley. He also represented England at Under 19 level against Wales (twice), Greece, Belgium and Iceland. Life and career Guest was born in Barnsley, Yorkshire, and began his football career as an apprentice with Lincoln City. He turned professional with that club, and made his senior debut on 11 December 1976, just before his 18th birthday, in an FA Cup ### Assistant:
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### User: is a Japanese competitor in synchronised swimming from Ōtsu, Shiga. She received five Olympic medals at the 1996, the 2000 and the 2004 Summer Olympics. The silver medal from the 2000 Olympics was in the duet with Miho Takeda, and they also received a silver medal at the 2004 Olympics. Tachibana began practicing the sport during her fourth year in elementary school. During the summer of 2008, she was a synchronized swimming coach for the Santa Clara Aquamaids in Santa Clara, California. References Category:1974 births Category:Living people Category:Olympic silver medalists for Japan Category:Olympic bronze medalists for Japan Category:Japanese synchronized swimmersCategory:Olympic synchronized swimmers of Japan Category:Synchronized swimmers at the 1996 Summer Olympics Category:Synchronized swimmers at the 2000 Summer Olympics Category:Synchronized swimmers at the 2004 Summer Olympics Category:People from Ōtsu, Shiga Category:Olympic medalists in synchronized swimming Category:Asian Games medalists in artistic swimming Category:Artistic swimmers at the 1994 Asian Games Category:Artistic swimmers at the 1998 Asian Games Category:Artistic swimmers at the 2002 Asian Games Category:World Aquatics Championships medalists in synchronised swimming Category:Synchronized swimmers at the 1998 World Aquatics Championships Category:Synchronized swimmers at the 1994 World Aquatics Championships Category:Medalists at the 2004 Summer Olympics Category:Medalists at the 2000 Summer Olympics Category:Medalists at the ### Assistant:
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### User: Australia had their first female Prime Minister, Julia Gillard. At the beginning of Gillard's tenure as Prime Minister the media reported that Australia welcomed and were happy to have a woman at the helm, with many outlets stating that sexism in Australia was now over as any gendered barrier to getting the "top job" was now overcome, however over time the reporting around Gillard changed in tone particularly after it was leaked that Gillard had opposed two key reforms for paid parental leave she was criticized for being out of touch as she was childless. Eventually the press begun toin a new medium which is interactive and gives a platform for women to engage in activism in a creative way, which is broad yet unifying; Many have said that the community has given them the confidence to speak up and ask for raises and that they feel a sense of solidarity and not alone; this has been particularly felt among survivors of sexual assault. Activism Purpose Destroy The Joint was initially a response to the criticism that Julia Gillard received but then grew to be a collective which focused on contemporary feminist issues in Australia and has since thenno additional cost. In the case of the survivor who wrote to Destroy the Joint, the group was able to successfully argue the case for waiving the cost of a silent number through emails to Telstra's CEO and it set a precedent for all survivors of domestic violence suffering financial hardship to have the silent number fee waived on a case by case basis. Protecting Bangladeshi Textile Workers After the Rana Plaza Collapse in April 2013, Destroy the Joint teamed up with other advocacy groups such as the Textile Clothing and Footwear Union of Australia (TCFUA), Australian Unions, Oxfam and ### Assistant:
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### User: Todd F. Davis (born 1965) is a prize-winning American poet and critic. Life and work Todd F. Davis (born March 29, 1965, in Elkhart, Indiana) is Professor of English and Environmental Studies at Penn State University’s Altoona College. He is the author of five books of poetry, as well as the author or editor of several volumes of literary criticism. The winner of the Gwendolyn Brooks Poetry Prize, awarded by the Society for the Study of Midwestern Literature, Davis has published poems in numerous national and international journals and magazines, including Poetry Daily, Verse Daily, The North American Review, The ### Assistant:
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### User: KKDD (1290 kHz, 1290 NewsTalk IE) is a commercial AM radio station in San Bernardino, California. The station is owned by iHeartMedia, Inc.. It airs a talk radio format for the Inland Empire region of Southern California including Riverside and San Bernardino. Its studios and offices are on Iowa Avenue in Riverside and the transmitter is at the end of East Bessant Street, behind San Gorgonio High School, in San Bernardino. KKDD carries mostly syndicated talk programs, beginning each weekday with Armstrong & Getty from co-owned KSTE in Sacramento, followed by Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, Mark Levin, Ground Zero withClyde Lewis and Coast to Coast AM with George Noory. KKDD airs one local show, hosted by Lou Desmond, in late afternoons. Some overnight and weekend hours feature programming from Fox Sports Radio. On weekends, KKDD carries syndicated programs from Gary Sullivan, Art Bell and Leo Laporte. Most hours begin with world and national news from Fox News Radio. History In 1947, the radio station first signed on as KITO, owned by the San Bernardino Broadcasting Company. It was a network affiliate of ABC, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, soap operas and big band broadcasts during thein Los Angeles, KMEN was the Inland Empire affiliate. In 1997, Chancellor Broadcasting, a forerunner of current owner iHeartMedia, bought KMEN, flipping the format to adult standards. In 2000, Chancellor Broadcasting reorganized, becoming Clear Channel Communications. The station call sign was changed to KKDD, which refers to KiDs, and in 2001, the station switched to a children's radio format, featuring music and programming from the Radio Disney network. On April 3, 2012, ERC Media signed a local marketing agreement (LMA) with Clear Channel, allowing the company to program the station with a mix of Contemporary Christian music and brokered religiousteaching programs. During this time, the station's programming originated from the Orange County studios of 107.9 KWVE-FM, a longtime Christian radio station. On April 11, 2014, ERC Media's LMA expired and Clear Channel resumed programming KKDD, this time with a Spanish-language adult hits format branded as "La Preciosa 1290." On May 15, 2017, 1290 KKDD swapped formats with sister station KFNY in Riverside. 1290 KKDD became a talk station, while KFNY became "La Presciosa 1440." References External links KDD Category:Mass media in San Bernardino, California Category:Radio stations established in 1947 Category:1947 establishments in California Category:IHeartMedia radio stations Category:News and talk ### Assistant:
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### User: Vivian Hugh Smith, 1st Baron Bicester (9 December 1867 – 17 February 1956) was a British merchant banker. Biography Vivian Hugh Smith was born on 9 December 1867. He was the elder son of Hugh Colin Smith (son of John Abel Smith and Governor of the Bank of England from 1897 to 1899) and Constance Maria Josepha (née Adeane). He was educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge. His brother Aubrey followed the different path of joining the Royal Navy at the age of eleven and later rose to be an admiral. Career Smith served as the Chairman ofSmith (1901–1981), married Francis Rodd, 2nd Baron Rennell. Lt.-Col. Hon. Stephen Edward Vivian Smith (1903–1952), father of Angus Smith, 3rd Baron Bicester. Hon. Joyce Sybil Vivian Smith (1905), married Gerald Lloyd-Verney. Hon. Honor Mildred Vivian Smith (1908–1995), neurologist Major Hon. Hugh Adeane Vivian Smith (1910–1978). Death He died in February 1956, at the age of eighty-eight, and was succeeded in the barony by his eldest son Randal. His wife died in 1959. Ancestry References External links Category:1867 births Category:1956 deaths Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge Category:Barons in the Peerage of the United Kingdom Category:Knights of the Order of St John ### Assistant:
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### User: Bourg-Saint-Pierre (German name: St. Petersburg) is a municipality in the district of Entremont in the canton of Valais in Switzerland. History Bourg-Saint-Pierre is first mentioned in 1125 as Burgus Sancti Petri. Geography Bourg-Saint-Pierre has an area, , of . Of this area, 29.1% is used for agricultural purposes, while 6.8% is forested. Of the rest of the land, 0.6% is settled (buildings or roads) and 63.5% is unproductive land. The municipality is located on the Italian border. It consists of the village of Bourg-Saint-Pierre and the Hospice du Grand Saint-Bernard in the Great St Bernard Pass. The village of Bourg-Saint-Pierrecommon (6 or 2.8%) and Portuguese is the third (6 or 2.8%). There are 2 people who speak German. Of the population in the municipality 101 or about 47.6% were born in Bourg-Saint-Pierre and lived there in 2000. There were 52 or 24.5% who were born in the same canton, while 21 or 9.9% were born somewhere else in Switzerland, and 36 or 17.0% were born outside of Switzerland. The age distribution of the population () is children and teenagers (0–19 years old) make up 22.6% of the population, while adults (20–64 years old) make up 62.7% and seniors (overpopulation) belonged to no church, are agnostic or atheist, and 4 individuals (or about 1.89% of the population) did not answer the question. Education In Bourg-Saint-Pierre about 68 or (32.1%) of the population have completed non-mandatory upper secondary education, and 14 or (6.6%) have completed additional higher education (either university or a Fachhochschule). Of the 14 who completed tertiary schooling, 57.1% were Swiss men, 14.3% were Swiss women. , there were 2 students in Bourg-Saint-Pierre who came from another municipality, while 5 residents attended schools outside the municipality. References External links Category:Municipalities of Valais Category:Cultural property of national significance in ### Assistant:
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### User: This is the discography of the Northern Irish blues, heavy metal and hard rock guitarist and singer-songwriter Gary Moore. Albums Solo studio albums Notes A^ Blues for Greeny charted at #5 on Top Blues Albums Chart B^ Back to the Blues charted at #6 on Top Blues Albums Chart C^ Power of the Blues charted at #9 on Top Blues Albums Chart D^ Old New Ballads Blues charted at #6 on Top Blues Albums Chart E^ Close as You Get charted at #7 on Top Blues Albums Chart F^ Bad for You Baby charted at #2 on Top Blues Albums ### Assistant:
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### User: General Sir Richard Lawson Barrons, (born 17 May 1959) is a retired British Army officer. He was Commander Joint Forces Command from April 2013 until his retirement in April 2016. Barrons' early career was spent in various staff and field posts in the UK, across Europe, and in the Far East. He also spent time working at the Ministry of Defence and in education. Sent to Germany in 1991, Barrons then served his first tour of duty in the Balkans in 1993. Returning to the UK, Barrons took up a staff position and went on to do a tour indeployed to Iraq for the second time, this time to Baghdad, with responsibility for joint operations. He then served briefly with the NATO Allied Rapid Reaction Corps before being sent to Afghanistan for the second time, when he headed an ISAF reintegration unit to provide incentives for Taliban soldiers to surrender. He later became Deputy Chief of the Defence Staff (Operations). Military career Barrons was commissioned as a second lieutenant on probation as a university cadet into the Royal Regiment of Artillery on 2 September 1977 prior to reading Philosophy, Politics and Economics at The Queen's College, Oxford and becominga full-time army officer on 21 June 1980. His commission was confirmed in 1981, with seniority from 17 May 1977 and he was promoted to lieutenant with seniority from 17 May 1979. Between 1980 and 1990, he served in various positions across Europe and the Far East as well as in a staff position at the Ministry of Defence in London. He was promoted to captain on 19 November 1983. and took a master's degree in Defence Administration in 1990, after which he attended the British Army's Staff College, Camberley, in 1991. Barrons' first field officer promotion was to majorUK, as MA to the Chief of the General Staff. He went on to command 3rd Regiment Royal Horse Artillery, headquartered in Hohne Germany, with which he deployed to the Balkans again in 2001. At the end of 2001, Barrons was appointed chief of staff of the 3rd (United Kingdom) Division and immediately deployed to Afghanistan, where the division assisted in establishing the International Security Assistance Force. After serving in Afghanistan, Barrons returned to the UK to attend the Higher Command and Staff Course, before promotion to colonel in June 2002. Barrons' next deployment was to Iraq in 2003 aschief of staff, Multinational Division (South East), stationed in Basra. High command Barrons was promoted to brigadier on 31 December 2003, with seniority from 30 June 2003. Upon promotion, he was posted to Northern Ireland, commanding 39 Infantry Brigade in Belfast, a position he held for two years. After Northern Ireland, he was appointed Assistant Chief of Staff, Commitments in 2005, with day-to-day responsibility for British Army operations. Barrons attained general officer status in 2008, when he was promoted to the substantive rank of major general and appointed Deputy Commanding General, Multi-National Corps – Iraq. He was posted to Baghdad, ### Assistant:
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### User: Dorothy Dene (1859 – 27 December 1899), born Ada Alice Pullen, was an English stage actress and artist's model for the painter Frederick Leighton and some of his associates. Dene was considered to have a classical face and figure and a flawless complexion. Her height was above average and she had long arms, large violet eyes and abundant golden chestnut hair. Biography Dene was born in New Cross, London, in 1859; her birth name was Ada Alice Pullen. She came from a large family of girls, a number of whom earned their living from acting on stage. She lived withwas chosen by Frederic Leighton. Dene made her debut as an actress as Marin in The School For Scandal in 1886. She appeared in New York City in a play produced by the Theater of Arts and Letters and performed in other venues there. She found little success as a performer in America and her tour was eventually abandoned. In the 1890s, she was still said to be England's most beautiful woman. She died in London in 1899, at the age of forty and is buried in Kensal Green Cemetery. References Lima, Ohio Times Democrat, Searching for a Model, 28 ### Assistant:
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### User: Saurbæjarkirkja is a church in the Eyjafjörður region of Iceland. It is located about south of Akureyri. Saurbæjarkirkja church has thick turf and stone walls on the outside for protection against the weather, and turf on the roof. It was built in 1858 by Olaf Briem (1808-59), who studied carpentry in Copenhagen. It is one of only six turf churches still extant in Iceland. Most churches in the country were built of this material until well into the 19th century. Inside, the church has a wooden frame construction. Churches of this type had no tower, and the bells usually hung ### Assistant:
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### User: 6/8/00 – Paris, France is a two-disc live album and the tenth in a series of 72 live bootlegs released by the American alternative rock band Pearl Jam from the band's 2000 Binaural Tour. It was released along with the other official bootlegs from the European leg of the tour on September 26, 2000. Overview The album was recorded on June 8, 2000 in Paris, France at the indoor sports arena Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy. It was selected by the band as one of 18 "Ape/Man" shows from the tour, which, according to bassist Jeff Ament, were shows the band ### Assistant:
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### User: Edward Jurkiewicz (born 22 January 1948 in Pruszcz Gdański, Poland) is a Polish former professional basketball player. During his playing career, he was a 1.95 m tall small forward. He competed in the men's tournament at the 1968 Summer Olympics. Professional career Jurkiewicz was a member of the FIBA European Selection, in 1971. Polish national team Jurkiewicz led the 1971 EuroBasket in scoring, averaging 22.6 points per game, as a member of the senior Polish national basketball team. His performance earned him a selection to the All-Tournament Team. He was also named to the EuroBasket All-Tournament Team at EuroBasket 1969. ### Assistant:
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### User: is a former Japanese football player. Playing career Sano was born in Shizuoka Prefecture on April 14, 1968. After graduating from high school, he joined Japan Soccer League club Toyota Motors (later Nagoya Grampus Eight) in 1987. However he could not play many matches. In 1992, Japan Soccer League was folded and founded new league J1 League. He moved to Japan Football League (JFL) club NKK during 1992 season. However he could not play at all in the match and he moved to JFL club Chuo Bohan (later Avispa Fukuoka) in 1993. He became a regular goalkeeper and the clubwon the champions in 1995 and was promoted to J1. However his opportunity to play decreased behind newcomer Hideki Tsukamoto from 1996. In 1999, he moved to Japan Football League club Sagawa Express Tokyo. However he could not play at all in the match. In 2000, he moved to newly was promoted to J2 League club, Mito HollyHock. However he could not play at all in the match and retired end of 2000 season. Club statistics References External links Category:1968 births Category:Living people Category:Association football people from Shizuoka Prefecture Category:Japanese footballers Category:Japan Soccer League players Category:J1 League players Category:J2 League ### Assistant:
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### User: Stewarts & Lloyds A.F.C. is a football club based in Corby, Northamptonshire, England. The club plays in the , and is currently managed by Darren Malone as the first team manager and Thomas ‘Swede’ Brown, will be taking charge of the reserves for the season 2019/20 History The club was founded in 1935 as the works team of the Stewarts & Lloyds Iron & Steel Company. S & L was the principal steel company exploiting the ironstone in the area, and the major employer in Corby. The club was a leading contender in the United Counties League. In 1948 arival club, Corby Town was formed in the town. Most of the key S & L personnel joined the new club, leaving a rump which joined the Kettering Amateur League. The club won the Kettering Amateur League championship in 1954, and they joined the United Counties League in 1957. The club's form in the league was indifferent, but they won the Division One championship in 1973–74 and 1974–75 and were promoted to the Premier Division for 1975–76, where they played until relegation at the end of 2013/14 season. The club nearly went under in 1989 before a rescue by localOn 23 December 2017 Sean and Del took charge of the first team following the resignation of Ian Benjamin Following the completion of Season 17/18 S&L were relegated from the UCL into the Northamptonshire Combination Premier Division. Honours United Counties League Premier Division Champions 2008–09 United Counties League Division One Champions 1973–74, 1974–75 United Counties League Cup Winners 1986-87 Records FA Cup Second Qualifying Round 2008–09, 2010–11 FA Vase Fourth Round 2008–09 See also Stewarts & Lloyds Corby A.F.C. players References External links Category:Football clubs in England Category:Football clubs in Northamptonshire Category:Association football clubs established in 1935 Category:United Counties League ### Assistant:
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### User: Aslı Bayram (born 1 April 1981) is a German actress and writer of Turkish descent. Since 2010, she is an Ambassador for Crime Prevention by the Justice Ministry Hessen, Germany. Life and career Bayram was born in Darmstadt, Germany. In 1994, her father was shot dead by a Neo-Nazi and she was shot in the left arm. In 2005 she became the first Miss Germany with Turkish roots and participated in the Miss Universe 2005 contest in Bangkok. Bayram completed actors' training with Eric Morris, Los Angeles, and Anne Mertin, Vienna. The first international film she starred in was Jump!with Patrick Swayze. Ensuing, she appeared in a very prominent role in the black comedy "Short Cut to Hollywood", shot in the USA and presented at the 2009 Berlinale. In October 2007, Aslı Bayram performed for the first time professionally on stage and to critical acclaim in the solo theater performance Anne Frank: The Diary at the Théatre de la Ville D’Esch in Luxembourg. An invitation at the Theatre Festival of German language in Prague followed, and afterwards the German premiere in Frankfurt/Main. Buddy Elias, Anne Frank’s cousin, complimented Aslı Bayram on this project. In 2008/2009 she toured with theEnglish language version in Canada and the USA. She finished the project on occasion of the commemoration of Anne Frank’s 80th birthday with three performances at the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles, Hollywood. The Times described her performance in Anne Frank: The Diary as "...emerging as one of Germany's most convincing and subtle actresses". In 2009 she also authored the book Grenzgängerin - Leben zwischen den Welten (Border Crosser. Life between Worlds), published 2009 by Random House. In 2009, she participated in the Swiss production and the Bosnian film Sevdah za Karima (English title: Sevdah for Karim). For bothpeople in a public reading relay. Aslı Bayram campaigns publicly against racism and xenophobia. Since 2010 Aslı Bayram is appointed honorable Ambassador for Crime Prevention by the Justice Ministry Hessen, Germany. She also was made the honorary Patron of the Riehl-School in Wiesbaden, which has many pupils from immigrant backgrounds. Since 2011 Aslı Bayram has performed the female lead role in a Turkish television serial on Star TV, Sirat. In July 2011, she performed the lead role in the international thriller Body Complete, performing in both the English and German languages alongside a veteran cast of Hollywood and Broadway actors. ### Assistant:
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### User: Jasmin Hasić is a Bosnian boxer in super heavyweight best known for winning bronze medal at the European Junior Championships 2007 in Sombor. At the European Junior Championships 2007, he defeated Drastamat Aslanyan from Armenia 17:16 and Darko Pirc from Croatia 24:3 but lost to Maxim Babanin from Russia by retiring in 4th round. In 2007, the Bosnian Sports Association named him the Bosnian Junior Sportsman of the Year. References External links European Junior Championships Results - Sombor, Serbia - July 8-16 2007 AIBA - Boxing’s Time of Change – A Review of the Year 2007 Sportin.ba - Jasmin Hasić ### Assistant:
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### User: The peso ley 18.188, usually known as either peso or, to distinguish it from the earlier peso moneda nacional, informally as peso ley, was the currency of Argentina between January 1, 1970 and May 5, 1983. It was subdivided into 100 centavos. Its symbol was $, sometimes $L. Its name comes from law 18188 which established it, effective April 5, 1969. Its ISO 4217 code was ARL. History The peso ley replaced the peso moneda nacional at a rate of 100 to 1. It was itself replaced by the peso argentino at a rate of 10,000 to 1. The history ### Assistant:
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### User: Diego José Lapera Sotolongo (born November 13, 1950) is a Cuban former volleyball player who competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics, in the 1976 Summer Olympics, and in the 1980 Summer Olympics. In 1972 he was part of the Cuban team which finished tenth in the Olympic tournament. He played all six matches. Four years later he won the bronze medal with the Cuban team in the 1976 Olympic tournament. He played all six matches. At the 1980 Games he was a member of the Cuban team which finished seventh in the Olympic tournament. He played two matches. External links ### Assistant:
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### User: Florian Hill (born April 9, 1984 in Germany) is a professional mountaineer Family Florian Hill is the first cousin of film director and Grimme prize-winner . His uncle Anton Hofherr is a German former professional ice hockey player. Notable climbs First ascent Djamila, Teke-Tor (4.480 m), Tian Shan, Kyrgyzstan, difficulty: V+, M4+, E4; 880 m First ascent Deliver Me, Illimani Southface (6.439 m), difficulty: VI, WI6, M6+, E5, alpine style; 1700 m. First ascent Chamaka, Sirk'i Qullu Southwest face (5.546 m) difficulty: VII,WI5, M5, alpine style; 550 m. First ascent Newfoundland, Diente Blanco (5.250 m), Kunturiri, Cordillera Real, difficulty V,WI5, ### Assistant:
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### User: Louis Moilliet (October 6, 1880 – August 24, 1962) was an artist from Switzerland who was noted as a painter and stained glass designer. He was lifelong friends with fellow artists Paul Klee and August Macke, spending time painting and traveling with them in Tunisia 1914 and introducing Klee into the group Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) earlier in 1911. His expressionist painting style was closely connected with that of the Orphism movement. One of his more popular works is titled "In The Circus". References Chilvers, Ian (2004), text from The Oxford Dictionary of Art on encyclopedia.com website "Moilliet, ### Assistant:
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### User: to the Attorney General's Office of the State of Sonora, there were 49 deaths in the ABC nursery fire. The fire apparently began in a warehouse with government documents planning to disappear, then expanded to daycare. Most of the children died of asphyxiation. There were about 100 children inside the building, firefighters and the population had to make holes in the walls to rescue the children, ranging from six months to five years. surname a stir both nationally and internationally and society's demand for justice. As a result of these events, June 3, 2010 was published in the Official Journal ### Assistant:
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### User: Samuel Sydney Silverman (8 October 1895 – 9 February 1968) was a British Labour politician and vocal opponent of capital punishment. Early life Silverman was born in poverty to a migrant Jewish parents from Jassy, Romania. His father was a draper living in the Kensington Fields area of Liverpool. Silverman attended Liverpool Institute and the University of Liverpool, thanks to scholarships. During the First World War he was a conscientious objector to military service and served three prison sentences, in Preston, Wormwood Scrubs and Belfast prisons. Career Silverman was a lecturer in English at the National University of Finland from1921 to 1925, and then returned to the University of Liverpool to read law. After qualifying as a solicitor he worked on workmen's compensation claims and landlord-tenant disputes. From 1932 to 1938 Silverman served on Liverpool City Council. He contested Liverpool Exchange without success at a by-election in 1933, but was elected as Member of Parliament (MP) for Nelson and Colne in the general election in 1935. Silverman was prominent in his support for Jews worldwide and for their rights in Palestine. He rethought his pacifism in light of the reports of antisemitism in Europe, and reluctantly supported Britain's entryinto the Second World War. He was vocal in asking from the government (and Churchill in particular) for a statement of war aims, which had become a contentious issue in the early years of the war. Silverman was prominent within the debates over the potential repatriation of Jewish refugees, telling Churchill 'that it would be difficult to conceive of a more cruel procedure than to take people who have lost everything they have – their homes, their relatives, their children, all the things that make life decent and possible – and compel them against their will, to go back tothe scene of those crimes'. Silverman was widely expected to join the government after the Labour victory in the general election in 1945, but, as he was a leftist, he was not appointed by Clement Attlee. He became opposed to the government's foreign policy. He refused to support German rearmament in 1954 and had the Labour Party Whip withdrawn from November 1954 to April 1955. He was one of the founders of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. In 1961, as a protest against bipartisan support for British nuclear weapons, he voted against the Royal Air Force, Royal Navy and BritishArmy estimates in the House of Commons, and was suspended from the Labour Party Whip from March 1961 until May 1963. Silverman died on 9 February 1968 following a stroke. Opponent of capital punishment A fervent opponent of the death penalty, Silverman founded the National Campaign for the Abolition of Capital Punishment. He wrote about several miscarriages of justice in the 1940s and 1950s, such as the hanging of Timothy Evans when it later emerged that serial killer John Christie had murdered Evans' wife and had given perjured evidence at Evans' trial in 1949. Silverman proposed a private member's billon abolition of the death penalty, which was passed by 200 votes to 98 on a free vote in the House of Commons on 28 June 1956; but was defeated in the House of Lords. In 1965, he successfully piloted the Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Bill through Parliament, abolishing capital punishment for murder in the UK and in the British Armed Forces for a period of five years but with provision for abolition to be made permanent by affirmative resolutions of both Houses of Parliament before the end of that period. The appropriate resolutions were passed in 1969. Silvermanwas opposed at the 1966 general election in the Nelson and Colne constituency by Patrick Downey, the uncle of Lesley Anne Downey, a victim in the Moors murders case, who stood on an explicitly pro-hanging platform. Downey polled over 5,000 votes, 13.7%, then the largest vote for a genuinely independent candidate since 1945. Notes References Emrys Hughes: Sydney Silverman, Rebel in Parliament, 1969 External links Category:1895 births Category:1968 deaths Category:British anti–death penalty activists Category:English Jews Category:Jewish British politicians Category:Jewish socialists Category:Labour Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies Category:Councillors in Liverpool Category:British people of Romanian-Jewish descent Category:British conscientious objectors Category:UK MPs ### Assistant:
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### User: "Sweetheart, I Have to Confess" is the 53rd episode of the ABC television series, Desperate Housewives. It was also the sixth episode of the show's third season. The episode was written by Dahvi Waller and Josh Senter and directed by David Grossman. It originally aired on October 29, 2006. Plot Susan visits Mike at the hospital, only to find him and Edie having sex. Susan is doing yardwork when Ian comes to her door. She tries to hide from him on the opposite side of her car visible to him. Mrs. McCluskey comes along and loudly says “hi” to Susan, ### Assistant:
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### User: Orphulella is a genus of slant-faced grasshoppers in the family Acrididae. There are more than 20 described species in Orphulella, all found in the Americas. Species These 24 species belong to the genus Orphulella: Orphulella abbreviata (Scudder, 1869) Orphulella aculeata Rehn, 1900 Orphulella brachyptera Rehn & Hebard, 1938 Orphulella chumpi Cigliano, Pocco & Lange, 2011 Orphulella concinnula (Walker, 1870) Orphulella decisa (Walker, 1870) Orphulella elongata Bruner, 1911 Orphulella fluvialis Otte, 1979 Orphulella gemma Otte, 1979 Orphulella losamatensis Caudell, 1909 Orphulella nesicos Otte, 1979 Orphulella orizabae (McNeill, 1897) Orphulella paraguayensis (Rehn, 1906) Orphulella patruelis (Bolívar, 1896) Orphulella pelidna (Burmeister, 1838) (spotted-winged ### Assistant:
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### User: Khar-Us Lake (Mongolian:, lit. "black water lake") is a lake in western Mongolia in the Great Lakes Depression. It is the upper one in a system of the interconnected lakes: Khar-Us, Khar, Dörgön, Airag and Khyargas. The lake is located in Har Us Nuur National Park. Its area value (1,852 km²) includes the island Agbash (or Ak-Bashi, white head) area (274 km²), so the water surface area is 1,578 km² only. Some sources are using different Khar-Us Lake Lake statistics values: Water level: 1,160.08 m Surface area: 1,496.6 km² Average depth: 2.1 m Volume: 3.12 km³. Primary inflow is the ### Assistant:
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### User: John Feikens (December 3, 1917 – May 15, 2011) was a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. Education and career Born December 3, 1917, in Clifton, New Jersey, Feikens received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1939 from Calvin College and a Juris Doctor in 1941 from the University of Michigan Law School. He worked for the priorities and war allocations department of the Detrex Corporation in Detroit, Michigan from 1942 to 1946. He was in private practice in Detroit from 1946 to 1960 an from 1961 to 1970. Federaljudicial service Feikens received a recess appointment from President Dwight D. Eisenhower on October 13, 1960, to a seat on the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan vacated by Judge Clifford Patrick O`Sullivan. He was nominated to the same position by President Eisenhower on January 10, 1961. His service was terminated on September 27, 1961, after his nomination was not confirmed by the United States Senate. A previous nomination by President Eisenhower on June 10, 1960, expired without action by the Senate, prior to his recess appointment. Feikens was nominated by President Richard Nixon on October7, 1970, to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, to a new seat authorized by 84 Stat. 294. He was confirmed by the Senate on November 25, 1970, and received his commission on December 1, 1970. He served as Chief Judge from 1979 to 1986. He assumed senior status on March 1, 1986. His service terminated on May 15, 2011, due to his death in Grosse Pointe Park, Michigan. Professional associations, civic and other activities Director of the Detroit Bar Association in (1962–1967), president 1967; trustee to the Detroit Bar Association Foundation Member of theAmerican Bar Association State Bar of Michigan Commissioner (1965–1971) Member of Fellow American College of Trial Lawyers Director of the Economic Club of Detroit Co-Chairman, Michigan Civil Rights Commission, (1964–1968) Board of Trustees, New Detroit, Inc. (1968–1970) Board of Trustees, Calvin College (1968–1974) University of Michigan Club Committee of Visitors, University of Michigan Law School Director, Economic Club of Detroit References External links The Political Graveyard John Feikens biography at the Eastern District of Michigan Category:1917 births Category:2011 deaths Category:Calvin University alumni Category:University of Michigan Law School alumni Category:Judges of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of ### Assistant:
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### User: Waipa District is a municipality in the Waikato region of New Zealand that is administered by the Waipa District Council. Its most populous town is Cambridge. The seat of the council is at the second most populous town, Te Awamutu. The district is south and south-east of the city of Hamilton. It has five wards: Te Awamutu, Cambridge, Pirongia, Maungatautari and Kakepuku. History The District was formed from Waipa County Council and its town boroughs in 1989. The county boundaries had varied since five ridings were formed in Waipa county in 1876: Newcastle, Hamilton, Mangapiko North and South, Rangiaowhia, andPukekura. In 1902 it covered and had an additional riding, Tuhikaramea. Geography The district has a land area of 1,473.47 km² (568.91 sq mi). Its population in was , of whom approximately 35% lived in each of the two main towns. The Waikato River forms much of the eastern boundary of the district, before it flows north-westward through the district, past Cambridge. The Waipa River, the Waikato River's main tributary, flows northwards through the western part of the district; the two rivers meet outside the district. The highest mountains are Mount Pirongia in the west and Maungatautari in the east.The region's economy is based largely on dairy farming and cereal production. The southeastern corner of the district includes the hydroelectric project at Karapiro. Demographics Waipa District had a population of 53,241 at the 2018 New Zealand census, an increase of 6,573 people (14.1%) since the 2013 census, and an increase of 10,740 people (25.3%) since the 2006 census. There were 19,518 households. There were 26,067 males and 27,171 females, giving a sex ratio of 0.96 males per female. Of the total population, 10,995 people (20.7%) were aged up to 15 years, 9,252 (17.4%) were 15 to 29, 23,535 (44.2%) ### Assistant:
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### User: Marquise Javon Williams (born October 5, 1992) is an American football quarterback for the New York Guardians of the XFL. He played college football at North Carolina. Williams was signed by the Green Bay Packers as an undrafted free agent in 2016, later playing for the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League (CFL) and the San Antonio Commanders of the Alliance of American Football (AAF). Early years Williams attended Mallard Creek High School in Charlotte, North Carolina. As a senior, he threw for 3,034 yards with 45 touchdowns and rushed for 1,147 yards and 19 touchdowns. Williams was afour-star recruit by Rivals.com and was ranked as the ninth best dual-threat quarterback in his class. College career After redshirting in 2011, Williams appeared in nine games as Bryn Renner's backup as a redshirt freshman in 2012. He passed for 127 yards and a touchdown and also rushed for 186 yards with three touchdowns. Williams entered his sophomore season in 2013 as Renner's backup. After Renner suffered an injury that caused him to miss the rest of the season, Williams became the starter. Against Old Dominion, he set the school record for total yards in a game with 469. Intotal he appeared in 12 games with six starts, completing 126 of 217 passes for 1,698 yards, 15 touchdowns and six interceptions. He also led the team in rushing yards with 536, becoming the first quarterback to lead North Carolina in rushing since Gayle Bomar in 1968. Williams entered his junior season in 2014 as the starter. He passed for 3,068 yards with 21 passing touchdowns and added 13 rushing touchdowns. Williams returned as a starter and team captain his senior year in 2015, leading the Tar Heels to the ACC Coastal Division title and the ACC Championship Game. OverWilliams signed as a rookie free agent with the Saskatchewan Roughriders of the Canadian Football League (CFL). Throughout the two-game preseason, Williams completed 10 passes out of 12 attempts, for 115 yards, and one interception. Williams made the Roughriders roster as the third quarterback on June 17, beating out Vince Young who, like Williams, had also played for the Green Bay Packers during a preseason. Williams also beat out Bryan Bennett for the job. In May 2018, Williams took reps against the Edmonton Eskimos in the opening preseason game of the 2018 CFL season, completing 3 of his 7 passrushed for nearly six yards per carry. The league ceased operations in April 2019. New York Guardians In October 2019, Williams was drafted by the New York Guardians in the tenth round of the 2020 XFL Draft. Statistics References External links Green Bay Packers bio North Carolina Tar Heels bio Category:1992 births Category:Living people Category:Players of American football from North Carolina Category:People from Shelby, North Carolina Category:American football quarterbacks Category:Canadian football quarterbacks Category:American players of Canadian football Category:North Carolina Tar Heels football players Category:Green Bay Packers players Category:Saskatchewan Roughriders players Category:Atlanta Legends players Category:San Antonio Commanders players Category:New York Guardians ### Assistant:
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### User: Camosun College is a community college located in Greater Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. The college has two campuses, Lansdowne and Interurban, with a total enrollment of ~20,000 students (including Continuing Education). Camosun College also provides contract training for local business; research, innovation and prototyping services for industry; and trained co-op students for employers. The Lansdowne campus provides University transfer and access programs, as well as career, technical and vocational programs in the fields of the arts, sciences, business, health and human services. The Interurban campus delivers programs in the trades, technologies, business, sport and exercise education, and access programs. Thelocated in what is currently the Ewing Building, and was the first centre in Canada to offer daytime courses for adults wishing to upgrade to high school graduation. Local interest in a community college grew, and on October 9, 1970, Victoria residents voted in favour of establishing a college. Plans for "Juan de Fuca" College were followed. The provincial government formally approved the college on October 27, 1970. In 1971 the college councillors voted on a name change, and "Camosun" (pronounced Cam-Ō-sun) was chosen, as it had been an early name for Victoria. It is originally a Lkwungen (Songhees) namefor an area of Victoria where different waters meet and are transformed. By September 1971, the final steps toward the realization of a college were taken when Camosun (Lansdowne campus) and the BC Vocational School (Interurban campus) merged to become BC's ninth community college. The trade-mark with the words 'Camosun College' was filed with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office Canadian Trade-marks database on 2008-02-22. Camosun College enrolled its first students in September 1971 when it opened as a two-year institution offering university transfer, vocational and upgrading courses to the residents of southern Vancouver Island. In 2014, the college had aboutClub, British Columbia Young Liberals of Camosun, Camosun College Greens, Camosun College Persian Club, Debate Club, Psychology Club, French Club, Chinese Conversation Club, Falun Gong Club, International Club, Students for Environmental Awareness, Japanese Conversation Club, Korean Conversation Club, Carpe Diem/ Ballroom Dance, Camosun NDP, Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, Mechanical Engineers Club, Poker Club, Bob's Wrenchman, and Camosun Cashflow Club. Student Affairs The student union on Campus is the Camosun College Student Society, where directors are elected for one year terms. Elections are every March/April and by-elections in October. The Nexus is Camosun College's official student newspaper and is editorially separate ### Assistant:
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### User: N2N Naval Aircraft Factory TS-1 Huff-Daland TA-2 trainer prototype - one example only re-engined Huff-Daland TA-5 trainer prototype Huff-Daland TA-6 trainer prototype Huff-Daland HN-2 naval trainer Engines on display The New England Air Museum in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, has a Lawrance J-1 on display. Specifications (J-1) See also ABC Dragonfly, contemporary production British air-cooled nine-cylinder aviation radial, unsuccessful in service. References External links Wright J-5 "Whirlwind" (PDF), by Kimble D. McCutcheon, from the Aircraft Engine Historical Society (AEHS). Part 2 of "Air-Cooled Aircraft Engine Cylinders", by George Genevro, also from AEHS. A detailed contemporary discussion of the Lawrance engine from ### Assistant:
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### User: Seldon Powell (15 November 1928–25 January 1997) was an American soul jazz, swing, and R&B tenor saxophonist and flautist born in Lawrenceville, Virginia. He worked with Tab Smith (1949), Lucky Millinder (1949–51), Neal Hefti, and Louis Bellson. During the 1960s he ventured into the soul jazz idiom and worked with Clark Terry, Lou Donaldson, Johnny Hammond Smith, and Buddy Rich. Discography As leader Seldon Powell featuring Jimmy Cleveland (Roost/Vogue, 1956) Rhythm Plus One (Fresh Sound, 1956) At the Hop (PMI) Messin' with Seldon Powell (Encounter, 1973) As sideman Louis Bellson: The Driving Louis Bellson (Norgran, 1955) Neal Hefti: Hot'n Hearty(Epic, 1955) Tony Aless: Long Island Suite (Roost, 1955) Sonny Stitt: Sonny Stitt Plays Arrangements from the Pen of Quincy Jones (Roost, 1955) Friedrich Gulda: At Birdland (RCA, 1956) Billy Ver Planck: Jazz for Playgirls (Savoy, 1957) Eddie Sauter: The Sauter-Finnegan Orchestra – Directions in Music (RCA, 1952–58) Jimmy Witherspoon: Goin' to Kansas City Blues (RCA Victor, 1958) with Jay McShann A. K. Salim: Blues Suite (Savoy, 1958) Art Farmer: The Aztec Suite (United Artists, 1959) Aaron Bell: Music from Peter Gunn (Lion, 1959) Aaron Bell: Music from Victory at Sea (Lion, 1959) Billy Taylor: Billy Taylor with Four Flutes(Riverside, 1959) Bobby Donaldson:Jazz Unlimited (Golden Crest, 1960) Ernie Wilkins: The Big New Band of the 60's (Everest, 1960) Panama Francis: The beat behind million sellers (ABC, 1960) Reuben Phillips: Manhattan...3 a.m. (Poplar, 1960) Buddy Rich: The Driver (EmArcy, 1960) Sy Oliver: Annie Laurie (Sesac, 1960) Clark Terry: Color Changes (Candid, 1960) Teri Thornton: Devil May Care (Riverside, 1961) Johnny "Hammond" Smith: Look Out! (New Jazz, 1962) Jimmy Forrest: Soul Street (New Jazz, 1962) Sy Oliver: Easy Walker (Sesac, 1962) Johnny "Hammond" Smith: Black Coffee (Riverside, 1962) Billy Taylor: Brazilian Beat (Sesac, 1963) Johnny "Hammond" Smith: Open House! (Riverside, 1963)Charlie Byrd: Byrd at the Gate (Riverside, 1963) Clark Terry: What makes Sammy swing (20th Century Fox, 1963) Gary McFarland: Soft Samba (Verve, 1963) Rufus Jones: Five on Eight (Cameo) Willie Rodriguez: Flatjacks (Riverside, 1964) Panama Francis: Tough Talk (20th Century Fox, 1964) Ahmed Abdul-Malik: Spellbound (Status, 1964) Cal Tjader: Warm Wave (Verve, 1964) Quincy Jones: Quincy Jones Explores the Music of Henry Mancini (Mercury, 1964) Quincy Jones: Quincy Plays for Pussycats (Mercury, 1959-65 [1965]) Chet Baker: Baker's Holiday (Limelight, 1965) Modern Jazz Quartet: Jazz Dialogue (Atlantic, 1965) Chico O'Farrill: Nine Flags (Impulse!, 1966) Jimmy McGriff: The Big Band (Solid ### Assistant:
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### User: Trévoux is a commune in the Ain department in eastern France. The inhabitants are known as Trévoltiens. It is a suburb of Lyon, built on the steeply sloping left bank of the river Saône. History In AD 843, the treaty of Verdun divided up the empire of Charlemagne. The river Saône became the frontier between France and the Empire. It is thanks to this border location that Trévoux gained its particular political status. From the 13th century, the Trévoux river toll became important, and the town built a castle and walls. On the 30th of June 1417, the local baronthe Montpensier hospital and the Palace of the Dombes Parliament. In 1560, the Dombes region fell to the Bourbons. The town became rich as the capital of Dombes principality and seat of its parliament from 1697 to 1771. The town is also known at this time for a dictionary, printed there from 1704 to 1771 by the Jesuits. In 1762, the principality of the Dombes was definitively absorbed into France. The town was a sub-prefecture of Ain until 1926. From the end of the 19th century until the 1950s, Trévoux was the global capital of the manufacture of synthetic diamonds. ### Assistant:
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### User: The Girl of My Dreams is a lost 1918 silent film romance directed by Louis Chaudet and starring Billie Rhodes. Cast Billie Rhodes - The Weed Jack McDonald - George Bassett Lamar Johnstone - Kenneth Stewart (*as Lamar Johnston) Golda Madden - Madelin Stewart Jane Keckley - Ma Williams Frank MacQuarrie - Pa Williams Ben Suslow - Jed Williams (*as Benjamin Suslow) Leo Pierson - Ralph Long References External links The Girl of My Dreams at IMDb.com slide Category:1918 films Category:American silent feature films Category:Lost American films Category:Films directed by Louis Chaudet Category:American black-and-white films Category:American films Category:American romance films ### Assistant:
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### User: Fluxinella is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Seguenziidae. Species Species within the genus Fluxinella include: Fluxinella asceta,Marshall, B.A., 1991 Fluxinella brychia Marshall, B.A., 1991 Fluxinella discula (Dall, 1889) Fluxinella euphanes Marshall, B.A., 1991 Fluxinella gellida (Barnard, 1963) Fluxinella lenticulosa Marshall, B.A., 1983 Fluxinella lepida Marshall, B.A., 1983 Fluxinella marginata (Schepman, 1909) † Fluxinella maxwelli B. A. Marshall, 1983 Fluxinella megalomphala Marshall, B.A., 1991 Fluxinella membranacea Marshall, B.A., 1991 Fluxinella polita Marshall, B.A., 1991 Fluxinella runcinata Marshall, B.A., 1991 Fluxinella solarium (Barnard, 1963) Fluxinella stellaris Bozzetti, 2008 Fluxinella stenomphala (Melvill, 1910) Fluxinella stirophora Marshall, B.A., ### Assistant:
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### User: The Whitby Witches is the first book in The Whitby Witches series by Robin Jarvis. It was originally published in 1991. Plot summary After the deaths of their parents, eight-year-old orphan Ben and his older sister, Jennet, have been pushed from foster home to foster home for the majority of their young lives. After they have lived at a dreary hostel for a few months, the mistress Mrs Rodice has the children hauled off to live in the seaside village of Whitby, with relish. Ben and Jennet do not get along as Ben possesses a sixth sense meaning that hecan see the spirits of dead people, including his parents. Jennet does not share this gift and therefore assumes he is lying and deliberately causing trouble. It is Ben's uncanny ability to see the dead that has caused him and his sister to be shunted between homes, as the families fostering them are unnerved by Ben. Upon arrival in Whitby, the children are adopted by a kind and eccentric elderly spinster named Miss Alice Boston, a former university lecturer. She and the children take to each other almost immediately, despite the children being a little bemused by Miss Boston's (orAunt Alice as they grew to call her) odd mannerisms and lifestyle. Miss Boston tells Ben the scary stories of Whitby much to his delight as he adores horror stories, but Jennet does not approve as she believes it will encourage his lies and his stories that he can see their dead parents. Miss Boston is friends with many of the elderly spinsters in the Whitby community. The widowed Mrs Prudence Joyster, whose late husband was in the army; the batty, cat-loving Miss Matilda Droon, Miss Edith Whethers the postmistress, and the wealthy and grossly obese Dora Banbury-Scott, twice thewidow who refuses to grow old gracefully. Ben and Jennet settle into Whitby and Ben encounters the "Fisher Folk", or the "Aufwader" as they call themselves, a reclusive and mysterious tribe of humanoid dwarf-like beings who are unseen by all except those with the sixth sense. Ben meets Nelda Shrimp, the youngest of the diminishing tribe and her aunt, Hesper Gull. They tell them that their kind are forbidden to fraternise with humans as it has done nothing but cause grief in the past. But Nelda has a premonition that Ben is involved in the fate of their tribe. Thea newcomer in town, Mrs Rowena Cooper, opens up a new antiques shop, and begins making herself very popular with the Whitby residents, by donating large sums of money to charity and charming even the most disagreeable neighbours. After being invited to tea at Mrs Cooper's house, Miss Boston and Mrs Joyster are instantly suspicious; Mrs Cooper appears ditzy, childish and too friendly for their liking. However, she has managed to woo over Miss Whethers, Miss Droon and Mrs Banbury-Scott most of all, whom she practically force-feeds expensive chocolates. After they leave, Miss Boston and Mrs Joyster share their doubts ### Assistant:
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### User: Hong Hyun-seok (; born 16 June 1999) is a South Korean footballer who plays as a midfielder for FC Juniors OÖ on loan from Ulsan Hyundai. Club career In January 2018, Hong moved from the youth team of Ulsan Hyundai to SpVgg Unterhaching. He made his professional debut for Unterhaching in the 3. Liga on 27 February 2019, coming on as a substitute for Lucas Hufnagel in the 84th minute against VfR Aalen, with the match finishing as a 1–4 away loss. International career Hong was included in South Korea's squad for the boys' football tournament at the 2014 SummerYouth Olympics in Nanjing, China. He started in all four matches, with South Korea reaching the gold medal match before losing 1–2 to Peru, therefore earning a silver medal as runners-up. In 2016, Hong made five appearances for the South Korea under-17 team. References External links FC Juniors OÖ profile Category:1999 births Category:Living people Category:South Korean footballers Category:South Korea under-17 international footballers Category:South Korean expatriate footballers Category:Association football midfielders Category:Ulsan Hyundai FC players Category:SpVgg Unterhaching players Category:FC Juniors OÖ players Category:3. Liga players Category:Austrian Football Second League players Category:Footballers at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics Category:South Korean expatriate sportspeople in ### Assistant:
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### User: Aki Juusela (born June 28, 1991) is a Finnish professional ice hockey left winger currently playing for HK Dukla Michalovce of the Tipsport Liga. Juusela previously played in Liiga for Ässät and made his debut for the team during the 2011–12 season. After two seasons, he moved to Lempäälän Kisa of Mestis on August 1, 2013. After a failed try-out with Västerviks IK, Juusela was further down a division, signing for HC Satakunta of the Suomi-sarja before returning to Mestis with KooKoo. On August 17, 2015, Juusela signed for TUTO Hockey. He stayed for three seasons before returning to Ässät ### Assistant:
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### User: William Alfred Freret, Jr. ["Will Freret"] (b. in New Orleans, Louisiana, 19 January 1833; d. 1911) was an American architect. He served from 1887 to 1888 as head of the Office of the Supervising Architect, which oversaw construction of Federal buildings. He is associated with a number of buildings that are listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. Biography William Alfred Freret was born in New Orleans. His father was William Freret, a mayor of the city, and his cousin James Freret was a fellow architect with whom he sometimes collaborated. He was educated in his native cityand in Baton Rouge. William received an engineering degree in England and adopted architecture as his profession. At the outbreak of the American Civil War, he entered the Confederate Army as a private in the Washington Artillery from New Orleans. He was promoted from time to time, finally reaching the rank of lieutenant-colonel of engineers. He served on Kirby Smith's staff, and was also assistant chief and acting chief of the Trans-Mississippi Department until the surrender. From 1866 to 1868 he was state engineer for Louisiana, and for several years after that he had charge of the construction of thepublic schools of the McDonogh fund, some sixteen in number. He served as supervising architect of the U.S. government from June, 1887, until March, 1890, when he resigned. W. A. Freret designed the reconstructed statehouse at Baton Rouge after the Civil War. He was the architect for the buildings of the state university at Pineville, the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, and many of the public buildings and private residences in New Orleans and elsewhere in Louisiana and several of the neighboring states. Projects Works include: Old Louisiana State Capitol, North Blvd. and St. Philip St. Baton Rouge, Louisiana, built1847-50, NRHP-listed After James H. Dakin's Gothic Revival building burned during the American Civil War, Freret was in charge of its reconstruction in 1882, adding notable features like a spiral staircase and the stained-glass dome. U.S. Courthouse and Post Office, 201 W. Commerce St. Aberdeen, Mississippi, NRHP-listed U.S. Courthouse and Post Office, 301 S. Center St., Statesville, North Carolina (now City Hall) U.S. Courthouse, Custom House and Post Office, 281 Front Street Key West, Florida (now Key West Museum of Art & History) U.S. Post Office, W. 4th St. between Government Pl. and West St. Williamsport, Pennsylvania Freret,William A.), NRHP-listedU.S. Post Office and Courthouse, 83 Broad St. Charleston, South Carolina, NRHP-listed United States Post Office in Charlotte, North Carolina; a red brick Romanesque Revival building with corner towers, no longer existing United States Post Office and Courthouse in Wilmington, North Carolina; brownstone Romanesque Revival which per its NRHP nomination was "especially imposing" with a tall corner tower and a "dramatic roofline", no longer existing Women's Guild of the New Orleans Opera Association, 2500 Prytania Street, Greek Revival, built for Edward A. Davis in 1859. Dr. and Mrs. Herman de Bachelle Seebold purchased the home in 1944 and donated themansion, furnishings and art in 1965 to the Women's Guild of the New Orleans Opera Association. (Marker by Women's Guild of the New Orleans Opera Association) The Manse, 2328 Coliseum Street, erected in 1859 for Hannah Killingley Walford, widow of Edmund W. Briggs, agent for London Unity Insurance Company. Purchased in 1871 by the Prytania Street Presbyterian Church for use as the minister's residence. The bay containing the minister's study was added at that time. The last minister to live here was the Rev. Dr. William McFadden Alexander. His widow, Ceneilla Bower Alexander, artist noted for designing Rex Carnival paradefloats, purchased the house from the church in 1947. (Marker by New Orleans Landmarks Commission, 2001) Notes References Annual Report of the Supervising Architect to the Secretary of the Treasury for The Year Ending September 30, 1887. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1887. Annual Report of the Supervising Architect to the Secretary of the Treasury for The Calendar Year Ending December 31, 1888. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1889. W.A. Freret and William John Fryer. U.S. Public Buildings in the City of New York: A Report to Colonel W.A. Freret, Supervising Architect, Treasury Department, Washington,D.C. New York: Willis McDonald & Co., 1888. ### Assistant:
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### User: Thomas Pichon (30 March 1700– 22 November 1781), also known as Thomas Tyrell, was a French government agent during Father Le Loutre's War. Pichon is renowned for betraying the French, Acadian and Mi’kmaq forces by providing information to the British, which led to the fall of Beausejour. He has been referred to as "The Judas of Acadia." Father Le Loutre's War During Father Le Loutre's War, Pichon entered the service of secretary for , latterly reputed to be a place-seeker, who had been appointed Governor at the Fortress of Louisbourg and Île-Royale (New France) in 1751. Jacques Prevost de laCroix dispatched Pichon to Chignecto, employing him as scrivener and subdelegate of the intendant of New France. Pichon arrived at Beauséjour on 3 Nov. 1753. For the next two years he acted as chief clerk responsible for stores. Pichon served as scribe to the commandants. Pichon also helped Father Jean-Louis Le Loutre with his writing, although Pichon's suspicions about Roman Catholicism were confirmed by the missionary and he came to despise the priest. British commander Captain George Scott invited Pichon to Fort Lawrence to offer him monetary gain for information on the French forces. For more than a year Pichonpractised espionage and subterfuge against the French under the assumed name of Tyrell. He sent Scott and his successor, Captain John Hussey, detailed accounts of French activities in Quebec and Acadia, plans of forts Beauséjour and Gaspereau, comments on the defences of Louisbourg, copies of official documents, censuses of Acadian refugees, reports on French missionaries and warnings of attacks by the Mi'kmaq and Acadians. Battle of Beausejour Pichon was instrumental in the British success in the Battle of Beausejour. Prior to the battle, Pichon supplied Scott with an outline of the steps necessary for their capture, which Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Moncktonlater used in the attack. Pichon discouraged the Acadians from joining the Mi'kmaq and retarded the strengthening of Beauséjour by advising that the British would not attack that year. During the siege Pichon urged Acadians and the French commandant, Louis Du Pont Duchambon de Vergor, to capitulate. Before the fall of Beauséjour Pichon had made arrangements with the British to continue his spying. As a prisoner in Halifax, he passed on to Governor Charles Lawrence, a French plan for seizing Halifax. Death and legacy Pichon retreated to London in 1757, where he entered on an affair with the French novelistJeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont, whose marriage had been annulled. Never a master of the English language, in 1769 he moved to Saint Helier, Jersey (a remnant of the Norman conquest where French was spoken) in which place he died on 22 November 1781. Thomas Pichon left behind a very large collection of documents. They are held by the Bibliothèque municipale de Vire, in Normandy, France. His 1760 book on Cape Breton Island -- Genuine letters and memoirs relating to the natural, civil, and commercial history of the islands of Cape Breton and Saint John : from the first settlement there,to the taking of Louisbourg by the English in 1758—published in both English and French shortly after the conquest of Louisbourg in 1758, was the first such history of that island. Pichon has been called repeatedly Le Judas de l'Acadie by a 20th-century French-Canadian priest-historian, and elsewhere his conduct has been uniformly deplored. See also Military history of Nova Scotia Military history of the Acadians Notes References Texts Thomas Pichon - Dictionary of Canadian Biography Thomas Pichon. Lettres et mémoires pour servir à l'histoire naturelle, civile et politique du Cap Breton, depuis son établissement jusqu'à la reprise de cette Islepar les Anglois en 1758, La Haye, Pierre Gosse / Londres, John Nourse, 1760, [New York, Johnson Reprint, 1966]. Genuine letters and memoirs relating to the natural, civil, and commercial history of the islands of Cape Breton and Saint John : from the first settlement there, to the taking of Louisbourg by the English in 1758 Geneviève Artigas-Menant, Lumières clandestines : les papiers de Thomas Pichon, Paris, Honoré Champion, 2001 ; Geneviève Artigas-Menant, « Un Français chez les Micmacs en 1752 : Thomas Pichon », Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, 1992 ; 305: pp. 1593–97 ; John Clarence,Webster ; Alice de Kessler Lusk Webster, Thomas Pichon, “the spy of Beausejour,” an account of his career in Europe and America, Sackville, N.B., Tribune Press, 1937. [L.-T. Jacau de Fiedmont], The siege of Beauséjour in 1755; a journal of the attack on Beauséjour . . ., ed. J. C. Webster, trans. Alice Webster (Saint John, N.B., 1936). J. C. Webster, Thomas Pichon, “the spy of Beausejour,” an account of his career in Europe and America . . . ([Sackville, N.B.], 1937). In fiction Thomas Pichon's life is the inspiration for a series of novels by Canadian historian and novelist ### Assistant:
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### User: Vasyl Ivehesh (; born 3 March 1961 in Vynohradiv, Zakarpattia Oblast, Ukrainian SSR) is a Ukrainian professional football coach and a former player. Ivehesh after retiring as footballer became a manager in some amateur clubs. Also was a manager in the Czech Republic. From July 2012 he is the manager in the FC Ternopil, and in 2014 was promoted with club to the Ukrainian First League. His two sons, Andriy Ivehesh (born 1985) and Viktor Ivehesh (born 1987), are football players. References External links Profile at Official FFU site (Ukr) Profile at Soccerway Category:1961 births Category:Living people Category:People from Vynohradiv ### Assistant:
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### User: Michel Particelli d'Émery, (6 June 1596 in Lyon – 25 May 1650 in Paris), was the son of a banker in Lyon, France, originally from an Italian family of Lucca, Italy, who was the counsellor of Cardinal-Duc de Richelieu. A portrait of him was taken by Théophile-Abraham Hamel and was changed by Théophile-Abraham Hamel in order to give a face to Samuel de Champlain. Champlain's new face According to Archive's Canada site, Michel Particelli d'Émery's face was used to represent Champlain for more than a century, and is still used by many historians to represent Champlain. ''This portrait of Champlain ### Assistant:
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### User: "Pange lingua gloriosi proelium certaminis" (Latin for 'Sing, tongue, the battle of glorious combat') is a 6th-century AD Latin hymn generally credited to the Christian poet St. Venantius Fortunatus, Bishop of Poitiers, celebrating the Passion of Christ. In the Catholic Church, the first five stanzas are used at Matins during Passiontide in the Divine Office, with the remaining stanzas (beginning with Lustra sex) sung at Lauds. Both parts are chanted during the Adoration of the Cross on Good Friday. This hymn later inspired Thomas Aquinas to write the hymn "Pange lingua gloriosi corporis mysterium" for the Feast of Corpus Christi. ### Assistant:
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### User: Watoga State Park is the largest of West Virginia's state parks, covering slightly over . It is located near Seebert in Pocahontas County, West Virginia. History The land that forms the nucleus of Watoga was originally acquired in January 1925, when the park was initially planned to be a state forest. In May 1934, a decision was made to instead develop the site as a state park. Much of the development on the site was done by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) and the park was first opened on July 1, 1937. New Deal Resources in Watoga State Park Historicwas held in 1938. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2010. Features 34 cabins 2 campgrounds with 88 total campsites (50 with electricity) Swimming pool fishing lake Hiking trails Brooks Memorial Arboretum Ann Bailey Lookout Tower Greenbrier River Trail See also List of West Virginia state parks State park References External links West Virginia CCC information Category:National Register of Historic Places in Pocahontas County, West Virginia Category:Historic districts in Pocahontas County, West Virginia Category:History of West Virginia Category:State parks of West Virginia Category:Protected areas of Pocahontas County, West Virginia Category:IUCN Category V Category:Protected areas established ### Assistant:
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### User: Dhumketu () is a 2016 Bangladeshi romantic drama film. The directed by Shafique Hasan and produced, screenplay, story and dialogue by Munir Reza under the banner of Munni Production. It feature Shakib Khan and Pori Moni played in lead roles and Tanha Tasnia, Ali Raj, Amit Hasan, Parveen Sultana Diti and Rebeka played supporting roles in the film. Cast Shakib Khan - Shaon Pori Moni - Rukh Moni Amit Hasan Tanha Tasnia Parveen Sultana Diti Ali Raj Rebeka Shiba Shanu Nazneen Akter Happy - Item Number, special appearance in the song of "Majhe Majhe Ashi" Promotion The first look teaser ### Assistant:
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### User: route from Jamaica to Philadelphia, claiming to have been under the orders of Great Britain. Perhaps not understanding his orders correctly, Nicholson had the crewmen imprisoned, placed a prize crew aboard Niger, and brought her into Norfolk, Virginia. Constitution sailed south again a week later to escort a merchant convoy, but her bowsprit was severely damaged in a gale; she returned to Boston for repairs. In the meantime, Secretary of the Navy Benjamin Stoddert determined that Niger had been operating under the orders of Great Britain as claimed, and the ship and her crew were released to continue their voyage. ### Assistant:
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### User: Eustachy Trepka (born around 1510, died October 17, 1558) was a Polish Lutheran theologian, pastor, and translator. Trepka's family had its origins near Sieradz and Wielkopolska. According to some sources his family was nicknamed Nękanda with a coat of arms Topór. Eustachy attended the Lubrański Academy in Poznań where he was mostly likely a student of the Lutheran theologian Christoph Hegendorff. He was also probably a tutor to the Górka family, who were his protectors. In the 1540s, together with his sponsor Andrzej Górka, Trepka traveled to Wittemberg and met Martin Luther and his collaborator Philipp Melanchthon. Subsequently, in 1546,he was invited by Duke Albert of Prussia to come to Królewiec (Königsberg, today Kaliningrad), the capital of Duchy of Prussia which at the time was a fief of Kingdom of Poland. There, Trepka was tasked by the Duke with carrying out translations of religious work from Latin into Polish, and he was employed in the print shop of Hans Daubmann. He also published with Daubmann's competitor, Aleksander Augezdecky. Works translated by Trepka include Mleko duchowne dla karmienia i wychowywania chrześcijańskich dziatek, 1556 ("Spiritual milk for nourishment and upbringing of Christian children"), by the Spanish theologian Juan de Valdés, and ### Assistant:
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### User: Gasketball is an action sports video game for the iPad by Mikengreg, an independent development team of Michael Boxleiter and Greg Wohlwend. Players flick basketballs through 2D physics puzzles into the hoop in single-player, local multiplayer, and asynchronous HORSE-style online multiplayer modes. The game is free-to-play with in-app purchases. Development began in mid 2011 following Mikengreg's successful Solipskier. They were able to live from the earnings for Gasketball two year development at their previous salary, which afforded them the stability to try new avenues and reject prototypes, though they worked 100-hour weeks. Towards the end of their development, they ranout of money and lived on the couches of friends. It was released on August 9, 2012, and the game did not reach their desired conversion rate at the time of launch. The game received "generally favorable" reviews, according to video game review score aggregator Metacritic. Pocket Gamer gave the game their silver award, and Tim Rogers of Kotaku named Gasketball his 2012 game of the year, calling it "the beginning of the hardcore social game genre". Gameplay Gasketball is a part-basketball, part-puzzler shot-matching sports video game where players flick basketballs through 2D physics puzzles (with flippers, portals, circular sawblades, and gravity switches) into a basketball hoop. Some puzzles include banking the basketball shot off multiple surfaces before making the basket. In the HORSE-style games, the player must match the exact setup of the opponent's shot, such as hitting the floor before entering the hoop. In the campaign, players get more points for making the shot without retrying, and have five attempts to make the hoop before moving to the next level shamefully. Players are awarded medals for the quality of their performance at the end of each chapter. Gold medals unlock new modes of play in the chapter.Every chapter has a unique theme, such as a construction site or outer space. The game has local two-player multiplayer with a divided iPad screen, and asynchronous online multiplayer where players construct levels for their opponents to complete. Players spin a wheel at the beginning of their turn to determine how many hazards they get to place via drag and drop. A few of the items are unlocked at first, and more are available with progress through the game or in-app purchases. Gasketball uses a colorful palette and features a cranky robot, who provides a tutorial and resets the ball.It was released as free-to-play with the tutorial unlocked, and four to five chapters available as additional paid downloads. Development Gasketball was developed and produced by Mikengreg, an Iowa-based two-man team: Michael Boxleiter and Greg Wohlwend. After releasing their first game, the sport-inspired Solipskier for iPhone and iPad, Boxleiter and Wohlwend lived off the profits for two years while working on Gasketball, paying themselves their same salaries from their Adobe Flash development days but having the security to try new ideas. Wohlwend made somewhat more income due to other collaborations, such as Puzzlejuice with Asher Vollmer, but shared his incomefor a million-person audience was "daunting" and Wohlwend questioned whether he could even recreate Solipskier success. The former game was designed in fits of creativity while the latter had no such moments, and took longer to produce. They discarded "everything" multiple times during their prototyping process with the understanding that anything less than what they wanted would lead to a subpar end result. Boxleiter had difficulty accepting praise towards the end of development, considering the weight of having to leave the industry if the many 100-hour weeks did not pan out in an accepted product. Mikengreg first announced the gameon March 1, 2012, and it was later released for iPad on August 9, 2012. Mikengreg decided to release the game as free-to-play for the base game with in-app purchases for the extended content. Wohlwend saw that a quarter of the top-grossing games on iOS used in-app purchases (albeit with predatory practices) and felt that they could follow the model with a more ethical strategy: free to play, but pay once to unlock forever. Wohlwend later remarked that, "So far, humanity is proving to us that we can't have it both ways." They were told by friends that the purchasereviews, according to video game review score aggregator Metacritic. Reviewers noted the game's character and creative vision. Pocket Gamer gave the game their silver award. Gasketball was Tim Rogers of Kotaku 2012 game of the year. Edge noted Mikengreg's deft ability with simple sound effects, citing their previous work with Solipskier. They praised the "sweet and personable" art design and the mix of "freewheeling creativity with arcade precision". Edge also praised the addition of the "decent" single-player campaign alongside the multiplayer. Pocket Gamer Harry Slater called the single-player "entertaining" but felt the asynchronous multiplayer was the highlight. TouchArcade Brad Nicholson ### Assistant:
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### User: Edith Corbet née Edenborough (28 December 1846 – 1920) was a Victorian landscape painter, having close associations with the Macchiaioli group (also known as the Tuscans or Etruscans), who, in a break with tradition, painted outdoors in order to capture natural light effects and favoured a panoramic format for their paintings. Life Edith Edenborough was born in Goulburn, New South Wales, Australia, the second daughter and fifth child of Henry Edenborough and Margaret Stedman. The Edenborough family came from Leicestershire, but relocated to London, where they became prosperous merchants in hosiery and silk. Henry Edenborough was a sea captain andmade several voyages to Australia between 1833 and 1837, deciding to settle there in 1840. He acquired a farm south of Goulburn known as 'Wollogorang' and built "a handsome two-storey brick and stone rubble building notable for its interesting French windows and its impressive outbuildings". This was the family home until 1854 when Henry and Margaret sold the property to John William Chisholm, and returned to England with their family of six children. Henry died in 1855 at Chesham Lodge in Surrey, aged 43. In 1861 the British census records show Edith, 14 years old, living with her widowed motherin Kensington. The 1871 census shows her living with her sister Annie, noted as head of household, at 5 Sheffield Gardens in Kensington, in which year she was exhibiting her work in London. She married the Victorian painter and illustrator Arthur Murch and moved to Rome, where she painted with Giovanni Costa, leader of the Macchiaioli group. In 1876 they both stayed in Venice. Olivia Rossetti Agresti wrote: "Costa had a very high opinion of this artist's gifts and used to remember with pleasure how on that occasion they used to go out together to paint from nature at Fusino"(Agresti, 1904). She frequently exhibited from 1880 to 1890 at the Grosvenor Gallery and the New Gallery. In 1891, after the death of her first husband, she married Matthew Ridley Corbet, one of the Macchiaioli group's leading members, after which she exhibited mainly at the Royal Academy, visiting Italy and living in London for the remainder of her life. Corbet exhibited her work at the Palace of Fine Arts at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. She died in Hampstead, north London, in 1920. References External links Category:1846 births Category:1920 deaths Category:Landscape artists Category:British women painters Category:19th-century Australian ### Assistant:
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### User: Lillian Cornell (June 2, 1916 Chicago, Illinois - May 25, 2015 Miami, Florida) was an American singer on old-time radio and an actress in films in the early 1940s. Early years Cornell was born Lillian Michuda June 2, 1916, in Chicago. Her name was changed to Lillian Cornell by studio executives when she began to act in films. Radio In 1936, Cornell (billed as Lillian Michuda) had her own radio program on WCFL in her hometown of Chicago, Illinois. Three years later, she had moved to NBC, where she had the self-titled Lillian Cornell program. She also performed on PleasureParade, Club Matinee, Roy Shield Revue, Jamboree and Sunday Dinner at Aunt Fanny's. Personal appearances In 1944, Cornell was the featured singer at the Blackstone Hotel in Chicago. A review published in the Chicago Tribune on November 26, 1944, described Cornell as "a dark haired beauty with a clear, impressive voice and an admirably gracious, easy manner." Film Cornell's venture into the film industry was initiated via radio. Radio Varieties magazine reported that because radio commitments kept Cornell in Chicago, "her managers arranged a cocktail party in the movie mecca, at which an audition of Lillian's voice was heard by ### Assistant:
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### User: Giovanni Corbeddu Salis (Oliena, 1844 - Riu Monte (Orgosolo), September 3, 1898) was a Sardinian outlaw. Nicknamed Il Re della macchia (The King of the bush) for the authority conferred on him by other criminals, he was a bandit who rampaged in Barbagia, in the center of Sardinia. Biography Corbeddu went into hiding in 1880 after being accused (perhaps falsely) of rustling. After a long series of crimes (among others the attack of the diligence Nuoro-Macomer), he took refuge in a cave in the Supramonte of Oliena (the cave is now named for him Corbeddu Cave). In that place, abandoningany criminal activity, he began to play the role of peacemaker and arbitrator in disputes and was reputedly possessed of wisdom. In 1894 Corbeddu collaborated with the authorities as a mediator for the release of two French timber merchants, Louis Paty and Regis Proll, who had been kidnapped in the territory between Seulo and Aritzo. He refused the monetary reward. Then, he was given ten days leave so that he could return to Oliena and walk round the village unhindered. In 1898 he was surrounded by the carabinieri on the mountains of Orgosolo together with another fugitive, Antonio Congiu, and ### Assistant:
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### User: Hoboken Terminal is a commuter-oriented intermodal passenger station in Hoboken, Hudson County, New Jersey, United States. One of the New York metropolitan area's major transportation hubs, it is served by nine NJ Transit (NJT) commuter rail lines, one Metro-North Railroad line, various NJT buses and private bus lines, the Hudson–Bergen Light Rail, the Port Authority Trans Hudson (PATH) rapid transit system, and NY Waterway-operated ferries. More than 50,000 people use the terminal daily, making it the ninth-busiest railroad station in North America and the sixth-busiest in the New York area. It is also the second-busiest railroad station in New Jersey,Hoboken. The coming of the railroads brought more and more travelers to the west bank of the Hudson River. Passengers traveling to Manhattan from most of the continental USA had to transfer to a ferry at the riverbank. Cuts and tunnels were constructed through Bergen Hill to rail–ferry terminals on the west bank of the river and the Upper New York Bay. The first of the Bergen Hill Tunnels under Jersey City Heights was opened in 1876 by the Morris and Essex Railroad, which was leased by the Delaware, Lackawanna, and Western Railroad (DL&W). The DL&W built the modern terminalhis 1996 single "Change the World". Services Commuter rail Hoboken Terminal is the terminus and namesake for NJ Transit's Hoboken Division, which consists mostly of the former (Erie) Lackawanna commuter routes in northern New Jersey. Main Line Bergen County Line Pascack Valley Line Morristown Line and Gladstone Branch of the Morris and Essex Lines Montclair-Boonton Line North Jersey Coast Line (limited service) Meadowlands Rail Line (event service) Port Jervis Line Raritan Valley Line (one inbound morning weekday train only) Access to other NJ Transit rail lines is available at Newark Penn Station (which also serves Amtrak), Secaucus Junction, or Newarkof the three Hudson-Bergen Light Rail routes and the Bayonne Flyer. Light rail platforms for which are located south of Track 18 and the terminal building, and provide a pathway connection to 14th Street along the Hudson River. Ferry Ferry service is operated by NY Waterway to Brookfield Place Terminal and Pier 11/Wall Street daily, as well as to the West Midtown Ferry Terminal on weekdays. The ferry concourse has five slips, numbered 1-5. Slips 1 and 5 are generally used for ferries heading to West Midtown, Slip 2 is generally used for Wall Street ferries, and Slip 3 isSam Sloan, president of the DL&W, moved during renovations faces the loading docks of the nearby post office. The plaza was named in honor of George Warrington, influential in the creation of NJ Transit, and as its executive director enabled the purchase and preservation of the station. In 2009, pedestrian access to the terminal from the south was made possible with the opening of a new segment of the Hudson River Waterfront Walkway. The closing of this gap along the promenade nearly completes the stretch from the Morris Canal to Weehawken Cove, with signage along the concourse at the railhead inside the terminal indicating that it is officially part of the walkway. Gallery Notes External links Metro-North station page for Hoboken PATH station details Hoboken Terminal Website Category:NJ Transit Rail Operations stations Category:Former Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad stations Category:Hudson-Bergen Light Rail stations Category:PATH stations in New Jersey Category:Buildings and structures in Hoboken, New Jersey Category:Railway stations in the United States opened in 1907 Category:Railway stations on the National Register of Historic Places in New Jersey Category:Ferry terminals in New Jersey NJ Transit Bus Operations Category:Transit hubs serving New Jersey Category:Railway stations in Hudson County, New Jersey Category:Clock towers ### Assistant:
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### User: NBA 07 is a basketball video game which was released on September 26, 2006. It is the second installment of the NBA series by Sony Computer Entertainment, and the first one for the PlayStation 3. It is the only game released at launch other than Marvel: Ultimate Alliance and Ridge Racer 7 that supports the 1080p high definition video output. Gameplay On all consoles, the game uses graphics from TNT's NBA coverage. Reception NBA 07 received "mixed or average reviews" according to Metacritic. In Japan, where the PlayStation 3 version was ported for release on January 11, 2007, Famitsu gave ### Assistant:
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### User: Richard LaGravenese (; born October 30, 1959) is an American screenwriter and film director, best known as the writer of The Fisher King. Personal life LaGravenese was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of a taxi driver. He is of Italian descent. He graduated from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts in 1980 with a bachelor of fine arts degree in acting. Career LaGravenese wrote The Fisher King on spec in the late 1980s. It was acquired by Stacey Sher, Lynda Obst, Debra Hill's production company and subsequently directed by Terry Gilliam. In New York City duringthe early 1980s, billed as "The Double R" comedy duo, in collaboration with playwright Richard O’Donnell, LaGravenese co-penned and consecutively performed in several Off-Off-Broadway productions including Spare Parts, ''Blood-brothers" at The 78th Street Theatre Lab, The Lion Theatre, and West Bank Cafe. LaGravanese wrote an adaptation for the famously on-and-off version of the musical Gypsy for Barbra Streisand. In 2015, he revealed that he'd spent several months working on the script with Streisand. "I had the best time with her. I can’t even tell you. It was like a fantasy come true. I did my first draft and went to ### Assistant:
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### User: Patrice is a given name meaning noble or patrician, related to the names Patrick and Patricia. In English, Patrice is often a feminine first name. In French it is used as a masculine first name. Popularity In the United States, the popularity of the name Patrice peaked in 1958 as the No. 212 most popular name. Its popularity has had ups and downs since then, but has fallen ever since 1987. The year 1995 was the most recent year the name Patrice appeared in the top 1000 names of babies born in the United States, at no. 941. People Men ### Assistant:
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### User: Ruchi Vira () is an Indian politician and a member of the 16th Legislative Assembly of Uttar Pradesh of India. She represents the Bijnor constituency of Uttar Pradesh and is a member of the Samajwadi Party. Early life and education Ruchi Vira was born in Bijnor district, Uttar Pradesh. She holds Bachelor of Arts degree from Mahatama Jyotiba Phule Rohilkhand University. Political career Ruchi Vira has been a MLA for one term. She represents the Bijnor constituency and is a member of the Samajwadi Party. Vira was elected as MLA during the by-election after the sitting MLA Kunwar Bhartendra Singhgot elected to 16th Lok Sabha. On 28 December 2015, Veera was suspended by the SP for anti-party activities. 4 others were expelled from the party. She lost her seat in the 2017 Uttar Pradesh Assembly election to Suchi Chaudhary of the Bharatiya Janata Party. Veera was joined Bahujan Samaj Party Candidate MP Aonla bareilly Veera Was loses Posts Held See also Bijnor Government of India Politics of India Samajwadi Party Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly References Category:1961 births Category:Living people Category:Samajwadi Party politicians Category:Uttar Pradesh MLAs 2012–2017 Category:People from Bijnor Category:Members of the Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly Category:Bahujan Samaj Party ### Assistant:
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### User: Battus may refer to: Animals Battus (butterfly), a genus of butterfly of the family Papilionidae Battus (trilobite), a synonym for several agnostid trilobites, now assigned to other genera Mythology Battus (mythology), a figure in Greek mythology who witnessed Hermes stealing Apollo's cattle. He was punished by being turned into stone. People Battus of Malta, king of the island of Malta, protector of Anna Perenna in Ovid's Fasti Battus I of Cyrene (died 600 BC), founder of the Ancient Greek colony of Cyrenaica and Cyrene Battus II of Cyrene (), third Greek king of Cyrenaica and Cyrene Battus III of Cyrene ### Assistant:
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### User: The Darby River, a perennial river of the West Gippsland catchment, is located in the South Gippsland region of the Australian state of Victoria. Location and features The Darby River rises below Mount Latrobe, part of the Latrobe Range, north of Wilsons Promontory and flows generally west by southwest before reaching its river mouth and emptying into Whisky Bay within Bass Strait in the South Gippsland Shire. The river descends over its combined course. The river is in relatively pristine condition, with the only human interference being a bridge at the estuary. Native fish species include common galaxias, pouched lamprey, ### Assistant:
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### User: William Bain Gill (1842–1919) was an American actor and playwright, most famous for authoring Broadway's first hit musical, Adonis Born in Newfoundland in 1842, Gill spent the early part of his career as an actor in Australia and India. Gill ultimately moved to the United States with his wife and children where he again took up acting. Over time, Gill transitioned to play writing. Gill's early plays were met with mixed critical reviews, until he penned Adonis. Gill's Adonis began playing on Broadway in 1884 and ran for an unprecedented 603 performances, becoming the longest running show in Broadway history ### Assistant:
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### User: Eucryphia cordifolia, the ulmo, is a species of tree in the family Cunoniaceae. It is found in Chile and Argentina. It is threatened by logging and habitat loss. The natural habitat is along the Andes Range from 38 to 43°S, and up to 700 meters (2300 ft) above sea level. It is a very elegant tree with a thick trunk and wide crown and can become over 12 m (40 ft) high. It blooms in February and March, depending on latitude and altitude. The fruit is a capsule about 1.5 cm (0.6 in) length. Cultivation and uses Its flowers containa highly appreciated aromatic nectar, harvested by introduced European bees and commercialized as "ulmo honey" (miel de Ulmo). The wood is light brown to brown, heavy, moderately firm, rather hard and quite resistant to decay. It is used locally for construction and very extensively as firewood. It also grows well in Scotland and has been planted in the North Pacific Coast of the United States. Chemical composition Eucryphin, a chromone rhamnoside, can be isolated from the bark of E. cordifolia. References González, M. 1998. Eucryphia cordifolia. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 21 August 2007. External links ### Assistant:
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### User: Michael Noone (born 16 October 1989) is an Irish rugby union player from County Wicklow, Ireland currently playing for Clontarf Noone is from Greystones, County Wicklow. He was educated at Presentation College, Bray where he played in the final of the Leinster Schools Junior Cup alongside fellow future professional, Jason Harris-Wright. Noone then moved to C.B.C. Monkstown where they reached the semi finals of the Senior Cup. Noone has captained Leinster at all under age levels. He also led a strong contingent of CBC players on an undefeated tour to South Africa before being selected to the Irish under 19squad. Following school Noone immediately began playing 1st XV club rugby at Seapoint, where he first played the game. In 2010 he moved to Blackrock College. Noone also represented the Ireland national under-20 rugby union team in the 2009/2010 season. In 2011 Michael Noone played for Doncaster Knights in the RFU Championship. He signed for Leicester in September 2012. In 2014 Noone signed for Jersey. He has now played for Clontarf for 3 years. Winning the All Ireland title in his first year. Noone, now in his third year is currently the capitan. Michael Noone is in a small selection ### Assistant:
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### User: Martin "Mark" Lagdaméo López (born August 12, 1972) is the chairman of ABS-CBN Corporation, the largest entertainment and media conglomerate in the Philippines, with investments primarily in television, radio, cable telecommunications, and film production. Education López completed INSEAD’s general management program in 2017, received his Executive Masters in Business Administration degree from the Asian Institute of Management in 2003, and earned his bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from Menlo College, California in 1994. Career Before joining ABS-CBN, López was the vice president and chief information officer of Manila Electric Company (MERALCO). He also served as president of e-Meralco Ventures Inc ### Assistant:
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### User: The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, better known as A&P, was an American chain of grocery stores that operated from 1859 to 2015. From 1915 through 1975, A&P was the largest grocery retailer in the United States (and until 1965, the largest U.S. retailer of any kind). A&P was considered an American icon that, according to The Wall Street Journal, "was as well known as McDonald's or Google is today", and was "the Walmart before Walmart". At its peak in the 1940s, A&P captured 10% of total US grocery spending. Known for innovation, A&P and the supermarkets that followedits lead significantly improved nutritional habits by making available a vast assortment of food products at much lower costs. Until 1982, A&P also was a large food manufacturer. In his 1952 book, American Capitalism, John Kenneth Galbraith cited A&P's manufacturing strategy as a classic example of countervailing power that was a welcome alternative to state price controls. Founded in 1859 by George Gilman as "Gilman & Company", within a few years the firm opened a small chain of retail tea and coffee stores in New York City, and operated a national mail order business. The firm grew to 70 storesIn 2007, A&P purchased Pathmark, one of its biggest rivals, and A&P again became the largest supermarket operator in the New York City area. At the same time, Tengelmann reduced its shares to 38.5%, while the private equity firm Yucaipa, as major shareholder of Pathmark, acquired 27.5% of A&P's shares. Highly leveraged after the Pathmark acquisition, A&P experienced financial difficulties because of the Great Recession and filed for Chapter 11 protection in 2010, in the United States Bankruptcy Court in White Plains, New York. By the time of its filing, A&P had declined from the nation's largest grocery retailer toAugust 2016. History 1859–1878: Gilman era The forerunner of A&P was founded in the 1850s as Gilman & Company by George Gilman (1826–1901) to continue his father's leather tanning business; in 1858 the firm's address was 98 Gold Street in Manhattan. Gilman's father died in 1859, leaving the son wealthy. That year, Gilman & Company entered the tea and coffee business from that storefront. One source speculates that Gilman decided to enter a more respectable business in light of his wealth. In May 1861, Gilman turned over the tanning business to his brother Winthrop; George moved his tea business tofirm had sales of $5 million from 198 stores as well as its mail order and wagon route operations. However, other grocery chains were expanding more rapidly and blanketing their respective areas while the tea company's stores were spread over a much larger area. A&P quickly found itself at a disadvantage. In 1901, George Gilman died without a will, starting a legal battle among his numerous heirs. The senior Hartford stepped into the battle by asserting that, in 1878, Gilman gave him half of the company in an unwritten partnership agreement. Evidence provided to the court established that Hartford receivedmanufacturer can establish retail prices. As a result, A&P and other large chains significantly expanded manufacturing private brands. Hartford Sr. died in 1917; control of the company passed into a trust with his sons George, Edward, and John as trustees in complete control. Adding stores that included grocery, meat, produce, and dairy After World War I, A&P rapidly expanded; in 1925 it operated 13,961 stores. The newer combination stores included space for meats, produce, and dairy, as well as traditional grocery items. Sales reached $400 million and profit was $10 million. However, the Hartford brothers were concerned that gross marginsretail company had ever achieved these results. A&P was twice as large as the next largest retailer, Sears, and four times that of grocer Kroger. Unlike most of its competitors, A&P was in excellent position to weather the Great Depression. The Hartfords built their chain without borrowing; their low-price format resulted in even higher sales. From 1929 through 1932, A&P reported a record $110 million in after-tax profits with each Hartford child earning over $5 million yearly in dividends and equity. A&P's success caused a backlash that threatened to destroy it. Thousands of mom-and-pop grocery stores could not match A&P'sprices. While small operators had little political clout, they were supplied by thousands of wholesale distributors which had considerable political influence. Anti-chain store movements gained traction in the 1920s, but became significantly stronger during the Depression. In 1935, Texas Congressman Wright Patman introduced legislation that would have levied a federal tax on chain stores. If adopted, this legislation likely would have ended A&P. While this legislation did not move in Congress, in 1936 Patman sponsored the Robinson–Patman Act that outlawed charging different prices to similar customers; this law passed. Patman then reintroduced his first bill. A&P retained a lobbyist andthe anti-trust division asked the court to order the spin-off of A&P's manufacturing operations and the break-up of A&P's retail operations into seven independent companies. Thousands of letters poured into the Justice Department supporting A&P; the Hartford brothers gave extensive interviews with Time which put them on the magazine's November 13, 1950 cover. Time wrote that, next to General Motors, A&P sold more goods than any other retailer in the world. John was quoted as saying, "I don't know any grocer who wants to stay small ... I don't see how any businessman can limit his growth and stay healthy."A&P also remained opposed to debt financing; the only source of capital was the depreciation account. While competitors invested in larger, modern supermarkets, A&P was slow to update its retail capital plant. By 1970, A&P stores were considerably smaller and mostly older than those of its competitors. A&P placed too much emphasis on private label products. In 1951, the Supreme Court ruled that manufacturers could not establish minimum prices unless the retailer agreed to the arrangement. This decision launched a revolution in discount retailing fueled by the rapid increase in television advertising that raised demand for national brands. Contrary torejected the offer, although some stockholders thought that the offer was attractive considering A&P's continuing difficulties. A&P exited California and Washington State in 1971 and 1974, respectively, making Missouri its westernmost reach. In 1974, the corporation also left its long-time headquarters in the Graybar Building, moving to Montvale, New Jersey. 1975–2001: Scott/Wood era In February 1975, A&P considered a plan by Booz Allen Hamilton to close 36% of its 3,468 stores. Kane agreed to resign and was replaced by Jonathan Scott, the 44-year-old president of Albertsons. Under Scott, A&P closed 1,500 stores in three years, reducing to 1,978 units. Scottdue to economic conditions caused by high inflation. With the share price down to $7, the John A. Hartford Foundation finally came to the conclusion that it could no longer wait for a turnaround. Erivan Haub, owner of the German Tengelmann Group, expressed interest. Born in 1930, Haub studied retailing in the U.S. after World War II and built his family's grocery business into a 2,000-store chain with annual sales of the equivalent of $2 billion. Although still having a home in Germany, his children were born in the United States. Haub agreed to pay $7.375 per share for 42%and more general merchandise. A&P continued to suffer in the South and abandoned most of the region by pulling out of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, the Carolinas, Tennessee, and Virginia; most of these stores were sold to Kroger. As a result, A&P was reduced to four regions: the Northeast, the Midwest (Michigan and Wisconsin), New Orleans, and Ontario. To reinforce the New Orleans division, A&P purchased six Schwegmann supermarkets; however, A&P was now reduced to 600 stores. Christian W.E. Haub, the youngest son of Erivan, became co-CEO in 1994 and CEO in 1997 when Wood retired from that post. Inhistory, A&P operated its stores under that name. That changed during the Scott and Wood eras when A&P created chains, or used the original names of acquired chains. The following were A&P's significant retail operations under a different name: Family Mart: Started in 1977, this chain of large grocery stores/pharmacies was based on similar units built by Skaggs-Albertson's when A&P Chairman Scott worked for the latter. Initially successful, within 10 years Family Mart opened 28 units in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and the Carolinas. The 18 Family Marts in Florida were sold in 1987 and the remaining Family Marts were closedA&P began liquidation. The brand has been sold to Foodtown, and in April 2019, a revived Pathmark (owned by Allegiance Retail Services) is scheduled to open in the East Flatbush section of Brooklyn. Private brands When A&P was founded, there were no branded food products, and retailers sold food commodities in bulk. In 1870, the company became among the first to sell a branded pre-packaged food product, introducing "Thea-Necter" brand tea. In 1885, the name "A&P" was introduced on baking powder containers. Also in the 1880s, the company adopted the name "Eight-O'Clock" for its coffee. When A&P moved its headquartersto Jersey City, New Jersey in 1907, it included a bakery and coffee-roasting operation. A&P's evolution into one of the country's largest food manufacturers was the result of the 1915 court decision in the Cream of Wheat litigation that upheld the right of a manufacturer to set retail prices. To keep prices down, A&P put emphasis on private label goods. By 1962, A&P operated 67 plants before consolidating many of them into the 1.5 million-square foot Horseheads facility, which was the largest food manufacturing plant in the world under one roof. As late as 1977, private label represented 25% ofone of the companies examined against its rival Kroger. See also List of supermarket chains in the United States References Citations Bibliography Further reading External links A&P Corporate Website Time magazine cover with John and George Hartford 1970s photo of an A&P in Towson, MD A&P page on Groceteria, which includes a short history of Futurestore and a photo gallery of former A&Ps and several Futurestores Category:Companies based in Bergen County, New Jersey Category:Companies based in Manhattan Category:Companies formerly listed on the New York Stock Exchange Category:Retail companies established in 1859 Category:Retail companies disestablished in 2015 Category:Companies that filed for ### Assistant:
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### User: The 2010 German Figure Skating Championships () was a national competition in the 2009–10 figure skating season. Skaters competed in the disciplines of men's singles, ladies singles, pair skating, and ice dancing for the title of national champion of Germany. The results of the national championships were among the criteria used to choose the German teams to the 2010 World Figure Skating Championships and the 2010 European Figure Skating Championships. Skaters competed on the senior, junior, and novice levels. The 2009–10 competition took place in the SAP Arena in Mannheim, Germany between 17–20 December 2009. Medalists Senior Junior Novice Senior-level ### Assistant:
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### User: Millan Baçi (born 3 November 1955, in Albania) ia a former Albanian football player. Club career He spent his entire career with 17 Nëntori Tirana. His main position was wing back, with the right wing as his favourite. International career Baçi made his debut for Albania in a November 1976 friendly match against Algeria and has earned a total of 7 caps, scoring 1 goal. He has represented his country in 5 FIFA World Cup qualification matches. His final international was an October 1981 World Cup qualification match against Bulgaria. Retirement Now, he works in the youth department of the ### Assistant:
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### User: First opened in 1977, the crescent-shaped Mount Lofty Botanic Garden is situated on 97 hectares on the eastern slopes of Mount Lofty in the Adelaide Hills east of Adelaide in South Australia. The cooler, wetter location suits plants from temperate climates which are difficult to grow on the Adelaide Plains. Amongst the native Australian flora there are tree ferns, as well as exotic cultivated plants from cool climates including Rhododendron and Magnolia and the National Species Rose Collection. The Mount Lofty Botanic Garden, together with the Adelaide and Wittunga Botanic Gardens, is administered by the Botanic Gardens of South Australia,a State Government statutory authority. In 1980, it was listed on the now-defunct Register of the National Estate. Gallery See also List of Adelaide parks and gardens References Further reading Aitken, Richard (2006). Seeds of change : an illustrated history of Adelaide Botanic Garden. Adelaide : Board of the Botanic Gardens and State Herbarium. External links Mt Lofty Botanic Garden Friends of the Botanic Gardens of Adelaide Retrieved 12 September 2012 Botanic Gardens of South Australia Retrieved 29 June 2017. Category:Parks in Adelaide Category:Tourist attractions in Adelaide Category:Botanical gardens in Australia Category:1977 establishments in Australia Category:Gardens in South Australia Category:South ### Assistant:
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### User: Harry William Osborne Kinnard II (May 7, 1915 – January 5, 2009) was an American general officer who, during the Vietnam War, pioneered the airmobile concept of sending troops into battle using helicopters. Kinnard retired from the military as a Lieutenant General. Kinnard grew up in Dallas, Texas. After graduating from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1939, he entered military service. Military service On December 7, 1941, Kinnard was stationed at Pearl Harbor, and manned a machine gun to defend the base on the morning of the Japanese attack. He parachuted into France in the earlyshort on supplies and suffering the effects of the bitter cold weather, two German officers approached the American lines with a demand that the U.S. forces surrender or face destruction. Brigadier General Anthony McAuliffe was serving as acting division commander and was handed the German demand. Kinnard, then a lieutenant colonel serving as the division's operations officer, recounted later that McAuliffe had laughed and said "Us surrender? Aw, nuts." After considering the German demand, McAuliffe said he didn't know what to say in response, to which Kinnard replied, "That first remark of yours would be hard to beat." As recountedby The New York Times in his 2009 obituary, "McAuliffe said, 'What do you mean?' I answered, 'Sir, you said, 'Nuts.' All members of the staff enthusiastically agreed. McAuliffe then wrote down: 'To the German Commander, Nuts! The American Commander.'" McAuliffe's response was passed on to the two German officers who didn't understand its meaning. Colonel Joseph Harper, commanding the 327th Glider Infantry Regiment, who had delivered the message, explained to the Germans, "If you don’t know what 'nuts' means, in plain English it is the same as 'go to hell.'" McAuliffe asked Kinnard to compose a message that hegallant feat of arms, are truly making for ourselves a Merry Christmas.Associated Press. "Article 7 -- No Title", The New York Times, December 29, 1944. Accessed January 11, 2009. With improving weather allowing air support to assist the troops, the American forces were able to hold Bastogne, with "nuts" coming to symbolize the American determination to overcome against the odds. After the war, William Wellman's film "Battleground", based on the experiences of the 101st, was filmed and released in 1950 with a script written by a veteran of the battle, Robert Pirosh, with Lieutenant Colonel H.W.O. Kinnard listed as TechnicalAdvisor. Twenty years after the Battle of the Bulge, Kinnard drew criticism from members of the 101st Airborne Division for his comments in a newspaper interview where he said "We never felt we would be overrun. We were beating back everything they threw at us. We had the houses, and we were warm. They were outside the town, in the snow and cold". Many members of Easy Company of the 506th Parachute Infantry sent military historian Stephen Ambrose, the author of Band of Brothers, the article containing the comments with their own opinion, the mildest comment by an E Companymember being "What battle was he in?". Airmobile Building on his paratroop service, Kinnard helped develop the airmobile concept, by which troops would be flown into battle by helicopter. He was able to develop this approach while commanding the 11th Air Assault Division (Test) at Fort Benning in 1963. This unit evolved into the First Cavalry Division (Airmobile). Kinnard commanded an operation in October 1965, in which 5,000 troops took control of the Suai Ca Valley, which placed the crop-rich valley under South Vietnamese control. Associated Press reporter Bob Poos who rode with 1st Squadron, 9th Cavalry Regiment of the1st Air Cavalry Division, for two days of this operation described the innovative use of the "Sky Cavalry", combining light infantry on armed helicopters, as constituting "the first cavalry charge of modern warfare". General Kinnard was in command in November 1965 during the unit's first major operation in the Pleiku Campaign. During this action, the division conducted 35 days of continuous airmobile operations. The opening battle, the Battle of Ia Drang, which resulted in heavy North Vietnamese casualties at the cost of 300 American deaths, was described in the book We Were Soldiers Once… And Young, which was also thebasis of the subsequent Mel Gibson film We Were Soldiers. The unit also earned the first Presidential Unit Citation (US) presented to a division during the Vietnam War. Kinnard retired in 1969 from the armed forces. Honours and awards On November 14, 1946 by Royal Decree, Kinnard was knighted by Queen Wilhelmina, with the rank of Knight 4th class of the Military William Order. The Order is the highest and oldest honour of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, which is bestowed for "performing excellent acts of Bravery, Leadership and Loyalty in battle". It is an extremely prestigious award, comparable toBritish Victoria Cross, the French Légion d’honneur or the American Medal of Honour ,but far less frequently rewarded. Kinnard in Museums World War II memorabilia from Kinnard can be seen in Belgium where he fought during the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, at December 44 Museum, La Gleize. Kinnard Mission Training Center, a digital systems training complex at Fort Campbell, Kentucky is named for him. His awards, decorations and several historical items of interest relating to him are on display in its lobby. Personal Kinnard died at age 93 on January 5, 2009, in Arlington, Virginia. He wassurvived by his wife, Libby; two sons, three daughters, a stepson, 2 stepdaughters, 16 grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren. References External links Category:1915 births Category:2009 deaths Category:American army personnel of World War II Category:Officers of the Order of the Crown (Belgium) Category:Knights Fourth Class of the Military Order of William Category:People from Dallas Category:Recipients of the Distinguished Service Cross (United States) Category:United States Army generals Category:United States Military Academy alumni Category:Recipients of the Silver Star Category:Recipients of the Distinguished Service Medal (US Army) Category:Recipients of the Legion of Merit Category:Operation Overlord people Category:Military personnel from Texas Category:American army personnel of the ### Assistant:
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### User: Raymond V. Haysbert Sr. (January 19, 1920 – May 24, 2010) was a prominent African-American business executive and civil rights leader during the second half of the 20th century in Baltimore, Maryland. During World War II, he served in Africa and Italy with the renowned Tuskegee Airmen. Haysbert joined Baltimore-based Parks Sausage Company in 1952, becoming CEO as it grew into one of the largest black-owned U.S. businesses. In later years, he was active in politics and the American civil rights movement. Haysbert was chairman of the Greater Baltimore Urban League when he died at age 90 in 2010. Earlylife Haysbert was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1920 into a poor family. After working for a coal company, he earned a degree in accounting at Wilberforce University. Following the outbreak of World War II, Haysbert joined the acclaimed Tuskegee Airmen, the first all-black fighter squadron, in Italy and Africa. After the war, he taught at Wilberforce University. Business leader In 1952, Haysbert moved from Wilberforce to Baltimore when he was recruited by Henry G. Parks Jr., founder of the sausage company there bearing his name, to serve as accountant and office manager. Haysbert was subsequently promoted to general manager,beginning in the early 1960s, Haysbert worked to elect black politicians, including Harry Cole as Maryland's first African-American state senator. In 1983, he started the President’s Roundtable for black business leaders to meet together. Haysbert was chairman of the board of directors of the Greater Baltimore Urban League, the local affiliate of the National Urban League, until his death in 2010, helping to restore the venerable civil rights group's financial viability. Of his many organizational memberships, Haysbert was also a member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, having been initiated at Wilberforce University (Xi chapter) on April 13, 1950 and wasa member of Baltimore's Delta Lambda chapter until his death. He told a newspaper interviewer in 1992 that, although he "started in the ghetto, black, poor, on welfare ... in America, it's still possible for him to succeed, without a government subsidy." He also was a leader in the field of education, helping to develop the Leadership Development Program for Minority Managers at Johns Hopkins University in the 1990s. The program provides an academic business environment for mid-level black professionals, bringing together the university's resources and Baltimore's business community. The Raymond V. Haysbert Research Center at Coppin State University, anapplied research facility, was instituted and named in his honor in 2004. Death When Haysbert died of heart failure in Baltimore on May 24, 2010, he was called an "elder statesman of Maryland's African-American business community" by the Baltimore Sun and lauded as a "courageous American hero" by the president of the Baltimore City Council. Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said Haysbert, "used his success and status in the community to help dozens if not hundreds of other minority-owned businesses start and thrive in Baltimore". He was survived by his wife, Carol, and four children. References Category:1920 births Category:2010 deaths Category:American chief ### Assistant:
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### User: "Drinkin' Bone" is a song written by Casey Beathard and Kerry Kurt Phillips, and recorded by American country music artist Tracy Byrd. It was released in August 2003 as the second single from his album The Truth About Men. It peaked at No. 7 on the United States Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart, and is his last Top 10 hit to date. It also peaked at No. 60 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100. Critical reception Chuck Taylor, of Billboard magazine reviewed the song favorably by calling it "an easy sing-along" and saying that Byrd "packs a lot ### Assistant:
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### User: Alatina is a genus of box jellyfish within class Cubozoa. It is the largest of the three known genera in the family Alatinidae, and the only one which is not monotypic. It contains the following ten species: Alatina alata (Reunaud, 1830) Alatina grandis (Agassiz & Mayer, 1902) Alatina Grandis is the largest known jellyfish in this genus, and is highly rare with a bell size of approximately 180mm and 110mm in height and width respectively. Alatina madraspatana (Menon, 1930) Alatina morandinii (Straehler-Pohl & Jarms, 2011) Alatina moseri (Mayer, 1906) Alatina pyramis (Haeckel, 1880) Alatina rainensis Gershwin, 2005 Alatina tetraptera (Haeckel, ### Assistant:
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### User: Edward Chun is a singer-songwriter and music producer who is best known for writing and performing "Give My Love," the title song to the SBS mini-series, Save the Last Dance for Me. Other works include the musical The After Midnight Club (The Club) and the SBS mini-series Let’s Go to the Beach. Chun is currently hosting a music program on Arirang Radio called Wake Up To Arirang. Discography Save the Last Dance for Me Music Producer: Edward Chun Partial track list: "Give My Love" (written and performed by Edward Chun) "Our Love Will Always Last" (written and performed by EdwardChun) "Stay With Me" (written by Danny Ahn, performed by Lyn) "See Your Heart" (music by Lee Gyuh Rah, lyrics by Kim Joon Sun, performed by Ji-hye) "My Dream" (music by Jo Gyu Mahn, lyrics by Eugene, performed by Eugene) "25 Million" (written and performed by Edward Chun) "그녀가 아니면 안돼는거죠" (music by Lee Gyuh Rah, lyrics by Myung In Hee, performed by Ji-hye) "Waiting For Your Love" (music by Edward Chun and Kim Joon Sun, lyrics by Kim Joon Sun, performed by Soul System) "추억 (Memory)" (music by Edward Chun) "Everything (Andrew's Song)" (written and performed by Edward Chun)"Destiny" (music by Edward Chun) Let’s Go to the Beach Music Producer: Edward Chun Partial Track list: "Summer Love" (written and performed by Edward Chun) "Keep You In My Heart" (music by Edward Chun, lyrics by Kim Joon Sun, performed by Big Mama King) "Ocean Blue" (music by Edward Chun, lyrics by Kim Joon Sun, performed by Shin Hyesung and Lee Minwoo) "오직 너에게만 (Your Love Is All I Need)" (music by Edward Chun, lyrics by Kim Seo Joon, performed by Seo Joon ft. Sa Kang) "하늘 (영원한 사랑)" music by Hwang Sang Je, lyrics by Lee Minwoo, performed byShin Hyesung and Tsuyoshi Kusanagi (草彅 剛)) "꿈" (music by Edward Chun, lyrics by Edward Chun, Kim Joon Sun and Eddie (SoRi), performed by SoRi) "Happy Together" (music and lyrics by Kim Joon Sun, performed by A*Sia) "1961" (written and performed by Edward Chun) "Rock And Roll Savior" (music by Edward Chun, lyrics by Edward Chun and Kim Seo Joon, performed by Dragon) "Romance" (music by Edward Chun) "Feel My Love (그대 사랑의 감사해요)" (music by Lee Gyuh Rah, lyrics by Song Seung Hwa, Lee Yoon Jung and Lee Gyuh Rah, performed by Shin Eun Jin) "Your Love Is All ### Assistant:
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### User: Elizabeth Weaver (March 28, 1941 – April 21, 2015) was a justice of the Michigan Supreme Court from 1995 to 2010 and served as Chief Justice from 1999 to 2001. Weaver was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree in 1962 from H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College. In 1965, she received her Juris Doctorate from Tulane University Law School and was admitted to the Louisiana bar. While pursuing her law degree, she was an editor of the Tulane Law Review. After graduating from Tulane, she began her practice working with the Chevron Corporation and aprivate law firm in New Orleans. She eventually relocated to Michigan, where she taught first grade and served as the dean of girls at The Leelanau School in Glen Arbor. In 1973, Weaver was admitted to the Michigan bar. In 1974, she was elected as Leelanau County's probate court judge. In 1987, she was elected to the Michigan Court of Appeals and was re-elected in 1992. She is the author (with David B. Schock, Ph.D.) of Judicial Deceit: Tyranny and Unnecessary Secrecy at the Michigan Supreme Court, a telling of the history of the court during her tenure. Her contentionof Judicial Conduct Even after she left the court she was a staunch critic of behavior of the other justices in revealing racist comments made but Robert Preston Young, Jr., at the time of his re-election in 2010, the court made an ill-fated attempt to censure her. They sent her a letter telling her that she was censured without apparently remembering that the Michigan Supreme Court can censure ONLY on the recommendation of the state Judicial Tenure Commission (per the State Constitution of Michigan of 1963, Article VI, Section 30), something that had not happened. In publishing her book in ### Assistant:
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### User: Espen Dietrichson (born 17 September 1976 in Stavanger, Norway) is a Norwegian artist. He lives and works in Oslo, Norway. Dietrichson was educated at Oslo National Academy of the Arts (2000–2004). He is working mainly within the field of sculpture. Exhibitions Espen Dietrichson has had several solo exhibitions: Gallery Van Bau, Vestfossen (2006), Kunstnerforbundet, Oslo (2007), Bomuldsfabriken Kunsthall, Arendal, (2007), Unge Kunstneres Samfunn, Oslo (2008), Galleri Trafo, Asker (2009), Galerie Susan Nielsen, Paris (2010) References Sketches for a Mechanical Sunrise, Editor: Eivind Slettemeås, texts by Eivind Slettemeås, Helga-Marie Nordby and Power Ekroth, Torpedo Press (2009) External links Espen Dietrichson først ### Assistant:
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### User: Nuri Kino, (born February 25, 1965, Mardin Province, Turkey), is a Swedish-Assyrian/Syriac award-winning investigative journalist, documentary filmmaker, author and human rights expert. He is the author of several nonfiction books, and hundreds of stories and reports from the Middle East, western and eastern Europe as well as Africa over the past two decades. He has won awards for his reporting on human-rights issues, and is the founder of human rights organization A Demand For Action (ADFA) which advocates for persecuted minorities in Iraq, Syria,Turkey and elsewhere in the Middle East. __TOC__ Life and career Nuri Kino is the eldest offour children of an Assyrian/Syriac family that originates from the village of Kfar-Shomac, south of the City of Midyat, in a region known by Assyrians/Syriacs as Tur Abdin. His parents moved to Germany as guest workers when he was four; in 1974, when he was eight, they visited his grandparents in Sweden and decided to stay because there were more jobs. He was kidnapped twice as a child. In 1985 he became one of Sweden's first male medical recorders. He has also run a restaurant; in 1994 he was chosen as Stockholm's most popular restaurant owner. In 1998, he graduatedfrom the Poppius School of Journalism in Stockholm. The following year he was in Istanbul when the Marmara earthquake occurred. He was interviewed by international news agencies and wrote a widely cited report on the collapse of buildings that had been known to be weak; this was the real start of his career as a journalist. He has since worked as a freelance investigative journalist for Dagens Nyheter,Expressen, Aftonbladet and Metro. In 2002 he started freelancing for the Swedish radio station Sveriges Radio. His reporting has been focused on human rights, immigration and refugee issues, and he has worked forthe media abroad in countries such as Turkey, Denmark, Norway, Finland, the U.S., and the Netherlands (reporting for the BBC and on the Dutch program Dit is de Dag). Nuri Kino was the first journalist to interview Irena Sendler, a Polish nurse who risked her life to smuggle 2,500 Jewish children out of the ghettos of Warsaw during World War II. The article was published in the Swedish daily newspaper Dagens Nyheter on February 8, 2003. Shortly after that it was translated into several other languages and among others published in Wprost, the largest weekly magazine in Poland. The followingJoint Subcommittee Hearing on Religious Minorities in Syria: Caught in the Middle. He was selected to host the Sommar radio program on P1 on June 18, 2004. Nuri Kino also does aid work, sometimes with the Youth Initiative of the Syriac Orthodox Church. In 2014 he founded A Demand For Action (ADFA), an organization that provides relief and advocates for minorities in the Middle East, particularly Christians in Iraq and Syria. From this position, in his home town of Södertälje, Sweden, he has developed a global network of human rights experts and activists who serve as a deep resource onBeverly Hills Film Festival. With Jenny Nordberg he made the documentary The High Price of Ransom for Dan Rather Reports in 2008. Books In 2007, Kino published By God - Sex dagar i Amman (By God – Six Days in Amman), a report on the consequences of the Iraqi war. In 2010 he wrote Still Targeted: Continued Persecution of Iraq's Minorities, a report for Minority Rights Group International. In 2011, he published Den svenske Gudfadern (The Swedish Godfather), about Milan Ševo, a convicted felon born in Serbia but brought up in Sweden, who claimed that close friends of King CarlXVI Gustaf had given him the task of destroying evidence that linked them and the king to porn clubs. The book was presented as a work of journalism illuminating the attraction that crime has for young people. Journalist Hanne Kjöller of Dagens Nyheter considered the book lacking in both objectivity and criticism of the sources, calling it a "portrait of an idol". However, the Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet reported that Ševo confirmed the information in the book was correct. Writing in Göteborgs-Posten, Mattias Hagberg thought the controversy detracted from Kino's message. According to the book's publisher, Kino's computer was hacked andthreats were made to stop a planned TV film. The book has sold well and is cited by Swedish criminologists. Kino has also published novels. In 2008 with Jenny Nordberg he published Välgörarna - Den motvillige journalisten (Benefactors - The Reluctant Journalist), a suspense novel whose main character he has said is based on himself; it has been translated into Finnish, German, and Norwegian. In 2010, he and David Kushner published Gränsen är dragen, a novel set against the backdrop of the war in Iraq and the situation of Iraqi Christians; it was published in the U.S. in 2013 asThe Line in the Sand. Awards 2000 Awarded Guldspaden with Wolfgang Hansson for work at Aftonbladet on human trafficking. 2002 Awarded Guldspaden for journalism for work on refugee children. 2003 Awarded Guldspaden for a joint effort with Jenny Nordberg and Margita Boström for a Swedish Radio report titled Tolkar och spioner (interpreters and spies). 2004 Ikaros Prize for Best Public Service Radio program by Swedish Radio Awarded Den gyllene haldan ("The Golden Halda") (also known as Det lite större journalistpriset), for journalist students at Mitt University in Sundsvall, Sweden 2006 Suryoyo (Assyrian) of the Year by Hujådå. Journalist of theYear by Qenneshrin and Suroyo TV, a Syriac newspaper and satellite television service. Blatte de Luxe Award for Journalism Assyrian of the Year by Zinda Magazine Assyrian of the Year by the Assyrian Youth Federation of Sweden Golden Palm Award of the Beverly Hills Film Festival, for Assyriska. 2007 Blatte de Luxe Award for Journalism: first person to win the award two years in a row. 2008 Ikaros Prize for Best Public Service Radio program by Swedish Radio 2009 One of a hundred Swedish inspiring people, awarded by Leva Magazine 2010 Journalist Prize of the European Parliament for radio, with ### Assistant:
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### User: Louis Dufort (born July 29, 1970) is a Canadian composer of electroacoustic music. He was born and lives in Montréal, Canada. Dufort has a bachelor's degree in electroacoustic music composition from the Université de Montréal as well as a master's degree from the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal, where he received a first prize with distinction. But university studies have not altered his iconoclasm and originality: his passion for electronic music and his love of cinema, painting and contemporary dance lead him to incorporate elements in his composition that are drawn from beyond music. He currently divides hiswas a finalist at the Concours international Noroit-Léonce Petitot in Arras, France. Recordings Matériaux Composés (empreintes DIGITALes, IMED 0893, 2008) Montreal Sound Matter (Pogus, 21041-2 CD, 2006) L'orchestre de granulation with L'Orchestre de granulation (No Type (web), NT 086, 2006) Connexion (empreintes DIGITALes, IMED 0051, 2000) List of works Accident (2001), soprano saxophone, and processing L'archange (2005), oper'installation: 3 voices, 1 actor, and tape Body_Remix (2005) Cantique #1 (2003), videomusic Cantique #2 (2003), videomusic Les cerisiers (2003) Chorale (2003) Concept 2018957 (1995) Consomption (1999), soprano, and tape Le cri du monde (2000) Décap (2000) Déflagration (2002) Ephem (2004) La femme ### Assistant:
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