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### User: Doubletime is a documentary film about the sport of modern-day jump roping and Double Dutch. The film follows two disparate teams—one suburban white and one inner-city black—as they train to compete against each other for the very first time. Plot In the last 30 years jump roping has moved off the sidewalks and onto the stage. It now features astounding acrobatics, lightning speed and international competition. Doubletime follows the top two American teams: The Bouncing Bulldogs of Chapel Hill, North Carolina and The Double Dutch Forces of Columbia, South Carolina. Although they train in neighboring states, the Bulldogs and theForces scarcely cross paths as they belong to separate leagues that do not compete against one another. The Bulldogs represent the best of gymnastic freestyle jumping found mostly in white suburbia while the Forces belong to the inner- city African American tradition of Double Dutch. For the first time, both the Bulldogs and the Forces decide to enter a competition at the world famous Apollo Theater called the Holiday Classic. The film features four young athletes (age 11 to 18) who display courage, skills and charisma as they passionately prepare for the event. Doubletime culminates on stage in Harlem withfounder of the American Double Dutch League Richard Cendali, the founder of U.S.A. Jump Rope League Awards and festivals Seattle Film Festival, Best Documentary “Best Sports Documentary” Newsday, 2007 Heartland Film Festival, Crystal Heart Award South by Southwest Film Festival, Audience Award Finalist Tribeca Film Festival, Audience Award Nominee AFI/ Silverdocs Mill Valley Film Festival Edinburgh International Film Festival See also Spellbound (2002 film) Mad Hot Ballroom External links / Doubletime Variety Magazine Review. / Doubletime Austin Chronicle Review. / Doubletime Film Threat Review. Bested by Japan, A Jump-Rope Team Plots a Comeback Wall Street Journal. Fierce Competition, In Double ### Assistant:
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### User: Peter John Milano (December 22, 1925 – April 21, 2012) was a Los Angeles based, Italian-American mobster, and former boss of the Los Angeles crime family. Milano was active in organized crime from the 1950s until his death. His legitimate businesses were in real estate properties and a vending company called "Rome Vending Company". Early life Milano was born in 1925 in Cleveland, Ohio to Anthony and Josephine Milano. His father was underboss of the Cleveland crime family from the 1930s until his retirement in 1976. Many members of the Milano family were involved in organized crime, including his uncleFrank Milano, who was boss of the Cleveland family and sat on the original Commission from 1931 until he chose to flee the country to avoid tax evasion charges in 1935. His brothers were also involved in the Mafia except for Carmen Milano who chose to be a lawyer until eventually also becoming a mobster in the 1980s. He is also related through marriage to John Nardi who was a Mafia associate who was killed for switching sides to the Irish Mob, during the Cleveland family's war with Danny Greene. Milano moved with his family to Beverly Hills, California inthe late 1930s or early 1940s as a teenager. After graduating from high school, Milano became a part of Mickey Cohen's syndicate and was involved in illegal gambling. Mafioso After switching allegiance to the Los Angeles crime family, Milano became a made man in 1970. Soon after, he was promoted to caporegime (captain) in the family. His father Anthony, while also being one of the main criminal powers in Cleveland, also had interests on the West Coast and was closely associated with the L.A family. In March 1973, Milano and six others were charged with running a rigged gambling operationin Los Angeles that brought in up to $250,000 a month. Their trial was delayed when the key informant and witness, former Mafia associate John Dubcek, was shot and killed in Las Vegas. Although this scared other informants from testifying, Milano was still sentenced to four years in prison. Months later Milano and 11 other men were indicted for conspiracy, racketeering and extortion against bookmakers, loan sharks, and pornographers. Milano served four years for both indictments. Boss In 1981 the top members of the Los Angeles crime family, including boss Dominic Brooklier, were sentenced to jail time on RICO charges.received a six year prison sentence. He never acknowledged being a part of the Mafia. On April 4, 1991, Milano was paroled from prison. He was able to avoid any jail time from the Las Vegas indictments brought on by the murder of Herbert Blitzstein in 1997. References Further reading Bureau of Narcotics, U.S. Treasury Department, "Mafia: the Government's Secret File on Organized Crime, HarperCollins Publishers 2007 External links Murder of Chicago Hood Foretells Power Grab by the Los Angeles Mob Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator Website Category:1925 births Category:2012 deaths Category:American mob bosses Category:American mobsters of Italian descent ### Assistant:
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### User: Katrina Holden Bronson is an American film director, screenwriter and actress. She is the adopted daughter of fellow actors Charles Bronson and Jill Ireland. Filmography The Uncanny (1977) – Lucy Death Wish 4: The Crackdown (1987) – Nurse Last Exit to Earth (1996) – Woman #1 Defying Gravity (1997) – Rachel Winding Roads (1999) – Samantha Stafford Bleach (2002) – Laura Spanish Fly (2003) – Anda Daltry Calhoun (2005) – writer and director External links Category:American film directors Category:American women film directors Category:Living people Category:Year of birth missing (living people) Category:20th-century American actresses Category:21st-century American actresses Category:Place of birth missing ### Assistant:
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### User: Belle Grove Historic District is a predominantly residential historic district north of the central business district of Fort Smith, Arkansas. This area became an affluent residential area not long after Fort Smith was established in 1842, and was most heavily developed between about 1870 and 1930. It is one of the oldest residential neighborhoods in the state. It includes a cross-section of architectural styles popular in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, although its oldest building, the c. 1840 John Rogers House (400 N 8th St), is Greek Revival in style. The district is roughly bounded by North 4th, ### Assistant:
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### User: Ken Shorter (born 1945) is an Australian actor best known for playing the title role in the biker film Stone (1974), and You Can't See 'round Corners (1969). In an iconic scene his character puts his arm up Rowena Wallace's skirt. Television appearances include Skippy, Play School, Matlock Police, Division 4, G.P., Casualty and The Bill. Films include Ned Kelly and Sunday Too Far Away, and the Disney film Dragonslayer (1981). Credits You Can't See 'Round Corners (TV series) (1967) You Can't See 'round Corners (1969) Ned Kelly (1970) Play School (1960s-?) Stone (1974) Sunday Too Far Away (1975) Dragonslayer ### Assistant:
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### User: Hiram Gene Slottow (1921–1989) was a professor of electrical engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. He was the co-inventor of the plasma display. After completing his bachelor's degree in physics from the University of Chicago, he completed MS in electrical engineering from the Johns Hopkins University and PhD in electrical engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. He was a professor of electrical engineering at Illinois from 1968 to 1986. He was also employed as an electrical engineer at the Coordinated Sciences Laboratory and the Computer-Based Education Research Laboratory from 1968 to 1986. He won the 2003 ### Assistant:
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### User: Semyon Lyvovich Ferdman PAR, better known by his stage name Semyon Farada (, born December 31, 1933, Nikolskoye village of Moscow Oblast, USSR — died August 20, 2009 in Moscow) was a Soviet and Russian stage and film actor. Early life Ferdman was born into the Jewish family of Army officer Lev Ferdman and pharmacist Ida Shuman. His father died when Semyon was 14. Later he tried to pursue a military career but failed the physical test at the Tank Forces School. He applied to Bauman Moscow State Technical University (then MVTU) and barely passed the exams; after three yearsin the classes he was drafted into the Baltic Fleet where he served for four years. The navy noticed Ferdman's artistic talent and assigned him to the garrison theatre in Baltiysk. There while playing the part of a long-haired anarchist on stage, he was the only Baltic Fleet sailor allowed to wear long hair. Career The navy provided Ferdman with recommendations to Moscow theatre directors, but he obeyed his mother's will and completed his courses at Bauman University, graduating in 1962. He worked as a mechanical engineer until 1969, and played as an amateur with Mark Rozovsky company based atMoscow University. Ferdman first appeared on screen in 1967. His stage name Farada was a nickname that emerged in one of his early filming tours of Central Asia. A studio manager refused to insert a Jewish surname, Ferdman, into film credits, and when Ferdman pressed him to "just invent some charade" (, sharada), found nothing better than Sharada Farada. Farada stuck with the actor. In 1972, after authorities shut down the Rozovsky theatre, Yury Lyubimov recruited Farada to work at the Taganka Theatre with whom he remained until his death. Farada played in more than 70 films, notably with directorsMark Zakharov, Eldar Ryazanov and Aleksey German. A stroke in June 2000 after the funeral of his friend, playwright Grigory Gorin, forced Farada to retire from acting. He was married to actress Maria Politseymako and was father of actor Mikhail Politseymako, who both supported him in his final years. Selected filmography Acting The Very Same Munchhausen (Тот самый Мюнхгаузен, 1979) as Commander-in-Chief The Garage (Гараж, 1980) as Trombonist Charodey (Чародеи, 1982) as Guest from South The House That Swift Built (Дом, который построил Свифт, 1982) as Governor Formula of Love (Формула любви, 1984) as Margadon After the Rain, on Thursday(После дождичка в четверг, 1985) as Shah Babadur How to Become Happy (Как стать счастливым, 1986) as Kolobok Gardemarines ahead! (Гардемарины, вперёд!, 1988) as director of Moscow School of Mathematics and Navigation Private Detective, or Operation Cooperation (Частный детектив, или Операция «Кооперация», 1989) as Mafioso Voice acting Entrance to the Labyrinth (Вход в лабиринт, 1989) as Pontyaga Adventures of Captain Vrungel (Приключения капитана Врунгеля, 1989) as Giulico Banditto References External links Category:1933 births Category:2009 deaths Category:Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery Category:Russian male film actors Category:Russian male stage actors Category:Soviet Jews Category:Russian Jews Category:Honored Artists of the RSFSR Category:People's Artists of Russia ### Assistant:
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### User: The is a large museum showcasing Toyota's storied past. It is a large complex located in Nagakute city, a city close to Nagoya, Japan. Collection Unlike the Toyota USA Automobile Museum, however, the museum in Nagoya also features many cars from other manufacturers such as Alfa Romeo and DeLorean Motor Company, as well as artwork. The reserve collection includes some exceptional examples such as the 1922 Grand Prix Sunbeam. The museum should not be confused with the Toyota Commemorative Museum of Industry and Technology, also located in Nagoya. List of Vehicles (partial) Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 Gran Sport (1930) Austin ### Assistant:
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### User: Clintonia uniflora is a species of flowering plant in the lily family known by several common names, including bead lily, bride's bonnet, and queen's cup. It is native to the mountains of northwestern North America (Alaska, British Columbia, Alberta, Idaho, Montana, Washington, Oregon, California). Clintonia uniflora is a rhizomatous perennial, a member of the bead lily genus, It grows in the understory of coniferous forests. This flower has only two or three leaves located at the base of its stem, but they are several centimeters wide and can be much longer. It bears flowers singly or in inflorescences of two ### Assistant:
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### User: Arvind Vegda is a Gujarati folk singer from Gujarat, India. He was a contestant on the reality television show Bigg Boss 9 in 2015. Early life Arvind Vegda is born on 5 October 1974 in Ahmedabad. He completed his school education from Vidhyanagar High School. He joined a diploma in drama but dropped to pursue commerce. He graduated from Navgujarat College. Vegda started his career as a marketing agent for an air conditioning firm. After working for twelve years in marketing, he was appointed the president of Indian Society of Heating and Refrigerating Air-Conditioning Engineers. Career Arvind Vegda has noformal training in music. He started learning the harmonium under Narendra Rao and later formed an orchestra in 2002. They started performing at Navratri venues. In 2006, following the sudden death of Maniraj Barot, he was invited to perform at Navratri Garba in Ahmedabad where he first time performed his track, "Bhai Bhai". His popularity emerged with his most popular track, "Bhai Bhai", which has more than 1 million hits on YouTube. His music albums including Bhala Mori Rama (2011) have sold over half a million copies. He was also roped in by the Bharatiya Janata Party for its 2012 ### Assistant:
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### User: The 2019 Boston Marathon was the 123rd running of the Boston Athletic Association's Boston Marathon. It took place on Monday, April 15, 2019 (Patriots' Day in Massachusetts). Lawrence Cherono won the men's foot race in 2:07:57 and Worknesh Degefa won the women's foot race in 2:23.31. Daniel Romanchuk won the men's wheelchair race in 1:21:36, and Manuela Schär won the women's wheelchair race in 1:34:19. Course The event ran along the same winding course the Marathon has followed for many decades26miles 385yards (42.195 km) of roads and city streets, starting in Hopkinton and passing through six Massachusetts cities and towns,to the finish line beside the Boston Public Library, on Boylston Street in Boston's Copley Square. There was rain early in the day and, by the time the races started, the temperatures were at around with gusty winds. Summary Elite Men's Foot Race The men's race came down to a sprint finish down Boylston Street. Two-time winner (2013 and 2015) Lelisa Desisa held a slight edge on Lawrence Cherono, with Kenneth Kipkemoi close behind. Cherono edged closer, then on the final block, both men started to sprint, virtually shoulder to shoulder. In the final few steps as Cherono gained a ### Assistant:
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### User: Cornwall College is a prominent public high school for boys located on Orange Street in Montego Bay, Saint James, Jamaica. It is the third oldest high school in the county of Cornwall. History The school in St. James dates to the 19th century. In 1871 the academy closed it doors when representatives from Scotland encouraged the government of Jamaica to establish a Queen's College in Spanish Town. This institution also did not last long and again government sponsored secondary education was lacking in the country. In 1895, a Presbyterian minister, Rev Adam Thompson, and a government representative for St. Jamesand Trelawny, Hon. John Kerr, petitioned the government to allocate 500 pounds for secondary education in Montego Bay. Hence, in 1896, the second city gave birth to Cornwall College which was at that time located on Barracks Road (site of the Public Works Office) and was called Montego Bay Government Secondary School. Mr. E. Lockett, B.A., was named the first headmaster and he served until 1903. He was succeeded by Anglican priest, Rev. George Hibbert Leader in 1904. He served some 19 years at the institution which ran into difficulties due to lack of space in the classrooms. It wasthen that the Hon D.H. Corinaldi stepped in and used his status to procure 2,500 pounds from the government in 1909 to assist in the provision of a new school site. Between 1910 and 1911, 34 acres of land were bought at the Pleasant Hill Estate where the institution was constructed. The school was officially opened at its new location in 1911 by the then Governor of Jamaica, Sir Sidney Oliver. In 1922, Montego Bay Government Secondary School became a name of the past and the large, beautiful institution was renamed Cornwall College. In 1953, Cornwall College came under theleadership of E.A. Barrett, the school's first Jamaican national. Barrett set new trends and advanced the school's population to over 650 boys. During his leadership the institution was named the first government school in Jamaica and also the first high school to offer Chemistry and Physics as subjects in its curriculum in the West Indies and for many years the majority of doctors and pharmacists in Jamaica were graduates of the school. The school also excelled in sports and was named the top male institution in football (soccer), holding the famous Olivier Shield over 11 times in the sporting fraternity.Upon the inception of the schoolboy daCosta Cup competition, Cornwall College also displayed their talents and skills to grab a hold of the trophy in 1953, 55, 56, 58, 59, 63, 82, 83, 95, 2000, 2001 and 2016. Cornwall College is now one of the top institutions in the Caribbean working with the motto 'Learn or Leave'. It now houses some 52 classrooms and 1,245 students. Former principal, Dr. Lennox Rowe, took office from acting principal Vinette Virgo in 2016. He left the institution in 2017, upper school vice principal, Mrs. Lecia Allen took the role of acting principal. On8 May 2018 Mr. Michael Ellis, former principal of Green Pond High School for 13 years, took office from acting principal Lecia Allen. The buildings are very colourful, sporting the school colours of red and gold. Many popular figures have passed through the gates of Cornwall College including Lloyd B. Smith, Chief Editor of the Western Mirror; Chief Justices Sir Rowland Phillips and Sir Herbert Duffus; Ambassador Derrick Heaven; the late Garth Taylor, Ophthalmologist; Kenneth Smith, former Chief Justice; the late Walt Crooks, owner of Club Inferno Resort; William Billy Craig, former Custos Rotulorum of St. James; Members of Parliament,Dr. Horace Chang, Dr. Kenneth Baugh, Dr. Karl Blythe, Arthur Nelson, Patrick Rosegreen and Lindel Frater. Cornwall College now enrolls females in their Sixth Form Programme. This began at the start of the academic year 2013-2014, 117 years after its establishment. Academics Extracurricular activities Cornwall has been successful in extracurricular activities such as the performing arts, essay competitions, and debating competitions. Additionally, achievements in the performing arts, one of the school's oldest and most successful; yet under appreciated/supported societies - has done excellently over the years. The young men have copped several gold and silver medals and national awards inannual JCDC festival of the arts competition (Music & Speech) and have performed nationally at several functions island wide. Recently, the performing arts society underwent a change in the operations of its award-winning boys choir (CCBC). The school's closest neighboring school - the Mount Alvernia high school for girls - was incorporated into the school's performing arts society. They are dubbed the MACC (pronounced 'mak) Singers - (Mount Alvernia Cornwall College Singers) and serve as the combined choir for both schools. The choir has lived up to the expectations of both schools' high performance in music and have won numerousawards at music festival and the Dr. Olive Lewin Award for best choral music presentation twice (2012 and 2013). Cornwall College has an adequate Interact Club (of Rotary International) which is a major club of its sort in western Jamaica. Their ruling government is unknown. The art department is a well-known patron of many national poster competitions. The Geography Club of Cornwall has participated in several events and return many trophies to the institution. The Cornwall College Chess Club has a history of being one of the stronger chess teams in western Jamaica. The Cornwall College cadet unit was placed ### Assistant:
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### User: The China Railways JF13 (解放13, Jiěfàng, "liberation") class steam locomotive was a class of 2-8-2 steam locomotives operated by the China Railway, built by the Škoda Works in Czechoslovakia in 1939. These locomotives were originally built for the North China Transportation Company, which had been formed in 1938 to operate railways in the collaborationist Provisional Government of the Republic of China during the Japanese occupation of China. A total of 45 were delivered to NCTC, which designated them Mikaha (ミカハ) class. After the end of the Pacific War, these locomotives were passed on to the Republic of China Railway. Afterthe establishment of the People's Republic of China, China Railways designated them ㄇㄎ13 (MK13) class in 1951, and subsequently 解放13 (JF13) class in 1959. The last of these locomotives known to be operational were JF13 3859, observed working at the Changxindian Crane Works in Beijing in 1981, and JF13 3876 at the Hegang Mining Railway in Heilongjiang province, where it was last seen in 1986. See also List of locomotives in China China Railways JF3: in common with JF13 of manufacturer. References Category:2-8-2 locomotives Category:Škoda locomotives Category:Railway locomotives introduced in 1939 Category:Steam locomotives of China Category:Standard gauge locomotives of China ### Assistant:
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### User: Copa Italia was a competition for association football clubs of Paraguay in 1920 won by Club Libertad from the capital Asunción. Prize was a highly attractive trophy donated by the ambassador of Italy. Club Libertad reached the final defeating Club River Plate, Club Guaraní and Club Nacional. Finalist was Club Sol de América, which defeated Club Cerro Porteño and Club Olimpia on its path. Libertad won the final with 2-0 over Sol de América with two goals by their striker Segundo Ibarra. Libertad also won the national championship of 1920. Sol de América, joint fifth in the national league, would ### Assistant:
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### User: George Frederick Tarrant (born 7 December 1838 at Cambridge; died 2 July 1870 at Cambridge) was an English professional cricketer who played first-class cricket from 1860 to 1869. Mainly associated with Cambridge Town Club (aka Cambridgeshire), he made 71 known appearances in first-class matches. He was a member of the second All England 11 to tour Australia, travelling out on the SS Great Britain in 1863. The team played several matches in Australia before travelling to New Zealand where they played five games. They returned to Australia to complete the remainder of the 19 tour matches. Tarrant was a rightarm fast bowler (RF) who was for a time rated the second fastest bowler in England after John Jackson. He bowled roundarm around the wicket from a "long, lively run-up". Tarrant took 421 wickets at 11.89 with a best analysis of 10/40. He took five wickets in an innings 41 times and ten wickets in a match 16 times. References External links CricketArchive profile Sources Further reading H S Altham, A History of Cricket, Volume 1 (to 1914), George Allen & Unwin, 1962 Derek Birley, A Social History of English Cricket, Aurum, 1999 Rowland Bowen, Cricket: A History of its ### Assistant:
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### User: Deka Lake is a freshwater body of water located in the Cariboo region of British Columbia. It is located in the Interlakes area. The lake holds two islands, one of which is privately owned. The name also applies to the surrounding rural community. The name comes from a misspelling of the name Decker, which was the name of a family from the Canim Lake Indian Band. Recreation The lake is stocked with Rainbow Trout and Kokanee for anglers, while Lake Trout is not stocked and is purely catch and release. A YMCA camp called Camp Deka, which is closed as ### Assistant:
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### User: AIP Conference Proceedings is a serial published by the American Institute of Physics since 1970. It publishes the proceedings from various conferences of physics societies. Alison Waldron is the current Acquisitions Editor for AIP Conference Proceedings. In addition to the series' own ISSN, each volumes receives its own ISBN. AIP Conference Proceedings publishes more than 100 volumes per year, with back-file coverage to 1970 which encompasses 1,330 proceedings volumes and 100,000 published papers. Scope In 2010 broad subject coverage included accelerators, biophysics, plasma physics, geophysics, polymer science, optics, lasers, nanotechnology, materials science, astronomy, astrophysics, mathematical physics, nuclear and particle physics, ### Assistant:
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### User: Claudio Brindis de Salas Garrido (Claudio José Domingo Brindis de Salas Garrido, Havana, Cuba, 4 August 1852 – Buenos Aires, Argentina 1 June 1911) was a Cuban concert violinist. His father was the violinist and bandleader, Claudio Brindis de Salas. The son surpassed his father, and was a violinist of world renown. He studied under his father, and then with maestros José Redondo and the Belgian José Van der Gutch (who lived in Havana). In 1863 he first performed in public, in Havana, with Van der Gutch as accompanist. Ignacio Cervantes also played at the same function. In 1864 hetoured with his father and his brother José del Rosario in the Cuban cities of Matanzas, Cárdenas, Cienfuegos and Güines; in 1869 to Veracruz, México. He went from México to Paris, to study under Hubert Léonard and Charles Dancla, and gained entry to Conservatoire de Paris, where he won first prize in 1871. He then toured Florence, Turin and Milan, where he played at La Scala. His tours in Europe brought great critical and public enthusiasm. In 1875, he returned to the Americas, and was appointed director of the Conservatoire de Haiti. He played in Caracas (1876), in Cuba inHavana (1878) and Santiago de Cuba, then to Veracruz again and México City, where he performed Mendelssohn's Concerto for violin and orchestra. In later years he played in St Petersburg (1881), New York (1887), Barcelona (1889), Santo Domingo (1895), San Juan, Puerto Rico, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago (1896), Caracas (1899), Tenerife (1902), Ronda, Spain (1911), and ended his career in Argentina. Claudio composed a few works, but he was primarily a concert performer, and to judge from critical notices, one of the best in the world at that time. Carpentier called him "the most extraordinary of the blackmusicians of the nineteenth century... an unprecedented case in the musical history of the continent". The French government made him a member of the Légion d'Honneur, and the German Kaiser gave him the title of Baron de Salas. In Buenos Aires he was given a genuine Stradivarius; when he stayed in Berlin, he married a German woman, was appointed chamber musician to the Emperor, and became a German citizen. He died in 1911, now in poverty, from tuberculosis in Buenos Aires. In 1930 his remains were transferred to Havana with great honours. References Category:1852 births Category:1911 deaths Category:Cuban composers Category:Cuban ### Assistant:
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### User: Claudette D. Roy, is an educator and public servant in Alberta, Canada. She was born in St. Paul, Alberta and resides in Edmonton. She served as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation from 1995 to 2007, serving as Vice-Chair for four years before her appointment as Chair in November 2003. Roy is a former educator and school administrator. She initiated many Francophone projects and institutions in Alberta, including, a committee created to establish Edmonton's first publicly funded French-first-language school. Later, she served on the Minister of Education's task force to create Francophoneschool boards. She served on many professional committees, including the Canadian Teachers' Federation. Her community volunteerism includes the City of Edmonton 2004 Centennial Celebration Committee and the Board of Trustees of the Western Catholic Reporter. Roy is a founding member of La Cité francophone, a community and business centre, and of Edmonton's chante music festival. She is a member of the Human History Gallery Advisory Group of the Royal Alberta Museum. She received many honours for her work in promoting francophone rights and community visibility. In addition, she received the Order of Canada, the Queen's Jubilee Medal and the Alberta ### Assistant:
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### User: The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister is a 2010 British biographical historical drama film about 19th-century Yorkshire landowner Anne Lister. Made for television, the film was directed by James Kent and starred Maxine Peake as Lister. The script by Jane English drew from Lister's diaries, written in code, and decoded many years after her death. The story follows Lister's lesbian relationships and her independent lifestyle as an industrialist. The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister held its world premiere screening at the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival in March 2010 and was broadcast in the United Kingdom bythe BBC in May 2010. Plot Anne Lister (Maxine Peake) is a young unmarried woman living in 19th century Yorkshire, at Shibden Hall, with her aunt (Gemma Jones) and uncle (Alan David). The one thing she wants from life is to have someone to love and to share her life with. The person she has in mind is Mariana Belcombe (Anna Madeley), with whom she has been conducting a secret romantic and sexual relationship. The relationship breaks apart when Mariana marries a rich widower named Charles Lawton (Michael Culkin). Depressed, Anne devotes her time to studying. A year after Mariana'sAnne's heart, but Anne says that she has found someone she is happy with now, and Mariana leaves. Her husband lives to the age of 89. Cast Maxine Peake as Anne Lister Anna Madeley as Mariana Susan Lynch as Isabella ('Tib') Norcliffe Christine Bottomley as Ann Walker Gemma Jones as Aunt Lister Alan David as Uncle Lister Richenda Carey as Mrs. Priestley Michael Culkin as Charles Lawton Dean Lennox Kelly as Christopher Rawson Background and production Anne Lister was a wealthy, unmarried woman who inherited Shibden Hall in West Yorkshire from her uncle in 1826. Throughout her life, she keptshooting took place during November and December 2009 in various locations in Yorkshire; including Shibden Hall, Newburgh Priory, Bramham Park, Oakwell Hall, the North York Moors and the city of York. Release The film premièred at the 24th London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival on 17 March 2010. It was broadcast in the United Kingdom by BBC Two and BBC HD on 31 May 2010. It played at the opening night of San Francisco's Frameline Film Festival on 17 June 2010 and was broadcast in Australia by ABC1 on 13 November 2011. Reception In its BBC broadcast, The Secret Diariesof Miss Anne Lister drew 1.878 million viewers (7.8%) and 50,000 more, simultaneously, on BBC HD. Critics gave a mixed response to the drama. The Daily Telegraphs John Preston was positive about the film and particularly praised Maxine Peake's acting. He said, "Peake is an extraordinary actress – both intensely human in her vulnerability and intensely disquieting [...] veering between predatory seductiveness and agonised self-pity." For The Scotsman, Andrea Mullaney gave a mixed review. She praised Peake's "excellent" and "fiery" performance and said that "played [Lister] with great energy, her small, alert face full of expression and emotion". She said,the film was "sex-obsessed, reductionist stuff". See also Gentleman Jack - BBC One/HBO television series about Anne Lister. References External links The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister on BBC Two The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister at BFI The Secret Diaries of Miss Anne Lister at BBFC Category:2010 television films Category:2010s biographical drama films Category:2010s historical films Category:2010s LGBT-related films Category:British films Category:British biographical films Category:British drama films Category:British historical films Category:British romance films Category:British LGBT-related films Category:British television films Category:Lesbian-related films Category:Lesbian-related television programs Category:LGBT-related drama films Category:Films set in the 19th century Category:Films set in Yorkshire ### Assistant:
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### User: greatest all-time mixed martial artists to have never won a UFC Championship. Outside of his UFC career, Florian has been a color commentator on the robot combat television series BattleBots since 2015. He has also started doing on camera interviews with some of the winners of the 2018 season. Early life Florian is the fourth of two children born to Peruvian parents: Agustin, a thoracic surgeon, and Ines Florian; however, none of his grandparents are from Peru, his ancestry includes: Spanish, Italian, German, French and Armenian. Florian was born in Westwood, Massachusetts and grew up in neighboring Dover, Massachusetts wherehe was a standout soccer player for Dover-Sherborn Regional High School. He attended Boston College where he played for the varsity soccer team (NCAA Division 1). He also holds dual citizenship in the United States and Peru. After college, his interests turned towards mixed martial arts and he earned a black belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu from Prof. Roberto Maia of Boston Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (Boston Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, formerly Gracie Barra Boston). Mixed martial arts career Kenny is known for his elbow strikes, which Joe Rogan describes as "razor sharp". Florian made his MMA debut in January 2003 at Mass Destruction 10,and mixed martial arts. Instructors at the academy include Kenny Florian, Keith Florian, and Alex Lewis. Championships and awards Mixed martial arts Ultimate Fighting Championship The Ultimate Fighter 1 Middleweight Tournament Runner-up Fight of the Night (Three times) vs. Sean Sherk, Dokonjonosuke Mishima, Joe Lauzon Submission of the Night (Two times) vs. Sam Stout, Takanori Gomi Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Pan-American Championship Pan-American Jiu-Jitsu Championships 2003 Brown Middle - 3rd Place North American Grappling Association NAGA BJJ Superfight Champion NAGA Advanced Gi Open Champion NAGA Advanced Gi Middleweight Champion NAGA North Eastern Grappling Championships – Pro Lightweight – 3rd Place ADCCWorld Championship 2002 Abu Dhabi US Trials Grapplers Quest Grapplers Quest Hall of Fame Grapplers Quest Superfight Champion Grapplers Quest Worlds Superfight Absolute Professional – 3rd place Grapplers Quest US Nationals Expert Middleweight – 3rd place Copa Atlantica 2002 Copa Atlantica Brown Belt Champion Mixed martial arts record |- | Loss | align=center| 14–6 | José Aldo | Decision (unanimous) | UFC 136 | | align=center| 5 | align=center| 5:00 | Houston, Texas, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 14–5 | Diego Nunes | Decision (unanimous) | UFC 131 | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | Vancouver,British Columbia, Canada | |- | Loss | align=center| 13–5 | Gray Maynard | Decision (unanimous) | UFC 118 | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | Boston, Massachusetts, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 13–4 | Takanori Gomi | Submission (rear-naked choke) | UFC Fight Night: Florian vs. Gomi | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 2:52 | Charlotte, North Carolina, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 12–4 | Clay Guida | Submission (rear-naked choke) | UFC 107 | | align=center| 2 | align=center| 2:19 | Memphis, Tennessee, United States | |- | Loss | align=center|11–4 | B.J. Penn | Submission (rear-naked choke) | UFC 101 | | align=center| 4 | align=center| 3:54 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 11–3 | Joe Stevenson | Submission (rear-naked choke) | UFC 91 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 4:03 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 10–3 | Roger Huerta | Decision (unanimous) | UFC 87 | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 9–3 | Joe Lauzon | TKO (punches and elbows) | UFC Fight Night:Florian vs. Lauzon | | align=center| 2 | align=center| 3:28 | Broomfield, Colorado, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 8–3 | Din Thomas | Submission (rear-naked choke) | UFC Fight Night: Thomas vs Florian | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 4:31 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 7–3 | Alvin Robinson | Submission (punches) | UFC 73 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 4:30 | Sacramento, California, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 6–3 | Dokonjonosuke Mishima | Submission (rear-naked choke) | UFC Fight Night: Stevenson vs. Guillard | |align=center| 3 | align=center| 3:57 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Loss | align=center| 5–3 | Sean Sherk | Decision (unanimous) | UFC 64: Unstoppable | | align=center| 5 | align=center| 5:00 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 5–2 | Sam Stout | Submission (rear-naked choke) | The Ultimate Fighter 3 Finale | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 1:46 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 4–2 | Kit Cope | Submission (rear-naked choke) | The Ultimate Fighter 2 Finale | | align=center| 2 | align=center|0:37 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 3–2 | Alex Karalexis | TKO (doctor stoppage) | UFC Ultimate Fight Night | | align=center| 2 | align=center| 2:52 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Loss | align=center| 2–2 | Diego Sanchez | TKO (Punches) | The Ultimate Fighter 1 Finale | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 2:49 | Las Vegas, Nevada, United States | |- | Loss | align=center| 2–1 | Drew Fickett | Decision (split) | Combat Zone 7: Gravel Pit | | align=center| 3 | align=center| 5:00 | Revere, Massachusetts,United States | |- | Win | align=center| 2–0 | Bobby McAndrews | Submission (kimura) | Mass Destruction 15 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 1:57 | Boston, Massachusetts, United States | |- | Win | align=center| 1–0 | Jason Giroux | TKO (punches) | Mass Destruction 10 | | align=center| 1 | align=center| 3:23 | Taunton, Massachusetts, United States | References External links Official UFC Profile Official Kenny Florian Web Site Kenny Florian on Twitter Florian Martial Arts Center Web Site Kenny Florian Quotes Anik-Florian Podcast Category:Living people Category:1976 births Category:American male mixed martial artists Category:Peruvian male mixed martial ### Assistant:
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### User: Established in 1895, Milwaukee High School of the Arts (MHSA), formerly West Division Sr. High School, is a high school in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. It is a part of the Milwaukee Public Schools system. It specializes in preparation for a profession in the arts. Students receive a minimum of two hours in arts study each day. Focus is given to creative outlets such as dance, writing, theater, technical theater, visual arts, and music. The school is open for audition to students from the Milwaukee metropolitan area. In 2005, the MHSA Artvarks, their ComedySportz Improvisational High School League Team tookhome the State Championship. History West Division High School opened in 1895 in what was known as the "Plankinton library block" on Grand Avenue downtown, but a building was built to house the new school in 1896 between 22nd and 23rd Streets on what was then called Prairie Street. C. E. McLenagan was the first principal. In 1958, the current structure was built, facing the original facility across what was by then called Highland Boulevard. The Milwaukee Public Schools system began designating a number of specialty or magnet schools in 1976. West Division was designated to house the Law Specialtyand Navy ROTC programs, until in 1984 the Milwaukee Board of School Directors moved those programs to Bay View High School and elected to transform West Division into an arts school. Notable alumni "Red Orchestra" anti-Nazi resister Mildred Harnack, General Douglas MacArthur and actor Spencer Tracy attended West Division High School before it was made a specialty arts school. Additionally, alumni Charles Goldenberg, Howard Stark, Patrick Vitrano, Donald Curtin, John Doehring, Jack Mead and Ray Phillips would play in the National Football League. More recently, actress Amy Pietz and Andrew Mrotek, former drummer for The Academy Is... attended MHSA, thoughnot as a music major. Rose Namajunas, professional mixed martial artist, former UFC Strawweight Champion Tim “Rawbiz” Williams Late Bassists for Suicidal Tendencies, Boyz 2 Men, P Diddy Making His Band, Toni Braxton, JaySean, etc http://www.mtdbass.com/news/2014/8/27/remembering-tim-rawbiz-williams Shonn Hinton Guitarist for Mary J Blige, Jill Scott, Shonn Hinton and Shotgun, Jay Z etc https://www.milwaukeemag.com/know-shonn-hinton-shotgun/ Quintin “Q” Gulledge Producer Musical Director & Keyboardist for Jay Z, Ella Mai, Kendrick Lamar, Dj Mustard, The Carter’s, Usher, Lucky Daye, Estelle, Jojo, etc References External links Milwaukee High School of the Arts website Category:High schools in Milwaukee Category:Art schools in Wisconsin Category:Schools of the performing ### Assistant:
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### User: Aase syndrome or Aase–Smith syndrome is a rare inherited disorder characterized by anemia with some joint and skeletal deformities. Aase syndrome is thought to be an autosomal recessive inherited disorder. The genetic basis of the disease is not known. The anemia is caused by underdevelopment of the bone marrow, which is where blood cells are formed. It is named after the American paediatricians Jon Morton Aase and David Weyhe Smith, who characterized it in 1968. Signs and symptoms Mildly slowed growth Pale skin Delayed closure of fontanelles (soft spots) Narrow shoulders Triple jointed thumbs, absent or small knuckles, decreased skin ### Assistant:
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### User: was a daimyō (feudal lord) of Ōmi Province and Wakasa Province during the late Sengoku period of Japan's history. Life His childhood name was Koboshi (小法師). Takatsugu is recognized as the founder of the modern Kyōgoku clan. His forebears had been powerful since the 13th century, but their fortunes had waned after the Ōnin War. Takatsugu is credited with restoring his family's lost prominence and position. Takatsugu allied himself with Oda Nobunaga; and after Nobunaga's death, Takatsugu became a fudai (hereditary vassal) daimyo of the Toyotomi. Hideyoshi installed Takatsugu at Ōtsu Castle (60,000 koku) in Ōmi province. In 1600, hesided with the Tokugawa. On the same day as the Battle of Sekigahara, failed in his efforts at the Siege of Ōtsu, but Tokugawa Ieyasu's victory at Sekigahara marginalized the consequences of that loss. In that same year, Takatsugu was rewarded with the fief of Obama (92,000 koku) in Wakasa Province. Under the Tokugawa shogunate, the Kyōgoku were identified as tozama or outsiders, in contrast with the fudai daimyo who were hereditary vassals of the Tokugawa. Despite this, Takatsugu prospered. Family Father: Kyōgoku Takayoshi Mother: Kyōgoku Maria Wife: Ohatsu Sister: Kyōgoku Tatsuko Concubine: Yamada-dono Sons: Kyōgoku Tadataka by Yamada-dono AtageTakamasa Genealogy The tozama Kyōgoku claimed descent from Emperor Uda (868–897) by his grandson Minamoto no Masanobu (920–993).<ref>Plutschow, Herbert. (1995). "Japan's Name Culture: The Significance of Names in a Religious, Political and Social Context, pp. 133–134.]</ref> They represent a branch of the Sasaki clan who were adopted by the Seiwa Genji. His sister, Kyōgoku Tatsuko, also known as Matsu no maru-dono, was one of Toyotomi Hideyoshi's concubine. Takatsugu's father was Kyōgoku Takayoshi, and his mother was Azai Nagamasa's sister Maria. Takatsugu married Ohatsu, the second of three daughters of his uncle. Ohatsu's mother, Oichi, was the younger sister of OdaNobunaga. Takatsugu became a close relative by marrying Nobunaga's niece. The older sister of Takatsugu's wife, Yodo-dono, was the concubine of Toyotomi Hideyoshi and mother of Toyotomi Hideyori. Takatsugu's sister and Yodo-dono's cousin, Kyōgoku Tatsuko, was also became Hideyoshi's concubine. In marriage, Takatsugu became a brother-in-law of Hideyoshi. The younger sister of Takatsugu's wife, Oeyo, was the wife of Tokugawa Hidetada and the mother of Iemitsu. In marriage, Takatsugu became a brother-in-law of Hidetada. After Takatsugu's death in 1609, Ohatsu became a Buddhist nun, taking the name Jōkō-in (常高院). With connections to both the Toyotomi and the Tokugawa, the Ohatsuhad long served as a liaison between the rivals. She continued in this role until 1615 when the Tokugawa eliminated the Toyotomi. Kyōgoku Tadataka (1593–1637) was Takatsugu's son. In 1607, Tadataka married the fourth daughter of Shōgun Hidetada. He died without leaving any heirs, which meant that his holdings reverted to the shogunate. However, the bakufu acted to continue his line by posthumously designating Kyōgoku Takakazu as an heir. Takakazu was Tadataka's nephew, the son of his brother Takamasa. Tadakazu was initially enfeoffed at Tatsuno (50,000 koku) in Harima Province. In 1658, Takakazu was transferred to Marugame in Sanuki Province,where the contrived descendants of Takatsugu remained until the abolition of the han system in 1871. The head of this Kyōgoku clan branch were ennobled as an hereditary viscount in the Meiji period. Notes References Appert, Georges and H. Kinoshita. (1888). Ancien Japon. Tokyo: Imprimerie Kokubunsha. Bryant, Arthur J. (1995). Sekigahara 1600: the final struggle for power. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. Iwao, Seiichi, Teizō Iyanaga, Susumu Ishii, Shōichirō Yoshida, et al. (2002). Dictionnaire historique du Japon. Paris: Maisonneuve & Larose. ; OCLC 51096469 Papinot, Edmond. (1906) Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie du japon''. Tokyo: Librarie Sansaisha. [http://www.unterstein.net/Toyoashihara-no-Chiaki-Nagaioaki-no-Mitsuho-no-Kuni/NobiliaireJapon.pdf Nobiliaire du japon (abridged ### Assistant:
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### User: Bartley Green School is an academy with Technology and Sports College status for pupils aged 11–16 in the Bartley Green area of Birmingham, England. The school has approximately 900 pupils. The school comprises largely of people with asian backgrounds and heritage, there are also many people of white and European ancestry, the school also has many black students (citation needed). The school has a higher-than-average proportion of students with special educations needs because the school has a unit for 55 students with speech and language difficulties, including autism spectrum disorders. The numeracy and literacy skills of pupils upon entry into ### Assistant:
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### User: Palárikovo () is a large village and municipality in the Nové Zámky District in the Nitra Region of south-west Slovakia. Names and etymology The village is named after a Slovak playwright Ján Palárik. The historic Slovak name Slovenský Meder was semantically the same as the Hungarian name Tótmegyer. Slovenský/Tót — Slovak, Meder/Megyer - the old Magyar tribe whose members lived in the region as garrison units. History In historical records the village was first mentioned in 1248. Geography The municipality lies at an altitude of 113 metres and covers an area of 51.294 km². It has a population of about ### Assistant:
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### User: Esther Shemitz (June 25, 1900August 16, 1986), also known as "Esther Chambers" and "Mrs. Whittaker Chambers," was a 20th-Century American painter and illustrator who, as wife of ex-Soviet spy Whittaker Chambers, provided testimony that "helped substantiate" her husband's allegations during the Hiss Case. Background Shemitz was born on June 25, 1900, in New York City. She was the youngest child of Rabbi Benjamin Shemitz and Rose Thorner. The family soon moved from New York City to New Haven, Connecticut, where they ran a candy store. The family had immigrated to the U.S. in the 1890s from the "Podolsk Province." Inof jailing. In 1926, Shemitz roomed on East 11 Street on the Lower East Side with writer Grace Lumpkin, and they both worked at The World Tomorrow magazine. During her time at the magazine, contributors included "social reformers, suffrage leaders, black intellectuals, labor activists, and a range of other progressives; people published in that period include: "Jane Addams, Carrie Chapman Cott, Babette Deutsch, Alain Locke, A.J. Muste, Reinhold Niebuhr, William Pickens, Upton Sinclair, Olive Schreiner, Vida Scudder, and Wallace Thurman." Shemitz also served as the advertising manager at the New Masses in 1926. In December 1926, on behalf of theWorld Tomorrow, Shemitz took Rebecca West to see the Passaic Textile Strike: at the Botany Worsted Mills, Shemtiz was beaten and arrested along with Sophie Shulman of the New Masses magazine and Sender Garlin (another reporter, probably with the Daily Worker). In the latter 1920s, Shemitz studied at the Art Students League under Boardman Robinson, Jan Matulka and Thomas Hart Benton. Her classmates included the future Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist and muralist Jacob Burck and the writer-illustrator Irwin Shapiro. Shemitz also contributed cartoons to the Daily Worker newspaper. In 1929, she was one of many signatories to form the John ReedIshigaki, Alfred Kreymborg, Joshua Kunitz, Louis Lozowick, A.B. Magil, H.L. Mencken, Scott Nearing, Joseph North, Isidore Schneider, Edwin Seaver, Edith Segal, Upton Sinclair, John Sloan, Raphael Soyer, Genevieve Taggard, Carlo Tresca, Louis Untermeyer, Edmund Wilson, and Art Young. At least one co-signer was a classmate (Jacob Burck), another a roommate (Grace Lumpkin), two were sponsors (Grace Hutchins and Anna Rochester), and two were teachers (Jan Matulka and Boardman Robinson). In April 1931, she married Whittaker Chambers (see "Personal life and death" below). In May 1931, she contributed a cartoon to the New Masses magazine. In 1932, when her husband's nameappeared as an editor, the names of Esther Shemitz and Jacob Burck appeared as (art) contributors for the New Masses alongside longer-term contributors like Louis Lozowick, Hugo Gellert, William Gropper, William Siegel, and Joseph Vogel. Soviet underground Shemitz cut short her own art career when her husband entered the Soviet underground in mid-1932. Thus, unlike most of her circle, who contributed to publications such as the Daily Worker newspaper and New Masses magazine, she did not become one of the New Deal's Federal Art Project artists during the latter part of the Great Depression and into World War II (1935–43).In 1938, when Chambers defected from the underground, Grace Hutchins delivered a death threat against him, through her brother, attorney Reuben Shemitz. Later, following a grand jury investigation in December 1948, Reuben Shemitz told the press: (Hutchins) said she wanted to see him on a 'matter of life and death' ... She assured me that no harm would come to my sister or her children if Whit would get in touch with someone known to Whit as Steve (J. Peters). In his 1952 memoir, Chambers detailed: She managed the family's Pipe Creek Farm during its many active years from thewas the softer, more feminine type." The overall experience of the Hiss Case led Shemitz to avoid all press and never speak to researchers, including Allen Weinstein. Personal life and death Shemitz's older brother was attorney Reuben Shemitz. A nephew was Nathan Levine; another was Sylvan Shemitz. In 1926, Whittaker Chambers first saw Shemitz at the Passaic Textile Strike, which he described at length in his 1952 memoir. In 1930, Chambers and friend Mike Intrator began to court Shemitz and Lumpkin; both couples married in 1931. Shemitz's marriage was witnessed by Grace Hutchins and her life partner Anna Rochester. Shemitzwhich they met Arthur Koestler and Margarete Buber-Neumann among others. When Chambers died of his seventh heart attack on July 9, 1961, Shemitz collapsed and was rushed to the nearest hospital in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Her physician Dr. E. Reese Wilkins had her admitted in critical condition into Warner Hospital at 02:45AM on Monday, July 10, where Dr. Raymond F. Sheely attended her. On August 16, 1986, she died age 86 at her home. Works Paintings, illustrations All of Shemitz's paintings are held privately by her family or friends. Her illustrations appeared in the Daily Worker newspaper, the New Masses magazine,and the book Labor and Silk and include: "Alookin' f'r a home," New Masses (May 1931) Books, articles "Creative Impulse in a Hostile Environment" with Grace Lumpkin, The World Tomorrow (April 1926) Labor and Silk by Grace Hutchins, illustrations by Esther Shemitz, cover by Louis Lozowick (New York: International Publishers, 1929) Cold Friday by Whittaker Chambers, edited by Duncan Norton-Taylor and Esther Shemitz (New York: Random House, 1964) References External sources Category:1900 births Category:1986 deaths Category:20th-century American painters Category:20th-century American women artists Category:American people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent Category:American editorial cartoonists Category:American Jews Category:Art Students League of New York alumni Category:Jewish ### Assistant:
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### User: Norfolk Collegiate is a coeducational independent day school in Norfolk, Virginia for students in pre-kindergarten through 12th grade. Norfolk Collegiate is accredited by the Virginia Association of Independent Schools (VAIS) and by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). It's also a member of the Tidewater Conference of Independent Schools, which includes 10 private schools from the Hampton Roads region of Virginia, as well as a member of the Virginia Independent Schools Athletic Association. History Norfolk Collegiate was founded in 1948 as a Carolton Oaks School in Wards Corner section of Norfolk, Virginia. It began as a kindergarten andpreschool in a cottage home in Norfolk. By 1963, the school had graduated its first class of seniors, and 10 years later it changed its name to Norfolk Collegiate School to more accurately reflect its college-preparatory mission. Today, the school is home to 600 students and more than 120 faculty and staff on two campuses, the middle and upper school (Grades 6-12) at 7336 Granby Street, Norfolk, and the lower school (Pre-K3-Grade 5) at 5429 Tidewater Drive, Norfolk. The school boasts several signature programs and learning spaces, such as the lower school's innovative farm-to-table Outdoor Learning Lab and MakerLab 1.The middle and upper school is home to the Meredith Center for the Arts, which showcases the school's arts and technology programs and serves as a venue for the Hampton Roads community. It houses a 425-seat theater, communication arts suite, digital arts classrooms, chorus rooms, MakerLab and more. The latest addition to the school came in September of 2015 with the opening of its $2.6 million athletic complex which features two 70x110 yard, competition-sized, pre-lined artificial, lighted turf fields. Athletics Norfolk Collegiate's athletic program offers daily physical education for students in kindergarten through grade 12 and focuses on fitness andnutrition. For student-athletes, an additional focus is placed on healthy competition, teamwork, accountability, goal setting and effective communication in team and individual sports. The athletic program offers more than 50 teams in nearly 20 sports for students in grades 6-12. Students in kindergarten through grade 5 are offered enrichment sports, such as karate, dance, soccer, as well as sport clinics throughout the year. Student-athletes compete in the fall, winter and spring seasons at the middle school, junior varsity and varsity levels. Collegiate offers the following athletic teams: Sailing (co-ed) Cross Country and Track (co-ed) Tennis (boys and girls) Golf (co-ed)Basketball (boys and girls) Baseball Softball Wrestling Swimming Lacrosse (boys and girls) Field Hockey Soccer (boys and girls) Crew Cheerleading Volleyball In 2015, the school added a $2.6 million athletic complex becoming the first K-12 school in the Hampton Roads with side-by-side, competition-size turf fields with lights. The 70x110 yard turf fields are pre-lined for soccer, field hockey, women’s lacrosse and men’s lacrosse. Made of nearly 164,500 square feet of TurfField Classic Slit Film two-inch with an infill mix, the fields also have 6 Musco® lights to allow for night competitions. Bleachers flank the fields and provide seating for 500spectators, while scoreboards make following game action a breeze. A batting cage offers a designated hitting area for the school's softball and baseball teams. Norfolk Collegiate christens new $2.6 million complex Summer Programs Norfolk Collegiate's academic year runs from late August through early June. During the summer, Norfolk Collegiate hosts Summer Under the Oak summer programs from students in pre-kindergarten through Grade 12. Notable Alumni Some of Norfolk Collegiate's notable alumni include: Ted Mathas '85, chief executive officer of New York Life Insurance Co. David Krohn '02, baritone, Juilliard-trained opera singer Brian Bress '93, video artist Barron Segar '80, chief ### Assistant:
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### User: The 1975 Idaho Vandals football team represented the University of Idaho in the 1975 NCAA Division I football season. The Vandals were led by second-year head coach Ed Troxel and were members of the Big Sky Conference, then in Division II. They played their home games at the Kibbie Dome, an indoor facility on campus in Moscow, Idaho. Season With quarterbacks Dave Comstock and Ken Schrom running the veer offense, the Vandals were overall and in the Big Sky. In the Battle of the Palouse, the Vandals suffered an eighth straight loss to neighbor Washington State of the Pac-8, fallingat Martin Stadium in Pullman on November 15. The score was at the half and after three went winless in the Pac-8 in 1975 and were overall. This was the first year the Vandals played home games indoors; the Kibbie Dome's arched roof and end walls were constructed in ten months following the 1974 season. Opened in October 1971, it was an unlit outdoor venue known as new Idaho Stadium for four seasons, the last three with artificial turf. Its predecessor Neale Stadium was also without lights, so this was the first season of night football games on campus. The ### Assistant:
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### User: Glutathione S-transferase Mu 4 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the GSTM4 gene. Cytosolic and membrane-bound forms of glutathione S-transferase are encoded by two distinct supergene families. At present, eight distinct classes of the soluble cytoplasmic mammalian glutathione S-transferases have been identified: alpha, kappa, mu, omega, pi, sigma, theta and zeta. This gene encodes a glutathione S-transferase that belongs to the mu class. The mu class of enzymes functions in the detoxification of electrophilic compounds, including carcinogens, therapeutic drugs, environmental toxins and products of oxidative stress, by conjugation with glutathione. The genes encoding the mu class ofenzymes are organized in a gene cluster on chromosome 1p13.3 and are known to be highly polymorphic. These genetic variations can change an individual's susceptibility to carcinogens and toxins as well as affect the toxicity and efficacy of certain drugs. Diversification of these genes has occurred in regions encoding substrate-binding domains, as well as in tissue expression patterns, to accommodate an increasing number of foreign compounds. Multiple transcript variants, each encoding a distinct protein isoform, have been identified. In the August 2009 issue of Oncogene journal, researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) at the University of Utah demonstrated that expression ### Assistant:
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### User: Songs of Theodorakis is an album by Irene Papas. She sings eleven songs, all in Greek, written by the Greek songwriter and composer Mikis Theodorakis. The album was first issued in 1968 by RCA Victor (FPM-215 and FSP-215). RCA Victor also released it in France in 1969. Anodos released it in Greece (ΠΜΕ Α-166) in 1990 as Ειρήνη Παππά Σε Ένδεκα Τραγούδια Του Μίκη Θεοδωράκη (Irene Pappas Eleven Songs by Mikis Theodorakis). It was remastered and reissued on CD in 2004 by FM Records as Irene Papas Sings Mikis Theodorakis. All the tracks in the album were recorded in a ### Assistant:
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### User: Raymond (Ray) Lugg (born 18 July 1948) is an English former professional footballer who played mainly as a midfielder for Middlesbrough, Watford, Plymouth Argyle, Crewe Alexandra and Bury during a 15-year career from the late 1960s through to 1980. Lugg was born in Jarrow, and played for his hometown club, Jarrow Vikings, before joining Middlesbrough in 1965, where he helped them win promotion in 1968. Unable to retain a first-team place the following season, he was sold to Watford, who he also helped to promotion as well as helping reach an FA Cup semi-final in 1970 (beating Stoke City and ### Assistant:
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### User: Irish Republican Army member Les McKeown, Scottish singer, former member of the Bay City Rollers M. Margaret McKeown, judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit Max McKeown, British management author Nick McKeown, Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Stanford University Paul McKeown, Scottish Intelligence and Analytics expert Sean McKeown, American Herpetologist Susan McKeown, Irish-American singer Thomas McKeown, British physician and historian Thomas McKeown, Scottish footballer (Celtic, Blackburn Rovers, Scotland) Tom D. McKeown, American politician (US Representative from Oklahoma) See also McCune (surname) McCunn MacEwen Macuen Descendants of William MacKewen (McKwen) of New Brunswick, ### Assistant:
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### User: The Way It Really Is is an album by Lisa Loeb, released in 2004 by Zoë/Rounder. The album title got its title from a previous song by Loeb, "The Way It Really Is" despite that song not appearing on this album. Reception Although the album was not as commercially successful as its predecessors, it was very well received by some critics who noted on the mature and strong writing by Loeb, with Stephen Thomas Erlewine calling it "the best, most cohesive record she's made, a clean, crisp collection of well-crafted, gentle tunes that slowly, surely work into the subconscious." Tracklisting "Window Shopping" (Dave Bassett, Lisa Loeb) – 3:17 "I Control the Sun" (Dave Bassett, Loeb) – 3:01 "Hand-Me-Downs" (Stephanie Bentley, Loeb) – 3:42 "Fools Like Me" (Loeb, Shelly Peiken, John Shanks) – 3:38 "Try" (Loeb) – 4:13 "Diamonds" (Loeb) – 3:04 "Would You Wander" (Loeb, Maia Sharp) – 3:33 "Probably" (Jimmy Harry, Loeb, Billy Steinberg) – 3:04 "Accident" (Loeb) – 4:04 "Lucky Me" (Loeb) – 2:29 "Now I Understand" (Loeb, Dweezil Zappa) – 3:07 Bonus track on the Japanese edition Personnel Chad Fischer - producer (tracks 3, 9), engineer (tracks 3, 7, 9), piano on "Hand-Me-Downs" Larry Goldings - ### Assistant:
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### User: Port Afrique is a 1956 British drama film based on the 1948 novel of the same name by Bernard Victor Dryer (1918–1995). The colour film was directed by Rudolph Maté and the adapted screenplay was written by John Cresswell. It was filmed on location in the Casbah in Algiers and in Tangiers and Morocco. Set in July 1945, the film tells the story of a returning American pilot named Rip Reardon who lost his leg during the war and a young woman, Ynez, who is accused of the murder of Rip's wife. Cast and characters Music by Malcolm Arnold References ### Assistant:
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### User: Peter John Durano Calderon (born March 27, 1961) is a Filipino politician and lawyer serving as the representative for the 7th district of Cebu since 2016. He served as mayor of Samboan, Cebu from 2001 to 2007 and as member of the Cebu Provincial Board representing the 2nd district from 2007 to 2016. Education Calderon earned his bachelor's degree in business economics and in laws at University of the Philippines Diliman. He then took up his master's in business management in University of the Philippines Cebu. He placed 11th in the 1988 Philippine Bar Examination. He went on to completeof Alcantara, Alegria, Badian, Dumanjug, Ginatilan, Malabuyoc, Moalboal, and Ronda. He defeated Pablo John Garcia, who previously ran against then-Governor Hilario Davide III in the 2013 elections. He ran for re-election in the 2019 elections and won against then-Dumanjug mayor Nelson Garcia. He is currently serving as the Vice Chairperson of the Committee on Appropriations. Electoral history House of Representatives References External links Congressional Profile - Hon. Calderon, Peter John D. Category:1961 births Category:People from Cebu Category:Members of the House of Representatives of the Philippines from Cebu Category:Nationalist People's Coalition politicians Category:University of the Philippines Diliman alumni Category:University of the ### Assistant:
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### User: The Snow Empress is a 2007 mystery novel written by Laura Joh Rowland, set in the Genroku (AD 1688–1704) of historical Japan It is the 12th book in the Sano Ichiro series. It combines a murder mystery with a portrayal of the strained, and often xenophobic relations between the Japanese rulers and the aboriginal inhabitants of Hokkaido, the Ainu (then called the Ezo). Plot summary The prologue begins in autumn of 1699, with the murder of an unidentified woman in Hokkaido, followed by the kidnapping of Sano Masahiro, son of the Shogun's Lord Chamberlain, Sano Ichiro, at the autumn festivities ### Assistant:
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### User: The D. Landreth Seed Company is one of the oldest companies in the United States. It was founded on January 7, 1784, by David and Cuthbert Landreth on High Street, (now 1210 Market Street). The David Landreth School in Point Breeze, Philadelphia is named for the founder. History David Landreth was born in 1752 in Northumberland, England. In 1780, Landreth immigrated with his family to Montreal, Canada, to establish a seed company. The harsh Canadian climate forced him to relocate to Philadelphia in 1783. In 1786, he partnered with his brother Cuthbert to run the business in Philadelphia. At first,he sold seeds to the City of Philadelphia and nearby estates. Over time his business grew and George Washington, Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Bonaparte were among his customers when they visited the city during the Constitutional Convention in 1787. In 1818, a store was founded in Charleston, South Carolina and a second in St. Louis in 1854 which later closed at the start of the Civil War. Landreth and his son David, who joined the company in 1820, were among the founders of the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society in 1827 and produced the first agricultural journal in the United States, FloralBurnet (1869–1941), and Leopold took over the business. In 1904, the company changed names to D. Landreth Seed Company and was headed by Landreth's great-grandsons. In 1942, it was sold to the Buist Seed Co. of Philadelphia. During World War II the US Government condemned much of Bloomsdale Farms for defense contractors and housing. Suburban sprawl took care of the balance of the farm. The company was sold to the Goldberg Co., which moved it to Baltimore until 2006. In 2003, venture capitalist Barbara Melera purchased the company and became its president in hopes of saving the company from closure.woodcuts until the 1890s, when the company became one of the first to introduce photography in their catalogs to show how the plants appeared in real life. In 2010, Michael W. Twitty worked with the company to compile the African American Heritage Collection of heirloom seeds for the company's 225th anniversary. The collection features roughly 30 plants, including the long-handled dipper gourd and the fish pepper, showcasing how instrumental they were to African-American survival and independence. See also Bartram's Garden References Category:Companies established in 1784 Category:Companies based in Philadelphia Category:Seed companies Category:1784 establishments in Pennsylvania Category:Agriculture companies of the United ### Assistant:
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### User: Serbia competed at the 2016 European Athletics Championships, which were held in Amsterdam, Netherlands from 6-10 July 2016. Results Key Note–Ranks given for track events are within the athlete's heat only Q = Qualified for the next round q = Qualified for the next round as a fastest loser or, in field events, by position without achieving the qualifying target NR = National record N/A = Round not applicable for the event Bye = Athlete not required to compete in round Men Track & road events Field Events Combined events – Decathlon Women Track & road events Field Events References ### Assistant:
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### User: Felipe Maria Garin Ortiz de Taranco (February 14, 1908 - June 7, 2005) was a Spanish writer, researcher and Academician of art. Biography Born in Valencia on February 14, 1908. He was member of Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Carlos de Valencia (Spain) in 1940, in this institution he exercised as president for more than two decades, the period 1974-1999. He died on June 7, 2005 in Valenciay. Career Because of its dual legal and historical formation, Felipe Garin could practice in both fields, but not equally. His interest in history began soon and most of his careerhe served as art historian. He was president of the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Carlos de Valencia (Spain) from 1974, and director of the journal “Archivo del Arte Valenciano” a referent in Valencian Art. He was honored referee of the College Doctors and Graduates in Philosophy and Letters and Sciences of the University of Valencia and was the head of Service Artistic Information, archaeological and ethnological of the university of Valencia. He was also president of the Provincial Commission of Monuments and Historical- Artistic elements of Valencia. He was also member of Academy of Valencian Culture; Institutethe Order of Alfonso X, National Prize of Literature and Art Criticism, Spanish National Superior Research Council Award, Gold Medal of the "Circulo de Bellas Artes" in Valencia, Gold Medal of the University Politécnica of Valencia and Medal of the Faculty of Fine Arts in Valencia. He received the High Distinction of the Generalitat Valenciana Cultural Merit in 1995. Also, it has a statue located in 1993 in the "Jardines de Viveros" a park close to the San Pio V Museum of Valence where he performed his activity and also names a street about his hometown Valencia. He was acandidate on several occasions "Prince of Asturias prize" in Fine Arts. He published numerous books and artistic monographs, them, aspects of the Valencian Gothic architecture, Loa and elegy Palomino painter in decoration of Santos Juanes Church of Valencia, El libro de horas del conde-duque de Olivares and “La visión de España de Sorolla” among others. He was married to Llombart Angeles Rodriguez, with they had two children; Mary Angels and Felipe. He was very rooted in social and cultural life of their neighborhood, the neighborhood of el Carmen, where discoursed all his life. His son Felipe Garin Llombart was directorof the Museum Prado (1991-1993), director of the Academy of Spain in Rome and also director of the Museum of Fine Arts in Valencia between 1969 and 1990. He died in Valencia on 7 June 2005 being buried in the General Cemetery of Valencia. Felipe Garin's library was donated by his wife and families to the Valencian National Library located at the monastery “Monasterio de San Miguel de los Reyes”. References Blasco Gil, Peset y Ferrer Sapena, 2014, p. 19. Blasco Gil, Peset y Ferrer Sapena, 2014, p. 78. «Felipe Garin Ortiz de Taranco, investigador y académico del arte». ElPaís. EFE. 8 de junio de 2005. Consultado el 25 de agosto de 2016. ALEJOS MORÁN, A. (2002). Introducción a una iconografía vicentina en Iglesias de la ciudad de Valencia. Felipe, M. (1999). ª Garín Ortiz de Taranco. Trayectoria académica, social y científica. Blasco Gil, Yolanda, Fernanda Peset Mancebo, and Antonia Ferrer Sapena. "Felipe María Garín Ortiz de Taranco. Trayectoria académica y social." (2013). http://www.mcnbiografias.com/app-bio/do/show?key=garin-ortiz-de-taranco-felipe-maria Bibliography Blasco Gil, Yolanda; Peset, Fernanda; Ferrer Sapena, Antonia (2014). «Trayectoria académica y social». En Yolanda Ayala Gascón. Felipe María Garín Ortiz de Taranco: trayectoria académica, social y científica. Universitat Politècnica de València. pp. 17–128. ### Assistant:
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### User: Gary Edward Lucy (born 27 November 1981) is an English actor, television personality and model who is best known for playing Will Fletcher in the ITV police drama The Bill, Luke Morgan in Hollyoaks, Kyle Pascoe in Footballer's Wives and Danny Pennant in the BBC soap opera EastEnders. He also played a part in the show The Dumping Ground as a footballer named Billy. Career Lucy was born in Chigwell, Essex, and appeared in Grange Hill and Dream Team before getting the role that brought him to public attention, Luke Morgan in the Channel 4 soap opera Hollyoaks. Lucy undertookthe CBBC show The Dumping Ground as a footballer named Billy who was the fantasised father of character Finn. In 2017, Lucy returned to Hollyoaks. He is currently taking time off but will return in 2019. Personal life Lucy was born at Chigwell in Essex. He attended Trinity Catholic High School in Woodford Green. He had his own company, Gary Lucy Real Estate. however this was dissolved in 2014. He also owns Driving Lessons Finder, an internet based directory of driving schools and driving instructors. Lucy manages several online E-shops for his parents and several smaller online businesses. Lucy marriedhis wife Natasha Gray on 16 November 2014 and was covered and featured with a magazine deal with OK!. They have four children, daughters India Jasmine (born 2005) and Sadie (born 2015) and sons Elvis (born 2011) and Theodore (born 2018) In November 2018 it was announced that Lucy and Gray had separated. Filmography Theatre The Full Monty (musical) – 2014–present, stage adaptation of the film The Full Monty, Theatre Royal, Newcastle References External links Official Gary Lucy Site (clothes store site) Category:1981 births Category:Living people Category:English male models Category:English male television actors Category:People from Chigwell Category:English male soap opera ### Assistant:
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### User: Ashapura Mata is one of aspect devi and one of the principle deity of Kutch. As the name indicates, she is the Goddess who fulfills the wish & desires of all those who trust and believe her. The unique thing about most of the idol of Ashapura Mata is that it has 7 pairs of eyes. Her temples are mainly found in Gujarat. Some people in Rajasthan and Gujarat consider her to be an incarnation(avatar) of goddess Annapoorna devi. Kuldevi She is considered as Kuldevi by many Kutchi communities, Billore and is chiefly the clan deity of Chauhans, Jadeja Rajputs, ### Assistant:
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### User: Irène Frain (née Le Pohon; 22 May 1950, Lorient, Morbihan) is a French novelist, journalist, and historian. She is a founding member of the Women's Forum for the Economy and Society. Biography Irene Frain was born into a very close but destitute family. Her first book was a history of the golden age of maritime Brittany titled Quand les Bretons peuplaient les mers (When the Bretons inhabited the seas) published in 1979. She studied at the lycée Dupuy-de-Lôme de Lorient, where she obtained a degree in Classics in 1972. From 1972 to 1978 she taught classics at different high schoolsthe honor committee of l'ADMD (Association for the Right to Die with Dignity). Themes Two deep currents have been noted in Frain's work: a passion for issues concerning women's status and a marked predilection for the Orient—the two often overlapping. Her book, Beauvoir in love (2012), based on a survey in the United States by the University of Columbus, Ohio, shed light on Simone Beauvoir's misunderstood passion for the American writer Nelson Algren. She orchestrated courses on Beauvoir and illuminated some of Beauvoir's psychological features hitherto ignored, often retouching the biased and even negative portrait that Beauvoir made of herAmerican lover after their separation. Frain also stressed the role of Algren in the genesis of The Second Sex. A great traveler, Irene attributes her predilection for Asia to her birth in Lorient, a historic port of the East India Company, formerly spelled L'Orient. Several of her travel stories demonstrate this predilection: Quai des Indes (East India Dock) (1992) which recounts her investigation of the famous Indian bandit woman Phoolan Devi, La vallée des hommes perdus (The Valley of Lost Men) (1995) in collaboration with cartoonist André Juillard, Pour que refleurisse le monde (To flourish the world) (2002) with JetsunPema, the sister of the 14th Dalai Lama, and Au Royaume des femmes (The Kingdom of Women) (2006) and À la recherche du Royaume (In search of the Kingdom) (2007) with photos by François Frain which she wrote after travelling to China and Tibet in the footsteps of the famous American explorer Joseph Rock. Her investigative passion is also evident in novels such as La Guirlande de Julie (The Garland of Julie) (1991) about the birth of the language of flowers and amorous civility in France, L'Inimitable (The Inimitable) (1998) a historical biography of Cleopatra, Gandhi, la liberté en marche ### Assistant:
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### User: "Run Like Hell" is a song by the English progressive rock band Pink Floyd, written by David Gilmour and Roger Waters. It appears on the album The Wall. It was released as a single in 1980, reaching #15 in the Canadian singles chart as well as #18 in Sweden, but only reached #53 in the U.S. A 12" single of "Run Like Hell," "Don't Leave Me Now" and "Another Brick in the Wall (Part 2)" peaked at #57 on the Disco Top 100 chart in the U.S. Concept The song is written from the narrative point of view of antiherotitle is never actually sung; each verse simply concludes with "You better run". Film adaptation In the film adaptation, Pink directs his jackbooted thugs to attack the "riff-raff" mentioned in the previous song, in which he ordered them to raid and destroy the homes of queers, Jews, and black people, among others. One scene depicts an interracial couple cuddling in the back seat of a car when a group of neo-Nazis accost them, beating the boy and raping the girl. The Wall director Alan Parker hired the Tilbury Skins, a skinhead gang from Essex, for a scene in which Pink's"hammer guard" (in black, militaristic uniforms designed by the film's animator, Gerald Scarfe) smashes up a Pakistani diner; Parker recalled how the action "always seemed to continue long after I had yelled out 'Cut!'." History The music was solely written by David Gilmour (one of three songs on The Wall for which Gilmour is credited as a co-writer), and the lyrics were written by Roger Waters. Waters provides the vocals (except for Gilmour's multitracked harmonies singing "Run, run, run, run,"). The first version of the song had music written by Roger Waters (which appears on the Immersion box set ofThe Wall) with the lyrics as on the album (in the key of G) but then Roger's music was scrapped in favor of Gilmour's music during the recording of the band demos (which too appears on the Immersion box set). The song features the only keyboard solo on The Wall by Richard Wright (although on live performances, "Young Lust" and "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" would also feature keyboard solos); after the last line of lyrics, a synthesizer solo is played over the verse sequence, in place of vocals. Following the solo, the arrangement "empties out" and becomessparse, with the guitar only playing an ostinato with rhythmic echoes, and brief variations every other bar. Sound effects are used to create a sense of paranoia, with the sound of cruel laughter, running footsteps, car tyres skidding, and a loud scream. The original 7" single version and Pink Floyd The Wall -- Special Radio Construction promotional EP both contain a clean guitar intro, without the live crowd effects. The EP version also contains an extended, 32-beat intro and an extended 64-beat outro where David Gilmour's main guitar phrase repeats before the track ends. As with "Comfortably Numb", also fromThe Wall, the music to "Run Like Hell" has its roots in Gilmour's first solo album. "Short and Sweet" can be seen as this song's precursor. "Yes," Gilmour told Musician magazine, "it's a guitar with the bottom string tuned down to a D, and thrashing around on the chord shapes over a D root. Which is the same in both [songs]. [Smiling] It's part of my musical repertoire, yes." Composition After the previous song, "In The Flesh", the crowd continues to chant, "Pink! Floyd! Pink! Floyd!" The guitar intro begins with the scratching of strings dampened with left-hand muting, beforesettling on an open D string dampened by palm muting. As heard earlier on the album in "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 1", the muted D is treated with a specific delay setting, providing three to four loud but gradually decaying repeats, one dotted-eighth note apart, with the result that simply playing quarter notes (at 116 beats per minute) will produce a strict rhythm of one eighth note followed by two sixteenth notes, with rhythmic echoes overlapping. Over this pedal tone of D, Gilmour plays descending triads in D major (mostly D, A, and G), down to the openC) do not match the sustaining open E and B strings an octave above. Aside from the added tones in each chord, the basic verse sequence of E minor, F major, E minor, C major, and B major is reprised later in "The Trial", the conceptual climax of The Wall. However, David Gilmour is not credited as a co-writer of "The Trial", which is credited to Waters and producer Bob Ezrin. Before the final riff ends the song, a piercing shriek by Roger Waters can be heard, not unlike one heard between "The Happiest Days of Our Lives" and "AnotherBrick in the Wall, Part 2". At the conclusion of the song, the crowd begins chanting, "Hammer! Hammer!" as the sound of soldiers marching is heard before segueing into the next song, "Waiting for the Worms". Film version The movie version of the song is considerably shorter than the album version, though this is likely done for the sake of pacing. The second guitar refrain between the first and second verses was taken out, with the verse's last line, "You better run", leading directly to Gilmour's harmonized chant ("Run, run, run, run"), which now echoed back and forth between theleft and right channels. Also, Richard Wright's synth solo was superimposed over the second verse, and the long instrumental break between the end of the synth solo and Waters' scream was removed. Live performances Pink Floyd The Wall Tour During the previous song, "In the Flesh", a giant inflatable pig was released, which Waters refers to in a speech between both songs. The speech given varied slightly on each concert and therefore can be used to identify which show a recording came from. On Is There Anybody Out There? The Wall Live 1980–81, the speech is a mix of the15 June 1981 and 17 June 1981 speeches. It was sometimes introduced by Waters as "Run Like Fuck" and Waters and Gilmour sang alternating lines in the verses, while the vocal quartet of Stan Farber, Jim Haas, Joe Chemay, and John Joyce sang the choruses. During the song, the "surrogate band" (also referred to, in Nick Mason's book, as the "shadow band") are onstage with the Pink Floyd members and their quartet of singers. Both Andy Bown and Roger Waters play bass on this song. Bown plays the bass exactly as it was recorded—four quarter notes per bar, playing onlyroots, using the lowest possible root in drop D tuning. Waters, meanwhile, plays variations at key moments, plays whole notes while singing, and, during the "emptied out" section on D following the synth solo, Waters sometimes improvised high-pitched riffs above Bown's low D. Later tours Following Waters' departure from Pink Floyd, the song became a regular number in the band's concerts, usually ending the show and going over nine minutes long. One live version was used as the B-side to "On the Turning Away". The song also was the closing track on the live album Delicate Sound of Thunder. Gilmourgenerally played an extended guitar introduction, sharing vocals with touring bassist Guy Pratt, with Pratt singing Waters' lines. In the 1994 tour, Pratt sometimes sang the name of the city where they were playing instead of the word mother in the line "...they're going to send you back to mother in a cardboard box..." – in the Pulse video (live at Earls Court, 1994), he clearly sings London. According to Phil Taylor, David Gilmour played Run Like Hell on a Fender Telecaster guitar tuned to a drop-D on the 1994 tour. Roger Waters In Roger Waters' The Wall concert inBerlin in 1990, he made no speech and sang all the lines alone. He didn't play the bass guitar for this live version. For Waters' worldwide 2010–2013 Wall tour, the song was transposed one whole step down, from D to C. This is commonly done in live performances when a singer has difficulty reaching the highest notes in the song's original key. During the intro of the song, Waters clapped to the beat and in some cases shouted, exhorting the audience to clap along and "have a good time, enjoy yourselves", which might be considered ironic, given the paranoid toneof the actual lyrics. Again, he did not play bass guitar, instead gesturing with a prop submachine gun at various points throughout the song. David Gilmour In addition to performing the song with Pink Floyd, Gilmour has also performed it himself on his 1984 solo tour in support of his About Face album. In Waters' absence, Gilmour would trade lines with bass guitarist Mickey Feat. He also performed the song solo at the Colombian Volcano benefit concert in 1986, trading lines with house-band keyboardist John "Rabbit" Bundrick (who would later play on Waters' solo album, Amused to Death) and againduring his 2015-2016 Rattle That Lock Tour, trading lines with Guy Pratt. Gilmour also performed the song in 2016 in Live At Pompeii. Personnel Roger Waters – bass, vocals, screaming, panting David Gilmour – electric guitar, bass guitar, backwards cymbals, vocals (chorus) Nick Mason – drums Richard Wright – Prophet-5 synthesizer, organ with: James Guthrie – backwards cymbals; running; panting Bobbye Hall – congas; bongos Personnel per Fitch and Mahon. Charts |- |- |- |- |- |} Cover versions In 2001, the Canadian all-female heavy metal band Kittie, recorded a cover and was released on their full-length album Oracle. Inthis version, lead vocalist and lead guitarist Morgan Lander actually does incorporate the title of the song within the lyrics. The Disco Biscuits have covered "Run Like Hell" live since 1997. In 2011, the Italian band Mastercastle recorded a cover that was released on their album Last Desire. On 6 March 2019, American heavy metal band Metallica bassist Robert Trujillo and guitarist Kirk Hammett jammed on the song during a concert in Kansas City, Missouri. The moment was recorded and uploaded to the band's YouTube channel the next day. In popular culture The opening to "Run Like Hell" is used ### Assistant:
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### User: Yongming Yanshou (; ) (904–975) was a prominent Buddhist monk during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period and early Song Dynasty in China. Biography Yongming Yanshou is first mentioned in biographical form by Zanning (贊寧) in a work called the Song Biographies of Eminent Monks (), which was produced in 988, 12 years after Yanshou's death. Yanshou lived largely during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, in the independent Wuyue kingdom. This age was characterized by nearly continuous warfare and political disorder. The future of Buddhism was especially uncertain during this time due to widespread suppression and sponsoreddestruction of temples. However, most of this activity took place in the north of China, while Yanshou resided in the independent Wuyue kingdom of the south, which was relatively stable during this time. Furthermore, unlike the trouble Buddhism faced in the north, the ruling Qian family heavily patronized Buddhist and other religious institutions. He was born in either the capital city of Wuyue, modern-day Hangzhou, or a suburb of it, Yuhang, in the year 904. He would have served as an official before becoming a monk, although the exact nature of the position is disagreed upon in biographical sources. HeYanshou to the newly constructed Yongming Temple, from which he would take his name. Here Yanshou is said to have become very prominent. He received gifts from the King of Korea, Gwangjong of Goryeo, and in return he ordained 36 Korean monks, who then returned home to teach. In 974 he returned to Mount Tiantai, and the following year he died. Teachings and influence Yongming Yanshou is best known for attempting to synthesize the diverse and seemingly contradictory teachings of the various schools of Buddhism that existed in China. He is often associated with Pure Land Buddhism and Zen, butmost of whom worked from a Japanese perspective. Nonetheless, recent Western scholarship recognizes his importance, and he has been an enduring influential figure in the eyes of Chinese, Korean, and Vietnamese branches of Zen, and he is deeply revered in the Pure Land school. References Further reading Benn, James A (2007), Burning for the Buddha, University of Hawaii Press, pp. 104-131. Wu, Zhongwei (2007), The mind as the essence of words: A linguistic philosophical analysis of the classification teaching of Yongming Yanshou. Frontiers of Philosophy in China 2 (3), 336-344 Category:904 births Category:976 deaths Category:Song dynasty Buddhist monks Category:Wuyue Buddhist ### Assistant:
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### User: The American Cream Draft is the only draft horse breed developed in the United States that is still in existence. A rare horse breed today, it is recognized by its cream color, known as "gold champagne", produced by the action of the champagne gene upon a chestnut base color, and by its amber eyes, also characteristic of the gene; the only other color found in the breed is chestnut. Like several other breeds of draft horses, the American Cream is at risk for the autosomal recessive genetic disease junctional epidermolysis bullosa. The breed was developed in Iowa during the earlycommonly associated with Belgian horses, but is also found in other draft breeds. A DNA test was developed in 2002, and JEB can be avoided as long as two carriers are not bred to one another. The American Cream registry states that it has "been pro-active in testing its registered animals since JEB was discovered". Breed history The American Cream is the only breed of draft horse developed in the United States that is still in existence today. The breed descends from a foundation mare named Old Granny. She was probably foaled between 1900 and 1905, and was first noticedAmerican Cream breed in earnest. In 1944, a breed association, the American Cream Association, was formed by 20 owners and breeders and granted a corporate charter in the state of Iowa. In 1950, the breed was finally recognized by the Iowa Department of Agriculture, based on a 1948 recommendation by the National Stallion Enrollment Board. The mechanization of farming in the mid-20th century led to a decrease in the overall draft horse population, and with Rierson's death in 1957, American Cream Draft numbers began to decline. By the late 1950s there were only 200 living American Creams registered, owned byonly 41 breeders. The registry became inactive until 1982 when three families who had retained their herds reactivated and reorganized the registry. In 1994, the organization officially changed its name to the American Cream Draft Horse Association (ACDHA). 1990s to the present In 1982, owners began blood-typing their horses, and by 1990, genetic testing found that "compared with other draft breeds and based upon gene marker data, the Creams form a distinct group within the draft horses." The American Cream Draft was found to have a genetic relationship with the Belgian breed that was no closer than the ones it ### Assistant:
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### User: Rhinerrhizopsis, commonly known as freckle orchids, is a genus of three species from the orchid family, Orchidaceae. Plants in this genus are epiphytes with smooth, thin roots, fleshy or leathery leaves and a large number of small, round, short-lived flowers with a three-lobed labellum. These orchids are found in the Bismarck Archipelago, the Solomon Islands, New Guinea and tropical North Queensland, Australia. Description Orchids in the genus Rhinerrhizopsis are epiphytic herbs with a short stem with smooth, thin roots at the base and fleshy or leathery leaves folded lengthwise. There are many relatively small, round, resupinate, short-lived flowers arranged ona long, thin flowering stem. The fragrant flowers have sepals and petals that are yellowish with reddish brown spots. The labellum is cream-coloured with reddish, brownish or orange markings. Taxonomy and naming The genus Rhinerrhizopsis was first formally described in 2000 by Paul Ormerod. The description was published in a supplement of Oasis, the journal. The type species is Rhinerrhizopsis moorei. The name Rhinerrhizopsis refers to the similarity of plants in this genus to those in the genus Rhinerrhiza. The ending -opsis is an Ancient Greek suffix meaning "having the appearance of" or "like". Species list: The following species are ### Assistant:
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### User: Warren Benbow (born December 22, 1954, in New York City) is a drummer who has worked with Nina Simone, Jimmy Owens, Larry Willis, Eddie Gómez, Olu Dara, Michael Urbaniak, Teruo Nakamura, and was an original member of James Blood Ulmer's band 'Odyssey'. Career At the High School of Performing Arts, Benbow studied drums and percussion with Warren Smith and Morris Goldenberg of the New York Philharmonic. Later at Mannes College he studied with Walter Rosenberger, also of the Phil, and with Dong Wong Park. While studying in the Jazzmobile with Freddie Waits and Albert “Tootie” Heath Benbow was introduced byWaits to jazz vocalist Betty Carter, and his career as a professional drummer began. He toured with Ulmer and played on Ulmer's albums Odyssey, Bloody Guitar, Part Time, Live At The Caravan Of Dreams, and Reunion. In addition to his jazz work, he has also worked on Broadway, and has also worked in pop with Whitney Houston, Gwen Guthrie, LL Cool J, SWV, and Mary J. Blige. In 2011 Benbow toured Europe with Ulmer's reformed band, 'Odyssey'. Discography with Luther Thomas yo' Momma (Moers Music) With James Blood Ulmer Odyssey (Columbia, 1983) Part Time (Rough Trade, 1984) Live at the ### Assistant:
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### User: B. P. Acharya (born 30 October 1960) is a senior officer of the 1983 batch Indian Administrative Service (IAS) and was the home secretary of Andhra Pradesh state. Acharya is Director General for MCR HRD Institute and also Special Chief Secretary in General Administration Department for Telangana State. Acharya was Special Chief Secretary, Planning in Telangana State till December 2018. He also served as Principal Secretary for Youth, Culture & Tourism till September 2015. He was also commissioner of Information & Public Relations till November 2015. He is also a writer, cartoonist and a keen researcher of history. The seniorDiplomatic Studies, School of International Studies, JNU (New Delhi). He also worked as Editor with internationally famous authors Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre (of Freedom at Midnight fame) for editing the personal papers of Lord Mountbatten Career In 1983, Acharya was selected for the Indian Administrative Service. He was awarded the Director's Medal for the best term paper in Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration as an IAS probationer. He worked as Secretary of the House Journal Society and Editor of the Journal 'Spectrum'. He underwent training as Assistant Collector in Chittoor District in 1984–85 and later served in& Managing Director of APIIC from 7 June 2007) till December 2009. During his tenure, many successful export-oriented clusters were facilitated by him in the combined State of AP. Of these, Sri City is the most successful SEZ in the country and the one of Brandix in Vizag is the largest apparel park in India. During his decade long stint in Industrial Sector in the State, He created at least 20 such clusters, viz, Genome Valley for Life Sciences near Hyderabad, Pharma city in Vizag, Apache footwear cluster in Nellore Dist, Aerospace cluster in Adibatla near Hyd, Financial District introphy for the NTR National Award, as well as the logo for the Janmabhoomi programme. He was a Member of the Jury for the International Cartoon competitions conducted by Cartoonists' Forum. As CMD, APIIC, he took steps for installing artistic sculptures titled "Technology for the Masses" in different Industrial Parks of the State. As a member of the Kalinga Cultural Trust, he coordinated the construction of the Jagannath Temple in Banjara Hills. As the Tourism and Culture Principle Secretary of Telangana, he participated in a roadshow in Toronto, Ontario, Canada to woo travelers to destinations in Telangana. References http://www.vikaspublishing.com/books/trade-general/biographies/mountbatten-partition-india/9789325986015/#.VmsLeN9277M.mailto https://www.moneylife.in/article/obtuse-angle-by-b-p-acharya/6786.html ### Assistant:
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### User: Catherine of Pomerania (German: Katharina von Pommern; c. 1390 - 4 March 1426), was a Pomeranian princess and Countess Palatine of Neumarkt. She was the wife of John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt, and the mother of Christopher of Bavaria, who would rule over Denmark, Sweden, and Norway as king of the Kalmar Union. Life Catherine was the daughter of Wartislaw VII, Duke of Pomerania in Pomerania-Stolp and Maria of Mecklenburg-Schwerin. Maria was the daughter of Henry III, Duke of Mecklenburg and Ingeborg of Denmark, eldest daughter of sonless King Valdemar IV of Denmark and older sister of Margaret I ofDenmark. Henry III's mother was Euphemia of Sweden, the daughter of Erik Magnusson and the sister of Magnus Eriksson. Catherine's brother was Eric of Pomerania, future king of Denmark, Sweden, and Norway. The two siblings were adopted by their grandaunt Queen Margaret I of Denmark in 1388 and likely brought to Margaret at the same occasion. Initially, Margaret's plan was for Catherine to enter the Vadstena Abbey Catherine was a candidate for a time for marriage to Prince Henry of Wales. This marriage was suggested in 1400-1401, and it was the idea that a double wedding was to be arrangedbetween Catherine and Henry in parallel to the wedding between her brother Eric and Henry's sister Philippa. The marriage between Catherine and Henry never occurred, but in 1406, another indirect link to the English royal house was created when the brother-in-law of Philippa suggested a marriage with John, Count Palatine of Neumarkt. John was the son of Rupert, King of Germany. The negotiations were completed in one year, and Margaret gave Catherine a dowry of 4000 gulden, much less than was expected by her future father-in-law. On 15 August 1407, Catherine married John in Ribe, Denmark. They would have seven ### Assistant:
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### User: Colin Lynes (born 26 November 1977) is a British former professional boxer who competed from 1998 to 2017. He held the IBO super lightweight title from 2004 to 2005. At regional level, he held the British super lightweight title in 2007; the EBU European super lightweight title from 2007 to 2008; and the British welterweight title from 2011 to 2012. Boxing career Early professional career Lynes begun his pro career in June 1998 with a 1st-round knockout of Lee Frost at the Broadway Theatre in Barking, London. He continued with 3 more quick victories over Ram Singh, Brian Coleman andTrevor Smith before finally completing the distance against Marc Smith. However hand problems in his next fight against Dennis Griffin forced him to develop an effective counter punching style. After compiling an unbeaten ledger of 20–0 he found himself in December 2002 competing for the IBO inter-continental light welterweight title, winning by 9th round tko against American Richard Kiley. He lost the title however in his next fight, when at the York Hall he was stopped in the 8th round by South African Samuel Malinga. Championship fights Following the defeat Lynes regrouped by winning his next three fights setting himselfup for a shot at the full IBO light welterweight champion Argentinian Daniel Sarmiento. The fight at the Goresbrook Leisure Center in Dagenham in May 2005 ended with a split decision victory for the Englishman. This time he made his first defence a successful one when in Brentwood, Essex he met American Juaquin Gallardo winning by majority decision. In October 2005 Lynes met fellow Brit Junior Witter for the British, Commonwealth and European titles losing a 12-round decision. He followed this defeat by losing again, this time to Lenny Daws still a 12–0 prospect for the English Southern Area title.British light welterweight boxers from recent years with Lynes winning two contests to reach the final. The draw for the competition which had been made by Floyd Mayweather pitted Lynes against David Barnes, the man who had succeeded Lynes as British champion in the quarter finals. A split decision win over Barnes moved Lynes into the semi's to meet former victim Young Mutley and emerge victorious for the second time against the man from Wolverhampton via another split decision. The final saw Lynes compete with Newbridge's Gavin Rees, a man who had briefly held the World WBA light welterweight championshipLynes 78–77. On 7 June 2011 Lynes once again took part in the Prizefighter tournament although this time it was the welterweight version at the York Hall in Bethnal Green. He reached the semi-finals beating his stablemate Bobby Gladman in the quarter finals but losing to eventual winner Yassine El Maachi with a controversial split decision in the semi's. On 9 November 2011 Lynes challenged Lee Purdy for the British welterweight championship, winning after 12 rounds via majority decision. References Category:Living people Category:1977 births Category:Light-welterweight boxers Category:People from Hornchurch Category:Prizefighter contestants Category:English male boxers Category:International Boxing Organization champions Category:Boxers from ### Assistant:
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### User: Nine ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Zephyr after Zephyrus, the Greek god of the west wind: HMS Zephyr, originally the sloop HMS Merlin, was captured by a French privateer in 1757. The British recaptured her in 1757 and the Royal Navy took her into service as Zephyr. The French frigate Gracieuse recaptured her in August 1778; she was disarmed and sold at Toulon in January 1780 for Lt44,200. The purchasers turned her into a privateer, which the British privateer Fame captured and burnt on 26 August 1780. , launched in 1779, was a 14-gun sloop. She ### Assistant:
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### User: Richard Thomas Correll (born May 14, 1948) is an American television actor, director, producer and writer. Life and career Born in Los Angeles County, California, Correll is the son of Charles Correll, who starred as Andy Brown on the radio program Amos 'n' Andy. He is the brother of Barbara Correll, Dottie Correll and Charles Correll Jr., who worked on Animal House as cinematographer and directed episodes of Without a Trace, CSI: Miami, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Beverly Hills, 90210, Melrose Place and Stargate SG-1. As a child actor, Correll played the role of Beaver's friend Richard Rickover during thethe co-creator of the Disney Channel original series, Hannah Montana. In 2010, Correll sued Disney for unfair termination and alleged non-payment of creative royalties for Hannah Montana. Filmography Actor The DuPont Show with June Allyson (1 episode, 1960) The Dick Powell Show (1 episode-1961) Leave It to Beaver (39 episodes, 1960–1962) The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet (3 episodes,1960-1961) The Blue Angels (1 episode- 1961) The Betty Hutton Show (3 episodes-1959-1960) Bonanza (1 episode, 1961) Lassie (5 episodes, 1961-1964) National Velvet (3 episodes, 1961–1962) The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (1 episode, 1962) Still the Beaver (Television film, 1984) The ### Assistant:
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### User: Undisonus is an album of contemporary classical music by guitarist Terje Rypdal recorded in 1986 and 1987 and released on the ECM label in 1990. Reception The Allmusic review by Paul Collins awarded the album 4 stars stating "Those accustomed to Rypdal's jazz and jazz-rock albums may be startled when they discover his extensive work in orchestral composition, although in some ways Rypdal seems to take these pieces closest to heart". Track listing All compositions by Terje Rypdal "Undisonus Op. 23 for Violin and Orchestra" - 21:40 "Ineo Op. 29 for Choir and Chamber Orchestra" - 18:27 Recorded at St. ### Assistant:
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### User: Hendrik Carré (October 2, 1656, Amsterdam – July 7, 1721, The Hague), was a Dutch Golden Age painter. Biography According to Houbraken he was a pupil first of Jacob Jordaens in Antwerp, and then Juriaen Jacobsze in Leeuwarden, where he painted for Henry Casimir II, Prince of Nassau-Dietz. According to the RKD he was the son of Franciscus Carree and became Jacobsze's pupil in Leeuwarden in 1669. He married in The Hague in 1683, where he stayed. His pupils were his sons Hendrik and Franciscus Abraham, his younger brothers Abraham and Michiel, Carel Galois, Emilie Raes, and Pieter de Raep. ### Assistant:
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### User: aka Night Train Woman is a 1972 Japanese film in Nikkatsu's Roman porno series, directed by Noboru Tanaka and starring Mari Tanaka. Synopsis Saeko is abnormally attached to her older sister, Yumi. When Yumi becomes engaged to Arikawa, Saeko schemes to separate the two. She seduces Arikawa who then becomes confused over his attraction to both sisters. He approaches their father about his dilemma. The father explains that the two are actually half-sisters, Saeko being the result of his affair with Tomoko, a family maid. After Arikawa explains this to the sisters, Saeko's obsession with Yumi seems to end. However,when Yumi and Arikawa leave for a vacation together, Saeko follows them on the night train. When she catches up to them, she kills her sister with a razor blade and then kills herself. Cast Mari Tanaka () as Saeko Mizuki Keiko Tsuzuki () as Yumi Mizuki Tomoko Katsura () as Hiroko Kibaji Tankoba () as Okajima Akemi Yamaguchi () as Mika Keisuke Yukioka () as Hajime Mizuki Toshihiko Oda () as Yōji Arikawa Hidetoshi Kageyama () as Gorō Hiroyuki Mikawa () as Kishibe Critical appraisal During Woman on the Night Train'''s Japanese critics noted the influence of European filmmakerson Tanaka's style. The use of metaphor and symbolism in the film was said to be similar to some of Roger Vadim's films. Luis Buñuel's Diary of a Chambermaid (1964), and Octave Mirbeau's original novel were said to be particular influences on Woman on the Night Train. In their Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films, Thomas and Yuko Mihara Weisser give Woman on the Night Train a rating of three out of four stars. They judge the film's weakness to be the rambling and far-fetched plot, but they write that this is compensated for by Tanaka's visuals and camera work,which they call, "some of the best in any pink film". They also note the welcome influence of French cinema on Tanaka's style. They single out the flashback scene in which the father seduces the maid as indicative of Tanaka's visual flair. Rather than staging the scene in a mundane bedroom setting, Tanaka makes the seduction more shocking by filming it among the stuffy, professorial father's books and papers in his study. Allmovie judges Woman on the Night Train "memorable", "[s]tylish and absorbing", and one of Nikkatsu's best entries in the softcore genre of this period. They note that this ### Assistant:
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### User: An abscess is a collection of pus that has built up within the tissue of the body. Signs and symptoms of abscesses include redness, pain, warmth, and swelling. The swelling may feel fluid-filled when pressed. The area of redness often extends beyond the swelling. Carbuncles and boils are types of abscess that often involve hair follicles, with carbuncles being larger. They are usually caused by a bacterial infection. Often many different types of bacteria are involved in a single infection. In the United States and many other areas of the world the most common bacteria present is methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.remains with gauze after drainage. Closing this cavity right after draining it rather than leaving it open may speed healing without increasing the risk of the abscess returning. Sucking out the pus with a needle is often not sufficient. Skin abscesses are common and have become more common in recent years. Risk factors include intravenous drug use, with rates reported as high as 65% among users. In 2005 in the United States, 3.2 million people went to the emergency department for an abscess. In Australia, around 13,000 people were hospitalized in 2008 with the condition. Signs and symptoms Abscesses maycommon cause. Often many different types of bacteria are involved in a single infection. In the United States and many other areas of the world the most common bacteria present is methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. Among spinal subdural abscesses, methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus is the most common organism involved. Rarely parasites can cause abscesses and this is more common in the developing world. Specific parasites known to do this include dracunculiasis and myiasis. Perianal abscess Surgery of the anal fistula to drain an abscess treats the fistula and reduces likelihood of its recurrence and the need for repeated surgery. There is noof abscess are more dangerous. Brain abscesses are fatal if untreated. When treated, the mortality rate reduces to 5-10%, but is higher if the abscess ruptures. Epidemiology Skin abscesses are common and have become more common in recent years. Risk factors include intravenous drug use, with rates reported as high as 65% among users. In 2005 in the United States 3.2 million people went to the emergency department for an abscess. In Australia around 13,000 people were hospitalized in 2008 for the disease. Society and culture The Latin medical aphorism "ubi pus, ibi evacua" expresses "where there is pus, there ### Assistant:
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### User: Lenny Fernandes Coelho (born 23 March 1988), simply known as Lenny, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a second striker. Biography Lenny left Fluminense in January 2008 for R$1.5 million. Palmeiras, associated with Desportivo Brasil (owned by Traffic Group), signed him. On 9 May 2013, he signed a deal with Campeonato Brasileiro Série C club Madureira. Honours Fluminense Brazilian Cup: 2007 Palmeiras São Paulo State Championship: 2008 References External links Category:1988 births Category:Living people Category:Sportspeople from Rio de Janeiro (city) Category:Brazilian footballers Category:Association football forwards Category:Campeonato Brasileiro Série A players Category:J1 League players Category:Thai League 2 players Category:Fluminense FC ### Assistant:
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### User: Adebayo, also spelled Adébáyọ̀ or Adebayor in French, is a Yoruba name which either means “he came in a joyful time”, or "the king/crown/royalty meets joy" Surname Adedayo Adebayo (born 1970), English rugby player (of Nigerian descent) Ayobami Adebayo (born 1988), Nigerian writer Bam Adebayo (born 1997), American professional basketball player Bo Adebayo (born 1988), Canadian football defensive lineman Cornelius Adebayo (born 1941), Nigerian government official Diran Adebayo (born 1968), British novelist, critic and broadcaster Dotun Adebayo (born 1960), British radio presenter Emmanuel Adebayor (born 1984), Togolese footballer Femi Adebayo (born 1972), Nigerian lawyer, actor, director and producer Niyi Adebayo ### Assistant:
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### User: Diego Iván Rubio Köstner (born 15 May 1993) is a Chilean footballer who plays as a striker for Major League Soccer club Colorado Rapids. Club career Early career Rubio began his football career with Universidad Católica. However, when he was 14, he took the decision to move to his favorite team Colo-Colo. After one year in the bench with Colo-Colo, in the next season Diego was consecrated in the youth team. After many seasons in the youth ranks, he was promoted to the first professional team in January 2011. Colo-Colo Rubio made his professional debut for Colo-Colo in a pre-seasonfriendly against Deportes La Serena as a starter. In other pre-season game, Diego scored his first unofficial goals for the club, in a 3–1 won against Unión Española, in where he scored two goals for his team, being named the man of the match. His Chilean Primera División came on 14 February 2011 against Unión San Felipe, as an 84th-minute substitution in a 2–0 away defeat. In a Copa Libertadores game played against Santos in Brazil, he scored his first professional goal, but the match finished in a 3–2 loss. On 19 April, Rubio scored his first two goals inthe Primera División against La Serena, at 30th and 62nd minute, being named the man of match, in a 4–1 home win. He finally was consecrated in the club in an international game for the Libertadores against Táchira, Rubio gave the 2–1 victory to the club, scoring the two goals of Colo-Colo, after an early goal of Edgar Pérez Greco at 4th minute. After his club's performances, was rumored that Udinese are interested in Rubio. He played his first derby game against his former youth club Universidad Católica, participating in the equalizer goal of Colo-Colo giving an assistance to EzequielMiralles at 81st minute, putting the 1–1 draw. The coach Américo Gallego nominated to Rubio for play the major derby of the Chilean football against Universidad de Chile, however, he only playing 30 minutes in a 2–1 loss. Sporting CP On 5 July 2011, Rubio joined Portuguese club Sporting Clube de Portugal for €1.5 million, signing a five-year contract with a €30 million minimum fee release clause. Loan to Pandurii On 2 September 2013, Romanian Liga I club Pandurii Târgu Jiu confirmed Rubio was signed on a loan from Sporting, with an option to buy. He debuted in Liga Iin the match against Dinamo Bucharest, won by Pandurii 2–1. Loan to Sandnes Ulf On 3 February 2014, Rubio joined Tippeligaen side Sandnes Ulf on a season-long loan. Valladolid On 31 August 2015, aged 22, signed a four-year contract with Spanish club Real Valladolid. Sporting Kansas City On 8 March 2016, Rubio signed a season-long loan with Major League Soccer side Sporting Kansas City as a Designated Player. He signed with the club on a permanent deal on 1 September 2016. Colorado Rapids Ahead of the 2019 season, Rubio was traded to Colorado Rapids in exchange for Kelyn Rowe, $200,000of General Allocation Money and $100,000 of Target Allocation Money. International career On 31 May 2011, Rubio was called up by Chilean national team manager Claudio Borghi to take part in the 28-man pre-list preparatory process for the upcoming 2011 Copa America. He officially debuted with Chile national team on 23 June 2011, in a match against Paraguay, the last match of Chile before the Copa América. Personal life Diego is the son of Hugo Rubio. Currently working at the Passball company as a football agent, Hugo was a successful football player, having spent most of his extensive career inhis country with a short spell in European football, specifically in Italy and Switzerland. Hugo also was a member of the Chile squad at the Copa América of 1987 and 1991. Diego has two footballer brothers, Eduardo, and Matías, who plays for Unión La Calera. Diego Rubio is also godchild of the Chilean football legend Iván Zamorano. On 15 May 2011, was reported that Rubio was on a list of most popular Chilean players on Twitter with 1,247 fans, in the 12th place of 14 players. The list was led by Jorge Valdivia, in the 1st place with more of50,000 fans. On 24 May 2013, Diego got married with Rocío Navarro in Seville and on 6 June 2014 his first son Thiago was born. Rubio earned his U.S. green card in September 2017. This status also qualifies him as a domestic player for MLS roster purposes. Career statistics International Honors Club Sporting Kansas City US Open Cup: Winner 2017 References External links Diego Rubio at Football-Lineups Category:Living people Category:1993 births Category:Chilean people of German descent Category:Chilean footballers Category:Sportspeople from Santiago Category:Association football forwards Category:Colo-Colo footballers Category:Sporting CP footballers Category:Sporting CP B players Category:CS Pandurii Târgu Jiu players Category:Sandnes Ulfplayers Category:Real Valladolid players Category:Sporting Kansas City players Category:Sporting Kansas City II players Category:Colorado Rapids players Category:Chilean Primera División players Category:Primeira Liga players Category:LigaPro players Category:Liga I players Category:Eliteserien players Category:Segunda División players Category:Major League Soccer players Category:USL Championship players Category:Chile under-20 international footballers Category:Chile international footballers Category:Designated Players (MLS) Category:Chilean expatriate footballers Category:Expatriate footballers in Portugal Category:Chilean expatriate sportspeople in Portugal Category:Expatriate footballers in Romania Category:Chilean expatriate sportspeople in Romania Category:Expatriate footballers in Norway Category:Chilean expatriate sportspeople in Norway Category:Expatriate footballers in Spain Category:Chilean expatriate sportspeople in Spain Category:Expatriate soccer players in the United States Category:Chilean expatriate sportspeople in ### Assistant:
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### User: Maestro Csaba Elthes (March 10, 1912 – November 8, 1995) was a fencing master who emigrated to the U.S. Elthes trained many Olympic competitors in the 1960s through 1980s, including the only U.S. Olympic fencing medalist of the period, Peter Westbrook (bronze medal in 1984). Early life Born in Budapest, Hungary, Elthes earned a degree in law from University of Budapest in 1936. In 1956, political turmoil in Hungary caused him to leave his wife and two daughters and flee to the west via the Brücke von Andau. He arrived in the United States and was detained for sixty days.In the USA Determining that he would not be able to find work as a lawyer in the United States, he decided that fencing might be a good way to make a living. Investigating the competitions of the time, he realized that while American foil fencing was already at a fairly high level (he cited Albie Axelrod and Daniel Bukantz in particular), there were opportunities in sabre and epee, and he quickly found employment at the salle of maestro Giorgio Santelli in New York City. Elthes and Santelli were largely (but not solely) responsible for making the New York Cityarea the center of US sabre fencing for most of their careers; Elthes was a US Olympic coach from 1964 to 1984, and as late as 1992, the entire US Olympic sabre team was based at NYC salles and clubs. Elthes generally gave lessons both at the Fencers Club and at the New York Athletic Club. For at least three years (1968-1971) he was the fencing coach at Pace University. Teaching style In his teaching, Elthes stressed balance and footwork, and treated fencing as an intellectual pursuit as well as an athletic one. When teaching, he often gave very fewinsults were received as gratuities!" Personal courage and disregard for discomfort were also part of the formula; for very advanced students, Elthes sometimes gave lessons without a mask, and nearly all serious students were disciplined by being hit with a sabre, sometimes hard enough to draw blood; Danny Bukantz' son Jeff, a student from the 1970s, notes "I think I may have been the only student that Csaba didn't hit. I always thought it might have been because my father was his dentist". Peter Westbrook quit working with Elthes after three months in 1972, unwilling to tolerate the maestro's teachingstyle. The following year, Westbrook began working with Elthes again, and Elthes no longer struck him, coaching him to his first of 13 US National Sabre titles in 1974. Of him, Westbrook wrote; "Csaba believed in me and worked me like a dog, goading me, inspiring me, always pushing me beyond what I thought I could or would do. I was lucky to have had 8 years with Csaba in his prime before his stroke in 1980. The stroke paralyzed his right hand so he taught w/his left until he recovered some use in his right. Csaba came to loveNew York and his life here in the U.S., he went back to Hungary every year on vacation to visit his daughters from his first wife and family, but New York was his home. He never lost that formality between us, just the one time (May 1977) when he punctured my throat by accident, the only time I have ever seen him cry or drop his formality with me." Hall of Fame and beyond Elthes was inducted into the USFA Hall of Fame in 1978. In 1980, the United States boycotted the Olympic Games in Moscow. Elthes and the USFencing team instead went on a state department sponsored trip to China, spending 3 weeks traveling through 4 different provinces competing against China's top teams. Later that year, Elthes suffered a stroke, paralyzing his right hand, but he learned to teach with his left until he had recovered some use of the right, and switched hands as needed for the rest of his career. In 1981, his student Michael Lofton becomes US Junior Olympic sabre champion, beginning a very successful career as one of the United States' top fencers. His passion for fencing and competition never wavered; in 1994, heconvinced Peter Westbrook to train for and participate in the 1995 Pan American Games, where Westbrook won a gold medal at the age of 42. Elthes died of a stroke in 1995 when visiting his home city of Budapest. He was survived by his second wife, Baba, who resides in New York. Among Elthes' students are US Olympic competitors Al Morales, Paul Apostol, Westbrook, Mika'il Sankofa (formerly Michael Lofton), Steve Mormando, and Jeff Bukantz, as well as Olympic fencing referee (certified at a record-setting age 18) and Maccabiah Games medalist Russell Wilson. See also Fencing USFA USFA Hall of Fame ### Assistant:
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### User: The Aero A.11 was a biplane light bomber and reconnaissance aircraft built in Czechoslovakia between the First and Second World Wars. It formed the basis for many other Czechoslovakian military aircraft of the inter-war period. Around 250 were built, with some remaining in service at the outbreak of World War II. Designed by Antonin Husnik, it was a development of the Aero A.12 (despite what the numbering of the designs might suggest). A Hispano-Suiza 8Fb-powered version, the A.11H-s was built for the Finnish Air Force, the only foreign operator of the type. The Finns had eight aircraft of this type ### Assistant:
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### User: James Anthony "Tony" Gaffney, CBE, FICE, FREng, FCIHT (1928–2016) was a British civil engineer. Gaffney was born in the Rhymney Valley, South Wales in 1928 and holds BSc and DSc degrees. He was the County Engineer for the West Riding of Yorkshire at the time of the construction of Scammonden Reservoir and M62 in the late 1960s. He was elected president of the Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation for the 1978-79 session and elected president of the Institution of Civil Engineers for the 1983-84 session. As part of the 1984 Queen's Birthday Honours Gaffney was, on 16 June, appointed ### Assistant:
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### User: Sir Eusebius Buswell, 1st Baronet (1681–1730?), was a baronet in the Baronetage of Great Britain. He was born at Tickencote, Rutland, in 1681. He matriculated at Pembroke College, Oxford, on 20 May 1698 aged 17. He was the eldest son of Eusebius Buswell, formerly Pelsant, of Lyddington, Rutland, by Frances Wingfield, daughter of Sir Richard Wingfield of Tickencote. Eusebius Buswell, Senior, was the son of Sir Eusebius Pelsant of Cadeby, Leicestershire, by his second wife Anne, the sister of Sir George Buswell, Baronet. Sir George died without issue on 10 March 1667, when Eusebius Buswell, Senior, was about 11 yearsold and presumably still called Pelsant. By 1706, he had adopted the surname of his maternal uncle, Buswell. Eusebius Buswell, Junior, was created a baronet on 5 March 1714, and was the last baronet created during the reign of Anne, Queen of Great Britain. He married firstly, Hester Skrymshire, second daughter and co-heir of Sir Charles Skrymshire of Norbury, Staffordshire, by his first wife Hester Taylor, daughter and heiress of George Taylor of Darwent Hall, Derbyshire. She died without issue on 7 April 1706, and was buried at All Saints' Church, Clipston, Northamptonshire. He married secondly Honora Sneyd (baptised 23May 1694), daughter of Ralph Sneyd, of Keel Hall, Staffordshire. They had an only daughter, Frances, who married Christopher Horton of Catton, Derbyshire. On his death in or about 1730, the baronetcy became extinct. His estate was heavily in debt, and a private bill "for vesting certain Lands and Estates, in the Counties of Stafford, Leicester, Rutland, and Northampton, late the Estates of Sir Eusebius Buswell Baronet, deceased, in Trustees, to be sold, for the Payment of his Debts" was passed by the Parliament of Great Britain in June 1732 to enable payment. There is a memorial tablet in All ### Assistant:
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### User: Paul Larudee (born April 25, 1946) is an Iranian-born American political activist who is a major figure in the pro-Palestinian movement. Based in the San Francisco Bay area, he is involved with the International Solidarity Movement and was a founder of the Free Gaza Movement and the Free Palestine Movement. Early life and education Larudee was born in Iran to an Iranian Presbyterian minister and his American missionary spouse in 1946 and grew up in the American Midwest. He attended Georgetown University from 1970 to 1973 and received a Ph.D. in linguistics. He also graduated from the Niles Bryant Schoolof Piano Technology in 1990. Career Larudee spent 14 years in Arab countries, supervising a Ford Foundation project in Lebanon, working as a Fulbright-Hays lecturer in Lebanon, and a United States government adviser to Saudi Arabia. Larudee has worked in the U.S. and abroad as a piano technician. He is certified as a Registered Piano Technician by the Piano Technicians Guild and has conducted training classes for the Guild and in overseas programs. He is the inventor of the patented Lo-Torq tuning pin, which is used for piano rebuilding. He has also compiled an English-Spanish glossary of piano terminology. Hethe United States. At a 2009 fundraiser for Gaza, Larudee said that "Palestine will be freed in our lifetime" and that "We are all Palestinians ... What happened to Palestinians can happen to everyone." Appearing on Iranian Press TV in December 2012, he said:"Israel has never really cared about international law unless it is enforced in some meaningful way; for example all it takes is for the United States to threaten to cutback aid and all of a sudden Israel changes its actions completely." He criticized the U.S., saying that it in other parts of the world the United States'the attacks. I see instead a resilient people without other means of resistance, pushed to desperation by the increasing pressures of ethnic cleansing, while their cries for help are ignored. Is there a proud people anywhere that might not be driven to such measures to defend themselves?" Elsewhere, he has stated that he is opposed to suicide bombing. Activism International Solidarity Movement Larudee is an active member and local leader of the International Solidarity Movement (ISM), in which capacity he has acted as a human shield in the West Bank. He has also written training materials for new ISM members.it true that you wrote on your website that you had been training volunteers?' But they didn't even name the website". Deported from Israel Larudee was arrested in and deported from Israel in 2006. Larudee was accused by Israeli authorities of being engaged in "anti-Israeli" activities that included meetings with Hamas a group accused by the United States of being a terrorism. Larudee had been photographed with Hamas leaders when he received an award after the first Gaza flotillas. He was traveling this time under the false identity Paul Wilder because he had been banned from the country before duehe refused to go and instead contacted an Israeli leftist human-rights attorney. Deportation from India Larudee was taken into custody in December 2012 in Tirur in the Malappuram district of India, where he had spoken at a Student Islamic Organisation conference. Charged with "violating visa norms," he was issued a "quit India" notice, which required that he "leave India as early as possible". He was then blacklisted by police in Kerala, which means that he cannot enter India again. According to one report, Larudee was taken into custody and was sent back due to his violation of the visa conditionGerman, and Arabic. See also Freedom flotilla International Solidarity Movement Free Gaza Movement References External links first interview with Larudee after he was released, unedited from KTVU Richmond Confidential article on Paul and Betty Larudee "The Lebanese Nakba and Israeli Ambitions" - CounterPunch article by Larudee "East Bay Palestine activists may be on the way home" "El Cerrito man beaten in assault on Gaza aid flotilla" "East Bay Citizens Condemn Israel Attack on Gaza Aid Flotilla" http://israelbehindthenews.com/poisoning-people-palestine-bds-raises-funding-olive-oil-fraud/. New article on Larudee engaging in fraud for BDS movement. Category:1946 births Category:Living people Category:American human rights activists Category:American Presbyterians Category:Georgetown University alumni ### Assistant:
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### User: __NOTOC__ This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Norfolk, Virginia. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in the independent city of Norfolk, Virginia, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in an online map. There are 59 properties and districts listed on the National Register in the city. Another 3 properties were once listed but have been removed. Current listings |} Former listings |} ### Assistant:
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### User: Pripovedi is the second studio album by Slovene musician Tomaž Pengov. He took eight years, from 1980 to 1988, to record this album, recorded with guest musicians. The music is still acoustic, but more varied. Track listing All songs written by Tomaž Pengov. Side one "Rodovnik vina" – 4:10 "Prišla je" – 3:25 "Pegam in Lambergar" – 6:10 "Starec in morska zvezda" – 4:10 Side two "Vanitas" – 3:05 "Vrnitev" – 3:45 "Tihe so njive" – 3:18 "Dolga reka" – 4:30 "Bela izba" – 4:18 Personnel Tomaž Pengov – accoutic guitar, 12-string lute, vocals Matjaž Sekne - viola Emil Krečan ### Assistant:
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### User: Tracey K (born Tracey Kelliher) is an Irish singer and songwriter best known for providing the vocals and lyrics for the UK Dance Chart hit "The Cure and the Cause". Career Kelliher was raised in Kerry, in the south west of Ireland. While in University in Galway, Kelliher joined Dextris, a group consisting of two vocalists harmonising over house and hip-hop beats. In 2003, Kelliher collaborated with Shane Johnson and Greg Dowling of Fish Go Deep. Their first track was "Lil' Hand" which was later released as the title track on their debut album. Their first single release was "Nights ### Assistant:
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### User: Joan Sophia Kersey, née Walder (6 October 1926 – 2013) was an Australian writer, social worker and left-wing activist. Her parents, Arthur Walder and Millie, née Bowen, were part of a prominent and wealthy family; her uncle Sir Samuel was Lord Mayor of Sydney in 1932 and later served as a United Australia Party member of the New South Wales Legislative Council. Sir William McMahon, Prime Minister from 1971 to 1972, was one of her cousins. She received a Bachelor of Arts in 1947 from the University of Sydney and a diploma in social studies in 1950. In 1952 shemarried Royal Navy officer Michael Kersey, and moved around with him to Scotland, Malta and New Zealand; on his retirement, they settled in Armidale to manage a grazing property. There Kersey became involved in organisations such as the Save the Children Fund, Family Planning, and Zero Population Growth, and joined the Australia Party, forerunner of the Australian Democrats. After her separation from her husband, Kersey moved back to Sydney and became involved in the nuclear disarmament, women's rights and conservation movements. She ran three times for the seat of Wentworth for the Democrats. After retiring from social work she studied ### Assistant:
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### User: Belaya River (means "White River" in Russian) may refer to the following rivers in Russia: Belaya River (Imandra), a tributary of the Lake Imandra in the Murmansk Oblast Belaya River (Kama), a tributary of the Kama River in the Republic of Bashkortostan Belaya River (Kuban), a tributary of the Kuban River in the Republic of Adygea and in Krasnodar Krai Belaya River (Penzhina), a tributary of the Penzhina River in Kamchatka Krai Bolshaya Belaya River, a tributary of the Angara River in Irkutsk Oblast Belaya River (Chukotka), a tributary of the Anadyr River in the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug a west-flowing ### Assistant:
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### User: Mohinder “Jimmy” Amarnath Bhardwaj (born 24 September 1950) is an Indian former cricketer and current cricket analyst. He is the son of Lala Amarnath, the first post-independence captain of India, and Kailash Kumari. His brother Surinder Amarnath was a Test player. Another brother Rajinder Amarnath is a former first class cricket and current cricket coach. Mohinder was seen in the latter part of his career, as the finest Indian batsman against express pace. Career Mohinder made his debut against Australia at Chennai in December 1969, as a quick-bowling all rounder. At his peak he was a top order batsman whomainly played at No. 3 for India. He was also handy with the ball, bowling swingers and cutters with great skill and control. He had a unique run-up where he slowed down as he reached the bowling crease. Behind his seemingly lethargic demeanor were nerves of steel. Mohinder Amarnath played 69 Tests scoring 4,378 runs at a batting average of 42.50, with 11 hundreds and 24 fifties, and claimed 32 wickets at a bowling average of 55.68 apiece. In 85 One Day Internationals, he scored 1,924 runs at an average of 30.53 and a highest score of 102 n.o. andhis fastest. He followed this test century with another 10 more against top class fast bowling. Imran Khan regarded Mohinder so highly that in his book "All Round View" he went on record to say that in the 1982–83 season, Mohinder was quite simply the best batsman in the world. Imran further went on to state that Mohinder should have played non-stop for India right from his debut in 1969 to the time he retired. (After his debut series in 1969, he had to wait until 1975 to make it into the team). 1982–83 series in Pakistan This series sawImran Khan at his lethal best, supported by the canny Sarfraz Nawaz. In match after match India crumbled against the fiery pace of Pakistan, losing the Second, third and fourth tests 3–0 . Imran Khan who took 40 wickets in the series was jointly awarded "Man of the Series" with Mohinder Amarnath. The catastrophic series for India hastened the end of the career of master batsman Gundappa Viswanath. Mohinder Amarnath was the sole saving grace for the Indian batting line-up for the series as a whole. (An aside – Sunil Gavaskar carried his bat in one innings of the series).1983 World Cup Performance Mohinder Amarnath is best known for his legendary performance in the 1983 Cricket World Cup. He was awarded "Man of the Match" in the finals and semi-finals, playing a star role in leading India to their first ever One Day International title and first World Cup win. In the semi-finals against England his accurate seam bowling fetched him the top-order wickets of David Gower and Mike Gatting. He gave away only 27 runs in his 12 overs, for an average of a miserly 2.25 an over, the lowest among all Indian bowlers. Returning to bat, hescored 46 runs to give India a solid foundation. He was named the Man of the Match. In the finals, India batted first against the West Indies which arguably boasted the world's best bowling attack comprising Malcolm Marshall, Michael Holding, Andy Roberts and Joel Garner. India did not fare well, with the entire team being dismissed for a paltry score of 183 in 54.4 overs, well short of the allotted 60 overs. Amarnath's calm and composed batting against West Indian fast bowling gave the Indian innings some much needed stability. He occupied the crease for the longest period (80 balls)and scored 26 runs. Though normally in limited over matches a long stint at the crease in not necessarily a good thing, given that India did not last the entire 60 overs Amarnath's innings gave the batsmen at the other end the opportunity to score. Krishnamachari Srikkanth top-scored with 38 runs, followed by Sandeep Patil (27 runs). After the poor batting performance India's chances were deemed almost non-existent. However, the Indian bowling exploited the weather and pitch conditions, conducive for swing bowling perfectly to bowl out the West Indies for just 140, thus winning the finals by 43 runs. Amarnath1982–83, Mohinder never held a steady place in the Indian Test side and would frequently get dropped. Mohinder is known as the Comeback Man of Indian Cricket. During his two decades at the top, he was dropped from the Indian side on several occasions and each time he fought his way back with sterling performances, playing excellent domestic cricket and making it hard for the national selectors to ignore him. He was well known for his batting technique, temperament and skill. He even experimented with a side-on batting stance, where one foot was placed at an angle to the crease,of the skull from Richard Hadlee, was knocked unconscious by Imran Khan, had teeth knocked out by Malcolm Marshall and was hit in the jaw so painfully by Jeff Thomson in Perth that he could eat only ice cream for lunch. 'What separated Jimmy from the others,' Michael Holding said, 'was his great ability to withstand pain . . . A fast bowler knows when a batsman is in pain. But Jimmy would stand up and continue.' " . In the Bridgetown Test during India's tour of the West Indies in 1982–83, Amarnath had to retire for stitches after beingtour of India by restricting him to only 1 run in six innings, during which Holding scalped Amarnath three times for a duck. Amarnath had scores of 0,0,0,1,0,0 and was hence dropped just months after his career-high success at the 1983 World Cup. He played an important role in famous chase in Queen's Park Oval, Port of Spain, Trinidad in 1976 tour. He made 85 in the second innings taking India to the brink of historic win. Amarnath was noted for his conflicts with the Indian cricketing political establishment, famously having called the selectors a "bunch of jokers". This oftenresulted in his exclusion from the Indian team also. Trivia Mohinder had some unique dismissals. He is the only Indian who has been dismissed on handling the ball. He was dismissed on 9 February 1986 also making him the first one to be dismissed for handling the ball in One-Day Internationals. He is also the only Indian to be dismissed for obstructing the field in One-Day Internationals. He has also been dismissed 'hit wicket'. He is the only International Cricketer in the world to be given out both for handling the ball and obstructing the field in his career .He displayed the unique superstition of carrying a red handkerchief visibly in his trouser pocket while batting. Cricket Coaching Mohinder Amarnath presented a popular weekly cricket coaching TV programme in the late 80s/early 90s. The program went by the name of 'Cricket with Mohinder Amarnath'. It featured technique presentation and discussion with guest speakers who were mostly Indian national team members at the time. It had a decent following among the youth of that time who were hooked to Cricket especially after Reliance Cup was held in India in 1987, given that the program was available on the national channelDoordarshan thus taking cricket to the masses. The title song of this program 'Khel hi hain hamara jeevan...' was very catchy. Young Sachin Tendulkar, a 15 years old, was interviewed by Amarnath for the program. Sachin was playing wonderfully in the domestic leagues, and was showing enormous potential. After a year, he was inducted into the Indian team for the Pakistan tour. Family Mohinder Amarnath is married to Inderjit Amarnath, and they have one daughter. References External links Category:India One Day International cricketers Category:India Test cricketers Category:North Zone cricketers Category:Wisden Cricketers of the Year Category:1950 births Category:Living people Category:Cricketers at ### Assistant:
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### User: KSnapshot is a screenshot application for the KDE desktop environment developed by Richard J. Moore, Matthias Ettrich and Aaron J. Seigo. The screenshots taken by KSnapshot are also called snapshots, which explains its name. It is written in Qt and C++. KSnapshot allows users to use hotkeys to take a screenshot. In December 2015, KSnapshot has been replaced by Spectacle. Features KSnapshot has the following features: Save snapshot in multiple formats Take new snapshot Open with... possibility to open snapshot in external editor. Copy to clipboard Several capture modes, including selected region or single window. Snapshot delay Ksnapshot also hada direct-to-print button but it was removed in version KDE 3.5. Spectacle Spectacle replaced KSnapshot with the release of KDE Applications 15.12 in December 2015. In addition to what one could do with KSnapshot, Spectacle can take composite screenshots of pop-up menus along with their parent windows. Other feature is the ability to take screenshots without explicitly starting Spectacle by using the keyboard shortcuts and respectively. Spectacle was optimized to start fast to minimize the time lag between starting the application and capturing the image. See also GNOME Screenshot Scrot References External links The KSnapshot Handbook Category:Free software programmed in ### Assistant:
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### User: Roshan Mathew is an Indian film and stage actor and director, best known for his work in Malayalam films. He made his debut in the 2016 movie Puthiya Niyamam directed by A. K. Sajan, in which he played the antagonist. He shot to popularity with his portrayal of Gautham Roy, a musician with a major identity crisis in Ganesh Raj's Aanandam (2016). His performance in Anjali Menon's Koode (2018) was widely appreciated and garnered him positive reviews. Roshan was next seen in Geetu Mohandas's Moothon. In addition to his film career, Roshan has appeared in numerous theatre productions based inMumbai and Chennai. Some of his prominent productions have been The Glass Menagerie directed by Rajit Kapoor, 07/07/07 directed by Faezeh Jalali. He has also directed an original play in Kochi called A Very Normal Family with a new team of artists based in the city. Early life Roshan hails from Changanassery, Kottayam in the Indian state of Kerala. His father Mathew Joseph is a bank manager in Canara Bank and his mother Regina Augustine is a retired PWD engineer. He studied in Kendriya Vidyalaya, Kottayam. After enrolling in School of Engineering, CUSAT in Kochi he dropped out after oneyear to study B.Sc Physics in Madras Christian College in Chennai. During his second year in college he developed an interest in acting, and after graduation joined the Drama School Mumbai. Career Theatre Roshan had been active on stage since school, but his first opportunity to work in professional theatre came when the Chennai-based theatre company Stagefright Productions came to Madras Christian College to audition actors for their production of Dirty Dancing in August 2010. Roshan bagged the role of Neal Kellerman, and the production went on stage at The Museum Theatre, Chennai in February 2011. He almost instantly fellin love with theatre, and went on to work with all the prominent Chennai based companies in plays such as Kamala, Leap, The Uprising, Tughlaq, and Murder Me Always. He was also part of The Little Theatre’s Christmas Pantomime in 2013. In Madras Christian College, Roshan along with his friends started a theatre group called Theatre No. 59 which staged many plays in different colleges in the state. Their production of Alfred Hitchcock/Patrick Hamilton’s Rope was widely appreciated, and their revival of Jean Paul Sartre’s No Exit won Roshan the award for Best Director at a national level student theatre ### Assistant:
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### User: Kelly's Locker is an EP released by Saint Etienne lead singer Sarah Cracknell. Issued by Instinct Records in 2000, the EP served as a companion piece to Cracknell's debut album Lipslide. Four tracks which were on the UK version of Lipslide (but removed for the U.S. release three years later) were included here, as well as the original mix of "Home", shown on Kelly's Locker as the "Armchair Mix". Two previously unreleased songs were also included, as well as a remix of "Anymore" which originally appeared on the 1996 UK single release. Track listing All tracks written by Sarah Cracknell, ### Assistant:
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### User: Muhammad Qavi Khan better known by his screen name Qavi Khan, is a Pakistani film and television actor. He has also worked in Radio Pakistan and on stage. Though now largely working in television, he has acted in over 200 films. The Government of Pakistan honoured Khan with two of the country's highest civilian honours, the Pride of Performance in 1980 and Sitara-e-Imtiaz in 2012 for his contribution to the field of arts. Life and career Khan was born and raised in Swat, Pakistan. He started working, at a young age, at Radio Pakistan, Peshawar as a child actor. Hisfamily later moved to Lahore. In 1964, he went on to work for Pakistan Television Corporation when TV broadcasting first started in Lahore, Pakistan, being one of the first actors of PTV. He started his film career in 1965. In 1966 He apeared In PTV's Best Black And White Drama Lakhon Mian Teen. Khan is also well known for his PTV's (1984–1985 television season) police drama serial Andhera Ujala which launched him to stardom alongside his fellow actors such as Irfan Khoosat and the late Jamil Fakhri. Qavi Khan got married in 1968. An event was arranged at the PakistanNational Council of the Arts (PNCA) auditorium, Islamabad, in March 2011, to pay tribute to Qavi Khan's achievements. He later began starring as an actor in the various television plays. Some of his recent works include Saheliyan, (2016 television serial), Farz (2017), and Khaani (2017). Selected filmography Films Television The list is incomplete. Some of his recent works are: Awards and recognition 2007 Lifetime Achievement Award by Pakistan Television Corporation 2012 Sitara-e-Imtiaz by the Government of Pakistan PTV Award for Best Actor Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007 1978 Nigar Award for Best Supporting Actor- Film 'Parakh' References External links http://www.citwf.com/person347381.htm, ### Assistant:
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### User: Brian Backer (born December 5, 1956) is an American former actor who has starred in film and on television. He is best known for his role in the 1982 hit comedy film Fast Times at Ridgemont High as shy teenager Mark "Rat" Ratner. He appeared in the 1985 comedy film Moving Violations as Scott Greeber and the 1987 comedy film Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol as Arnie. Backer's primary television role was on the soap opera Santa Barbara in 1990 as A. Bartlett Congdon. He has made guest appearances on such shows as Charles in Charge and Growing Pains.Backer won the 1981 Tony Award for Best Performance by a Featured Actor in a Play, the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actor in a Play, and the Theatre World Award for Woody Allen's The Floating Light Bulb, in which he portrayed an Allen-like protagonist. Early life Backer grew up in Brooklyn. Filmography The Burning (1981) as Alfred Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982) as Mark "Rat" Ratner Talk to Me (1984) as Men's Store Salesman Moving Violations (1985) as Scott Greeber The Money Pit (1986) as Ethan Police Academy 4: Citizens on Patrol (1987) as Arnie Perry Mason: ### Assistant:
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### User: DeRay Mckesson (born July 9, 1985) is an American civil rights activist, podcaster, and former school administrator. A supporter of the Black Lives Matter movement, he has been active in the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, and Baltimore, Maryland and on social media outlets such as Twitter and Instagram. Mckesson has also written for HuffPost and The Guardian. Along with Johnetta Elzie, Brittany Packnett, and Samuel Sinyangwe, Mckesson launched Campaign Zero, a policy platform to end police violence. He is currently part of Crooked Media and hosts a podcast, Pod Save the People. On February 3, 2016, Mckesson announced his candidacyin the 2016 Baltimore mayoral election. He finished with 3,445 votes (2.6%) placing sixth in the Democratic Party primary on April 26. Mckesson is the author of On the Other Side of Freedom: The Case for Hope, a memoir about his life and time as a Black Lives Matter organizer. Early life, education, and career Mckesson was an organizer in Baltimore City as a teenager, notably as the Chairman of Youth As Resources, Baltimore's youth-led grant-making organization. He graduated in 2007 with a degree in government and legal studies from Bowdoin College, where he had been president of the studentgovernment and his class. After graduation Mckesson began his education career by working for Teach for America for two years in a New York City elementary school. Mckesson later worked as special assistant in the office of human capital with the Baltimore City Public Schools, for the Harlem's Children's Zone, and as a human resources official at Minneapolis Public Schools. In June 2016, he was appointed Baltimore City Schools' interim chief human capital officer, i.e., chief personnel officer, by district CEO Sonja Santelises. He has been criticized by some public education advocates for his involvement in the controversial Teach forpolice reform. Key points included the decriminalization of trespassing, marijuana possession, loitering, public disturbance, and consuming alcohol in public as these crimes do not threaten public safety, but are often used to target African Americans. Mckesson and Elzie were awarded the Howard Zinn Freedom to Write Award in 2015 for their activism. In June 2015, Mckesson was the focus of a Twitter campaign while he was in Charleston, South Carolina to protest the Charleston church shooting. The campaign featured the hashtag "#GoHomeDeray", which was accompanied by statements demanding that Mckesson leave the city. Mckesson responded to the hashtag, stating thathe was there as a sign of solidarity for the nine deaths and that the hashtag was proof that "[r]acism is alive and well in places like South Carolina, and in towns across America." Mckesson's Twitter account was later hacked in 2016. In late 2015, he was a guest lecturer at Yale Divinity School. In November of the same year, Mckesson spoke at the GLAAD Gala, where he discussed his life as a gay man and asked LGBT people to "come out of the quiet." In February 2016, Mckesson announced his candidacy for Mayor of Baltimore just before the filingdeadline. He placed 6th in the city's Democratic primary in April, with 2.5% of the vote. In June 2016, he was named as interim chief human capital officer of the Baltimore City Public School System. On July 9, 2016, in the aftermath of the shooting of Alton Sterling, Mckesson took part in a protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. While live streaming, he was arrested. He was released the next day after being charged with obstruction of a roadway, and charges were later dropped. On July 13, he and other Black Lives Matter activists, along with police officials, politicians, and otherthis aspect of the demonstration, Mckesson should have known that leading the demonstrators onto a busy highway was most nearly certain to provoke a confrontation between police and the mass of demonstrators, and not withstanding, did so anyway. By ignoring the foreseeable risk of violence that his actions created, Mckesson failed to exercise reasonable care in conducting his demonstration." As of October 25, 2019, there is a portrait of Mckesson hanging in the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery. Books On the Other Side of Freedom (2018) See also Ferguson unrest 2015 Baltimore protests References External links This Is the Movement We ### Assistant:
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### User: Henry Wigglesworth (birth registered July→September 1860 – 3 March 1925) was an English rugby union footballer who played in the 1880s. He played at representative level for England, and Yorkshire, and at club level for Thornes F.C. (in Thornes, Wakefield), as a three-quarter, e.g. wing, or centre, Background Henry Wigglesworth's birth was registered in Doncaster district, West Riding of Yorkshire, and he died aged 64 in Hunslet, West Riding of Yorkshire. International honours Henry Wigglesworth won a cap for England while at Thornes RFC in the 1884 Home Nations Championship in the 1-goal to nil victory over Ireland at Lansdowne ### Assistant:
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### User: Ratnapimpri is a village in western Indian State of Maharashtra in the Jalgaon District, located on the bank of the River Gopi. It has been situated at the strategic location between two talukas-- Parola and Amalner in Jalgaon district. Administratively, it comes in Parola taluka but the assembly constituency is Covered Under Amalner. It is surrounded by villages named: Bahadarpur, Bhokarbari, Sadavan, and Bhilali. The village consists Sardar, Patil, Bhadane, Borse, Suryawanshi, Dhangar, Wankhede, Bhil communities predominently exists. Ratnapimpri has Two other Sub-villages in it viz. Dabapimpri, and Holpimpri. Although having three villages in one, the administrative activities are being ### Assistant:
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### User: The Rexburg Idaho Temple is the 125th operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). History Announced in late 2003, the temple was dedicated on February 10, 2008 and was the first temple dedicated by Thomas S. Monson as the church's new president. The Rexburg Idaho Temple was the third LDS temple in Idaho. (Later in 2008, a fourth Idaho temple was dedicated in Twin Falls.) The temple sits south of the Brigham Young University–Idaho (BYU–Idaho) campus on the south side of Rexburg. Prior to its completion, BYU–Idaho had been the only LDS Church-owned universityfor February 2, 2008, the dedication was postponed one week and was dedicated on February 10 by Monson, the new church president. Val R. Christensen was the temple's first president. The temple rests atop a hill, as does much of the city with a shield volcano nearby. In 2020, the Rexburg Idaho Temple was closed in response to the coronavirus pandemic. See also Comparison of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints List of temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by ### Assistant:
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### User: Treaty 4 is a treaty established between Queen Victoria and the Cree and Saulteaux First Nation band governments. The area covered by Treaty 4 represents most of current day southern Saskatchewan, plus small portions of what are today western Manitoba and southeastern Alberta. This treaty is also called the "Qu'Appelle Treaty," as its first signings were conducted at Fort Qu'Appelle, North-West Territories, on 15 September 1874. Additional signings or adhesions continued until September 1877. This treaty is the only indigenous treaty in Canada that has a corresponding indigenous interpretation (a pictograph made at the time by Chief Paskwa). Reasons forthe treaty In 1870, Hudson's Bay Company sold Rupert's Land for £300,000 to the Dominion of Canada. The Company's land covered the edge of the Rocky Mountains to the Great Lakes and was divided into the Province of Manitoba and the North-West Territories. The Indigenous peoples whose traditional territories were sold were not included in the land transfer negotiations. After learning of the transaction, the Indigenous people demanded recognition and compensation. The subsequent years, between 1871 and 1877, saw the first seven of the eleven numbered treaties signed by Canada and the Prairie First Nations. The government of Canada negotiatedthe first five Numbered Treaties to gain land from the First Nations for settlement, agricultural and industry. Also, Prime Minister John A. Macdonald saw the land as necessary to complete a transcontinental railway, which would run through the cities of Regina, Moose Jaw, and Swift Current in southern Saskatchewan. The Canadian Government feared that potential conflict with Indigenous people could disrupt the advancement in the west. Generally, the Indigenous people knew that change was inevitable because their natural food source was fading and settlers were arriving. They believed treaty negotiations would provide protection and resources. Both parties cooperated with thethe first of the numbered treaties in which First Nations adhered to the treaty after it had been determined and signed, therefore they had to accept the terms as is. The commissioners for Canada were: Alexander Morris, appointed as Lieutenant-Governor for Manitoba and the North-West Territories in 1872, who acted as the primary negotiator; David Laird, the Minister of the Interior; and William Christie, the Esquire of Brockville in Ontario. These men were selected by the Canadian government as representatives, but they stated that the Indigenous people were making a deal with the Queen herself. A number of Metis attendedthe Treaty negotiations as interpreters and signed Treaty 4 as witnesses. These men were: Charles Pratt, Pascal Breland, Edward McKay, Pierre Poitras, Jean Baptiste Davis, Pierre Desnomme,Joseph McKay, Donald McDonald and Pierre Lapierre. Later on 7 September 1876, the Metis at Fort Walsh submitted a petition to Inspector Walsh on behalf of the Metis of the four districts of Assiniboia to join Treat 4. This petition did not receive a favourable hearing. In 1873, the first three numbered treaties were concluded and as a result, a clear route was established for the intended transcontinental railway. The Canadian government had alsothrough the land. Further the treaty explicitly provides that the government may utilize the surrendered lands "as may be required or taken up from time to time for settlement, mining or other purposes, under grant or other right given by Her Majesty's said Government" and does not give any right of veto, while ensuring any lands used on the reserve by the government must be offset with matching grant of non-reserve lands. Timeline 15 September 1874: first signings at Fort Qu'Appelle by Cree, Saulteaux, and Assiniboine bands 21 September 1874: Fort Ellice adhesion by Saulteaux band 8 September 1875: Qu'AppelleLakes adhesion by Cree, Saulteaux, and Stony bands 9 September 1875: additional Qu'Appelle Lakes adhesion by Cree, Saulteaux, and Stony bands 24 September 1875: Swan Lake adhesion by Cree, Saulteaux, and Stony bands 24 August 1876: Fort Pelly adhesion by Cree and Saulteaux bands 25 September 1877: Fort Walsh adhesion by Stony and Assiniboine bands List of Treaty 4 First Nations Manitoba Swampy Cree Tribal Council the chief of the tribe Chemawawin Cree Nation—Treaty 5 signatory council member Grand Rapids First Nation—Treaty 5 signatory council member Marcel Colomb First Nation—Treaty 6 signatory council member Mathias Colomb First Nation—Treaty 6 signatorycouncil member Mosakahiken Cree Nation—Treaty 5 signatory council member Opaskwayak Cree Nation—Treaty 5 signatory council member Sapotaweyak Cree Nation Wuskwi Sipihk First Nation West Region Tribal Council Ebb and Flow First Nation—Treaty 2 signatory council member Gamblers First Nation Keeseekoowenin Ojibway First Nation—Treaty 2 signatory council member O-Chi-Chak-Ko-Sipi First Nation—Treaty 2 signatory council member Pine Creek First Nation Rolling River First Nation Skownan First Nation—Treaty 2 signatory council member Tootinaowaziibeeng Treaty Reserve First Nation independent Waywayseecappo First Nation Saskatchewan File Hills Qu'Appelle Tribal Council Carry The Kettle First Nation Little Black Bear First Nation Muscowpetung First Nation Nekaneet First NationOkanese First Nation Pasqua First Nation Peepeekisis First Nation Piapot First Nation Standing Buffalo First Nation—non-Treaty signatory council member; included in Treaty 4 Star Blanket Cree Nation Wood Mountain First Nation—non-Treaty signatory council member; included in Treaty 4 Saskatoon Tribal Council Kinistin Saulteaux Nation Mistawasis First Nation—Treaty 6 signatory council member Muskeg Lake First Nation—Treaty 6 signatory council member Muskoday First Nation—Treaty 6 signatory council member One Arrow First Nation—Treaty 6 signatory council member Whitecap Dakota First Nation—non-Treaty signatory council member Yellow Quill First Nation Touchwood Agency Tribal Council Day Star First Nation Fishing Lake First Nation Gordon First Nation ### Assistant:
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### User: The Courtland Historic District is a historic district in Courtland, Alabama. Courtland was founded in 1818 and incorporated the following year. Its location was chosen to be close to the Tennessee River to facilitate transportation, but also close to cotton plantations to the south. The town's founders envisioned becoming the county seat of the newly formed Lawrence County, but the title instead went to Moulton. Many of the earliest structures in Courtland were built of logs, and were later replaced with frame and brick buildings. Development plateaued by 1830, but received a slight bump from the Tuscumbia, Courtland and Decatur ### Assistant:
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### User: Catherine Furnace is a historic iron furnace located in the George Washington National Forest near Newport, Page County, Virginia. It was built in 1836, and is a pyramidal shaped furnace measuring 32 feet high. It was instrumental in producing high quality pig iron that was used in the Mexican War and American Civil War. The furnace was abandoned in 1885. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. References Category:Industrial buildings and structures on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia Category:Industrial buildings completed in 1836 Category:Buildings and structures in Page County, Virginia Category:National Register ### Assistant:
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### User: Andrine Stolsmo Hegerberg (born 6 June 1993) is a Norwegian footballer who plays as a midfielder for Roma in Italy's Serie A. Club career Hegerberg was raised in Sunndal and played for Sunndal Fotball together with her younger sister Ada. In 2007, their family moved to Kolbotn, where the sisters joined the youth-ranks of Kolbotn IL. Ahead of the 2009 season, the 16-year-old Hegerberg was promoted to the first-team squad and signed a professional contract with Kolbotn, and subsequently made her debut in the Toppserien on 27 September 2009 during a 2–1 win against Fløya. The sisters were early consideredas two of the most talented footballers in Norway, and in July 2011 Andrine won the Statoil Talent of the Month award. After three years with Kolbotn, where she won bronze in Toppserien in 2010 and 2011, she and Ada signed with Stabæk ahead of the 2012 season. With Stabæk, Hegerberg won the silver medal in the Toppserien and won gold at the Norwegian Cup. In January 2013, Hegerberg moved with her sister to 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam, where she made her debut in the semifinal of the 2012–13 Frauen DFB-Pokal against Bayern Munich on 3 March 2013. She madeher Bundesliga debut on 24 March 2013 in a 3–0 win against SC 07 Bad Neuenahr. Hegerberg made a total of four appearances for Potsdam, when the team finished second behind VfL Wolfsburg in both the league and the cup. During the summer of 2013, Hegerberg signed with Swedish side Kopparbergs/Göteborg FC in the Damallsvenskan. She announced the move on her public Facebook profile, stating that she was no longer prepared to play for veteran coach Bernd Schröder. Turbine's players issued an open letter in response, which expressed disappointment at the manner of Hegerberg's departure. She made her debut forGöteborg during the team's 0–5 defeat to LdB Malmö on 18 August. She signed for FA WSL club Birmingham City L.F.C. on 15 June 2016. It was announced in January 2018, that Hegerberg was joining Paris Saint-Germain ("PSG") in Division 1 Féminine on a transfer from Birmingham. She is signed with PSG until 2019. In May 2019, it was announced Hegerberg had mutually agreed to leave PSG at the end of her contract and had already started negotiating with other teams. In July 2019, Hegerberg signed with Italian Serie A team Roma. International career Hegerberg has represented Norway at variousjunior levels of the Norwegian Football Association. In 2009, she was part of the Norwegian team that finished fourth during the finals of the U-17 European Championship in Nyon. Two years later, the team reached the final match of the 2011 UEFA Women's U-19 Championship in Italy, where they were defeated 1–8 by Germany. Hegerberg was also a part of the Norwegian team in the 2012 FIFA U-20 Women's World Cup, where she and her sister scored one goal each when Canada was beaten 2–1 and the Norwegian team advanced to the quarterfinal. On 17 January 2012, Hegerberg made herfirst appearance for the senior national team during a friendly match against Sweden. She scored her first senior international goal on 15 September 2016 again Kazakhstan. Honours Club Stabæk Norwegian Women's Cup: 2012 Toppserien: Runner-up, 2012 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam Frauen Bundesliga: Runner-up, 2012–13 Frauen DFB Pokal: Runner-up, 2012–13 Country Norway U-19 2011 UEFA Women's U-19 Championship: Runners-up, 2011 References External links Player German domestic football stats at DFB (part 1) (part 2) Kopparbergs/Göteborg FC player profile Category:Living people Category:1993 births Category:People from Sunndal Category:Norwegian women's footballers Category:Norway women's international footballers Category:Women's association football midfielders Category:Stabæk Fotball Kvinner players Category:1. ### Assistant:
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### User: Clinton Woodbury Howard (July 25, 1864 – February 23, 1937) was a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington. Education and career Born in Lima, Ohio, Howard received a Bachelor of Science degree from Griswold College in 1885 and a Bachelor of Laws from the University of Michigan Law School in 1887. He was in private practice in Mount Pleasant, Iowa from 1887 to 1889, and after that in Bellingham, Washington Territory (State of Washington from November 11, 1889) starting in 1889. He was city attorney of Fairhaven, Washington from 1891to 1892, and an assistant county attorney of Whatcom County, Washington from 1892 to 1893. Federal judicial service Howard received a recess appointment from President William Howard Taft on August 26, 1912, to a seat on the United States District Court for the Western District of Washington vacated by Judge Cornelius H. Hanford. He was nominated to the same position by President Taft on December 3, 1912. His service terminated on March 3, 1913, after his nomination was not confirmed by the United States Senate, which never held a vote on his nomination. Later career and death Howard resumed private ### Assistant:
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### User: The Great Crash, 1929 is a book written by John Kenneth Galbraith and published in 1955. It is an economic history of the lead-up to the Wall Street Crash of 1929. The book argues that the 1929 stock market crash was precipitated by rampant speculation in the stock market, that the common denominator of all speculative episodes is the belief of participants that they can become rich without work and that the tendency towards recurrent speculative orgy serves no useful purpose, but rather is deeply damaging to an economy. It was Galbraith's belief that a good knowledge of what happenedwhich conventional wisdom saw the seeds of what became the Great Crash sown. Following Britain's return to the Gold Standard, and subsequent foreign exchange crises, there followed an exodus of gold from Europe to the United States. In the spring of 1927, Montagu Norman and other governors of European Banks asked the Federal Reserve to ease their monetary policy and they agreed, reducing the rediscount rate from 4 to 3.5%, a move that Lional Robbins described as resulting “in one of the most costly errors committed by it or any other banking system in the last 75 years”. The fundsthe offing even on the day after an election. Reception and popular culture In 2008 and 2009, Jim Cramer took to waving John Kenneth Galbraith's book, and praising it on his show Mad Money. He has been struck by the similarities between the crash described by Galbraith and the crash occurring in the Late 2000s recession. Revisions and updates Revised editions of the book, each time with updated research and a more timely version of the introduction, were published in 1961, 1972, 1988, 1997 and 2009. See also Debt deflation Financial Instability Hypothesis Notes Reference works Galbraith, J.K, The Great ### Assistant:
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### User: The Illinois House of Representatives is the lower house of the Illinois General Assembly, the bicameral legislature of the U.S. state of Illinois. The body was created by the first Illinois Constitution adopted in 1818. The House under the current constitution adopted in 1970 consists of 118 representatives elected from individual legislative districts for two-year terms with no limits; redistricted every 10 years, based on the 2010 U.S. census each representative represents approximately 108,734 people. The house has the power to pass bills and impeach Illinois officeholders. Lawmakers must be at least 21 years of age and a resident ofthe district in which they serve for at least two years. U.S. President Abraham Lincoln, who oversaw the American Civil War and the end of slavery in the United States, began his career in politics in the Illinois House of Representatives. History The Illinois General Assembly was created by the first Illinois Constitution adopted in 1818. The candidates for office split into political parties in the 1830s, initially as the Democratic and Whig parties, until the Whig candidates reorganized as Republicans in the 1850s. Abraham Lincoln began his political career in the Illinois House of Representatives as a member ofthe Whig party in 1834. He served there until 1842. Although Republicans held the majority of seats in the Illinois House after 1860, in the next election it returned to the Democrats. The Democratic Party-led legislature worked to frame a new state constitution that was ultimately rejected by voters After the 1862 election, the Democratic-led Illinois House of Representatives passed resolutions denouncing the federal government's conduct of the war and urging an immediate armistice and peace convention, leading the Republican governor to suspend the legislature for the first time in the state's history. In 1864, Republicans swept the state legislatureand at the time of Lincoln's assassination at Ford's Theater, Illinois stood as a solidly Republican state. Cutback Amendment of 1980 From 1870 to 1980, Illinois' lower house had several unique features: The House comprised 177 members; three representatives were elected from each of 59 "legislative districts". Elections were conducted using cumulative voting; each individual voter was given three votes to cast for House seats, and they could distribute them to three candidates (one vote each), one candidate (receiving three votes—this was called a "bullet vote") or two candidates (each receiving 1½ votes). Though not constitutionally mandated, the two parties59 Senate districts in half. Each representative is "associated" with a senator. Since the adoption of the Cutback Amendment, there have been proposals by some major political figures in Illinois to bring back multi-member districts. A task force led by former governor Jim Edgar and former federal judge Abner Mikva issued a report in 2001 calling for the revival of cumulative voting, in part because it appears that such a system increases the representation of racial minorities in elected office. The Chicago Tribune editorialized in 1995 that the multi-member districts elected with cumulative voting produced better legislators. Others have arguedthat the now-abandoned system provided for greater "stability" in the lower house. The Democratic Party won a majority of House seats in 1982. Except for a brief two-year period of Republican control from 1995 to 1997, the Democrats have held the majority since then. Firsts The first two African-American legislators in Illinois were John W. E. Thomas, first elected in 1876, and George French Ecton, elected in 1886. In 1922, Lottie Holman O'Neill became the first woman elected to the Illinois House of Representatives. In 1958, Floy Clements became the first African American woman to serve as state Representative. In1982, Joseph Berrios became the first Hispanic American state representative. Theresa Mah became the first Asian American to serve in the Illinois House when she was sworn into office January 10, 2017. Powers The Illinois House of Representatives meets at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield, Illinois. It is required to convene on the second Wednesday of January each year. Along with the Illinois Senate and governor, it is vested with the power to make laws, come up with a state budget, act on federal constitutional amendments, and propose constitutional amendments to the state constitution. The Illinois House of Representativesalso holds the power to impeach executive and judicial officials. Qualifications A person must be a U.S. citizen and two-year resident of an electoral district of at least 21 years of age to serve in the Illinois House of Representatives. Members of the House cannot hold other public offices or receive appointments by the governor while in office. Composition of the House Leadership The current Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives is Michael Madigan (D-Chicago), who represents the 22nd district. The Democratic Party of Illinois currently holds a majority of seats in the House. Under the Constitution of Illinois,Floor Leader: Mark Batinick Officers Clerk of the House: John W. Hollman Chief Doorkeeper: Lee A. Crawford Parliamentarian: Justin Cox Assistant Clerk of the House: Bradley S. Bolin Members , the 101st General Assembly of the Illinois House of Representatives consists of the following members: Ɨ Legislator was appointed to the Illinois House of Representatives during session. ƗƗ Legislator was appointed to the Illinois House of Representatives after being elected, but prior to inauguration day of the General Assembly to which they were elected. Past composition of the House of Representatives References External links Illinois General Assembly - House official ### Assistant:
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### User: Cyprus-Spain relations are the bilateral relations between Cyprus and Spain. The relations are defined mainly by the membership of both countries to the European Union. Cyprus has an embassy in Madrid and consulado s in Barcelona, Bilbao, Sevilla and Granada. Spain has an embassy in Nicosia. Diplomatic relations Spain and Cyprus established diplomatic relations on 22 December 1967. However, for a long time, there was no embassy resident in Nicosia: relations with Cyprus were covered from Damascus or Beirut. The Council of Ministers of 18 January 2002 appointed Ignacio García-Valdecasas as Spain's first ambassador in Nicosia, covering, with the openingof the Spanish Embassy in that capital, an institutional vacuum that Until then, he had been feeling the task of adequately promoting the important relations existing with the Republic of Cyprus. On the other hand, Cyprus inaugurated its Embassy in Madrid in 1992, being previously its embassy in Paris the one in charge to develop the relations with Spain. The first official visit of a Cypriot president to Spain goes back to July 1987, when Spyros Kyprianou met with the president Felipe González and was guest of honor at a dinner hosted by the King of Spain. Since then therehave been six other presidential visits (Giorgios Vassiliou, Glavkos Klerides twice, and Tassos Papadopoulos in three). The first visit of a Spanish president to Cyprus was that of José María Aznar, in February 2002, when he reiterated, on behalf of the European Union (presided over then by Spain), the validity of the agreements adopted at the Helsinki summit in 1991 to negotiate the accession of Cyprus, even if the reunification of the two areas in which the country is divided has not taken place. The second took place in December 2009, this time by José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, who presentedin Nicosia the priorities of the Spanish Presidency of the Council of the European Union that began the following month. Queen Sofía inaugurated 10 March 2010 in Nicosia the exhibition "Miró de Mallorca", an anthology of the last 20 years of the painter's work in the Spanish island of the Mediterranean. It was the first time that an exhibition of such magnitude was held in Cyprus, coinciding with the Spanish presidency of the Council of the EU and with the acts of the 50th anniversary of the Republic of Cyprus. These elements are but examples of the harmony and excellentrelations between Spain and Cyprus. Invited by his counterpart Yiannakis Omirou, president of the Congress of Deputies, Jesús Posada, made an official visit to Cyprus between 13 and 14 July 2015, during which he was interviewed, in addition to Omirou, with the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ioannis Kasoulides, and with the mayor of Nicosia, Constantinos Yiorkadjis. Spain supports the search for a negotiated solution, which allows the establishment of a bizonal and bi-communal federation, in accordance with the relevant resolutions of the United Nations Security Council, and that also respects, according to the Joint Declaration of the leaders of 11February 2014, the principles of sovereignty, legal personality and unique citizenship. Due to their geographical situation, both countries share, in addition, a special interest for the Mediterranean basin and especially support the policy of common neighborhood of the European Union in this region. At the end of 2013, Cyprus and Spain promoted the creation of a "Mediterranean Group" of consultation and consultation within the European Union. The first ministerial meeting of this group, in which seven countries participate, took place in Brussels in December 2013, while the second was held in Alicante in April 2014. Likewise, the two countries share ### Assistant:
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### User: The Cloven Viscount () is a fantasy novel by Italian writer Italo Calvino. It was first published by Einaudi (Turin) in 1952 and in English in 1962 by William Collins, with a translation by Archibald Colquhoun. The Cloven Viscount was collected together with The Baron in the Trees and The Nonexistent Knight in a single volume, Our Ancestors, for which Calvino was awarded the Salento Prize in 1960. Plot The Viscount Medardo of Terralba and his squire Kurt ride across the plague-ravaged plain of Bohemia en route to join the Christian army in the Turkish wars of the seventeenth century.is ordered to consent to Gramo's marriage proposal. On the day of the wedding, Pamela marries Buono, because Gramo arrives late. Gramo challenges Buono to a duel to decide who shall be Pamela's husband. As a result, they are both severely wounded. Dr. Trelawney takes the two bodies and sews the two sides together. Medardo finally is whole. He and his wife Pamela (now the Viscountess) live happily together until the end of their days. References Further reading Bloom, Harold (ed.). Bloom's Major Short Story Writers: Italo Calvino. Broomall, Pennsylvania: Chelsea House Publishers, 2002. Calvino, Italo. Our Ancestors: The Cloven ### Assistant:
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### User: Metuloidea is a genus of five species of fungi in the family Steccherinaceae. The genus was circumscribed by New Zealand-based mycologist Gordon Herriot Cunningham in 1965. The type species is M. tawa, a fungus originally described by Cunningham as a species of Trametes. Formerly classified in family Meruliaceae, Metuloidea was moved to the Steccherinaceae in 2016, following prior research that outlined a revised framework for the Steccherinaceae based on molecular phylogenetics. Description Metuloidea contains fungi that produce poroid or hydnoid fruit bodies that are brown and have a sweet odour. It features a dimitic hyphal system with branched, relatively wide ### Assistant:
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### User: Microsemi Corporation was an Aliso Viejo, California-based provider of semiconductor and system solutions for aerospace & defense, communications, data center and industrial markets. In February 2018, it was announced that Chandler, Arizona-based Microchip Technology was acquiring the company for over US$10bn, pending regulatory approval. In May 2018, it was announced that Microchip had completed its acquisition of Microsemi. In August 2018, Microchip discovered that Microsemi shipped large orders to distributors on discount before the closing of the acquisition and had a culture of excessive extravagance, casting some doubt on the future prospect of the acquisition. History 1959 to 1970: Earlyto merge with Microsemiconductor. This request disclosed that the major shareholders of Microsemiconductor as of May 31, 1969 were Arthur Feldon (31%), Steve Manning (31%) and Thomas C. Hall (10%). At the end of the proposed merger the company would retain the name Microsemiconductor. At the time, J.M. Kaplan's JemKap Inc owned 37.7% of the outstanding common shares of Standard, which would make him the owner of 18.9% of the surviving company. Standard Resources and Microsemiconductor merged in November 1969. 1971 to 2000: The Philip Frey Jr years According to the Orange County Business Journal, "In 1971, the New Yorkoperation was spun off and Philip Frey Jr. was brought on from Teledyne Inc.'s semiconductor division in Hawthorne to head Microsemiconductor. At the time, the company had annual sales of about $500,000, almost entirely to defense industry customers. In 1972, the company moved from Culver City to Santa Ana, California. Microsemi still was almost exclusively a defense business in 1987, but by then sales were close to $50 million. That same year, the company did a $35 million convertible bond offering, the proceeds of which were used to acquire about a dozen companies, most of them struggling "bargain" buys. Whena supplier of "high-performance semiconductor diodes in a variety of military, industrial and commercial products", issued 2.5 million shares of common stock. Up until this time, Jacob M Kaplan of New York owned or controlled 38.4% of the company shares, and was 94 years-old. Microsemi raised $26 million in the stock sale. Jacob Merril Kaplan, who was a philanthropist, died in Manhattan, NY on July 20, 1987. Microsemi was originally traded Over the Counter, commonly traded as MicrSm. On March 1, 1990 Microsemi joined the NASDAQ exchange. On March 1, 1987 Microsemi sold $35M in convertible debentures. Between 1986 andseveral years as defense budget cuts have slowed its sales. In 1989, the company said it planned to sell or close 10 subsidiaries not related to its core business of manufacturing computer chips for use in electronics equipment ranging from military weapons to heart pacemakers. The company sold four subsidiaries, shut down one, combined two and retained three. The company took $20.5 million in write-offs during the past three years in connection with the restructuring." In April 1994 Microsemi formed a joint venture in China with Shanghai Electrical Apparatus, with 60% of the joint-venture belonging to Microsemi. Linfinity, whose CEOwell as communications focused companies (PowerDsine, VT Silicon, Zarlink) a programmable logic company (Actel) and an ASIC design house focused on analog mixed-signal (ASIC Advantage). In 2011 Microsemi relocated its headquarters from Irvine, California to Aliso Viejo, California. In August 2012, Microsemi marked its 20 years of operations in Ireland by naming Ennis its European headquarters. It also announced the inaugural Microsemi Scholarship in Engineering at the University of Limerick. In addition, the company funded a high-profile science and aerospace engineering programme in St. Flannan's school in Ennis. Microsemi works closely with the Industrial Development Authority (IDA Ireland), which isresponsible for attracting and developing overseas investment in Ireland. Support from IDA Ireland was a key factor in the company's decision to invest in the region. Between 2012 and 2013 Microsemi acquired Timing companies (the timing business of Maxim Integrated Products, Symmetricom) in addition to Zarlink. In November 2013, Jim Peterson promoted Paul Pickle to COO and president, retaining the CEO position, and accumulating the position of Chairman of the Board. In 2014 Microsemi established a design group in Cork, Ireland, through the acquisition of Mingoa, which is focused on advanced system-on-chip (SoC) software and solutions with an emphasis onARM processor-centric designs. Between 2014 and 2015 Microsemi acquired communications and data-center focused companies (Mingoa, Centellax, Vitesse, PMC-Sierra). In March 2016 Microsemi announced the divestiture of the defense-focused business units acquired between 2009 and 2011. In April 2016 Microsemi announced the divestiture of its Broadband Wireless Division, which was previously part of PMC-Sierra for $21M. In October 2017 Microsemi announced the acquisition of the timing business of Vectron International from Knowles for $130 Million. In March 2018, Microsemi's PolarFire FPGA was named "2017 Product of the Year" by Electronic Products China and 21ic.com. In March 2018 Microchip Technology announced it1998 June 1989: Varo Quality Semiconductor 1990s acquisitions July 1992: Unitrode (semiconductor Product Division) October 1996: SGS Thomson's Radio Frequency Semiconductor (High-reliability Products) October 1996: National Semiconductor (high reliability monolithic diode arrays) September 1997: PPC Products May 1998: BKC Semiconductors, shutdown in November 1999 January 1998: Xemod (19%) April 1999: Linfinity Microelectronics division of Symmetricom June 1999: Narda Microwave Semiconductor 2000s acquisitions February 2000: Infinesse (HBT Business Product Group) August 2001: New England Semiconductor August 2001: Compensated Devices April 2006: Advanced Power Technology (APT) January 2007: PowerDsine Ltd November 2007: MDT Corporation January 2008: TSI Microelectronics October 2008: Electro Module,Inc. and its wholly owned subsidiary, Babcock, Inc. April 2009: the Space Level Power Products business of Spectrum Microwave, Inc. April 2009: defense and security business of Endwave Corp, divested on May 2, 2016 to Mercury Systems. June 2009: Nexsem 2010s acquisitions April 2010: White Electronic Designs Corp divested on May 2, 2016 to Mercury Systems. September 2010: VT Silicon September 2010: Arxan Technologies, Defense Systems, Inc., divested on May 2, 2016 to Mercury Systems. November 2010: Actel Corp. May 2011: AML Communications, divested on May 2, 2016 to Mercury Systems. June 2011: Brijot Imaging Systems, Inc. July 2011: ASICAdvantage, Inc. October 2011: Zarlink Semiconductor, Inc. January 2012: timing, synchronization, and synthesis business of Maxim Integrated Products October 2013: Symmetricom, Inc. July 2014: Mingoa September 2014: Centellax March 2015: Vitesse Semiconductor Corp. November 2015: PMC-Sierra for $2.5 Billion . Divested the Broadband Wireless Division to Maxlinear in April 2016. June 2017: Phonon November 2017: Vectron Awards Internet Telephony Product of the Year Awards 2008 by TMCnet.com for PD-7000G Series of PoE Midspans TMC Labs Innovation Award 2009 for PD-9000G family of PoE Midspans SOLAR Industry Award 2010, for LX2400 IDEALSolar (Solar Bypass IC) Best Delivery Support Award 2011, ZTECorporation Product of the Year Award 2011, Electronic Products, for SmartFusion (Mixed Signal FPGAs) Editor's Choice 2012, Military Embedded Systems Magazine Corporate Social Responsibility Award 2013, ITsAP Award Innovation Award 2013, EDN China for SmartFusion2 Innovative Product/Technology 2013, OC Tech Alliance, for SmartFusion2 (SoC FPGA) CFO of the Year 2013, Business Journal and CalCPA Renewable Energy Design Award 2014, Elektra Awards, Electronics Weekly, for DC-powered PoE Midspan Injector (solar powered) Outstanding CEO in Technology 2014, OC Tech Alliance DesignVision Award 2014, DesignCon European Commission Innovation Award 2014, European Commission, for SOI-HITS Research Project (Smart Silicon-on-Insulator Sensing Systems Operating at HighYear" by Electronic Product Magazine for its lowest power, cost-optimized mid-range PolarFire® field programmable gate array. Leading Lights 2018 Outstanding Components Vendor by Light Reading Controversies James Peterson education claims In 2009 Barry Minkow, co-founder of the Fraud Discovery Institute, published a report claiming that James Peterson, Microsemi's president and CEO, had not obtained a bachelor's degree or Master of Business Administration as he had listed on his biography on STEC Inc.’s regulatory filings (as part of his board position with that company) and on a US government security clearance application. Peterson responded with a public statement saying he "categorically"denied the reports. The next day, the registrar of Brigham Young University advised that they had double-checked and had no records of Peterson ever having obtained any degrees. An independent inquiry was made on behalf of the board by the law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson, which confirmed that in fact Peterson had not earned either degree. As a penalty for misrepresenting his academic credentials, Peterson paid Microsemi a fine and forwent his 2008 bonus. Backdoor In 2012, a backdoor was found in Microsemi's ProASIC3. Offices Microsemi was headquartered in Aliso Viejo, California and had offices in California (Camarillo, Cupertino,Garden Grove, San Diego, San Jose, Santa Clara, Santa Rosa); Boulder, Colorado; Atlanta, Georgia; Beverly, Lawrence, and Lowell, Massachusetts; Allentown and Reading, Pennsylvania; Austin and Dallas, Texas; Ottawa, Canada; Macau, Shanghai and Shenzhen, China; Herlev, Denmark; Bruges, Belgium; Ennis, Ireland; Hod HaSharon, Israel; Manila and Cabuyao, Philippines; Caldicot, United Kingdom; and Hyderabad, India. This list does not include properties acquired together with PMC-Sierra. References External links Glassdoor page Category:Semiconductor companies of the United States Category:Electronic design automation companies Category:Fabless semiconductor companies Category:Networking companies of the United States Category:Networking hardware companies Category:Reconfigurable computing Category:Telecommunications equipment vendors Category:Technology companies based in Greater ### Assistant:
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### User: Kanižarica () is a settlement southwest of the town of Črnomelj in the White Carniola area of southeastern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola and is now included in the Southeast Slovenia Statistical Region. History During the Second World War, on 19 July 1942, the Partisan White Carniola Detachment took 61 Roma from Kanižarica. They were marched to Mavrlen, which had recently been emptied of its Gottschee German residents, held prisoner there for two days, and then murdered and buried in the Zagradec Mass Grave () southeast of the abandoned settlement of Gradec, now ### Assistant:
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### User: Kiss You In The Rain - Max Lorentz Sings David Bowie is the fifth album from Swedish artist Max Lorentz. The record was released on CD on 8 June 2011 on PB8 Records. It contains one track each from all of David Bowie's LP's 1967 - 1980 (apart from compilations, live albums and Pin Ups). The music is mainly acoustic and in the vein of Tom Waits and burlesque and is performed by Max Lorentz with some help from the leading names in Swedish jazz. Track listing Station to Station PT.1 - from the 1976 David Bowie album "Station toStation" Five Years - from the 1972 David Bowie album "The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars" All the Madmen - from the 1971 David Bowie album "The Man Who Sold The World" Be My Wife - from the 1977 David Bowie album "Low" Drive In Saturday - from the 1973 David Bowie album "Aladdin Sane" Blackout - from the 1977 David Bowie album ""Heroes"" When I Live My Dream - from the 1967 David Bowie album "David Bowie" Scream Like a Baby - from the 1980 David Bowie album "Scary Monsters (And Super Creeps)"Rock 'n' Roll With Me - from the 1974 David Bowie album "Diamond Dogs" Quicksand - from the 1971 David Bowie album "Hunky Dory" Yassassin - from the 1979 David Bowie album "Lodger" Cygnet Committee - from the 1969 David Bowie album "Space Oddity" Can You Hear Me? - from the 1975 David Bowie album "Young Americans" Station to Station PT.2 - from the 1976 David Bowie album "Station to Station" Personnel Max Lorentz - guitars, piano, Hammond, bassguitar, accordions, mandolin, zittre, sitar, banjo, cello, zarod, harmonicas, flute, clarinet, trumpet, stylophone, midi-saxofon, synt & percussion Patrik Boman - acoustic bass ### Assistant:
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### User: The downtown core of St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada is defined by the city as the area between Highway 406 on the west and south, Geneva Street on the east until it reaches St. Paul Street then Niagara Street north until it meets Welland Avenue. It an historical area of the city, as well as a significant cultural and entertainment destination, playing host to several bars and restaurants along St. Paul and James Streets, and the popular Niagara Grape & Wine Festival and Grand Parade in September. Various retail and commercial businesses, are found throughout the core, as well as government,At the time, two-way traffic was promoted as one way of making the downtown streets safer, slowing down traffic and boosting business. By October 2009, most of the conversion work was completed. The addition of two-way traffic, especially to St. Paul Street, played a role in the Ontario Wine Council's decision to modify the Niagara Wine Route to pass through downtown St. Catharines in 2014. On June 16, 2006 the Province of Ontario released a Growth Plan under the Places to Grow Act, 2005, of which was born the Growth Plan for the Greater Golden Horseshoe in 2017. In thenearby Lower Level Parking Lot, construction began in 2013 on the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts, a new campus of Brock University. Completed in 2015, the school operates alongside the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre, a municipal cultural project, built on adjacent lands. The facilities house 500 full-time students in new buildings along St. Paul Street and the historic Canada Hair Cloth building. The grand opening of the city's new spectator arena, the Meridian Centre, took place on October 21, 2014. The 5,300 seat arena was built by the municipality to house the Niagara IceDogs ice hockeyteam of the Ontario Hockey League. The venue also plays host to numerous events throughout the year such as sporting events, concerts, trade shows and conferences. Historical sites The downtown's extensive history left an impressive showplace of heritage sites in the core. Architectural landmarks reveal the stories behind St. Catharines varying roles as the former seat of Lincoln County, a popular health-spa destination, and the premiere retail centre for Niagara. St. Catharines Armoury - A recognized Federal Heritage building, listed #1991 on the Register of the Government of Canada Heritage Buildings. British Methodist Episcopal Church, Salem Chapel - A nationaland wide sweeping staircase, were left intact. Farmers' Market - One of the oldest farmers' markets in Ontario, dating back to the early 1860s. It continues to operate every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, as it did over a century ago. The Grand Opera House (1877–1998) - With seating for 1200, the facility opened to much fanfare as a centre for musical production on Ontario Street. Over the years it housed an orchestra and featured numerous concerts and vaudeville shows. After a fire ravaged the building's facade and most of its interior, there was some public interest in restoring what wasleft of the auditorium, but the city and some professionals concluded that renovations would be much too costly and the site was levelled. The site is used today as a parking lot. The Canada Hair Cloth Company Ltd (1882–2007) - An industrial factory for over a century, the building closed in 2007 and is now home to Brock University's Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts. The Russell Hotel - a noted hotel and tavern built in 1843 by Samuel Stinson at the corner of St. Paul and James streets. The building was destroyed by fire and thesite currently sits empty. Mansion House - Thought to have been constructed in the early 19th century by William Hamilton Merritt, it is the oldest tavern in St. Catharines and the oldest continually licensed bar in Canada. Montebello Park - Designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in 1887, who went on to create New York City's Central Park. A commemorative rose garden with over 1,300 bushes in 25 varieties is the city's largest rose collection and features an ornamental fountain. The focal point of the park is a band shell and pavilion built in 1888. The park is designated under theOntario Heritage Act. Old Courthouse - Built in 1848–49, the Old Courthouse was the centre of political, cultural and social life in St. Catharines. Designed by renowned architect Kivas Tully, it was hailed as a great architectural achievement. The existing building soon became too small and an addition was added in 1863–65. Today, the building is home to Carousel Players, an independent theatre group, and recently underwent an extensive restoration. Welland House Hotel - One of the few surviving symbols of the city's extensive health spa history. Today the building is home to a student residence and CFBU, Brock University'scampus radio station. Heritage corridor The St. Catharines Economic and Tourism Services department, with support from the Ontario Ministry of Tourism, launched the Heritage Corridor Project in 2004. The goal of the project is to draw tourists off the Niagara Wine Route into St. Catharines' downtown and other historically significant areas. Transportation The downtown core of St. Catharines is served by the St. Catharines Transit on numerous routes. The central bus terminal is located downtown. The terminal also has charter buses taking you to numerous cities around the region including Welland & Thorold, as well as Greyhound buses towards Toronto.rental units, but also has historic and architecturally significant buildings. Many can watch the Wine Festival's Grande Parade from their front porch. Gerrard & Beecher Streets - Cosy community within the Downtown Core with many historic homes, some dating back to the 1860s. Many improvements in the neighbourhood make this area an up-and-coming destination for those seeking to live in the Downtown Core. Main employers Information Technology - The Ministry of Transportation of Ontario is the largest employer of IT jobs in the core. Call Centres - The Garden City Tower and RBC tower on Church Street are home toa few call centres Education - Brock University as well as the District School Board of Niagara which operates Harriet Tubman Public School on Henry Street. Municipal government - City Hall is located at James and Church Streets. Regional government - The Niagara Regional Police headquarters was once located on Church Street. Today is serves as a detachment of the police force. Provincial government - The Garden City Tower is home to a number of ministries, the largest being the Ministry of Transportation. Federal government - Canada Revenue Agency is located on Church Street. References External links St. Catharines Downtown ### Assistant:
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### User: Spialia sertorius, the red-underwing skipper, is a butterfly of the family Hesperiidae. It is found in southern and central Europe and North Africa. This is a species of mountainous regions, being found in Europe at altitudes of up to 1400 m. The wingspan is 22–26 mm. The butterfly flies from April to August depending on the location. There are usually two generations per year, adults of the second generation being smaller than those of the first. This is a variable species but can usually be distinguished from similar species such as Spialia orbifer by the dark reddish-brown colour of the ### Assistant:
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### User: The Skydivers is a 1963 film produced by Anthony Cardoza and written and directed by Coleman Francis, who together also made The Beast of Yucca Flats. It stars actress Kevin Casey as Beth, along with, also from The Beast of Yucca Flats, Eric Tomlin as Joe, Anthony Cardoza as Harry, and Marcia Knight as Suzy. The film contains performances by influential Nashville guitarist Jimmy Bryant. After being forgotten for three decades the film got a second life in 1994, serving the basis for a Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode (during which TV's Frank describes it as like "Manos without thelucid plot"). It is generally considered to be the most watchable Coleman Francis film, albeit still of subpar quality. Plot Harry (Anthony Cardoza) and Beth (Kevin Casey) Rowe run a small skydiving facility in an unnamed desert town. One day, a woman named Suzy Belmont (Marcia Knight) comes around claiming to be looking for the Rowes' plane mechanic Frankie Bonner (Titus Moede). Beth claims that Frankie was fired for being drunk on the job, but feels that Suzy didn't come down just to see Frankie. As she walks away, Beth can't help but feel that her husband is having anJoe takes his leave of Beth, who is giving up running the skydiving facility. As Joe drives away, Beth takes her own leave of the facility. The curiously grim end credits feature names and head shots of the actors set to total silence. Alternative titles The Skydivers is also known as Fiend from Half Moon Bay and Panic at Half Moon Bay. DVD releases The MST3K version of the film (accompanied by the uncut version, included as a bonus feature) was released by Rhino Home Video as part of the Collection, Volume 1 DVD set. External links Category:1963 films Category:1960s ### Assistant:
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### User: School Idol Project is a Japanese multimedia project co-developed by ASCII Media Works' Dengeki G's Magazine, music label Lantis, and animation studio Sunrise. The project revolves around a group of nine schoolgirl friends who become idols in order to save their school from shutting down. It launched in the August 2010 issue of Dengeki G's Magazine, and went on to produce music CDs, anime music videos, two manga adaptations, and video games. A 13-episode anime television series produced by Sunrise, directed by Takahiko Kyōgoku, and written by Jukki Hanada aired in Japan between January and March 2013, with a secondseason airing between April and June 2014. Both anime series and film are licensed in North America, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand by NIS America, MVM Entertainment and Madman Entertainment, respectively. An animated film titled Love Live! The School Idol Movie was distributed by Shochiku and released in June 2015. A follow-up project focusing on a new set of idols, titled Love Live! Sunshine!!, launched in 2015. Plot Honoka Kōsaka is a girl who attends . When the school is scheduled to be closed due to a lack of applicants, Honoka becomes determined to save it. Honoka goeswas published, the editors of the magazine have hosted reader participation games whose development is directly influenced by the people who read the magazine. The project was first announced in the July 2010 issue of Dengeki G's Magazine, which revealed that the magazine would be collaborating with the anime studio Sunrise and the music label Lantis to co-produce the project. The project officially began with the August 2010 issue of Dengeki G's Magazine, which introduced the story, characters, and a more detailed explanation of the project. The original plan for the story was written by Sakurako Kimino, who also writes2010 issue of Dengeki G's Magazine, readers were polled to determine the name of the idols' group. After the editors narrowed it down to the five most popular names, readers were polled for a final time, ultimately choosing the name μ's. A similar polling system was used to determine the names of the three subunits: Printemps, BiBi and Lily White. Media Print media A manga adaptation titled Love Live!, written by Sakurako Kimino and illustrated by Arumi Tokita, began serialization in the January 2012 issue of Dengeki G's Magazine. The manga ended serialization in the magazine's May 2014 issue andMedia Works published 11 volumes between May 30, 2013 and August 29, 2014. A fan book titled History of Love Live! was released on September 10, 2014, which features the Love Live! articles published between the July 2010 and February 2013 issues of Dengeki G's Magazine. Anime A 13-episode anime television series produced by Sunrise, directed by Takahiko Kyōgoku, and written by Jukki Hanada aired in Japan on Tokyo MX between January 6 and March 31, 2013 and was simulcast by Crunchyroll. The opening theme is and the ending theme is ; both are performed by μ's (Emi Nitta, AyaUchida, Suzuko Mimori, Yoshino Nanjō, Pile, Riho Iida, Aina Kusuda, Yurika Kubo and Sora Tokui). An original video animation episode was released on November 27, 2013. A second season aired on Tokyo MX between April 6 and June 29, 2014, also airing on TV Aichi, Yomiuri TV, and BS11, and was simulcast by Crunchyroll. The opening theme is and the ending theme is ; both are performed by μ's. An animated film titled Love Live! The School Idol Movie was released in theaters on June 13, 2015. It was released on Blu-ray in Japan on December 15, 2015. A secondfilm, Love Live! Sunshine!! The School Idol Movie: Over the Rainbow, was released in Japan on January 4, 2019. Both anime series and the first film are licensed in North America by NIS America, who released the premium edition of the first season on Blu-ray on September 2, 2014 and an English dubbed version was released with the standard edition of the first season, along with the premium edition of the second season, on February 14, 2016, as well as the standard edition of the second season on April 12, 2016. The series also began airing on Mnet America fromFestival as developed by KLab and released by Bushiroad for iOS devices in Japan on April 15, 2013. The game is a collectible card game with elements of rhythm game and visual novel genres. A version for Android was also released. The game was localized into English and released worldwide on May 11, 2014 for both iOS and Android devices, and also received localizations available in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and South Korea. At the end of September 2016, the English version of the game added Korean support due to merging between the two servers. A new game titled LoveLive! School Idol Festival All Stars, which also features members of Aqours as well as a new set of characters known as the "Nijigasaki High School Idol Club", was released on September 26, 2019 in Japan. The game released globally on February 25, 2020 with support in Thai, Korean, traditional Chinese, and English. A series of three rhythm-action video games developed by Dingo Inc., titled Love Live! School Idol Paradise, were released on August 28, 2014 for the PlayStation Vita. The three games were released as Vol. 1 Printemps, Vol.2 BiBi and Vol.3 Lily White. These games sold 88,169 physicalretail copies altogether within the first week of release in Japan. Rin Hoshizora became the new face of the Puyo Puyo games in 2015 as part of a campaign by Sega to market the popularity of the anime by giving her a place on all of their current franchises. A mobile gamed titled Puchiguru Love Live! revolves around the mini-stuffed dolls sold resembling the characters. It was released on April 24, 2018 for Android and iOS, and was shut down on May 31, 2019. Discography Aside from individual and duet singles, the nine idols of μ's are divided into threeof equal attention to the main cast, but praised it for fixing the problems she found in the first season and providing genuine emotion from its characters, saying that "it is a lot of fun and one of the most enjoyable entries into the idol genre, a position it solidifies with this second season." In 2014, Love Live! won the Anime Work Award in the 19th Animation Kobe Awards, an annual anime event in Kobe, Japan. In 2015, μ's won The Best Singing award in the 9th Seiyu Awards. μ's ranked No. 8 among Oricon's best-selling artists of 2015. TheJapan for 2016 and ranked No. 4 in 2015. The franchise earned over ¥8 billion in 2016 and over ¥5 billion in 2015. This includes the raw yen totals of Blu-ray Discs, DVDs, music CDs, novels, and manga, but not video games, film tickets, digital downloads, and other forms of media sales. In 2013, physical media sales generated () in Japan. DVD and Blu-ray sales of the anime's second season in 2014 sold () in Japan. The franchise's physical media sales generated () in Japan between 2015 and 2018. In 2016, μ's received the Special Award in the 30th JapanGold Disc Awards and their second best album Love Live! μ's Best Album Best Live! collection II was also chosen as Animation Album of the Year. The group even dominated Tower Records Japan's anime CD ranking of 2015. Controversy Fans of the English version of the Love Live! School Idol Festival game discovered that most of the homosexual subtext between the various girls depicted in the game were removed. In some instances, overt references to relationships between girls were changed to imply a relationship between a girl and a boy. Klab has since issued a statement on the controversy: Anupdate released on June 30, 2015 made adjustments to the translated text to retain their original meanings. Western popular culture The "Hit or Miss" (2018) Internet meme originates from a TikTok video featuring a cosplay of Nico Yazawa. Notes References External links Official website Official worldwide website Love Live! School Idol Festival official website Love Live! School Idol Festival official website Love Live! School Idol Paradise official website Love Live! at NIS America Category:2013 anime television series Category:2013 video games Category:2014 anime television series Category:2014 video games Category:Android (operating system) games Category:Animated musical groups Category:ASCII Media Works manga Category:Comedy anime ### Assistant:
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### User: The Charles LeMoyne Hospital () is the major hospital in Longueuil, Quebec, Canada. It is located on Taschereau Boulevard in the borough of Greenfield Park opposite the borough of Saint-Hubert and in close proximity to the LeMoyne neighbourhood in the borough of Le Vieux-Longueuil. It also serves neighbouring cities on the south shore of Montreal. A teaching hospital affiliated with Université de Sherbrooke, the hospital is used to train students in medical school, nursing and other multidisciplinary programs. The Charles LeMoyne Hospital is home to 3,000 employees, of which 1,500 are nurses, 500 are healthcare professionals and technicians, 325 are ### Assistant:
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### User: Máng (芒, read Wáng according to Sima Zhen) was a king of ancient China, the ninth ruler of the semi-legendary Xia Dynasty. He possibly ruled 18 years. He was also known as Huang (荒). King Si Mang invented a Sinking Sacrifice Ceremony (沉祭 Chen Ji) to worship celestials living in Huang He River, to pray for peace and safety, by sinking three normal livestocks (cattle, pig and sheep) and an important memorial jade were sunk into the river. Since then, having important and valuable stuff sunk into rivers, lakes and seas became an important sacrifice ceremony in history of China,which was believed could easily get accepted by celestials living in water. Family Máng’s father was King Huai of Xia, son of the King Zhu of Xia. Mother of Máng was an unknown lady, consort of Huai. He had a consort who bore him a son Xie. Máng’s grandsons were King Jiōng and wise King Bù Jiàng. Biography Máng took the throne after his father’s death, in the year of Renshen (壬申). He celebrated his inauguration by giving precious jades to all his vassals. In the 33rd year of his regime, the Shang Vassal Zihai (子亥) moved his capital from ### Assistant:
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### User: Toško Čelo () is a dispersed settlement on the slope of the hill known as Tošč Face (), part of the Polhov Gradec Hills, west of the capital Ljubljana in central Slovenia. The area was part of the traditional region of Upper Carniola and is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. It belongs to the City Municipality of Ljubljana. Geography The scattered village lies in the hills between the Sava Plain and the Gradaščica Valley. It is accessible by a paved road running along the ridge above the Kucja Valley; the road ### Assistant:
Nodes:[["Toško Čelo", {"description":'place in Upper Carniola, Slovenia'}], ["Slovenia", {}], ["City Municipality of Ljubljana", {}]] Relations:[["Toško Čelo", "country", "Slovenia"], ["Toško Čelo", "located in the administrative territorial entity", "City Municipality of Ljubljana"]]