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### User: Howard John Brenton FRSL (born 13 December 1942) is an English playwright and screenwriter. Early years Brenton was born in Portsmouth, Hampshire, son of policeman (later Methodist minister) Donald Henry Brenton and his wife Rose Lilian (née Lewis). He was educated at Chichester High School For Boys and read English Literature at St Catharine's College, Cambridge. In 1964 he was awarded the Chancellor's Gold Medal for Poetry. While at Cambridge he wrote a play, Ladder of Fools which was performed at the ADC Theatre as a double bill with "Hello-Goodbye Sebastian" by John Grillo in April 1965, and at theOxford Playhouse in June of that year. It was described by Eric Shorter of The Daily Telegraph as "Actable, gripping, murky and moody: how often can you say that of the average new play tried out in London, let alone of an undergraduate's work..." Brenton's one-act play, It's My Criminal, was performed at the Royal Court Theatre (1966). Career In 1968 he joined the Brighton Combination as a writer and actor, and in 1969 joined Portable Theatre (founded by David Hare and Tony Bicat), for whom he wrote Christie in Love, staged in the Royal Court's Theatre Upstairs (1969) andFruit (1970). He is also the author of Winter, Daddykins (1966), Revenge for the Royal Court Theatre Upstairs; and the triple-bill Heads, Gum & Goo and The Education of Skinny Spew (1969). These were followed by Wesley (1970); Scott of the Antarctic and A Sky-blue Life (1971); Hitler Dances, How Beautiful With Badges, and an adaptation of Measure for Measure (1972). In 1973 Brenton and David Hare were jointly commissioned by Richard Eyre to write a "big" play for Nottingham Playhouse. "The result was Brassneck, which offered an exhilaratingly panoramic satire on England from 1945 to the present, depicting themeteoric ups and downs of a self-seeking Midlands family...from singing the Red Flag in 1945 to acting as a conduit for the Oriental drug market in the decadent Seventies." – Michael Billington (2007). Brassneck was followed a year later by Brenton's The Churchill Play, again staged by Richard Eyre at the Nottingham Playhouse (1974), another 'state of the nation play' about the growing conflict between security and liberty, opening with the image of a dead Winston Churchill rising from his catafalque in Westminster Hall. Brenton's play "offered an imaginative vision of a future in which basic human freedoms would becurtailed by the state. As so often, a dramatist saw things that others did not". Brenton's next major success was Weapons of Happiness, about a strike in a south London factory, commissioned by the National Theatre for its new Lyttelton Theatre and the first commissioned play to be performed at its South Bank home. Staged by Hare in July 1976, it won the Evening Standard award for Best Play. He gained notoriety for his play The Romans in Britain, first staged at the National Theatre in October 1980, which drew parallels between the Roman invasion of Britain in 54BC andthe British military presence in Northern Ireland. But the politics of his play were ignored. Instead a display of moral outrage focused on a scene of attempted anal rape of a Druid priest (played by Greg Hicks), caught bathing by a Roman centurion (Peter Sproule). This resulted in a private prosecution by Mary Whitehouse against the play's director, Michael Bogdanov. But Whitehouse's prosecution was withdrawn by her own legal team when it became obvious that it would not succeed. The theme of Brenton's 1985 political comedy Pravda, a collaboration with David Hare who also directed, was described by Michael Billingtonin The Guardian of 3 May 1985 as "the rapacious absorption of chunks of the British press by a tough South African entrepreneur, Lambert Le Roux....superbly embodied by Anthony Hopkins who utters every sentence with precise Afrikaans over-articulation as if the rest of the world are idiots." The target of the satire was generally accepted to be the Australian international newspaper proprietor Rupert Murdoch and his News International empire, but the play's main question mark was about the dangers for society and the state of monopolistic media ownership. Brenton was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature intranslation from Bertolt Brecht, National Theatre, Olivier (August 1980) The Romans in Britain, National Theatre, Olivier (October 1980) A Short Sharp Shock, written with Tony Howard, Royal Court at the Theatre Royal Stratford East (1980) Thirteenth Night, RSC Donmar Warehouse (1981) Danton's Death, translation from Georg Büchner, National Theatre, Olivier (July 1982) Conversations in Exile, adapted from Brecht, Foco Novo (1982) The Genius, Royal Court (1983) Sleeping Policemen, written with Tunde Ikoli, Foco Novo, Hemel Hempstead then Royal Court (1983) Bloody Poetry, Foco Novo, Hampstead Theatre (1984); Royal Court (1987) Pravda, written with David Hare, National Theatre, Olivier (1985); winner(with Rupert Walters) "Celebrity" "Road Trip" "The Russian" "Diana" Books Diving for Pearls (novel), Nick Hern Books (1989) Hot Irons (diaries, essays, journalism), Nick Hern Books (1995) ; reissued in an expanded version, Methuen (1998) Awards Evening Standard Award for – Best Play 1976, for Weapons of Happiness Best Play 1985, for Pravda Whatsonstage.com Theatregoers' Choice Award for best new play 2011, for Anne Boleyn Sources The Second Wave by John Russell Taylor, Methuen 1978 reprint Who's Who in the Theatre, 17th Edition, Gale (1981) Brenton: Plays One, Methuen 1986 Theatre Record and its annual Indexes Howard Brenton's CV for ### Assistant:
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### User: Justin S. Rhodes (born March 26, 1972) is an American neuroscientist and a professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He is affiliated with the Neuroscience Program, Program of Ecology, Evolution, & Conservation Biology, the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, and the Neurotech group at Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology. After receiving a Bachelor of Science in biology at Stanford University, Rhodes obtained a PhD in zoology in 2002 from University of Wisconsin–Madison, under the supervision of Theodore Garland, Jr.. After completing a postdoctoral fellowship at Oregon Health & ScienceUniversity, he held a position as an instructor at Lewis & Clark College for a year before accepting a full-time faculty position in 2005 in the biological division of the Department of Psychology at the University of Illinois. He is an emerging scientist in the field of neuroscience with research interests in exercise-induced hippocampal neurogenesis, neural circuitry involved in addictive behaviors, and brain plasticity in clownfish. Research Rhodes research interests relate to neuronal plasticity. One interest includes understanding the role of voluntary exercise via wheel running in inducing the formation of new neurons in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. ### Assistant:
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### User: Pa'l Mundo () is the fifth studio album by Puerto Rican reggaeton duo Wisin & Yandel, released on November 8, 2005 by Machete Music. It is notable for being their first commercially successful album. It has sold over 3,000,000 albums worldwide. The album includes the singles, "Rakata," "Llamé Pa' Verte (Bailando Sexy)," and "Noche de Sexo", each of which were top five hits on the U.S. Billboard Hot Latin Tracks chart. The song "Mayor Que Yo, Pt. 2" is a continuation of the top three original, which had been featured on a Luny Tunes album. Luny Tunes co-produced the bulkof Pa'l Mundo, and was assisted here by Nely, Tainy, Thilo, and Nesty. A deluxe edition of the album was released on May 16, 2006. The "Deluxe Edition" was nominated for a Lo Nuestro Award for Urban Album of the Year. Track listing Standard Edition "Dale (Intro)" (featuring Mr. Phillips) — 3:10 "Manigueta" — 2:47 "Llamé Pa' Verte (Bailando Sexy) — 3:14 "Paleta" (featuring Daddy Yankee) — 2:55 "Sólo Una Noche" — 3:01 "Mayor Que Yo, Pt. 2" — 3:47 "La Barria" (featuring Héctor "El Father") — 2:55 "Calle Callejero" — 2:56 "Sin El" — 2:52 "Rakata" — 2:52 "Sensación"(featuring Tony Dize) — 2:34 "Tabla" — 2:54 "Noche de Sexo" (featuring Aventura) — 3:25 "Mírala Bien" || Thilo — 2:36 "La Compañía" (featuring Franco "El Gorila" & Gadiel) — 3:23 "Lento" — 2:56 "Títere" — 2:38 "Yo Quiero" — 2:44 "Fuera de Base" — 3:06 Bonus Tracks These tracks appear on the special bonus track edition of the album (not including Pa'l Mundo: Deluxe Edition) "Rakata (Remix)" (featuring Ja Rule) (Luny Tunes and Nely) — 3:31 "Rakata (Hip Hop Remix)" (featuring Tea Time) (Remix by DaRock) — 3:22 "Llamé Pa' Verte (Bailando Sexy) [Instrumental]" (Luny Tunes and Nely) —3:19 Sample credits "La Barria" contains a sample of "Murder She Wrote" by Chaka Demus & Pliers Pa'l Mundo: Deluxe Edition Track #1-19 from standard edition, and includes a second disc and DVD. Disc 2 "Pam Pam" (Luny Tunes, Tainy & Naldo) — 3:47 "Te Noto Tensa" (Wisin featuring Tony Dize) (Monserrate & DJ Urba) — 2:36 "Toma" (Wisin featuring Franco "El Gorila") ](Monserrate & DJ Urba) — 3:01 "La Quebranta Hueso" (featuring El Tío) (DJ Eric) — 3:23 "Mayor Que Yo, Pt. 2 (Remix)" (featuring Tony Dize and Franco "El Gorila") (Luny Tunes) — 4:01 "Burn It Up" (featuringR. Kelly) (Luny Tunes; Nely) — 3:52 "Sácala" (featuring Héctor "El Father" and Don Omar) (Naldo) — 3:22 "Llora Mi Corazón" (featuring La Secta AllStar) — 3:07 DVD "Llamé Pa' Verte (Bailando Sexy)" "Mírala Bien" "Mírala Bien - Making Of" "Rakata" "Burn It Up" "Exclusive Interview" Pa'l Mundo: First Class Delivery Pa'l Mundo: First Class Delivery is the second re-edition of the album, released on July 10, 2007 available only in Spain. The second re-edition contains 7 tracks from Pa'l Mundo, as well as some tracks from Los Vaqueros and other past hits. This album is distributed by Machete Musicand El Cartel Records by Daddy Yankee "Pam Pam" (Luny Tunes, Tainy & Naldo) — 3:47 "Rakata" (Luny Tunes & Nely) — 2:52 "Mayor Que Yo" (with Daddy Yankee, Tony Tun-Tun, Baby Ranks & Hector "El Father") (Luny Tunes) — 4:08 "Pegao" (Nesty "La Mente Maestra" & Victor "El Nasi") — 3:52 "Llamé Pa' Verte (Bailando Sexy)" (Luny Tunes & Nely) — 3:14 "No Me Dejes Solo" (with Daddy Yankee) (Fido, Monserrate & DJ Urba) — 2:50 "El Teléfono" (featuring Héctor "El Father") (Tainy) — 3:55 "Noche de Sexo" (featuring Aventura) (Nely & Nesty) — 3:25 "Yo Te Quiero" (Victor& Nesty) — 3:27 "Sácala" (featuring Hector "El Father" and Don Omar) — 3:59 "Mírala Bien" (Thilo) — 2:36 "Paleta" (featuring Daddy Yankee) (Luny Tunes & Tainy) — 2:55 "Burn It Up" (with R. Kelly) (Luny Tunes; Nely) — 3:52 "Dem Bow" — 2:04 "Solo Una Noche" (Naldo & Nely) — 3:01 "Noche de Entierro (Nuestro Amor)" (with Daddy Yankee, Hector "El Father", Tony Tun-Tun, & Zion) (Luny Tunes, Nales & Mr. G) — 4:23 "Torre de Babel" (with David Bisbal) — 4:16 Personnel Juan Luis Morera – Primary artist, vocals and lyrics Llandel Veguilla – Primary artist, vocals andgraphic design Antonio Hernandez – Artists and repertoire Louis Martinez – Photography Charts Certifications Release history Accolades !align="center"|Ref. |- |rowspan="5"|2006 |Pal Mundo |Latin Billboard Music Awards – Reggaeton Album of the Year | |align="center" rowspan="3"| |- |rowspan="2"|«Rakata» |Latin Billboard Music Awards – Hot Latin Song of the Year | |- |Latin Billboard Music Awards – Song of the Year | |- |Pa'l Mundo |Latin Grammy Awards – Best Urban Music Album | |align="center"| |- |«Rakata» |Lo Nuestro Awards – Urban Song of the Year | |align="center"| |- |rowspan="5"|2007 |«Noche De Sexo» |Latin Billboard Music Awards – Vocal Duet or Collaboration ### Assistant:
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### User: Per Palle Storm (1 December 1910 – 6 January 1994) was a Danish-born Norwegian sculptor and professor at the Norwegian National Academy of Fine Arts. Biography He was born in Copenhagen and was raised in Argentina. He was the son of Hans Peter Blix Storm and Ellen von Müllen. His father was a businessman who served as a Norwegian Consul. Storm grew up in Buenos Aires where he was a student of the sculptors Bartolomé Tasso and Urbici Solér (1927–29). He studied at the Norwegian National Academy of Fine Arts under Wilhelm Rasmussen (1930–33). He also studied art in Germany,Spain, France and Italy. In 1947 he became a professor at the National Academy of Fine Arts, a position he held until 1980, where his students included Oddmund Raudberget. In 1939, Storm won the competition for a statue of Olympic skier Thorleif Haug which was erected in Drammen. In 1952, he was commissioned by Thomas Fearnley, who was a member of the International Olympic Committee, to design the Fearnley award (Fearnleys olympiske ærespris) in connection with the 1952 Winter Olympics. Storm also accounted for the design of the King Olav V of Norway coin series which was issued between 1958and 1973. Among his sculptures are Arbeiderbevegelsens pionerer which was unveiled at Youngstorget in Oslo during 1958. He also designed six bronze sculptures (Handenlangeren, Elektrikeren and Steinhoggeren 1950, Mureren 1951, Tømmermannen 1954, Steinbryteren 1960) situated outside the Oslo City Hall and several World War II memorials. Storm was awarded the King's Medal of Merit (Kongens fortjenstmedalje) in 1950. He was decorated Knight, First Class of the Order of St. Olav in 1980, and was decorated Knight of the Order of the Dannebrog. Personal life In 1948, he married Ingeborg Aasengen Dal f. Amundsen (1903-1991). In 1993, he founded the Ingeborgog Per Palle Storms Legat. Awards from this foundation, Ingeborg og Per Palle Storms ærespris, are distributed for the purpose of accommodating sculptors living in Norway. Selected works Minnesmerke over falne fra Sarpsborg, Tune, Skjeberg og Varteig (1946-1948) Kulåsparken, Sarpsborg Statsråd Sven Oftedal (1950) Sven Oftedals plass, Stavanger Kong Haakon VII (1950-1951) Torget, Kristiansand Krigsminnesmerke (1952) Ris Church, Oslo Mann som drikker (1958) Kronprinsesse Märthas plass, Oslo Kong Haakon VII (1967-1969) Rådhusparken, Tromsø References External links Per Palle Storm in the Collection of the National Gallery, Oslo Arbeiderbevegelsens pionerer Category:1910 births Category:1994 deaths Category:Artists from Copenhagen Category:Norwegian sculptors Category:Norwegian educators ### Assistant:
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### User: Sandya Eknaligoda is a Sri Lankan human rights activist. She is the wife of missing journalist Prageeth Eknaligoda. She became an International Women of Courage Award recipient in 2017. She has been campaigning for thousands of missing persons in Sri Lanka. Her husband had told her that he was on a hit list and he received threats to warn him to stop writing. They were investigating corruption when he was kidnapped and returned in 2009. She became actively involved after her husband and prominent journalist Prageeth Eknaligoda disappeared in 2010 when he was investigating the alleged use of chemical weapons ### Assistant:
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### User: Jacques Archambault (c. 1604 – February 15, 1688) was a French colonist in Montreal. He was born in Dompierre-sur-Mer, where he was baptized. Archambault married (around 1629) Françoise Tourault, with whom he had many children. All Archambaults (and descendants) now living in North America are his descendants, as no other Archambault ever emigrated from France. A plate in the back of the Pointe-à-Callière Museum of Montreal commemorates his digging the first water well, near what is now known as Place-d'Armes, on October 11, 1658, upon request by Paul de Chomedey de Maisonneuve. List of children Madeleine Archambault ou Aubry (1621–?); ### Assistant:
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### User: Wilfred P. Moore, (born January 14, 1942) is a Canadian lawyer. From 1996 until his retirement in 2017, he represented Nova Scotia in the Senate of Canada. Early life and education Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Moore received a Bachelor of Commerce degree from Saint Mary's University in 1964 and a law degree from Dalhousie University in 1968. He was made a Queen's Counsel in 1983. Career He was an alderman on Halifax city council from 1974 to 1980 and served as deputy mayor from 1977 to 1978. He has also served as Chairman of the Social Assistance Appeal Boardis it because he wants the chamber to work, causing him to do his constitutional duty?...If it does happen I'm pleased the Senate will be filled and the chamber can work properly as one of our two houses of Parliament". On January 29, 2014, Liberal Party leader Justin Trudeau announced all Liberal Senators, including Moore, were removed from the Liberal caucus, and would continue sitting as Independents. The Senators referred to themselves as the Senate Liberal Caucus even though they were no longer members of the parliamentary Liberal caucus. References 5. Regarding the need for an ombuds office within the ### Assistant:
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### User: Görele is a town and a district of Giresun Province on the Black Sea coast of eastern Turkey. The population was 16,033 in 2010. Geography The district is mainly mountainous and watered by streams and rivers running into the Black Sea, the highest peaks are Mount Sis and Haç (Haş). Up to 600m the hillsides are covered with hazelnuts, along with alder, poplars and other deciduous trees. The agriculture of the district is mainly hazelnuts along with some tea planting, beekeeping, and gardening for domestic consumption, while the higher elevations are forest and pasture. Recently trout farming has begun inthe mountain waterways and more importantly the attractive high pasture lands have begun to attract visitors on trekking holidays. Traditionally in this part of the world people would move their sheep and cattle to the high pastures (yayla) for summer grazing and today this has become something of an event with summer folklore festivals in places like Sis Dağı attracting visitors from all over Turkey, who come to hear the Kemençe and watch people dance the Horon. The sale of local costumes and craftwork such as wooden toys and woven goods bring extra income to the district. The climate istypical of the Black Sea region; it rains in every season and in the high mountains it snows in winter. The mountain hinterland is hard to access, with many dirt roads and the villages are continuously shrinking as the villagers migrate to Turkey's larger cities in search of work. Görele itself is a large town of 27,000 people on the Black Sea coast. The Black Sea coast highway from Giresun to Trabzon runs through here and Görele is about halfway between the two cities, 70 km from each. There is no real port at Görele so goods and people allthe last Christian outposts to fall to Sultan Mehmet II after he conquered the Empire of Trebizond in 1461. According to Pontic ballads, it was defended against the Sultan's soldier by a peasant girl until she took her life by throwing herself from a window. According to William Miller, the window could still be seen up to the Crimean War. From 1878 to 1922, it was a part of Ottoman Trebizond Vilayet. During republic era, it became a part of newly founded Giresun province. Görele, like the rest of this coast was occupied by Russian troops for two years during ### Assistant:
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### User: Honey Popcorn (Hangul: 허니팝콘) is a girl group based in South Korea formed by Kyun Create, consisting of Yua Mikami, Moko Sakura, Nako Miyase, Ruka Tajima, and Sara Izumi. The group debuted on March 21, 2018 with album Bibidi Babidi Boo. History In February 2018, Yua Mikami announced that she would debut in South Korea with a new girl group with Miko Matsuda and Moko Sakura. Prior to this, all three girls had worked as idol singers in Japan, with Mikami as a member of SKE48, Matsuda as a member of NMB48, and Sakura as a member of Bakusute SotokandaIcchome (a sub-unit of Akihabara Backstage Pass). The group was funded by Mikami herself as a passion project. Their debut was met with controversy by South Korean media outlets due to the members being adult film actresses. On December 23, 2018, Miko Matsuda announced on her Twitter that she will be graduating from the group. In June 2019, Nako Miyase, Ruka Tajima and Sara Izumi joined the group. Discography Extended plays Singles References Category:K-pop music groups Category:South Korean girl groups Category:South Korean dance music groups Category:Musical groups from Seoul Category:Musical groups established in 2018 Category:2018 establishments in South Korea Category:South ### Assistant:
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### User: Prasenjit Biswas teaches Philosophy at North Eastern Hill University, Shillong. His research interests reflect an interdisciplinary orientation that includes ethno-philosophy, ethnicity, and indigenous identities. He is also a human rights defender who works with Barak Human Right Protection Committee, Silchar. He defended human rights of labourers and their familites in tea gardens of Barak Valley of Assam, who faced deaths due to starvation in 2011–12. The National Human Rights' Commission (NHRC) of India granted relief and compensation to some of the families who suffered due to starvation deaths. Prasenjit Biswas also contributed to fourth UPR process initiated by WGHR, NewDelhi. Prasenjit Biswas specializes in continental philosophy and phenomenology with an emphasis on Jacques Derrida. He has worked on Post-Marxist thoughts and currently exploring the notion of Aporia in Social Theory. He writes regularly in The Statesman on issues related to Northeast India and often shares his views in Al Jazeera. Academic career Dr. Prasenjit Biswas obtained his PhD from North Eastern Hill University. He was formerly with Indian School of Mines, Dhanbad, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati, and Assam University, Silchar. Books authored Political economy of underdevelopment of North-East India, Akansha Pub. House, 2004(with Rifual Ahmed). The Postmodern Controversy: Understanding Richard Rorty, Jacques Derrida and Jurgen Habermas, Rawat Publications, 2005. Ethnic life-worlds in north-east India: an analysis, New Delhi: Sage, 2008 (with Chandan Suklabaidya). Construction of Evil in north east India, Sage ( edited with C J Thomas) Between Philosophy and Anthropology: Aporias of Language, Thought and Consciousness, Notion Press, Chennai, 2017. Books edited Peace in India's North-East: Meaning, Metaphor, and Method: Essays of Concern and Commitment, New Delhi: Regency, 2006 (with C. Joshua Thomas) Construction of Evil in North East India: Myth, Narrative and Discourse New Delhi: Sage, 2012 (with C. JoshuaThomas). Recent articles "Phenomenology and Ontology of Humiliation" in Man and Society: A Journal of North-East Studies, Vol.X, Summer, 2013, pp. 180–202. "Daya Krishna's 'Presuppositionsless Philosophy': Sublimity as a Source of Value and Knowledge" In Shail Mayaram (ed.) Philosophy as Samvad and swaraj, SAGE, New Delhi, forthcoming, pp. 133–54. "The Sense of self: Ka Rngiew, Tlawmngaihna and the Art of Not Being Governed" in Journal of Indian Council of Philosophical Research, Oct-Dec.,2011,Vol.XXVIII,No.4, pp. 129–167. "The Inscrutable substance of Ontology" in Sociological Bulletin, 62(1), January–April, 2013, pp. 124–29. "Tagore's Nationalism: In Search of a Proper Place of Identity Struggles of India's ### Assistant:
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### User: Queen Leonor. The convent was recognized, until the end of the 16th century, as the Convent of São Bento de Enxobregas. Between 1570 and 1602 (the Philippine dynasty), it was inhabited by Father António da Conceição, who was responsible for collecting the necessary financial stipends for the construction of the new church and improve the building. Following legend, the friar was able to construct a sumptuous convent with few monetary resources, which expanded his fame. Later beatified in the 18th century, he was linked to the local toponymy (the site of Beato António or Convent of Beato), giving rise toreceiving 2000 cruzados of land rents, supporting a congregation of 37 clerics and 26 servants. Public work on the convent persisted in 1697, resulting in the construction of the cloister and staircase. Following the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, the building registered some damage, but many of the clergy abandoned the convent, resulting in the many of its treasurers being transferred to other religious buildings, including tombs. The spaces were occupied by a Royal Military Hospital. But, by the end of the century, what little remained in the convent, of an artistic value, was destroyed following a fire that gutted the building.church and part of the convent complex. It was then purchased by industrialist João de Brito, who established a steam-powered milling factory to produce bread and cookies, in addition to a carpentry shop. By 1845, the rest of the convent was occupied by a tobacco factory, and much later, the Companhia Industrial de Portugal e Colónias (Industrial Company of Portugal and the Colonies). By the beginning of the 20th century the church spaces were transformed into silos for cereals. A project to recuperate the old convent began in 1948, under the direction of Porfírio Pardal Monteiro, that persisted until 1952.General repairs were performed in 1983, and later in 1990, in context of the Expo 98 Caminhos do Oriente exposition, that included the restoration of the cloister. In November 1998, a risk assessment study was carried out by the DGEMN. A year later it was acquired by the Cerealis group. On 28 July 2004, a fire destroyed the covering over the staircase and part of the old conventual dependencies. The new temple of Mannerist and Baroque architecture, was classified as a property of public interest. On the evening of 28 July 2004 a fire damaged the building, destroying about 70%of the building, including covered staircase and old conventual dependencies. Restoration of the building was completed in May 2005. Since the late twentieth century building has been used for cultural events and social causes. The German band Scorpions had one of the three concerts, based on their 2001 live album (Acoustica) in Convento do Beato. Architecture The building comprises a rectangular plan that includes the old church and the primitive conventual dependencies, forming a "U" around the cloister. It includes differentiated wings, covered in tiled roofs. To the south is the old church, which is preceded by a long courtyard.arches topped by rectangular bay windows. The refectory includes a rectangular space, covered by a vault in depressed arch. In the lateral wall are six windows, where there are visible traces of the original late 16th century albarradas-type tile. The staircase leading to the upper floor, flows from an accessible areas by three vaulted arches in two straight sections, that come together at an intermediate level. It is flanked by semi-recessed rails on the walls. In the upper atrium are four doors with protruding pads and marble framing. References Notes Sources Category:Convents in Portugal Category:Religious buildings and structures in Lisbon ### Assistant:
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### User: William Alvin Lloyd (July 4, 1822 – March 17, 1869) was an American con man, convicted felon and minstrel troupe impresario who, under the guise as steamboat and railroad guide publisher, claimed to be employed during the Civil War as a personal spy for President Abraham Lincoln. Lloyd along with his associates Thomas H. S. Boyd and F. J. Bonfanti were able to travel throughout the South during the war, to supposedly gather intelligence for the North. After his death, Lloyd's estate filed suit against the government for unpaid compensation. This suit resulted in the U.S. Supreme Court case Tottenv. United States. Pre-war life Born the son of a tailor in Kentucky on July 4, 1822, William A. Lloyd's family came to Louisville in 1830 where Lloyd came of age, and was apprenticed to his father until the age of twenty-one. Finally opening his own tailoring business, Lloyd married and fathered two children but abruptly left his home and family in 1846 to follow a traveling minstrel troupe, eventually assuming the duties of manager, marketer and prominent impresario. Between bouts of failure, poverty, blackmailing, swindling and serial bigamy, as he traveled throughout the Northeast and Midwest with his troupe,Lloyd was often on the run from the police, leading new minstrel bands and publishing a steamboat and railroad guide, an anti-abolitionist, southern right mouthpiece that excoriated Abraham Lincoln and his administration. When the Civil War began and his latest minstrel band folded because of his hard-handed management and his failure to pay his performers, along with his pro-Confederate stance, he decided he must go south. Lloyd's visit to Lincoln in 1861 On July 13, 1861, William Alvin Lloyd, in desperate need of money, came to President Abraham Lincoln to request a passport to allow him travel into the Confederateand was almost immediately jailed for bigamy. Within a day or two he had bought his way out and for the next few years crisscrossed Dixie, collecting monies owed him and trying to revive his dormant "Steamboat & Railroad Guide". In the following four years Lloyd remained in the Confederacy researching for his publications, and allegedly providing human intelligence (HUMINT) to President Lincoln. Over the course of the war, Lloyd traveled across the Confederacy and spent time in: Richmond, Savannah, Chattanooga, and New Orleans. Lloyd and his business partners had a well established presence in the Confederacy prior to the ### Assistant:
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### User: Bradley Dub Bryant (born December 11, 1954) is an American professional golfer. Bryant was born in Amarillo, Texas, the son of a Southern Baptist pastor. He moved with his family to Alamogordo, New Mexico during his youth. Bryant attended the University of New Mexico for three years, but turned professional and qualified for the PGA Tour in 1976, a year before his scheduled graduation. Bryant's only win on the PGA Tour came at the age of forty at the 1995 Walt Disney World/Oldsmobile Classic, which took 20 years and 475 starts to achieve, one of the longest waits for aPGA Tour win. After reaching the age of 50, Bryant began play on the Champions Tour, where he won for the first time at the 2006 Toshiba Classic and followed up later the same year by winning the Regions Charity Classic. He lost to Jay Haas in a playoff for the 2006 Senior PGA Championship. His best year in professional golf was 2007, when he finished third on the Champions Tour money list and fourth in the Charles Schwab Cup race; that year was highlighted by his victory at the U.S. Senior Open. Bryant's younger brother Bart has also wonon the PGA Tour. Professional wins (6) PGA Tour wins (1) PGA Tour playoff record (0–1) Other wins (1) 1994 JCPenney Classic (with Marta Figueras-Dotti) Champions Tour wins (4) Champions Tour playoff record (1–3) Results in major championships CUT = missed the half-way cut "T" = tied Results in The Players Championship CUT = missed the halfway cut "T" indicates a tie for a place Senior major championships Wins (1) Results timeline Results not in chronological order before 2017. CUT = missed the halfway cut WD = withdrew "T" indicates a tie for a place References External links Brad Bryant's ### Assistant:
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### User: "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" is the seventh episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series, Star Trek. Written by Robert Bloch and directed by James Goldstone, it first aired on October 20, 1966. In the episode, Nurse Chapel searches for her long lost fiancé, and uncovers his secret plan to create sophisticated androids for galactic conquest. The first episode of the series to be repeated on NBC, the title of the episode is taken from the fourth line of the 19th-century nursery rhyme, "What Are Little Boys Made Of?." Plot The USS Enterprise underCassidy), a still functioning android from the time of the original inhabitants, Korby has created more androids, one being a lovely woman he calls "Andrea". Chapel recognizes Korby's aide Dr. Brown, but is surprised the man does not remember her. In reality, Brown is also an android created as a prototype for Korby's plan to replace key personnel in the Federation with android duplicates under his control. Korby proceeds to create an exact android duplicate of Kirk as Chapel looks on. As Kirk's personality is imprinted on the android, the real Kirk imagines himself insulting Spock as a "half-breed". Korbyhas the duplicate Kirk beamed aboard the Enterprise with orders to begin the spread of android duplicates throughout the galaxy. When Spock questions the Kirk-android's orders, it repeats the insult Kirk had used. Spock, realizing that this is not Kirk, forms a security team and follows the Kirk-android back down to Exo-III. Meanwhile, the real Kirk, guarded by Ruk, convinces the android that Korby is a threat to his continued existence and must be destroyed. Ruk begins to recall the clash between the "Old Ones" and the androids that led to his civilization's demise centuries ago, and concludes that conflictis again inevitable. Korby enters and Ruk confronts him, but Korby destroys Ruk with a phaser. Shortly afterwards, in a struggle with Kirk, the skin of Korby's hand is torn, revealing that he is also an android. It is now revealed that Korby, dying of frostbite, had transferred his mind to an android body. He begs Chapel to believe that he is still the same man, but Chapel is repelled by what he has done to himself. Andrea, realizing she loves Korby, kisses him, and in despair, Korby fires Andrea's phaser between the embracing pair, destroying them both. Spock arriveswith the security force, but finds that the crisis has passed. When Spock inquires about Dr. Korby's whereabouts, Kirk replies, "Dr. Korby was never here." In the end, Chapel decides to stay on with the Enterprise and finish out her tour of duty. Production The episode was written by Robert Bloch, but received rewrites during shooting by Gene Roddenberry. The director of the second pilot Where No Man Has Gone Before, James Goldstone, was hired to direct this episode but due to problems with the script shooting went two days over schedule and Goldstone was never re-hired. Sherry Jackson whoplays the android woman Andrea said that they had a censorship person on the set to make sure that her costume fully covered her breasts and side cleavage was not visible. She also said of William Shatner "I must say when he kissed me on screen, he really kissed me!" and that Shatner's chest had to be shaved for his nude scenes in the android machine because Gene Roddenberry felt that Captain Kirk wouldn't be hairy. Reference to the works of H. P. Lovecraft was briefly made in Bloch's script, with its mention of "the Old Ones" and the lookof the trapezoidal doors in the caverns. Reception Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B+" rating, noting that the "repetitive plotting" took away any real sense of threat and that without Spock or McCoy to play off, Kirk's character is less interesting. See also Ship of Theseus Allegiance (Star Trek: The Next Generation) Redshirt (stock character) References External links "What are Little Girls Made Of?" Final revised draft July 27, 1966; report & analysis by Dave Eversole "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" Side-by-side comparisons before and after remastering at TrekMovie.com Category:Star Trek: The Original Series ### Assistant:
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### User: Islands of Four Mountains () is an island grouping of the Aleutian Islands in Alaska, United States. The chain includes, from west to east, Amukta, Chagulak, Yunaska, Herbert, Carlisle, Chuginadak, Uliaga, and Kagamil islands. This island chain is located between Amukta Pass and the Andreanof Islands to the west, and Samalga Pass and the Fox Islands to the east. These islands have a total land area of 210.656 sq mi (545.596 km²) and have no permanent population. The two largest islands are Yunaska and Chuginadak. Chuginadak is mainly made up of the active volcano Mount Cleveland. The name is translated ### Assistant:
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### User: The Spirit of Christmas 2000 is the seventh compilation album of Christmas-associated tracks in the annual Spirit of Christmas series. It was released in Australia in November 2000 with proceeds going to The Salvation Army's Red Shield Appeal, which supports at-risk children and youth throughout the country. The compilation has contributions from various Australian artists and was produced by Lindsay Field (also compiler) and Glenn Wheatley. It was issued on cassette and CD by Myer Grace Bros. and distributed by Sony BMG. Background The Spirit of Christmas series started in 1993 when Myer, an Australian department store, wished to continuea new rendition of a standard Christmas carol. Together with Glenn Wheatley (former member of The Masters Apprentices and manager of Little River Band), Field produced the recording for Myer Grace Bros. own label which was distributed by Sony BMG. Track listing "Silent Night" – Sister2Sister – 4:16 "The Christmas Song" – Glenn Shorrock – 3:46 "Here Comes Santa Claus" - – Adam Brand – 2:29 "One Little Christmas Tree" – Tina Arena – 3:32 "Christmas Gives Me the Chance" – Bachelor Girl – 3:33 "Every Step" – John Farnham – 4:34 "Santa Baby" – Kylie Minogue – 3:22 "Merry ### Assistant:
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### User: Knut Faldbakken (born 31 August 1941, in Hamar) is a Norwegian novelist. Biography Faldbakken studied psychology at Oslo University, and then worked as a journalist. He visited a number of countries, working variously as a bookkeeper, sailor, and factory worker, and began writing books in 1967 while living in Paris. He was editor of the literary magazine Vinduet (The Window) between 1975 and 1979. His sons Stefan Faldbakken and Matias Faldbakken have achieved recognition as a film director and a novelist respectively. His books have been published in 21 countries, translated to 18 languages and have sold two million copies ### Assistant:
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### User: Joshua "Josh" Hayden Cunningham is an Australian guitarist, vocalist and songwriter who is one-third of folk rock band The Waifs. His involvement with The Waifs has resulted in a total of four Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) Award wins, all in 2003 for Up All Night and ten further nominations. Cunningham has released five studio albums with The Waifs and co-writes songs with fellow members Donna Simpson and Vikki Thorn, including "Lighthouse", which was nominated for an ARIA Award as 'Single of the Year' in 2003. Cunningham has been a regular member of Missy Higgins's backing band, performed on herrecent album "On a Clear Night" and appeared in her live show. Cunningham has constructed some of the guitars he plays, both acoustic and electric. Biography Joshua Cunningham grew up on a farm in Moruya, New South Wales, and picked up his first guitar in 1987. He met Donna and Vikki Simpson while the two sisters played gigs in Broome, in 1992. At the time, Cunningham played bass guitar in an all-male band. Donna Simpson described, on The Waifs' official website, how they met: Cunningham has been a member of The Waifs ever since. Discography Solo albums Into Tomorrow (2011) ### Assistant:
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### User: Jesse Fink (born 1973) is a British-Australian author, best known for two biographies on the hard-rock band AC/DC (The Youngs: The Brothers Who Built AC/DC and Bon: The Last Highway) and the memoir Laid Bare. His first book was a work on Australian football called 15 Days in June. Biography Born in London, United Kingdom, Fink was educated at schools in Sydney, Australia. He attended the University of Technology, majoring in journalism. Career Fink began his writing career in sports journalism, working as an editor of sports and non-fiction titles for the Australian arm of book publisher HarperCollins and lateras a deputy editor of Inside Sport. In 2003, he was nominated for a Walkley Award for a feature about the sports memorabilia industry. It was included in the Black Inc. anthology The Best Australian Sportswriting 2004, as was "Safari Politics", a feature on trophy hunting. Another Inside Sport feature, "Silent Witness", about mental illness among high-performance athletes, won an Australian Sports Commission Media Award. Sportswriter Fink left Inside Sport to work as a soccer writer for Fox Sports Australia in 2006 and wrote his first book, 15 Days in June: How Australia Became a Football Nation, the same year. ### Assistant:
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### User: Louis Grant Silver (born November 27, 1953) is an American-Israeli businessperson and attorney, after having retired from a previous career as a professional basketball player. Silver received his A.B. from Harvard College in 1975, his LL.B. from Tel Aviv University's School of Law, and his LL.M. from New York University School of Law. Basketball playing career During his basketball playing career, the 2.03 m (6'8") tall Silver, played at the small forward and power forward positions. He was considered to be an "all-around" player. College career Silver played college basketball at Harvard College, with the Harvard Crimson. Silver served asthe team co-captain, during his final year at Harvard College. He also received a number of accolades, while attending, and playing for Harvard College, including being selected to the All-Ivy League Team, and Division honors. Professional career Silver was selected by the Kentucky Colonels, in the 8th round (73rd overall), of the 1975 ABA Draft. Silver played in Israel, with Maccabi Tel Aviv (1975–1985), and he served as the captain of the team, from 1981 to 1985. While playing with Maccabi Tel Aviv, the team won 10 Israeli League championships (1976, 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1985)National Team, to a second-place finish at the EuroBasket, as Israel took the silver medal, after losing to the Soviet Union National Team in the finals, at EuroBasket 1979, in Italy. Post basketball career Since his retirement from playing professional basketball, Silver has practiced corporate law, at Stroock & Stroock & Lavan, in New York City. He served as general counsel to a publicly listed software company, that is based in Paris, France. His professional career includes profiles as an investment banker, private banker, and hedge fund manager. Silver continues to serve as a member of the board of directors ### Assistant:
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### User: Kameshwar Baitha is a member of the 15th Lok Sabha of India. He represented the Palamu constituency of Jharkhand. He was originally a member of the Jharkhand Mukti Morcha political party, but joined the Bharatiya Janata Party in 2014. He left the BJP for the Trinamool Congress after failing to get a ticket for the general Elections of 2014. Education and background Kameshwar Baitha was born in a village in the Bishrampur block of the Palamu district (then part of Bihar). The highest educational qualification attained by Baitha is matriculation. During the 1970s, the rampant feudalism and the resulting marginalisation7 months in jail, getting bail in late 2011. Baitha left JMM in 2014. He declared that he had joined the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), but BJP declined this and did not approve his membership. He then joined TMC, and was given a ticket for the 2014 Lok Sabha elections. Posts held See also List of members of the 15th Lok Sabha of India Politics of India Parliament of India Government of India References Category:1956 births Category:Living people Category:15th Lok Sabha members Category:People from Palamu district Category:Lok Sabha members from Jharkhand Category:People from Garhwa district Category:Jharkhand Mukti Morcha politicians Category:All ### Assistant:
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### User: Israeli–Japanese relations (In Hebrew יחסי ישראל יפן in Japanese 日イスラエル関係) began on May 15, 1952, when Japan recognized Israel and an Israeli legation opened in Tokyo. In 1954 Japan's ambassador to Turkey assumed the additional role of minister to Israel. In 1955 a Japanese legation with a Minister Plenipotentiary opened in Tel Aviv. In 1963, relations were upgraded to Embassy level, and have remained on that level since then. Japan's trade relations with Arab League members and most Muslim-majority countries have taken a precedence over those with Israel. However, due to the declining price of oil in early 2015, aswell as internal political shifting in Japan, the two nations are seeking increased research, economic and cultural ties, particularly in the area of tech start-ups and defense. Recently ties between Israel and Japan have strengthened significantly, with many mutual investments between the two nations. Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe visited Israel twice – once in 2015 and a second time in 2018. History 1920s In 1922, Norihiro Yasue and Koreshige Inuzuka, head of the Imperial Japanese Navy's Advisory Bureau on Jewish Affairs, returned from their military service in Siberia to provide aid to the White movement against the Red Army.They became particularly interested in Jewish affairs after having learned of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. Over the course of the 1920s, they wrote many reports on the Jews, and traveled to Mandatory Palestine to research them and to speak with Zionist leaders Chaim Weizmann and David Ben-Gurion. Yasue even translated the Protocols into Japanese (variations of it have frequently made the bestseller lists in Japan). The pair managed to get the Foreign Ministry of Japan, or Gaimusho, interested in Judaism. Every Japanese embassy and consulate was requested to keep the Ministry informed of the actions and movementsof Jewish communities in their respective countries. Fugu Plan The Fugu Plan was an idea first discussed in 1934, in the Empire of Japan, centered around the idea of settling thousands, if not tens of thousands, of Jewish refugees escaping Nazi-occupied Europe, in Manchuria and Japanese-occupied Shanghai. The Imperial government wanted to gain Jewish economic prowess while convincing the United States, specifically American Jewry, to grant their favor and invest in Japan. The Plan was first discussed in 1934, and solidified in 1938 at the Five Ministers' Conference, but the signing of the Tripartite Pact in 1940, along with aheaded by Colonel Seishirō Itagaki and Lieutenant-Colonel Kanji Ishiwara, who were having trouble attracting Japanese settlers or investment into Manchuria. In 1938, top government officials discussed the ideas and plans of the "Jewish experts" in the Five Ministers' Conference. The Plan never got off the ground. In 1939, the Jews of Shanghai requested that no more Jewish refugees be sent into Shanghai, as their community's ability to support them was being stretched thin. During World War II In 1939, the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression pact with Nazi Germany, making the transport of Jews from Europe to Japan far moredifficult. The Japanese government signed the Tripartite Pact with Germany and Italy, completely eliminating the possibility of any official aid for the Plan from Tokyo. However, Chiune Sugihara, the Japanese Consul in Kaunas, Lithuania, began to issue, against orders from Tokyo, transit visas to escaping Jews, allowing them to travel to Japan and stay there for a limited time, ostensibly stopping off on their way to their final destination, the Dutch colony of Curaçao, which required no entry visa. Thousands of Jews received transit visas from him, or through similar means. Some even copied, by hand, the visa that Sugiharahad written. After the grueling process of requesting exit visas from the Soviet government, many Jews were allowed to cross Russia on the Trans-Siberian Railway, then took a boat from Vladivostok to Tsuruga, and eventually settled in Kobe, Japan. Settler plans Plans allowed for the settler populations to range in size from 18,000 up to 600,000 depending on how much funding and how many settlers were supplied by the world Jewish community. It was agreed, by all the planners, that Jewish settlers would be given complete freedom of religion, along with cultural and educational autonomy. While the Japanese were warydeath in Nazi-Occupied Europe by the policies surrounding Japan's temporary pro-Jewish attitude, and Chiune Sugihara was bestowed the honor of the Righteous Among the Nations by the Government of Israel in 1985. In addition, the Mir Yeshiva, one of the largest centers of rabbinical study today, and the only yeshiva to survive The Holocaust, survived as a result of these events. Post-1950s relations In 1993 both nations signed the "Convention between Japan and the State of Israel for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income." In 2000, the two nationssigned the "Agreement between the Government of Japan and the Government of the State of Israel for Air Services." There were 708 Japanese nationals in Israel as of October 1999 and 604 Israeli nationals in Japan as of December 1998. The Japanese government appointed Yoshinori Katori, press secretary at the Foreign Ministry, as ambassador to Israel on August 1, 2006. Katori previously served as minister to South Korea and director-general of the Consular Affairs Bureau before assuming the current post in August 2005. In September 2008, Katori ended his post to Israel and was replaced by ambassador Haruhisa Takeuchi, whopresented his credentials on December 1, 2008. In July 2006, Japan announced a plan for peace called "Corridor for Peace and Prosperity", which would be based on common economic development and effort by Israelis and Palestinians, rather than on continuous contention over land. Shimon Peres gave this idea much attention during his participation in an international conference in New York in September 2006 which was organized by former U.S. President Bill Clinton. In July 2008, the Japanese government reiterated its support for the plan in meetings with Israelis and Palestinians, and urged the sides to continue working towards completion. Japanalso indicated specific support for an agro-industrial park to be built near Jericho, and said it hopes to begin construction by 2009. Considering Israel's and Japan's shared democratic values, open trade policies, complementary business and industrial environments, and close alliance with the United States, relations between the two countries have long remained strikingly underdeveloped, until approximately 2014, when both government moved to significantly upgrade diplomatic and business ties. This rapid warming of relations is evidenced by the two countries entering into a number of important political and economic agreements – from a series of high-level dialogues on national security andcybersecurity to their first bilateral investment agreement – transforming their once limited bilateral relationship into one more characteristic of allied partners, a process that has been described as "rising sun relations" in Foreign Affairs Magazine. Economy Until the 1990s, Japan was the industrialized nation that acquiesced most strongly to the Arab demands to boycott Israel. As a result, economic relations have been limited for most of the State of Israel's history. Israeli exports to Japan, consisting primarily of polished diamonds, chemical products, machinery, electrical equipment, and citrus fruit are worth $810 million. Japanese exports to Israel, consisting primarily of automobiles,machinery, electrical equipment, and chemical products, are worth $1.3 billion. There has been growing trade between the two countries in terms of technology, as well as partnerships between startups and venture capitalists. According to the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO), 35 Japanese companies had subsidiaries in Israel by 2015 and as many as 50 in November 2016. Academic relations Universities in both countries are making special efforts to conduct lively exchange of studies. On May 2012, a symposium to commemorate the sixtieth anniversary of the diplomatic relations was held at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, to discuss issues of regional,bilateral, and cultural exchanges. The Israeli Association of Japanese studies was also launched on that occasion. Visits Quotes "Israel and Japan are situated at opposite ends of Asia, but this is a fact which binds them together rather than separates them. The vast continent of Asia is their connecting link, and the consciousness of their Asian destiny is their common thought." – Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, July 1, 1952 Both Israel and Japan are "ancient peoples who have risen from the ashes of the Second World War to build on the platform of our ancient cultures thriving, successful andadvanced societies." – Israeli Foreign Minister Silvan Shalom, January 17, 2005 See also Antisemitism in Japan History of the Jews in Japan International recognition of Israel Japanese-Jewish common ancestry theory Makuya References Further reading Rabbi Marvin Tokayer, The Fugu Plan. New York: Weatherhill, Inc. (1979) John Katz, Israeli–Japanese Relations, 1948–1963 Tel Aviv: Saar (2007) Matthew Brummer and Eitan Oren, ''Israel and Japan's Rising Sun Relations''. Foreign Affairs (2017) External links Security Incidents Set Tone for Japanese PM's Visit Ynetnews "Investigators launch probe into Japan boat crash" (Haaretz) "Friendly Relations With Japan" "EVS Receives Award from Israel-Japan Chamber of Commerce" "Japanese ### Assistant:
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### User: Gaoliangqiao () is a bridge situated in Haidian District, Beijing. It was first built in 1292 during the Yuan dynasty. History Kublai Khan built the bridge to meet the water needs of Beijing. He commissioned Guo Shoujing to dredge the water ways and construct a bridge. During Ming and Qing dynasties, it formed part of the route between Beijing to the Western Hills. According to legend, the Sorghum River comes from the story about Zhe Gao. There was a river in the north side of the Xizhimen. It was said that both the Yuan emperor and Liu Bowen wanted to ### Assistant:
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### User: St Mary's Church consists of the ruins of a former Anglican parish church, located in the grounds of Eastwell Park in the hamlet of Eastwell, Kent, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building, and is a Scheduled monument. The ruins have been in the care of the Friends of Friendless Churches charity since they took over the freehold on 20 March 1980. History In 1951 the roof of the nave collapsed, and the remaining shell of the church was demolished in 1956, leaving only the footings, the tower, and ### Assistant:
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### User: Christopher John Monckton (born 23 March 1954 at Ipswich, England), is a conductor, singer, and organ recitalist and accompanist. The son of an eye surgeon, Monckton was educated at Gresham's School (where he learnt to play the organ), and Magdalen College, Oxford (where he held a choral scholarship and read English). Graduating from Oxford in 1976 he attended a Law School in Guildford, Surrey. A further scholarship in literature and the fine arts took him to a cultural foundation at Vence in France. He became organist of the Basilica of Notre Dame de Nice, taught music at a choir schoolfor boys in Grasse, and studied music at the Nice Conservatoire. He has performed (as a solo singer, organist, and conductor) in almost every western and central European country. His performances in the British Isles include a song recital at St John's, Smith Square, and St Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin. He is based mainly in France. Monckton also lectures around the world. In 2005, he formed a travel company, Thomas Martlet Ltd, to organize cultural tours to places of artistic, architectural and musical interest. References Christopher Monckton – official site thomasmartlet.com – official site Category:1954 births Category:Living people Category:People from ### Assistant:
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### User: {| {{Infobox ship image |Ship image=Imperator LOC ggbain 13359u.jpg |Ship caption=The first Imperator class liner, the [[SS Imperator|Imperator]]}} |} The 'Imperator class ocean liners' were a series of three ocean liners designed for the Hamburg America Line, commonly known as HAPAG. These three ships were commissioned by the chairman of HAPAG Albert Ballin. Namely the Imperator (1912), the Vaterland (1913) and the largest, the Bismarck (1914). These liners were over 50,000 tons, sported three funnels and had a length ranging from 906 ft (276 m) to 955.8 ft (291.3 m). To this day, the Vaterland is the largest passenger shipoperated by a German shipping company. Background The Hamburg America Line was one of two German shipping companies which operated transatlantic crossings, the other being North German Lloyd. The latter had had much success with the advent of their so-called Kaiser-class ocean liners, the first of which was the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. Lloyd soon had a fleet of four liners with weekly transatlantic crossings on offer. By the turn of the century, HAPAG had only one flagship the Deutschland. Though successful, the Deutschland could not rival the "Four Flyers" owned by Lloyd. HAPAG soon added the Kaiserin Auguste Viktoria ### Assistant:
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### User: Javontae Hawkins (born November 13, 1993) is an American professional basketball player for Crailsheim Merlins of the Basketball Bundesliga. He played his first two years of college basketball with the South Florida. Hawkins later played also with Eastern Kentucky and Fordham before going undrafted in the 2017 NBA draft. High school career Hawkins was a Four-star prospect and the No. 89 overall player in the 2012 class. He earned First Team all-state honors as a junior in Michigan while playing at Powers Catholic High School. He spent two years at Huntington Prep in Huntington, West Virginia, where he averaged 17.5he played with Fordham where he was 1st in points (14.0), second in rebounds (4.9). Scored his 1,000 collegiate points in a double OT win against VCU. Professional career After going undrafted in the 2017 NBA draft Hawkins joined Vilpas Vikings of the Korisliiga. With Vilpas, he went on to average 14.3 points 4.3 rebounds and 1.1 assists per game. On July 13, 2018, he joined Holargos of the Greek Basket League. On August 3, 2019, he has signed with Crailsheim Merlins of the Basketball Bundesliga. References External links RealGM.com profile Nbadraft.net profile ESPN.com profile Fordham Rams bio Category:1993 births ### Assistant:
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### User: Riyad Bank is one of the largest financial institutions in Saudi Arabia, ranked fourth in assets It was established in 1957. The Saudi government owns 51% of the shares of the firm. As other Saudi commercial banks, Riyad Bank is supervised by the Saudi Arabian Monetary Authority. In March 2018, Riyad Bank launched contactless payment wristbands, using the Gemalto digital security solution. In December 2018, Riyad bank went into preliminary discussions with National Commercial Bank (NCB), the country's biggest lender by assets, to study a merger plan. After three weeks Riyad Bank hired Goldman Sachs to advise on the merger ### Assistant:
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### User: The 2010 Wisconsin gubernatorial election took place on November 2, 2010, to elect the Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin. The primary elections on September 14 determined which candidates advanced to the general election. Incumbent Democratic Governor Jim Doyle did not seek re-election in 2010. Republican nominee Scott Walker, the Milwaukee County Executive, defeated Democratic nominee Tom Barrett, the Mayor of Milwaukee. Democratic primary Candidates Declared Tom Barrett, Mayor of Milwaukee and former U.S. Representative Tim John Failed to qualify Jared Gary Christiansen Dominic Reinwand Results Republican primary Candidates Declared Mark Neumann, former U.S. Representative and nominee for the U.S.Senate in 1998 Scott Paterick Scott Walker, Milwaukee County Executive Failed to qualify William "Bill" Ingram, truck driver and write-in candidate for President of the United States in 2008 John Schless Polling Results Others Candidates Declared James Dean Langer (Independent) James James (Common Sense) Failed to qualify Michael J. Blinkwitz Terry Virgil General election candidates Seven candidates appeared on the primary election ballot: two Democrats, three Republicans and two other candidates. The Democratic and Republican nominees will face the independent candidates using the "Independent" and "Common Sense" labels in the November general election. General election polling Results County results ReferencesExternal links Elections & Voting at the Wisconsin Government Accountability Board Candidate list Wisconsin Governor Candidates at Project Vote Smart Campaign contributions for 2010 Wisconsin Governor from Follow the Money Wisconsin Governor 2010 from OurCampaigns.com 2010 Wisconsin Gubernatorial General Election graph of multiple polls from Pollster.com Election 2010: Wisconsin Governor from Rasmussen Reports 2010 Wisconsin Governor – Walker vs. Barrett from Real Clear Politics 2010 Wisconsin Governor's Race from CQ Politics Race Profile in The New York Times Election 2010 at the Milwaukee Journal SentinelDebates Wisconsin Governor Republican Primary Debate, C-SPAN, August 25, 2010 Wisconsin Gubernatorial Debate, C-SPAN'', September 24, ### Assistant:
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### User: Cosmonauts Alley () is a wide avenue in northern Moscow leading to the Russian Museum of Cosmonautics and the Monument to the Conquerors of Space . The pedestrian-only avenue connects the museum and monument to the VDNKh subway station. The park-like avenue is punctuated by large stone memorials of important figures in the Soviet space program. At its terminus below the monument, a larger-than-life statue of Soviet rocket pioneer Konstantin Tsiolkovsky (1857–1935) sits facing back down the path. In 2008, Cosmonauts Alley was under a reconstruction, adding: A model of the Solar System, Monument of Sergey Korolev and star-shaped granite ### Assistant:
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### User: Abigail and Roger was a British sitcom that aired on the BBC Television Service in 1956. It was written by Kelvin Sheldon. The programme saw Julie Webb and David Drummond play Abigail and Roger, an engaged couple living in London bedsits. The series is thought to no longer exist. Cast Julie Webb – Abigail David Drummond – Roger Rosina Enright – Shirl John Stone – Clive Grace Denbigh-Russell – Mrs Moloch Plot Abigail and Roger are an engaged couple living separately in bedsits in London. Abigail is a shorthand typist, who is outspoken and very capable domestically, she can menda fuse, cook, drive and so on. Roger works in the City and is into keeping fit and planning for their future. Much of the humour arose from the different attitudes to life, and their interest in the attractions of London. Episodes The show was originally meant to run for thirteen weeks, as a summer replacement for the soap opera The Grove Family, but in fact only ran for nine weeks. The entire series is thought to be lost. References Mark Lewisohn, "Radio Times Guide to TV Comedy", BBC Worldwide Ltd, 2003 British TV Comedy Guide for Abigail And Roger ### Assistant:
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### User: Vice Admiral Alan David Richards, (born 1958) is a retired Royal Navy officer who served as Chief of Defence Intelligence from 2012 to 2015. Naval career Richards joined the Royal Navy in 1977. He became commanding officer of the frigate and then of the frigate in which he saw operational service during the Gulf War. He went on to be Director of Force Development in 2002, Commander United Kingdom Carrier Strike Group in 2006, Assistant Chief of Defence Staff (International Security Policy) in 2007 and then Assistant Chief of Defence Staff (Resources and Plans) in 2009. He became Chief of ### Assistant:
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### User: The Schönbiel Hut (German: Schönbielhütte) is a mountain hut located north of the Matterhorn. It is situated at above sea level, north of the Zmutt Glacier, a few kilometers west of the town of Zermatt in the canton of Valais in Switzerland. The actual hut was built by the Swiss Alpine Club in 1955, after the demolition of an older hut, built in 1909. The hut is accessible to hikers, from the cable car station of Schwarzsee with a marked trail. It is used to climb the Matterhorn on Zmutt ridge and many other high summits in the area (Dent ### Assistant:
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### User: The Highest Honour is a 1982 Australian/Japanese co-production about Operation Jaywick and Operation Rimau by Z Special Unit during World War II. The same story inspired the mini-series Heroes (1988) and Heroes II: The Return (1991). Plot During World War II, a team of Australian soldiers from Z Special Unit, including Ivan Lyon and Robert Page, successfully lead an expedition to destroy ships in Singapore harbour, Operation Jaywick. An attempt to duplicate this success, Operation Rimau, ends in disaster, with the team either killed or captured. These soldiers are interrogated by the Japanese in Singapore, with Page forming a friendshipwith Minoru Tamiya. Eventually all the Australians are convicted of war crimes and executed. Cast John Howard as Capt. Robert Page Atsuo Nakamura as Minoru Tamiya Stuart Wilson as Lt. Col. Ivan Lyon Steve Bisley as A.B. W.G. Falls Michael Aitkens as Major Ingleton George Mallaby as Lt. Cmdr. Don Davidson Tony Bonner as Lt. W.G. Carey John Ley as Lt. A.I. Sargent Harold Hopkins as Cpl. C.M. Stewart Garry Waddell as Cpl. R.B. Fletcher Slim DeGrey as Leading Stoker J.P. McDowell Alan Cassell as Lt. Ted Carse Mark Hembrow as Able Seaman F.W. Marsh Vincent Ball as Lt. Cmdr.Mong as Lu Ran Shi Yû Numazaki as Capt. Nomura Neil Redfern as WO2 A. Warren Jiro Sakagami as Kimura Taro Shigaki as Hayakawa Trevor Sommers as Sub. Lt. J.G. Riggs Mizuho Suzuki as Maj. Gen. Kawamura Jonathan Sweey as Cpl. A. Crilley Hajime Tawara as Sgt. Maj. Omori Production Producers John McCallum and Lee Robinson had previously made a film about Z Special Unit, Attack Force Z (1981). Robinson said he was approached to make the film by a member of the Australian embassy in Tokyo in 1980. He says the official asked him if he was interested inmaking a movie about Jaywick and Rimau with a Japanese company. Robinson says he spent a year researching the story in Japanese and Australian archives. The film was originally shot under the title of Southern Cross. Production took place in 1982. It was financed by two dozen Australian businessmen and a Japanese production company, Shinihon Eija, who contributed $1.5 million in marketing and production costs. There were two versions of the film – Australian and Japanese. Robinson later said the two versions were intrinsically the same but the emphasis in the Japanese film was more towards the Japanese actors andvice versa. Robinson later said that "the film is a human story of how a friendship can develop among enemies and how human spirit rises above the atrocities of war. It is an anti-war film set in a period remembered for horrendous slayings of civilians." Release The film was never released theatrically in Australia but did screen as a tv mini-series in 1989. It did obtain a theatrical release in the US and UK and McCallum says the film sold widely to television. It was also known as Heroes of the Krait and Minami Jujisei. The widow of Bob Pageand survivors of Z Force were furious with the film, claiming it was far too complimentary to the Japanese. Robinson admitted the film was "50 percent fiction" and that "there is no doubt that the whole picture is designed as an apology, but with facts as dramatic as these, why play around with it? What gives the film the impact is the constant reminder that this is true." Robinson admitted there was an occasion when the Japanese producers wanted the prison set to have pillows and sheets on the bed to make them look nicer, but he refused. A scenewhere a Japanese officer comes to Australia ten years after the war to make peace with one of the widows, Roma Greemish, was cut at the request of Ms Greemish. McCallum later said that "Stuart Wilson was very good in" the film but: It got bogged down with too much Japanese dialogue, because they were co-producing, and put up half the money. They insisted on a lot of Japanese. I said, 'You're the villains in this, you beheaded the Australians.' But they thought they'd make a huge amount of money out of it; the man behind the film company wasa millionaire. He took us up there, Robinson and myself and some of the actors, and we had a great jamboree of a week in Tokyo, where he had a huge launch of the damn thing in a huge cinema. He said 'We're releasing it tomorrow all over Japan. We expect to make three million.' I think they lost three million. In 1982 Thomas Keneally was reported as working on a script for another film based on Operation Rimau called Rimau for the South Australian Film Corporation to be made for $1 million, but no film eventuated. References External links ### Assistant:
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### User: Nina Radulović (; born 15 May 1986) is a Serbian television presenter on Prva TV. She is best known for her hosting duties on “The Stars Sing for Them” and Survivor Srbija on the FOX Serbia network (now PRVA TV). Education and career Born in Belgrade in 1986, she finished primary and secondary school in her hometown, and later graduated and obtained Master's thesis at the University of Belgrade. Her first television appearance was when she competed in the 2007–08 RTS reality series “Euro Face” to determine the co-hosts of the 2008 Eurovision Song Contest. Nina was a finalist butlost in the final vote. She was a co-host of the "Eurovision Countdown" show in 2008. Since September 2008, she began working on the FOX Serbia network by hosting the show Survivor Special. The show accompanied the first season of Survivor Srbija, the highly successful Serbian version of the reality show Survivor. Survivor Special aired from October 2008 to February 2009. Nina Radulović was to host the show again for its second season, starting September 2009. As of April 2009, she began hosting the television show "The stars sing for them", also aired on FOX. Notes External links Nina Radulović ### Assistant:
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### User: Richard George MacLeish (January 3, 1950 – May 30, 2016) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played 14 seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) with the Philadelphia Flyers, Hartford Whalers, Pittsburgh Penguins, and Detroit Red Wings. He played 12 seasons in Philadelphia, winning two Stanley Cups with the Flyers in 1974 and 1975. Playing career MacLeish played minor ice hockey in Cannington, Ontario, and went to the 1962 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournament with his youth team. He played junior ice hockey with the Peterborough Petes from 1967 to 1970. The Boston Bruins selected him fourth overallin the 1970 NHL Amateur Draft. After spending the first half of his first professional season with the Oklahoma City Blazers, MacLeish was involved in a three-way deal which sent him; Bruce Gamble, Dan Schock, and a 1st round pick to the Philadelphia Flyers, Bernie Parent and a 2nd round pick to the Toronto Maple Leafs, and Mike Walton to Boston. MacLeish spent the rest of the 1970–71 season with the Flyers, scoring two goals and four assists in 26 games. He also added a goal in four playoff games. In the 1971–72 season he saw his output drop considerablyto a single goal, and consequently split the year between the Flyers and their AHL affiliate the Richmond Robins. The 1972–73 season, during which the Flyers earned the nickname "the Broad Street Bullies" proved to be a breakout year for MacLeish as he became the first member of the Flyers to ever score 50 goals in a single campaign. He added 50 assists that year, to bring his points total to 100. This was enough to finish fourth in league scoring, only a single point behind Bobby Orr. In the Stanley Cup playoffs, the Flyers won their first playoff series32 goals and added 45 assists. In the playoffs, however, he led all scorers with 13 goals and 9 assists as the Flyers claimed their first ever Stanley Cup. He scored the only goal in the series' sixth and final game, and narrowly missed out on winning the Conn Smythe Trophy to his teammate, Bernie Parent. After another successful regular season in 1974–75, notching 38 goals and 41 assists MacLeish went on to lead his team again in playoff scoring as they won a second consecutive championship. This championship marked the last time the trophy was raised by a teamyear. In a game against the Los Angeles Kings in April 1978, MacLeish narrowly avoided serious injury suffering a cut neck requiring 80 stitches when he slid into the skate of center Marcel Dionne. Several days later, he was back in the lineup. He joked later that he smoked a cigarette in the locker room afterward and smoke came out his throat. After the 1980–81 season, the Flyers traded MacLeish, Blake Wesley, and Don Gillen to the Hartford Whalers for Fred Arthur and Ray Allison. During the 1981–82 season, the Whalers traded MacLeish to the Pittsburgh Penguins for Russ Anderson.Pittsburgh released MacLeish during the 1982–83 season, and he played briefly in Switzerland. He rejoined the Flyers as a free agent for the 1983–84 season, and was traded during the season to the Detroit Red Wings for future considerations. He retired at the end of that season. Playing style His skating and playing styles were influenced by years of "river skating" where he developed his smooth, long striding speed. MacLeish depended on a whipping and accurate wrist shot for the majority of his goals and was the Flyers' first, pure goal scoring "sniper". His often used scoring move involved carryingthe puck over the blue line, quickly darting to the left and then wrist shooting the puck back to the right against the goaltender. Later life In retirement, MacLeish enjoyed his passion for owning racehorses. In the early 2000s, he suffered a heart attack during a Flyers Alumni game and had cardiac bypass surgery the next day. MacLeish also suffered from diabetes. On May 11, 2016, MacLeish's daughter announced her father had been "battling multiple medical problems" for the last 6 weeks in a Philadelphia hospital. MacLeish died in the Philadelphia hospital where he was being treated on May 30,2016 at age 66 of meningitis, as well as kidney and liver failure. MacLeish was survived by his wife, Charlene and two daughters, Brianna and Danielle. Career statistics References External links Category:1950 births Category:2016 deaths Category:Boston Bruins draft picks Category:Canadian ice hockey centres Category:Canadian people of Scottish descent Category:Detroit Red Wings players Category:Hartford Whalers players Category:EHC Kloten players Category:London Nationals players Category:National Hockey League All-Stars Category:National Hockey League first round draft picks Category:Oklahoma City Blazers (1965–1977) players Category:Peterborough Petes (ice hockey) players Category:Philadelphia Flyers players Category:Pittsburgh Penguins players Category:Richmond Robins players Category:Stanley Cup champions Category:Canadian expatriate ice hockey players in ### Assistant:
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### User: Jay Bothroyd (born 7 May 1982) is an English professional footballer who plays as a striker for J1 League club Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo. A product of the Arsenal Academy, he left in 2000 and signed with Coventry City, spending three years with the Sky Blues and becoming the club's top-scorer with 11 goals during the 2002–2003 season. His form attracted attention from Serie A's Perugia, and he signed with the club in 2003. He later returned to England and played for Blackburn Rovers, Charlton Athletic, Wolverhampton Wanderers, Stoke City, Cardiff City, Queens Park Rangers and Sheffield Wednesday. In 2014, Bothroydbegan playing in Asia, first in Thailand for Muangthong United, and later in Japan for Júbilo Iwata and Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo. He has also played for the England national team, earning his first and to date only cap in 2010. Club career Coventry City Bothroyd was born in Islington, London. He started his career in Arsenal's Academy, and played in their win against Coventry City in the 1999–2000 FA Youth Cup Final. At 18 years of age, Bothroyd was sold to Coventry after throwing his shirt at youth coach Don Howe and the bench having been substituted in the 2000Premier League Youth Cup final against West Ham United. Despite having never played a first-team match for Arsenal, he cost Coventry £1 million when he joined them on 13 July 2000. His league debut came on 4 November 2000 in a 2–1 home defeat to Manchester United in the Premier League. In the three years he played for Coventry, he scored seventeen goals in total, despite making little impact in his first season, after making his debut against Preston North End in the League Cup. Bothroyd only featured for Coventry after many other members of the squad had to bewhere he scored one and created one in a 2–0 win and kept his starting place for the next three matches, scoring Wolves' only goal of the match against Bristol City in a 1–1 draw. After Wolves signed new strikers Sylvan Ebanks-Blake and brought in Kevin Kyle on loan during the January transfer window, Bothroyd found himself out of first team contention. To gain playing time, he moved to fellow Championship club Stoke City on an initial one-month loan on 14 March 2008, later extended to the end of the season, which ended in promotion to the Premier League. However,after featuring in just four matches during his loan spell, he returned to his parent club who promptly put him up for transfer. Cardiff City Bothroyd remained in the Championship, joining Cardiff City, who beat off interest from newly promoted Premier League club Hull City, on 4 August 2008 in a three-year contract for a fee of £350,000. At the start of the season Bothroyd found himself in and out of the team as manager Dave Jones attempted to find his best strike partnership and, after a number of matches, Bothroyd assumed the role of first choice strike partner togoal against league leaders QPR, later after the match, there were many wondering if he meant to cross instead of going for goal but Bothroyd claimed he went for goal. On 23 May 2011, Bothroyd left Cardiff City after failing to agree a new contract. Queens Park Rangers On 13 July 2011, Bothroyd signed for newly promoted Premier League club Queens Park Rangers on a three-year contract. He made his debut on the opening day of the season, playing the full 90 minutes of a 4–0 defeat at home to Bolton Wanderers. He scored his first goal on 30 October,agency by signing a two-year contract with Muangthong United of the Thai Premier League. He made his competitive debut the following month, playing the full match as Muangthong lost to Buriram United in the Kor Royal Cup. His first goal for the club came on 8 February 2014, in a 2014 AFC Champions League qualifying match against Hà Nội T&T. Júbilo Iwata In February 2015, Bothroyd signed for J2 League club Júbilo Iwata. He scored two goals on his debut in a 3–1 win against Giravanz Kitakyushu. In the 2015 season, he was the top scorer in the J2 League.This aided his team to achieve promotion to Japan's top league, the J1 League. Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo In July 2017, Bothroyd signed for J1 League club Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo. International career As a youngster Bothroyd represented England at several youth levels, getting as far as the under-21 team. He won one cap for the team during a friendly against Mexico at Filbert Street, scoring during the match with a spectacular overhead kick as England won 3–0. In October 2008, it was revealed that Bothroyd was on the verge of a possible call-up to play for Jamaica as he qualifies throughhis grandparents. In April 2010, Guyana were interested in calling-up Bothroyd, whom qualifies for the nation through his parents. On 13 November 2010, Bothroyd was called up to the England squad for the friendly against France. He appeared as a second-half substitute in the 2–1 defeat, becoming Cardiff City's first England international in their 111-year history, and the first Football League player to represent England since David Nugent in 2007. Style of play Dave Jones described Bothroyd as a player who can "drift, he's got good ability and good pace." Career statistics Club International Honours Arsenal FA Youth Cup: 1999–2000Júbilo Iwata J2 League runner-up: 2015 Hokkaido Consadole Sapporo J.League Cup runner-up: 2019 References External links Jay Bothroyd profile at the Football Association website Category:1982 births Category:Living people Category:Footballers from Islington (district) Category:English footballers Category:English expatriate footballers Category:England youth international footballers Category:England under-21 international footballers Category:England international footballers Category:Association football forwards Category:Arsenal F.C. players Category:Coventry City F.C. players Category:A.C. Perugia Calcio players Category:Blackburn Rovers F.C. players Category:Charlton Athletic F.C. players Category:Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. players Category:Stoke City F.C. players Category:Cardiff City F.C. players Category:Queens Park Rangers F.C. players Category:Sheffield Wednesday F.C. players Category:Muangthong United F.C. players Category:Júbilo Iwata players Category:Premier League ### Assistant:
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### User: Sir John Marcus Fox MBE (11 June 1927 – 16 March 2002) was a British Conservative Party politician. He served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for Shipley from 1970 to 1997. He was chairman of the 1922 Committee directly overseeing candidate selection for the Conservative Party in the 1979 General Election. Early life Fox had a twin sister with whom he attended dancing lessons. At these lessons, he met Betty Boothroyd, later the House of Commons Speaker. He attended Wheelwright Grammar School for Boys (now a campus of Kirklees College) in Dewsbury. Fox served in the Green Howards (Duke ### Assistant:
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### User: Roberto Marcos Saporiti (born 11 April 1939 in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine retired footballer who played as a striker, and is a manager. He has managed clubs in Argentina, Mexico and Colombia. Playing career Saporiti started his professional career with Club Atlético Independiente in 1957. In 1960 he was part of the squad that won the Primera División Argentina championship. In 1962 he moved down a division to play for Club Atlético Lanús and in 1963 he moved to Deportivo Español where he played alongside Carlos Bilardo. Saporiti had a spell playing in Uruguay for Racing Club de Montevideobefore returning to Argentina in 1971 to play for Club Atlético Platense. Titles as a player Managerial career Saporiti has held managerial positions at a large number of clubs. Most notably he coached Argentinos Juniors to their first ever title in 1984, he has had five spells as manager of Talleres de Córdoba (1977–1979, 1988, 1995, 2006 and 2009) and he coached Loma Negra in the early 1980s, the most successful period in their history. He has also coached Argentine clubs Chacarita Juniors, Rosario Central, San Lorenzo and had a spell as caretaker manager of Boca Juniors. Between 2007 and2008 he had a second spell as manager of Olimpo de Bahía Blanca. Saporiti has also coached Junior in Colombia and a number of clubs in Mexico including Veracruz, Atlante, Pumas, Necaxa, Tecos UAG and Puebla. Managerial titles References Category:1939 births Category:Living people Category:Sportspeople from Buenos Aires Category:Argentine footballers Category:Association football forwards Category:Club Atlético Independiente footballers Category:Club Atlético Lanús footballers Category:Deportivo Español footballers Category:Racing Club de Montevideo players Category:Club Atlético Platense footballers Category:Santiago Morning footballers Category:Argentine Primera División players Category:Argentine expatriate footballers Category:Expatriate footballers in Chile Category:Expatriate footballers in Uruguay Category:Argentine football managers Category:Chacarita Juniors managers Category:Rosario Central managers Category:Talleres ### Assistant:
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### User: Leslie Stephen Ettre (September 16, 1922 – June 1, 2010) was a Hungarian-American analytical chemist and scientist who was known for his contributions to the field of chromatography, in particular open-tubular gas chromatography, as well as to documentation of the history of chromatography. Life Ettre was born in Szombathely, Hungary and received a degree equivalent to a Masters of Science in Chemical Engineering in 1946 from the Technical University, Budapest. He later received a technical doctorate (Tech.) from the same institution. He and his wife, Kitty (Polonyi) Ettre (192?–199?) immigrated to the United States in 1958. They had one daughter.Work From 1946 through 1956 Ettre worked at pharmaceutical and chemical engineering firms in Hungary. In 1956 he was appointed to the position of head of the Industrial Department of the Hungarian Research Institute on Plastics in Budapest. He held the position of chemical engineer at Lurgi AG in Frankfurt am Main, West Germany, where he began to work with gas chromatography. In the United States, Ettre worked at the PerkinElmer Corporation from 1958 until his retirement in 1990; he held the positions of Application Engineer, Product Specialist, Chief Applications Chemist, and Senior Staff Scientist, and finally Senior Scientist. Ettre'smajor research area was chromatography. His activities covered a variety of fields including surface area studies, trace analysis, detector response, reaction gas chromatography, the retention index system, headspace gas chromatography, and in particular the theory and practice of open-tubular (capillary) column gas chromatography. After his retirement, he focused on the history and evolution of chromatography and its relationship to other scientific disciplines. The history and variations of Hungarian philately in the period 1900 – 1944 was one of his lesser-known activities, in which he authored several monographs published by the Society for Hungarian Philately. Academia Ettre was a Senior Lecturerand Adjunct Professor at several universities; Veszprém University, Budapest, Hungary (1950–1952), the University of Houston, Texas, United States (1986–1968), Johannes Kepler University, Linz Austria, and the Department of Chemical Engineering at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States (1977 – 1978, 1988–200?), where he was Adjunct Professor and Research Affiliate. Ettre served as an editor of Chromatographia from 1970 – 1994, when he became a member of the journal's Advisory Board. He served on the Editorial Advisory Boards of the Journal of Chromatographic Science (1963–1994) and the Journal of Liquid Chromatography (1984–1993), and on the Editorial Advisory Boards of LC/GCMagazine in both the North America and Europe editions, as well as of the Magyar Kemikusok Lapja (Hungarian Chemical Journal). He was the author of the column “Milestones in Chromatography,” in LC/GC Magazine from 1999 until 2008. Ettre was a member of the Commission on Analytical Nomenclature of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (I.U.P.A.C.) from 1982 – 1990, where he was responsible for the development of the "Unified Nomenclature for Chromatography" issued in 1993. He also served as a member of the Executive Committee of the American Society for Testing and Materials (A.S.T.M.) Committee E-19 on Chromatography(1966 – 1973); as a foreign member of the Executive Committee of the (British) Chromatographic Society (1992–1997); and as an Executive Committee member of the Chromatography Subdivision of the Division of Analytical Chemistry of the American Chemical Society (A.C.S.). Leslie Ettre Award In 2008, the Leslie Ettre Award of the International Symposium on Capillary Chromatography was established by the PerkinElmer Corporation. The award is given each year to a scientist, 35 years old or younger, for the most interesting original research in capillary gas chromatography in environmental and food safety. Publications Ettre authored and co-authored close to 300 scientific publications,20 books, editor and co-editor of 42 books. He was a member of many professional chemical societies. From 1968 to 1974 he served as the Executive Editor of the Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemical Analysis. Selected publications Foster Dee Snell, Clifford L Hilton, Leslie S Ettre, Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemical Analysis (John Wiley & Sons, 1966 – 1974), 20 volume set. L. S. Ettre, "Farewell to 'Milestones in Chromatography'," LC/GC North America April, 2008. Chromatography: the Separation Technique of the 20th Century, Chromatographia Vol. 51, No. 1/2, January 2000, p. 7-17 (Centennial Review). Awards and honors Csaba Horváth Medal of theConnecticut Separation Science Council (2001) Keene P. Dimick Award in Chromatography of the Society of Analytical Chemists of Pittsburgh (1998) Jubilee Award of the International Symposium on Capillary Chromatography (1998) Golden Diploma from Budapest Technical University (1995) Elected Honorary Member, Hungarian Chemical Society (1992) Marcel J. E. Golay Award of the International Symposium on Capillary Chromatography (1992) M. S. Tswett Medal of the Russian Chromatography Society (1991) Pioneer in the Development of Analytical Instrumentation of the first James L. Waters Symposium at the 41st PittCon (1990) National Award in Chromatography of the American Chemical Society (1985) A. J. P. MartinGold Award of the Chromatography Discussion Group (1982) Anniversary Medal of Tartu University (Estonia, 1981) L.S. Palmer Award of the Minnesota Chromatography Forum (1980) Anniversary M.S. Tswett Chromatography Medal of the All-Union Scientific Council on Chromatography of the USSR Academy of Sciences (1979) M.S. Tswett Award in Chromatography of the International Symposium on Advances in Chromatography (1978) References Sources "Leslie Stephen ETTRE," Obituary, Hartford Courant, June 4, 2010. C. W. Gerhke, Chromatography: A Century of Discovery 1900-2000 : The Bridge to the Sciences/Technology Journal of Chromatography Library Vol. 64 (Elsevier, 2001), pp. 178 – 179. "Happy Birthday Professor Leslie S. ### Assistant:
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### User: Jordan Kerr (born 26 October 1979, in Adelaide) is a retired Australian professional tennis player. His highest ATP singles ranking was 356th, which he reached on 7 August 2000. His career high in doubles was 23rd, which he reached on 18 August 2008. He was an Australian Institute of Sport scholarship holder. He represented Australia in the men's doubles at the 2008 Beijing Olympics, losing in the opening round to the eventual silver medallists from Sweden. 2012 Kerr played for the Philadelphia Freedoms of World Team Tennis that summer. It was his first season playing for the WTT. The Freedoms ### Assistant:
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### User: Kim Hastreiter (born November 12, 1951) is an American journalist, editor, publisher, and curator who co-founded Paper magazine. She served as co-Editor-in-Chief from its inception until 2017, when she and partner David Hershkovits sold the company. In her column of 32 years, "Note From Kim," Hastreiter observed and articulated cultural movements and trends that she saw forming, deciphering the transforming zeitgeist. She currently resides in Greenwich Village, New York City. Biography Early life Hastreiter was born to Gloria and Walter Hastreiter in West Orange, New Jersey. She has one sibling, Laurie. After high school she attended Washington University in St.the Style Editor, where she worked on fashion stories collaborating with artists like Robert Mapplethorpe, Keith Haring, and Kenny Scharf, among others. While working there, she met journalist David Hershkovits, who became her business partner after the SoHo Weekly News closed suddenly. Together they founded Paper Magazine in 1984, in the kitchen of her Tribeca loft. Through her work at Paper, Hastreiter became known for her creative collaborations with artists, designers, illustrators, and photographers. She was also behind several historical collaborations between creatives, connecting artists and designers such as Keith Haring and Vivienne Westwood for a collection together in the ### Assistant:
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### User: Edmond Malinvaud (25 April 1923 – 7 March 2015) was a French economist. He was the first president of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences. Trained at the École Polytechnique and at the École Nationale de la Statistique et de l'Administration Économique (ENSAE) in Paris, Malinvaud was a student of Maurice Allais. In 1950, Malinvaud left Allais to join the Cowles Commission in the United States. At Cowles, Malinvaud produced work in many directions. His famous article, "Capital Accumulation and the Efficient Allocation of Resources" (1953), provided an intertemporal theory of capital for general equilibrium theory and introduced the conceptof dynamic efficiency. He became director of the ENSAE (1962–1966), director of the forecast department of French Treasury (1972–1974), director of the INSEE (1974–1987) and Professor at the Collège de France (1988–1993). He also worked on uncertainty theory, notably the theory of "first order certainty equivalence" (1969) and the relationship between individual risks and social risks (1972, 1973). His 1971 microeconomics textbook and his econometrics textbook, Statistical Methods in Econometrics, have since become classics. Malinvaud's main contribution to macroeconomics is represented in his slim 1977 book, Theory of Unemployment Reconsidered which provided a clear and unified reconstruction of dynamic "disequilibrium"macroeconomics; this theory built on previous results of Clower, Leijonhufvud, and "Non-Walrasian" theory. Malinvaud's influence on the subsequent generation of European economists has been profound. Major works of Edmond Malinvaud "Note on von Neumann-Morgenstern's Strong Independence Axiom", 1952, Econometrica. "Capital Accumulation and the Efficient Allocation of Resources", 1953, Econometrica "Aggregation Problems in Input-Output Models", 1954, in Barna, editor, Structural Interdependence of the Economy "Initiation à la comptabilité nationale", 1957 "Statistical Methods in Econometrics", 1964 "Croissances optimales dans un modèle macroéconomique", 1965, PASSV. "Les Croissances optimales", 1965, Cahiers du séminaire d'économétrie. "Decentralized Procedures for Planning", 1967, in Malinvaud and Bacharach, editors,Allocation of Individual Risks in Large Markets", 1974, in Dreze, editor, Allocation Under Uncertainty. "Une Nouvelle formulation générale pour l'étude de certains fondements microéconomiques de la macroéconomie", with Y.Younes, 1977, Cahiers du séminaire d'économétrie. "Some New Concepts for the Microeconomic Foundations of Macroeconomics" with Y.Younes, 1977, in Harcourt, editor, Microeconomic Foundations of Macroeconomics. "Macroeconomic Rationing of Employment", 1980, in Malinvaud and Fitoussi, editors, Unemployment in Western Countries. "Profitability and Unemployment", 1980. "Théorie macroéconomique", 2 volumes, 1981–2. "Essais sur la théorie du chômage", 1983 "Mass Unemployment", 1984 "Reflecting on the Theory of Capital and Growth", 1986, Oxford EP "The Challenge of ### Assistant:
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### User: The Lonnie Zamora incident was an alleged UFO close encounter which occurred on Friday, April 24, 1964, at about 5:50 p.m., on the outskirts of Socorro, New Mexico. Several primary witnesses emerged to report their version of the event, which included the craft's approach, conspicuous flame, and alleged physical evidence left behind immediately afterward. Lonnie Zamora, a Socorro police officer who was on duty at the time, claimed to have come closest to the object and provided the most prolonged and comprehensive account. Some physical trace evidence left behind—burned vegetation and soil, ground landing impressions, and metal scrapings on aBlue Book was unable to come up with a conventional explanation and listed the case as an "unknown". Sighting Alone in his patrol car, Sergeant Lonnie Zamora was chasing a speeding car due south of Socorro, New Mexico, on April 24, 1964, at about 5:45 p.m., when he "heard a roar and saw a flame in the sky to southwest some distance away — possibly a 1/2 mile or a mile." Thinking a local dynamite shack might have exploded, Zamora broke off the chase and went to investigate. Though Zamora says he did not pay much attention to the flame,was again quoted in an Air Force report written two days later about smoking brush. “[Chavez] then went to the area were the craft or thing was supposedly sighted and found four fresh indentations in the ground and several charred or burned bushes. Smoke appeared to come from the bush and he assumed it was burning, however no coals were visible and the charred portions of the bush were cold to the touch.” Chavez was further reported securing the area and scouring the ground looking for the presence of other human activity. He could find no other tire tracks besidesleft quite an impression on him. There is also no question about Zamora's reliability. He is a serious police officer, a pillar of his church, and a man well versed in recognizing airborne vehicles in his area. He is puzzled by what he saw and frankly, so are we. This is the best-documented case on record, and still we have been unable, in spite of thorough investigation, to find the vehicle or other stimulus that scared Zamora to the point of panic." See also List of UFO sightings References Further reading Brad Steiger, Project Blue Book, 1976, Ballantine Books, (contains ### Assistant:
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### User: Lindsay Pulsipher (born May 6, 1982) is an American actress. She has had several roles in film and television, and is known for her series regular role as Rose Lawrence on A&E Network's The Beast (2009). She joined the third season of HBO's True Blood (2010), playing were-panther Crystal Norris and love interest to Jason Stackhouse. Childhood Lindsay Pulsipher was born and grew up in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, with five siblings, and was inspired to be an actor by her mother, a theater actress. As she puts it: She was influenced by Julie Christie and AudreyHepburn who showed her "a whole new world as far as acting goes". Pulsipher's parents were members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints but she stopped practicing religion. Career After appearing in several roles from 2000 to 2003 in the television series, Touched by an Angel, filmed in her hometown of Salt Lake City, and after starring in a couple of indie films, Pulsipher moved to Los Angeles to pursue a lifelong dream of a career in acting. She was given several guest starring roles in popular television series including House, M.D., CSI: NY (Crime Scene Investigation: ### Assistant:
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### User: Harold Bright Maynard (Oct. 18, 1902 - 1975) was an American industrial engineer, consulting engineer at the Methods Engineering Council, and management author. He is known as the "Broadway counsel for industries, railroads, state governments" and as recipient of the Henry Laurence Gantt Medal in 1964. Life and work Maynard was born in 1902 in Northampton, Massachusetts to William Clement Maynard and Edith Lucia (Clark) Maynard. He attended the Protestant Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia, where he graduated in 1919. In 1923 he obtained his M.Sc in mechanical engineering at Cornell University. After his graduation in 1923 he started as ahandbook. 1956. Maynard, Harold Bright, ed. Effective Foremanship. McGraw-Hill book Company, Incorporated, 1941. Maynard, Harold B. ed. Top management handbook, New York,: MaGraw-Hill, 1960. Maynard, Harold Bright (ed.). Handbook of Business Administration. McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1967. Maynard, Harold Bright. Handbook of modern manufacturing management. Vol. 1. McGraw-Hill, 1970. Articles, a selection Lowry, Stewart McKinley, Harold Bright Maynard, and Gustave James Stegemerten. "Time and motion study and formulas for wage incentives." (1940). References External links MTM – Work design productive and safe Category:1902 births Category:1975 deaths Category:American industrial engineers Category:Episcopal Academy alumni Category:People from Northampton, Massachusetts Category:Henry Laurence Gantt Medal recipients ### Assistant:
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### User: The Dreamer may refer to: Film The Dreamer (1916 film) starring Edward Coxen The Dreamer (1936 film), a German film directed by Carl Froelich The Dreamer (1965 film), an Italian film directed by Massimo Franciosa The Dreamer (1970 film), an Israeli film directed by Dan Wolman Comics The Dreamer (webcomic), a comic book series and webcomic by Lora Innes The Dreamer (comics), a 1986 semi-autobiographical graphic novel by Will Eisner Art The Dreamer (sculpture), a 1979 sculpture by Manuel Izquierdo in Portland, Oregon, United States Music Albums The Dreamer (Yusef Lateef album), 1959 The Dreamer (Jimmy MacCarthy album), 1994 TheDreamer (Blake Shelton album), 2003 The Dreamer (Tamyra Gray album), 2004 The Dreamer (José James album), 2008 The Dreamer (Etta James album), 2011 The Dreamer (Rhett Miller album), 2012 Songs See also Dreamer (song) - disambiguation "The Dreamer" (1943 song), a song about a farm girl waiting for her soldier boyfriend to return home, written by Arthur Schwartz and Frank Loesser for the 1943 film Thank Your Lucky Stars, sung by Dinah Shore and later comically reprised by Olivia de Havilland, George Tobias, and Ida Lupino. "The Dreamer", a song by Neil Sedaka "The Dreamer", a song by Ryan Sheridan ### Assistant:
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### User: Lightweight User Interface Toolkit (LWUIT) is a Widget toolkit developed by Sun Microsystems to enable easier Java ME user interface development for existing devices, including not only traditional Java ME environments like mobile phones, but also TVs and set top boxes. LWUIT is inspired by Swing and supports many of its features including pluggable look and feel, layout managers, etc. History LWUIT was created by Chen Fishbein of Sun Microsystems Israel development center (SIDC) who started developing LWUIT for an internal project. The project grew at which point Shai Almog joined the project which was announced at JavaOne 2008, following ### Assistant:
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### User: The University of Minnesota Press is a university press that is part of the University of Minnesota. It had annual revenues of just over $8 million in FY 2018. Founded in 1925, the University of Minnesota Press is best known for its books in social theory and cultural theory, critical theory, race and ethnic studies, urbanism, feminist criticism, and media studies. The University of Minnesota Press also publishes a significant number of translations of major works of European and Latin American thought and scholarship, as well as a diverse list of works on the cultural and natural heritage of thestate and the upper Midwest region. Journals The University of Minnesota Press's catalog of academic journals totals ten publications: Buildings & Landscapes: Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum Critical Ethnic Studies Cultural Critique Environment, Space, Place Future Anterior Journal of American Indian Education The Moving Image: The Journal of the Association of Moving Image Archivists Native American and Indigenous Studies Verge: Studies in Global Asias Wíčazo Ša Review References External links Partner Presses, Oxford Scholarship Online Theory and History of Literature Press Minnesota, University of Category:Publishing companies established in 1925 Category:1925 establishments in Minnesota Category:Native American literature Category:Book publishing companies ### Assistant:
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### User: Albany William Fonblanque (1793 – 13 October 1872) was a celebrated English journalist of French Huguenot descent, and by his own example a reformer of the journalist's profession. Family Fonblanque, descended from the noble French De Greniers family of Languedoc, and was born in London. His grandfather, John de Grenier Fonblanque, had been a banker naturalised in England under the name Fonblanque; his son, John Anthony Fonblanque, was Albany's father. Albany's mother, Frances Caroline Fitzgerald, was a granddaughter of Colonel Samuel Martin of Antigua, West Indies and niece of Samuel Martin. Her brother was the poet William Thomas Fitzgerald. AlbanyFonblanque married Caroline Keane. They had a daughter and three sons. Education Fonblanque was sent to Tonbridge School and then to the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich, to prepare for a career in the Royal Engineers. However, his health fell short and his studies were suspended. On his recovery he studied law, with a view to being called to the bar. At the age of 19 (in 1812), he began writing for newspapers and soon gained attention for the boldness and liberality of his opinions and for the superiority of his style amid what Macaulay, when speaking of him, called the "rantto resign from The Examiner, although he continued to contribute to it under the control of John Forster. During the later years of his life Fonblanque took no prominent part in public affairs. He died aged 79. By then he was, as his nephew Edward Fonblanque observed, a man who had lived and toiled in an age gone by, in a cause long since established. Albany Fonblanque's political activity may be judged from his England under Seven Administrations (1837), which compares the course of social and political events in England frnm 1826 to 1837. As a journalist, he must be ### Assistant:
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### User: Sylvia Tenney Allen (born April 2, 1947) is an American politician from Arizona. She is a Republican member of the Arizona State Senate. Education Sylvia Allen holds a high school diploma from Snowflake High School, in Snowflake, AZ. Career She is a co-founder and co-owner of George Washington Academy, LLC, a charter school in Snowflake, Arizona. She served as a Navajo County Supervisor. A Republican party activist, in 2008 she was appointed to the Arizona State Senate following the departure of Senator Jake Flake. A resident of Snowflake, Arizona, she first represented the 5th legislative district. Following her appointment, shewas elected in her own right in 2008. In the 2009–10 legislature, she was a member of four standing committees: Appropriations; Education Accountability and Reform; Natural Resources, Infrastructure, and Public Debt; and the Appropriations Subcommittee on Health and Welfare. She served as chair of the Appropriations Subcommittee on Health and Welfare for the Arizona Senate. Senator Allen was a sponsor of a 2012 bill, SB 1127, that introduced shared parenting to Arizona. After the death of Chester Crandell, Allen was selected to replace him on the primary ballot and was elected to the Arizona State Senate District 6 seat inshe was awarded Legislator of the Year by Arizona Community Colleges and Champion of Education by the Arizona School Administrators. Other awards Allen has won include Friend of the Family from the Arizona Family Project and Champion of the Taxpayer from Americans for Prosperity. Allen also has an "A" rating from the National Rifle Association. In 2017, the American Conservative Union gave her a lifetime evaluation of 92%. Controversies In 2017, while Chairwoman of the Arizona Senate Education Committee, The George Washington Academy charter school, of which she is a co-owner and co-founder, received an "F" Grade from the ArizonaSenate committee hearing on a bill that would relax concealed carry restrictions pertaining to public buildings, Allen, a member of the LDS Church, suggested that attending Sunday church services should be compulsory for Americans. Arizona state senate Democrat Steve Farley argued that even if church attendance might prove beneficial for society at large, Allen's proposal was a clear violation of separation of church and state laws, including the First Amendment to the US Constitution. In part of a speech she gave in July 2019, Allen lamented the "browning" of the United States, claiming that the country would "look like South ### Assistant:
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### User: The University of Graz Library (), in Graz, Austria is the largest scientific and public library in Styria and the third largest in Austria. It holds the right of legal deposit. It is part of the University of Graz and consists of the main library, two faculty libraries (for law and social and economic sciences, and for theology) and several branch libraries and is open to the public. History Jesuit university library The University of Graz Library owes its origin to the Counter-Reformation. Since 1571 the Jesuits had been pushing the re-catholization in the predominantly Protestant city of Graz accordingto the wishes of the Archduke Charles II of Austria. For that reason a Jesuit college with a school and a library were founded next to the cathedral in 1573. In 1585 this school was confirmed by Pope Gregory XIII as a Jesuit University, thus the library came into the status of a university library. It grew rapidly because many books got transferred from monasteries to Graz and because of donations and continuous purchases. The university was more or less a theological faculty, and the library's main focus in purchasing books was also theology – but not necessarily Catholic theology.Unfortunately, the 28 volume library catalogue was untraceable, it might have been taken away or destroyed by some glowering Jesuits and has never been detected until today. The considerable increase of books from monasteries aggravated the chaos. Lyceum library As well as several other universities the University of Graz was downgraded to the status of lyceum in 1782 by the emperor Josef II. Its collections increased nonetheless. Re-established university library On the 19. April 1827, after 45 years, the old rights were re-confirmed by the emperor Francis I of Austria. Since then the university mentions both founders in its name"Karl-Franzens-Universität Graz". Adjunctive to the re-installation was a requirement: the university must not cause any additional costs to the state. Therefore, it stayed dependent on donations and bequests. Only when the number of personnel was raised from 3 to 6 and the endowment from 830 to 4000 guilder in 1870, the university could again accomplish its tasks properly. From the relocation to the end of World War II Due to the limited space at the city centre, a new complex of buildings was erected in the periphery (present day Geidorf) in 1891. The various buildings were opened at different times.a consequence of the university-splitting in 2004, the medical branches became an autonomous university library. Together with the University Libraries of Vienna and Innsbruck Graz has been assuming control of the establishment of national and international consortia installed in order to use electronic journals and books in cooperation and thus more cost-effectively in 1998. On 1 July 2005 the "Cooperation of e-media in Austria" was constituted. The University of Graz Library authoritatively participates in the Austrian Literature Online project, the digitisation of Austrian literature. Staff When the library was taken over by the state, it got two employees: the directorPaul Guldin. 42 papyrus-manuscripts from Oxyrhynchos and Hibeh must also be mentioned. They were found by the British Egypt Exploration Society between 1896 and 1907 and entered into the library's possessions as quid pro quo for the city's financial support of the Society's excavations. Today, the greatest part of these findings is located in the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, the British Museum in London and the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Sources Manuela Reiter and Sigrid Reinitzer: "University Library of Graz". In: International Dictionary of Library History. Vol. 2. Chicago, London 2001. External links homepage Graz Graz Category:Buildings and structures in ### Assistant:
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### User: The Norwegian royal family is the family of the Norwegian monarch. The current family belongs to the House of Glücksburg and ascended the throne after the election of Prince Carl (regal name Haakon VII) during the dissolution of the Swedish-Norwegian union in 1905. In Norway there is a distinction between the Royal House (kongehuset) and the royal family (kongelige familie). The Royal House includes only the monarch and their spouse, the heir apparent and their spouse, and the heir apparent's eldest child. The royal family includes all of the sovereign's children and their spouses, grandchildren, and siblings. The current royalfamily, and Royal House, maintains a high approval rating among the Norwegian people. History The Norwegian monarchy, and its royal family, traces its history and origin back to the unification and founding of Norway, as well as Norway's first king, Harald I of the Fairhair dynasty. With the introduction of the Norwegian Law of Succession in 1163 AD, the legal framework established that only one monarch and one royal family was, through succession, allowed to rule. Norway, Sweden and Denmark had joint monarchs during the Kalmar Union in the late Middle Ages, and Norway remained in union with Denmark afterSweden left the union in 1523 . Following the reformation a joint Danish-Norwegian state was established 1536-37, which was ruled from Copenhagen by the House of Oldenburg until Norway was ceded to Sweden at the Treaty of Kiel in 1814 following Denmark-Norway's defeat in the Napoleonic Wars. Norway was briefly independent with its own king in 1814, but forced into a new union with Sweden under the rule of the House of Bernadotte. Upon becoming independent in 1905, Norway decided through a referendum to remain as a monarchy, with its first monarch being the Danish-born King Haakon VII, whose familyconsisted of the British Princess Maud and their son Olav. It is King Haakon's descendants that today make up the current royal family of Norway. Through marriages and historical alliances, the Norwegian royal family is closely related to the Swedish and Danish royal families as well as being more distantly related to royal families of Greece and the United Kingdom. The current king Harald V descends from all of the four kings belonging to the House of Bernadotte (1818-1905) that preceded the House of Glücksburg on the throne and is the first Norwegian monarch to be a descendant of allprevious Norwegian monarchs since 1818. Members Members of the Royal House are: The King and Queen (the monarch and his wife) The Crown Prince and Crown Princess (the King's son and daughter-in-law) Princess Ingrid Alexandra of Norway (the King's granddaughter) Members of the Royal Family are: Prince Sverre Magnus of Norway (the King's grandson) Marius Borg Høiby (the King's step-grandson) Princess Märtha Louise (the King's daughter) Maud Angelica Behn (the King's granddaughter) Leah Isadora Behn (the King's granddaughter) Emma Tallulah Behn (the King's granddaughter) Erling Lorentzen (the King's brother-in-law) Princess Astrid, Mrs. Ferner (the King's sister) Family tree of membersNotes * Member of the Royal House Royal coat of arms The coat of arms of Norway is one of the oldest in Europe and serves both as the coat of arms of the nation and of the Royal House. This is in keeping with its origin as the coat of arms of the kings of Norway during the Middle Ages. Håkon the Old (1217–1263) used a shield with a lion. The earliest preserved reference to the colour of the arms is the King's Saga written down in 1220. In 1280 King Eirik Magnusson added the crown and silver axeauthorized rendering was instituted for the first time. In 1905 the official design for royal and government arms was again changed, this time reverting to the medieval pattern, with a triangular shield and a more upright lion. The coat of arms of the royal house as well as the Royal Standard uses the lion design from 1905. The earliest preserved depiction of the Royal Standard is on the seal of Duchess Ingebjørg from 1318. The rendering used as the official coat of arms of Norway is slightly different and was last approved by the king 20 May 1992. When usedas the royal coat of arms the shield features the insignias of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav around it and is framed by a royal ermine robe, surmounted by the crown of Norway. The royal coat of arms is not used frequently. Instead, the king's monogram is extensively used, for instance in military insignia and on coins. See also Kings of Norway family tree Succession to the Norwegian throne List of Norwegian monarchs Monarchy of Norway References External links The Royal Family and the Royal House of Norway - Official Site of the Norwegian Royal Family (in English) ### Assistant:
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### User: Benjamin Fall (born 3 March 1989) is a French rugby player who currently plays for Montpellier in the Top 14 club competition. He plays as a wing. He was part of the 2008 IRB Junior World Championship playing for France playing 4 games and scoring 2 tries. He then played for Union Bordeaux Bègles in the 2007-08 Rugby Pro D2 season, playing 12 games and scoring 3 tries before being moving to Bayonne. He was selected for the French national team for the 2009 Autumn Internationals after his performances in the Top 14. Fall took part in the 2010 Six ### Assistant:
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### User: Mark Anthony Grater (born January 19, 1964) is former Major League Baseball pitcher. Grater played for the St. Louis Cardinals in and the Detroit Tigers in . He batted and threw right-handed. External links , or Retrosheet Pura Pelota (Venezuelan Winter League) Category:1964 births Category:Living people Category:Arkansas Travelers players Category:Baseball players from Pennsylvania Category:Calgary Cannons players Category:Detroit Tigers players Category:FIU Panthers baseball players Category:Florida International University alumni Category:Johnson City Cardinals players Category:Louisville Redbirds players Category:Major League Baseball pitchers Category:Minor league baseball coaches Category:People from Rochester, Pennsylvania Category:Savannah Cardinals players Category:Springfield Cardinals players Category:St. Louis Cardinals players Category:St. Petersburg Cardinals players ### Assistant:
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### User: SGH Warsaw School of Economics (, SGH) is the oldest business school in Poland. SGH Warsaw School of Economics was founded in 1906 as a private school under the name August Zieliński Private Trade Courses for Men. On 30 July 1919 it became a separate legal entity and was granted the status of an institution of higher education. The school was renamed Szkoła Główna Handlowa (SGH) in 1933. Following World War II SGH was nationalized and its name changed to Szkoła Główna Planowania i Statystyki (Main School of Planning and Statistics) with an abbreviation of SGPiS. The school regained itspre-war name after the fall of communism in 1991. SGH Warsaw School of Economics offers courses leading to bachelor's or master's degrees to both full-time and extramural students. It also offers programs for doctoral and postgraduate degrees. Its Finance and Accounting program was ranked among the Top 40 European Masters in Management by the Financial Times, 2008. SGH Warsaw School of Economics cooperates with around 200 higher education institutions around the world within student and staff exchange areas. It is also a member of the CEMS, the LLP Erasmus, the Partnership in International Management network (PIM) and the European UniversityAssociation EUA. It is located at the northern edge of the Mokotów district of Warsaw. Bus and tram stops as well as the Pole Mokotowskie metro station are nearby. Organizational structure SGH Warsaw School of Economics abandoned the traditional departmental structure segregating students on the basis of their major. Professors as well as research and teaching programmes are grouped in five Colleges (Collegiums) as well as a number of extra-collegial units, such as the foreign language teaching center. Courses offered SGH is a university with no departments. Within full-time and part-time studies, they are conducted in two levels. Bachelor studies,mostly on students themselves, due to the free choice of courses (some limitations apply), professors, and the maximum work load per semester. International cooperation SGH is currently working with over 250 foreign universities, as well as with many international organizations. Main partners are universities from the European Union, North America and Asia. Every year, an international students' exchange involves about 500 students of SGH Warsaw School of Economics and the university hosts over 300 students from foreign universities. Among important international cooperation programs are: LLP Erasmus, CEMS (The Global Alliance in Management Education), Polish-German Academic Forum at SGH, Partnership inEkonomicznych) Collegium of Socio-Economic Policy (Kolegium Ekonomiczno-Społeczne) Collegium of World Economy (Kolegium Gospodarki Światowej) Collegium of Business Administration (Kolegium Nauk o Przedsiębiorstwie) Collegium of Management and Finance (Kolegium Zarządzania i Finansów) Library The Library of SGH Warsaw School of Economics is the largest economics library in Poland with its 786 334 volumes of monographs; 216 778 volumes of serials; 983 titles of subscribed periodicals – Polish and foreign, and ca. 30 000 titles of foreign journals in electronic form. The SGH Library holdings are organized in several collections. Each collection is available in different departments, on precisely defined conditions: byFaculty Leszek Balcerowicz – Chairman of the National Bank of Poland (2001–2007), Deputy Prime Minister of Poland (1989–1991, 1997–2000), Minister of Finance of Poland (1989–1991, 1997–2000), architect of the free market reforms in Poland Joanna Cygler - economist and professor of management Adam Glapiński – Chairman of the National Bank of Poland (2016–2022) – co-author of the pension system reform in Poland Danuta Hübner – European Commissioner for Regional Policy (2004-2009), Member of the European Parliament (since 2009) Michał Kalecki – called: "one of the most distinguished economists of the 20th century" Stanisław Kluza – Minister of Finance of Poland(2006), Chairman of the Polish Financial Supervision Authority (2006–2011) Oskar Lange – economist, econometrician, President of the UN Security Council (1946), and Member of Parliament Janusz Piechociński – Deputy Prime Minister of Poland (2012–15), Minister of Economy of Poland (2012-15) Dariusz Rosati – Minister of Foreign Affairs of Poland (1995–1997), Member of the European Parliament (2004–2009, 2014–2019) Stanisław Wojciechowski – President of the Republic of Poland (1922–1926) Andrzej Sławiński – a member of the Council of Monetary Policies since 2004 and a fellow of Collegium Invisibile. Alumni The majority of Ministers of Finance in the governments of the III Republicof Poland were SGH alumni, including all from 1988 to 1997. Leszek Balcerowicz – see above Elżbieta Bieńkowska - European Commissioner for Internal Market and Services (since 2014), Deputy Prime Minister of Poland (2013-2014), Minister of Regional Development of Poland (2007-2013), Minister of Infrastructure and Development of Poland (2013-2014) Marek Borowski – Deputy Prime Minister of Poland (1993-1994), Minister of Finance of Poland (1993-1994), Marshal of the Sejm of Poland (2001-2004) Joanna Cygler - see above Jacek Czaputowicz - Minister of Foreign Affairs of Poland (since 2018) Adam Glapiński – see above Danuta Hübner – see above Stanisław Kluza –see above Grzegorz Kołodko – Deputy Prime Minister of Poland (1994-1997, 2002-2003) and Minister of Finance of Poland (1994-1997, 2002-2003) Maciej Kranz - Silicon Valley executive, Vice President for Cisco Systems Andrzej Olechowski - Minister of Finance of Poland (1992), Minister of Foreign Affairs of Poland (1993-1995), co-founder of Civic Platform Józef Oleksy – Prime Minister of Poland (1995–1996), Deputy Prime Minister of Poland (2004), Minister of Internal Affairs and Administration of Poland (2004), Marshal of the Sejm of Poland (1993-1995, 2004-2005) Janusz Piechociński – see above Marek Rocki – former Rector (1999–2005), since 2005 member of the Senate ofPoland Dariusz Rosati – see above Wiesław Rozłucki – President of the Warsaw Stock Exchange (1991–2006) Michał Rutkowski – economist, co-author of the pension system reform in Poland, director in the World Bank in Washington, DC Stefan Starzyński – president of Warsaw from 1934 to the fall of the city in World War II in 1939 Edward Szczepanik – last Prime Minister of the Polish government in exile Halina Wasilewska-Trenkner - former finance minister Republic of Poland (2001), member of Monetary Policy Council (2004-2010) See also Galeria Chwały Polskiej Ekonomii References External links SGH Warsaw School of Economics CEMS at ### Assistant:
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### User: Erebia fletcheri is a butterfly found in the East Palearctic (Altai to Northeast Yakutia, Sayan, Transbaikalia. Amur) that belongs to the browns family. It resembles Erebia dabanensis but in fletcheri the reddish yellow borders of the ocelli of the forewing are merged on both sides to form a broad russet band. On the hindwing the small ocelli are widely separated from one another. The median band on the underside of the hindwing is dark and somewhat prominent in, while in fletcheri it is of the same dark brown colour as the rest of the wing, so that only the edges ### Assistant:
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### User: The Halkapınar—Otogar Line () is a planned urban commuter railway line in İzmir, Turkey. The line has a total length of and would begin at Halkapınar Transfer Center and run southeast along Kamil Tunca Boulevard to the İzmir Bus Terminal (). Construction of the line was approved in May 2017, and is expected to begin in December 2017 or January 2018. It was previously planned as a subway but revised in 2018 to be constructed as a commuter railway. Overview The Halkapınar—Otogar Line was originally planned in 2005 by the İzmir Metropolitan Municipality. The line was planned to diverge fromthe Fahrettin Altay—Evka 3 Line at Halkapınar and run underneath Kamil Tunca Boulevard to the İzmir Bus Terminal. Since Kamil Tunca Boulevard was built on an old railway branch, the land was still owned by the Turkish State Railways. The city municipality bought the land for 22 million YTL (appr. 18.8 million USD at the time) and finalized plans. However construction was later halted by the Ministry of Transport which later acquired the project from the city. The Ministry of Transport re-planned the line to include it within the Ankara-İzmir high-speed railway, on which construction began in 2013. The ministry ### Assistant:
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### User: André-François Boureau-Deslandes (21 May 1689 – 11 April 1757) was a French philosopher. Deslandes has been viewed as an important precursor of the Encyclopédistes. He was appointed Commissioner of the Port of Brest in 1716, was a corresponding member from La Rochelle of the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, and a member of the Prussian Academy of Sciences. Family background Deslandes was born into an important family in Pondichéry. He was the son of André Boureau-Deslandes (born in Tours) and grandson of François Martin (1634-1706), the founder and first governor of Pondichéry. His father André Boureau-Deslandes played a major rolein the diplomatic relations between France and Siam, then in India where he became Director General of Commerce in Bengal. On his return to France, he was sent to Saint-Domingue as an officer in the Navy of the kings of France and Spain, and inspector-general of "l'Assiente". He was ennobled by letters in 1703 and died at Léogâne in 1707. In 1686 he married Deslandes' mother, Marie-Françoise, the daughter of the famous knight Martin, the governor of Pondichéry. They had eight children of which six survived, including two who became clergymen. Deslandes' father brought François Martin's Memoirs back to France ### Assistant:
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### User: The Jeantaud was a make of French automobile manufactured in Paris from 1893 until 1907. It was the brainchild of Charles Jeantaud, a coachbuilder who built his first electric carriage in 1881. Among the vehicles he constructed was the first car to set a land speed record (, driven by Gaston de Chasseloup-Laubat), as well as coupes and hansom cabs; in these the driver sat high, and to the rear. Some cars had an unusual bevel-gear front-wheel-drive layout. From 1902 to 1904, Jeantaud offered a range of gas-engined cars similar to 1898 Panhards. The company ceased trading in 1906 following ### Assistant:
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### User: Lucien Vogt (born in New York City, died ), was an American painter and illustrator . Biography Lucien Vogt was born in New York City on 28 February 1891, of Alsatian extraction, his parents having emigrated to America after 1860 together with thousands of others escaping in Alsace. But some time before 1904 Vogt had returned to his family’s roots, living in Soultz, in Haut-Rhin, and then in Mulhouse from 1904 to 1910. His initial art studies were probably undertaken in Mulhouse’s only specialised school, the École de Dessin et d’Art Industriel, founded to provide the flourishing local textile industryon, Vogt would submit work to the Parisian Salons more regularly. In 1926, at the Salon des Tuileries, he exhibited Femmes au bord de la mer, introducing – just this once – the life-size human figure into the landscape. Later in his career, the human figure would appear again, if only allusively, in the many views of Paris that he quickly sketched out in paint on small wood panels. It was in this format alone that he focused on bourgeois life, depicted in the emblematic setting of the capital’s monuments and public parks. Landscapes in Alsace and the Cévennes Vogtperiodically returned to Alsace, where he maintained a pied-à-terre in Mulhouse. From there he would roam the countryside, painting directly from nature the landscapes of his youth, the banks of the Ill, for instance, and the Vosges forest bordering Soultz. His early landscapes bring to mind those of another Alsatian artist, Jean-Jacques Henner, who showed his work at the Salon until 1903. This painter was himself very much attached to his native region, and renewed his inspiration through his contact with the rugged nature of Alsace. The artist was especially aware of the seasons and climate. Thus he would oftenreturn to the same place, as he did in Anduze, a traditional Cévennes village, to paint the site in winter and summer. His favourite seasons are clearly autumn and spring, when nature displays her fieriest colours. Vogt excels in the shifts from brown to russet, for example in his treatment of Alsace’s forests and in the intense greens that deck out the foliage of the poplars along the Bords du Loing (INV 2535), in the Seine-et-Marne. It was there that Vogt spent his final years as a painter. The study of the reflections of trees in water, one of his(INV 2022), a preliminary study of which is extant (fig. 10). Such paintings, exhibited both in the Paris Salons and the exhibitions of Mulhouse’s Société des Arts, stand out thanks to his polychromatic palette. The uniform light, creating the paintings’ peaceful atmosphere, is consistent with contemporary painting, with its paring down of detail and simplification of form. In 1957 the Raymond Duncan Gallery in Paris mounted a retrospective of this painter ‘of luminous landscapes’, to use the words of the famous Alsatian illustrator and cartoonist Henri Zislin. Lucien Vogt died in 1968. Works in public institutions Paysage sous la neige.Musée des Beaux-Arts de Mulhouse, gift of Mrs Paul Schwartz 1973, n° inv. 73.3.4. Exhibitions (non-exhaustive list) Lucien Vogt - 1957, Galerie Raymond Duncan, Paris French Naturalist Painters 1890-1950 - 12 June - 7 July 2012, The Fleming Collection, London References A. Bauer and J. Carpentier, Répertoire des artistes d’Alsace des dix-neuf et vingtièmes siècles, Paris: Oberlin, 1991, p. 405. H. Zislin, Exposition, exhibition catalogue, preface, Galerie Ducan, Paris, 1957. External links French Naturalist Painters 1890-1950 exhibition - 29 January - 16 February 2013, Galerie de l'Association des Amis de Gustave de Beaumont, Geneva Category:20th-century French painters Category:French male painters ### Assistant:
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### User: Rina Ronja Kari (born 15 February 1985) is a Danish politician and Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from Denmark. She is a member of the People's Movement against the EU, part of the European United Left–Nordic Green Left. She replaced Søren Søndergaard as MEP for the People's Movement against the EU and is associated member of GUE/NGL. She was elected to the European Parliament in May 2014. External links Rina Ronja Kari official website Category:1985 births Category:Living people Category:Critics of the European Union Category:Euroscepticism in Denmark Category:People's Movement against the EU MEPs Category:MEPs for Denmark 2014–2019 Category:21st-century women MEPs ### Assistant:
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### User: Enrico Garbuglia (30 March 1900 – 2 June 2007) was one of the last five remaining known Italian veterans of the First World War living in Italy (two others live in France). Called up to serve in June 1918 near the end of the war, his service was less than six months, and so he was not on the official list of Cavalieri di Vittorio Veneto. It far exceeds, however, the short service times of several American World War I veterans, such as Harold Gardner for example. Garbuglia was one of the last known World War I veterans to be ### Assistant:
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### User: Thimingalam is a 1983 Indian Malayalam film, directed by Crossbelt Mani. The film stars Shankar, Balan K. Nair, K. P. Ummer and K. R. Vijaya in the lead roles. The film has musical score by G. Devarajan. Cast Shankar as Vijayan Balan K. Nair as Kurup K. P. Ummer as Menon K. R. Vijaya as Devamma Kuthiravattam Pappu as Sankarankutty Raveendran as Venu Lalu Alex as Gopan Poojappura Ravi as Chacko Bheeman Raghu as Peter Manochithra as Reetha Sukumari as Bhanumathi Devi as Rosily Sunanda as Anitha V. D. Rajappan as Union Secretary Soundtrack The music was composed by G. ### Assistant:
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### User: Pseudoniphargus is a genus of crustacean in family Pseudoniphargidae. It contains the following species: Pseudoniphargus adriaticus Karaman, 1955 Pseudoniphargus affinis Notenboom, 1987 Pseudoniphargus africanus Chevreux, 1901 Pseudoniphargus associatus Sànchez, 1991 Pseudoniphargus branchiatus Stock, 1980 Pseudoniphargus brevipedunculatus Stock, 1980 Pseudoniphargus burgensis Notenboom, 1986 Pseudoniphargus calliaicus Notenboom, 1987 Pseudoniphargus candelariae Sànchez, 1990 Pseudoniphargus cazorlae Notenboom, 1987 Pseudoniphargus cupicola Stock, 1988 Pseudoniphargus daviui Jaume, 1991 Pseudoniphargus duplus Messouli, Messana & Yacoubi-Khebiza, 2006 Pseudoniphargus eborarius Notenboom, 1986 Pseudoniphargus elongatus Stock, 1980 Pseudoniphargus fragilis Notenboom, 1987 Pseudoniphargus frontinalis Stock, 1988 Pseudoniphargus gibraltaricus Notenboom, 1987 Pseudoniphargus gomerae Stock, 1988 Pseudoniphargus gorbeanus Notenboom, 1986 Pseudoniphargus gracilis Notenboom, ### Assistant:
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### User: Sydney Irwin Pollack (July 1, 1934 – May 26, 2008) was an American film director, producer and actor. Pollack directed more than 20 films and 10 television shows, acted in over 30 movies or shows and produced over 44 films. His 1985 film Out of Africa won him Academy Awards for directing and producing. He was also nominated for Best Director Oscars for They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1969) and Tootsie (1982) in which he also appeared. Some of his other best known works include Jeremiah Johnson (1972), The Way We Were (1973), Three Days of the Condor (1975) andproblems, died at the age of 37 while Pollack was a student. Despite earlier plans to attend college and then medical school, Pollack left Indiana for New York City soon after finishing high school at age 17. Pollack studied acting with Sanford Meisner at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre from 1952–54, working on a lumber truck between terms. After two years army service, ending in 1958, he returned to the Playhouse at Meisner's invitation to become his assistant. In 1960, John Frankenheimer, a friend of Pollack, asked him to come to Los Angeles in order to work asa dialogue coach for the child actors on Frankenheimer's first big picture, The Young Savages. It was during this time that Pollack met Burt Lancaster who encouraged the young actor to try directing. Career Pollack played a director in The Twilight Zone episode "The Trouble with Templeton" in 1961. But he found his real success in television in the 1960s by directing episodes of series, such as The Fugitive and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. After doing TV he made the jump into film with a string of movies that drew public attention. His film-directing debut was The Slender Thread (1965).select group of non- and/or former actors awarded membership in The Actors Studio, Pollack resumed acting in the 1990s with appearances in such films as The Player (1992) and Eyes Wide Shut (1999), often playing corrupt or morally conflicted power figures. As a character actor, Pollack appeared in films such as A Civil Action, and Changing Lanes, as well as his own, including Random Hearts and The Interpreter (the latter also being his final film as a director). He also appeared in Woody Allen's Husbands and Wives as a New York lawyer undergoing a midlife crisis, and in Robert Zemeckis'sPollack was nominated for five Primetime Emmys, earning two: one for directing in 1966 and another for producing, which was given four months after his death in 2008. The moving image collection of Sydney Pollack is housed at the Academy Film Archive. Influences In the 2002 Sight and Sound Directors' Poll, Pollack revealed his top ten films: Casablanca, Citizen Kane, The Conformist, The Godfather Part II, Grand Illusion, The Leopard, Once Upon a Time in America, Raging Bull, The Seventh Seal, and Sunset Boulevard. Family Pollack's brother, Bernie, is a costume designer, producer, and actor. Pollack was married to Claire ### Assistant:
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### User: The Canon de 19 C modèle 1870/93 was a French coastal defense gun designed and built before World War I that also saw action during World War II. A number of guns were also converted to railway guns during World War I in order to meet the need for heavy artillery and these were also used in World War II. Design The Canon de 19 C modèle 1870/93 were typical built-up guns of the period with mixed construction consisting of a rifled steel liner and several layers of iron reinforcing hoops. In French service guns of mixed steel/iron construction were1893-1896 guns were converted to Canon de 19 modèle 1870/93 TAZ railway guns during the first world war. The guns were mounted in a large turret on an armored railroad carriage built by Schneider. World War II Twenty-four mle 1870/93 TAZ railway guns were mobilized at the beginning of the second world war. After the fall of France, nine guns were used by the Germans as coastal defense artillery under the designation 19 cm K(E) 486(f). The Kingdom of Italy also received twelve guns after the Armistice of Villa Incisa and these were given the designation Cannone da 194/29 Modello ### Assistant:
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### User: Ao Vivo em Copacabana (English: Live in Copacabana) is the first live album by the Brazilian recording artist Claudia Leitte, released on June 27, 2008. The album was recorded during a single concert performed on February 17, 2008, at Copacabana beach in Rio de Janeiro in front of audiences of up to one million people. The disc had sold over 700,000 copies, which earned her a certified Triple Platinum and Gold Record by ABPD. Track listing On June 27, 2008, the album was released in CD and digital download formats. A DVD with two discs set was released on August11, 2008. On disc one comes a concert recorded on Copacabana beach, in addition to music videos and making of. On disc two comes a documentary showing the last few months of Claudia in the band Babado Novo and the beginning of his solo career. An extended play with songs that are only on DVD was released ony for digital download on September 5, 2008. CD DVD Extended play Ao Vivo em Copacabana: Músicas Extraídas do DVD (English: Live in Copacabana: Songs from DVD) is the first extended play by Claudia Leitte, released on September 5, 2008. Contains four songs ### Assistant:
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### User: Shakeb Jalali or Shakeeb Jalali (), born Syed Hassan Rizvi (1 October 1934 – 12 November 1966), was a Pakistani Urdu poet, considered as one of the distinguished Urdu poets of the post-independence era. Shakeb was born on 1 October 1934 in Jalal, a small village near Aligarh. His ancestors were from a small town, Saddat, near Aligarh. He committed suicide on 12 November 1966 by throwing himself before a passing train near Sargodha, Pakistan. Roushni Aye Roushni, his first poetry collection, was published posthumously in 1972. Sang-e-Meel published his complete poetical works as Kulliyat-e-Shakeb Jalali in 2004. Further reading ### Assistant:
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### User: Color Theory presents Depeche Mode is a tribute album by Brian Hazard's Color Theory, published in 2003 as a one-man effort based in covers from British band Depeche Mode. All tracks were composed by Martin Gore, except "Ponytail Girl", which is the only original track from Color Theory on the album. Track listing "I Want You Now" – 3:33 "Sister of Night" – 6:36 "It Doesn't Matter" – 4:11 "Sweetest Perfection" – 5:13 "Here is the House" – 4:55 "I Am You" – 4:10 "World Full of Nothing" – 4:52 "Surrender" – 4:17 "But Not Tonight" – 3:44 "One Caress" ### Assistant:
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### User: Akosombo is a small town in the south of the Asuogyaman District, Eastern Region, Ghana with notable street names of some African Countries in the sub-region like Ghana, Congo, Namibia, Lagos-town, Freetown etc.It is preoccupied by people of diverse ethnic background like the Akans, Ewe, Krobo and other ethic Akosombo is close to the Adome Bridge at Atimpoku which is about a 3 to 5 min drive. Akosombo Dam The Ghana town of Akosombo is the site of the Akosombo Dam. Close to Akosombo is the Asuogyaman district capital Atimpoku.Its a 4minutes drive from Atimpoku Gallery Akosombo Railway Station An ### Assistant:
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### User: KHYI (95.3 FM) is a radio station with an alternative country music format, focusing on Texas music. The station's city of license is Howe, Texas; it serves the areas between the Metroplex and the Sherman/Denison area, making it a rimshot station. Studios are located along Greenville Avenue in north Dallas, and the transmitter site is northwest of Gunter in Grayson County. The station was authorized in late 1991, and was licensed in late 1994. It replaced the station that had been on the 95.3 dial position at the time, KSSA-FM now KRVA-FM. That station had begun broadcasting in 1969 underthe call sign KAWB. KAWB moved to 106.9 to allow the 94.9 station at Arlington, TX KLTY (then known as KHYI) to upgrade from class C1 to class C, and raise power from 36,000 watts to 100,000 watts. The 95.3 channel was moved outward to the unserved town of Howe, where the new station operates to this day. KHYI is also an affiliate of the Mean Green Sports Network, and carries University of North Texas football and men's basketball games. External links KHYI website DFW Radio/TV History Category:Country radio stations in the United States HYI Category:Radio stations established in 1969 ### Assistant:
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### User: Georgi Asparuhov Rangelov (; 4 May 1943 – 30 June 1971), nicknamed Gundi, was a Bulgarian footballer who played as a striker. A prolific forward of his generation, Asparuhov was renowned for his finishing, technique and heading ability. He was voted the best Bulgarian footballer of the 20th century and Europe's 40th best player of the century , a position shared with Paolo Rossi. Asparuhov was also nominated for the 1965 Ballon d'Or award, finishing eighth in the final standings. In international football, Asparuhov made his Bulgaria debut on 6 May 1962 at the age of 19. He made 49appearances in total, appearing at three FIFA World Cup tournaments, in 1962, 1966 and 1970, and scoring 18 goals. Asparuhov's career was cut short in 1971 at the age of 28 when he was killed in a vehicle accident. Levski Sofia's current stadium is named in his honour. Career Beginnings at Levski Asparuhov began his senior career at Levski Sofia in the end of 1959–60 season at the age of 17. He made his debut on 5 June 1960 in a 1–0 home loss against Lokomotiv Sofia, coming on as a second-half substitute. His first senior goal came during thefollowing campaign when he scored in a 1–1 away draw against Botev Plovdiv on 28 September 1960. Botev Plovdiv In January 1962, Asparuhov joined Botev Plovdiv where he won 1961–62 Bulgarian Cup a few months later. On 13 September 1962, he marked his European debut away at Steaua Bucureşti with two goals, but Botev lost the game 3–2 in their preliminary round first leg tie of 1962–63 Cup Winners' Cup. A week later, in the second leg of Botev's European tie against Steaua, Asparuhov scored his first-ever hat-trick in a resounding 5–1 home victory. He also scored in a 4–0away win over Shamrock Rovers on 24 October 1962 and became a top scorer of the tournament with 6 goals. In October 1963, Asparuhov returned to Levski Sofia. Return to Levski Widely regarded as Levski's greatest ever player, Asparuhov played over 230 games for the club, winning three Bulgarian League titles and three Bulgarian Cups. During his time at the club he won the Bulgarian footballer of the year and Bulgarian sportsperson of the year in 1965. Asparuhov is Levski's third all-time leading goal scorer (153). In 1964–65 season he became the league's top scorer with 27 goals in 29matches. Some of the top European clubs at the time sought his services. In the 1965–66 European Cup, Levski played Benfica (with Eusébio in the squad). When Benfica eliminated Levski after hard-fought 3:2 and 2:2 scorelines and Gundi having netted 3 of all Levski goals (one of them Simo Nikolov), Europe began to view Gundi with interest. In fact, he was the first player to score two goals in Benfica's stadium. The Portuguese club, as well as Itaian giants A.C. Milan, wanted to buy Asparuhov, but the communist government of Bulgaria did not allow them to do so. To A.C.Milan's emissary, regarding their offer, he answered that way: "Tell them that there is a country named Bulgaria. In that country there is a team named Levski, you might not have heard of it. But I was born in this team and I will die in this team." International career Asparuhov made his debut for the Bulgarian national team in a friendly match against Austria at Praterstadion in Vienna on 6 May 1962 and was named in the 22-man Bulgarian squad for the 1962 FIFA World Cup. He made his World Cup debut in the second group game against Hungaryat Estadio Braden Copper Co. in Rancagua on 3 June 1962. Asparuhov scored his first goals for Bulgaria on 7 November 1962, scoring twice in a 3–1 home victory over Portugal in a 1964 European Nations' Cup qualifying match. Then he top scored for Bulgaria in their 1966 World Cup qualifying campaign with five goals. During the World Cup he scored Bulgaria's only goal in a 1–3 loss against Hungary at Old Trafford in Manchester. Death Asparuhov died in a car crash in 1971 with teammate Nikola Kotkov. Over 550,000 people gathered at his funeral in Sofia. The present stadiumof Levski Sofia is named Georgi Asparuhov Stadium in honour of the famous striker. Career statistics Club National team International goals Scores and results list Bulgaria's goal tally first. Honours Club Botev Plovdiv Bulgarian Cup: 1961–62 Levski Sofia Bulgarian League (3): 1964–65, 1967–68, 1969–70 Bulgarian Cup (3): 1966–67, 1969–70, 1970–71 Individual Bulgarian League top scorer: 1964–65 (27 goals) UEFA Cup Winners' Cup top scorer: 1962–63 (6 goals) Bulgarian sportsperson of the year: 1965 Bulgarian footballer of the year: 1965 Best Bulgarian footballer of the 20th century (bg) 1965 Ballon d'Or: 8th place Holder of an Order of Labour Deserved Master ### Assistant:
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### User: Pictures from Italy is a travelogue by Charles Dickens, written in 1846. The book reveals the concerns of its author as he presents, according to Kate Flint, the country "like a chaotic magic-lantern show, fascinated both by the spectacle it offers, and by himself as spectator". Background In 1844, Dickens took a respite from writing novels and for several months traveled through France and Italy with his family. They visited the most famous sights: Genoa, Rome, Naples (with Vesuvius still smouldering), Florence and Venice. In his travelogue the author portrays a nation of great contrasts: grandiose buildings and urban desolation, ### Assistant:
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### User: Thomas Bowles Shannon (September 21, 1827 – February 21, 1897) was a California merchant and politician who served as member of the California State Assembly and the U.S. House of Representatives for California. Early life Shannon was born in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, September 21, 1827, where he attended public schools. He moved to Illinois in 1844 and during the 1849 Gold Rush went to California. There he engaged in mining and mercantile pursuits in Plumas County. Early political career Shannon was originally a Whig in politics, but later supported the Free Soil wing of the Democratic Party, serving as athe Committee on Expenditures in the Department of the Interior. As a congressman he participated little in debate, but voted consistently for administration measures. Due to political turmoil in California over Conness, Shannon was not a candidate for reelection in 1864. He was selected as a California Congressional delegate for the Lincoln funeral, in which capacity he participated in speeches delivered outside the capital building in Columbus, Ohio. Later career Shannon was appointed surveyor at the port of San Francisco on August 11, 1865, and served four years. He was again a member of the State Assembly, representing San Francisco,in 1871 and 1872, serving as the Speaker of the Assembly the first year. He was appointed by President Grant appointed him Collector of Customs at San Francisco, which he served as from July 1, 1872, to August 10, 1880, after which he resumed his mercantile pursuits. Death and burial Shannon died in San Francisco, California on February 21, 1897. His body was originally buried in the Masonic Cemetery, but reburied in 1931 at Woodlawn Memorial Park in Colma, California. External links Congressional Biography Category:1827 births Category:1897 deaths Category:California state senators Category:Members of the California State Assembly Category:Members of the ### Assistant:
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### User: Beneath the Neon: Life and Death in the Tunnels of Las Vegas is a non-fiction account by author and journalist Matthew O'Brien, with photos by Danny Mollohan. It chronicles the author's time in subterranean Las Vegas. As he pursued a killer hiding in the tunnels, he discovered hundreds of people living underground and interviewed many of them for the book. It was released in June 2007 by Huntington Press. Content Equipped with a flashlight, tape recorder and expandable baton, O'Brien, an editor at the time for Las Vegas CityLife, an alternative weekly newspaper, for four years explored the black-and-gray underworld ### Assistant:
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### User: Zanetto Micheli (c. 1489 – after 1560) was the first representative of the oldest known family of string instrument makers from the famous Renaissance Brescian school of strings and violin making, from which many very clear archive documents but (more important) some perhaps 20 original instruments (violins, violas, viols, double basses) seems to survive. Micheli was born in the Italian village of Montichiari, and later moved to the nearby town of Brescia. The birth date is deduced from a document of 1550 in which Zanetto declared to be over 60 years old. The oldest record of Micheli is in theall the many documents on his activity the string instruments are predominant, and that the customers of the maker are the most distinguish nobles of Brescia. And more, in the archive documents Zanetto is called "master of violins" like all the other Brescian makers starting surely from 1558. But we have to remember that the word violin appear in Brescia in 1530 and 20 years later il all part of Italy and Europe. Some very rare and good instruments created by Micheli survive in museums and private collections around the world. Some were exhibited at the Maggini exposition in Brescia ### Assistant:
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### User: Lidziya Marozava (, , Lidiya Aleksandrovna Morozova; born 8 October 1992 in Minsk) is a professional tennis player from Belarus. Marozava has won 16 doubles titles and one singles title on the ITF Women's Circuit. On 25 September 2017, she reached her career-high singles ranking of world no. 468. On 23 October 2017, she peaked at no. 69 in the doubles rankings. She is coached by former professional player Tatiana Poutchek. Playing for Belarus at the Fed Cup, Marozava has a win–loss record of 1–2. Significant finals WTA Elite Trophy Singles: 1 (1 runner–up) WTA career finals Doubles: 5 (1 ### Assistant:
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### User: Ernst Nicolaas Herman Jansen, (born 24 October 1945 in Kamperland, Netherlands), later known as Ernst Jansen Steur, is a former Dutch neurologist, who garnered notoriety for misconduct and lost his license to practice medicine. Career Ernst Nicolaas Herman Jansen, later known as Ernst Jansen Steur is a Dutch former neurologist who worked in several positions, including the Medisch Spectrum Twente (MST). During his career he was noted within his profession for his research into Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis. He completed his doctoral research in 1994 at the Maastricht University, researching Parkinson's disease. Jansen Steur was interviewed asand should have filed criminal charges against him rather than settling for a voluntary relinquishing of his status as a physician. They also criticized the MST and the doctors treating Jansen Steur for his injuries in that they did not cooperate fully with the investigation by the Inspectorate. Both of Jansen's doctors invoked physician–patient privilege. However, the Inspectorate concluded in an internal investigation concluded on 17 February 2009 that they had functioned correctly in the matter of Jansen Steur. It was announced in October 2009 that Jansen Steur would have to face charges in court after all, charges having beenfemale patient due to his diagnosis. The court sentenced in February 2014 3 years of prison. Jansen Steur appealed. Metta de Noo, a physician and acquaintance of Jansen Steur claimed in her book of 2015 that he suffered a frontal lobe disorder due to the 1990 accident and should not be held criminally accountable. Work in Germany after 2004 After being forced out of the MST in 2004, Jansen Steur moved to Germany, where he worked for several private clinics. After Dutch correspondent Rob Vorkink tracked him down to the Schlossberg Klinik in Bad Laasphe and tried to interview himfor RTV Oost, Jansen Steur was immediately fired from that institute. The Netherlands was shocked on 4 January 2013 when the NOS evening news led with the story that Jansen Steur had found another job as a neurologist in the Klinik am Gesundbrunnen hospital in Heilbronn. He was discovered there by the same Rob Vorkink, who recognized Jansen Steur's voice in a phone call (despite his denying that he was the same person). NOS reporter Marc Hamer verified his identity by passing around photographs among hospital personnel. He was subsequently fired from the hospital on 5 January 2013. Although the ### Assistant:
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### User: François Cosset (Picardy, c. 1610 - c. 1673) was a French composer. His works include 8 masses, 4 of them composed at Reims in 1659. Bibliography Yolande de Brossard, La collection Sébastien de Brossard 1655-1730. Catalogue.. Paris, BNF, 1994, XXV-539 pages, Charles Cerf, « La musique dans l’église de Reims », Travaux de l’Académie nationale de Reims 84/2(1890), p. 415-437. François-Léon Chartier, L’ancien chapitre de Notre-Dame de Paris et sa maîtrise. Paris, 1897. Georges Durand, « La musique de la cathédrale d’Amiens avant la Révolution », Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de Picardie, 1920–21 (1922), p. 329–457 ; repr.in La vie musicale dans les provinces françaises (Genève, 1971). Catalogue de la bibliothèque de F.-J. Fétis acquise par l'État Belge. Bruxelles, Librairie européenne C. Muquardt, 1877. Charles Gomart, Notes historiques sur la maîtrise de Saint-Quentin et sur les célébrités musicales de cette ville. Saint-Quentin, 1851. Laurent Guillo : Pierre I Ballard et Robert III Ballard : imprimeurs du roy pour la musique (1599–1673). Liège : Mardaga et Versailles : CMBV, 2003. 2 vol. . Denise Launay, La musique religieuse en France du concile de Trente à 1804. Paris, 1993. J. Leflon, Henri Hardouin et la musique du chapitre de ### Assistant:
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### User: Southeast Limburgish (Dutch: Zuidoost-Limburgs, Ripuarian: Süüdoß-Limburjesch), also referred to as Southern Meuse-Rhenish, is a subdivision of what recently has been named Meuse-Rhenish. Both terms denote a rather compact grouping of Low Franconian varieties, spoken in the Limburg and Lower Rhineland regions, near the common Dutch/Flemish (Belgium) and Dutch/German borders. These dialectal varieties differ notably from Dutch and Flemish at the one side, and no less from German at the other. In the Netherlands and Belgium this group is often included in the generic term Limburgish. Limburgish was recently recognised as a regional language (streektaal) in the Netherlands and as suchit receives moderate protection under chapter 2 of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. The linguistic border of the Limburgish varieties to the South is the Benrath line, to the North it is the Uerdingen line. This means Southeast Limburgish is different in nature from the other Limburgish varieties. Southeast Limburgish around Aachen Southeast Limburgish is spoken around Kerkrade, Bocholtz and Vaals in the Netherlands, Aachen in Germany and Raeren and Eynatten in Belgium. In Germany it is sometimes considered as Ripuarian, not always as Limburgish. This explains why it is not distinctly marked on both maps (atright and below). These pictures, however, have to be fine-tuned for the transitional zone between Limburgish and Ripuarian. In Belgium, the southeastern boundary between Meuse-Rhenish (Du: Maas-Rijnlands, Fr: francique rhéno-mosan) and Ripuarian is formed by the so-called Low Dietsch (Limburgish: Platduutsj, Du: Platdiets, Fr: platdutch, francique carolingien) language area. According to a contemporary vision, all varieties in a wider half circle some 20 km around Aachen, including 2/3 of Dutch South Limburg and the Low Dietsch area between Voeren and Eupen in Belgium, can be taken as a group of its own, which recently has been named "Tri-state Limburgish" (Dutch:Drielandenlimburgs, German: Dreiländerplatt), referring to the place where the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany meet (Welschen 2005, Frins 2005, 2006). This variety still possesses interesting syntactic idiosyncrasies, probably dating from the period in which the old Duchy of Limburg existed. Relation to Ripuarian If only tonality is to be taken as to define this variety, both Southeast Limburgish and Ripuarian belong to a broader class of Meuse-Rhenish varieties in a wider sense. This tonal language group stretches rather deep into Germany, even across the Rhine up to Siegen. In Germany, it is consensus to class both varieties as belonging to HighGerman varieties. But this is a little over-simplified. In order to include this variety properly a more encompassing concept is needed. The combination of Meuse-Rhenish and Ripuarian, including their overlapping transitional zones of Southeast Limburgish and Low Dietsch, will do. Classification Indo-European Germanic West Germanic Low Franconian East Low Franconian (Limburgish) Southeast Limburgish See also Meuse-Rhenish Limburgish Low Dietsch References Georg Cornelissen 2003: Kleine niederrheinische Sprachgeschichte (1300-1900) : eine regionale Sprachgeschichte für das deutsch-niederländische Grenzgebiet zwischen Arnheim und Krefeld [with an introduction in Dutch]. Geldern / Venray: Stichting Historie Peel-Maas-Niersgebied, Category:West Germanic languages Category:Limburgish language Category:Low Franconian languages Category:Central German ### Assistant:
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### User: Valery Viktorovich Kostuk (; born 26 August 1940 in Zaporizhia) is a Russian scientist who has contributed to the development of processes for producing gases and cryogenic liquids. He is a vice president of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Career Kostuk graduated from the Chelyabinsk Polytechnic Institute in 1962 and then worked there as an engineer until 1963. From 1963 to 1978, he worked at the Moscow Aviation Institute, receiving a doctorate in 1976 and rising to the rank of professor. In the early 1990s, Kostuk founded the Low Temperature Research and Development Institute of the Moscow Aviation Institute andhas served as the director of the Low Temperature Research and Development Institute since 1992. In 1997, Kostuk became a full member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and in 2013, one of its vice presidents. His research interests have included heat transfer, state changes and hydrodynamics of cryogenic fluids, as well as high-temperature superconducting machines and power transmission cables. In 2012, along with Boris Katorgin and Rodney John Allam, Kostuk received the Global Energy Prize for his contributions to the development of processes and equipment for production of cryogenic liquids as well as technology for electricity production. References Category:1940 ### Assistant:
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### User: Matthew 28:13 is the thirteenth verse of the twenty-eighth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament. This verse is part of the resurrection narrative. In this verse the guards of the tomb, after being present for an angel hearkening the resurrection, told what to say by the priests of Jerusalem after being bribed. Content The original Koine Greek, according to Westcott and Hort, reads: 13: λεγοντες ειπατε οτι οι μαθηται αυτου νυκτος ελθοντες εκλεψαν αυτον ημων κοιμωμενων In the King James Version of the Bible it is translated as: 13: Saying, Say ye, His disciples came bynight, and stole him away while we slept. The modern World English Bible translates the passage as: 13: saying, “Say that his disciples came by night, and stole him away while we slept. For a collection of other versions see BibleHub Matthew 28:13 Analysis This verse links back to Matthew 27:64. In that verse the priests raised the idea of the disciples stealing the body as a reason for putting the guards in place. Thus, according to Matthew, the priests are making use of the deception that they themselves had warned of. It is notable that the priests make no ### Assistant:
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### User: Audrey Eu Yuet-mee is a former member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong and was founding leader of the Civic Party. She is currently a member of the Executive Committee of the Civic Party, focusing on party development. In politics, Eu has focused on matters relating to the Basic Law. Early life and legal career Audrey Eu was born on 11 September 1953 in Hong Kong. She studied at St. Francis' Canossian College from 1960 to 1970 and matriculated from St. Paul's Co-educational College in 1972. She earned her Bachelor of Laws from the University of Hong Kong andher Master of Laws from the London School of Economics. She was called to the Bar in England in 1977 and the Bar in Hong Kong in 1978 and was appointed as a Queen's Counsel in 1993 (known as Senior Counsel since 1997). She continues to practice and specialises in civil law. Notable pupils of hers include Andrew Cheung, permanent judge of the Court of Final Appeal. Before entering politics, Eu was the chair of the Hong Kong Bar Association. She shot to prominence on the right of abode issue, at the time of the transfer of sovereignty to thePeople's Republic of China in 1997, she held a firm stance against the interpretation of the Hong Kong Basic Law by the National People's Congress. In 2011, she was awarded an honorary fellowship by the London School of Economics and Political Science. Political career Eu decided to enter into politics in 2000. She contested the Hong Kong by-election that year and successfully gained a seat at the Legislative Council of Hong Kong, replacing Gary Cheng, who resigned from his seat amidst controversy. She then became a founding member of the Basic Law Article 23 Concern Group, which later became theBasic Law Article 45 Concern Group, then the Civic Party in 2005. Article 23 Concern Group In 2002, when the Hong Kong Government wanted to alter the existing Article 23 concerning treason and sedition, Eu, with some other notable members of the Bar, including Alan Leong, Margaret Ng, Ronny Tong, formed the Basic Law Article 23 Concern Group. Before the draft Bill became public, Eu put forward strong opinions and statements opposing certain measures of the Article 23 legislation. Her campaigning helped her significantly raise her public profile after 1 July 2003, demonstrations. Article 45 Concern group Concern started togrow among Hong Kong residents later about Articles 45 and 68 of the Basic Law in 2004. There were also uncertainties concerning the future of the next 2007 Chief Executive election and the next 4th LegCo elections in 2008. In response, Eu, along with other barristers including Margaret Ng and Ronny Tong, formed the Basic Law Article 45 Concern Group that advocated fully democratic processes in the form of universal suffrage in both elections. She found most support with the middle-class. Eu ran for the 2004 LegCo election for the Hong Kong Island constituency in the same ballot as CydHo from The Frontier. The "Eu-Ho" pair obtained 73,844 votes which resulted in Eu obtaining a seat at the expense of Ho, who lost out to her nearest DAB rival Choy So Yuk by a mere 815 votes. This was seen as a blunder by the pan-democratic camp, as Hong Kong Democratic Party LegCo candidate Martin Lee had more than enough votes to be elected, directly affecting Cyd Ho's election chances. Civic Party Eu was the founding leader of the party, and held the office from 19 March 2006 to 8 January 2011. She stood for and was returned inthe Hong Kong Island geographical constituency for the 2008 Hong Kong legislative election. She was placed second on the Civic Party ticket, behind newcomer Tanya Chan, who was also elected. After deducting the quotient required for the first seat, the remainder to Eu was only 30,362, enable Eu to win a seat in the constituency with the lowest number of vote. She got 525 votes less than her former running mate in the 2004 election Cyd Ho. However, Eu lost her seat in the Legislative Council in September 2012. 2009 Reform package In the debate over the Hong Kong government'spositions Eu is a patron of St John's Cathedral HIV Education Centre and was formerly a member of the Consumer Council's Management Committee of its Consumer Legal Action Fund. References External links Audrey Eu's Personal Website Category:1953 births Category:Leaders of political parties Category:Members of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong Category:Living people Category:Alumni of the University of Hong Kong Category:Alumni of the University of London Category:Hong Kong Roman Catholics Category:Queen's Counsel 1901–2000 Category:Hong Kong Senior Counsel Category:Charter 08 signatories Category:Civic Party politicians Category:Hong Kong women in politics Category:HK LegCo Members 2000–2004 Category:HK LegCo Members 2004–2008 Category:HK LegCo Members 2008–2012 Category:Hong ### Assistant:
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### User: Blue Wild Angel: Live at the Isle of Wight is a posthumous live album by Jimi Hendrix released on November 12, 2002. The album documents Hendrix's last U.K. live performance at the Isle of Wight Festival on August 31, 1970, three weeks before his death. The set list for the concert contained songs from the original Experience albums, as well as new songs. Some were previously available on Isle of Wight (1971) and Live Isle of Wight '70 (1991). Overview Included in the set was an adaptation of "God Save the Queen" and a cover of The Beatles' "Sgt. Pepper'sand slip cover format as part of Experience Hendrix's plan to re-release most of Jimi Hendrix's recorded material. {{Album ratings |rev1 = AllMusic |rev1score = |rev2 = BBC Music |rev2score = (mixed)<ref> Track listings All songs were written by Jimi Hendrix, except where noted. Disc one "God Save the Queen" (Traditional) – 3:54 "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) – 0:49 "Spanish Castle Magic" – 5:09 "All Along the Watchtower" (Bob Dylan) – 5:39 "Machine Gun" – 22:10 "Lover Man" – 2:58 "Freedom" – 4:36 "Red House" – 11:36 "Dolly Dagger" – 6:01 "Midnight Lightning" –Sun)" – 6:58 "In from the Storm" – 6:14 DVD "God Save the Queen" (Traditional) "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" (Lennon, McCartney) "Spanish Castle Magic" "All Along the Watchtower" (Dylan) "Machine Gun" "Lover Man" "Freedom" "Red House" "Dolly Dagger" "Foxey Lady" "Message to Love" "Ezy Ryder" "Purple Haze" "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)" "In from the Storm" Personnel Jimi Hendrix – guitar, vocals Mitch Mitchell – drums Billy Cox – bass guitar References External links Category:Albums produced by Eddie Kramer Category:Live albums published posthumously Category:Jimi Hendrix live albums Category:2002 live albums Category:2002 video albums Category:Live video albums Category:MCA Records live ### Assistant:
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### User: Peter G. Strasser is an American attorney who currently serves as the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Louisiana. Prior to assuming his current role, he was a partner at the New Orleans office of Chaffe McCalle. Biography Strasser earned his Bachelor of Arts, with distinction, from the University of Virginia. He earned his Juris Doctor from Washington and Lee University School of Law. Strasser previously served as an Assistant United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Louisiana, where he was the head of the organized crime and the economic crime sections. He also served for over ### Assistant:
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### User: Donald Brook (born 8 January 1927-died 17 December 2018) was an Australian artist, art critic and theorist whose research and publications centre on the philosophy of art, non-verbal representation and cultural evolution. He initiated the Experimental Art Foundation in Adelaide and was Emeritus Professor of Visual Arts in the Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia. Early life and education Brook was born in Leeds, Yorkshire and educated on scholarships at Woodhouse Grove School and at the University of Leeds, where he read Electrical Engineering. He left before graduating with the intention of becoming an artist and was conscripted in theWelwyn in Hertfordshire, His interest in unresolved theoretical questions about the visual arts led him to accept a further postgraduate scholarship in the Department of Philosophy in the Australian National University in Canberra in 1962. His PhD thesis (1965), examined by Professors E. H. Gombrich and David Armstrong, applied analytic-philosophical theories of perception to questions of pictorial representation and art-critical appraisal. He died in Adelaide, Australia. Professional career Electing to remain in Australia, Brook continued to work as a sculptor and as art critic of the Canberra Times under John Pringle’s editorship. Later (from 1968) he became art critic ofthe Experimental Art Foundation in the city of Adelaide. This was partly designed to enrol practising artists, along with academics and theorists, to bridge what he called ‘the gap between town and gown.’ He also introduced postgraduate academic programs for practising artists. Brook abandoned art criticism after leaving Sydney, and published extensively thereafter in journals of informed opinion and more popular media as well as in the academic literature. He retired from Flinders at the end of 1989 and lived in Cyprus from 1990–92, returning temporarily to a part-time role at the University of Western Australia before settling again in ### Assistant:
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### User: Henry Phillips may refer to: Henry Phillips (singer) (1801–1876), English singer Henry F. Phillips (1890–1958), American businessman for which the Phillips-head screw and screwdriver is named Henry Myer Phillips (1811–1884), U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania Sir Henry Phillips (colonial administrator) (1914–2004), British colonial administrator in Nyasaland, later Malawi Henry D. Phillips (1882–1955), American football player and Episcopal bishop Henry Phillips (comedian) (born 1969), songwriter and humorist Henry Phillips (horticulturist) (1779–1840), botanist, horticulturist and writer who worked in and around Brighton, England Henry Phillips (cricketer) (1844–1919), English cricketer Henry Wyndham Phillips (1820–1868), British portrait painter H. D. Phillips (Henry Dominic Phillips, died ### Assistant:
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### User: 8 Letters is the debut full-length studio album by American boy band Why Don't We. The album was released on August 31, 2018, by Atlantic Records in the United States and by Warner Music Group elsewhere. The album was supported by three singles: "Hooked", "Talk" and the title-track "8 Letters". Critical reception Elias Leight of Rolling Stone gave the album a negative review, scoring it 2.5 out of 5 stars, criticizing the short length while stating the band "throws out eight new songs with little to show for it." Track listing Charts References Category:2018 debut albums Category:Atlantic Records albums Category:Warner ### Assistant:
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### User: Claudio Mattone (born 28 February 1943) is an Italian composer, lyricist and music producer. Born in Santa Maria a Vico, Caserta, Mattone approached music at young age, as a jazz pianist. After leaving the university he moved to Rome, where he debuted in 1968 as a singer-songwriter with the song "E' sera", that premiered without any success at Cantagiro '68. Focusing on composition, between late sixties and early eighties he successfully teamed with the lyricist Franco Migliacci and signed several hits, contributing to launch the careers of Nada and Eduardo De Crescenzo; also working as music producer and as lyricistof his songs, in nineties Mattone launched the careers of Neri per caso and Syria, that respectively won the 1994 and 1995 editions of the Sanremo Music Festival in the "giovani" category. In 1990 Mattone won a David di Donatello and a Nastro d'Argento for the soundtrack of the 1989 film Scugnizzi. His earlier scores had included (1974), Così parlò Bellavista (1984), Il mistero di Bellavista (1985) and Fatto su misura (1985). From 2000s his principal occupation is the theater, as author and producer of musicals. References External links Claudio Mattone at Discogs Category:1943 births Category:Italian singer-songwriters Category:Living people Category:David ### Assistant:
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### User: The S. Dillon Ripley Center, better known simply as the Ripley Center, is one of the buildings of the Smithsonian Institution series of museums located in the National Mall in Washington, D.C. The above-ground portion is only a small pagoda, and it descends into a larger underground portion. The Ripley Center houses the International Gallery, The Smithsonian Associates, and the offices of the Smithsonian Contributing Membership. It contains a conference center, an art gallery, and meeting/class rooms as well as exhibition space. It connects underground to the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, the National Museum of African Art, and the FreerGallery of Art. The Smithsonian Associates was formed in 1992 from combining the Resident Associates Program with the Smithsonian National Associate Program. The Smithsonian Associates was established as the cultural, educational, and membership division of the Smithsonian Institution. These membership and educational programs include the Young Benefactors, Smithsonian Sleepovers, Resident Associates Program, Discovery Theatre, Regional Events, and the Art Collectors Program. The Art Collectors Program is devoted to the creation and appreciation of contemporary American limited-edition art and to creating a context for collecting and a forum for artists to discuss their work. The Program sells Smithsonian-commissioned contemporary fine art ### Assistant:
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### User: 1356 Nyanza, provisional designation , is a dark asteroid from the background population of the outer asteroid belt, approximately 63 kilometers in diameter. It was discovered on 3 May 1935, by South-African astronomer Cyril Jackson at the Union Observatory in Johannesburg. The asteroid was named for the former Nyanza Province in Kenya, Africa. Orbit and classification Nyanza is a non-family asteroid of the main belt's background population. It orbits the Sun in the outer asteroid belt at a distance of 2.9–3.2 AU once every 5 years and 5 months (1,977 days; semi-major axis of 3.08 AU). Its orbit has aneccentricity of 0.05 and an inclination of 8° with respect to the ecliptic. The asteroid was first identified as at Heidelberg Observatory and as and at Lowell Observatory in March and May 1929, respectively. The body's observation arc begins at Lowell Observatory in October 1931, three and a half years prior to its official discovery observation at Johannesburg. Naming This minor planet was named for the former Nyanza Province located in southwestern Kenya, bordering on Lake Victoria. Its provincial capital was Kisumu. In 2010, Kenya's 8 provinces were reorganized into 47 counties. The official naming citation was mentioned in TheNames of the Minor Planets by Paul Herget in 1955 (). Physical characteristics Nyanza has been characterized as a primitive P-type asteroid by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). It is also an assumed carbonaceous C-type. Rotation period In May 2005, a rotational lightcurve of Nyanza was obtained from photometric observations by French amateur astronomer Pierre Antonini. Lightcurve analysis gave a well-defined rotation period of 12.422 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.28 magnitude (). Diameter and albedo According to the surveys carried out by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite IRAS, the Japanese Akari satellite and the NEOWISE mission of NASA's ### Assistant:
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### User: Nerita melanotragus, common name black nerite, is a medium-sized sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Neritidae, the nerites. There has been some confusion over the taxonomy of the genus Nerita in the Pacific region, however Nerita atramentosa and Nerita melanotragus are now recognised as separate species (the two have often been considered to be the same species). Distribution This nerite is endemic to the southern Pacific, including the south-eastern coast of Australia (Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, Lord Howe Island, Norfolk Island, northern New Zealand and the Kermadec Islands. Habitat This species is commonly found on ### Assistant:
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### User: Robert Henry Claude Stubbs (2 April 1905 – 25 May 1998) was an Australian politician who was a Labor Party member of the Legislative Council of Western Australia from 1962 to 1980, representing South-East Province. He served as a minister in the government of John Tonkin. Stubbs was born in Northam, Western Australia, to Mary Jane (née Marshall) and Stokes Stubbs. He attended the Kalgoorlie School of Mines and Perth Technical College, and then worked as a miner in Collie. Stubbs moved to Kalgoorlie in 1932, and then to Norseman in 1937, where he eventually became an underground supervisor. He ### Assistant:
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### User: Abdullah Bozkurt (born 1971) is a Turkish journalist and business director. He was the bureau chief for the Gülen-aligned newspaper Today's Zaman. Biography Bozkurt started his work in journalism with the newspaper Zaman. He worked as the New York Bureau Chief and Washington Representative of Zaman Newspaper. Afterwards, he continued the same work for the newspaper Today's Zaman. Bozkurt has lived outside Turkey since the 2016 failed Turkish coup d'état. He has a warrant out for his arrest stemming from his FETÖ membership, an organization that is designated as a terrorist organization by Turkey. A statement made by Bozkurt's mother ### Assistant:
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### User: Liam Mandeville (born 17 February 1997) is an English professional footballer who plays as forward for Chesterfield. Career Mandeville made his first team debut for Doncaster Rovers on 3 April 2015, coming on as a second-half substitute for Jonson Clarke-Harris in a home League One match against Bradford City at the Keepmoat Stadium. In November 2015, he joined Northern Premier League Premier Division side Whitby Town on a one-month loan deal. Mandeville scored his first professional goal for Doncaster Rovers in a 2–1 defeat to Walsall at the Keepmoat Stadium. Mandeville scored his first goal of the season in anat the end of the 2018–19 season. On 5 June 2019, Mandeville signed a two-year contract with Chesterfield. Style of play "He's got a lot of attributes that I want from an attacker; he's got good vision, he can finish with both feet and he's very good technically." Darren Ferguson on Mandeville in 2016. Career statistics References External links Category:1997 births Category:Living people Category:People from Lincoln, England Category:English footballers Category:Doncaster Rovers F.C. players Category:Whitby Town F.C. players Category:Colchester United F.C. players Category:Morecambe F.C. players Category:Chesterfield F.C. players Category:Association football forwards Category:English Football League players Category:National League (English football) players Category:Northern ### Assistant:
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### User: Sherry Bryce (born May 28, 1946 in Duncanville, Alabama) is an American country music artist. Between 1971 and 1977, she charted fifteen times on the Billboard country singles charts, including seven duets with Mel Tillis. Their highest-charting duet was 1971's "Take My Hand" at No. 8. They were also nominated in 1974 at the Country Music Association awards for Duo of the Year. At the time, both she and Tillis were signed to MGM/Curb Records, and she recorded two duet albums with him. Bryce released six solo singles on the label and two solo albums but none of the singles ### Assistant:
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### User: Matthew Edward Diaz ( ; born March 3, 1978) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He played in Major League Baseball for the Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Kansas City Royals, Atlanta Braves, Pittsburgh Pirates and Miami Marlins. Amateur career As a two-year starter at Florida State University, Diaz helped lead the Seminoles to two College World Series appearances, including the title game vs. the University of Miami. He was named the Sporting News man of the Year in , and a First Team All-American (American Baseball Coaches Association, National Baseball College Writers' Association) in 1999. Professional career Tampa BayDevil Rays He was drafted by the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in the 1999 Major League Baseball Draft in the 17th round. Despite being among the Devil Rays' minor league career leaders in hits and extra base hits, Diaz had a tough time in the majors, hitting only .167 in 30 at-bats in his two years with the Devil Rays. Kansas City Royals After being released by Tampa Bay, Diaz signed with the Kansas City Royals where he hit .281 with 10 extra base hits (including 1 home run) and 12 RBI in a backup role in . Atlanta BravesOn December 19, 2005, Diaz was traded to the Atlanta Braves for minor league pitcher Ricardo Rodríguez. Diaz earned a backup outfielder spot for the Braves during spring training. Appearing in 124 games, including many starting assignments in the second half of the season, Diaz batted .327 in 297 at-bats. On August 14, 2006, Diaz had four hits for the second straight day and tied the National League record with ten straight hits. He grounded out in the 9th inning to end the streak. Diaz had his first career two-homer game on August 29, , against the Florida Marlins. OnSeptember 5, he hit a three-run walk-off double in the bottom of the ninth to give the Braves a 9-8 win. Diaz finished the season with a career-high .338 batting average in 124 games. Pittsburgh Pirates In December 2010, Diaz agreed to a two-year, $4.25 million contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Second stint with the Atlanta Braves On August 31, 2011, Diaz was traded back to the Braves for a player to be named later. Pittsburgh also sent cash to the Braves in the deal. On August 13, 2012, the Braves announced that Diaz would have surgery on his thumband would miss the rest of the 2012 season. New York Yankees On December 26, 2012, Diaz signed a minor-league contract with the New York Yankees with an invitation to Spring Training. He was released on March 17, 2013. Miami Marlins Diaz was brought up by the Miami Marlins from their Triple-A affiliate New Orleans Zephyrs on May 2, 2013. Retirement On Feb. 4th, 2014 Matt Diaz announced his retirement from professional baseball. On April 24, 2014 Diaz joined the Braves pre-game and postgame telecast of Braves Live on Fox Sports South, which he will do regularly for the 2014is the center of a viral video of him getting heckled by a New York Mets fan. He was heckled for wearing two different socks, and Diaz responded by showing the fans behind him the variation in color. References External links Category:1978 births Category:Living people Category:Tampa Bay Devil Rays players Category:Kansas City Royals players Category:Atlanta Braves players Category:Pittsburgh Pirates players Category:Miami Marlins players Category:Arizona League Royals players Category:Baseball players from Oregon Category:Bakersfield Blaze players Category:Durham Bulls players Category:Florida State Seminoles baseball players Category:Gwinnett Braves players Category:Hudson Valley Renegades players Category:Major League Baseball left fielders Category:Mississippi Braves players Category:Omaha Royals players ### Assistant:
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### User: Jeff Pinkner (born November 16, 1965) is an American television and movie writer and producer. Life and career Born to a Jewish family, Pinkner graduated from Pikesville High School in Baltimore, Maryland in 1983, Northwestern University in 1987, and Harvard Law School in 1990. He is known for his work on Alias where he served as executive producer. In 2006 and 2007, he worked as an executive producer and writer for the mystery series Lost. The Lost writing staff, including Pinkner, were nominated for the Writers Guild of America (WGA) Award for Best Dramatic Series at the February 2007 ceremonyRoberto Orci. Pinkner served as co-showrunner, executive producer, and writer (titles he shared with J. H. Wyman) through the show's fourth season. After the conclusion of season four, Pinkner left the series. Episodes he contributed to include: "The Same Old Story" (01.02) (co-written by Orci, Abrams, and Kurtzman) "The Arrival" (01.04) (co-written by Abrams) "In Which We Meet Mr. Jones" (01.07) (co-written with Abrams) "Bound" (02.11) (co-written by Abrams, Orci, and Kurtzman) "The Road Not Taken" (01.19) (Pinkner and supervising producer J. R. Orci co-wrote the teleplay, based on a story by consulting producer Akiva Goldsman) "There's More Than Oneof Everything" (01.20) (Pinkner and Wyman co-wrote the teleplay, based on a story by Goldsman and executive producer Bryan Burk) "Night of Desirable Objects" (02.02) (co-written with Wyman) "August" (02.08) (co-written by Wyman) "Peter" (02.16) (Pinkner, Wyman, and supervising producer Josh Singer wrote the teleplay based on a story along with Goldsman) "Brown Betty" (02.20) (co-written with Goldsman and Wyman) "Over There (Part 1)" (02.22) (co-written by Wyman and Goldsman) "Over There (Part 2)" (02.23) (co-written by Goldsman and Wyman) "Olivia" (03.01) (co-written with Wyman) "Entrada" (03.08) (co-written by Wyman) "The Firefly" (03.10) (co-written with Wyman) "Subject 13" (03.15) (co-written ### Assistant:
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### User: Daniel Ellis (born June 19, 1980) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey goaltender who is currently a goaltending scout for the Chicago Blackhawks. He played in the National Hockey League for the Dallas Stars, Nashville Predators, Tampa Bay Lightning, Anaheim Ducks, Carolina Hurricanes, and the Florida Panthers. He served as an assistant coach with the Omaha Lancers of the United States Hockey League in 2016-17 before assuming his current role. Playing career Amateur Ellis was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan but grew up in Orangeville, Ontario and played his minor hockey for the AA Orangeville Flyers of the OMHA Tri-CountyHockey League and then eventually AAA hockey for the Halton Hills Hurricanes of the OMHA South-Central Triple A Hockey League. Ellis was undrafted by the Ontario Hockey League and played Major Midget hockey for Halton in 1996-97 and the following season for the Newmarket Hurricanes club of the Ontario Provincial Junior A Hockey League (OPJHL). After one season in Newmarket, Ellis moved south to the Omaha Lancers, in the USHL where he was awarded Goaltender of the Year, Player of the Year and named a First Team All-Star. Following his USHL season, Ellis then spent three years at the Universityof Nebraska at Omaha before signing after the 2002-03 season. Dallas Stars The Dallas Stars drafted Ellis in the 2nd round, 60th overall, of the 2000 NHL Entry Draft. For the 2003–2004 season, Ellis split time between the Utah Grizzlies and Idaho Steelheads of the ECHL, finishing the season with the Steelheads. In Idaho, Ellis would have great success, leading the team to a Kelly Cup Championship win and nabbing the 2004 Playoff MVP award with a record of 13–0 and a 1.86 goals-against average. For the 2005–06 AHL season, Ellis spent his time exclusively with the Iowa Stars. Hesplit playing time with fellow goalie Mike Smith, but ultimately lost the job as the season came to a close. He finished the season with a record of 16 wins, 13 losses and 1 tie. Ellis made his NHL debut on February 8, 2004 against the Los Angeles Kings. Ellis made 25 saves en route to his first career win as Dallas defeated Los Angeles 4 - 3. Nashville Predators In 2007, Ellis signed as a free agent with the Nashville Predators. Due to sub-standard play from starting goalie Chris Mason, Ellis took over the starting goaltender duties for thethe Week for week ending March 30, 2008 (233:39 shutout streak) Ellis posted impressive statistics during the 2007–2008 season, being among the top goaltenders in save percentage (1st), shutouts (T-3rd), and GAA (12th). He also received national coverage for his excessive weight loss during games, receiving intravenous fluids after games, and for his shutout streak of 233:39 over the course of four games. He earned the nickname "snowstorm" in the spring of 2008 when the poor play of Ellis and teammate Chris Mason caused the team to call up minor-league goalie Pekka Rinne. However, Rinne was delayed from joining theteam due to a snowstorm and Ellis was given the start in the subsequent game against the Chicago Blackhawks on March 22, 2008. He held the Blackhawks to one goal on 38 shots and led the Predators to a 2–1 shootout victory. This victory earned him the starting job for the team, lasting into the 2008 playoffs. He was the starting goalie for Nashville in their 2008 first-round series against the number one-seeded Detroit Red Wings. Ellis stopped 71 of 78 shots he faced in the first two games, both losses. Back home at Nashville for games three and four,he proceeded to stop 62 of 67 shots as the Predators won both games at home to tie the series at 2. Game 5 was Ellis' best game of the series as he made 52 saves in a 2–1 overtime loss. The Red Wings closed out the series in Game 6 at Nashville with a 3–0 win. Ellis was victimized by Red Wings defenceman Nicklas Lidström's skipping shot from behind center ice for the game's first goal, which turned out to be the winner. On June 19, 2008, Ellis was re-signed to a two-year, $3.5 million contract by the Predators.During the 2008–09 season, Ellis wasn't as sharp as the previous season, recording only 11 wins compared to his 23 wins of the previous season. Because of this, Rinne, who was Nashville's backup goaltender at the start of the season, took over the starting job. Ellis recorded 15 wins in 31 appearances during the 2009–10 NHL Season with a 2.69 goals-against-average. On June 29, 2010, his negotiation rights, along with Dustin Boyd were traded to the Montreal Canadiens for Sergei Kostitsyn and future considerations. Without a deal in place before July 1, 2010, Ellis became an unrestricted free agent. TampaBay Lightning He signed a two-year deal with the Tampa Bay Lightning as a free agent on July 1, 2010. Later years On February 24, 2011 Ellis was traded to the Anaheim Ducks in a goalie swap for Curtis McElhinney. After posting a solid 8-3 record upon his arrival in Anaheim, he made a postseason start in round one of the 2011 Playoffs, but lost the starting job to Ray Emery after allowing four goals on 24 shots. After the conclusion of the 2012–13 NHL lockout and playing on an AHL contract with the Charlotte Checkers of the AHL, Ellissigned with NHL affiliate, the Carolina Hurricanes on January 8, 2013 as a backup to starter Cam Ward. Ellis got into his first game with the Hurricanes during the first game of the season, January 19 against the Florida Panthers after Ward let in four goals in the first period. On July 5, 2013 after a one-year stint in Carolina, Ellis re-joined his original draft team the Dallas Stars, on a two-year deal to be the back-up goalie to Kari Lehtonen, with an Average Annual Value of $900,000. On March 5, 2014, Ellis was traded to the Florida Panthers inreturn for goalie Tim Thomas. He appeared in six games for the Panthers that season. In September 2014, the Panthers assigned him to their AHL affiliate, the San Antonio Rampage. On July 4, 2015, having left the Panthers as a free agent, Ellis signed a one-year, two-way contract with the Washington Capitals and spent most of the season playing with the Hershey Bears, their AHL affiliate. Twitter Controversy On September 8, 2010, Ellis lashed out to the public, via his Twitter account expressing frustration and anger towards the 24 percent pay cut NHL players took when the 2004-05 NHL Lockoutwas settled with the new collective bargaining agreement by stating, "I am more stressed about money now than I was in college." He then stated that "players deserve the money they get because they are specialists." Despite signing a two-year, $3 million contract with the Lightning, Ellis added, "If you lost 18% of your income would you be happy? If you don’t make a lot of money, I don’t expect you to understand." When a negative reception ensued, he told followers, "I am not holding a gun at your head to follow so do yourself a favor." He then retractedhis statement released by the Lightning, stating "I am deeply sorry if I offended anyone via my recent statements on Twitter. I should have known better." Mike Russo of the Minneapolis Star Tribune commented, "No matter the point, pro athletes are better off not talking money during such turbulent times." Personal life He was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, but was raised in Orangeville, Ontario. He moved to Nebraska when his career began and resides during the off-season in Omaha. Ellis is a devout Christian and displays a cross at the back of his mask. He is married and has two ### Assistant:
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