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Federal Minimum Wage Jumps to $7.25 an Hour
The federal minimum wage will increase to $7.25 per hour this month.  The current minimum wage of $6.55 will increase on July 24th, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. Seven states already have a minimum wage of $7.25 an hour, and 14 states have an even higher minimum wage for ...(70 words) | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12234 | {"url": "https://forum.washlinksystems.com/forum/the-correlator/car-wash-news-info-from-around-the-net/1631-federal-minimum-wage-jumps-to-7-25-an-hour", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "forum.washlinksystems.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:48:07Z", "digest": "sha1:ADXB64IDTFSOLETI5OPGVFPJVSJDJYU7"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 352, 352.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 352, 1689.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 352, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 352, 66.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 352, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 352, 135.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 352, 0.26744186]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 352, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 352, 0.20522388]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 352, 0.13432836]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 352, 0.02325581]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 352, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 352, 0.34883721]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 352, 0.6]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 352, 4.46666667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 352, 0.03488372]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 352, 3.4128224]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 352, 60.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 352, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 352, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 44, 8.0], [44, 352, 52.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.07317073], [44, 352, 0.07368421]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 44, 0.0], [44, 352, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 44, 0.11363636], [44, 352, 0.02597403]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 352, 0.9949826]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 352, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 352, 8.655e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 352, -39.70961682]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 352, -0.48193712]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 352, -3.0645664]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 352, 10.0]]} |
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Your password is ciphered (a one-way hash) so that it is secure. However, it is recommended that you do not reuse the same password across a number of different websites. Your password is the means of accessing your account at “forum”, so please guard it carefully and under no circumstance will anyone affiliated with “forum”, phpBB or another 3rd party, legitimately ask you for your password. Should you forget your password for your account, you can use the “I forgot my password” feature provided by the phpBB software. This process will ask you to submit your user name and your email, then the phpBB software will generate a new password to reclaim your account. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12235 | {"url": "https://forum.z-wave.me/ucp.php?mode=privacy&sid=a197e3113b886015fb6997a9220da13f", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "forum.z-wave.me", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:49:48Z", "digest": "sha1:WHRWYU5JQBLTXUZ3CYS6SEOL3TSC3VZM"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2978, 2978.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2978, 3424.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2978, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2978, 25.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2978, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2978, 289.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2978, 0.40635452]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2978, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2978, 0.0362737]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2978, 0.04616653]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2978, 0.02225886]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2978, 0.00334448]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2978, 0.20568562]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2978, 0.45887446]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2978, 5.25108225]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2978, 4.88166594]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2978, 462.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 388, 1.0], [388, 979, 1.0], [979, 1513, 1.0], [1513, 2309, 1.0], [2309, 2978, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 388, 0.0], [388, 979, 0.0], [979, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 23, 3.0], [23, 388, 45.0], [388, 979, 92.0], [979, 1513, 87.0], [1513, 2309, 121.0], [2309, 2978, 114.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 388, 0.00887574], [388, 979, 0.0], [979, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2978, 0.00152672]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 23, 0.0], [23, 388, 0.0], [388, 979, 0.0], [979, 1513, 0.0], [1513, 2309, 0.0], [2309, 2978, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 23, 0.04347826], [23, 388, 0.03013699], [388, 979, 0.01353638], [979, 1513, 0.01310861], [1513, 2309, 0.00879397], [2309, 2978, 0.01793722]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2978, 0.06838793]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2978, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2978, 0.0035767]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2978, -282.29315248]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2978, -11.75865362]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2978, -260.71608776]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2978, 22.0]]} |
This is the name that will be displayed on all your posts. You can't change it later, so choose wisely.
Your password must be at least 15 characters long (eg three unconnected words). For a stronger password, increase its length or combine upper and lowercase letters, digits, and symbols.
How many f's in our name?
I am over 16 and agree to the terms of service | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12236 | {"url": "https://forums.shipoffools.com/entry/register?Target=discussion%2Fcomment%2F173741", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "forums.shipoffools.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:31:20Z", "digest": "sha1:5QZ7HXZEJ6L4JA4I7D557MQ5J2XWU7YF"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 362, 362.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 362, 956.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 362, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 362, 49.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 362, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 362, 294.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 362, 0.4625]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 362, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 362, 0.0125]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 362, 0.175]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 362, 0.89393939]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 362, 4.3030303]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 362, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 362, 4.03469552]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 362, 66.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 104, 1.0], [104, 290, 1.0], [290, 316, 1.0], [316, 362, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 104, 0.0], [104, 290, 0.0], [290, 316, 0.0], [316, 362, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 104, 20.0], [104, 290, 29.0], [290, 316, 6.0], [316, 362, 11.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 104, 0.0], [104, 290, 0.01123596], [290, 316, 0.0], [316, 362, 0.04347826]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 104, 0.0], [104, 290, 0.0], [290, 316, 0.0], [316, 362, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 104, 0.01923077], [104, 290, 0.01075269], [290, 316, 0.03846154], [316, 362, 0.02173913]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 362, 0.00169629]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 362, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 362, 0.00029552]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 362, -3.6826898]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 362, -2.88039108]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 362, -27.31007538]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 362, 6.0]]} |
The page you are trying to access is http://al-ars.ru | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12237 | {"url": "https://fotka.com/link.php?u=http://al-ars.ru", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "fotka.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:58:15Z", "digest": "sha1:WUDT55CUWSGQBL2V2QDMAGU2UER4KYPQ"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 53, 53.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 53, 810.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 53, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 53, 7.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 53, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 53, 156.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.33333333]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 53, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 53, 0.2]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 53, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 53, 4.44444444]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 53, 2.19722458]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 53, 9.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 53, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 53, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 53, 0.01886792]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 53, -9.89e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 53, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 53, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 53, -13.03264838]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 53, -4.66927999]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 53, -12.58150649]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 53, 2.0]]} |
The page you are trying to access is http://ddc158c.ibacklink.com.br | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12238 | {"url": "https://fotka.com/link.php?u=http://ddc158c.ibacklink.com.br", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "fotka.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:14:03Z", "digest": "sha1:2PAV24QCFJWCFLPODN4UDKLFKUJIDGQS"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 68, 68.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 68, 825.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 68, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 68, 7.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 68, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 68, 233.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.35294118]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 68, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 68, 0.23529412]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 68, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 68, 6.0]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 68, 2.19722458]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 68, 9.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 68, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.0483871]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 68, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.01470588]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 68, -9.89e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 68, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 68, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 68, -15.66175991]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 68, -7.6057579]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 68, -17.28209731]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 68, 4.0]]} |
The page you are trying to access is http://samostudio.ir | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12239 | {"url": "https://fotka.com/link.php?u=http://samostudio.ir", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "fotka.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:23:22Z", "digest": "sha1:B2MCC3ZWTB3IMWX4XWZJGVDZZS25AUFI"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 57, 57.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 57, 814.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 57, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 57, 7.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 57, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 57, 210.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.38461538]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 57, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 57, 0.15384615]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 57, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 57, 5.0]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 57, 2.19722458]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 57, 9.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 57, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 57, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.01754386]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 57, -9.89e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 57, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 57, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 57, -10.52343763]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 57, -4.06878831]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 57, -12.17312941]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 57, 2.0]]} |
European Commission Approves Visa Inc.’s Acquisition of Visa Europe
Transaction expected to close before the end of June 2016
San Francisco, CA, June 3, 2016 – Visa Inc. (NYSE: V) today announced that the European
Commission has approved the proposed acquisition of Visa Europe Ltd. by Visa Inc. Visa has now received all regulatory approvals required for the acquisition. The transaction has already been cleared by both the Jersey and the Turkish competition authorities. The transaction is expected to close in Visa Inc.’s fiscal third quarter of 2016. Visa will announce the closing once it has occurred.
About Visa Inc.
Visa Inc. (NYSE: V) is a global payments technology company that connects consumers, businesses, financial institutions, and governments in more than 200 countries and territories to fast, secure and reliable electronic payments. We operate one of the world’s most advanced processing networks — VisaNet — that is capable of handling more than 65,000 transaction messages a second, with fraud protection for consumers and assured payment for merchants. Visa is not a bank and does not issue cards, extend credit or set rates and fees for consumers. Visa’s innovations, however, enable its financial institution customers to offer consumers more choices: pay now with debit, pay ahead with prepaid or pay later with credit products. For more information, visit usa.visa.com/about-visa, visacorporate.tumblr.com and @VisaNews.
This release contains forward-looking statements within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements generally are identified by words such as “will,” "is expected," and other similar expressions. Examples of forward-looking statements include, but are not limited to, statements Visa Inc. makes about the likelihood and timing of the closing of the acquisition.
By their nature, forward-looking statements: (i) speak only as of the date they are made; (ii) are not statements of historical fact or guarantees of future performance; and (iii) are subject to risks, uncertainties, assumptions or changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict or quantify.
Therefore, actual results could differ materially and adversely from Visa Inc.’s forward-looking
statements due to a variety of factors, including the risk that the transaction may not be
consummated; matters arising in connection with the parties' efforts to satisfy the closing conditions relating to the transaction; and various other factors, including those contained in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 30, 2015, our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 2016, and Visa Inc.’s other filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
You should not place undue reliance on such statements. Except as required by law, Visa Inc. does not intend to update or revise any forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise.
Connie Kim, +1 212-521-3962, [email protected]
Victoria Hyde-Dunn, +1 650-432-7644, [email protected] | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12240 | {"url": "https://fr.review.visa.com/visa/newsroom/press-releases.1434477.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "fr.review.visa.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:08:48Z", "digest": "sha1:6TUGOMQNGBBSRSNOCCKXASC74B4HSDM2"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 3101, 3101.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3101, 3277.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3101, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3101, 19.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3101, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3101, 216.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3101, 0.32459016]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3101, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3101, 0.01665345]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3101, 0.01348136]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3101, 0.01823949]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3101, 0.01803279]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3101, 0.2295082]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3101, 0.54817987]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3101, 5.40042827]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3101, 5.10896883]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3101, 467.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 126, 0.0], [126, 214, 0.0], [214, 609, 1.0], [609, 625, 1.0], [625, 1450, 1.0], [1450, 1869, 1.0], [1869, 2169, 1.0], [2169, 2266, 0.0], [2266, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2774, 1.0], [2774, 3000, 1.0], [3000, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 126, 0.0], [126, 214, 0.0], [214, 609, 0.0], [609, 625, 0.0], [625, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1869, 0.0], [1869, 2169, 0.0], [2169, 2266, 0.0], [2266, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2774, 0.0], [2774, 3000, 0.0], [3000, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 68, 9.0], [68, 126, 10.0], [126, 214, 16.0], [214, 609, 62.0], [609, 625, 3.0], [625, 1450, 121.0], [1450, 1869, 59.0], [1869, 2169, 46.0], [2169, 2266, 12.0], [2266, 2357, 16.0], [2357, 2774, 65.0], [2774, 3000, 36.0], [3000, 3047, 6.0], [3047, 3101, 6.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 126, 0.07017544], [126, 214, 0.0625], [214, 609, 0.01033592], [609, 625, 0.0], [625, 1450, 0.01006289], [1450, 1869, 0.00992556], [1869, 2169, 0.0], [2169, 2266, 0.0], [2266, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2774, 0.039801], [2774, 3000, 0.0], [3000, 3047, 0.28205128], [3047, 3101, 0.23913043]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 68, 0.0], [68, 126, 0.0], [126, 214, 0.0], [214, 609, 0.0], [609, 625, 0.0], [625, 1450, 0.0], [1450, 1869, 0.0], [1869, 2169, 0.0], [2169, 2266, 0.0], [2266, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2774, 0.0], [2774, 3000, 0.0], [3000, 3047, 0.0], [3047, 3101, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 68, 0.11764706], [68, 126, 0.03448276], [126, 214, 0.14772727], [214, 609, 0.03544304], [609, 625, 0.1875], [625, 1450, 0.01818182], [1450, 1869, 0.02863962], [1869, 2169, 0.00333333], [2169, 2266, 0.03092784], [2266, 2357, 0.0], [2357, 2774, 0.04076739], [2774, 3000, 0.01769912], [3000, 3047, 0.04255319], [3047, 3101, 0.05555556]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3101, 0.16793859]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3101, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3101, 0.37202561]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3101, -187.18965105]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3101, -9.49219459]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3101, -53.22588793]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3101, 36.0]]} |
New Hampshire Foreclosure Law Legal Information Disclaimer
The information about New Hampshire Foreclosure law and other legal information provided on this website does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice; instead, all information, content, and materials available on this site are for general informational purposes only. Information on this website may not constitute the most up-to-date legal or other information. This website contains links to other third-party websites. Such links are only for the convenience of the reader, user or browser; FRAUD STOPPERS and its members do not recommend or endorse the contents of the third-party sites.
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New Hampshire Foreclosure Law
– Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
– Non-Judicial Foreclosure Available: Yes
– Primary Security Instruments: Deed of Trust, Mortgage
– Timeline: Varies by Process; Typically 60 days
– Right of Redemption: None
– Deficiency Judgments Allowed: Yes
In New Hampshire, lenders may foreclose on a mortgage or deed of trust in default by using either the judicial or non-judicial foreclosure processes or any of the following special methods: Entry under Process, Entry and Publication or Possession and Publication.
New Hampshire Judicial Foreclosure
In New Hampshire, the judicial process of foreclosure is very similar to that of the strict foreclosure process used in other New England states. The New Hampshire judicial foreclosure process is one in which the lender must file a complaint against the borrower and obtain a decree of sale from a court having jurisdiction in the county where the property is located before foreclosure proceedings can begin. Generally, if the court finds the borrower in default, they will give them a set period of time to pay the delinquent amount, plus costs. If the borrower does not pay within the set period of time, the court will then order the property to be sold. Anyone may bid at the foreclosure sale, including the lender.
New Hampshire Non-Judicial Foreclosure
The New Hampshire non-judicial process of foreclosure is used when a power of sale clause exists in a mortgage or deed of trust. A “power of sale” clause is the clause in a deed of trust or mortgage, in which the borrower pre-authorizes the sale of property to pay off the balance on a loan in the event of the their default. In deeds of trust or mortgages where a power of sale exists, the power given to the lender to sell the property may be executed by the lender or their representative, typically referred to as the trustee. Regulations for this type of foreclosure process are outlined below in the “Power of Sale Foreclosure Guidelines”.
Power of Sale Foreclosure Guidelines
If the deed of trust or mortgage contains a power of sale clause and specifies the time, place and terms of sale, then the specified procedure must be followed. Otherwise, the non-judicial power of sale foreclosure is carried out in the following phases:
A notice of sale must be recorded in the county where the property is located and then: 1) mailed to the borrower at least twenty-five (25) days before the sale; and 2) published once a week for three (3) weeks, with the first publication appearing not less than twenty (20) days before the sale, in a newspaper of general circulation in the county where the property is located.
The notice should contain the time, date and place of sale, a description of the property and the default, as well as a “warning” to the borrower, informing him the property is going to be sold and what rights he has to stop the procedure.
The New Hampshire foreclosure sale must be held on the property itself, unless the power of sale clause specifies a different location.
Special Methods of Foreclosure
Entry under Process – The lender may foreclose by entering the property under process of law and maintaining actual possession of the property for one year.
Entry and Publication – By peaceable entry onto the property and continued, actual, peaceable possession for a period of one year, and by a publishing a notice stating the time of possession, the lender and borrowers name, the date of the mortgage and a description of the property in a newspaper of general circulation in the county where the property is located. The notice must be published for three (3) successive weeks, with the first publication appearing at least six (6) months before the borrowers right to redeem has expired.
Possession and Publication – By the lender in possession of the property publishing a notice stating that from and after a certain day, the property will be held for default of the mortgage and the borrowers rights to the property will be foreclosed. Said notice must be published in a newspaper printed in the county where the property is located for three (3) successive weeks and must give the borrower and lenders name, the date of the mortgage, a description of the property and the lenders intention to hold possession of the property for at least one (1) year.
Borrowers have no rights of redemption when any of the three (3) special methods of foreclosure are used.
More information on New Hampshire foreclosure laws.
For more information on United States Foreclosure Laws Click Here
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The information about Foreclosure law and other legal information provided on this website does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice; instead, all information, content, and materials available on this site are for general informational purposes only. Information on this website may not constitute the most up-to-date legal or other information. This website contains links to other third-party websites. Such links are only for the convenience of the reader, user or browser; FRAUD STOPPERS and its members do not recommend or endorse the contents of the third-party sites.
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Not Enough Dirt to Go Around
News of the Weird has a depressing economics story this week about food prices in the poorer sections of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, which is perhaps the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.
The price of rice, the staple product, has doubled in the last year. This increase naturally has residents looking for substitutes for rice.
Apparently in the past they have baked “dirt cookies,” using salt and vegetable shortening along with clay from a nearby area. The clay has some nutrients in it, so it is not entirely filler. The problem, though, is that the supply curve of clay is not horizontal; so with this increased demand for the clay, its price has risen too — by 40 percent during the same period. One might say that the dirt is no longer dirt-cheap! | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12242 | {"url": "https://freakonomics.com/2008/04/not-enough-dirt-to-go-around/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "freakonomics.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:23:38Z", "digest": "sha1:DFQ7KYWCQTD6R6NQA3F43HFQWTVKBGE6"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 787, 787.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 787, 1596.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 787, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 787, 30.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 787, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 787, 235.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 787, 0.43209877]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 787, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 787, 0.03174603]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 787, 0.14197531]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 787, 0.67391304]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 787, 4.56521739]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 787, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 787, 4.25220592]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 787, 138.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 221, 1.0], [221, 362, 1.0], [362, 787, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 221, 0.0], [221, 362, 0.0], [362, 787, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 6.0], [29, 221, 31.0], [221, 362, 23.0], [362, 787, 78.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 221, 0.0], [221, 362, 0.0], [362, 787, 0.00483092]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 221, 0.0], [221, 362, 0.0], [362, 787, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.17241379], [29, 221, 0.03645833], [221, 362, 0.0141844], [362, 787, 0.00941176]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 787, 0.74966711]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 787, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 787, 0.01349694]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 787, -28.95079605]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 787, 15.37761523]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 787, -14.15876349]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 787, 7.0]]} |
Posts Tagged ‘Murtaza Haider’
More on Street Names and Property Values
A while ago Levitt posed the question of whether the name of a street (such as “Pleasant Avenue” or “Massacre Lane”) could have an effect on the price of its real estate. Now, it turns out, there’s more data on the subject: The Edmonton Journal reports that a study by a Canadian real-estate analyst found a “a small but noteworthy . . . | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12243 | {"url": "https://freakonomics.com/tag/murtaza-haider/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "freakonomics.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:25:49Z", "digest": "sha1:TMBWOIOEP4JRNM6MIWAKLGR2ZFAPFMXD"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 408, 408.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 408, 1191.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 408, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 408, 27.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 408, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 408, 231.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 408, 0.37777778]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 408, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 408, 0.03076923]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 408, 0.01111111]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 408, 0.18888889]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 408, 0.8028169]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 408, 4.57746479]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 408, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 408, 3.90410746]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 408, 71.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 71, 0.0], [71, 408, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 71, 0.0], [71, 408, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 30, 4.0], [30, 71, 7.0], [71, 408, 60.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 71, 0.0], [71, 408, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 71, 0.0], [71, 408, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 30, 0.13333333], [30, 71, 0.12195122], [71, 408, 0.03264095]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 408, 0.00989926]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 408, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 408, 0.00044209]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 408, -24.58719634]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 408, 12.58880367]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 408, -22.70474474]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 408, 2.0]]} |
Popul Vuh Myth Video Assignment Submit Assignment
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Popul Vuh Myth Video Assignment
Creation of Earth and Different sorts of Creatures that could Worship God
According to the myth of Popul Vuh, the world was created out of sheer nothingness. The first beings that were present here were “the Makers” or the “beings” that created the birds and the animals in the very beginning. But these animals could not speak or think for themselves, so these “Makers” made human beings out of the mud. This initial version of human beings had no soul and was killed in a flood CITATION Pfe15 \l 1033 (Pfeiffer). After this, the deities created the later versions of humans with the help of corn, which was considered to be a precious and long-lasting material. This kind of humans were blessed with soul and thinking and were able to worship these deities.
Similarities between Popul Vuh and Bible
The first and foremost similarity between the Popul Vuh Myth and the transcriptions of the Bible is in the creation of the world. According to the Bible, the world came into existence from a state of “nothingness”. Same has been explained by the ancient myth of Popul Vuh which states that there was nothing in the beginning; there was no animal, no bird, animal, crab, fish, tree, canyon, rock, hollow, meadow or forest.
The second similarity that can be clearly seen in both texts is the appreciation or description of the Creator in multiple ways. In the Bible, multiple names of God can be found, that are solely intended for His appreciation and praise. In the same way, the prologue of Part 1, in Popul Vuh writings, contains a 13 line paragraph that solely describes the praise and characteristics of “The Maker”.
The last similarity between both the transcripts is the sequence of occurrence of the events. Both the transcripts narrate that in the beginning, there were only Gods who speak the land, then they created animals and then human beings came into existence.
BIBLIOGRAPHY \l 1033 Popul Vuh. Dir. Jill Pfeiffer. Perf. Jill Pfeiffer. 2015. Youtube Video. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12244 | {"url": "https://freeessaywriter.net/free-essays/all-subjects/Education/Popul-Vuh-Myth-Video-Assignment-Submit-Assignment-98170", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "freeessaywriter.net", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:42:14Z", "digest": "sha1:75LZEY4S32GPONMRXSNCRCF6YBNJPSD3"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2084, 2084.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2084, 3990.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2084, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2084, 138.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2084, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2084, 263.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2084, 0.41404358]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2084, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2084, 0.03214286]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2084, 0.03809524]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2084, 0.02142857]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2084, 0.0202381]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2084, 0.00484262]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2084, 0.15496368]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2084, 0.47308782]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2084, 4.7592068]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2084, 4.62330089]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2084, 353.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 71, 0.0], [71, 81, 0.0], [81, 113, 0.0], [113, 187, 0.0], [187, 873, 1.0], [873, 914, 0.0], [914, 1336, 1.0], [1336, 1735, 1.0], [1735, 1991, 1.0], [1991, 2084, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 71, 0.0], [71, 81, 0.0], [81, 113, 0.0], [113, 187, 0.0], [187, 873, 0.0], [873, 914, 0.0], [914, 1336, 0.0], [1336, 1735, 0.0], [1735, 1991, 0.0], [1991, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 50, 7.0], [50, 71, 3.0], [71, 81, 1.0], [81, 113, 5.0], [113, 187, 12.0], [187, 873, 121.0], [873, 914, 6.0], [914, 1336, 73.0], [1336, 1735, 69.0], [1735, 1991, 42.0], [1991, 2084, 14.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 71, 0.0], [71, 81, 0.0], [81, 113, 0.0], [113, 187, 0.0], [187, 873, 0.00894188], [873, 914, 0.0], [914, 1336, 0.0], [1336, 1735, 0.00769231], [1735, 1991, 0.0], [1991, 2084, 0.09411765]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 50, 0.0], [50, 71, 0.0], [71, 81, 0.0], [81, 113, 0.0], [113, 187, 0.0], [187, 873, 0.0], [873, 914, 0.0], [914, 1336, 0.0], [1336, 1735, 0.0], [1735, 1991, 0.0], [1991, 2084, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 50, 0.14], [50, 71, 0.0952381], [71, 81, 0.1], [81, 113, 0.15625], [113, 187, 0.08108108], [187, 873, 0.02915452], [873, 914, 0.09756098], [914, 1336, 0.02369668], [1336, 1735, 0.03007519], [1735, 1991, 0.01171875], [1991, 2084, 0.23655914]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2084, 0.85095274]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2084, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2084, 0.43444848]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2084, -2.68626738]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2084, 51.97253091]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2084, 44.6679426]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2084, 21.0]]} |
Category: Black & White
Psalm 23:1-3: “The Lord is my shepherd, I lack nothing. He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he refreshes my soul. He guides me along the right paths for his name’s sake.”
March 17, 2020 August 12, 2020 newglobaldevotionLeave a comment
The law is like a checkerboard; it is painted black and white. Applying the law to life is what law experts do when they meet in court. The challenge lies in the nature of the beast – people are not black and white. They are not one way or the other. Guess what: Neither is the Lord. Even though His 613 commandments summarized in the Law of Moses could make Him look like a law expert, I do not think we do Him justice to confine Him to the law alone. If we do, our view of God is black and white.
David’s sigh of relief as he breathed his prayer is like a splash of color:
“The Lord is my Shepherd, I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures, he leads me beside quiet waters, he refreshes my soul.”
We need to get familiarized with the diverse color nuances of the Lord. David could tell you all about it. He is no model citizen. If we look into his life story we will find that he did many great and noble things, but he also committed murder in cold blood to protect his interests. And yet, even when David got caught red-handed, he relied on God’s judgment rather than on people’s judgment. People have a tendency to condemn. God doesn’t. God is a God of color and He understands the subtleties of a human being. God is our judge without being judgmental.
The best way to describe the effect God has on my life is like a fog lifting from the valley. Becoming aware of God, the fog slowly lifts. The first things I detected about God were His outlines, His do’s and don’ts. But as any friendship, my relationship with God has matured over the years. I study Him like a painting to see His nuances and subtleties and I see more than just His outlines when I look at Him now.
Sticking to a world of black and white just because it feels more defined, we are definitely missing out. Life with God is no walk in the park, but it is rich; it is a rainbow of experiences. In His presence we don’t lack a thing.
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Redefining Alzheimer’s disease
Home » Blog » Redefining Alzheimer’s disease
In Alzheimer's Disease
Redefining Alzheimer’s disease2021-05-142021-11-30//sharlinhealth.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/shn-png-logo-copy-1.jpgFunctional Medicine Doctorhttps://functionalmedicine.doctor/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/alzheimers-disease1.jpg200px200px
Alzheimer’s has no cure. That’s what many of the 6.2 million Americans living with the disease have come to accept, but it’s only one side of the story.
Alzheimer’s Disease has a pre-clinical stage of one to two decades. Suppose neurologists like myself could diagnose healthy, young, and cognitively normal individuals without symptoms in that pre-clinical stage. In that case, we could stop the disease before it caused irreversible changes to the brain.
Conventional, symptoms-based diagnostic tools like the 1984 Clinical Diagnostic Criteria for PROBABLE Alzheimer’s Disease and Montreal Cognitive Assessment(MoCA) don’t allow for pre-clinical diagnoses. Instead, the future of Alzheimer’s treatment depends on a new, biology-based definition.
A new definition of Alzheimer’s disease
The 1984 Clinical Diagnostic Criteria for PROBABLE Alzheimer’s Disease focuses on clinical symptoms like dementia and the progressive worsening of memory. However, these symptoms don’t affect every person living with the disease. Those in their early stages are often symptom-free ticking timebombs. Eventually, the condition will take hold and augment their cognitive abilities, but there is an opportunity for intervention beforehand.
Suffice to say, the outdated, symptoms-based definition for Alzheimer’s Disease is inadequate. Luckily, we have a new one:
“The term “Alzheimer’s Disease” refers to an aggregate of neuropathologic changes and thus is defined in vivo by biomarkers and by postmortem examination, not by clinical symptoms.” – NIA-AA Research Framework: Toward a biological definition of Alzheimer’s disease
Under this explanation, Alzheimer’s Disease is defined by biomarkers. This new definition gives other neurologists and me a broader scope for diagnosis, meaning we can catch pre-clinical patients and provide treatment that redirects the trajectory of their health journey.
Biology-based diagnostic tools
There are several biology-based diagnostic tools available today – many of which I use in my clinic. Let’s scratch the surface and investigate three ways we can examine biomarkers.
Structural MRI scans are a non-invasive way to analyze the pathology and anatomy of the brain. These scans are distinct from fMRIs, which examine activity in the brain.
In the diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease, we are interested in 3D volumetric scan sequences. These measure different brain structures and determine the volume of tissue.
Until recently, structural MRI scans were predominantly used to exclude non-Alzheimer’s causes of dementia. However, we can also use the severity of frontotemporal atrophy to support a diagnosis in the pre-dementia stages of Alzheimer’s.
Cerebrospinal fluid examinations
A spinal fluid examination also called a lumbar puncture, is a routine procedure that I carry out frequently at my clinic. It’s a test that evaluates cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), a biologically active tissue formed in the brain’s center. CSF moves around the brain and brainstem through aqueducts and channels and spreads throughout the central nervous system.
Similar to a blood test, a spinal fluid examination can investigate a range of biomarkers. When it comes to testing for Alzheimer’s Disease, I look for amyloid protein, beta-amyloid 42, total tau protein, and phosphorylated tau.
I can also test for the APOE ε4 gene. If present, this gene increases the individual’s likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s Disease. It’s also linked to an earlier onset of the disease. About one in four people have one copy of the APOE ε4 gene, with two to three percent carrying two copies.
PET scan technology
In 2016, research out of the University of California Berkeley found that PET scans can trace the progression of Alzheimer’s Disease in adults that are cognitively normal by examining cellular-level changes in the brain’s tissue.
The study suggests that the imaging of tau – one of the biomarkers I look for in spinal fluid examinations – will likely play a role in the development of early-stage therapeutic approaches to treatment.
As we move into the new age of diagnostics, we might start performing routine “cognoscopies” beginning at age 60 to predict the onset of disease and prevent it from occurring in the first place.
Biology-based diagnoses and emerging pharmaceutical treatments
My ability to diagnose patients early in the progression of Alzheimer’s Disease using biology-based systems will be critical to realizing the promise of emerging drugs targeting the disease. There are several treatments in the development pipeline, several of which should become commercially available in the next few years – even months.
They are not going to be magic bullet fix-alls, but here are two of the most promising treatments on the horizon:
Biogen’s Aducanumab, a monoclonal antibody, is currently under review by the FDA, with a decision expected on or before June 7, 2021. Its journey to this point has been a rocky one, with an FDA advisory committee voting unanimously against the drug in November 2020.
Eli Lilly’s Donanemab is expected to deliver its study results in 2023.
I am happy to report that the Sharlin Health Neuroscience Research Center is a study site for the donanemab Trailblazer phase 3 trial and a candidate participant in a real-world experience aducanumab trial. If you would like to learn more about the neuroscience research at Sharlin Health and Neurology, also including studies on multiple sclerosis, traumatic brain injury, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and pediatric migraine, please do not hesitate to call my office and ask for Shawna or Mikhayla.
Access the future of medicine today
The future of Alzheimer’s Disease diagnoses and treatment looks bright, but there are people – maybe you, or perhaps a loved one – living with the condition today.
You do not have to wait for some miracle cure or brand-new technology to experience real improvements in your life. Together with my multi-dimensional team of healthcare professionals, I help you map an effective, highly personalized pathway to well-being using a functional medicine approach.
If you are sick of being told there’s nothing anyone can do if you don’t want to rely on drugs, and if you are ready to put in the hard work to live the life you know you deserve, reach out today. Schedule your initial consultation, and let’s work toward your health goals together.
Alzheimer’s disease, biomarkers, and the future of biology-based diagnoses: HOW TO TREAT ALZHEIMER’S IN OUR SPRINGFIELD CLINICAlzheimer's Disease
Discover a newly approved treatment option for Alzheimer’s diseaseAlzheimer's Disease | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12246 | {"url": "https://functionalmedicine.doctor/redefining-alzheimers-disease/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "functionalmedicine.doctor", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:00:46Z", "digest": "sha1:VOIHDA4JA2JQ3JXAX3JEAWYTLKKBAW3Z"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 6952, 6952.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6952, 12784.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6952, 37.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6952, 231.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6952, 0.91]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6952, 267.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6952, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6952, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6952, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6952, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6952, 0.37144993]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6952, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6952, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6952, 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WHY SHARLIN HEALTH AND NEUROLOGY IS A HYBRID CLINIC — SHOULD YOU SEE A NEUROLOGIST?
Home » Blog » WHY SHARLIN HEALTH AND NEUROLOGY IS A HYBRID CLINIC — SHOULD YOU SEE A NEUROLOGIST?
In Functional Medicine
WHY SHARLIN HEALTH AND NEUROLOGY IS A HYBRID CLINIC — SHOULD YOU SEE A NEUROLOGIST?2022-07-042023-01-26//sharlinhealth.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/shn-png-logo-copy-1.jpgFunctional Medicine Doctor//sharlinhealth.wpengine.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/shn-png-logo-copy-1.jpg200px200px
Why do you go to the doctor? It is probably because you have a problem, an illness or injury, or something about your health that is just not right. Your main goal is to get better. This is especially true regarding the brain and other parts of the nervous system. At Sharlin Health and Neurology, we help people with conditions like multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s and other forms of memory loss, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We believe our patients deserve bold options when it comes to the big stuff.
We’ve discovered that most people we talk to have not gotten what they want from their doctor. So, let’s talk about the five don’ts:
They don’t get the proper tests, and as a result,
They don’t get the correct diagnosis.
They don’t get their questions answered.
They don’t spend the time with the doctor that they expect, and
They don’t get offered a treatment plan that ultimately changes the trajectory of their illness, helps them heal, recover, or become the best versions of themselves.
This is the brick wall that is our current healthcare system, and it is very unsatisfactory.
There are many reasons why the five don’ts tell the truth about healthcare and how it is delivered. A big one is that too often we allow our health insurance to dictate the terms of our health. The costs are enormous. They include the monthly premiums, large deductibles, and copays, formularies that exclude the treatment that is best for us, the cost of treatment with drugs that are prescribed with no end in sight. The fact is that most drugs do not cure illness – they “manage it.” Tragically, we are often told we don’t have a choice. (That’s the sixth, don’t, but it’s not true. You do have a choice.)
Because of our customer centric focus, Sharlin Health and Neurology is thought by many to be the best neurology clinic near Springfield. We believe that the best healthcare begins with genuinely getting to know you and your health and offering you choices about the kind of healthcare you receive. We believe that the best healthcare should present all available options, including emerging diagnostic and therapeutics not found elsewhere. You should be the one to choose, not your insurance and not a big healthcare system. This means that we are not your traditional neurology clinic and are proud of this fact. We help people change their lives and health, even with conditions that too often good folks are told, “there’s nothing that can be done about it.” So, if you are wondering if you should see a neurologist, our Springfield clinic can help you understand all the reasons why you should!
How do we accomplish what we do? First and foremost, we are a clinic that cares about you as an individual. Dr. Sharlin and his team stay on top of emerging technologies and information that larger systems are slow to adopt. We take the time to listen. We accept health insurance for the role that it can play in some aspects of the healthcare journey. But we do not limit our decisions to what health insurance will cover or doesn’t cover, and neither should you. After all, this is your life, and we have not yet met anyone who believes that an insurance executive or government bureaucrat should determine how you receive the best healthcare that money can buy.
This is called a hybrid model. Join the movement. For example, many people are turning to concierge doctors that operate under a membership plan because they know that with this service, they can provide the best of both worlds when it comes to time and attention. Although Sharlin Health and Neurology is not a concierge practice, we align with the philosophy that drives this approach. We accept insurance for initial evaluations and the standard tests that would be done anywhere you would choose to go for a given problem. This includes basic blood work, nerve conduction tests, or brain wave tests. In addition, we offer a research quality option for MRI right here through our partner company, Sharlin Health Advanced Imaging. But as Dr. Sharlin often says, a test helps to identify the problem correctly, but no one gets better because of a test. The test is just the first step in a treatment plan.
The term hybrid comes in when we ask, what type of treatment plan do you want? It is not so much about money as it is about value. Every day, we spend our money on the things we believe bring us the most value. So why not put yourself or the person you love first when it comes to healthcare value? Have you ever purchased a car or truck and evaluated the options available to determine whether one upgrade or another improves your experience of that vehicle? It just makes sense that you would do the same regarding your health.
If you are contemplating seeing a neurologist here near Springfield, please consider that our patients come to us because they know there is a better way, where people genuinely get better. We’ve published the proof in a peer-reviewed journal, the largest case series ever of reversal of cognitive decline. That was four years ago, and we are still going strong.
We are considered one of the best neurology clinics near Springfield and beyond because our solutions don’t just mask symptoms or hold symptoms at bay. Those five don’ts, well, we don’t do any of them. Instead, we offer an approach that reverses symptoms, addresses environmental and lifestyle factors, and takes the deepest dive to see why our bodies are not working as they should, all the way down to the level of your cells and your genes. This part of the practice is the self-pay side of the hybrid model. Many of our patients see the value in paying out of pocket for services and options that help them change – not only their health – but their family’s health for generations to come. We make sure that you always know what the out-of-pocket expenses will be and that you genuinely want and need what you are paying for. There will never be a surprise cost to you. This goes from our most comprehensive Restore and Regenerate Package and our Complete Brain Tune Up! Program to a la carte options that include bioidentical hormone replacement therapy, IV nutrition, peptide therapy, neuro fitness, functional nutrition, health coaching, and our private pharmaceutical-grade supplements to support your needs.
Should you see a neurologist? Call our Springfield clinic to see if we are a good fit, and schedule your initial consultation to start your journey to better health today.
What to do when suffering from a migraineFunctional Medicine
Identify – The First Pillar of a Unique 5 Pillar System at Sharlin Health and Neurology (Part 1)Functional Medicine, Neurology | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12247 | {"url": "https://functionalmedicine.doctor/why-sharlin-health-and-neurology-is-a-hybrid-clinic/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "functionalmedicine.doctor", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:19:42Z", "digest": "sha1:7I4BS7UUWHKTEEQ57TYRD3KUYIKZYK5E"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 7175, 7175.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 7175, 12986.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 7175, 22.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 7175, 215.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 7175, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 7175, 322.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 7175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 7175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 7175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 7175, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 7175, 0.45647704]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 7175, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 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Talie Shove October 31, 2017
I Know Who You Are (Halloween 2017)
Invisible Counter
CURRENT SEASON:
Tracking a traveling husband,
Encouraging my Francophile first-grader,
Loving on my wildflower of a littlest,
Defining what the story of my 30s will be.
This life is lived in the little moments,
the funny and the beautiful,
and I want to remember them all.
Go Ahead, Play Catch Up...
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Dictionary details: Encyclopedia
Dictionary type: Computing
Description: Includes definitions (English, French, Dutch, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Chinese, Arabic, Russian, Japanese, Korean), example phrases, illustrations
Internal code: tfe
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Gargfinanceblog
Let's understand Finance and Strategy
Why should you consider Singapore for your company registration?
January 22, 2017 January 24, 2017 Nitin Garg
Last week, one of my e-Commerce Clients in the B2C segment asked me this question: “Where can I register my company, other than in India? Is Singapore a good option?”
This is a common question every Indian startup Entrepreneur explores, keeping in the mind the FDI and taxation policies that Indian government has. So, let’s take a close look at why you should consider Singapore as your destination while exploring foreign company registration
FDI Policy
The Government of India recently introduced Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) policy did not permit FDI in the multi-branded retail (B2C segment). As such, foreign venture capitalists have restrictions while funding an Indian online retail operation.
Take the example of Flipkart, India’s largest e-commerce private company. When the Indian Government turned down the proposal for allowing FDI in the retail sector, investors of Flipkart were left with 2 options: (i) sell the company at the best price or (ii) sell the risky part of the business (logistics and delivery) and move the profitable part to a country with more relaxed regulations. It’s very obvious for the Bansals (Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal, the Co-founders of Flipkart) to agree to the second option; they registered their company in Singapore. Flipkart’s investors now can infuse the capital in the parent company, and can direct the funds to its India arm
Singapore has based its economic development on a proactive strategy to attract FDI using its trade openness. Since 2003, Singapore has been ranked first by the World Bank Group for ease of doing business – favorable lending to foreign investors, a simple regulatory system, tax incentives, a high-quality industrial real estate park, political stability and the absence of corruption make Singapore an attractive destination for investment.
According to the UNCTAD 2015 World Investment Report, Singapore is the 5th largest recipient of FDI in the world and the 3rd largest among the East and Southeast Asian countries. In 2014, FDI flows into Singapore increased by 27% from 2013, reaching US$ 81 billion.
Lower tax rates
A company registered in Singapore do not pay tax for the first 3 years after the registration, for the first SG$ 100,000 of profit. Beyond this limit, effective corporate tax for Singapore Private Limited Companies is calculated according to the following slabs:
For profits between SG$ 100,000 and SG$ 300,000: tax @ 8.5%
For profits SG$ 300,000 and above: tax @ 17%.Compare this with India’s 34%!
There are no capital gains taxes in Singapore. India charges 15%!
For income that has been taxed at the corporate level, dividends can be distributed to its shareholders tax-free in Singapore. But, India charges tax on dividends paid at 16.995%!
In an effort make the economy more competitive, the Singapore Government has adopted Goods and Services Tax (GST). Singapore maintains one of the world’s lowest GST rates (currently 7%), ranking below the global average VAT/GST rate of 16.4%, and the Asia-Pacific average of 10.5%.
Personal income tax has a tier system that starts from 0% and goes up to 20% for income above SG$ 320,000.
Singapore enjoys the extensive network of double tax agreements (DTA) with more than 70 countries across the globe. The key merits of DTA are (i) no double taxation (ii) lower withholding taxes, and (iii) preferential tax regime. This DTA network along with the absence of capital gains and dividends tax makes Singapore a very attractive jurisdiction for business investments through a Singapore incorporated holding company.
Customs duty
Singapore, being a transit and trade hub, has limited import duty on only a few items like petroleum products, tobacco etc, and no export duty. This offers a lot to companies that trade with foreign vendors. This is one of the reasons why Flipkart chose Singapore as their destination – Flipkart has foreign vendors for electronics and fashion apparels.
Other things to consider
Strategic location with superb connectivity
Singapore is situated at the heart of Southeast Asia, making it possible for a business to access a market of 2.8 billion people within a few hours of flight. For an Indian Entrepreneur, Delhi – Singapore flight takes about 5.5 hours. Singapore also boasts of its state-of-the-art telecommunications infrastructure; it’s the only Asian country to secure a rank in the top 10 economics among 142 countries worldwide.
One can incorporate his/her company in Singapore in 1 – 2 days; minimum authorized capital stock is S$ 1 (one Singapore dollar!); shareholders can own 100% of all shares, and residential status is irrelevant (you do not have to be a resident of Singapore). You also get access to a larger investment environment
In addition to this, flexible immigration policies, availability of talent pool, high quality of life, efficient legal system and Intellectual Property protection regime gives Singapore an edge over its neighbors.
Other locations an Entrepreneur can consider are Hong Kong (HK) and the USA. HK is similar to Singapore in almost all aspects, but with still lower tax rate (currently at 16.5%)
USA is another place for those who are considering foreign company registration, but it’s an expensive state with fairly high tax rates, besides other restrictions. The US enjoys third highest corporate tax slab in the world at 40%.
For a comprehensive list of tax rates across the globe, click here
Entrepreneurship, Finance, Private EquityCompany Registration, FDI, Singapore, Tax
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6 thoughts on “Why should you consider Singapore for your company registration?”
Babu January 22, 2017 / 7:37 pm
Good read!
Kumar January 22, 2017 / 7:37 pm
Well-written!
Julia Margret September 5, 2019 / 11:05 am
Very amazing article shared by you. It will help me a lot in starting up a business or register company in Singapore as I am planning to do so. You have covered all the important aspects of your article.
Great job. Looking forward to more informative articles like this of yours.
Daniel Brown September 19, 2019 / 9:59 pm
This is all really useful information! It seems to me that it should be added to the article that a local director (resident of Singapore) is needed. When it comes to millions of dollars in turnover, the local director is no longer just a nominal unit. Your future relations with the bank also depend on the choice of a local director. There are many companies that can help to solve the problem of finding a reliable local director (for example, a good friend of mine worked with OSOME). Of course, you can study all the offers on the market. In my opinion, this complex service enables those who planning to start a business in Singapore to save both time and nerve, and allows them to concentrate on their main activities.
seethalakshmi November 26, 2020 / 1:28 pm
Amazing write up, this blog contains full information on company formation in Singapore and company registration such as lower tax rates, customs duty.
seethalakshmi May 17, 2021 / 6:19 am
Excellent information, that is provided in this article. I can know more about company registration and company formation in Singapore from this article.
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Twitter sale and potential acquirers: Salesforce, Microsoft, Google, Disney, Verizon October 7, 2016 | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12250 | {"url": "https://gargfinanceblog.com/2017/01/22/why-should-you-consider-singapore-for-your-company-registration/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gargfinanceblog.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:24:06Z", "digest": "sha1:VWM3MP7OIUMLF6U6OINLCN3UN2LVT2I2"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 8056, 8056.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 8056, 9794.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 8056, 64.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 8056, 136.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 8056, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 8056, 309.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 8056, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 8056, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 8056, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 8056, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 8056, 0.32131562]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 8056, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 8056, 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Tag: [2016] EWHC 1722 (Pat)
Chugai v UCB: When does one litigate not just the scope but also the validity of a patent?
Update 31 August 2018 the merits of the case were subsequently held in August 2018, [2018] EWHC 2264 (Pat).
End of exam season (sadly not yet of marking marathon). In the next few weeks I shall be posting on judgments issued a little or longer while ago, which I was pondering to use in exams. (I did for some of them).
In [2017] EWHC 1216 (Pat) Chugai Pharmaceutical v UCB the issue at stake was to what degree a suit seeking to establish absence of liability under a patent license, in reality provokes argument on the validity of the patent. Carr J has excellent review of precedent, much of which has passed in one way or another on this blog. Please do refer to judgment for proper reading.
Claimant (“Chugai”) seeks a declaration against the Defendants (collectively “UCB”) that it is not obliged to continue to pay royalties under a patent licence (“the Licence”) granted by the First Defendant (“UCB Pharma”). UCB Pharma is a Belgian company with an English branch which entered into the Licence with Chugai in respect of a portfolio of patents. Chugai claims that its products, which are, in part, manufactured and sold in the USA, fall outside the scope of the claims of the Patent concerned. Accordingly, Chugai seeks a declaration that it owes no royalties for the manufacture and sale of these drugs manufactured after a certain date.
UCB alleges that, although framed as a claim for a declaration relating to a contract, a part of these proceedings, in substance, concerns not only the scope but also the validity of the Patent. UCB submits that the validity of a US patent is non-justiciable, since the English court has no power to determine the validity of a foreign patent. Accordingly, it submits that those parts of Chugai’s pleading which are said to raise issues of invalidity fall outside the subject matter jurisdiction of the English court.
European private international law as readers will know lays greats emphasis on exclusive jurisdiction in the case of validity of patents. The CJEU’s holding in C-4/03 Gat v Luk that nullity actions against a national part of a certain European patent can only be conducted in the jurisdiction for which that patent was registered, regardless of whether the nullity argument is raised in the suit or by way of defence, is now included verbatim in Article 24(4) Brussels I Recast. The EU’s take is rooted in the idea that the grant of a national patent is “an exercise of national sovereignty” (Jenard Report on the Brussels Convention (OJ 1979 C59, pp 1, 36)). The rule therefore engages the Act of State doctrine, and suggests that comity requires the courts of States other than the State of issue, to keep their hands off the case.
Particularly in cases where defendant is accused of having infringed a patent, this rule gives it a great possibility to stall proceedings. Where the action is ‘passive’, with plaintiff aiming to establish no infringement, the argument that the suit really involves validity of patent is less easily made.
The possibility of ‘torpedo’ abuse, coupled with less deference to the jurisdictional consequences of the Act of State doctrine [particularly its contested extension to intellectual property rights], means the English courts in particular are becoming less impressed with the exclusivity. (Albeit Carr J on balance decides per curiam (at 73-74) that direct challenges to the validity of foreign patents should not be justiciable in the English courts). Where the EU Regulation applies, they do not have much choice. Carr J refers to [2016] EWHC 1722 (Pat) Anan where claimant sought to carve out issues of validity by seeking a declaration that the defendant’s acts infringed a German patent “if the German designation is invalid (which is to be determined by the German courts)“. EU law meant this attempt could not be honoured. Carr J however suggests that EU rules have no direct application in the present case because the Patent at stake is a United States patent. That is spot on, on the facts of the case: choice of court having been made in favour of the English courts, the case does not fall under the amended lis alibi pendens rule of the Brussels I Recast. In Article 33 juncto recital 24, reflexive effect is suggested for the Regulation’s exclusive jurisdictional rules, leaving a Member State court in a position (not: under an obligation) to give way to pending litigation in third countries, if its own jurisdiction is based on a non-exlusive jurisdictional rule (Articles 4, 7, 8 or 9) and not within the context of the protected categories.
Allow me to lean on 20 Essex Street’s conclusion in their review of the case: Carr J held that the case before him was not a direct challenge to validity. He accepted Chugai’s submissions that its claim was contractual. Disputed parts of the patent were incidental to the essential nature of its claim, which was a claim for determination of its royalty obligations. In his view, this claim fell within the exclusive jurisdiction clause, in favour of the English courts, which parties had agreed.
Essential reading for IP litigators.
(Handbook of) EU Private international law, 2nd ed. 2016, Chapter 2, Heading 2.2.6.7. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12251 | {"url": "https://gavclaw.com/tag/2016-ewhc-1722-pat/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gavclaw.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:13:39Z", "digest": "sha1:AZEXAWNZUKOT4KS5VUVM3N3XJUO7RDL3"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 5305, 5305.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5305, 8787.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5305, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5305, 64.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5305, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5305, 264.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5305, 0.40625]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5305, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5305, 0.04237883]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5305, 0.02528682]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5305, 0.01311168]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5305, 0.0163896]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5305, 0.0182627]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5305, 0.00983376]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5305, 0.03125]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5305, 0.16666667]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5305, 0.45261984]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5305, 4.76142698]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5305, 5.28562289]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5305, 897.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 119, 1.0], [119, 227, 1.0], [227, 439, 1.0], [439, 815, 1.0], [815, 1467, 1.0], [1467, 1985, 1.0], [1985, 2820, 1.0], [2820, 3126, 1.0], [3126, 4686, 1.0], [4686, 5183, 1.0], [5183, 5220, 1.0], [5220, 5305, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 119, 0.0], [119, 227, 0.0], [227, 439, 0.0], [439, 815, 0.0], [815, 1467, 0.0], [1467, 1985, 0.0], [1985, 2820, 0.0], [2820, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 4686, 0.0], [4686, 5183, 0.0], [5183, 5220, 0.0], [5220, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 28, 5.0], [28, 119, 18.0], [119, 227, 19.0], [227, 439, 42.0], [439, 815, 67.0], [815, 1467, 106.0], [1467, 1985, 87.0], [1985, 2820, 144.0], [2820, 3126, 48.0], [3126, 4686, 259.0], [4686, 5183, 84.0], [5183, 5220, 5.0], [5220, 5305, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.36363636], [28, 119, 0.0], [119, 227, 0.17821782], [227, 439, 0.0], [439, 815, 0.02185792], [815, 1467, 0.0], [1467, 1985, 0.0], [1985, 2820, 0.01838235], [2820, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 4686, 0.01314924], [4686, 5183, 0.00410678], [5183, 5220, 0.0], [5220, 5305, 0.13333333]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 28, 0.0], [28, 119, 0.0], [119, 227, 0.0], [227, 439, 0.0], [439, 815, 0.0], [815, 1467, 0.0], [1467, 1985, 0.0], [1985, 2820, 0.0], [2820, 3126, 0.0], [3126, 4686, 0.0], [4686, 5183, 0.0], [5183, 5220, 0.0], [5220, 5305, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 28, 0.21428571], [28, 119, 0.05494505], [119, 227, 0.07407407], [227, 439, 0.02358491], [439, 815, 0.03723404], [815, 1467, 0.04294479], [1467, 1985, 0.02509653], [1985, 2820, 0.03473054], [2820, 3126, 0.00653595], [3126, 4686, 0.0275641], [4686, 5183, 0.02012072], [5183, 5220, 0.08108108], [5220, 5305, 0.07058824]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5305, 0.70046347]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5305, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5305, 0.64503795]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5305, -146.41527638]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5305, 77.98280533]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5305, 11.51885462]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5305, 39.0]]} |
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The Post-COVID Tech Industry and How It Affects You
ByGeek Insider Hours September 30, 2022 October 2, 2022
The coronavirus pandemic has affected everyone the world over. Many industries have seen delays and complications because of COVID-19. The technology industry is no different, having seen major changes during and after COVID.
The technology industry may be one of the most affected industries. Some of those effects have been positive, while others have been much more negative.
Whether the changes and consequences are positive or negative, there are major ripple effects. People outside the technology industry are feeling them too.
The biggest shift is the move to all things virtual. Almost every business and service provider has created a way for employees and customers to interact without face-to-face interaction but more screen time. This shift to a more virtual environment has also created more opportunities for independent contractors.
These positions offer flexibility, for both the employer and employee, but they also create a lot more questions. Individuals who move from full-time work to contract work are left to fill in a lot of blanks, like health care and auto insurance for independent contractors.
Change can be great, but there’s always a give and take. There’s always a time of growth and stretching. Good things come out of that growth, but it’s not all good.
COVID and the Good
First, the good news: COVID has caused a boon in the technology industry. The increased demand across many industries has required more from the technology industry.
The truth is the COVID-19 pandemic has increased the need for technology in our lives in a way that was unimaginable before.
Everything from the workplace and our schools to our grocery stores and stadiums has implemented new pieces of technology. Even the money we use has changed with COVID-19 and the introduction of Bitcoin.
The workplace has created a lot of demand for technology. Post-COVID, almost 82% of workplaces are allowing their workers to work from home. This creates a need for virtual interactions and workflow systems. Products like Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and Slack have helped fill the gaps.
These web-based systems may not seem like an increase in demand from the tech industry, but it has. More people working from home require more bandwidth from internet providers, and therefore more computers and pieces of equipment need to be created, disbursed, and maintained.
Limited Contact
A virus that is highly contagious and spread through close contact means there is a greater need for limited contact. The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the need for new technologies that help limit person-to-person contact.
As a result, the technology industry has seen an incredible increase in demand for touchless technologies and automated robots. Both of these technologies help keep the world moving in both production and customer-facing industries, but it also opens more doors for advancements.
The shift in the world has highlighted the need for change across other industries. One interesting area is car insurance. With more individuals turning to a less traditional method of employment, like independent contracting, there is less need for traditional car insurance.
Independent contractors may use their personal cars less often and need different coverage. It’s also possible these individuals will use their personal cars for business ventures. In both of these cases, car insurance coverage must change.
If you find yourself making the move to independent contracting, then it’s time to answer some nagging questions. Start with your car insurance and make the necessary changes to protect yourself and your car. Look into rates by your car’s make and model; the average insurance cost for a Dodge Charger will be different than those for a Ford F150.
COVID and Chips
While it would seem the majority of the changes are positive, there is one area that has caused major problems. A large portion of the world’s industry runs through microchips — everything from computers and cellphones to our vehicles.
The issue isn’t a simple one, either. The chips necessary to make these systems run are delayed or completely unavailable due to massive shortages. These issues won’t be resolved quickly.
Longer delays and continuing shortages across many industries will force more inconsistencies in production and function. This can have major impacts on other areas of technology and industry. Coupled with higher demand for these technologies, these issues might mean even more delays in necessary pieces of equipment.
The delays and shortages have also called into question the security of data and personal information. Now everywhere you look there are thousands of VPNs and promises of digital security. It can be hard to know who to trust.
COVID didn’t disrupt just one area of our lives. It’s pushed each and every one of us to reevaluate how we operate in every aspect of our daily lives. While some of the changes have been positive, there could be more stress and strain in the coming months.
Laura Gunn writes and researches for the car insurance site, CarInsuranceComparison.com. Her husband works in the tech industry and stays up to date on the advances, changes, and concerns.
Geek Insider
This post is published by the Geek Insider staff, including our editors or publisher. Enjoy and please don't forget to leave us a comment!
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Exclusive: “Stranger Fruit” Breathes New Life into the Story of Mike Brown. A Review #SXSW
The screening began with Mike Brown Sr. and director Jason Pollock requesting a moment of silence from the crowd in memory of Mike Brown Jr. There was, for me, a […]
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Thermal gasification turns biomass or waste fuel into producer gas, which can then be used in heat and power production. The fuel can originate from wood, agricultural residues or municipal solid waste. The energy can be used as heat in industrial processes, as electricity using gas engine or gas turbine, or in combined heat and power (CHP) production. Combined heat and power production is very efficient, allowing more than 90% of the energy contents of the fuel to be harnessed. Gasification increases the fuel to power efficiency of the biomass fuels, and it is the most efficient method to recover the energy content of waste materials.
Biomass gasification has attracted interest in the past 20–30 years due to the growing attention to the use of green and sustainable energy. Considerable efforts have been made on developing and applying this gasification system into an established and practical, but also competitive technology. The versatility of the gases produced using biomass gasification is the main driver for the interest this technology.
Geneset gasification generates 150 - 2000 kW of electrical power and 250 - 4000 kW of thermal power, making it optimal power and energy solution for communities, industries, large farms, hospitals, schools etc. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12254 | {"url": "https://geneset.com/renewable-energy/technology/biomass-gasification", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "geneset.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:40:13Z", "digest": "sha1:LPBZBKYXBPWPLRBUZAEDPNQYZFC75LHO"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1269, 1269.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1269, 2995.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1269, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1269, 106.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1269, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1269, 192.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1269, 0.35682819]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1269, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1269, 0.01917546]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1269, 0.03451582]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1269, 0.042186]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1269, 0.00440529]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1269, 0.14977974]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1269, 0.55778894]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1269, 5.24120603]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1269, 4.37360458]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1269, 199.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 644, 1.0], [644, 1059, 1.0], [1059, 1269, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 644, 0.0], [644, 1059, 0.0], [1059, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 644, 106.0], [644, 1059, 62.0], [1059, 1269, 31.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 644, 0.00317965], [644, 1059, 0.0097561], [1059, 1269, 0.07]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 644, 0.0], [644, 1059, 0.0], [1059, 1269, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 644, 0.01242236], [644, 1059, 0.00722892], [1059, 1269, 0.01428571]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1269, 0.32713568]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1269, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1269, 0.17164636]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1269, -39.90325719]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1269, 10.36534366]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1269, 25.66966535]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1269, 9.0]]} |
Yoga and Stretching (online)
January 30 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm PST Event Series
Experience with yoga or stretching is not required. This class is designed to be approachable by all populations, regardless of fitness level. Moves in class are broken down in a slow and manageable manner. The intention of the class is to move a little and have a lot of fun – even if you don’t perform each move perfectly. This class is recurring:Monday: 11am - […]
11:30 am - 1:00 pm Event Series
Gentle Yoga–Rainbow Recreation
January 30 @ 11:30 am - 1:00 pm PST Event Series
Stretch, move, and align your body with a focus on the breath. Increase strength, stamina, and a sense of well-being. Chair-seated participants are welcome. An LGBTQ+ affirming space. Open to everyone. Fee-based class, scholarships available. Late registration may be possible. Jan 9, 2023 - Mar 13, 2023, Mondays 11:45 AM - 12:45 PM Exception date(s): 16 Jan 2023 / 20 Feb 2023 Register here: Rainbow Recreation […]
Strength & Balance
January 31 @ 3:45 pm - 4:25 pm PST Event Series
Join us for this 40-minute movement-based class that integrates full-body strength, balance, and core-strengthening exercises. Exercises will focus on strengthening the major muscle groups of the body in vertical and horizontal positions for strength and challenging our static and dynamic balance. In this virtually-taught class, we will use our own body weight using a chair for balance for support and a mat to aid various […]
Tai Chi Chih – Rainbow Recreation
February 2 @ 10:30 am - 11:30 am PST Event Series
A meditative Tai Chi practice for toning and enlivening the body. Chair-seated students are welcome. An LGBTQ+ affirming space. Open to everyone. Fee-based class, scholarships available. Late registration possible. Jan 12, 2023 - Mar 16, 2023 Thursdays 10:30 AM - 11:30 AM Register here: Rainbow Recreation Tai Chi Chih
February 2 @ 7:30 pm - 9:30 pm PST Event Series
GLORIA: A LIFE Presented by Strawberry Theatre Workshop January 19- February 18 Thu-Fri-Sat 7:30 pm MAINSTAGE THEATREFive decades after Gloria Steinem began raising her voice for equality and championing the voices of others, she remains a leader of the American women’s movement. Emily Mann's play traces the progress of Steinem's extraordinary life, from her undercover Playboy Bunny exposé in the 1960s, through her founding of […]
Qigong (online)
Join instructor Kimberly Ivy, founder of Seattle’s Embrace the Moon Tai Chi and Qigong for a free, online, 10-week course: Introduction to Qigong. Qigong is a practice of contemplative movement that is one of the main branches of Chinese medicine. Qigong helps us to understand Yin/Yang philosophy, meditation, breath, and movement. All these beautiful flows harmonize the body, mind, and spirit with nature and provide […]
Seattle Women’s Chorus: 20th Anniversary Concert & Celebration
Come out and Get the Party Started with songs from Lesley Gore and Pink, and inspiring music from Nina Simone and Lizzo! Seattle Women's Chorus 20th anniversary show includes tunes from female-identified composers that celebrate where we’ve been and where we’re going. Tickets on sale now for both matinee and evening shows. Plus, if you can't attend the concert in-person, you can watch the Saturday, […]
Stronger Together: LGBTQ+ Self Defense Class for Ages 15+
February 5 @ 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm PST
Stronger Together: an LGBTQ+ Self Defense Class for Ages 15+ Sponsored/Created by Pride Across the Bridge and Axton Burton, founder/organizer of Redmond Pride '22
February 6 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm PST Event Series
February 6 @ 11:30 am - 1:00 pm PST Event Series
Experience with yoga or stretching is not required. This class is designed to be approachable by all populations, regardless of fitness level. Moves in class are broken down in a slow and manageable manner. The intention of the class is to move a little and have a lot of fun – even if you don’t perform each move perfectly. This class is recurring: Monday: 11am […]
February 10 @ 10:30 am - 11:30 am PST Event Series
February 10 @ 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm PST Event Series
February 13 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm PST Event Series
February 13 @ 11:30 am - 1:00 pm PST Event Series
For the Love of Our Elders First Annual Valentine’s Luncheon
February 14 @ 11:00 am - 3:00 pm PST
FOR THE LOVE OF OUR ELDERS Free Native Elders luncheon Tuesday February 14th! -- 11am to 3pm Daybreak Star Indian Cultural Center: 5011 Bernie Whitebear Way, Seattle, WA 98199 More info: https://www.facebook.com/uiatf/
A free, online support group. Third Tuesday of each month, 6:30-8 p.m. The group is for those who are unpaid or family caregivers for someone who is living with dementia To register or learn more, contact: Lionel Wang 206.854.4700 | [email protected] Visit alzwa.org to learn more about caregiver programs and resources. To further extend your network of support, visit our online community, ALZ connected®, at […]
Movie Club: February – Moonlight
February 24 @ 6:00 pm - 8:30 pm PST
Friday, Feb 24 | 6:00 – 8:30pm : Movie - Moonlight With the 2023 Oscars awards broadcast in March, GenPride revisits the rich, deep film that swept the Oscars in 2017, MOONLIGHT, which won Best Picture, Best Screenplay, and Best Supporting Actor. -- In MOONLIGHT, a young Black man grapples with his identity and sexuality, while experiencing everyday struggles of violence and rejection in childhood, […]
March 1 @ 3:30 pm - 4:30 pm PST Event Series
March 2 @ 10:30 am - 11:30 am PST Event Series
All Levels Trans-Friendly Dance Class, with Sean Dorsey Dance Company (SFO)
March 4 @ 11:00 am - 12:30 pm PST Event Series
ALWAYS WANTED TO DANCE BUT… DIDN’T FEEL COMFORTABLE TRYING, BECAUSE YOU ARE TRANSGENDER, NON-BINARY OR LGBQI2S+? TERRIFIED BEGINNERS WELCOME! This all-levels, super-friendly workshop led by transgender choreographer Sean Dorsey and his all-queer/gender-nonconforming/non-binary company will lead us through mindful breathing, meditation, a gentle warmup, movement exercises … and then creative self-expression through movement! For ALL levels – including terrified “non-dancers”! 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Concrete and metal structures
Foundation design and retaining walls
Installation of precast concrete piles by static immersion
Redesign and optimization of projects
Sheet piling and retaining walls
Static compaction of soils
Reports and tests
QUALITY, ECONOMY, HIGH PERFORMANCE
PortfolioContact
GEOPILE has been active in the romanian markets since 2016.
Optimization of design solutions for pile foundations, taking into account the mutual influence of piles and the operation of a low grate on their load-bearing capacity. Thanks to the joint efforts of scientists, designers and builders, significant progress has been made both in this field of construction and in construction in general, which has made it possible to bring the design of pilot foundations to the modern level.
The foundation is a very responsible and technologically difficult stage of building a house.
Most customers do not understand the importance of the foundation and try to save on it. In our company, prices for foundations are slightly higher than those of competitors, but this is due to the high quality of work and adherence to technology.
Driving piles is the most modern method of piling foundations for residential and industrial construction, used all over the world. This method is most in demand in Europe and Asia. Modern technology even plunges heavy piles with a large cross-section – 350 × 350 mm and 400 × 400 mm.
Soil compaction methods are divided into:
-surface, when compacting effects are applied to the surface and lead to compaction of a relatively small layer of soil
-deep, when compacting effects are transmitted by significant depths of the soil massif.
→ The surface seal is made
∙ rolling etc.
At the initial stage of construction, the soil is in its natural state – not compacted. After an increase in the load on the soil, which is provided by the new structure, the soil is compacted, not only under the facility being built, but also in its immediate surroundings. Such physical processes threaten closely spaced buildings with deformation and violation of integrity. In order to prevent undesirable consequences, sheet piling of foundation pits or “sheet pile wall” is used.
We manufacture steel structures and heavy reinforced concrete structures (RC), during the construction of buildings and structures we produce various types of iron / concrete work.
Steel structures include not only towers, beams, columns, etc. Installation of steel structures and installation of reinforced concrete structures is carried out for the construction of the following steel objects
We produce works of the highest quality and are responsible for the result.
Certified Experience
Our company is fully certified. All employees are highly qualified and the equipment is reliable.
We always care about our clients and are happy to offer flexible payment systems to our partners.
We give a quality guarantee for all work carried out.
GEOPILE S.R.L. on the market since 2016. We have vast experience in the field.
Our experts are always ready to provide you with the necessary support and advice on any issues.
Customers & Partners
Adress: România, Constanța, bd. Tomis 46, cam. 3 Tel: +40736977215
E-mail: [email protected]
Monday-Saturday: 8:00-18:00
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Vancouver seventh-best place in Canada to be a woman; Victoria takes top spot
By Business in Vancouver | Link to Article
Vancouver ranks seventh in Canada in a list of the best places for women to live, according to a July 15 Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.
The list is based on a study that compared leadership, health, personal security, education and economic security in 25 Canadian cities.
Women in Vancouver score highly in terms of health, educational attainment, leadership roles and having a relatively small wage gap in full-time jobs.
Vancouver women have the country’s longest life expectancy, with women living 86 years on average compared with 81 for men. Sixty four per cent of women rate their health as very good or excellent (61% for men).
Women in this city are more likely than men to hold university degrees (27% compared with 26% for men). They are also more likely than men to have completed high school or college.
Five out of every 11 elected positions in the City of Vancouver are held by women.
The wage gap between men and women in Vancouver is close to the national average of 70% and is well behind Gatineau, Quebec, where women earn 87 cents on the male dollar.
Vancouver’s wage gap narrows significantly for full-time workers. When only examining those in full-time positions, women earn 83% of what men earn.
Victoria tops the list overall, according to the study, thanks to factors such as a relatively small wage gap and a high percentage of female politicians. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12257 | {"url": "https://getintheknow.ca/news/vancouver-seventh-best-place-in-canada-to-be-a-woman-victoria-takes-top-spot/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "getintheknow.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:42:43Z", "digest": "sha1:IJRSWBOP5EU774NFEQHNFYUUG4PW36PG"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1505, 1505.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1505, 7509.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1505, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1505, 327.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1505, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1505, 221.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1505, 0.35880399]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1505, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1505, 0.06942149]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1505, 0.0231405]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1505, 0.02644628]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1505, 0.03305785]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1505, 0.16611296]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1505, 0.5546875]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1505, 4.7265625]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1505, 4.61872846]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1505, 256.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 78, 0.0], [78, 121, 0.0], [121, 267, 1.0], [267, 404, 1.0], [404, 555, 1.0], [555, 767, 1.0], [767, 948, 1.0], [948, 1031, 1.0], [1031, 1202, 1.0], [1202, 1351, 1.0], [1351, 1505, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 78, 0.0], [78, 121, 0.0], [121, 267, 0.0], [267, 404, 0.0], [404, 555, 0.0], [555, 767, 0.0], [767, 948, 0.0], [948, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 78, 13.0], [78, 121, 7.0], [121, 267, 26.0], [267, 404, 21.0], [404, 555, 23.0], [555, 767, 37.0], [767, 948, 33.0], [948, 1031, 16.0], [1031, 1202, 32.0], [1202, 1351, 22.0], [1351, 1505, 26.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 78, 0.0], [78, 121, 0.0], [121, 267, 0.01398601], [267, 404, 0.01515152], [404, 555, 0.0], [555, 767, 0.02926829], [767, 948, 0.02298851], [948, 1031, 0.02469136], [1031, 1202, 0.02409639], [1202, 1351, 0.01408451], [1351, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 78, 0.0], [78, 121, 0.0], [121, 267, 0.0], [267, 404, 0.0], [404, 555, 0.0], [555, 767, 0.0], [767, 948, 0.0], [948, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1202, 0.0], [1202, 1351, 0.0], [1351, 1505, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 78, 0.03846154], [78, 121, 0.11627907], [121, 267, 0.04794521], [267, 404, 0.01459854], [404, 555, 0.01324503], [555, 767, 0.00943396], [767, 948, 0.01104972], [948, 1031, 0.03614458], [1031, 1202, 0.02339181], [1202, 1351, 0.01342282], [1351, 1505, 0.00649351]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1505, 0.78397387]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1505, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1505, 0.25999987]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1505, -69.49401232]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1505, 35.13138221]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1505, 12.501176]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1505, 12.0]]} |
Senator Hertzberg Calls on Metro to Amend its Expenditure Plan, Include Project for CSUN
The $120 billion plan for LA County transportation improvements over the next 50 years provides no guarantees for state’s largest CSU campus
SACRAMENTO – Sen. Bob Hertzberg, D-Van Nuys, issued a call today to the Los Angeles County Metropolitan (Metro) Board to consider amending its expenditure plan for a proposed sales tax measure scheduled to be placed on the November ballot and include specific projects benefiting
CSUN.
The board is scheduled to vote on June 23rd on the plan and placing the tax measure on the ballot. If approved by voters, the sales tax increase would provide an estimated $120 billion over the next 50 years to fund transportation infrastructure improvements throughout the county.
“The Metro expenditure plan is the product of a lot of hard work and thoughtfulness, but it has one glaring omission: CSUN,” Hertzberg said. “As the state’s largest Cal State campus with nearly 50,000 students, workers and faculty, CSUN draws commuters from throughout Los Angeles County, and it desperately needs public transportation options.”
The Metro plan includes some money that could be accessed for projects around CSUN, but it fails to tie any money to specific projects. That lack of a guarantee means the money could easily go elsewhere.
Zev Yaroslavsky, a former Los Angeles County supervisor representing the Valley, and Richard Katz, chair of the Valley Economic Alliance, have also fought for transportation projects serving CSUN.
“A lot of work has gone into Metro’s plan, with a great deal of consideration given to San Fernando Valley projects, and we appreciate that,” said Yaroslavsky and Katz in a joint statement. “The northern part of the
Valley – and CSUN in particular, being the Valley’s largest public employer – needs public transportation solutions. It’s not too late for Metro to make adjustments to its plan to meet those needs.”
CSUN President Dianne Harrison has talked and written frequently about the importance of transportation to the university’s students.
“Quality mass transit for many of our students, who come from throughout the region, is not mere convenience,” Harrison said. “It is an essential link to earning a college degree, improving the fates of their families and powering the organizations and businesses that lift Los Angeles.”
Two transportation summits held by Hertzberg brought attention to CSUN’s transportation woes, with students telling stories about spending hours on multiple bus lines just to get to campus and having to make separate arrangements to get home because bus service often stops before evening classes finish. Furthermore, surface streets are clogged, with 200,000 single-occupancy car trips made to campus each week, and parking around campus is almost impossible to find.
CSUN is a countywide campus and it offers opportunity for upward mobility. Each year, there are more degrees earned by under-represented minorities at CSUN than any other university in California. In addition, CSUN graduates more teachers every year than the entire UC system combined, and there are 19,900 Pell Grant recipients at CSUN, the second most recipients in the entire nation.
“A comprehensive transportation plan for the county is important for our future, and I would like to support Metro’s plan, but I may not be able to if CSUN is ignored,” Hertzberg said. “It’s easy to fix this – by using funds already within the plan and attaching them to a specific project benefiting CSUN. A few simple changes can provide CSUN the guarantees it deserves without undercutting any of the plan’s other priorities or projects.”
Hertzberg took out a full page ad in the Los Angeles Daily News on Wednesday advocating for CSUN transportation improvements and encouraging San Fernando Valley residents to provide their input to the Metro board. A copy of the ad is attached.
About Metro’s Los Angeles County Traffic Improvement Plan
Q: What is the Traffic Improvement Plan?
A: Metro’s plan for spending the $120 billion in estimated revenues over the next 50 years from a sales tax measure that is scheduled to appear on the county’s November ballot. It includes a long list of infrastructure projects, from addressing the Sepulveda Pass to increasing connectivity to LAX, and will essentially govern major transportation improvements over the next five decades.
Q: Is the plan final?
A: No. While Metro has circulated a final draft of the expenditure plan, it has not voted on it. The plan will become final if the Metro board approves it. A board vote is scheduled for June 23rd. In addition, county voters would have to approve the sales tax by a two-thirds majority in November.
Q: Some say Metro’s plan includes funding for CSUN improvements. Does it?
A: The plan has other projects designated for the San Fernando Valley, but they are not connected to CSUN. Metro’s plan has two line items that could be accessed for CSUN projects in the future: $50 million for regional bus rapid transit (BRT) projects, and $107 million that won’t become available until 2048. As the plan is written, however, there is no guarantee that a single dime from those pots of money will be used for projects benefiting CSUN. Metro’s plan is full of commitments to projects throughout the county, with specific timelines, but does not contain a single commitment to CSUN.
Q: Metro’s plan has been circulating for 90 days. Why raise the issue now?
A: The issue has been raised continuously for nine months. A transportation summit was held on CSUN campus on March 3. A broad coalition of San Fernando Valley leaders sent Metro a letter on April 21 requesting several changes to the plan, including funding for a BRT line connected to CSUN campus and guarantees the Valley would get its fair share of funding. Metro officials appeared open to the changes, but Metro’s latest draft plan, released on Friday, does not provide funding for the BRT line or any other CSUN project.
Q: Have other changes been made to Metro’s plan since it has circulated its draft?
A: Yes. In the Valley, the Orange Line has seen its scheduled improvements accelerated by five years on the start date and three years on the completion date. Throughout the county, more than a dozen projects have been accelerated a combined 42 years. Furthermore, three additional projects have been added at the end of the timeline of the plan.
Q: Metro officials say the sales tax can’t fund everything – every need can’t be in the plan. Why should CSUN be a priority?
A: CSUN is the largest Cal State University in the state, and it draws commuters from throughout Los Angeles County. As it is, CSUN has few public transportation options. Yet, it has nearly 50,000 students, faculty and workers and 320,000 alumni spread across the county. 17,000 (46 percent) of CSUN’s undergraduate students are Hispanic, compared with 5,600 at UCLA, which has the most of any UC school. CSUN has more Hispanic students than any other university in California, and each year more degrees earned by under-represented minorities at
CSUN than any other university in California. The university is a magnet for Los Angeles County’s upwardly mobile, so it makes little sense to have limited public transportation serving it.
For more information, visit Senator Hertzberg’s Web site.
Bob Hertzberg, chair of the Senate Committee on Governance and Finance, represents nearly 1 million San Fernando Valley residents of Senate District 18, which includes part of Burbank and the following communities in Los Angeles: Arleta, Granada Hills, Hansen Dam, Lake View Terrace, Mission Hills, North Hills, North Hollywood, part of Northridge, Pacoima, Panorama City, Sherman Oaks, Studio City, part of Sun Valley, Sylmar, Toluca Lake, Valley Glen, Valley Village, Van Nuys, the City of San Fernando and Universal City. See a district map at https://sd18.senate.ca.gov/district.
After serving in the Assembly from 1996-2002, including two years as Speaker, Hertzberg invested in solar, wind and electric-car projects; and worked for structural changes in government through the Think Long Committee of California. 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ByECS DIVISON, GICIA INDIA August 31, 2022 September 1, 2022
The CARB & EPA TSCA Title VI Certification program certifies composite wood in accordance with California Air Resources Board (CARB) Airborne Toxic Control Measure (ATCM) to reduce formaldehyde emissions from composite wood products with accordance to sections 93120-93120.12 and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) Title VI, 40 CFR Part 770. They both have the same goal of protecting public health, protecting ecological systems, and reducing climate change by limiting emissions of toxins into the air
The current potential for wood panel industry is expected to grow in recent years with MDF demand expecting to grow at 15-20% per annum over the next two years. The Plywood segment is also expected to see double digit volume growth as demand from plywood has resurrected from 2021 onwards and is expected to maintain the growth trajectory going ahead.
Apart from pent-up demand, key growth drivers in the medium term are rising such as income levels, urbanisation, real estate development, and housing for all, among others. Further, leading wood panel manufacturers are expected to grow at a faster pace, benefiting from market share gains from the unorganised sector, leveraging their strong distribution network. The government’s focus on making India an export hub provides strong export growth opportunities for the industry. Also, growth prospects of real estate industry are another good news for wood panel industry.
ByECS DIVISON, GICIA INDIA June 27, 2022 July 5, 2022
Increasing the use of wood-based panel in various applications whole over the world is expected to be a major factor operate the growth of the global wood-based panel market. In addition, currently people are more interested in interior designing and hence the increase in demand for interior designing and furniture in developed and developing economies…
Read More Global Wood Based Panel Market: Market Dynamics Continue | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12259 | {"url": "https://gicia.org/expected-to-show-good-growth-in-wood-panel-industry/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gicia.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:27:54Z", "digest": "sha1:DQO2RFTV4WARMVPURXZGOYH6WVJUBCWS"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2005, 2005.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2005, 4701.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2005, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2005, 117.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2005, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2005, 287.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2005, 0.27348066]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2005, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2005, 0.03026634]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2005, 0.02179177]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2005, 0.02663438]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2005, 0.04696133]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2005, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2005, 0.17127072]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2005, 0.60517799]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2005, 5.34627832]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2005, 0.00276243]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2005, 4.94197768]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2005, 309.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 604, 0.0], [604, 956, 1.0], [956, 1529, 1.0], [1529, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 604, 0.0], [604, 956, 0.0], [956, 1529, 0.0], [1529, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 10.0], [61, 604, 78.0], [604, 956, 60.0], [956, 1529, 86.0], [1529, 1583, 10.0], [1583, 1939, 55.0], [1939, 2005, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.19298246], [61, 604, 0.03231939], [604, 956, 0.02305476], [956, 1529, 0.0], [1529, 1583, 0.22], [1583, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 604, 0.0], [604, 956, 0.0], [956, 1529, 0.0], [1529, 1583, 0.0], [1583, 1939, 0.0], [1939, 2005, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.37704918], [61, 604, 0.09944751], [604, 956, 0.01704545], [956, 1529, 0.008726], [1529, 1583, 0.42592593], [1583, 1939, 0.00561798], [1939, 2005, 0.15151515]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2005, 0.00117731]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2005, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2005, 0.03734618]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2005, -133.31760003]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2005, -0.62853546]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2005, -2.9852995]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2005, 10.0]]} |
I was finally moved into my new place, and officially done traveling to and from every weekend. It was hard while I was attending school earlier in the year, but even harder, later down the line, while undergoing my radiation treatments. After a year of traveling, I was ready to finally ground myself again.
I spent most of the first month exploring the city with the infamous “YELP” app. It helped me find some good places to eat and people watch. I love watching people go about their day. I often wonder what it is they might be thinking about and what kinds of things they have planned. Observing body language can really tell you a lot about a person too. All in all, I was enjoying my time off. It was a time for me to think about what more I wanted to do with my life.
I’d say the biggest adjustment I had to make after moving to the city was coping with traffic and the aggressive nature of some of the people that live here. Being raised in Naples, people were far more relaxed and approachable. I felt like people in the city were always in a rush to get somewhere. Too busy to even smile. It’s such a foreign concept to me. Now, put these people in cars and you’ve got yourself a serious problem. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had someone show me “the finger”.
I’ve learned to brush it off though and just move out of the way. Life is just too short, and to be honest with you, it’s a small price to pay for the opportunity to live in a place that offers so much adventure and new possibilities. That includes the possibility of building new friendships. Even though I’ve had some unpleasant experiences, I’ve also managed to find some really great individuals.
*** Note to Reader ***
The amazingly adorable dog in the picture with me is my cute little boy Chico. He’ll be six this year. 🙂
The law of attraction…
Now was the time to get myself in order and start getting ready for the big move. I remember coming home the evening of October 30th 2013 after a long day at work and just wanting to jump in the shower and head to bed. Never mind dinner, I was to tired for that. While in the shower contemplating all of the things I needed to do prior to moving I stumbled across the same lump I had found early January in my left breast. I recall briefly playing the conversation I had with the doctor over in my head, “Because you are so young I would simply recommend for you to have it checked in 2 years. There is nothing you need to worry about.”
At that time only 9 months had past but, on a more recent note I had been feeling a lot of pain and discomfort. So much that I couldn’t sleep on that side so I figured checking in on it might be a good idea. As soon as I began to examine the area my heart grew heavy and my throat felt like it had a knot in it. It had grown! I was desperate for a second opinion in hopes of a different reaction so I asked the one person I knew could tell me if they noticed a difference, my mom.
I had shown it to her the first time around and knew she would give me her honest opinion. “Mom, remember the lump I had you feel in January? Can you feel it again and tell me if you think it’s grown?” She barely touched it and I could already tell what she was going to tell me. “You need to get it checked Elizabeth. It’s grown a lot. How did you not notice this before?” She was right, how didn’t I notice? I was so consumed with my plans that I had literally put it out of my mind. Never gave it a second thought.
Needless to say that night I couldn’t sleep. All I could think about were the calls I needed to make in order to get my testing scheduled. The following day I spoke to my boss. He immediately scheduled a mammogram and ultrasound for that very afternoon. “Why is this happening now?” I didn’t have time for bad news. I was moving in 2 months, had just transitioned from a runner to a triathlete and I felt better than I had in years. Well, at least that’s what I said out loud.
In reality I was scared. Fearful that I might not find another job, that I would find myself lost in a new city and farther than I had ever been from everything I’ve known. I couldn’t even find comfort in all of the prepping I was doing to ensure a smooth transition. I was full of self doubt. In the end however, non of that mattered to the law of attraction. All it heard me say was, “I want to grow and experience life differently. I want to find my calling and appreciate every gift life has to offer.” Well my fellow readers, that’s exactly what I got.
After my testing was done I was called into the back room to sit with the reading physician. I was the last one there and nervous to hear what she had to say, but at the same time felt I could handle any news given to me. “Regardless of the outcome there are options and I’m strong”. I kept repeating this in my head until she looked at me and said, “I’ve compared the results with your last exam and this doesn’t look good. We will have to do further testing but, I’m afraid the findings are similar to those of a patient with breast cancer”. What? The “C” word? Sure, I’ve heard and said it a million times before but, never did it make me feel as speechless. It literally took my breath away.
The worse part of it was that somehow I already knew she was going to tell me that and even than I wasn’t prepared to hear it. The law of attraction was giving me what I wanted, “a chance to grow and experience life differently. To find my calling and appreciate every gift life had to offer.” You see, I never specified what tools I wanted given to me to help me grow or what I wanted to experience differently in life. I just put my desire out there and the universe delivered it… | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12260 | {"url": "https://giftwithapinkribbon.com/tag/moving/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "giftwithapinkribbon.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:29:22Z", "digest": "sha1:IFHQUNAX3QYE2FPCCGKYV2YDXZ7E4M7F"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 5681, 5681.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5681, 7484.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5681, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5681, 59.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5681, 0.99]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5681, 259.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5681, 0.48864526]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5681, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5681, 0.04209584]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5681, 0.04209584]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5681, 0.01836095]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5681, 0.01836095]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5681, 0.01836095]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5681, 0.01164353]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5681, 0.00537394]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5681, 0.00582176]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5681, 0.05794832]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5681, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5681, 0.11824589]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5681, 0.40180995]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5681, 4.04162896]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5681, 0.00156617]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5681, 5.31601876]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5681, 1105.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 309, 1.0], [309, 777, 1.0], [777, 1280, 1.0], [1280, 1681, 1.0], [1681, 1704, 0.0], [1704, 1809, 0.0], [1809, 1832, 0.0], [1832, 2469, 1.0], [2469, 2950, 1.0], [2950, 3468, 1.0], [3468, 3945, 1.0], [3945, 4503, 1.0], [4503, 5199, 1.0], [5199, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 309, 0.0], [309, 777, 0.0], [777, 1280, 0.0], [1280, 1681, 0.0], [1681, 1704, 0.0], [1704, 1809, 0.0], [1809, 1832, 0.0], [1832, 2469, 0.0], [2469, 2950, 0.0], [2950, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3945, 0.0], [3945, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 5199, 0.0], [5199, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 309, 54.0], [309, 777, 94.0], [777, 1280, 95.0], [1280, 1681, 71.0], [1681, 1704, 3.0], [1704, 1809, 21.0], [1809, 1832, 4.0], [1832, 2469, 126.0], [2469, 2950, 103.0], [2950, 3468, 106.0], [3468, 3945, 91.0], [3945, 4503, 108.0], [4503, 5199, 135.0], [5199, 5681, 94.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 309, 0.0], [309, 777, 0.0], [777, 1280, 0.0], [1280, 1681, 0.0], [1681, 1704, 0.0], [1704, 1809, 0.0], [1809, 1832, 0.0], [1832, 2469, 0.0111465], [2469, 2950, 0.00211416], [2950, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3945, 0.00214592], [3945, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 5199, 0.0], [5199, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 309, 0.0], [309, 777, 0.0], [777, 1280, 0.0], [1280, 1681, 0.0], [1681, 1704, 0.0], [1704, 1809, 0.0], [1809, 1832, 0.0], [1832, 2469, 0.0], [2469, 2950, 0.0], [2950, 3468, 0.0], [3468, 3945, 0.0], [3945, 4503, 0.0], [4503, 5199, 0.0], [5199, 5681, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 309, 0.01618123], [309, 777, 0.02777778], [777, 1280, 0.01988072], [1280, 1681, 0.01496259], [1681, 1704, 0.08695652], [1704, 1809, 0.02857143], [1809, 1832, 0.04347826], [1832, 2469, 0.02354788], [2469, 2950, 0.02286902], [2950, 3468, 0.03088803], [3468, 3945, 0.03144654], [3945, 4503, 0.02867384], [4503, 5199, 0.02298851], [5199, 5681, 0.02282158]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5681, 0.76415533]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5681, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5681, 0.10417813]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5681, -17.26158845]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5681, 144.22022348]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5681, -759.65433711]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5681, 74.0]]} |
What are Product Videos and Why Are They Used In Marketing?
Video content is driving the way in content marketing campaigns across the web. Audiences desire to consume video content coupled with digital platforms preference for it means that a winning digital marketing formula, more often than not involves video content.
Product videos are simply a subset of video marketing content. Videos come in all shapes and sizes, however, a product video focuses solely on the product in question. In a world where e-commerce activity is very high and shoppers are increasingly buying products through social media, the ability to show off the product that is being sold effectively is highly sought after.
Through this article, I will fly you through what product videos are and how they actually show products off. As well as why they are used in marketing campaigns and the benefits they can have in an e-commerce environment.
Putting A Product In The Spotlight
The main aim of a product video is to put the full focus of the content on the product in question. This style of content exists to quickly show potential customers what it is they could be buying. Every product listed online will be accompanied by a selection of photos. This seems obvious.
Think of the product video as an extension of this. It’s a deeper showcase of the product, making the customer even more familiar with the physical look of the product. With more and more money being spent online, clarity of what is being purchased is vital to entice customers.
Therefore, producing pieces of video content that clearly depict what the product in question looks like is vital as part of the marketing campaign. Customers can be sold to in a range of different ways, however, if they don’t know what they are buying, they won’t buy it. This is why the visual clarity that a product video provides is priceless.
Highly Effective In Digital Marketing Campaigns
Digital platforms love video content. Beyond the visual impact they have on the audience, most digital platforms are now optimised towards video use.
This is most evident across social media platforms. Facebook and LinkedIn for example will push posts out further that include video content. This is a result of their drive to include higher quality and more informative content on their platforms.
But no matter the reason, this can be taken advantage of. Ensuring campaigns across social media are lead by strong video content will increase the chances of the end result being achieved.
This is true for both organic and paid campaigns. In fact, product videos are prime for paid campaigns. Short snappy video content performs well in social adverts. By their very nature, product videos share a lot of visual information in a short amount of time.
When trying to grab attention and share information as quickly as possible, high-quality footage of the product in question is just the way to do this. Various versions can then be edited with different copy to appeal to different audience segments.
These principles apply to digital marketing as a whole. Short, snappy and high-quality videos can share information quickly online. Apply this thinking to landing pages, email campaigns and direct mailouts and you’ll see the power that product videos have.
Dynamic Use Of Branding
This is the bonus benefit of product videos. Not only is the physical product displayed in all its glory, through motion graphics the product branding can be integrated in all sorts of dynamic ways.
Consistency throughout a marketing campaign is essential to ensure the target audience receive a focused message. This is absolutely possible with product videos. Through motion graphics, animated text and branded transitions, each video produced will have its own unique feel. It’s these extras that help bring it to life. You’re not just presenting the product itself, but the message behind the brand.
It’s this message that sells a product. Wider marketing principles are fully in play here. In a very short amount of time, a product video shares clear visuals of the product itself through the footage as well as the message of what the brand is all about through the animations.
These are the two elements at the heart of any successful advertising campaign. They are not always possible to achieve in one piece of content. This is what makes product videos so unique. They allow these two elements to be achieved in one piece of content!
High Quality Content
Nobody wants a potential customer to think what they are selling looks shoddy. The high-quality, close-up footage involved in a product video means this is not an issue. As long as the production behind the video is of a high standard, then the end result always paints your products in an unbelievable light.
This style of content is your opportunity to put your product in the shop window. The screen sitting in front of your customer is the equivalent of the glass in a shop window. Present what you’re selling in the way you want customers to see it. Product videos can be dressed with all sorts of props, creating a range of scenarios. Think of the cold dripping can or the superbly detailed digits on a watch. The quality this style of video provides enables you to make your customer feel the physicality of the product. Once they feel part of it, the sell is so much easier from there.
To top all of this off, a full TV production crew is no longer needed to get amazing results. When you picture everything I’ve been talking about you may think of a Coca-Cola advert. Sublime visuals on the can, but coming as a result of a super expensive ad campaign.
With short and snappy videos in this style, these visuals can be achieved away from this environment. So much of the quality of the end product is in the ideas behind the video and how they are pulled together with the animations. All it takes is a simple idea along with some amazing footage and you have yourself a short product video to rival the quality of some of the biggest companies in the world.
To segway out of that paragraph nicely, we just so happen to produce beautiful product videos of this standard here at Glacé Media. The added joy is that they are all produced remotely. All we need is your product posting to us and we’ll deal with the rest. Head over to our website to find out more about our product video production service.
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12261 | {"url": "https://glacemedia.com/what-are-product-videos-and-why-are-they-used-in-marketing/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "glacemedia.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:05:00Z", "digest": "sha1:BKYFEEHYFW6RCMIHJRIXHLOJUFMYTMBS"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 6424, 6424.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 6424, 6627.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 6424, 27.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 6424, 35.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 6424, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 6424, 307.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 6424, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 6424, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 6424, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 6424, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 6424, 0.44768856]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 6424, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 6424, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 6424, 0.01570881]], 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Tag: Abraham Lincoln Memorial Monument.
Day 90 & 91: Abraham Lincoln Memorial Monument & Henry B. Joy Monument
On September 6, 2021 By glampinginmyrvLeave a comment
Sunday, September 5, Day 90. The park is full of RVs from everywhere. Hubby and I enjoy walking around the campground looking at all of the different brands of RVs. Hubby also likes to look at license plates to see where everyone is from. It's been cold at night. In the mid 40s. If you've …
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Tag Archives: clinical trials
Guest Post: More Transparency Is Needed to Fight Grand Corruption in the Pharmaceutical Sector
Posted on June 26, 2018 by Matthew Stephenson
Today’s guest post is from Till Bruckner, the founder of TranspariMED:
In the pharmaceutical sector, public agencies are routinely handing over billions in public money to private companies for products whose value they cannot accurately assess, because the vendors control the flow of information generated by clinical trials. (Even the purchasing price is often kept secret, but that is another story.) If we observed this sort of opacity in the public procurement sector, it would immediately raise red flags. If public contractors were taking billions from governments in exchange for products of dubious quality that the governments cannot assess, the anticorruption community would be–rightly–up in arms. But for the pharmaceutical industry, this is business as usual.
Consider, as one particularly egregious example, what can only be described as an $18 billion heist of public money by a pharma company. In 2006, governments around the world began stockpiling Tamiflu, an anti-retroviral drug, due to fears that outbreaks of bird flu (and later swine flu) could turn into a lethal global pandemic. The evidence available at the time suggested that the drug was safe and effective at reducing the symptoms of influenza. In total, 96 counties accumulated enough Tamiflu to treat 350 million people. Then, in 2009, a doctor noticed that the results of eight clinical trials of Tamiflu were missing from the public record. (Worldwide, around half of all clinical trials have never reported their results.) After a struggle lasting four years, independent scientists finally got the company to turn over the relevant data from these trials—and concluded that the drug did little, if anything, to help patients.
This example is especially egregious, but it is not otherwise exceptional. Amazingly, comprehensive information on the safety and effectiveness of drugs is not only inaccessible to independent scientists, but also to government agencies. When a drug company applies for a marketing license, it has to submit detailed documentation from every relevant trial to regulatory agencies such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Regulators review these submissions, called Clinical Study Reports (CSRs) – and then promptly lock them away in their confidential archives. This is especially frustrating for scientists working for health technology agencies, who are tasked with assessing the cost-effectiveness of different drugs but are often unable to access CSRs. To date, only the European Medicines Agency systematically releases (some) CSRs.
Politicians have tried to bring transparency into the sector, but the laws they pass often remain unenforced. In the United States, the 2007 FDA Amendment Act made it compulsory for companies and universities to publish the summary results of some clinical trials on public registries. (Summary results are a kind of “executive summary” of a clinical trial; they are far shorter and less detailed than CSRs, but still better than nothing). In 2015, an investigation by STAT News found that pharmaceutical companies routinely violated the law. The law stipulates a fine of up to $10,000 for every day a result is overdue. In theory, Big Pharma has already racked up over $25 billion in fines. In practice, the FDA has yet to collect a single cent. In the European Union, a similar regulation exists, but there too it remains unenforced by national agencies. In Britain, a 2013 parliamentary inquiry called for greater transparency, but its recommendations were largely ignored.
Last December, a coalition of four health integrity organisations issuing a wake-up call for governments to finally get serious about clinical trial transparency. Transparency International Pharmaceuticals & Healthcare (PHP), TranspariMED, Cochrane, and the Collaboration for Research Integrity and Transparency (CRIT) released a study that documents in detail how opacity in the sector harms patients, prevents public health agencies from making informed decisions, wastes public health funds, slows down medical progress, and exposes shareholders to substantial risks. The study also shows that clinical trials can be made significantly more transparent without introducing new legislation. Public research funders could demand that grantees report the results of publicly funded trials. Regulators could make continued market access conditional on companies agreeing to make CSRs publicly available. And in many cases, simply enforcing the rules already on the book could make a huge difference – and the costs of enforcement could easily be covered by imposing fines for noncompliance.
The medical research community has long called for greater transparency in medical research. The AllTrials campaign, which calls for all clinical trials to be registered and fully reported, has attracted the support of over 700 groups, including the American Medical Association and dozens of patient groups, and TranspariMED is currently building a broader coalition to push for greater transparency in the sector. It’s high time for the wider anticorruption community to join the fray.
Posted in Guest Commentary | Tagged clinical trials, Cochrane, Collaboration for Research Integrity and Transparency, Food and Drug Administration, pharmaceutical industry, pharmaceuticals, Tamiflu, Till Bruckner, Transparency International, TranspariMED | Leave a reply | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12263 | {"url": "https://globalanticorruptionblog.com/tag/clinical-trials/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "globalanticorruptionblog.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:22:13Z", "digest": "sha1:YE3UEYTKFQF4J6VQOAXOY33VSJUMUMF7"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 5560, 5560.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5560, 10064.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5560, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5560, 313.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5560, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5560, 243.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5560, 0.35251799]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5560, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5560, 0.02088318]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5560, 0.02088318]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5560, 0.02436372]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5560, 0.01435719]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5560, 0.01087666]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5560, 0.00822199]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5560, 0.15107914]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5560, 0.50120192]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5560, 5.52524038]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5560, 5.48513941]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5560, 832.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 125, 0.0], [125, 171, 0.0], [171, 242, 0.0], [242, 946, 1.0], [946, 1885, 1.0], [1885, 2735, 1.0], [2735, 3712, 1.0], [3712, 4802, 1.0], [4802, 5290, 1.0], [5290, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 125, 0.0], [125, 171, 0.0], [171, 242, 0.0], [242, 946, 0.0], [946, 1885, 0.0], [1885, 2735, 0.0], [2735, 3712, 0.0], [3712, 4802, 0.0], [4802, 5290, 0.0], [5290, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 30, 4.0], [30, 125, 14.0], [125, 171, 8.0], [171, 242, 11.0], [242, 946, 105.0], [946, 1885, 151.0], [1885, 2735, 123.0], [2735, 3712, 159.0], [3712, 4802, 153.0], [4802, 5290, 74.0], [5290, 5560, 30.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 125, 0.0], [125, 171, 0.13636364], [171, 242, 0.0], [242, 946, 0.0], [946, 1885, 0.01642935], [1885, 2735, 0.0], [2735, 3712, 0.01997897], [3712, 4802, 0.0], [4802, 5290, 0.00625], [5290, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 30, 0.0], [30, 125, 0.0], [125, 171, 0.0], [171, 242, 0.0], [242, 946, 0.0], [946, 1885, 0.0], [1885, 2735, 0.0], [2735, 3712, 0.0], [3712, 4802, 0.0], [4802, 5290, 0.0], [5290, 5560, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 30, 0.06666667], [30, 125, 0.11578947], [125, 171, 0.08695652], [171, 242, 0.09859155], [242, 946, 0.00710227], [946, 1885, 0.01064963], [1885, 2735, 0.03411765], [2735, 3712, 0.03275333], [3712, 4802, 0.0266055], [4802, 5290, 0.02459016], [5290, 5560, 0.08148148]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5560, 0.40081751]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5560, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5560, 0.2681092]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5560, -195.97102182]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5560, 75.74236646]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5560, 35.15047882]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5560, 39.0]]} |
Colombia Responde Program Helps to Increase Micro-financing Services
Colombia Responde Program Helps to Increase Microfinance Services
Lack of financial education and limited access to financial services are two of the main constraints that reduce farmers´ income generation capacities in Montes de Maria, Colombia. A 2012 study conducted by the institution Crezcamos determined that only 20 percent of the population in Montes de Maria had savings, and five percent had a bank account. Additionally, even though 60 percent expressed having access to loans, only 30 percent of them acquired those loans through formal financial institutions.
These findings demonstrate that access to financial services should be a priority. However, training is fundamental to increase income opportunities since access to financial services without training may lead to over-indebtedness.
Colombia Responde, a USAID-funded initiative implemented by Global Communities in Montes de Maria, supported the financial institution Crezcamos to open new offices in El Carmen de Bolivar and San Onofre to implement a project that provides training and access to financial services to the most vulnerable rural populations. During 2013, Crezcamos will open two other offices in San Jacinto and Ovejas.
Crezcamos has not only trained populations in financial literacy, but it has also provided access to financial services such as microloans and micro-insurances.
Thus far, the project has benefited 1,325 families, granting microloans to 674 women and 651 men through 1,325 microloans, 1,202 life micro-insurances and 1,256 home micro-insurances, for a total of US $1,283,648. Additionally, 56 women and 48 men received financial education training. In total, 4,335 people have benefited in Montes de Maria from financial trainings.
This initiative has focused on women and other vulnerable populations living in the most isolated rural areas. Not only has the program increased economic access, but beneficiaries have also acknowledged that it has also increased the economic role of women in the family economy. Additionally, the new San Onofre office means increasing access to other vulnerable populations such as indigenous people and Afro-Colombians.
Read more about Global Communities’ work in Colombia.
Published 01/08/2013 by Global Communities in Global Communities Archives,
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Global Communities’ Vice President for Communications on the Importance of Community-based Development
Global Communities’ Vice President for Communications & Public Affairs on the Importance of Community-based Development David Humphries, Vice President for Communications & Public Affairs was recently interviewed by Through the Noise, a weekly podcast, where he talked about, in his “melodic Scottish accent” the importance of Global Communities’ community-based approach to development. 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REACH Partners With Mike O'Callaghan Military Medical Center in Nevada
The partnership gives REACH exclusive transfer rights for patients flown from William Bee Ririe Hospital in Ely, Nevada to the military medical center at Nellis Air Force Base.
REACH Air Medical Services (REACH), a leading air medical transportation provider, announced today that it is collaborating with Mike O'Callaghan Military Medical Center at Nellis Air Force Base. Through the collaborative efforts, REACH has been given exclusive transfer rights for patients flown from William Bee Ririe Hospital in Ely, Nev., to Mike O'Callaghan Military Medical Center located at Nellis Air Force Base.
“We are proud to work with Mike O’Callaghan Military Medical Center to provide air medical transfers for William Bee Ririe patients that require a higher level of care,” said Tom Liebman, regional director for REACH parent company, Global Medical Response. “We embrace the concept of readiness and know that our work together will enable our military medical force to be prepared at a moment’s notice. We have no doubt it will save lives on the battlefield and at facilities like Mike O’Callaghan through increased patient volume and hands-on experience. This is truly something we fully support.”
On October 28, crew members from the REACH base in Ely, Nev., participated in their first specialized training at Nellis Air Force Base, where they were able to share best practices for the safe loading and unloading of patients from air medical aircraft. Starting in early November, REACH will begin to transfer select patients from the critical access hospital in Ely to Mike O'Callaghan Military Medical Center for specialized care and treatment unavailable in Northern Nevada. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12265 | {"url": "https://globalmedicalresponse.com/news/reach-partners-with-mike-o-callaghan-military-medical-center-at-nellis-air-force-base", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "globalmedicalresponse.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:40:55Z", "digest": "sha1:JWRRQHHY772LXJAW6CPUIMOWNHHYKV3C"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1747, 1747.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1747, 6883.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1747, 5.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1747, 159.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1747, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1747, 255.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1747, 0.28980892]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1747, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1747, 0.09833795]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1747, 0.27354571]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1747, 0.24584488]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1747, 0.15512465]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1747, 0.15512465]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1747, 0.09833795]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1747, 0.07271468]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1747, 0.08725762]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1747, 0.08033241]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1747, 0.04458599]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1747, 0.11146497]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1747, 0.49632353]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1747, 5.30882353]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1747, 4.56847138]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1747, 272.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 248, 1.0], [248, 669, 1.0], [669, 1267, 1.0], [1267, 1747, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 248, 0.0], [248, 669, 0.0], [669, 1267, 0.0], [1267, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 71, 10.0], [71, 248, 28.0], [248, 669, 62.0], [669, 1267, 96.0], [1267, 1747, 76.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 248, 0.0], [248, 669, 0.0], [669, 1267, 0.0], [1267, 1747, 0.00424628]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 71, 0.0], [71, 248, 0.0], [248, 669, 0.0], [669, 1267, 0.0], [1267, 1747, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 71, 0.1971831], [71, 248, 0.09039548], [248, 669, 0.10688836], [669, 1267, 0.04347826], [1267, 1747, 0.06041667]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1747, 0.08056825]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1747, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1747, 0.85359722]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1747, -93.53417551]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1747, 19.99107434]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1747, -39.32529488]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1747, 11.0]]} |
The Dream of Hong Ik Ingan and the Great Harmony (大同)
The following editorial was published in HanKooki by Mr. Chul-Soon Im and attendee of the Global Peace Convention 2013 from Korea. The Global Peace Convention, held in Malaysia, was organized by the Global Peace Foundation, began by Chairman Dr. Hyun Jin Moon, promoting the vision of “One Family under God.”
The GPF Convention in Malaysia proposed new initiatives for peace. The proposed “UN Interfaith Council” is to promote Hong Ik Ingan and the Great Harmony (大同).
The national slogan of Malaysia is “Satu Malaysia”, one Malaysia. Numerous religions of the world co-exist in Malaysia, and its population’s ethnic profile consists of Malays, Chinese, and Indian at the ratio of 6:3:1. The Department of National Unity and Integration, which was launched under the Office of Prime Minister in 1969, has coped well with the structural complexity of the multi-racial, multi-cultural, and multi-religious Malaysian society by seeking a united identity and peaceful coexistence.
In such a country, it is natural to discuss ways to realize the shared prosperity of mankind and sustainable peace. The 2013 annual convention of the Global Peace Foundation (GPF) was held in Kuala Lumpur from December 5th to 8th under the theme of “Unity in Diversity”. About 400 participants from 40 countries around the world discussed how to realize interfaith cooperation, women’s leadership, development of families and regional communities, and media ethics. Many participants across the globe such as a group of former presidents and prime ministers from Latin America made the convention resemble the UN General Assembly.
The most noteworthy of the action plans and resolutions adopted at the convention is the proposal by GPF founder and Chairman Moon Hyun-jin to create an interfaith peace council at the United Nations. The rationale behind the proposal is as follows: “The most dangerous and cruel conflicts since the beginning of history have been religious conflicts. Today we are facing a greater risk of religious war as religious passion is coupled with weapons of mass destruction. Therefore, the world needs an interfaith movement which takes actions beyond dialogue and mutual recognition. The existing UN, the legacy of the Cold War, is no longer effective. So we need a new organization”. It is true that the UN is limited when addressing religiously-based conflicts are rooted on faith. The UN, by nature is designed to promote a balance and status quo. As Samuel Huntington pointed out, this international organization is not equipped with the structure and capacity to deal with growing religious conflicts. In this sense, this proposal is worth discussion and efforts towards implementation.
Chairman Moon presented the vision of One Family under God as a motto for lasting peace and mutual prosperity. All religions pursue peace. God in this statement refers to a spiritual and transcendent being that each religion reveres. The philosophy that encompasses such a beyond -religion-movement that can embrace the world is found in “Hong Ik Ingan”, the founding ideology of Korea.
The founding philosophy of Korea makes me look back on the situation of Korea. Korea has called for cultural and religious acceptance since the adoption of “globalization” as a national policy in the early 1990’s, but we have yet to see significant progress. The concept of multi-cultural family in Korea serves more as a mechanism of discrimination than of embracing multi-cultural families. There will inevitably substantial side effects as we try to integrate multi-cultural families into our society without changing ourselves..
The bigger problem lies inside of us. If we remain mired in stubborn and firm belief in factions with little tolerance, political development and social unity is hardly achievable. The spirit of “Grand Harmony” (大同) is truly needed. The Grand Unity, an idea developed by Chuang-tzu, means “All things are one in a big picture but they are all different in detail”. Our goal should be to realize a mature society through tolerance and harmony by promoting the Grand Harmony (大同) and considering minor differences.
Scholars in the Joseon Dynasty during the 18th-19th century had a “Byung-se consciousness”, in which they considered the intellectuals and civilization of the Qing dynasty as contemporary equals even though they were located in a different regions. At that time, for Joseon intellectuals, the Chinese Qing Dynasty was not only the center of the world but also the whole world. “Byung” connotes benevolence, to embrace, befit, and unite. The “Byung-se” consciousness would direct us to enhance the substantial promotion of the Grand Harmony (大同) while valuing differences.
Why do we need to pursue the task of reunification in Korea? The goal of achieving “one Korea” should be creating an ideal unified country which is globally recognized and respected not for its military and economic power, but for the contribution to the culture and spirit of unity. This is my with and conviction renewed in Malaysia. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12266 | {"url": "https://globalpeace.org/the-dream-of-hong-ik-ingan-and-the-great-harmony-%E5%A4%A7%E5%90%8C/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "globalpeace.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:23:34Z", "digest": "sha1:EWR2LXZ72F5AUP2KKTGQG3Z6RWXNZOA6"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 5090, 5090.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5090, 7925.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5090, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5090, 113.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5090, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5090, 226.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5090, 0.36506276]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5090, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5090, 0.01628743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5090, 0.01628743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5090, 0.01628743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5090, 0.01628743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5090, 0.01628743]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5090, 0.01077844]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5090, 0.01341317]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5090, 0.00670659]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5090, 0.0083682]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5090, 0.14958159]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5090, 0.50061958]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5090, 5.17348203]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5090, 5.32440753]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5090, 807.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 363, 1.0], [363, 523, 1.0], [523, 1031, 1.0], [1031, 1662, 1.0], [1662, 2750, 1.0], [2750, 3137, 1.0], [3137, 3670, 1.0], [3670, 4183, 1.0], [4183, 4755, 1.0], [4755, 5090, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 363, 0.0], [363, 523, 0.0], [523, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1662, 0.0], [1662, 2750, 0.0], [2750, 3137, 0.0], [3137, 3670, 0.0], [3670, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4755, 0.0], [4755, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 54, 11.0], [54, 363, 50.0], [363, 523, 26.0], [523, 1031, 75.0], [1031, 1662, 99.0], [1662, 2750, 173.0], [2750, 3137, 62.0], [3137, 3670, 81.0], [3670, 4183, 85.0], [4183, 4755, 87.0], [4755, 5090, 58.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 363, 0.01337793], [363, 523, 0.0], [523, 1031, 0.01428571], [1031, 1662, 0.01774194], [1662, 2750, 0.0], [2750, 3137, 0.0], [3137, 3670, 0.00764818], [3670, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4755, 0.00719424], [4755, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 363, 0.0], [363, 523, 0.0], [523, 1031, 0.0], [1031, 1662, 0.0], [1662, 2750, 0.0], [2750, 3137, 0.0], [3137, 3670, 0.0], [3670, 4183, 0.0], [4183, 4755, 0.0], [4755, 5090, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.12962963], [54, 363, 0.08737864], [363, 523, 0.1], [523, 1031, 0.03740157], [1031, 1662, 0.03328051], [1662, 2750, 0.02665441], [2750, 3137, 0.03100775], [3137, 3670, 0.01313321], [3670, 4183, 0.02534113], [4183, 4755, 0.02622378], [4755, 5090, 0.01791045]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5090, 0.59165746]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5090, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5090, 0.52650249]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5090, -153.78787513]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5090, 87.57691078]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5090, 19.90807161]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5090, 43.0]]} |
Sheena Chestnut Greitens
Dr. Sheena Chestnut Greitens is associate professor at the LBJ School at UT-Austin, where she is affiliated with both the Strauss Center and Clements Center for National Security. Her work focuses on East Asia, democracy & dictatorship, and American national security policy. Her first book, Dictators and Their Secret Police, won several academic awards, and she is currently working on a book project on China’s approach to internal security and grand strategy.
February 17: A Conversation with Dan Blumenthal on “The China Nightmare: The Grand Ambitions of a Decaying State” | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12267 | {"url": "https://globaltaiwan.org/member/sheena-chestnut-greitens/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "globaltaiwan.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:26:25Z", "digest": "sha1:Z3J25FLLNXOEPZQRZDBARSL7ZHUNEQ2I"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 602, 602.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 602, 2743.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 602, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 602, 127.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 602, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 602, 207.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 602, 0.27927928]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 602, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 602, 0.05645161]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 602, 0.08870968]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 602, 0.02702703]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 602, 0.16216216]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 602, 0.7173913]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 602, 5.39130435]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 602, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 602, 4.06499562]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 602, 92.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 489, 1.0], [489, 602, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 489, 0.0], [489, 602, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 25, 3.0], [25, 489, 71.0], [489, 602, 18.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 489, 0.0], [489, 602, 0.01801802]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 489, 0.0], [489, 602, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.12], [25, 489, 0.05818966], [489, 602, 0.11504425]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 602, 0.05699307]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 602, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 602, 0.00826007]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 602, -39.81477583]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 602, 1.84959733]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 602, -7.99228456]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 602, 5.0]]} |
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novels like Fifty Shades of Grey
Blog Books Love Romantic
Hardik Dhamija
If you’re looking for novels like Fifty Shades of Grey, you’re in luck! This highly popular erotic romance series has spawned a whole new sub-genre of books that explore the world of BDSM and erotic relationships. There are many novels out there that feature similar themes and elements to “Fifty Shades of Grey,” such as power dynamics, intense emotions, and steamy romantic encounters.
Some of the most popular books in this category include “Bared to You” by Sylvia Day, “The Crossfire Series” by J.R. Ward, and “The Submissive Series” by Tara Sue Me. Each of these books features complex characters and deep, emotional relationships that will keep you hooked from beginning to end.
Whether you’re a fan of “Fifty Shades of Grey” or just looking for a new erotic romance series to sink your teeth into, these novels are sure to satisfy your cravings for passion and romance.
The Stark Trilogy – J. Kenner
Crossfire series – Sylvia Day
The Breathless Trilogy – Maya Banks
A Million Dirty Secrets – C.L. Parker
Legal Briefs – Emma Chase
The Cocktail Series – Alice Clayton
The Submissive Series – Tara Sue Me
novels like Fifty Shades of Grey – The Stark Trilogy – J. Kenner
The Stark Trilogy is a series of romance novels by J. Kenner. The trilogy consists of the following books:
Release Me (2013)
Claim Me (2013)
Complete Me (2013)
The books follow the story of Nikki Fairchild, a recent college graduate who is looking for a job in Los Angeles. She meets the successful and handsome Damien Stark, who is looking for a new assistant. Nikki is drawn to Damien’s charm and begins working for him.
As their professional relationship deepens, Nikki and Damien become romantically involved. However, they both have troubled pasts that threaten to derail their relationship. Nikki is haunted by a traumatic incident from her past, and Damien is grappling with his own demons.
Throughout the trilogy, Nikki and Damien navigate their past traumas and try to build a future together. The books are full of steamy romance, suspense, and unexpected twists and turns.
The Stark Trilogy has been praised for its well-drawn characters, compelling plot, and steamy romance scenes. The series has been very popular with readers of contemporary romance and erotic fiction.
Books like Fifty Shades of Grey – Crossfire series – Sylvia Day
The Crossfire series is a set of romantic novels by Sylvia Day. The series consists of five books:
Bared to You (2012)
Reflected in You (2012)
Entwined with You (2013)
Captivated by You (2014)
One with You (2016)
The books follow the tumultuous relationship between Gideon Cross and Eva Tramell, two successful professionals in New York City. The two meet and are immediately drawn to each other, but their relationship is complicated by their troubled pasts and emotional baggage.
Throughout the series, Gideon and Eva navigate their difficult pasts, including sexual abuse, addiction, and past relationships, while trying to build a future together. Their intense attraction to each other fuels their passion, but also causes conflict and drama.
novels like Fifty Shades of Grey – The Breathless Trilogy – Maya Banks
The series follows the romantic relationships between three wealthy and powerful men and the women they fall in love with.
The first book in the series is “Rush.” It tells the story of Gabe Hamilton, a successful businessman who is used to getting what he wants. He’s been in love with his friend’s little sister, Mia Crestwell, for years, but has kept his feelings hidden. When Mia’s brother dies, Gabe sees an opportunity to finally be with her, but his dominant tendencies threaten to derail their relationship.
The second book in the series is “Fever.” Jace Crestwell, Gabe’s best friend and business partner, has always been a player, until he meets Bethany “Beth” Willis. Beth is a quiet and reserved woman who has recently become the guardian of her younger brother. Jace is drawn to her innocence and vulnerability, and he finds himself falling in love with her.
The third and final book in the series is “Burn.” Ash McIntyre is a talented musician who has just signed a major record deal. He’s always been in love with Josie, his best friend’s sister, but has never acted on his feelings. When Josie’s brother dies, Ash sees an opportunity to be with her, but his wild and reckless lifestyle threatens to ruin their relationship.
Books like Fifty Shades of Grey – A Million Dirty Secrets – C.L. Parker
A Million Dirty Secrets is an erotic romance novel by C.L. Parker. It was first published in 2013 and is the first book in the Million Dollar Duet series.
The book tells the story of Delaine Talbot, a young woman who is desperate for money to pay off her debts. She answers an advertisement for a job as a personal assistant, only to discover that the job is for a very wealthy and very attractive man named Noah Crawford. Noah offers to pay off all of Delaine’s debts if she agrees to be his submissive sex partner for thirty days.
Delaine is shocked and hesitant at first, but the offer is too good to pass up. As she begins to explore her sexuality with Noah, she discovers a passion that she never knew existed. However, as the thirty days draw to a close, Delaine realizes that she has fallen in love with Noah, and wonders if their relationship can continue beyond the terms of their agreement.
The book is known for its steamy sex scenes and explicit language. It has been popular with fans of erotic romance, and has been compared to the Fifty Shades of Grey series. While the book has been criticized for its unrealistic portrayal of BDSM relationships, it has also been praised for its engaging plot and well-developed characters.
novels like Fifty Shades of Grey – Legal Briefs – Emma Chase
“Legal Briefs” is a contemporary romance novel by Emma Chase. The book was published in 2014 and is the third book in the “The Legal Briefs” series, which follows the romantic lives of a group of successful lawyers in Washington, D.C.
In “Legal Briefs,” the main character is Jake Becker, a successful lawyer who is focused on his career and not interested in settling down. But when his high school sweetheart, Chelsea McQuaid, comes back into his life, he finds himself rethinking his priorities. Chelsea is also a successful lawyer and is in Washington, D.C. to fight for an important case. As they work together on the case, Jake and Chelsea begin to reconnect and realize that their feelings for each other have never truly gone away.
Books like Fifty Shades of Grey – The Cocktail Series – Alice Clayton
The first book in the series is “Wallbanger,” which tells the story of Caroline Reynolds, a food blogger who has just moved into a new apartment in San Francisco. She’s excited to start her new life, but is kept awake by the loud banging coming from the apartment next door. She soon finds out that the noise is coming from her neighbor, Simon Parker, a handsome and charming photographer who likes to entertain women in his bedroom. Despite their initial animosity, Caroline and Simon become friends and then more.
The second book in the series is “Rusty Nailed,” which follows Simon’s best friend, the chef and restaurateur, Viv Franklin. Viv is struggling to balance her successful career and her relationship with her boyfriend, Clark. When her best friend, the newly divorced and always-horny bar owner, Mimi, moves in with her, Viv’s life becomes even more complicated.
The third book in the series is “Screwdrivered,” which tells the story of Viv’s younger sister, the free-spirited and adventurous, Chloe Patterson. Chloe leaves her job in California to move to the small town of Monterey, where she meets the sexy and mysterious Lucas Campbell, who has just inherited a vineyard. Chloe and Lucas have a steamy summer romance, but must decide whether they can make a long-term relationship work.
The fourth and final book in the series is “Mai Tai’d Up,” which follows the story of Chloe’s friend, the no-nonsense and ambitious, Clara Morgan. Clara moves to California to take a job as a vineyard manager, but finds herself attracted to the laid-back and easygoing, Archie Bryant, who works as a bartender at a local hotel.
novels like Fifty Shades of Grey – The Submissive Series – Tara Sue Me
“The Submissive Series” is a trilogy of erotic romance novels by American author Tara Sue Me. The books in the series are “The Submissive,” “The Dominant,” and “The Training.”
The series follows the romantic relationship between Abby King, a librarian who yearns for something more in her life, and Nathaniel West, a handsome and wealthy businessman who is also a dominant in the BDSM lifestyle. The first book in the series, “The Submissive,” introduces Abby and Nathaniel and follows their journey as they explore their sexual desires and develop a deeper emotional connection.
In the subsequent books, “The Dominant” and “The Training,” the couple faces various challenges as they navigate their relationship and the BDSM lifestyle. The series also includes themes of power dynamics, trust, and communication.
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Top 10 Enemies of Batman
Top 10 Enemies of Batman: Batman, the Dark Knight, has faced many foes in his crime-fighting career.
The Joker is the polar opposite of Batman, embodying all the aspects that the Dark Knight lacks.
The Riddler stands apart from other Batman villains with his playful, yet dangerous approach to crime.
Born from a life of corruption and abuse in a prison, Bane is the epitome of physical and mental villainy.
Two-Face, the former White Knight of Gotham, is one of the most intriguing villains in Batman’s rogues’ gallery.
Ra’s Al Ghul
Ra’s Al Ghul, the Demon’s Head, is a standout among Batman’s rogues gallery. Unlike many of the Dark Knight’s.
The Court of Owls
The Court of Owls are a formidable and dangerous addition to Batman’s rogues gallery.
The Penguin, first introduced in Detective Comics #58 in 1941, has been a staple in Batman’s rogues gallery.
Hugo Strange
Hugo Strange, one of Batman’s earliest villains, made his first appearance in Detective Comics #36 in 1940.
Deathstroke, once a Teen Titans villain, has risen to become one of Batman’s top foes after appearing in works like “Batman: Arkham Origins”
Talia al Ghul
Talia al Ghul ranks highly on Batman’s list of enemies due to the mental and emotional toll she has taken on him. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12270 | {"url": "https://gobookmart.com/web-stories/top-10-enemies-of-batman/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gobookmart.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:22:40Z", "digest": "sha1:YUJ5TSJKFASOEEWFBPOAO4L4DAH4CSUT"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1272, 1272.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1272, 1516.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1272, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1272, 33.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1272, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1272, 281.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1272, 0.35018051]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1272, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1272, 0.03910068]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1272, 0.02346041]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1272, 0.06158358]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1272, 0.02737048]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1272, 0.18772563]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1272, 0.53211009]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1272, 4.69266055]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1272, 0.00722022]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1272, 4.40503231]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1272, 218.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 126, 1.0], [126, 223, 1.0], [223, 326, 1.0], [326, 433, 1.0], [433, 546, 1.0], [546, 559, 0.0], [559, 670, 1.0], [670, 688, 0.0], [688, 774, 1.0], [774, 883, 1.0], [883, 896, 0.0], [896, 1004, 1.0], [1004, 1145, 1.0], [1145, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1272, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 126, 0.0], [126, 223, 0.0], [223, 326, 0.0], [326, 433, 0.0], [433, 546, 0.0], [546, 559, 0.0], [559, 670, 0.0], [670, 688, 0.0], [688, 774, 0.0], [774, 883, 0.0], [883, 896, 0.0], [896, 1004, 0.0], [1004, 1145, 0.0], [1145, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 25, 5.0], [25, 126, 17.0], [126, 223, 17.0], [223, 326, 16.0], [326, 433, 20.0], [433, 546, 18.0], [546, 559, 3.0], [559, 670, 19.0], [670, 688, 4.0], [688, 774, 14.0], [774, 883, 18.0], [883, 896, 2.0], [896, 1004, 17.0], [1004, 1145, 23.0], [1145, 1159, 3.0], [1159, 1272, 22.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.08333333], [25, 126, 0.02105263], [126, 223, 0.0], [223, 326, 0.0], [326, 433, 0.0], [433, 546, 0.0], [546, 559, 0.0], [559, 670, 0.0], [670, 688, 0.0], [688, 774, 0.0], [774, 883, 0.05769231], [883, 896, 0.0], [896, 1004, 0.05825243], [1004, 1145, 0.0], [1145, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 25, 0.0], [25, 126, 0.0], [126, 223, 0.0], [223, 326, 0.0], [326, 433, 0.0], [433, 546, 0.0], [546, 559, 0.0], [559, 670, 0.0], [670, 688, 0.0], [688, 774, 0.0], [774, 883, 0.0], [883, 896, 0.0], [896, 1004, 0.0], [1004, 1145, 0.0], [1145, 1159, 0.0], [1159, 1272, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 25, 0.12], [25, 126, 0.05940594], [126, 223, 0.05154639], [223, 326, 0.02912621], [326, 433, 0.01869159], [433, 546, 0.05309735], [546, 559, 0.23076923], [559, 670, 0.08108108], [670, 688, 0.16666667], [688, 774, 0.04651163], [774, 883, 0.04587156], [883, 896, 0.15384615], [896, 1004, 0.0462963], [1004, 1145, 0.04964539], [1145, 1159, 0.14285714], [1159, 1272, 0.02654867]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1272, 0.72952265]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1272, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1272, 0.49518049]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1272, -112.42292144]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1272, 31.91754908]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1272, -22.43418118]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1272, 11.0]]} |
NHRA Gatornationals Pre-Race Report
AMALIE Motor Oil NHRA Gatornationals
Gainesville Raceway
DSR’s Funny Car contingent will be looking to extend its streak of nine consecutive wins at the Gatornationals. All four DSR Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat pilots have claimed at least one victory throughout the first six races of 2020
The only other time in the series’ history that a team swept 10 consecutive race wins in a single category was during the 2017 season when the same lineup of current DSR Dodge drivers contributed to that streak
DSR is currently in championship contention in each of the three categories it competes in – Top Fuel, Funny Car, and the Factory Stock Showdown Series
DSR occupies the top three spots in the Funny Car point rankings with Jack Beckman leading the class. Matt Hagan and Tommy Johnson Jr. sit No. 2 and 3, respectively, and Ron Capps rounds out the top five
Leah Pruett arrives in Gainesville second in the Top Fuel championship standings with a runner-up finish at the NHRA U.S. Nationals
Pruett will once again pull double-duty, competing in both the Top Fuel and Factory Stock categories, and will have the opportunity to compete for two trophies over the course of the weekend
Mark Pawuk occupies the No. 2 spot on the Factory Stock leaderboard after a runner-up finish at the previous event
Gainesville Event Highlights:
2018 event champion
Two-time No. 1 qualifier (2016, 2018)
2019 Gainesville Recap:
Qualified sixth; Semifinal finish (defeated J.R. Todd in E1, Tommy Johnson Jr. in E2; defeated by Tim Wilkerson in E3)
Last Event (U.S. Nationals):
Qualified seventh; Event champion (defeated Cruz Pedregon in E1, Ron Capps in E2, Tim Wilkerson in E3, J.R. Todd in E4)
2020 Season Statistics:
Two event wins; 15 round wins; ranked No. 1 in points
Career Statistics:
330 races; 32 wins; 27 No. 1 qualifiers
Beckman is the current point leader, and including his U.S. Nationals victory, is a two-time winner in four final rounds in 2020
Beckman is currently participating in the Infinite Hero Foundation’s Task Force 22 campaign to help raise vital funds for mental health and suicide prevention programming for our nation’s veterans. The former U.S. Air Force sergeant has donated a custom helmet as well as a Zoom call, available to win now through the end of the month: https://www.infinitehero.org/task-force-22/
“I love Indy, but it’s going to be fun to go to a different venue and I fully expect to see fans foaming at the mouth for drag racing. The fans in this area have been clamoring for this since March, so it’s going to be a lot of fun. You want to win every race you go to and it would be great to give Don Schumacher a 10th straight Funny Car victory. We lost the points lead for a race, so it felt good to come back and vindicate ourselves at the U.S. Nationals, and we’ll try to extend it in Gainesville.”
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Here are 4 reasons why you should invest in NVIDIA
Here are 4 reasons why…
The 2020 pandemic hit many companies hard, while other companies took it as a chance to grow, seemingly unaffected by the state of the world around them. NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) came out as one of those thriving businesses and achieved gains of 122% in 2020.
The company’s graphics processing units (GPUs) were present and needed for trends that accelerated exponentially due to the pandemic, boosting the company’s presence in the market and overall stock performance. NVIDIA’s stock has gone up more than 3,000% in the past ten years.
Given these gains, many investors are tempted to invest, while others think that the cow has already been milked. The latter is highly unlikely. Many of these new trends behind NVIDIA’s growth have plenty of room to grow, giving the company a big opportunity to grow as well.
Here are 4 reasons why you should invest in NVIDIA.
NVIDIA and AI go hand in hand
High-end GPU’s play a key role in artificial intelligence (AI). Parallel processing used in rendering realistic images in video games utilizes AI’s unique capabilities to deliver incredibly lifelike results.
While everyone is taking a shot at developing a dedicated AI processor, NVIDIA’s GPUs are still the weapon of choice for most data centers and researchers that run AI and other algorithms of similar sophistication.
NVIDIA’s data center segment includes processors used in data centers, cloud computing, and AI. It has become the company’s main growth factor. Revenue in this segment increased 125% year over year in 2020 and ended the year switch plenty of traction.
NVIDIA’s presence in cloud computing is undeniable
Cloud computing has become a norm and has been ongoing for some time. The pandemic kicked this trend towards the stratosphere, with more and more companies adopting cloud computing as the days went by.
NVIDIA’s GPU has been present in most cloud computing systems and operations. The hardware’s ability to handle parallel processing has made NVIDIA the primary pick for the world’s top cloud computing providers like Amazon’s AWS, Alphabet’s Google Cloud, and Microsoft’s Azure Cloud.
NVIDIA is the current champion and plans to hold unto that title
NVIDIA is always focusing on innovating technology and looking into the future of computing hardware. It is the current champion when talking about dedicated gaming processors. The company is the favourite pick for hardcore gamers everywhere, holding 82% of the GPU market.
NVIDIA is way ahead of the competition and is not planning on slowing down anytime soon. The company introduced its latest line of processors that offered a breakthrough rendering experience of light and shadow through Ray tracing.
Ray tracing is a technology that manages to recreate the pathing light in the real world in the digital world in real-time, making it the most sought-after technology by gaming enthusiasts and many digital artists worldwide.
It released a trio of RTX (ray tracing) processors, which have quickly become the standard, providing the best digital visuals in the market.
The gaming industry represents practically half of NVIDIA’s revenue. The segment increased 67% year over year and shows no signs of slowing down. With NVIDIA being the top dog for processing, the company is bound to benefit from this segment’s growth.
Fiscal 2021 was a fantastic year for NVIDIA. Its earnings per share of $6.90 grew 53%, and revenue of $16.68 billion climbed 53% year over year.
NVIDIA isn’t just sitting down gloating either. It recently made announcements that it will venture into the CPU market and its Grace CPU, targeted mainly at data centers, aiming to deliver 10 times the performance of current CPUs.
This opens a new pathway to where the company can expand. It can take the entire market by storm and be a presence in nearly all aspects of the hardware industry.
Analysts estimate that over 80% of NVIDIA’s customers have yet to upgrade to the company’s latest processor generation, leaving much room for growth and sales.
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Abonmarche Brad Mosness, vice president, Abonmarche Consultants A little over five years ago, Abonmarche came to Goshen and acquired [Brads-Ko Engineering and Surveying]. We’ve been looking for an office space downtown ever since. We work with the city of Goshen and... | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12273 | {"url": "https://goodofgoshen.com/project_tag/revitalization/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "goodofgoshen.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:05:20Z", "digest": "sha1:27IZHQ7IQGGTG6ZJJCO3AK5FFNPBGEXO"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 269, 269.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 269, 864.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 269, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 269, 37.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 269, 0.86]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 269, 308.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 269, 0.32692308]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 269, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 269, 0.08256881]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 269, 0.01923077]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 269, 1.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 269, 0.17307692]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 269, 0.87804878]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 269, 5.31707317]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 269, 0.01923077]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 269, 3.51898748]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 269, 41.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 269, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 269, 41.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 269, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 269, 0.05576208]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 269, 0.13484377]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 269, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 269, -8.58e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 269, -14.79952042]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 269, 2.4342937]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 269, -9.84644942]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 269, 3.0]]} |
On Demand Aerial Silks Membership
Starts on the date of purchase. Valid for 31 days.
This membership grants access to our On Demand Aerial Silks Content library for 31 days from purchase.
This membership can not be used to book online or face to face classes.
Buy - £25.00
This membership will entitle the purchaser to a partial or complete discount on events/classes offered by the business for Starts on the date of purchase. Valid for 31 days.. If the start date of this membership has already passed, it will not be prorated for partial months/days, meaning the price is the same regardless of when purchased. Some classes/events may be excluded from this membership. Unless otherwise noted, this membership is non-transferable. See the details above for more information. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12274 | {"url": "https://goteamup.com/p/2996200-blush-aerial-pole-fitness/memberships/105352/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "goteamup.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:29:59Z", "digest": "sha1:NMS4PKXVLLIE2XLRJ5NONY7I7TDOKP2L"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 776, 776.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 776, 1123.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 776, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 776, 20.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 776, 0.88]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 776, 319.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 776, 0.375]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 776, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 776, 0.12400636]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 776, 0.12400636]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 776, 0.12400636]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 776, 0.12400636]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 776, 0.12400636]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 776, 0.12400636]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 776, 0.13354531]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 776, 0.04292528]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 776, 0.06041335]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 776, 0.16447368]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 776, 0.56692913]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 776, 4.95275591]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 776, 4.02520852]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 776, 127.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 85, 1.0], [85, 188, 1.0], [188, 260, 1.0], [260, 273, 0.0], [273, 776, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 85, 0.0], [85, 188, 0.0], [188, 260, 0.0], [260, 273, 0.0], [273, 776, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 34, 5.0], [34, 85, 10.0], [85, 188, 17.0], [188, 260, 14.0], [260, 273, 2.0], [273, 776, 79.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 85, 0.04166667], [85, 188, 0.01980198], [188, 260, 0.0], [260, 273, 0.44444444], [273, 776, 0.00408998]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 34, 0.0], [34, 85, 0.0], [85, 188, 0.0], [188, 260, 0.0], [260, 273, 0.0], [273, 776, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 34, 0.14705882], [34, 85, 0.03921569], [85, 188, 0.05825243], [188, 260, 0.01388889], [260, 273, 0.07692308], [273, 776, 0.0139165]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 776, 0.13050526]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 776, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 776, 0.00111741]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 776, -39.77484899]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 776, -6.04175774]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 776, -17.79917205]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 776, 11.0]]} |
Ruman Returns to Trans Am...
Ruman Returns to Trans Am Podium at Mid-Ohio – Scores 2nd Place
Lexington, Ohio (11 June 2012) – Amy Ruman scored her second consecutive Trans Am podium of the season at her home track as she raced the No. 23 McNichols Co./Goodyear/Cenweld Corvette to a second place result in front of many family, friends and hometown fans in attendance at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course.
Ruman opened the 100-mile race from third on the starting grid and immediately made her move past Peterson, wheeling the C6 Corvette up to second place on the opening lap with a strong run through the Carousel corners.
An early full course caution just laps into the race slowed the field and Ruman lined up second on the restart. She took over the lead just two laps later to pace the Trans Am field for the first time at her home track. The No. 23 McNichols Co./Goodyear/Cenweld Corvette showed strong pace throughout the beginning stages of the 45-lap race as Ruman hoped to return to the same Mid-Ohio podium she stood on just one week before in SCCA competition.
Ruman looked to control the pace while in the lead, but had another set of tasks to take on inside the car as the lap count grew. The heat continued to change the handling on the car and Ruman remained busy behind the wheel, making the most of the available in-car adjustments to compensate. The changes helped, but weren’t enough to ultimately hold off the advances of a hard charging Simon Gregg.
But Ruman did not make it easy as the two went side by side through several corners before she ceded the lead. For many laps, the two put on a great show for the crowd running neck and neck.
“We’re happy with second - I’ll take that,” said Ruman. “I was a little disappointed that we weren’t closer at the end of the race. The handling went off and I was trying to just manage the tires. We had a good race at the beginning. Simon (Gregg) and I were running close lap times together and raced side by side for four or five turns so that was pretty cool. He ended up getting in front of me because I didn’t want to be on the outside through Thunder Valley. Then I just thought I’d settle in and see if his tires would fade off or not and then they didn’t.”
In a day that saw temperatures rise past 90 degrees with the track temperature around 133 degrees, Ruman faced a grueling day in the cockpit when her in-car drinking system malfunctioned at the start of the race. Despite the heat, Ruman soldiered to the finish to claim the runner-up spot.
“Unfortunately the water bottle wasn’t working so I had no water the whole race,” added Ruman. “The cool suit worked well though, so it wasn’t that bad. The championship is really close at this point so this was a good finish with valuable points. It was great to be on the podium in front of so many friends and family that came out to support me today. My crew has done a tremendous job for me this season, and we hope to keep the momentum going for that win in the new Vette. ”
With another podium result, Ruman strengthened her position in the championship standings, just eight points out of second place, as the series next heads to New Jersey Motorsports Park July 1. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12275 | {"url": "https://gotransam.com/news/Ruman-Returns-to-Trans-Am-Podium-at-Mid-Ohio-Scores-2nd-Place/59417", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gotransam.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:51:22Z", "digest": "sha1:ECBHP3UQL4GKQ73PPEMUPIPZRE2HKBXC"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 3190, 3190.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3190, 4349.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3190, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3190, 66.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3190, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3190, 294.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3190, 0.43171806]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3190, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3190, 0.04883813]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3190, 0.03229618]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3190, 0.01181568]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3190, 0.01063411]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3190, 0.01496652]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3190, 0.01468429]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3190, 0.09090909]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3190, 0.12628488]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3190, 0.48805461]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3190, 4.33276451]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3190, 0.00146843]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3190, 5.11813067]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3190, 586.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 1.0], [29, 93, 0.0], [93, 403, 1.0], [403, 622, 1.0], [622, 1071, 1.0], [1071, 1470, 1.0], [1470, 1661, 1.0], [1661, 2226, 1.0], [2226, 2516, 1.0], [2516, 2997, 1.0], [2997, 3190, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 93, 0.0], [93, 403, 0.0], [403, 622, 0.0], [622, 1071, 0.0], [1071, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1661, 0.0], [1661, 2226, 0.0], [2226, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2997, 0.0], [2997, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 5.0], [29, 93, 12.0], [93, 403, 53.0], [403, 622, 38.0], [622, 1071, 81.0], [1071, 1470, 72.0], [1470, 1661, 39.0], [1661, 2226, 111.0], [2226, 2516, 50.0], [2516, 2997, 94.0], [2997, 3190, 31.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 93, 0.01612903], [93, 403, 0.02675585], [403, 622, 0.01860465], [622, 1071, 0.00911162], [1071, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1661, 0.0], [1661, 2226, 0.0], [2226, 2516, 0.01766784], [2516, 2997, 0.0], [2997, 3190, 0.00529101]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 93, 0.0], [93, 403, 0.0], [403, 622, 0.0], [622, 1071, 0.0], [1071, 1470, 0.0], [1470, 1661, 0.0], [1661, 2226, 0.0], [2226, 2516, 0.0], [2516, 2997, 0.0], [2997, 3190, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.13793103], [29, 93, 0.140625], [93, 403, 0.06129032], [403, 622, 0.02283105], [622, 1071, 0.04454343], [1071, 1470, 0.01503759], [1470, 1661, 0.01570681], [1661, 2226, 0.0300885], [2226, 2516, 0.0137931], [2516, 2997, 0.01663202], [2997, 3190, 0.03626943]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3190, 0.43709773]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3190, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3190, 0.43573064]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3190, -87.2699014]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3190, 91.46235426]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3190, -103.00887126]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3190, 30.0]]} |
Governor Abbott Proclaims March 2023 As Women Veterans Month
March 1, 2023 | Austin, Texas | Proclamation
Ours is indeed “the land of the free” and “the home of the brave,” and were it not for our brave men and women in uniform, our precious freedoms would have perished long ago. Time and again, our soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, and Coast Guardsmen have leapt to the defense of liberty, justice, and the American Way, and by so doing, they have protected the world from despotic monarchs, totalitarian dictatorships, repressive ideologies, and merciless terrorists.
The ideals for which our nation stands are universal, and it is unsurprising that Americans from every walk of life have answered the call to service. For nearly a quarter millennium, our troops have protected America’s interests at home and abroad, both in peacetime and in wartime. Many of these great Americans were women, and as members of a grateful society, we would be remiss if we did not acknowledge the significant role that women have played in our armed forces.
In World War I, American women voyaged to Europe en masse and served as nurses and telephone operators in the most significant conflict mankind had yet known. A generation later, women took on additional responsibilities within the armed forces in every theater of World War II, and in subsequent conflicts, women have been seamlessly integrated into virtually every aspect of the military. Women have distinguished themselves in every branch, and at present, females constitute approximately 17 percent of our nation’s active-duty military personnel.
These proud daughters of America embody many of the traits that set our people apart: valor, sacrifice, a sense of duty, and a commitment to a higher purpose. We therefore owe them our utmost appreciation and our unconditional support. Furthermore, many such women gave the last full measure of devotion in order to ensure our nation’s survival. The duty now falls on us, the living, to preserve the memory of the fallen, who themselves kept alive the flame of American democracy.
Each year, a month is set aside in order to honor our brave female veterans. The purpose of this observance is twofold: to celebrate the women who have served our nation and to rededicate ourselves to the timeless ideals for which they valiantly fought. We owe them a debt of gratitude that can never be repaid in full, but we must nevertheless strive to honor all of our veterans in thought, word, and deed—men and women alike.
At this time, I join a grateful nation in saluting our women veterans, and I encourage all Texans to do likewise and support them by any means possible.
Therefore, I, Greg Abbott, Governor of Texas, do hereby proclaim March 2023 to be Women Veterans Month in Texas and urge the appropriate recognition whereof.
In official recognition whereof, I hereby affix my signature this 1st day of March, 2023.
GREG ABBOTT
Governor of Texas
View the Governor's proclamation. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12276 | {"url": "https://gov.texas.gov/news/post/governor-abbott-proclaims-march-2023-as-women-veterans-month", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gov.texas.gov", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:49:28Z", "digest": "sha1:6MHKHSGRMPLPCP2E6VNDIXPHN564R5CB"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2974, 2974.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2974, 4395.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2974, 13.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2974, 91.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2974, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2974, 220.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2974, 0.39721254]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2974, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2974, 0.02072968]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2974, 0.01036484]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2974, 0.01492537]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2974, 0.01658375]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2974, 0.01567944]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2974, 0.14634146]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2974, 0.52244898]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2974, 4.92244898]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2974, 5.03998898]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2974, 490.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 106, 0.0], [106, 574, 1.0], [574, 1048, 1.0], [1048, 1600, 1.0], [1600, 2081, 1.0], [2081, 2510, 1.0], [2510, 2663, 1.0], [2663, 2821, 1.0], [2821, 2911, 1.0], [2911, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 2974, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 106, 0.0], [106, 574, 0.0], [574, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1600, 0.0], [1600, 2081, 0.0], [2081, 2510, 0.0], [2510, 2663, 0.0], [2663, 2821, 0.0], [2821, 2911, 0.0], [2911, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 9.0], [61, 106, 6.0], [106, 574, 76.0], [574, 1048, 81.0], [1048, 1600, 83.0], [1600, 2081, 81.0], [2081, 2510, 77.0], [2510, 2663, 28.0], [2663, 2821, 25.0], [2821, 2911, 15.0], [2911, 2923, 2.0], [2923, 2941, 3.0], [2941, 2974, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.06666667], [61, 106, 0.13157895], [106, 574, 0.0], [574, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1600, 0.00369686], [1600, 2081, 0.0], [2081, 2510, 0.0], [2510, 2663, 0.0], [2663, 2821, 0.02631579], [2821, 2911, 0.05813953], [2911, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 106, 0.0], [106, 574, 0.0], [574, 1048, 0.0], [1048, 1600, 0.0], [1600, 2081, 0.0], [2081, 2510, 0.0], [2510, 2663, 0.0], [2663, 2821, 0.0], [2821, 2911, 0.0], [2911, 2923, 0.0], [2923, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 2974, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.13114754], [61, 106, 0.08888889], [106, 574, 0.01495726], [574, 1048, 0.01265823], [1048, 1600, 0.02173913], [1600, 2081, 0.01247401], [2081, 2510, 0.00699301], [2510, 2663, 0.02614379], [2663, 2821, 0.06962025], [2821, 2911, 0.03333333], [2911, 2923, 0.83333333], [2923, 2941, 0.11111111], [2941, 2974, 0.06060606]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2974, 0.89122063]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2974, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2974, 0.85186231]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2974, 10.35216485]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2974, 61.71227633]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2974, -25.2101978]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2974, 19.0]]} |
Home Q&A Literature
What Does Logos Mean in Literature?
Logos is a Greek word meaning "word" or "reason." In literature, logos refers to the use of logic and reasoning to persuade the reader.
In literature, logos refers to the use of logic and reasoning to persuade the reader, and this is especially true when it comes to persuasive writing — such as an argumentative essay or persuasive speech — but logos can also be used in other types of writing.
Logos can be used for good or evil. When used for evil, it is called propaganda. It can also mean “a speech or discourse.”
Logos is one of three rhetorical modes (along with ethos and pathos) that are used to persuade an audience. The persuasive speaker uses logos as his main tactic; however, other rhetorical devices are often employed in conjunction with logos. For example, if you were trying to convince someone that your point of view was correct, you would have to appeal to their emotions as well as their intellect with pathos and ethos.
The most common use of logos in literature is when an author makes an argument using reason and logic rather than emotion or personal opinion.
To understand how logos works in literature, it’s helpful to understand how Aristotle used the term in his Rhetoric (ca. 350 BCE). Aristotle believed that all writing should be based on reason and logical deduction rather than emotion or personal experience. He believed that persuasion occurs when a speaker uses logical arguments to convince an audience that something is true or false. Logos is one type of appeal used in rhetoric because it appeals to reason rather than emotion or personal experience.
What Does Logos Mean in Literature?. (2023, Jan 17). Retrieved from https://graduateway.com/qa/what-does-logos-mean-in-literature/
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The Garden of Eden Revisited
pixabay dodo71
This is the last of four articles in response to David Knott’s comments on my recent article on the Big Bang. My topic here is the same as in the third article, his denial of the doctrine of pre-existence; he believes that the soul is created with the body, and that this is consistent with the Bible, specifically Genesis 2.7, where man became a living being having had the breath of life breathed into him by God. This is a conclusion I cannot agree with; it depends on how one interprets the text.
Here I’m going to offer an alternative interpretation of the first three chapters of Genesis. I accept in advance that some of the text may not appear to support this, but if you bear with me and see it through to the end, then I hope you will agree it is a coherent interpretation of the Biblical message, and one that I believe makes more sense than the conventional one.
Before attempting this interpretation, it is important to note that scholars agree that, in these opening chapters, there are two different accounts of the Creation. David Knott tells me that he finds amazing coherence in the Bible, so it would be interesting to know what he makes of that. An alternative approach would be to see whether it is possible to reconcile the two different accounts. This is what my alternative interpretation attempts to do, although difficulties remain.
Genesis 1 tells how the Elohim (a plural word usually translated as God) created a hierarchical universe with various levels, until at verse 9 “the dry land” (the material universe) emerges from the lower waters (the lowest non-material level). The text then describes the development of the material universe and the emergence of life in its various forms on Earth. All this so far makes sense.
Then the text becomes difficult: “God said, ‘Let us make humankind in our image, according to our likeness… So God created humankind in his image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them”. This is obviously confusing. Not only do we read both ‘our image’ (when a supposedly singular God speaks) and ‘his image’ (when the narrator takes over) in relation to God; we also learn that a supposedly male God created a female in his image. What are we to make of this?
It may be possible to resolve this confusion if we assume that down the years something has been lost in translation, or has been changed or misunderstood by an editor. The use of the word ‘image’ is strange. Do we really think that humans look like God in some sense? I submit that a better understanding would be ‘of the same nature as God’.
(EDIT. Since writing the last paragraph, I have noticed that, according to the NRSV edition of the Bible, the original Hebrew word translated as ‘humankind’ was actually ‘Adam’. That humankind was what was intended is therefore an assumption, perhaps unwarranted. The original meaning has indeed been changed in translation.)
As I argued in the second article in the series, if God is the ultimate source of everything in the universe, that must include everything that becomes female — ‘God’ must be a synthesis of male and female elements. The text implies this, because it says that God (who is both male and female), created something of the same nature, both male and female. This entity I would normally call the soul, but in the light of what follows in chapter 2, a different term needs to be found.
The Hindu atman is possible, since we know that this is considered to be of the same nature as the ultimate source, Brahman. Perhaps better but less well known is the term monad, which I’ll define below. Whatever term we use, it is important to remember that what is being described is an entity separate from, but of the same nature as, God. It would therefore be a mistake to think of this as the first physical human being, as the text appears to say, and various Christians have taken to be the case. It is rather a spiritual entity which has the potential to become a physical human.
The problem with this interpretation is that the text continues as if the male and female were human beings on Earth. However, it does fit with the alternative account which follows in chapter 2. (See the EDIT above. Again the Hebrew word for ‘Adam’ has been translated by ‘humankind’.) I suggest that the Garden of Eden story which begins there, despite apparently taking place on planet Earth, refers to events taking place in the spiritual realm. As with all myths, we have to delve beneath the surface to find the hidden levels of meaning.
(EDIT. What is translated as “male and female he created them” should, again according to the NRSV, be more correctly translated “male and female he created him”. The ‘Adam’ created in verses 26 and 27 is therefore both male and female, the significance of which becomes apparent in chapter 2. Perhaps more importantly, there is no suggestion in Genesis 1 that the Adam referred to exists on planet Earth; this is merely an assumption because translators have chosen to use the word ‘humankind’.)
Adam of Genesis 2.7–17 is what above I called a monad. The text gives the impression that Adam is male. As we know, however, the female aspect Eve later emerges from within ‘him’. Before this, ‘he’ must therefore have been both male and female — hermaphroditic, androgynous, or some similar term. (This is in agreement with my interpretation of Genesis 1.27 above.)
What is the monad? In the esoteric spiritual system of Theosophy, it is said to comprise of the two highest Principles, Atma (Spirit) and Buddhi (the Spiritual Soul). Although a duality, “they cannot function without each other. Atma needs Buddhi for a vehicle through which to manifest and Buddhi needs Atma to inform it. These two exist as a unit, not as a compound” ¹. I suggest that such an entity is what is being portrayed as Adam and Eve in Genesis 2.
The monad Adam’s proper home was in the Garden of Eden, the spiritual realm. It was free to enjoy its existence there. The one thing forbidden was to eat of “the tree of knowledge of good and evil”. What does this mean? Since the consequence of this transgression will be that “in the day that you eat of it you shall die”, this suggests that the monad, which is eternal and immortal, thus of the same nature as God, if it incarnates into a physical body will obviously be forced to experience death. The phrase ‘good and evil’ refers to the world of the opposites, the lower levels of the Great Chain of Being, as the One, what Carl Jung calls the unus mundus, separates and divides. This tree of knowledge of good and evil is the psyche at these lower levels, remote from the divine source, as humans experience it when in a physical body.
Then, from 2.21, the unified monad separates into its male and female aspects, becomes dual, or at least this duality becomes more apparent. According to the definition above, the soul principle or Buddhi should be identified with the female aspect (Eve). This is what is tempted to descend into the material world, and persuades the male principle (Atma/Spirit) to accompany her. This has nothing to do with the first human woman tempting a man.
It is not Satan who tempts Eve to eat the fruit, as later Christian theologians have claimed for no reason apparent in the text. The serpent symbolises the fall into the material world; that is what tempts the soul principle (Eve). The spiritual monad has then eaten of the tree of knowledge of good and evil, as pure consciousness from the spiritual realm incarnates into physical form, and experiences the world of the opposites (good and evil).
If such an interpretation seems strange, and inconsistent with some parts of the Genesis text, then I would suggest that it is something that Jesus believed, at least according to the Bible. He frequently says that the meaning of his parables is hidden, and only for those who have ears to hear. This doesn’t seem to be the case in the parable of the Prodigal Son, however, where the meaning is only thinly disguised, if at all.
The story begins at Luke 15.11. There the younger of two sons asks to be given his birthright (the fact that he was a monad of the same nature as God), then takes it off to a distant country (the material world) where he squandered this birthright “in dissolute living”. At some point he comes to bitterly regret this decision, and seeks to return home to his loving father (to the spiritual realm, the life of the monad).
In passing, it’s interesting to note that this story is told exclusively in male terms. The Greek equivalent provides a counterbalance, in that it is told from a female perspective. In Greek mythology it is the daughter Persephone (the soul) who is dragged down into the underworld, and her mother Demeter who longs for and constantly seeks her return. This story is at the heart of the Eleusinian Mystery tradition.
In the Nag Hammadi Gospel of Thomas Jesus expresses the message of the Prodigal Son parable even more starkly: “I am amazed at how this great wealth has made its home in this poverty”². This is immediately preceded by these words: “If the flesh came into being because of spirit, it is a wonder. But if spirit came into being because of the body, it is a wonder of wonders”.
Because this text is not found in the Bible, David Knott obviously does not have to take any notice of it. It’s nevertheless interesting that here Jesus states categorically that spirit and body are of fundamentally different natures, and that it would be extraordinary if the body could bring spirit into existence, which is how Knott interprets the Biblical text. The New Testament parable of the Prodigal Son, however, conveys the same message, that the soul or monad pre-exists the body, which is a far distant country. This is the clearest example in the Bible of a text which contradicts David Knott’s belief, so I assume he must have a different interpretation of the parable. How does he interpret this if he wishes to deny pre-existence?
Raynor Johnson, great authority on spiritual matters, interprets the parable in the same way: “It is the story of the souls of men who drifted away from the Father’s presence after they were created, descending from their true home through all the levels of lesser reality until they finally found themselves in the far country of earth in physical bodies. Here they have dissipated their spiritual treasure, the Light that the soul was originally given. They are in the darkness of matter, having forgotten the brightness of the Father’s realm. Their famine is spiritual and life seems dreary, futile, and meaningless. The soul is now a prisoner of the ego; its voice is weak and the ego does not wish to hear it. Degradation leads to suffering; after enough has been endured the voice of the soul is listened to and in desperation the individual tries to find his way back”³.
According to this interpretation, there is clear evidence in the Bible of the pre-existence of the soul. You can say, if you wish, that this is only my personal, unconventional interpretation. I would counter that it is hard to see what else Jesus, as reported by Luke, could have meant.
That is what I believe to be the real story of Genesis chapters 1 to 3. Adam and Eve were not the first humans, rather the two aspects of the spiritual monad. We have to note, however, that the parable of the Prodigal Son appears only in Luke. Given the importance of the message, why are the other three gospel authors unaware of it? Where did Luke get it from? Since it is in the Bible, however, David Knott presumably believes that it is the Word of God and consistent with the overall message.
We are still left with the contradiction between the two accounts of creation. My interpretation makes sense of Genesis 1.26–27. However, Genesis 2 says that it was against God’s will that the monad should descend to the material world and become human. Genesis 1.28–31 gives the impression that the world was created with humans in mind and for their benefit. That contradiction (lack of coherence) I would have to ask David Knott to explain.
pixabay hollylmonahan
I hope you have enjoyed this article. I have written in the past about other topics, including spirituality, metaphysics, psychology, science, Christianity, politics, and astrology. All these articles are on Medium, but the simplest way to see a guide to them is to visit my website (click here and here).
1. Oneness and the Monad, Yvonne K. Burgess, The Theosophical Publishing House, 2009, p6
2. Logia 29, The Nag Hammadi Library, general editor James M. Robinson, HarperSanFrancisco, 1990, p130
3. The Spiritual Path, Hodder & Stoughton, 1972, p71
David Knott
Gerald R. 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For years, women’s health advocates have argued that far more research is needed on women’s bodies and health. The world’s first-ever “vagina on a chip,” recently developed at Harvard’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, could go a long way to making that happen.
“Women’s health has not received the attention it deserves,” says Don Ingber, mestinon retard wirkung MD, PhD, who led the team that created the vagina chip. The advance quickly drew media attention after it was reported in the journal Microbiome in late November. But researchers hope for more than headlines. They see the chip as a way to facilitate vaginal health research and open the door to vital new treatments.
By now, you may have heard of “organs on chips”: tiny devices about the size of a flash drive that are designed to mimic the biological activity of human organs. These glass chips contain living human cells within grooves that allow the passage of fluid, to either maintain or disrupt the cells’ function. So far, Ingber and his team at the Wyss Institute have developed more than 15 organ chip models, including chips that mimic the lung, intestine, kidney, and bone marrow.
The idea to develop a vagina chip grew out of research, funded by the Gates Foundation, on a childhood disease called environmental enteric dysfunction, an intestinal disease most commonly found in low-resource nations that is the second leading cause of death in children under 5. That’s when Ingber discovered just how much the child’s microbiome influences this disease.
The vagina chip could help scientists find new treatments for bacterial vaginosis, vaginal yeast infection (candidiasis), chlamydia, and endometriosis.
Stemming from that work, the Gates Foundation turned its attention to newborn health — in particular, the impact of bacterial vaginosis, an imbalance in the vagina’s bacterial makeup. Bacterial vaginosis occurs in 1 out of 4 women worldwide and has been linked to premature birth as well as HIV, HPV persistence, and cervical cancer.
Upon establishing the Vaginal Microbiome Research Consortium, the foundation asked Ingber to engineer an organ chip that mimicked the vagina’s microbiome. The goal was to test “live biotherapeutic products,” or living microbes like probiotics, that might restore the vagina’s microbiome to health.
No other preclinical model exists to perform tests like that, says Ingber.
“The vagina chip is a way to help make some advances,” he says.
Pushing for More Women’s Health Research
The Gates Foundation recognized that women’s reproductive health is a major issue, not only in low-income nations, but everywhere around the world. As the project evolved, Ingber began to hear from female colleagues about how neglected women’s reproductive health is in medical science.
“It is something I became sensitive to and realized this is just the starting point,” Ingber says.
Take bacterial vaginosis, for example. Since 1982, treatment has revolved around the same two antibiotics. That’s partly because there is no animal model to study. No other species has the same vaginal bacterial community as humans do.
That makes developing any new therapy “incredibly challenging,” explains Caroline Mitchell, MD, MPH, an OB/GYN at Massachusetts General Hospital and a member of the consortium.
It turns out, replicating the vagina in a lab dish is, to use the technical term, very hard.
“That’s where a vagina chip offers an opportunity,” Mitchell says. “It’s not super high-throughput, but it’s way more high-throughput than a [human] clinical trial.”
As such, the vagina chip could help scientists find new treatments much faster.
Like Ingber, Mitchell also sees the chip as a way to bring more attention to the largely unmet needs in female reproductive medicine.
“Women’s reproductive health has been under-resourced, under-prioritized, and largely disregarded for decades,” she says. And the time may be ripe for change: Mitchell says she was encouraged by the National Institutes of Health’s Advancing NIH Research on the Health of Women conference, held in 2021 in response to a congressional request to address women’s health research efforts.
Beyond bacterial vaginosis, Mitchell imagines the chip could help scientists find new treatments for vaginal yeast infection (candidiasis), chlamydia, and endometriosis. As with bacterial vaginosis, medicines for vaginal yeast infections have not advanced in decades, Mitchell says. Efforts to develop a vaccine for chlamydia — which can cause permanent damage to a woman’s reproductive system — have dragged on for many years. And endometriosis, an often painful condition in which the tissue that makes up the uterine lining grows outside the uterus, remains under-researched despite affecting 10% of childbearing-age women.
While some mouse models are used in chlamydia research, it’s hard to say if they’ll translate to humans, given the vaginal and cervical bacterial differences.
“Our understanding of the basic physiology of the environment of the vagina and cervix is another area where we’re woefully ignorant,” Mitchell says.
To that end, Ingber’s team is developing more complex chips mimicking the vagina and the cervix. One of his team members wants to use the chips to study infertility. The researchers have already used the chips to see how bacterial vaginosis and mucous changes impact the way sperm migrates up the reproductive tract.
The lab is now linking vagina and cervix chips together to study viral infections of the cervix, like HPV, and all types of bacterial diseases of the vaginal tract. By applying cervical mucus to the vagina chip, they hope to learn more about how female reproductive tissues respond to infection and inflammation.
“I always say that organ chips are like synthetic biology at the cell tissue and organ level,” says Ingber. “You start simple and see if you [can] mimic a clinical situation.”
As they make the chips more complex — perhaps by adding blood vessel cells and female hormones — Ingber foresees being able to study the response to hormonal changes during the menstrual cycle.
“We can begin to explore the effects of cycling over time as well as other types of hormonal effects,” he says.
Ingber also envisions linking the vagina chip to other organ chips — he’s already succeeded in linking eight different organ types together. But for now, the team hopes the vagina chip will enhance our understanding of basic female reproductive biology and speed up the process of developing new treatments for women’s health.
Microbiome: “Vaginal microbiome-host interactions modeled in a human vagina-on-a-chip.”
Don Ingber, MD, PhD, founding director, Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, Harvard University.
Caroline Mitchell, MD, MPH, OB/GYN, Massachusetts General Hospital.
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Adult Playtime: Why You Should Play More & How to Get Started
/ July 28, 2022 /
When was the last time you set aside time to play? Can you remember?
As adults, we often think that playtime is just for children. We have fond memories of playing our favorite games and sports when we were little, but now that we’re grown up, it’s time to work, right?
That may not be entirely true. It turns out, adults need playtime just as much as kids! As we grow older and busier and we take on more and more responsibility in our lives, it becomes essential to allow time for play. Your inner child needs that time to learn, heal, and grow. Playtime teaches us how to become more creative, and it keeps us younger longer.
The problem is, too many of us forget how to play. We forget how to have fun! That’s why today, we’re taking a little time to talk about why adult playtime is so important. We’ll look at the facts and share why you should schedule some playtime for yourself. We hope this post inspires and encourages you to get in touch with your inner child and enjoy some playtime today. Ready to get started?
What Is Play?
When you think of “playing,” what comes to mind? You might think of playing a sport when you were a child. You might remember a favorite toy or game you liked years ago. But how does that translate into adulthood?
As an adult, you may not want to pull out your old Barbie dolls or Hot Wheels, but you can still find ways to play that you enjoy now. Jeff Harry, a speaker and consultant who advocates for enjoying playtime as an adult defines play as “any joyful act where you forget about time, where there is no purpose/result, [and] where you are entirely enveloped in the process.” That means any activity that you truly enjoy and that you don’t do for any specific result counts as play!
The problem is, too many of us forget how to play. We forget how to have fun!
What activities give you that kind of joy? What do you do purely for the fun of it? It could be playing a board game with your friends or family. Maybe you enjoy going outside and playing with your dog. Perhaps you like a physical activity like surfing, golfing, or cycling. Whatever it is, if you enjoy it, it’s play!
The tricky thing is to let your playtime be all about play — not about competition or receiving anything other than the joy of doing something for the fun of it. That’s why it’s important to be particularly careful when it comes to playing sports for your playtime. If you’re focused more on being stronger, faster, or better than others, that’s not playtime. You want your focus to be on pure enjoyment and living in the moment.
That’s why it’s important to toss out all the rules and shake up your routine and mindset when it comes to playing. It’s great to play a sport or participate in an activity you like, but it’s also good to experiment and try something new. If you’ve never been fishing before, now could be the time to try it!
Maybe for you, that new thing could be gardening, baking, flower arranging, cloud watching, playing an instrument, reading a book, or any number of other things. Be creative and try something new! The possibilities are endless, and there is no shortage of new activities you can try. The idea is to find something that lights you up — something you can do without needing to get anything other than pure enjoyment.
This is where boredom can become a huge blessing. If you experience moments of boredom, those can be moments when you think outside the box and try something you might not have done before. If you have children, we encourage you to follow their lead — what do they do when they have free time? And even if you don’t have children, find a way to get in touch with your inner child — what makes them happy?
Wait, What’s All This About an “Inner Child?”
When we think about our inner child, we remember the warm anticipation of Christmas morning (or any other holiday you celebrate that holds a special place in your heart). Do you remember that feeling — the magic and wonder of the Christmas season? In those days, it was all about warm mugs of hot chocolate, always hoping for snow, staying up late to catch a glimpse of Santa, and that joyful rush of Christmas morning and the experience of opening gifts with our families. Do you remember how exciting and magical everything felt at Christmas time when you were a little kid?
Unfortunately, we tend to forget about that feeling as we grow up. When we’re children, the world feels like a magical place, full of new things for us to learn. But when we become adults, we lose that sense of authentic joy. We find ourselves weighed down by the responsibilities and burdens of everyday life. Jobs, bills, challenging relationships, frustrating experiences, and mental health struggles add up over time, and we all too easily lose touch with that sense of child-like wonder we can remember from years past.
Friends, we’re here to tell you it doesn’t have to be like that. That little kid you remember — the one who looked forward to Christmas more than anything else in the world — is still there. You carry your inner child with you for your entire life, and you can never lose them completely. They will always be a part of you, and you always have the opportunity to get in touch with them again.
You carry your inner child with you for your entire life, and you can never lose them completely.
The best way to do that is through play. By scheduling even just a few minutes a day for a little playtime, you can get in touch with your inner child and experience the same joy and wonder that they did.
Of course, not all of our inner children are feeling as warm and fuzzy as we just described. The unfortunate truth is that many of us carry wounds from our childhoods that never fully healed. Maybe you experienced trauma as a child, and you still feel that pain even today. Maybe your inner child struggles with low self-esteem, a fear of failure, or anger leftover from your past negative experiences. If your inner child is hurting, we can promise that you’re not alone.
But there’s good news: Playtime can teach you how to heal your inner child. If you’re carrying wounds from your past, playtime could be exactly the remedy you need.
Now, that’s not to say it’s not important to seek the help and advice of a trusted mental health professional. If you’re struggling with trauma or anxiety from your past, we encourage you to reach out to a counselor or therapist who can help you recover from those issues.
But don’t make the mistake of undervaluing play when it comes to healing! Getting in touch with your unique sense of authentic joy can absolutely help heal your inner child. By bringing out your inner childlike qualities through playtime, you give yourself the chance to experience that true joy and wonder you missed as a kid, and you open up new possibilities for greater enjoyment in life in the future.
But How Exactly Does Play Improve My Health?
There are plenty of ways that playtime can improve both your mental and physical health as an adult. The most obvious way is through simple physical activity. Even when you aren’t in the gym and following a specific workout pattern or training for athletic competition, just by moving your body, you’re getting exercise.
That movement can only be good for you. Just by moving your body, you can strengthen your heart, boost your lung capacity, and reduce your cortisol levels. A short walk, a quick bike ride, or even a few minutes of running around your yard with your dog can be enough to reduce stress and increase endorphins — those hormones that make you feel happy and relaxed.
And that’s not all! Playtime doesn’t have to be all about physical activity. The truth is, any kind of play can have incredible effects on your mental health. The simple act of laughter can release your feel-good hormones just like physical exercise, boosting your mood and lowering your stress level.
Additionally, especially as we get older, play improves cognition and gives us a serious boost in creativity. Have you ever noticed that taking a short break during the workday can actually help you boost your productivity later? That’s because giving your brain a break enables you to approach your work from a new perspective and practice your problem-solving skills.
Not only that but incorporating play into the way you work can have a massive impact on productivity. When you’re fully immersed in play, that’s when you’re actually able to access your flow state. When you’re in a flow state, you are concentrated, productive, and you’re able to work more quickly, efficiently, and happily than ever. That’s why play is important, even in the workplace.
So How Can I Play More in My Life?
We’re so glad you asked! The good news is that incorporating more play into your life doesn’t have to be difficult. There are very simple ways you can start playing more in your life right now. Here are just a few examples:
Host a game night, or plan an activity with friends, family, or coworkers.
Schedule time to go to a park and ride a bike, fly a kite, or play with your pets.
Tell some jokes! When you approach friends and even strangers with a sense of humor, you inject a little bit of fun and playtime into your day and theirs.
Take a class and learn something new. Interested in dance or pottery or photography? Check online to see if there are classes for adults in your area.
Keep small toys or brain teasers at your desk at work.
Pick up your favorite book from when you were little and give it a re-read.
When it comes to finding new ways to play, the sky is truly the limit. So ask yourself — what makes you happy? What activities do you enjoy doing? When was the last time you got so wrapped up in having fun that you forgot about your worries, and how can you recreate that experience?
Maybe for you, playtime is all about getting together with others and spending time in your community, or maybe you’d prefer to schedule some solo playtime to rest and recenter yourself instead. Whatever you need to do to incorporate more play into your life, we encourage you to do it! The benefits are huge, and you never know what incredible things you’ll be able to accomplish with the clarity and healing that comes from playing.
Ready to Play?
Friends, we hope this post encouraged you and inspired you to get out there and play. Playtime is an essential part of life even into adulthood, and the potential for joy and happiness it can create in your life is limitless. Whether you want to try something new, pick up something old, or engage with family and friends around you, playtime has the power to improve your health, boost your creativity, and help you live a life of greater joy than ever before!
Sound good? We think so! So if you’re ready to get in touch with your authentic joy, schedule in some playtime for yourself today. Remember, it doesn’t have to be much — even just a few minutes a day is enough to start seeing the benefits.
Now, are you ready to play?
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BEWARE: INTERNATIONAL HIGH JINKS
By HumbleSky Culture, Film & TV, Make Believe News One Comment
There is a world where two wrongs make it right. Where you can get by on your looks. Where social-Darwinism evolves. This hotbed of sociopathic behavior is called high school. It is as easy as it is disturbing to imagine… | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12282 | {"url": "https://greenbaum-pr.com/tag/lagarde/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "greenbaum-pr.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:40:04Z", "digest": "sha1:GEAEQJ3Q4C72XGSYERG6LPN5TWD35U2Z"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 317, 317.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 317, 3380.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 317, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 317, 71.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 317, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 317, 288.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 317, 0.32307692]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 317, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 317, 0.03149606]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 317, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 317, 0.07692308]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 317, 0.33333333]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 317, 0.15384615]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 317, 0.7962963]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 317, 4.7037037]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 317, 0.01538462]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 317, 3.66153907]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 317, 54.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 33, 0.0], [33, 96, 0.0], [96, 317, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 33, 0.0], [33, 96, 0.0], [96, 317, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 33, 4.0], [33, 96, 10.0], [96, 317, 40.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 33, 0.0], [33, 96, 0.0], [96, 317, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 33, 0.0], [33, 96, 0.0], [96, 317, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 33, 0.84848485], [33, 96, 0.19047619], [96, 317, 0.02714932]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 317, -7.2e-07]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 317, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 317, -1.91e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 317, -23.7314556]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 317, -6.65882346]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 317, -17.64818159]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 317, 5.0]]} |
craziest goddamn moment in U.S. history
Posted on November 14, 2019 by greg
Okay, a quick heads up. I’m going to write a really long sentence. Really long. The kind of sentence writing instructors warn students never to write because readers will either lose interest in the subject and decide to go see what’s on television, or get massively confused halfway through and have to start again at the beginning. It’s going to be longer than the sentence you just read. It’s a long sentence because the craziest goddamn moment in U.S. history demands long sentences. So you’ve been warned.
Yesterday, at the same time Congress was holding the first public impeachment hearing to determine if Comrade Donald J. Trump is fit to continue to occupy the office of the President of the United States, Trump was meeting with Turkish President Recep Erdoğan, who last month launched a military offensive that bore all the hallmarks of an ethnic cleansing campaign against the Kurdish forces who had been the chief ally in the U.S. fight against ISIS for years until they were suddenly, unexpectedly betrayed by Trump’s inexplicable decision — which came immediately after a late-night phone call with the president of Turkey — to remove U.S. military forces from the Kurdish-controlled territory in Syria.
This was an extraordinary conjunction of events, even by the loopy standards of the Trumpverse. As I said earlier, it’s the craziest goddamn moment in U.S. history. While two patriotic career civil servants (one of whom is actually a deputy assistant secretary of state specializing in anti-corruption efforts) were testifying under oath that Trump had betrayed his oath of office by engaging in corrupt activity, Trump was publicly celebrating a different corrupt betrayal — and doing it with the corrupt dictator who directly benefited from the betrayal. Not only that, Trump openly confessed to a war crime. Although he’d claimed he pulled U.S. forces out of Syria to bring them home, yesterday he said this:
“We are keeping the oil. We have the oil. The oil is secure. We left troops behind only for the oil.”
This is a clear violation of Article 33 of the Geneva Conventions, which categorically states pillaging (taking something of value from a location seized in a time of war) is prohibited. It’s also perfectly on-brand for Trump, who argues that corruption committed in the open doesn’t count.
This is the craziest goddamn moment in U.S. history. Democrats and civil servants are systematically and methodically demonstrating the corrupt practices of the Trump administration while Republicans are spouting insane conspiracy theories and mocking Congressional witnesses for drinking water (I am NOT making this up) and POTUS is calling himself a ‘big fan’ of a foreign dictator who a few weeks ago had openly insulted him by saying he’d thrown Trump’s threatening letter in the trash. What the actual fuck is happening here?
How can all this crazy shit be happening at the same time? It almost makes you want to believe in astrology, because it would be nice if we could explain it all away by pointing to some lunatic arrangement of planets. That would actually make it less crazy; that’s how goddamn crazy this moment is.
And don’t even think about pulling me aside and whispering, “Forget it, Jake…it’s Chinatown” because it’s NOT CHINATOWN. This is NOT a Chinatown situation. Sure, Kurdistan is as dead as Hollis Mulwray, and Trump is treating the Constitution the way Noah Cross treated his daughter, but this isn’t policing in Los Angeles in the 1930s. It’s actually possible for us to know whether our foreign interventions are helping victims or exploiting them.
Okay. Okay, I got a tad carried away and veered off into a tangent that probably won’t even make sense to folks who’ve seen the movie. Sorry. That’s what living in the craziest goddamn moment in U.S. history will do to you.
There’s another public hearing schedule for tomorrow. Maybe it’ll be less crazy. Or maybe Comrade Trump will hold a press conference with Ming the Merciless. I’m not going to rule it out.
Somewhat Related Editorial Note: If you haven’t seen Chinatown, WTF is wrong with you? Go watch it. It’s brilliant. Cynical, yeah, but one of the best films ever made, even if it was made by Roman Polanski — and there’s a tangent I’m going to avoid while I still retain some semblance of self-control.
This entry was posted in awful people, comrade trump, current events, despicable behavior, election 2020, ItMFA by greg. Bookmark the permalink.
5 thoughts on “craziest goddamn moment in U.S. history”
dramamath on November 14, 2019 at 11:37 am said:
I am not certain that Ming the Merciless would ever stoop so low as to hold a press conference with President Trump. The man is merciless, but he does have standards.
greg on November 14, 2019 at 3:21 pm said:
The Emperor Ming: Klytus, I’m bored. What plaything can you offer me today?
Klytus: An obscure body in the S-K system, Your Majesty. The inhabitants refer to it as the planet… Earth.
The Emperor Ming: How peaceful it looks.
Anne C. on November 14, 2019 at 6:30 pm said:
Well, THAT was a great read–and totally not crazy, so thank you for your sanity (again).
Kathy Nobles on November 15, 2019 at 6:33 am said:
So…when do we get rid of the Electoral College??? That’s what started all this bull shit to begin with.
There’s a long history of electoral colleges — in all sorts of hierarchies from governmental to religious to business — dating back to 18th century Germany. It actually made sense back then, when the only way you could be sure a vote was valid was if it was cast in real time and in a semi-open venue. There were so many things that go wrong if you voted locally, then had to trust somebody to hand deliver the tally to a central authority hundreds of miles away.
But, of course, that doesn’t apply now. I agree it would be best for the nation if we scrapped that ancient system. 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Introduction to Motion Graphics. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12284 | {"url": "https://grindreel.academy/courses/davinci-resolve-workflow/lectures/21555395", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "grindreel.academy", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:58:58Z", "digest": "sha1:Y6RVHNVMXGGFCKKDDPKVVGVEXMICF4Q3"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 32, 32.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 32, 1723.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 32, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 32, 44.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 32, 0.63]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 32, 229.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.2]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 32, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 32, 0.2]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 32, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 32, 7.0]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 32, 1.38629436]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 32, 4.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 32, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 32, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 32, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.09375]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 32, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 32, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 32, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 32, -0.61789141]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 32, -0.4411455]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 32, -0.12074463]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 32, 1.0]]} |
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McKaiser for Memorial Lecture
By Grocott's Mail May 24, 2016 No Comments1 Min Read
Grahamstonian, writer, broadcaster, philosopher and commentator, Eusebius McKaiser, will give the DCS Oosthuizen Academic Freedom Memorial lecture on Monday 30 May.
The title of his talk is "Epistemic Injustices: The dark side of academic freedom".
This annual lecture, dedicated to the memory of the philosopher DCS Oosthuizen, was started in 1970. Oosthuizen was Professor of Philosophy at Rhodes from 1958 until his death in 1969.
He was an outspoken critic of the apartheid regime – one of the first Afrikaners to speak out against it. He was once described by Andre Brink as a 'thorn in the flesh of the establishment'.
The lectures are organised by the university's Academic Freedom Committee.
The lecture is free and starts at 6.30pm in Eden Grove Blue.
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by Crystal Koe
#Artist#Country#Rock
Dolly Parton sets her sights on Rolling Stones collab: “I’ve always wanted to do the song ‘Satisfaction’”
Dolly Parton, who was voted into this year’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, has some A-list collaborators in mind for the rock album that she intends to release sometime in the future. READ MORE: Former Judas Priest member KK Downing open to reuniting on stage for this year’s Rock Hall Induction ceremony In a recent […]
Image: Adam Gasson / Alamy
Dolly Parton, who was voted into this year’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, has some A-list collaborators in mind for the rock album that she intends to release sometime in the future.
READ MORE: Former Judas Priest member KK Downing open to reuniting on stage for this year’s Rock Hall Induction ceremony
In a recent interview with Billboard, the Jolene hitmaker revealed that she’s “always wanted to do a great rock album”, and what better way to do so than to enlist the help of one of the greatest rock bands of all time — the Rolling Stones.
“I love the Rolling Stones. I’ve always wanted to do the song ‘Satisfaction,’” said Parton, who had attempted to bow out of the nomination at first because she felt she was undeserving of the honour. “That’s one of my husband’s favourite songs. And I may have to drag Mick’s guys up there to help me sing it.”
“I’m hoping we’re both around long enough when I get to doing this record that he’ll come sing with me, and I may have to use The Rolling Stones to play behind me…Now I may have to call my album Rock Star!”
More than just a song though, Parton also mentioned that she’s considering having various rock bands feature on her album, saying: “I thought about writing a song called ‘Rock of Ages,’ where I get all the great old rock ‘n’ rollers, the people that I have always admired and respected.”
“I didn’t follow rock music that much, but my husband is a rock ‘n’ roll freak. He loves all the groups and all the great stuff. I just liked certain records. I may do up a version of something like [Lynyrd Skynyrd’s] ‘Free Bird’ and do my own versions of some classic things that I think would make good rock ‘n’ roll songs.”
While the 76-year old singer-songwriter is still unsure if she’ll attend the induction ceremony this November, she shared that if she does, she will sing the hardest rock ‘n’ roll song she can muster just to show that she can do it.
“I don’t know what I’ll do. … But I’ll do something to make it fun,” said Parton.
A post shared by Dolly Parton (@dollyparton)
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4Strymon El Capistan V2 review: The finest tape echo sim around gets a subtle but important polish | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12286 | {"url": "https://guitar.com/news/music-news/dolly-parton-talks-rolling-stones-mick-jagger-collab-rock-album/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "guitar.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:01:31Z", "digest": "sha1:HLWH6PKTXCY4IN3VPTA7QD4C3IUE4IUE"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2927, 2927.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2927, 3561.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2927, 20.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2927, 43.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2927, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2927, 280.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2927, 0.40998487]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2927, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2927, 0.21462163]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2927, 0.25823001]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2927, 0.24711415]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2927, 0.24711415]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2927, 0.21462163]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2927, 0.21462163]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2927, 0.01881146]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2927, 0.02394186]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2927, 0.01282599]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2927, 0.04387292]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2927, 0.1633888]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2927, 0.4971537]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2927, 4.43833017]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2927, 0.00907716]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2927, 5.15320534]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2927, 527.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 36, 0.0], [36, 142, 1.0], [142, 459, 0.0], [459, 486, 0.0], [486, 666, 1.0], [666, 787, 0.0], [787, 1028, 1.0], [1028, 1338, 1.0], [1338, 1545, 1.0], [1545, 1833, 1.0], [1833, 2160, 1.0], [2160, 2393, 1.0], [2393, 2475, 1.0], [2475, 2520, 0.0], [2520, 2577, 1.0], [2577, 2603, 0.0], [2603, 2684, 0.0], [2684, 2829, 0.0], [2829, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 36, 0.0], [36, 142, 0.0], [142, 459, 0.0], [459, 486, 0.0], [486, 666, 0.0], [666, 787, 0.0], [787, 1028, 0.0], [1028, 1338, 0.0], [1338, 1545, 0.0], [1545, 1833, 0.0], [1833, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2393, 0.0], [2393, 2475, 0.0], [2475, 2520, 0.0], [2520, 2577, 0.0], [2577, 2603, 0.0], [2603, 2684, 0.0], [2684, 2829, 0.0], [2829, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 15, 3.0], [15, 36, 1.0], [36, 142, 17.0], [142, 459, 56.0], [459, 486, 4.0], [486, 666, 32.0], [666, 787, 20.0], [787, 1028, 46.0], [1028, 1338, 57.0], [1338, 1545, 42.0], [1545, 1833, 50.0], [1833, 2160, 63.0], [2160, 2393, 42.0], [2393, 2475, 17.0], [2475, 2520, 7.0], [2520, 2577, 10.0], [2577, 2603, 5.0], [2603, 2684, 12.0], [2684, 2829, 26.0], [2829, 2927, 17.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 36, 0.0], [36, 142, 0.0], [142, 459, 0.0], [459, 486, 0.0], [486, 666, 0.0], [666, 787, 0.0], [787, 1028, 0.0], [1028, 1338, 0.0], [1338, 1545, 0.0], [1545, 1833, 0.0], [1833, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2393, 0.00881057], [2393, 2475, 0.0], [2475, 2520, 0.0], [2520, 2577, 0.0], [2577, 2603, 0.04], [2603, 2684, 0.0125], [2684, 2829, 0.00699301], [2829, 2927, 0.02061856]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 36, 0.0], [36, 142, 0.0], [142, 459, 0.0], [459, 486, 0.0], [486, 666, 0.0], [666, 787, 0.0], [787, 1028, 0.0], [1028, 1338, 0.0], [1338, 1545, 0.0], [1545, 1833, 0.0], [1833, 2160, 0.0], [2160, 2393, 0.0], [2393, 2475, 0.0], [2475, 2520, 0.0], [2520, 2577, 0.0], [2577, 2603, 0.0], [2603, 2684, 0.0], [2684, 2829, 0.0], [2829, 2927, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.13333333], [15, 36, 0.14285714], [36, 142, 0.05660377], [142, 459, 0.07886435], [459, 486, 0.14814815], [486, 666, 0.03888889], [666, 787, 0.14049587], [787, 1028, 0.02074689], [1028, 1338, 0.03225806], [1338, 1545, 0.04830918], [1545, 1833, 0.02430556], [1833, 2160, 0.02752294], [2160, 2393, 0.00858369], [2393, 2475, 0.06097561], [2475, 2520, 0.06666667], [2520, 2577, 0.01754386], [2577, 2603, 0.15384615], [2603, 2684, 0.02469136], [2684, 2829, 0.02068966], [2829, 2927, 0.05102041]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2927, 0.62197137]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2927, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2927, 0.9763422]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2927, -248.26019161]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2927, 66.20373592]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2927, -384.06248171]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2927, 18.0]]} |
Firestone Tire Sale in Lynhurst, ON
If you’ve been searching “Firestone tires near me”, “Firestone tires for sale Lynhurst”, “Should I buy Firestone tires”, or any similar search term, Gurr Auto can help you. We strive to serve our clients with all the top-rated tires, so of course we have Firestone tires for sale.
As one of the oldest and top-selling tire brands in the world, Firestone has many happy customers globally, including right here in Lynhurst, Ontario. But what Firestone tires are for sale, and which is the best Firestone tire for your light truck, SUV, family sedan, or luxury car? Read on to learn more.
No matter where you are, the answer is probably yes. As one of the global leaders in tire design and tire engineering, Firestone sells their tires in just about every corner of the globe. What we can say for certain is that, if you’re looking for Firestone tires for sale in Lynhurst, Gurr Auto has a wide range of Firestones available for your selection.
Gurr Auto has Firestone tires for sale near you in Lynhurst, ON
There’s no need to keep searching for a Firestone tire sale near you, just make Gurr Auto your Firestone tire dealer inthe Lynhurst, Ontario area. We have a wide range of Firestone tires suitable for different vehicle types and the varying weather conditions. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12287 | {"url": "https://gurrauto.com/firestone-tires-lynhurst-on/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "gurrauto.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:49:09Z", "digest": "sha1:YW4WOQ2KRSEXMLEQVKAC2X7Y5HQZAXWY"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1302, 1302.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1302, 29698.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1302, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1302, 813.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1302, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1302, 297.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1302, 0.40520446]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1302, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1302, 0.03349282]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1302, 0.04593301]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1302, 0.06028708]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1302, 0.01486989]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1302, 0.14126394]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1302, 0.52654867]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1302, 4.62389381]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1302, 4.43000712]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1302, 226.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 317, 1.0], [317, 623, 1.0], [623, 979, 1.0], [979, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1302, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 317, 0.0], [317, 623, 0.0], [623, 979, 0.0], [979, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 36, 6.0], [36, 317, 48.0], [317, 623, 53.0], [623, 979, 64.0], [979, 1043, 12.0], [1043, 1302, 43.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 317, 0.0], [317, 623, 0.0], [623, 979, 0.0], [979, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 36, 0.0], [36, 317, 0.0], [317, 623, 0.0], [623, 979, 0.0], [979, 1043, 0.0], [1043, 1302, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 36, 0.16666667], [36, 317, 0.03914591], [317, 623, 0.03594771], [623, 979, 0.0252809], [979, 1043, 0.09375], [1043, 1302, 0.03474903]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1302, 0.00978541]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1302, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1302, 0.00884968]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1302, -51.51110025]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1302, -4.01364376]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1302, -146.45717472]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1302, 10.0]]} |
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We may use publicly available Personal Information posted on social media profile information including photos for purposes of assisting us, and our marketing partners with marketing and advertising activities and with contact management.
We may use Usage Data without restriction in our sole discretion for administrative and optimization purposes, such as to improve the Services and personalize ads (as described more particularly below under “Targeted Advertising”).
We may combine and use the Personal Information and Usage Data we collect from all services and products offered by us and our Affiliated Entities over various websites to provide, protect, and improve them, and to develop and offer new services and products. We will treat you as a single user of these combined services and products.
HOW AND WHEN WE SHARE AND DISCLOSE INFORMATION
General Disclosure Policy. We may share and disclose your Personal Information as described below. We may share and disclose Usage Data without restriction, such as in the ways described below.
Affiliated Entities. “Affiliated Entities” are entities that we legally control (by voting rights) or that control us. We may provide your Personal Information and Usage Data to any affiliated entities we may have, including our subsidiaries.
Service Providers. We may provide access to your Personal Information and Usage Data to trusted service providers that assist us with the operation and maintenance of the Service. For example, we may contract with third parties to facilitate purchases from the Services, process payments, host our servers, provide security, and provide production, fulfillment, optimization, analytics, reporting, and software maintenance and development services. Our service providers will be given access to your information only as is reasonably necessary to provide the services for which they are contracted.
Successors. If we sell or otherwise transfer part or all of our business or assets to another organization, such as in the course of an acquisition, merger, bankruptcy or liquidation, we may transfer your Personal Information and Usage Data.
Legal Process, Enforcement and Security Notice. We may disclose your Personal Information and Usage Data if we have a good faith belief that access, use, preservation or disclosure of such information is reasonably necessary (i) to satisfy any applicable law, regulation, legal process or enforceable governmental request (such as for example, to comply with a subpoena or court order), (ii) to detect, prevent, and address fraud or other illegal activity, and (iii) to investigate, respond to, or enforce violations of our rights or the security of this site.
With Your Consent. We may share your Personal Information with other parties with your consent.
Analytics Partners. We may participate with third party analytics partners to monitor and analyze Web traffic and to keep track of user behavior on this site.
Transfer Outside Country of Residence. In general, any Personal Information we may collect may be stored and processed in our servers located in the United States or in any other country in which we, or our affiliates, subsidiaries, or agents maintain facilities. By using this site, you consent to any such transfer of Personal Information outside your country of residence to any such location.
We engage certain third-party service providers to serve advertisements on our behalf across the Internet and to provide analytics services. We may also participate in third-party affiliate advertising and allow third-party affiliate links to be encoded on some of our pages. This means that we may earn a commission when you click on or make purchases via third-party affiliate links.
Our advertisers or the ad networks that serve advertisements may utilize cookies or other similar tracking technologies (including within the ads) to collect anonymous information from you such as your device identifiers, advertising IDs, and IP address, web browser, actions you take relating to the ads, any links you click on, and conversion information. This information may be used by us, our service providers and their clients in aggregated, anonymous form to, among other things, analyze and track aggregated data, determine the popularity of certain content or products, measure the effectiveness of ad campaigns, determine the proper amount of repeat views of a given ad, and deliver advertising and content targeted to your interests on our Services and outside of our Services on other websites (also known as “interest-based advertising”). These service providers are prohibited from collecting any Personal Data from you and we do not share any of your Personal Data with them.
You have a choice about participating in interest-based advertising. If you wish to opt out of such participation, you have a few options:
On your mobile device, you can visit https://youradchoices.com/appchoices to learn about and download the Digital Advertising Alliance’s opt-out app, which allows you to opt your mobile device out of interest-based advertising from participating companies.
Your device settings may allow you to limit the use of information from your device in interest-based advertising through your browser’s settings (such as under the “Security & Privacy” settings of the Safari app on an iOS device) or an “Opt Out of Interest-Based Ads” setting (on an Android device).
You can learn more about advertising networks and interest-based advertising, and your ability to opt out, by visiting the Digital Advertising Alliance at www.aboutads.info/choices or the Network Advertising Initiative at www.networkadvertising.org/choices.
In providing you with transparency and choice regarding interest-based advertising, we are acting in accordance with our commitment to the Digital Advertising Alliance’s Self-Regulatory Principles. To learn more about these Principles, please visit http://www.aboutads.info/consumers.
CHANGING AND DELETING PERSONAL INFORMATION
Under certain laws, including as described below with respect to the GDPR and CCPA, you may have the right to: obtain confirmation that we hold Personal Information about you, request access to and receive information about the Personal Information we maintain about you, receive copies of the Personal Information we maintain about you, update and correct inaccuracies in your Personal Information, object to the continued processing of your Personal Information, and have the Personal Information blocked, anonymized or deleted, as appropriate. The right to access Personal Information may be limited in some circumstances by local law, including as described above under California law. If you qualify, in order to exercise these rights, please contact us as described under “Contact Us”.
You may opt out of promotional communications by sending us an email at the email address below under “Contact Us”.
We may ask you to provide additional information for identity verification purposes, or to verify that you are in possession of an applicable email account.
Please understand, however, that we reserve the right to retain an archive of such Personal Information for a commercially reasonable time to ensure that its deletion does not affect the integrity of our data; and we further reserve the right to retain an anonymous version of such Information.
TERMS FOR SPECIFIC TYPES OF USERS
EEA Residents
This section of the Privacy Policy is applicable to residents of the EEA. The EEA consists of the member states of the EU, i.e., Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Republic of Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom, and Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway. This section also applies to residents of Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Residents of the EEA, Switzerland and the United Kingdom are referred to here as “EEA Residents”.
Since May 25, 2018, all processing of Personal Information of EEA Residents is performed by us in accordance with the General Data Protection Regulation (2016/679) of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons regarding the processing of Personal Information and on the free movement of such data (“GDPR”).
Under the GDPR, we are the controller and a processor of the Personal Information of EEA Residents. Our purpose for collecting and processing Personal Information from EEA Residents is to obtain contact information, to substantiate such information and to provide the Services. The legal basis for collecting Personal Information is your consent. You may withdraw consent for obtaining such communications by following the “Unsubscribe” instructions on any communication or by contacting us at [email protected].
If you are a resident of the EEA and believe that we have Personal Information about you, and you wish to access or correct the Personal Information that we have about you or have any questions relating to the processing of your Personal Information, please contact us at [email protected] with the subject line “GDPR Data.”
International Data Transfers. If you are resident outside the United States, including in the EEA, we transfer Personal Information provided by you for processing in the United States. Under the GDPR, we are considered a “controller” and a “co-processor” of the Personal Information of EEA Residents. By providing Personal Information to us for the purpose of setting up an account, obtaining Services, or adding yourself to our contact lists, you consent to the transfer of your Personal Information to the United States. The transfer of your Personal Information to the United States is necessary for the performance of a contract between you and us for obtaining Services.
This section pertains to the rights of individuals or households in California (“California consumers”).
Under certain circumstances, California Civil Code Section 1798.83 states that, upon receipt of a request by a California consumer, a business may be required to provide detailed information regarding how that business has shared that customer’s Personal Information with third parties for direct marketing purposes. However, the foregoing does not apply to businesses like ours that do not disclose Personal Information to third parties for direct marketing purposes.
The CCPA (California Civil Code Section 1798.100 et seq.) provides California consumers with additional rights regarding Personal Information that identifies, relates to, describes, is capable of being associated with, or could reasonably be linked, directly or indirectly with a particular consumer or household. The categories of Personal Information we collect are generally described above but differ for individual consumers depending on the services used by such consumers.
Under the CCPA, qualifying California consumers may have the following rights:
Right to Know and Right to Delete.
A California consumer has the right to request that we disclose what Personal Information we collect, use, disclose and sell. A California consumer also has the right to submit requests to delete Personal Information.
When we receive a valid request to know or delete from a California consumer, we will confirm receipt of the request within 10 days and provide information about how we will process the request, including our verification process. We will respond to such requests within 45 days.
Right for Disclosure of Information.
A California consumer may also submit requests that we disclose specific types or categories of Personal Information that we collect.
Under certain circumstances, we will not provide such information, including where the disclosure creates a substantial, articulable and unreasonable risk to the security of that Personal Information, customers’ account with us, or the security of our systems or networks. We also will not disclose California consumers’ social security numbers, driver’s license numbers or other government-issued identification numbers, financial account numbers, any health insurance or medical identification numbers, or account passwords and security questions and answers.
Submitting Requests
If you are a California consumer and would like to make any requests under the CCPA, please see the “Changing and Deleting Personal Information” the section.
Verifying Requests. If we receive any request we will use a two-step process for online requests where the California consumer must first, clearly submit the request and then second, separately confirm the request. We will use other appropriate measures to verify requests received by mail or telephone.
To verify a request, a California consumer must provide a business with sufficient information to identify the consumer, such as name, e-mail address, home or work address, or other such information that is on record with us so that we can match such information to the Personal Information that we maintain. Do not provide social security numbers, driver’s license numbers, account numbers, credit or debit card numbers, medical information or health information with requests. If requests are unclear or submitted through means other than outline above, we will provide the California consumer with specific directions on how to submit the request or remedy any deficiencies. If we cannot verify the identity of the requestor, we may deny the request.
We are committed to preserving online privacy for all of its website visitors, including children. Consistent with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), we do not knowingly collect any personal information from children under the age of 13, and we delete any such information we become aware of. If you are a parent or guardian and you believe your child has provided us with Personal Information, please contact us at “please contact our site as provided below under “Contact Us,” and be sure to include in your message the same login information that your child submitted.
If you have any questions regarding this Privacy Policy, please contact us at:
Pixel Labs, LLC
Attn: Privacy Policy Officer
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Home » Alleva Dairy, the Oldest Cheese Shop in America, Has Closed its Doors
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Alleva Dairy, the Oldest Cheese Shop in America, Has Closed its Doors
by Stop Anti-Italianism March 1, 2023 March 2, 2023
3 Comments on Alleva Dairy, the Oldest Cheese Shop in America, Has Closed its Doors
Today was the last time that you could have grabbed the fresh ricotta and mozzarella that has made Alleva Dairy a staple in New York City’s Little Italy since the late 1800s. Regarded as the oldest cheese store in the United States, the 130-year-old shop has been forced to close its doors after falling two years behind on rent.
Karen King, the store’s owner since 2014, tried her best to keep the business afloat while dealing with the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to cutting her staff’s pay, she expanded Alleva’s offerings to include other Italian favorites like arancini while also selling pre-made meals and grocery items. However, it ultimately wasn’t enough to cover their level of debt which exceeds $628,000.
Alleva Dairy filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last September and had been attempting to work with Jerome G. Stabile III Realty, the owner of the property, to remain at the corner of Mulberry and Grand Street in the heart of Little Italy. King’s prayers were not answered though, as the two parties agreed to a deal that would include Alleva’s relocation. In exchange for dropping its efforts to collect the large sum of back rent, Alleva Dairy would be required to pay $31,000 in addition to moving out of their current location by March 5th, 2023.
While times have changed drastically since 1892, one thing remains the same: The vibrance of Little Italy and timelessness of our historic storefront. #AllevaDairy #TBT #ThrowbackThursday pic.twitter.com/s0L5XmYf6j
— Alleva Dairy (@AllevaDairyNYC) April 1, 2021
This truly marks the end of an era, as the shop has been beloved by Italians and New Yorkers alike for over a century. When Alleva first opened, it mainly serviced Italian immigrants who worked hard labor jobs like digging subway tunnels. Yet, as Italian food became more popular in the US over time, tourists began to flock to places like Little Italy to get an authentic taste of what many agree is the best type of cuisine in the world. Also frequented by celebrities like Leah Remini, Michael Imperioli, Alice Cooper, and Joey Reynolds, Alleva even had a celebrity co-owner in Tony Danza until 2017.
This isn’t the first Little Italy institution to feel the effects of COVID-19. Forlini’s was forced to close in 2022 after spending 79 years on Baxter Street, while many other local businesses also struggled to make ends meet.
A similar impact was felt in nearby Chinatown, but the neighboring ethnic enclave was awarded a $20 million economic and tourism grant by Governor Kathy Hochul to help mitigate these financial hardships. Meanwhile, Little Italy vendors were not even asked to jointly apply for the state grant.
This was echoed by owner Karen King, who stated that “Chinatown got money. A museum across the street from me got a million dollars. My question is, when are businesses like mine going to get their fair share?” She also reached out to the government herself, writing letters to state officials for aid, but she was met with “lip service.”
Alleva Dairy gets its name from Pina Alleva, an immigrant from Benevento, Italy who founded the shop in 1892. The Alleva family would operate the store for the next 122 years before selling the business in 2014 to King and her husband John Ciarcia, more affectionately known as “Cha Cha” and dubbed the “unofficial mayor of Little Italy” before his death in 2015. Ciarcia was a cousin of the last family owner Robert Alleva and also dabbled in acting, appearing in “The Sopranos” and “Goodfellas.” Alleva continued to be a family business despite the switch in ownership, as Karen’s sister Denise, nephew Sean, and niece Nikki all currently work at the shop. Other family members also lend a helping hand during the annual San Gennaro Festival each September.
Start your week with an #AllevaDairy history lesson: Robert Alleva, Irma's nephew, ran Alleva Dairy until 2014, when their cousin John "Cha Cha" Ciarcia took over. When Cha Cha passed away in 2015, his wife, Karen King, was tasked with carrying on the Alleva Dairy legacy. ❤️ pic.twitter.com/ufM0I67yJj
— Alleva Dairy (@AllevaDairyNYC) March 1, 2021
While time has run out to stop by Alleva at its iconic location at the corner of Mulberry and Grand, King does intend to reopen in a different spot. Until then, Alleva patrons will have to find another place to get high-quality Italian cheeses.
Tags: alleva dairy italian american Italian Americans Italian Cheese Italian Food
Published by Stop Anti-Italianism
View all posts by Stop Anti-Italianism
Kathleen kostef says:
So sad to hear!
It has been around awhile. Such a shame. My heart goes out to them.
Adriano says:
Adriano Natarelli…so sad to hear went there on many occasions when visiting my uncle Nicki @most precious blood church where he was a priest and has also closed down. Little Italy has changed it’s landscape so sad that alleva has closed its doors also. Little Italy will never be the same..
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March 30, 2017 by AW Leave a Comment
By Adam Waldman On March 30, 1979, Canadian power trio Triumph released their third studio album, Just A Game. This is the album that exposed the band to American audiences with hit songs like “Hold On” and “Lay It On The Line” (which is still a staple on classic rock radio today). Like the younger […]
Filed Under: This Day In Hard Rock Tagged With: Fantasy Serenade, Gil Moore, Hold On, Just A Game, Lay It On The Line, Mike Levine, Movin' On, Rik Emmett, This Day In Hard Rock, Triumph, Young Enough To Cry | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12291 | {"url": "https://hardrockdaddy.com/tag/hold-on/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hardrockdaddy.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:50:08Z", "digest": "sha1:HSB76N2AFMYHT7JMFTIPO35HCIREGJN2"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 601, 601.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 601, 2102.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 601, 4.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 601, 26.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 601, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 601, 203.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 601, 0.12857143]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 601, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 601, 0.13978495]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 601, 0.10322581]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 601, 0.04516129]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 601, 0.05806452]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 601, 0.08387097]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 601, 0.02857143]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 601, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 601, 0.22857143]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 601, 0.66371681]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 601, 4.11504425]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 601, 0.00714286]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 601, 4.14006148]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 601, 113.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 91, 0.0], [91, 395, 0.0], [395, 601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 91, 0.0], [91, 395, 0.0], [395, 601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 54, 10.0], [54, 91, 8.0], [91, 395, 56.0], [395, 601, 39.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 91, 0.17142857], [91, 395, 0.02040816], [395, 601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 91, 0.0], [91, 395, 0.0], [395, 601, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.18518519], [54, 91, 0.13513514], [91, 395, 0.06578947], [395, 601, 0.18932039]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 601, 3.1e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 601, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 601, 0.00030053]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 601, -65.58071756]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 601, -6.89274934]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 601, -8.31016091]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 601, 3.0]]} |
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Published by Hartman Initiative on October 20, 2022
What is the NCLEX?
The most extensive test nursing students take is the NCLEX. It’s the required exam for nurses to earn licensure and practice nursing. This test is vital to their careers, as The National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) states it is one of the main steps in becoming a nurse. The others include:
“Graduating from a recognized nursing program,
Meeting the specific requirements of the state board of nursing, and
Passing the National Council of State Boards of Nursing NCLEX examination for registered nurses (RNs) or licensed practical/ vocational nurses (LPN/VNs)” (Source).
The NCLEX-RN specifically is similar to the typical standardized tests you may think of in high school (ACT / SAT) or graduate school (GRE). However, it focuses entirely on nursing. The exam is taken over the computer and comprises approximately anywhere between 70 and 200+ questions. Students have five hours to complete the test.
For more detailed information about the NCLEX, visit: https://nurse.org/resources/what-is-the-nclex/.
NCLEX prep session and the Hartman Initiative
In the Hartman Initiative’s local program, Natalie Cekovich leads practice sessions for the students. Usually, she focuses on different specialties in each session she leads. In her last session, her questions focused on pediatric nursing.
Cekovich boiled down one way to think about pediatric nursing-focused questions as “what is appropriate for a child to do at what age.”
For the NCLEX in general, she also gave valuable tips, tricks, and wisdom as she walked the students through practice questions. Her goal, she said, was to teach them the science and art of deductive reasoning.
Along with their medical knowledge, deductive reasoning is one of the main components in succeeding in the test. For example, all the answers may be correct on a question, but on some questions, it is asking for the best possible solution—not just an applicable answer.
Cekovich guides the students in their own knowledge in an encouraging and helpful way.
Here are some NCLEX tips and tricks straight from the past session:
Read carefully. Really read the question. Cekovich emphasizes the NCLEX likes to use terms like “Most,” “Least,” and “Select All,” so it’s important to keep that in mind when you choose your answer.
Use mnemonic devices. Using word pictures in your head can help you remember certain concepts. The most traditional mnemonic device would be acronyms. However, Cekovich gave the example of association as a key trick. Two examples of association she gave:
Think of a child you know that meets the description of a question. Although this isn’t always true by any means, if a question asks about a two-year-old and you can think of your nephew in that stage, it helps frame your mind around the scenario.
Think of a medical diagnosis similar to the one the question might be bringing up. Comparing illnesses this way can help you categorize their similarities and differences.
“Keep going.” No matter what, keep going and keep persevering. Cekovich reminded the students that this is one of the most tested times they will experience in their careers, but if they can make it, they will pass and succeed. So keep studying and keep going when you’re taking the test. There is an end.
For more information about the Hartman Initiative’s local program, visit: https://hartmaninitiative.org/local-programs.
National Council of State Boards of Nursing. “NCLEX Fact Sheet.” NCSBN. 2022. https://www.ncsbn.org/publications/2022-nclex-fact-sheet.
Jividen, Sarah. “What is the NCLEX?”. Nurse.org. November 2, 2021. https://nurse.org/resources/what-is-the-nclex/
Categories: Local Programs
Tags: local programNCLEX test prepnursingprofessional development
Natalie Cekovich CRNP-BC, RN, DNP. Natalie is a Neonatal Nurse Practitioner for the Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh, Department of Newborn Services. She is currently one of the Hartman Initiative’s local program mentors, host of our Read more…
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Tips to choose Dietary Supplement For Weight Loss
If you’re thinking of taking any dietary supplement for weight loss, be sure to follow the suggested dosage on the label. Don’t take more than […] | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12295 | {"url": "https://hawaiband.com/category/tips/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hawaiband.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:09:01Z", "digest": "sha1:NG63BF5G54E454SVBDI2CXSGJTMMTYZU"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 438, 438.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 438, 2185.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 438, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 438, 57.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 438, 0.89]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 438, 303.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 438, 0.40909091]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 438, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 438, 0.16997167]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 438, 0.06798867]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 438, 0.07365439]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 438, 0.14730878]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 438, 0.01136364]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 438, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 438, 0.125]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 438, 0.67105263]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 438, 4.64473684]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 438, 0.02272727]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 438, 3.78465828]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 438, 76.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 79, 0.0], [79, 224, 0.0], [224, 242, 0.0], [242, 292, 0.0], [292, 438, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 79, 0.0], [79, 224, 0.0], [224, 242, 0.0], [242, 292, 0.0], [292, 438, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 15, 2.0], [15, 79, 11.0], [79, 224, 26.0], [224, 242, 3.0], [242, 292, 8.0], [292, 438, 26.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 79, 0.0], [79, 224, 0.0], [224, 242, 0.0], [242, 292, 0.0], [292, 438, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 15, 0.0], [15, 79, 0.0], [79, 224, 0.0], [224, 242, 0.0], [242, 292, 0.0], [292, 438, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 15, 0.13333333], [15, 79, 0.125], [79, 224, 0.0137931], [224, 242, 0.11111111], [242, 292, 0.12], [292, 438, 0.01369863]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 438, -9.78e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 438, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 438, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 438, -41.44871495]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 438, -4.90532203]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 438, -47.10770337]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 438, 3.0]]} |
Michigan Health and Hospital Association president to retire
Spencer Johnson who has worked 30 years as President of Michigan Health & Hospital Association has decided to retire from his job in June 2015. It is said that he spent 40 years of his life in advocacy and health care policy. Media reports claim that in June 2015, Johnson will be replaced by Brian Peters.
Presently, Peters is executive vice president of the association and he has been working Michigan Health & Hospital Association since the last 25 years. Besides, Dennis Swan the chairman of MHA Board said that “Johnson has made Michigan as a worldly recognized State in terms of health care provider”. He further said that the contribution of Johnson is commendable and we would never forget his outstanding services.
Last but not the least, Peters is supposed to be one of the most senior and experience officials of MHA and he has worked on different positions of this organization.
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Clinton: Michigan Democrats should tout health law | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12296 | {"url": "https://health-splash.org/michigan-health-and-hospital-association-president-to-retire/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "health-splash.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:50:28Z", "digest": "sha1:OIB5X6LVH2J34B6ATRBQUPHTAIQUF4V4"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1247, 1247.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1247, 4208.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1247, 8.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1247, 58.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1247, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1247, 326.3]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1247, 0.37668161]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1247, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1247, 0.0545809]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1247, 0.04288499]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1247, 0.06432749]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1247, 0.01345291]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1247, 0.12107623]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1247, 0.62376238]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1247, 5.07920792]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1247, 4.58643769]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1247, 202.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 368, 1.0], [368, 786, 1.0], [786, 953, 1.0], [953, 1055, 1.0], [1055, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1197, 0.0], [1197, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 368, 0.0], [368, 786, 0.0], [786, 953, 0.0], [953, 1055, 0.0], [1055, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1197, 0.0], [1197, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 8.0], [61, 368, 55.0], [368, 786, 66.0], [786, 953, 30.0], [953, 1055, 16.0], [1055, 1125, 9.0], [1125, 1197, 11.0], [1197, 1247, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 368, 0.04], [368, 786, 0.00487805], [786, 953, 0.0], [953, 1055, 0.01030928], [1055, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1197, 0.01408451], [1197, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 368, 0.0], [368, 786, 0.0], [786, 953, 0.0], [953, 1055, 0.0], [1055, 1125, 0.0], [1125, 1197, 0.0], [1197, 1247, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.06557377], [61, 368, 0.04560261], [368, 786, 0.0430622], [786, 953, 0.02994012], [953, 1055, 0.01960784], [1055, 1125, 0.15714286], [1125, 1197, 0.02777778], [1197, 1247, 0.06]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1247, 0.08338225]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1247, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1247, 0.70603102]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1247, -45.17778288]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1247, 23.32122625]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1247, -3.36181924]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1247, 9.0]]} |
Filters: Author is White, KN [Clear All Filters]
S. Ko, Gunter, K., Costello, M., Aum, H., MacDonald, S., White, K. N., Snow, C. M., and , “Stride width discriminates gait of side-fallers compared to other-directed fallers during overground walking”, Journal of Aging and Health, vol. 19, no. 2, pp. 200-212, 2007. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12297 | {"url": "https://health.oregonstate.edu/biblio?amp%3Bf%5Bauthor%5D=6971&s=type&o=desc&f%5Bauthor%5D=5996&page=2", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "health.oregonstate.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T11:00:16Z", "digest": "sha1:ETFGV57HQOHSO4NTPJLXOGGDGGLMLIVN"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 314, 314.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 314, 1120.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 314, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 314, 35.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 314, 0.73]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 314, 326.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 314, 0.10344828]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 314, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 314, 0.11494253]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 314, 0.44827586]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 314, 0.86]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 314, 4.5]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 314, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 314, 3.71794179]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 314, 50.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 314, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 314, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 49, 8.0], [49, 314, 42.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 314, 0.05676856]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 49, 0.0], [49, 314, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 49, 0.16326531], [49, 314, 0.07924528]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 314, -9.42e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 314, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 314, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 314, -38.14721829]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 314, -16.25943352]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 314, -6.5026863]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 314, 13.0]]} |
What is Viagra?
Viagra is a drug used to treat erectile dysfunction. It is considered the third great achievement of scientists of the twentieth century after penicillin and x-rays. This is the world’s first oral tableted pharmaceutical agent that proved to be effective for the majority of men suffering from erectile problems. The researchers, who managed to bring joy to thousands of men, were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1998.
[ithshop code=”genericviagra” tpl=”short” page_id=”2215″ dummy=”txt”]
The History of Viagra
In the 90s of the 20th century, American scientists were engaged in the invention of a new generation drug that was supposed to cope with chest pain in patients with stenocardia. However, clinical trials revealed that the active substance Sildenafil citrate did not produce any effect on the heart. At the same time, all men who participated in the research started enthusiastically talking about side effects of Viagra associated with an improved erection. When most of the participants of the experiment has finally refused to return the useless pills for the heart, and one even tried to get into the laboratory to get more pills, the company’s managers realized that created a “gold mine”.
The new miracle pills have been given a name basing on the words “Vigor” (means “power” or “strength”) and Niagara (Niagara Falls), which is the biggest waterfall in North America.
Since 1993 scientists have been conducting a long and complex investigation, the aim of which was to confirm the unique features of Sildenafil. As a result, they proved not only the high efficiency of the drug but also the safety of tablets in the fight against male erectile dysfunction. As a result, the Department of the United States for the control of drugs has permitted the release of Viagra for men.
How Does Viagra Work?
The main mechanism of Viagra action is a significant increase in blood flow into the penis, which provides the natural erection. This drug has a positive effect only on a natural mechanism of male erection – that is the novelty and the secret of the huge popularity of the ED drug.
Sildenafil is NOT a stimulator that increases male libido, and does NOT create a sexual desire – the action of “magic” pills is based only on the local increase in blood flow to the penis, which provides a natural erection.
How Does an Erection Occur?
The start of the erectile process is the presence of sexual arousal. When a man is sexually excited, the blood vessels located in the pelvis, are expanding, thus providing a high blood flow to the penile area, the penis increases in size and hardens. That is how an erection occurs. When the sexual act is completed with the release of sperm, sexual tension disappears, accompanied by a decrease of blood flow in the penis, and the penis gets into its natural usual state.
Under the influence of adverse factors such as chronic pathological conditions or long-term therapy with drugs of antihypertensive action, a man may experience a violation of blood flow in the penis. This results in the lack of proper blood flow to the penis when a man is sexually aroused. So, the erection is insufficient or absent at all what prevents to perform sexual intercourse. If such a failure occurs repeatedly for a long time, experts call it erectile dysfunction.
Effects of Viagra
The action of this ED drug from Canadian Pharmacy is very simple. To understand how it works, you just need to know the mechanism of a natural erection mentioned above. The natural erection is absolutely necessary for proper sexual intercourse. Viagra does the same things as nature does, everything is quite natural and safe. However, you have to remember that these pills do not affect sexual desire and do not increase libido, a man should be excited and really want intimacy.
How To Take Viagra?
Before taking Viagra, you need to see a doctor first, as only a doctor can reveal erectile dysfunction causes, the disease which interferes with man’s normal erection and prescribe the necessary drug, taking into account all the features of your organism. The rest actions are very simple and standard: it is necessary to take one pill about 30-40 minutes before the planned sexual intercourse and take some water after. Take the drug only once per day, do not exceed the prescribed dosage. The normal daily dose of the drug is 50 mg, but it may be decreased or increased by the doctor. In case of overdose, you can have a negative reaction to your health. Theoretically, sildenafil and alcohol can be combined but the drug’s effect will be reduced.
Active Ingredients of The Drug
Do not take the drug without consulting a doctor, because it can be dangerous. The active ingredient of the ED drug is Sildenafil citrate. This component has an ability to instantly interact with many drugs. The leaders are the medicines used in the treatment of cardiovascular pathologies and nitrates. If you combine them with sildenafil, you may experience all sorts of complications.
In general, the drug produces a very positive effect on the male body, this has been proven in clinical trials. Most men participating in the researchers (≈80%) got a hard and long-lasting erection after taking this drug, they also experienced a feeling of profound satisfaction after the remedy ceased to work. Approximately 15% of participants noted the lack of effectiveness of the PDE-5 inhibitor, the remaining minority of men (5%) said that the Viagra effects can be dangerous for health.
When is This Drug Useless?
These ED pills will not help men who have difficulty with sexual desire. Viagra as well as Cialis, Levitra, and generic drugs block the enzyme phosphodiesterase type 5, increasing the blood flow to the penis and providing an erection. This means that the erection improvement is observed only in those men who have problems with potency, but not with sexual desire. If a man has no desire to have sex, no magic pills can help.
Viagra Professional vs Traditional Remedies
Viagra is a medication which is characterized by erection emergence sufficient for carrying out sexual intercourse. The drug should be swallowed with water once a day to receive proper dosage of sildenafil. Sildenafil provokes blood flow to the cavernous body. …
What Would Happen if Women Take Viagra?
If woman belongs to homo sapiens, that does not happen anything. If taken Viagra was prescribed for men, man will be very upset, because he will not be able to please this time with a girl nothing special. If the …
Can Viagra Improve Athletic Performance?
The scandal erupted when a bottle of Viagra disguised as vitamins were found at American superstar Roger Clemens and which he hid in his locker. 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Amazing Things: Lauren Manning
Sixteen years after two planes struck the World Trade Center, a 9/11 survivor has a new outlook on life — and is thriving.
10 Min Read •NYP News
Lauren Manning is used to making split-second decisions under pressure. A former Wall Street executive, an athlete, and the daughter of a Marine, she says, “In a crisis, no matter who you are, you can surrender or put on your game face.”
That attitude didn’t desert her September 11, 2001, when she arrived at 1 World Trade Center and turned the corner into the lobby, toward the elevators, at 8:46 a.m.
She barely paused when she heard an ear-splitting sound, chalking it up to construction. In reality, the piercing whistling was exploding jet fuel coming down the elevator from American Airlines Flight 11. The jet had crashed into floors 93–99 and cut off escape routes from the floors above, including 101–105, where hundreds of Lauren’s Cantor Fitzgerald colleagues were at their desks. For an instant, the tower trembled, then fire exploded from the elevators, engulfing Lauren and scores of others on the south and west sides of the lobby.
As the flames enveloped her, igniting her back and arms, Lauren fled, making it across the six lanes of West Street traffic to a grass embankment, where she dropped and rolled with the aid of two good Samaritans.
“I was in complete and utter pain, I knew I needed a burn center, and some of the first words out of my mouth were, ‘Get me to Weill Cornell, now!’” she recalls yelling.
She wouldn’t arrive at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center until 10 hours later. She was first admitted to another hospital, one without specialized burn care. That night, Lauren was transferred through the locked-down city to the William Randolph Hearst Burn Center at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell.
What It Takes to Heal Burns
Seventeen other survivors were in the intensive care unit that night. Many wouldn’t make it. Lauren’s burns were catastrophic and covered 82.5 percent of her body.
In the weeks after, she faced severe infection and an onslaught of surgeries, including grafts, partial finger amputations and joint fusions.
“She also had serious injuries to her lungs, and we needed to put her on a ventilator,” says Dr. Palmer Bessey, associate director of the Hearst Burn Center and the Aronson Family Foundation Professor of Burn Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine. Her chance of dying was estimated at 90–95 percent.
“Her accomplishments every day, from the moment she opened her eyes, made grown people weep, and it kept happening again and again.”
— Greg Manning
The medical team, led by Dr. Roger Yurt, retired chief of burns, critical care, and trauma at the Hearst Burn Center and Professor Emeritus of Surgery at Weill Cornell Medicine, then the director at the burn center, would perform 11 surgeries. Each had multiple procedures, including using cadaver skin and skin grafts as Lauren lay in an induced coma for almost two months.
“The body eventually rejects the cadaver skin, so you have to keep shaving off what healthy skin she has left, expand and stretch it to cover a part of the burned area, then wait for the healthy areas to heal, and then take more skin to cover another small part of the burn,” says Dr. Bessey.
Surgery was only the first step.
“When they brought me out of the coma, it was already late October,” Lauren recalls. “I knew I’d been injured, but I still somehow believed that I’d be going home at the end of the week. I guess I had a positive attitude from the outset,” she said with a laugh.
Lauren would learn how seriously she’d been wounded when Dr. Yurt explained the extreme nature of her injury and that there was no certain release date.
Lauren during her recovery.
Occupational and physical therapists continued to work on her limbs, as they’d begun doing weeks before she was brought out of the coma. On November 12, Lauren’s physical therapists announced that her goal that day was to walk to a chair in the corner of her room, about 4 feet from her bed.
“I thought, ‘These people think that’s all I can do? That’s easy — I’ve got this,’” Lauren recalls. Within minutes, she discovered she didn’t have the strength to sit up on her own. Putting weight on her feet and her grafted legs for the first time in two months was excruciating.
“It felt as if my body was pulling apart. I almost passed out from the pain.”
Yet with help, she dragged her legs and made it to that chair, tears streaming down her face.
“I was elated,” she says. “I called it the day of the walking mummy.”
Three days later, determined and flanked by PTs once again, she walked 30 feet to the ICU nurses’ station. Nurses, doctors, and therapists crowded around. One of the occupational therapists ran out to the corridor, its walls covered with cards from well-wishers around the world, to get Lauren’s parents, exclaiming, “Lauren is walking!”
“I felt an incredible surge of freedom,” Lauren says. “Everyone was clapping and crying, and I realized that my fight was their fight and that we were a team. My triumphs were ours together and that this was our victory.”
Part of Lauren’s motivation was her son, Tyler, 10 months old the day of the attacks, who was not allowed to see her until 67 days afterward, when the risk of infection was less severe. In the time they’d been apart, he had his first birthday and learned to walk. The day of the visit he toddled past, not recognizing her.
“I could see he was afraid and uncertain, so I sang as best I could, having just had the tracheal tube removed, a little lullaby that used to soothe him,” she says. At last he turned toward Lauren. “He smiled at me. Everything I had fought and hoped for was embodied in that moment of recognition. That visit, and the ones that came after, fueled me forward.”
Lauren and her husband Greg, with sons Tyler, 16, and Jagger, 7.
“Her accomplishments every day, from the moment she opened her eyes, made grown people weep, and it kept happening again and again,” says her husband, Greg, whose best-selling book, Love, Greg & Lauren, recounts the first six months of Lauren’s recovery. “She’s the strongest person I know. She said she wanted to make the injured woman disappear, and like every other impossible goal she set, she achieved it.”
Lauren credits her equally determined medical team.
“It was the power and hope in everyone’s heart on a day-to-day basis, caregivers’ footsteps outside my door in the quietest hours of the night, checking on me,” Lauren says. “Every single person there had the same goal: to win. We met every setback with the desire to conquer the next. I existed outside the bell curve of survival odds, but together we accomplished things that no one believed I could.”
A Delicate Balance
Helping burn survivors requires being “tough but supportive,” says Dr. Bessey.
Lauren agrees. “It’s sometimes not clear to clinicians to know how far to push someone — to know when the patient has reached their breaking point,” she says. Yet despite that push-pull, “I remained relentless, and amidst all the pain we also managed to laugh through the tears.”
After 91 days, Lauren was discharged to a rehabilitation hospital for three months.
“I’d been asking about leaving for so long, but as the day approached, although I was initially ecstatic, I was also afraid,” she admits. “I knew the people in the hospital, the routine — it had become my home.”
Lauren went home in March 2002. She was beginning the next phase of a decade-long recovery. She traveled to NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell five days a week for hours of grueling occupational and physical therapy. On Sundays, an occupational therapist she befriended at the hospital came to her home for another session.
“My relationship with the hospital and my caregivers lasted for years. I had frequent operations, on average every nine weeks during the first few years, to help release scar tissue on my hands, my arms, my shoulders, and back. I was there all the time. NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell became my workplace, my recovery, my full-time job.”
On the 10-year anniversary of the terror attacks, Lauren’s best-selling memoir, Unmeasured Strength: A Story of Survival and Transformation, published. Since then, Lauren has shared her story of inspiration and courage as a speaker to audiences throughout the U.S.
“I felt an incredible surge of freedom. Everyone was clapping and crying, and I realized that my fight was their fight and that we were a team. My triumphs were ours together and that this was our victory.”
— Lauren Manning
“She is the reason for her success,” says Dr. Bessey. “We were able to keep her body alive, but she was the one to get her life back.”
One of Lauren’s prime motivations is mothering her two sons, Tyler, now 16, and Jagger, 7, born in 2009 with the help of a gestational carrier. “I fought so hard to get back to being a mom,” she says. “When I look into my sons’ eyes, it’s all there — everything I fought for, the grace I feel for just being alive.”
These days, Lauren is making the most of that, as co-founder of a consumer privacy startup, YouBoard Inc., and she is working on a master’s degree in narrative medicine/bioethics at Columbia University.
“Before the attacks, I used to breeze right by the little things, all those expected or mundane activities that you don’t pay attention to, like seeing a friend for lunch or bringing your son to school. I treasure each of these simple and joyful moments now,” she says.
The 658 of her colleagues who were killed on 9/11 are never far from her thoughts, particularly every September 11, when she gathers with her Cantor Fitzgerald family for their annual memorial.
“I worked alongside those people for years. So many were good friends,” she says. “I was half a step removed from the ones who died. But they didn’t have the chance I had to fight. I have never failed to appreciate that gift.”
She also makes time to see her former medical team. “It’s like returning for a school reunion — we recount the old stories,” she says. Of course, it’s much more than that. “I should be dead, but I’m not, and that’s not because of luck, but because of the fortitude, talent, and commitment we had as a team. We were in it together, and not one of us wanted to lose.”
As Lauren says, “Every day you have a choice. We chose to make it count.”
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Read More: NYP News, 11-Sep, 9/11 tragedy, Amazing Patients, burn unit, burn victim, Palmer Bessey, physical therapy, rehabilitation, William Randolph Hearst Burn Center
Tragedy & Healing: Inside the William Randolph Hearst Burn Center on 9/11
A Veteran Paramedic Reflects on September 11
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Hannah Ku and Alleyah Genosa
Hansen Du, freshman, claims the best part of chess is that, “I get to win.”
The grandmasters of history looked in awe as a majority freshman team carried Hoffman to a state competition, placing 48 out 129 schools.
The team jumped like the knight does on the chess board, over multiple hurdles to achieve this success. When asked what brought the team to their victory and lead up to state, Alex Emerick, sophomore, discussed the importance of preparation.
“I think it was our team’s cooperation and training. As in chess, training is just as important as any other sport, like basketball or football, if not more,” said Emerick. Devanshu Pandya junior captain, agrees.
“Everyone’s a key player on the team,” said Pandya. “It’s a 100% team effort. Even if we lose, it serves as a placeholder so we can move up. Every single game has led us to where we are; its 100% a team effort.”
United, the chess team’s use of teamwork and bonds brought them to a successful victory to advance to state.
“My favorite part is just the team spirit,” said Emeric. “We’re just like every other team. People can think we’re boring and stuck up but no we’re really not.”
Sponsor Patrick Swanson was excited about the team’s, “third [place] in conferences, the first time in 12 years.” The team placed third at the MSL conference and the regular season.
Pandya said a visit to state did not at first seem possible at the start of the season. “We had no faith in the team this year,” he said. “We had so many freshman and sophomores this year and we didn’t expect much, but over the course of time, we started to bond together and learn. As a result of that we’ve had the most solid team we’ve had in years.”
The Museum of Science and Industry becomes students’ classroom
HEHS starts first majorette dance team in D211
Hawks Football: A behind-the-scenes look at an inspiring season
HEHS senior creates backpack drive
AP Seminar students visit Angelic Organics farm
The cell phone hotels help students stay on task | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12300 | {"url": "https://hehsnews.com/4188/news/4188/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hehsnews.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:47:54Z", "digest": "sha1:V3ATBK7USLF3MRTCY7W7WXMRTM5F3YG2"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2021, 2021.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2021, 6193.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2021, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2021, 162.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2021, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2021, 338.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2021, 0.40950226]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2021, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2021, 0.02168525]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2021, 0.01809955]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2021, 0.17420814]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2021, 0.58543417]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2021, 4.5210084]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2021, 4.97424104]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2021, 357.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 105, 1.0], [105, 243, 1.0], [243, 485, 1.0], [485, 698, 1.0], [698, 910, 1.0], [910, 1019, 1.0], [1019, 1180, 1.0], [1180, 1362, 1.0], [1362, 1716, 1.0], [1716, 1779, 0.0], [1779, 1826, 0.0], [1826, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 1925, 0.0], [1925, 1973, 0.0], [1973, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 105, 0.0], [105, 243, 0.0], [243, 485, 0.0], [485, 698, 0.0], [698, 910, 0.0], [910, 1019, 0.0], [1019, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1362, 0.0], [1362, 1716, 0.0], [1716, 1779, 0.0], [1779, 1826, 0.0], [1826, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 1925, 0.0], [1925, 1973, 0.0], [1973, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 29, 5.0], [29, 105, 15.0], [105, 243, 23.0], [243, 485, 40.0], [485, 698, 35.0], [698, 910, 43.0], [910, 1019, 19.0], [1019, 1180, 29.0], [1180, 1362, 30.0], [1362, 1716, 71.0], [1716, 1779, 9.0], [1779, 1826, 8.0], [1826, 1890, 9.0], [1890, 1925, 5.0], [1925, 1973, 7.0], [1973, 2021, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 105, 0.0], [105, 243, 0.03703704], [243, 485, 0.0], [485, 698, 0.0], [698, 910, 0.02970297], [910, 1019, 0.0], [1019, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1362, 0.01142857], [1362, 1716, 0.0], [1716, 1779, 0.0], [1779, 1826, 0.06521739], [1826, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 1925, 0.0], [1925, 1973, 0.0], [1973, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 29, 0.0], [29, 105, 0.0], [105, 243, 0.0], [243, 485, 0.0], [485, 698, 0.0], [698, 910, 0.0], [910, 1019, 0.0], [1019, 1180, 0.0], [1180, 1362, 0.0], [1362, 1716, 0.0], [1716, 1779, 0.0], [1779, 1826, 0.0], [1826, 1890, 0.0], [1890, 1925, 0.0], [1925, 1973, 0.0], [1973, 2021, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 29, 0.13793103], [29, 105, 0.03947368], [105, 243, 0.01449275], [243, 485, 0.01652893], [485, 698, 0.02347418], [698, 910, 0.02358491], [910, 1019, 0.00917431], [1019, 1180, 0.02484472], [1180, 1362, 0.03846154], [1362, 1716, 0.01129944], [1716, 1779, 0.06349206], [1779, 1826, 0.10638298], [1826, 1890, 0.046875], [1890, 1925, 0.11428571], [1925, 1973, 0.10416667], [1973, 2021, 0.02083333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2021, 0.76131612]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2021, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2021, 0.74878073]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2021, -137.56780645]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2021, 112.96135169]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2021, -145.07345097]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2021, 22.0]]} |
Tag Archives: self-harm
Syndrome de Lasthénie de Ferjol
Krishna G. Badami Christchurch, New Zealand Figure 1. Une Histoire sans nom by Jules Amedee Barbey d’Aurevilly. Source Several years ago we saw a young woman who had an iron deficiency anemia, caused not by blood loss from menstruation (a common cause of iron deficiency anemia in females), but by repeatedly drawing her own blood by venipuncture […]
Scarification: harmful cultural practice or vehicle to higher being?
Kenneth Michael Felsenstein Bethesda, Maryland, United States Scarification is the act of “covering, disguising and transforming the body”1 by creating wounds in one’s own flesh in order to cause indelible markings. It is perhaps one of the most misunderstood body modification procedures done today, largely perceived in Western society as a tabooed and harmful cultural practice.2 […]
Jeanne Bereiter Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States “I wasn’t trying to kill myself,” Jessica insisted, running a black-tipped, artificial fingernail through her black, gelled hair, which flashed blonde at the roots. “I was drinking, and I miscalculated. I didn’t know this could happen.” Jessica had been admitted to my adolescent psychiatric unit after she […] | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12301 | {"url": "https://hekint.org/tag/self-harm/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hekint.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:06:36Z", "digest": "sha1:7FOSAK6QUSOBYR7WDNTFOIXORPWJZUIS"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1228, 1228.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1228, 3099.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1228, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1228, 37.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1228, 0.92]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1228, 289.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1228, 0.30172414]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1228, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1228, 0.02780536]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1228, 0.03972195]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1228, 0.02155172]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1228, 0.18534483]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1228, 0.78074866]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1228, 5.38502674]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1228, 0.01293103]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1228, 4.87573427]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1228, 187.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 56, 0.0], [56, 407, 0.0], [407, 476, 1.0], [476, 863, 0.0], [863, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 56, 0.0], [56, 407, 0.0], [407, 476, 0.0], [476, 863, 0.0], [863, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 24, 3.0], [24, 56, 5.0], [56, 407, 58.0], [407, 476, 9.0], [476, 863, 57.0], [863, 1228, 55.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 56, 0.0], [56, 407, 0.00294118], [407, 476, 0.0], [476, 863, 0.00529101], [863, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 24, 0.0], [24, 56, 0.0], [56, 407, 0.0], [407, 476, 0.0], [476, 863, 0.0], [863, 1228, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 24, 0.08333333], [24, 56, 0.09375], [56, 407, 0.04273504], [407, 476, 0.01449275], [476, 863, 0.02583979], [863, 1228, 0.03561644]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1228, 0.00493443]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1228, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1228, 0.00650519]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1228, -48.88283813]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1228, 15.18800987]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1228, -40.69581994]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1228, 10.0]]} |
Human rights, private security and the law: an evolving path to
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6jsi9qTLtKY
1. You will then write a summary of the video.
2. Your opinion on the video.
3. How the video relates to what you have been learning in the course of private security.
This should be no less than 300 words. With references and cited.
Ifsm 201, databases | Information Systems homework help | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12302 | {"url": "https://help-with-homework.net/2022/05/03/human-rights-private-security-and-the-law-an-evolving-path-to/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "help-with-homework.net", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:14:01Z", "digest": "sha1:WEYHXDZFLBK3E6PKE6YYH2PCQGT24X2R"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 405, 405.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 405, 3578.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 405, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 405, 105.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 405, 0.81]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 405, 251.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 405, 0.33333333]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 405, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 405, 0.07523511]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 405, 0.26666667]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 405, 0.81538462]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 405, 4.90769231]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 405, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 405, 3.87191354]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 405, 65.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 116, 0.0], [116, 163, 1.0], [163, 193, 1.0], [193, 284, 1.0], [284, 350, 1.0], [350, 405, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 116, 0.0], [116, 163, 0.0], [163, 193, 0.0], [193, 284, 0.0], [284, 350, 0.0], [350, 405, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 64, 11.0], [64, 116, 2.0], [116, 163, 10.0], [163, 193, 6.0], [193, 284, 17.0], [284, 350, 12.0], [350, 405, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 116, 0.04761905], [116, 163, 0.02272727], [163, 193, 0.03703704], [193, 284, 0.01136364], [284, 350, 0.04761905], [350, 405, 0.05769231]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 64, 0.0], [64, 116, 0.0], [116, 163, 0.0], [163, 193, 0.0], [193, 284, 0.0], [284, 350, 0.0], [350, 405, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 64, 0.015625], [64, 116, 0.11538462], [116, 163, 0.0212766], [163, 193, 0.03333333], [193, 284, 0.01098901], [284, 350, 0.03030303], [350, 405, 0.05454545]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 405, 0.03451675]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 405, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 405, 0.0008955]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 405, -48.05630672]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 405, -20.63863392]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 405, -43.47625931]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 405, 12.0]]} |
Is Quilted available outside the United States?
Yes, Quilted is available outside the U.S. International numbers may have issues, so it will be better to send those invitees via email. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12303 | {"url": "https://help.quilted.io/en/articles/5714782-is-quilted-available-outside-the-united-states", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "help.quilted.io", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:23:12Z", "digest": "sha1:2JSAYLTUOYK6JIGLYI2O4OJI7VCHPVRJ"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 184, 184.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 184, 504.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 184, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 184, 15.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 184, 0.93]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 184, 278.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 184, 0.45945946]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 184, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 184, 0.2147651]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 184, 0.25503356]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 184, 0.05405405]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 184, 0.16216216]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 184, 0.83333333]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 184, 4.96666667]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 184, 3.17014832]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 184, 30.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 48, 1.0], [48, 184, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 184, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 48, 7.0], [48, 184, 23.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 184, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 48, 0.0], [48, 184, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 48, 0.08333333], [48, 184, 0.03676471]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 184, 0.17169535]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 184, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 184, -8.94e-06]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 184, -18.47147954]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 184, 1.53609905]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 184, -8.47029759]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 184, 4.0]]} |
hemispheric institute Encontro
Biblioteca de vídeo (HIDVL)
Josh Kun: Border Sound Files
Border Sound Files v. 1: An Audio Essay
Border Sound Files is an hour long solo performance-lecture that mixes spoken narrative, spoken, history, and spoken critique, with a collage of sound, noise, and music. The piece focuses on the border between Southern California and Northern Mexico and explores it as a transnational field of sound, "an aural border." The piece explores the relationship between sound/music and the following principal areas of investigation: migration (documented and undocumented movement back and forth across the border by migrants, border patrol agents, drugs, and capital); tourism (how US tourism shapes Mexican border realities); and labor (who works, who pays, who gets treated how by whom). In keeping with the aims of this year's Institute encuentro, the piece also deals directly with religious and spiritual rituals of mourning and faith employed by Mexican migrants-- the Mexican mass that plays as white crosses line the border wall, as migrants pray at the tomb of Juan Soldado. The piece creates an archive of sound and music that is both critical and performative, one that theorizes the border through the noises it makes and demonstrates the powerful, complex role of music and sound in the negotiation of everyday life and cultural production in the face of policed national divisions. As a result, the piece covers a broad range of material, from the parables of Jorge Luis Borges, the Tijuana jazz of Charles Mingus, and the Tijuana jails of The Kingston Trio to the global "clandestino" protest of Manu Chao, the Mexican hip hop of Control Machete, and the two scores of Orson Welles' border fantasy Touch of Evil.
Josh Kun is Assistant Professor of English at UC Riverside, and an arts columnist for the San Francisco Bay Guardian and The Boston Phoenix. He is a 2000-2002 Sundance Writers Fellow whose writing has appeared in the popular press, scholarly journals, and book anthologies. He is the host of two Latin music video and culture shows (The Red Zone on MTV-Español and Rokamole on KJLA) and is a resident DJ with the US-UK-Latin America nightclub La Leche. He is currently completing his first book for UC Press, Strangers Among Sounds: Listening, Difference, and the Music of America.
Short Performances
Photo Exhibits
Mini Seminars
Copyright © 2009–2013 Instituto Hemisférico de Performance e Política
Sobre o Website | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12304 | {"url": "https://hemi.nyu.edu/hemi/enc03-short-performances/item/1546-enc03-josh-kun?lang=pt", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hemi.nyu.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:25:03Z", "digest": "sha1:UTPIJKZLYHJ6NGGJI3HSGTJE46P44RMO"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2467, 2467.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2467, 2809.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2467, 11.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2467, 44.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2467, 0.9]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2467, 334.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2467, 0.30851064]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2467, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2467, 0.01994018]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2467, 0.02392822]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2467, 0.01914894]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2467, 0.15106383]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2467, 0.59697733]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2467, 5.05289673]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2467, 4.93057134]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2467, 397.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 59, 0.0], [59, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.0], [128, 1752, 1.0], [1752, 2334, 1.0], [2334, 2353, 0.0], [2353, 2368, 0.0], [2368, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2452, 0.0], [2452, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 59, 0.0], [59, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.0], [128, 1752, 0.0], [1752, 2334, 0.0], [2334, 2353, 0.0], [2353, 2368, 0.0], [2368, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2452, 0.0], [2452, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 31, 3.0], [31, 59, 4.0], [59, 88, 5.0], [88, 128, 8.0], [128, 1752, 262.0], [1752, 2334, 97.0], [2334, 2353, 2.0], [2353, 2368, 2.0], [2368, 2382, 2.0], [2382, 2452, 9.0], [2452, 2467, 3.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 59, 0.0], [59, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.02702703], [128, 1752, 0.0], [1752, 2334, 0.01415929], [2334, 2353, 0.0], [2353, 2368, 0.0], [2368, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2452, 0.11267606], [2452, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 31, 0.0], [31, 59, 0.0], [59, 88, 0.0], [88, 128, 0.0], [128, 1752, 0.0], [1752, 2334, 0.0], [2334, 2353, 0.0], [2353, 2368, 0.0], [2368, 2382, 0.0], [2382, 2452, 0.0], [2452, 2467, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 31, 0.03225806], [31, 59, 0.21428571], [59, 88, 0.17241379], [88, 128, 0.15], [128, 1752, 0.02401478], [1752, 2334, 0.09278351], [2334, 2353, 0.10526316], [2353, 2368, 0.13333333], [2368, 2382, 0.14285714], [2382, 2452, 0.07142857], [2452, 2467, 0.13333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2467, 0.29281312]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2467, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2467, 0.60445112]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2467, -42.05126014]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2467, 13.56761084]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2467, 75.87117778]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2467, 12.0]]} |
The Sweet dreams and ambitions of Children who say, “When I grow Up I would Like to be so and so…”
“When I grow up, I would like to be a Doctor, Engineer, Clown, bartender… and so forth”
What did you say you would like to be when you grow up? Are you in a career you dreamed about when you were a child? When I grow up I would like to be someone special.
We all had dreams when we were Kids of Course, I am sure Over Fifty Percent of adults are currently undertaking a job they did not dream about when they were very little children. You know kids can be little bit naïve when having visions for their future. Sometimes conditions get into the way and force you to change trajectory in your life, or many who have trained for a particular profession ended up abandoning their dream career after they searched for years and failed to find a job related to their work, so they settle for something to keep them busy, anything that can help them pay their bills.
With our current education systems a lot of time and resources are wasted in training professionals of whom more than a half of those never end up using those skills in the long term. Anyways kids will always dream big, and having to abandon your career because of an unexpected economic crisis is not the end of life, You can always find your way around Minefields and get to your life’s dreams without having to cling to a specific profession.
When I grow Up, I would Like to be an Author/Publisher
When I grow Up, I Would Like to be an Engineer/Mechanic
When I grow up, I would like to be a Politician
When I grow Up I would like to be a Famous Artist
When I grow Up, I would Like to be a Singer/Pop artist
When I grow Up I would like to be a skilled Music composer and play instruments at the orchestra
When I grow Up, Would Like to be a scientist
When I grow up, I would like to be a Call Center Manager or customer care representative
When I grow up, I would like to be a marine biologist
When I grow up, I would like to be a Pilot/Aeronautical Engineer
When I grow up I would like to be a college professor
When I grow up, I would like to be an architect
Are you now in your dream job, the one you told everyone about when you were a kid? Have you now become what you said you would be when you were a child?
Scientific dreams start Young
Genetically Modified Foods or GMOs as they are commonly…
The Notion that rapid population growth often leads to…
Fairy tales are present in virtually every culture in the…
How did common games begin?
The next generation of children is going to grow up in… | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12305 | {"url": "https://henryninegraphics.net/graphicdetails/discussions/the-sweet-dreams-and-ambitions-of-children-who-say-when-i-grow-up-i-would-like-to-be-a/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "henryninegraphics.net", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:39:03Z", "digest": "sha1:MSLK7I5TLTUS4DAOJPGMQHRD54ZORMEJ"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2562, 2562.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2562, 3691.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2562, 24.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2562, 93.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2562, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2562, 204.9]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2562, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2562, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2562, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2562, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2562, 0.49360146]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2562, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2562, 0.14812992]], 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There’s irregular, and then there’s irregular. Not posting any ‘monthly’ linksposts since March is the latter. Woops. Many of these are quite a bit older, found by me in the months and months in which I have not been linksposting. All I can say is (a) they’re still good and (b) woops. I’m avoiding things that many of you will have already seen, and also trying only to post things that still hold up (along at least one axis). | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12306 | {"url": "https://herfingersbloomed.substack.com/p/linksposting-most-of-2022/comments", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "herfingersbloomed.substack.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:27:02Z", "digest": "sha1:IYCIXUFM3EVNPL4IHOJII5ZS5G7AYJTN"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 428, 428.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 428, 1033.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 428, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 428, 29.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 428, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 428, 321.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 428, 0.53398058]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 428, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 428, 0.09552239]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 428, 0.02912621]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 428, 0.19417476]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 428, 0.75949367]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 428, 4.24050633]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 428, 4.01848725]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 428, 79.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 428, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 428, 79.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 428, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 428, 0.02102804]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 428, 0.27997714]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 428, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 428, 4.196e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 428, -32.35543385]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 428, 10.04930478]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 428, -48.32806864]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 428, 6.0]]} |
South Jefferson SJ
Fri, January 31, 2014, 11:12pm
South Jefferson (19-1)
South Jefferson
Austin Stevens 5 3 1 0 11 0 0 0
Marisa Clark 1 1 0 0 12 0 0 0
Jenny McLean 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0
Marissa Garland 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Hannah Bassett 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
Tatyana Fish 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals: 13 6 4 0 23 0 0 0
Madison Comins 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
Cayla O'Connor 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Katie Pitkin 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Sam Sampson 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0
Hannah Smithers 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12307 | {"url": "https://highschoolsports.syracuse.com/game/56418", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "highschoolsports.syracuse.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:36:48Z", "digest": "sha1:DV4X2EK5GIHMJ4DSNEH5Z73KKIF4QVUD"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 448, 448.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 448, 5062.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 448, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 448, 328.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 448, 0.54]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 448, 161.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 448, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 448, 0.25324675]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 448, 0.25324675]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 448, 0.17532468]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 448, 0.12987013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 448, 0.35064935]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 448, 0.38961039]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 448, 0.36363636]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 448, 0.01388889]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 448, 0.76388889]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 448, 0.31818182]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 448, 2.33333333]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 448, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 448, 2.24787919]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 448, 132.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 50, 0.0], [50, 73, 0.0], [73, 89, 0.0], [89, 121, 0.0], [121, 151, 0.0], [151, 180, 0.0], [180, 212, 0.0], [212, 243, 0.0], [243, 272, 0.0], [272, 298, 0.0], [298, 329, 0.0], [329, 360, 0.0], [360, 389, 0.0], [389, 417, 0.0], [417, 448, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 50, 0.0], [50, 73, 0.0], [73, 89, 0.0], [89, 121, 0.0], [121, 151, 0.0], [151, 180, 0.0], [180, 212, 0.0], [212, 243, 0.0], [243, 272, 0.0], [272, 298, 0.0], [298, 329, 0.0], [329, 360, 0.0], [360, 389, 0.0], [389, 417, 0.0], [417, 448, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 19, 3.0], [19, 50, 5.0], [50, 73, 3.0], [73, 89, 2.0], [89, 121, 10.0], [121, 151, 10.0], [151, 180, 10.0], [180, 212, 10.0], [212, 243, 10.0], [243, 272, 10.0], [272, 298, 9.0], [298, 329, 10.0], [329, 360, 10.0], [360, 389, 10.0], [389, 417, 10.0], [417, 448, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 50, 0.38461538], [50, 73, 0.15789474], [73, 89, 0.0], [89, 121, 0.29032258], [121, 151, 0.31034483], [151, 180, 0.28571429], [180, 212, 0.25806452], [212, 243, 0.26666667], [243, 272, 0.28571429], [272, 298, 0.41666667], [298, 329, 0.26666667], [329, 360, 0.27586207], [360, 389, 0.28571429], [389, 417, 0.2962963], [417, 448, 0.25806452]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 19, 0.0], [19, 50, 0.0], [50, 73, 0.0], [73, 89, 0.0], [89, 121, 0.0], [121, 151, 0.0], [151, 180, 0.0], [180, 212, 0.0], [212, 243, 0.0], [243, 272, 0.0], [272, 298, 0.0], [298, 329, 0.0], [329, 360, 0.0], [360, 389, 0.0], [389, 417, 0.0], [417, 448, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 19, 0.21052632], [19, 50, 0.06451613], [50, 73, 0.08695652], [73, 89, 0.125], [89, 121, 0.0625], [121, 151, 0.06666667], [151, 180, 0.10344828], [180, 212, 0.0625], [212, 243, 0.06451613], [243, 272, 0.06896552], [272, 298, 0.03846154], [298, 329, 0.06451613], [329, 360, 0.09677419], [360, 389, 0.06896552], [389, 417, 0.07142857], [417, 448, 0.06451613]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 448, 0.07941902]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 448, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 448, 0.02353781]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 448, -288.15994241]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 448, -92.84906783]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 448, -95.15919326]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 448, 1.0]]} |
Leading the Commercial Construction Industry
Serving the markets that matter to you
With more than 60 years of experience in the commercial construction industry, including extensive experience on Sacramento construction projects, Hilbers has the experience and expertise to meet and exceed your commercial construction needs.
At Hilbers, it’s our mission to be a leader in the commercial construction industry and build value into every project.
Hilbers has experienced general contractors and construction managers with extensive experience, completing a wide variety of commercial construction projects. Our diverse portfolio includes the construction and renovation of schools, restaurants, retail construction, convenience stores, health clubs, and medical facilities.
As one of the largest pre-engineered steel building construction contractors in the nation, our customers receive all the benefits of pre-engineered systems, including sustainability, design, and accelerated construction.
View Market Projects
Our experience as a national and California commercial general contractor ranges from specialty fine dining to fast-food restaurants. Our project portfolio includes both family-owned and franchise restaurant chains.
Since 1962, Hilbers, Inc. has become recognized as a premier builder in church and faith-based construction. We are committed to supporting our clients throughout the building, expansion, and renovation process.
From single facilities to national, multi-location schools, Hilbers has the experience to build or renovate your charter school to your exact specifications.
Hilbers has completed more than $100 million in medical and assisted living construction. While this area is heavily regulated, our experience and knowledge help us stay ahead of the ever-changing construction requirements.
Although fuel stations and convenience stores all serve a similar purpose, they each have their own unique styles and builds. Our diverse experience gives us an advantage because we understand how to approach and complete all types of fuel stations and convenience store buildings.
We have experience designing, building, and renovating both large and small health clubs and gyms. Additionally, interior and exterior pools, spas, saunas, shower facilities, and locker rooms are all a part of the Hilbers health club construction portfolio.
At Hilbers, we build every building as if it were our own. Hiring only the most reputable subcontractors in the industry, we build with exceptional workmanship, excellent materials, innovative commercial construction techniques, and modern management practices.
Multi-family Construction
Under our subsidiary company, Hilbers New Homes Communities, we build multi-family and mixed-use buildings. Typically located near businesses, schools, and rapid transport, our multi-family, and mixed-use buildings are the perfect combinations of style and convenience.
Hilbers has more than 50 years of experience as a national retail general contractor. Our completed projects include specialty, department, “big box”, and discount stores.
Hilbers has extensive experience in small to large-scale shopping center construction. Our expertise includes ground-up construction and conversion of an existing space.
Hilbers has extensive grocery construction experience. From neighborhood stores to supermarket chains, Hilbers approaches every grocery store construction project with the highest level of industry and ethical standards.
Hilbers understands the dynamic needs and critical applications of the medical construction industry. Through experience and education, we keep up-to-date on hospital construction regulations and standards.
Hospitality construction requires minimal disruptions to guests and hotel operations. Historic hotels also require special consideration to preserve cherished pieces. Our team understands these challenges and treats every hospitality project with the respect it deserves.
Does your commercial building need renovation or ground-up construction? | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12308 | {"url": "https://hilbersinc.com/construction-markets/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hilbersinc.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:44:23Z", "digest": "sha1:464L2KA5ZJUSVWLDCEGDHZS5HFCXBHQE"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 4039, 4039.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4039, 8008.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4039, 22.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4039, 193.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4039, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4039, 325.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4039, 0.29909366]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4039, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4039, 0.02060035]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 4039, 0.02060035]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 4039, 0.02207181]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 4039, 0.02913479]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 4039, 0.15256798]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 4039, 0.48994516]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 4039, 6.21206581]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 4039, 5.03320286]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 4039, 547.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 84, 0.0], [84, 327, 1.0], [327, 447, 1.0], [447, 774, 1.0], [774, 996, 1.0], [996, 1017, 0.0], [1017, 1233, 1.0], [1233, 1445, 1.0], [1445, 1603, 1.0], [1603, 1827, 1.0], [1827, 2109, 1.0], [2109, 2367, 1.0], [2367, 2629, 1.0], [2629, 2655, 0.0], [2655, 2925, 1.0], [2925, 3097, 1.0], [3097, 3267, 1.0], [3267, 3488, 1.0], [3488, 3695, 1.0], [3695, 3967, 1.0], [3967, 4039, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 84, 0.0], [84, 327, 0.0], [327, 447, 0.0], [447, 774, 0.0], [774, 996, 0.0], [996, 1017, 0.0], [1017, 1233, 0.0], [1233, 1445, 0.0], [1445, 1603, 0.0], [1603, 1827, 0.0], [1827, 2109, 0.0], [2109, 2367, 0.0], [2367, 2629, 0.0], [2629, 2655, 0.0], [2655, 2925, 0.0], [2925, 3097, 0.0], [3097, 3267, 0.0], [3267, 3488, 0.0], [3488, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3967, 0.0], [3967, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 45, 5.0], [45, 84, 7.0], [84, 327, 33.0], [327, 447, 20.0], [447, 774, 39.0], [774, 996, 28.0], [996, 1017, 3.0], [1017, 1233, 28.0], [1233, 1445, 30.0], [1445, 1603, 22.0], [1603, 1827, 32.0], [1827, 2109, 44.0], [2109, 2367, 38.0], [2367, 2629, 36.0], [2629, 2655, 2.0], [2655, 2925, 35.0], [2925, 3097, 25.0], [3097, 3267, 22.0], [3267, 3488, 28.0], [3488, 3695, 26.0], [3695, 3967, 35.0], [3967, 4039, 9.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 84, 0.0], [84, 327, 0.0083682], [327, 447, 0.0], [447, 774, 0.0], [774, 996, 0.0], [996, 1017, 0.0], [1017, 1233, 0.0], [1233, 1445, 0.01970443], [1445, 1603, 0.0], [1603, 1827, 0.01376147], [1827, 2109, 0.0], [2109, 2367, 0.0], [2367, 2629, 0.0], [2629, 2655, 0.0], [2655, 2925, 0.0], [2925, 3097, 0.01204819], [3097, 3267, 0.0], [3267, 3488, 0.0], [3488, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3967, 0.0], [3967, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 45, 0.0], [45, 84, 0.0], [84, 327, 0.0], [327, 447, 0.0], [447, 774, 0.0], [774, 996, 0.0], [996, 1017, 0.0], [1017, 1233, 0.0], [1233, 1445, 0.0], [1445, 1603, 0.0], [1603, 1827, 0.0], [1827, 2109, 0.0], [2109, 2367, 0.0], [2367, 2629, 0.0], [2629, 2655, 0.0], [2655, 2925, 0.0], [2925, 3097, 0.0], [3097, 3267, 0.0], [3267, 3488, 0.0], [3488, 3695, 0.0], [3695, 3967, 0.0], [3967, 4039, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 45, 0.08888889], [45, 84, 0.02564103], [84, 327, 0.01234568], [327, 447, 0.01666667], [447, 774, 0.00611621], [774, 996, 0.0045045], [996, 1017, 0.14285714], [1017, 1233, 0.01388889], [1233, 1445, 0.01886792], [1445, 1603, 0.01265823], [1603, 1827, 0.00892857], [1827, 2109, 0.0070922], [2109, 2367, 0.01162791], [2367, 2629, 0.01145038], [2629, 2655, 0.07692308], [2655, 2925, 0.02222222], [2925, 3097, 0.01162791], [3097, 3267, 0.01176471], [3267, 3488, 0.01357466], [3488, 3695, 0.00966184], [3695, 3967, 0.01102941], [3967, 4039, 0.01388889]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 4039, 0.03075427]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 4039, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 4039, 0.10049254]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 4039, -149.71730643]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 4039, 4.91644699]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 4039, -50.51682081]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 4039, 33.0]]} |
Air Medical Transport
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it can help get patients to the hospital quickly and efficiently.
When you need medical air transport, contact MedFlight Today for a quote. We will work with you to find the best transportation option for your needs.
Airmedical services have become an integral part of the modern healthcare system. Air ambulance companies provide a vital service, transporting patients to and from hospitals around the world in order to receive medical care they need. These airmedical services are designed to ensure that patients receive the highest quality of patient care possible. Through the use of advanced technology, such as helicopters and jets, these companies are able to quickly transport patients where they need to go. In addition, these companies can also provide specialized medical equipment and personnel for more critical cases. With the help of airmedical services, healthcare providers can provide the best possible treatment for their patients in a timely manner.
medical air flight
by Editor | March 15, 2023 | ems | 0 Comments
medical air flight is the perfect way to get the medical treatment you need. Our experienced flight personnel are equipped with the latest medical technology, allowing us to provide top-notch care for our patients. Whether you need a simple check-up or complex...
air ambulance kit
by Editor | March 2, 2023 | ems | 0 Comments
air ambulance kit When you need to transport a patient by air, an air ambulance is the best option. But what do you need to make this trip a success? First, make sure you have an air ambulance kit ready. This will Include items like blankets, oxygen tanks, and...
helicopter ambulance toy
helicopter ambulance toy is perfect for kids who love playing with toy helicopters. This toy comes with a working horn and detachable stretcher. Kids can pretend to be paramedics transporting patients in this amazing toy. Self-contained toys and games have come quite...
texas air ambulance
by Editor | February 28, 2023 | ems | 0 Comments
texas air ambulance The state of Texas has been hit hard by natural disasters in recent years, resulting in the need for air evacuation services. With the advent of more and more severe weather events, it is increasingly important that these services are up to date...
us air ambulance jobs
us air ambulance jobs If you're looking for a rewarding career, then consider joining the US air ambulance team. Although these jobs offer flexible and profitable jobs for pilots and flight nurses, their passion lies in helping others. The primary members...
air ambulance medical transport
air ambulance medical transport Air medical transport is a fundamental component of emergency response and used to transport patients from one place to another to receive acute care. The usage of specially-equipped aircraft is used to rapidly transfer patients from...
new york air ambulance
new york air ambulance As the sole air ambulance operator in New York City, New York Air Ambulance plays a vital part in the city's emergency medical care system. Their clinical transport assistance and search and rescue operations are attested to through their many...
local air ambulance 2023
local air ambulance 2023 In the year 2023, local emergency services will be utilizing air medical transport more often to get patients to the hospital in a shorter amount of time. Air ambulance costs will continue to increase, but with advancements in technology,...
air ambulance flight When you need medical attention quickly and safely, air ambulance services are the perfect option. Air medical transport (AMT) is a specialized form of air transportation that can quickly transport patients to nearby hospitals in case of...
air medical transport is a critical part of healthcare. Air ambulances can take patients to the best medical facilities quickly and efficiently, regardless of location. When choosing an air ambulance, it is important to consider the type of service offered, the...
Air medical transport is an integral part of medical care today, providing a safe and efficient way to transport critically ill or injured patients. With the aid of medical personnel, air medical transport services can deliver the best possible care to those in need, no matter their location. By utilizing helicopters, airplanes, and specialized crew members, these services are able to provide a level of care that would not be possible with ground ambulances. Air medical transport is a vital part of modern healthcare and offers life-saving solutions in times of crisis.
Transfer Of Patients
For patients who are taken to another medical facility, transferring from one facility to a different can be tough. The condition of a patient, along with the mode of transportation that he or she needs, can put an immediate strain on the medical staff tasked with the transfer.
The transferring process requires meticulous cooperation between the targeted and arriving destinations, including ensuring that all pertinent medical records and test results have been transferred, as well as confirming any necessary critical care and equipment will be available at the new facility.
Air Medical Transport©Copyright 2022 . 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Posted by Constantin Santos T. Toko on February 3, 2015 at 7:00 PM | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12310 | {"url": "https://hokifa.webs.com/apps/blog/show/prev?from_id=43286111&siteId=117397344&locale=en-US", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hokifa.webs.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:15:48Z", "digest": "sha1:BFFFXNVBOJ2WB6B4UVHBO6VK3OJYXLBF"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 66, 66.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 66, 2325.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 66, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 66, 77.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 66, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 66, 135.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 66, 0.17647059]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 66, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 66, 0.11764706]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 66, 0.41176471]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 66, 1.0]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 66, 3.92307692]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 66, 2.56494936]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 66, 13.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 66, 13.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 66, 0.12698413]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 66, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 66, 0.12121212]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 66, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 66, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 66, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 66, -16.26108075]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 66, -8.47447017]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 66, -6.54761549]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 66, 2.0]]} |
Under-20 Women's World Cup: Nigeria Confident Of Hosting 2020
Nigeria is hoping to become the first African country to host a Fifa's women's tournament as they intensify bid for the 2020 Under-20 World Cup.
A Fifa inspection team, led by Heyral Kaj Jurgen, has inspected facilities across the country in the proposed cities of Lagos, Benin City, Asaba and Uyo.
The inspection team is expected to make a final decision later in the year, but Nigeria's Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo remains optimistic.
"The Government of Nigeria guarantees to back the bid 100 percent," Osinbajo said.
"We are actually excited with the prospect of hosting the Fifa Under-20 Women's World Cup in 2020.
"For us, football is a unifying force. Government interest in hosting is beyond commercial; football is a measure of unity and well-being of our people as diverse as we are."
Nigeria has previously hosted the men's Under-20 World Cup in 1999 and the under-17 version ten years later.
Despite the bid facing strong criticism from a section of the country's socio-political commentators and analysts, the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) president Amaju Pinnick believes it will have a positive impact on the nation.
"Hosting the Fifa Under-20 Women's World Cup in 2020 will leave a lot of legacies beyond the physical; it will impact on humanity," Pinnick said on Thursday.
"We have played in two final matches and reached the semi-final once.
"I believe it is time to take it to the next level. It is time we win the competition and it would be even more fulfilling to win it on home ground."
Nigeria are one of four countries (alongside USA, Germany and Brazil) to have participated in every World Under-20 tournament since its inception 17 years ago.
The Falconets reached the final in 2010 and 2014, but lost to women's football superpowers Germany on both two occasions.
I Felt Betrayed - Asamoah Gyan On Being Stripped Of Captaincy
2019 AFCON Was My Best Camp Ever – Asamoah Gyan | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12311 | {"url": "https://home.peacefmonline.com/pages/sports/soccer/201908/388751.php", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "home.peacefmonline.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:45:15Z", "digest": "sha1:EIBFL53AJYJPJQQFTZGPP5HOKFELPQG7"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1967, 1967.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1967, 5376.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1967, 16.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1967, 133.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1967, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1967, 197.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1967, 0.34718826]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1967, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1967, 0.05209657]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1967, 0.05209657]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1967, 0.05209657]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1967, 0.05209657]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1967, 0.05209657]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1967, 0.02541296]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1967, 0.0343075]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1967, 0.04002541]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1967, 0.01466993]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1967, 0.19070905]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1967, 0.54407295]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1967, 4.78419453]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1967, 4.78864434]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1967, 329.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 62, 0.0], [62, 207, 1.0], [207, 361, 1.0], [361, 500, 1.0], [500, 583, 1.0], [583, 682, 1.0], [682, 857, 0.0], [857, 966, 1.0], [966, 1198, 1.0], [1198, 1356, 1.0], [1356, 1426, 1.0], [1426, 1576, 0.0], [1576, 1736, 1.0], [1736, 1858, 1.0], [1858, 1920, 0.0], [1920, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 62, 0.0], [62, 207, 0.0], [207, 361, 0.0], [361, 500, 0.0], [500, 583, 0.0], [583, 682, 0.0], [682, 857, 0.0], [857, 966, 0.0], [966, 1198, 0.0], [1198, 1356, 0.0], [1356, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 1576, 0.0], [1576, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 1858, 0.0], [1858, 1920, 0.0], [1920, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 62, 9.0], [62, 207, 25.0], [207, 361, 26.0], [361, 500, 21.0], [500, 583, 13.0], [583, 682, 17.0], [682, 857, 30.0], [857, 966, 18.0], [966, 1198, 34.0], [1198, 1356, 27.0], [1356, 1426, 12.0], [1426, 1576, 32.0], [1576, 1736, 25.0], [1736, 1858, 20.0], [1858, 1920, 10.0], [1920, 1967, 10.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 62, 0.10344828], [62, 207, 0.04285714], [207, 361, 0.0], [361, 500, 0.0], [500, 583, 0.03846154], [583, 682, 0.06382979], [682, 857, 0.0], [857, 966, 0.07692308], [966, 1198, 0.0], [1198, 1356, 0.04], [1356, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 1576, 0.0], [1576, 1736, 0.02597403], [1736, 1858, 0.06779661], [1858, 1920, 0.0], [1920, 1967, 0.08510638]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 62, 0.0], [62, 207, 0.0], [207, 361, 0.0], [361, 500, 0.0], [500, 583, 0.0], [583, 682, 0.0], [682, 857, 0.0], [857, 966, 0.0], [966, 1198, 0.0], [1198, 1356, 0.0], [1356, 1426, 0.0], [1426, 1576, 0.0], [1576, 1736, 0.0], [1736, 1858, 0.0], [1858, 1920, 0.0], [1920, 1967, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 62, 0.12903226], [62, 207, 0.04137931], [207, 361, 0.06493506], [361, 500, 0.04316547], [500, 583, 0.04819277], [583, 682, 0.06060606], [682, 857, 0.01142857], [857, 966, 0.03669725], [966, 1198, 0.0387931], [1198, 1356, 0.05063291], [1356, 1426, 0.01428571], [1426, 1576, 0.01333333], [1576, 1736, 0.05], [1736, 1858, 0.02459016], [1858, 1920, 0.16129032], [1920, 1967, 0.25531915]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1967, 0.47822362]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1967, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1967, 0.98837715]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1967, -60.12120628]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1967, 30.23604508]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1967, -5.35446205]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1967, 16.0]]} |
After 32 Years, Original Lori's Diner To Close Its Doors
Photo: Leo U./Yelp
By Saul Sugarman - Published on December 27, 2016.
San FranciscoTenderloinUnion Square
Lori’s Diner at 336 Mason St., the original location in a small chain of San Francisco eateries, is closing its doors after nearly 32 years serving customers. Its last day of business will be January 2nd.
A sign spotted on its window stated “lease expiration” as the only reason for the closure, and a Dec. 19th announcement on the chain’s Facebook page said the decision to close was made “with a heavy heart.” It also noted “leasing issues.”
An employee at the location confirmed the news Monday.
“We have been able to enjoy your patronage for almost 32 years,” said the message on the window. “Thank you so much from the bottom of our heart.”
The closure announcement posted in the window of Lori's Diner. | Photo: Carrie Sisto/Hoodline
Lori’s opened its first diner at 336 Mason in 1985 and steadily expanded over the next 14 years. In 1993, the chain opened its second location at 500 Sutter. A third location at 149 Powell began serving customers in 1995, and a fourth one opened in 2000 at Ghirardelli Square. There’s also a spot at the San Francisco International Airport.
The restaurants serve American diner fare and sport a classic vibe, with sparkly red booths, pinball machines, vintage cars, and Elvis and Marilyn Monroe memorabilia.
“By providing generous portions of our classic home style fare, we ensure the old fashioned value that diners are famous for,” according to the Lori’s Diner website.
Man J. Kim, who owns the chain, has operated a number of restaurants and bars in San Francisco, including Sears Fine Food and the Golden Gate Grill. The latter opened in 2012, shortly after the Powell Lori’s closed its doors.
For those craving "moon doggie" hot dogs, Oreo Cookie shakes and other Lori's menu items, the restaurant's Ghirardelli Square and Sutter Street locations will remain open. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12312 | {"url": "https://hoodline.com/2016/12/original-loris-diner-to-close-its-doors-in-union-square/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hoodline.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:52:56Z", "digest": "sha1:X3YTKIUYZQXZYUAZKSMZT5P7D2V7C44A"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1974, 1974.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1974, 5770.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1974, 14.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1974, 67.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1974, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1974, 281.5]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1974, 0.31203931]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1974, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1974, 0.01510384]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1974, 0.01258653]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1974, 0.0188798]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1974, 0.00982801]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1974, 0.1965602]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1974, 0.61515152]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1974, 4.81515152]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1974, 4.96223965]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1974, 330.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 127, 1.0], [127, 163, 0.0], [163, 368, 1.0], [368, 607, 1.0], [607, 662, 1.0], [662, 809, 1.0], [809, 903, 0.0], [903, 1244, 1.0], [1244, 1411, 1.0], [1411, 1577, 1.0], [1577, 1803, 1.0], [1803, 1974, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 127, 0.0], [127, 163, 0.0], [163, 368, 0.0], [368, 607, 0.0], [607, 662, 0.0], [662, 809, 0.0], [809, 903, 0.0], [903, 1244, 0.0], [1244, 1411, 0.0], [1411, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1803, 0.0], [1803, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 57, 10.0], [57, 76, 3.0], [76, 127, 8.0], [127, 163, 3.0], [163, 368, 36.0], [368, 607, 42.0], [607, 662, 9.0], [662, 809, 28.0], [809, 903, 13.0], [903, 1244, 60.0], [1244, 1411, 25.0], [1411, 1577, 27.0], [1577, 1803, 40.0], [1803, 1974, 26.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.03703704], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 127, 0.13043478], [127, 163, 0.0], [163, 368, 0.03015075], [368, 607, 0.00854701], [607, 662, 0.0], [662, 809, 0.01398601], [809, 903, 0.0], [903, 1244, 0.08083832], [1244, 1411, 0.0], [1411, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1803, 0.01834862], [1803, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 57, 0.0], [57, 76, 0.0], [76, 127, 0.0], [127, 163, 0.0], [163, 368, 0.0], [368, 607, 0.0], [607, 662, 0.0], [662, 809, 0.0], [809, 903, 0.0], [903, 1244, 0.0], [1244, 1411, 0.0], [1411, 1577, 0.0], [1577, 1803, 0.0], [1803, 1974, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 57, 0.15789474], [57, 76, 0.21052632], [76, 127, 0.09803922], [127, 163, 0.13888889], [163, 368, 0.03902439], [368, 607, 0.0167364], [607, 662, 0.03636364], [662, 809, 0.01360544], [809, 903, 0.07446809], [903, 1244, 0.03812317], [1244, 1411, 0.02994012], [1411, 1577, 0.01807229], [1577, 1803, 0.0619469], [1803, 1974, 0.04678363]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1974, 0.92658055]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1974, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1974, 0.85042703]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1974, -136.21878994]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1974, 42.57316463]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1974, -32.11129646]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1974, 22.0]]} |
How to Date Craftsman Tools? (Answered)
December 13, 2022 December 9, 2022 by Mike Stanton
how to date craftsman tools
Craftsman has the perfect durability on all the tools that you might be getting out there.
Not only are the craftsman tools perfect in order to ensure that you are getting the right edge of using them for a vast number of needs.
Yet, you also need to maintain your tools efficiently and ensure that you are not facing any such problems with them either that can later cause you to have problems or downtime with your work.
Educating yourself on the proper care requirements will help you get a robust response from the tools.
A bit of attention to the maintenance of the tools will go a long way when it comes to keeping them in perfect condition. There are no quick fixes when it comes to managing your tools.
So, you need to keep track of the tool maintenance to avoid more issues with the power tools.
Dating your tools is a great way to keep an eye on the health conditions of your tools and make them work in the right manner. A few such things to know about it are:
What is it For?
Dating means figuring out the manufacturing date and year of any tools that you might have been using.
While you might be wondering why I would need to know when my tool was manufactured, there are several reasons for it.
You need to know them all if you want to have a seamless experience with any of these tools that you might be having.
It will also help you to make sure that you are replacing any wearable components on the tools that you might have.
It is also useful for finding the right user manual for any of the tools and getting support for these tools at the same time if you are encountering any problems with these tools.
How to Date Craftsman Tools?
Luckily, Craftsman has engraving on all their tools that will help you to know when a particular tool was manufactured.
There are several ways to mark your craftsman tools, and the best thing would be to look for any markings that you might have on these.
These markings might be visible to you without any aid, or at times you might need to use a magnifying glass to be able to properly read out these markings.
The best thing is that these engraved markings will not only let you know the date your tool was manufactured but will also be coming in handy for knowing the origin of the tool that you have, or in other words.
In this facility, the particular tool was manufactured. Here are the methods that are most commonly used to date the Craftsman tools.
Check the Model Number
The first thing that you should do is check the model number for the tools. While this will not give you an exact idea of the unit’s purchase, you will still get a basic understanding of the production date.
This is especially true for all of the power tools. So, before anything else, just take a peek at the model number.
Once that is done, you can proceed to do your research on the model and then match the model number with the production date.
That will be more than enough to help you through the majority of issues with figuring out the age of the tool.
Check For Hardware Issues
Next, you need to check up on the hardware side of things. You will be able to easily take a guess on the age of the tool by checking for faulty sections.
If you do find defects in the system and the pivot points are clogged up, then there is a good chance that it has been in use for years.
This method will not be as accurate when you’re new to the market, and the basic usage of the unit can always vary from project to project.
However, that does not mean that you can’t make an educated guess based on the defects in the power tools.
So, all that you need to do is to engage the unit and then cycle through all of the features.
This will help you get a better hang of the situation without seeking help from anyone else. From there, you can go about figuring out the right fit for your system.
Seek Pointers From Local Experts
At this point, you should just reach out to local experts to get a better hang of the situation. This is especially true if you don’t have much experience in the market.
So, if you’re new, just take the tool that you’re planning to purchase to the local repair center. From there, you can ask the professionals working there to date your tool.
They will look at the wear and the rough patches on the unit to give you a rough idea. Their guess will be pretty accurate, and you will get a decent idea of how much you should pay for this unit.
You can also get opinions from other owners by taking some pictures and clips of the tools and then uploading them on the community forums.
This will make it much easier to get a complete perspective on the situation, and you will not have to waste more time in finalizing the purchase.
All it takes is a bit of effort on your end, and seeking help from more experienced users is always the best move.
So, when you can’t seem to date the Craftsman tools by looking at the model number yourself, just take some pictures and send them to the experts.
These experts will make it effortless to decide whether or not you should make the purchase on the toolset.
Hopefully, you will be able to save yourself from a bad decision by taking some pointers from experts.
Search It Online
There are a number of guides, but you might not be able to get the right ones with those guides.
The best way would be to search the date or code that you find on your tool online to ensure that you are able to get precise information on the manufacturing of your tool.
You can also search by image even when the model number and all the relevant markings are removed from the unit.
You will be able to find similar units in the Craftsman portfolio, and that will make it much easier for you to figure out the production date for this unit.
From there, you can develop an accurate estimate of the unit itself and how you should go about the purchase.
Even though purchasing second-hand tools is not always the best decision, you can still find a good deal if you’re aware of how to root out bad options.
Find the Diamond Mark
For such tools that don’t have any visible patent date on them, there is always a Diamond mark that is followed by a number.
That will refer to the catalog of a particular year that you bought this tool or the year the tool was manufactured.
With that, you can find the most accurate information about the tool that you might have. You can look at these markers to also define the origin of the tool, along with the assembly and the distribution.
You will be able to find symbols from GX to LX that will indicate that the unit was produced anywhere between the 1920s and 1980s.
Similarly, you can take a peek at the CT markings to figure out whether the unit was produced in Taiwan or not.
Lastly, you also have the option of comparing the current tool with their latest model and figuring out the missing features.
If you can’t find any significant difference in the design and the features, then you’re dealing with a relatively new unit.
On the other hand, if there are a ton of differences, then you might be out of luck, and the current unit will be fairly old.
So, it all comes down to the basic shape and the features that are missing from this unit when you can’t seem to find the age of the tools.
While there are no accurate ways that can help you date a Craftsman tool set, you can still make pretty reliable guesses about the pricing and the age of the unit.
It all comes down to your experience as a workman, and you need to look at the wear and the rough patches to find the right fit.
Figuring out the best usage of the unit can be a bit hard at times. If you’re confused and don’t know whether or not you should invest in a second-hand kit, then be sure to seek pointers from an expert.
That will save you a lot of time down the road, and you will get some reliable pointers.
Similarly, you can also compare the tool kit with the latest model and figure out the differences in the features and the design to make an educated guess yourself.
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Roy Chapman Andrews (1884-1960)
Roy Chapman Andrews traveled the world studying fossils, from mammals to dinosaurs, during the first half of the twentieth century. Andrews worked and collected fossil specimens for the American Museum of Natural History ...
Andrews, Roy Chapman, 1884-1960 (1)
Anthropology, Physical (1)
Biological Evolution (1)
Dinosaur eggs (1)
Natural history museums (1) | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12314 | {"url": "https://hpsrepository.asu.edu/handle/10776/434/discover?filtertype_0=subject&filtertype_1=subject&filtertype_2=subject&filter_relational_operator_1=equals&filtertype_3=subject&filter_relational_operator_0=equals&filtertype_4=subject&filter_2=Natural+history+museums&filter_relational_operator_3=equals&filtertype_5=subject&filter_1=Fossils&filter_relational_operator_2=equals&filtertype_6=subject&filter_0=Dinosaurs--Eggs&filter_relational_operator_5=equals&filtertype_7=subject&filter_relational_operator_4=equals&filtertype_8=author&filter_6=Archaeology&filter_relational_operator_7=equals&filtertype_9=dateIssued&filter_5=People&filter_relational_operator_6=equals&filter_4=Andrews%2C+Roy+Chapman%2C+1884-1960&filter_relational_operator_9=equals&filter_3=Dinosaur+eggs&filter_relational_operator_8=equals&filter_9=2015&filter_8=Madison%2C+Paige&filter_7=Anthropology%2C+Physical&filtertype=subject&filter_relational_operator=equals&filter=Dinosaurs", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hpsrepository.asu.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:12:31Z", "digest": "sha1:FOJYDOKBHGYMAKHSYLUBGF5QG46PYGBE"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 390, 390.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 390, 1464.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 390, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 390, 60.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 390, 0.78]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 390, 265.2]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 390, 0.15384615]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 390, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 390, 0.09615385]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 390, 0.10897436]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 390, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 390, 0.14285714]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 390, 0.38461538]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 390, 0.67272727]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 390, 5.67272727]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 390, 0.01282051]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 390, 3.43870781]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 390, 55.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 257, 1.0], [257, 293, 0.0], [293, 320, 0.0], [320, 345, 0.0], [345, 363, 0.0], [363, 390, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 257, 0.0], [257, 293, 0.0], [293, 320, 0.0], [320, 345, 0.0], [345, 363, 0.0], [363, 390, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 32, 4.0], [32, 257, 33.0], [257, 293, 5.0], [293, 320, 3.0], [320, 345, 3.0], [345, 363, 3.0], [363, 390, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.28571429], [32, 257, 0.0], [257, 293, 0.3], [293, 320, 0.04347826], [320, 345, 0.04545455], [345, 363, 0.06666667], [363, 390, 0.04]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 32, 0.0], [32, 257, 0.0], [257, 293, 0.0], [293, 320, 0.0], [320, 345, 0.0], [345, 363, 0.0], [363, 390, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 32, 0.09375], [32, 257, 0.03555556], [257, 293, 0.08333333], [293, 320, 0.07407407], [320, 345, 0.08], [345, 363, 0.05555556], [363, 390, 0.03703704]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 390, -4.29e-06]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 390, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 390, 3.624e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 390, -63.71013792]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 390, -27.50880032]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 390, -7.412573]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 390, 3.0]]} |
Bianchi, Diana W. (1)
fetal cells (1)
Fetal cells from maternal blood (1)
Fluorescence in situ hybridization (1)
Immune response (1)
Immunity (1) | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12315 | {"url": "https://hpsrepository.asu.edu/handle/10776/434/search-filter?filtertype_10=has_content_in_original_bundle&filter_relational_operator_10=equals&filtertype_0=subject&filtertype_1=subject&filtertype_2=subject&filter_relational_operator_1=equals&filtertype_3=subject&filter_relational_operator_0=equals&filtertype_4=subject&filter_2=Immunity&filter_relational_operator_3=equals&filtertype_5=subject&filter_1=Bianchi%2C+Diana+W.&filter_relational_operator_2=equals&filtertype_6=dateIssued&filter_0=Experiment&filter_relational_operator_5=equals&filtertype_7=author&filter_relational_operator_4=equals&filtertype_8=subject&filter_6=2014&filter_relational_operator_7=equals&filtertype_9=subject&filter_5=Immune+response&filter_relational_operator_6=equals&filter_4=Cells&filter_relational_operator_9=equals&filter_3=Experiments&filter_relational_operator_8=equals&filter_9=Reproduction&filter_10=true&filter_8=Fetus&filter_7=Abboud%2C+Alexis&field=subject&filterorder=COUNT", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "hpsrepository.asu.edu", "date_download": "2023-03-20T08:49:30Z", "digest": "sha1:R4OCINBXXEHMGDSKOAQCQFO2B5TSHDPB"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 145, 145.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 145, 881.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 145, 6.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 145, 41.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 145, 0.66]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 145, 334.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 145, 0.05405405]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 145, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 145, 0.11009174]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 145, 0.20183486]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 145, 0.02702703]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 145, 0.54054054]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 145, 0.69565217]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 145, 4.73913043]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 145, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 145, 2.54753137]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 145, 23.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 38, 0.0], [38, 74, 0.0], [74, 113, 0.0], [113, 133, 0.0], [133, 145, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 38, 0.0], [38, 74, 0.0], [74, 113, 0.0], [113, 133, 0.0], [133, 145, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 22, 4.0], [22, 38, 3.0], [38, 74, 6.0], [74, 113, 5.0], [113, 133, 3.0], [133, 145, 2.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.05882353], [22, 38, 0.07692308], [38, 74, 0.03030303], [74, 113, 0.02777778], [113, 133, 0.05882353], [133, 145, 0.1]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 22, 0.0], [22, 38, 0.0], [38, 74, 0.0], [74, 113, 0.0], [113, 133, 0.0], [133, 145, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 22, 0.13636364], [22, 38, 0.0], [38, 74, 0.02777778], [74, 113, 0.02564103], [113, 133, 0.05], [133, 145, 0.08333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 145, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 145, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 145, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 145, -66.30181821]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 145, -34.59615573]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 145, -25.73738258]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 145, 2.0]]} |
The Wealthiest Family of All Time - The Rothschilds (Part 2)
How did the Rothschilds go from a poor family inhabiting a part-share of a home in a Jewish ghetto to the richest family of all time in less than 50 years? Listen to how they reach their zenith, and what has happened to the family since then. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12316 | {"url": "https://httotw.libsyn.com/website/2019/07", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "httotw.libsyn.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:38:31Z", "digest": "sha1:6FAXR25X5G4JI2B4UTLBW72VXNK73PKJ"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 303, 303.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 303, 6823.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 303, 2.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 303, 103.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 303, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 303, 175.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 303, 0.44615385]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 303, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 303, 0.06694561]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 303, 0.09205021]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 303, 0.12552301]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 303, 0.13846154]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 303, 0.66666667]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 303, 4.19298246]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 303, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 303, 3.47005671]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 303, 57.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 303, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 61, 10.0], [61, 303, 47.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.01785714], [61, 303, 0.00840336]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 61, 0.0], [61, 303, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 61, 0.13114754], [61, 303, 0.01652893]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 303, 0.00316978]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 303, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 303, 0.00092965]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 303, -7.51148003]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 303, 1.55168108]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 303, -5.24757165]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 303, 2.0]]} |
Pro Bono Stars: New York City Edition
As part of the American Bar Association’s Celebrate Pro Bono Week, we are recognizing individuals with outstanding dedication to pro bono service as Pro Bono Stars. Today we highlight Molly Kammien, Noah Czarny, and Angela Urbano from Seward & Kissel LLP in New York.
Mr. W, an Ethiopian man, was discriminated against, enslaved, and tortured in Eritrea. When he sought asylum in the United States, he was locked up in a New Jersey immigration detention center. But last month, he finally walked free. He won his asylum case and release from detention. Molly Kammien, Noah Czarny, and Angela Urbano, all associates at Seward & Kissel LLP in New York, made that happen.
Mr. W was born in Ethiopia, but belongs to the Tigrayan minority ethnic group. The discrimination was so severe that it led to his family’s exile from Ethiopia to Eritrea when he was a young child.
In Eritrea Mr. W was forcibly conscripted into the military, where he was forced to complete hard labor with no pay and in terrible conditions. He eventually became involved with an underground youth opposition network within the military camp. When the Eritrean military discovered his involvement, they imprisoned, tortured, and starved him. Mr. W managed to escape the prison and Eritrea, fleeing over land to Israel.
Mr. W. was never able to seek permanent protection in Israel, living under constant threat of deportation to Eritrea by the Israeli government. Eventually he fled to the United States, undertaking a six-month journey before reaching the United States’ southern border in search of safety. Immigration officials then sent him to detention. While there, Mr. W sought asylum with the aid of his pro bono attorney team from Seward & Kissel.
Molly, Noah, and Angela went to great lengths to ensure that the immigration judge had ample evidence to support Mr. W’s claims and to demonstrate the great risk he would face if forced to return to Eritrea. This included finding experts on the conditions in Eritrea—one of the most repressive countries in the world—and the obstacles to seeking permanent refugee protection in Israel. The team did all of this while their client was confined, unable to meet with them outside of the detention center or readily contact them.
After spending ten months in immigration detention, Mr. W. was released the night he was granted asylum in September 2016. Even then, his pro bono attorneys continued to go above and beyond—finding their client a safe place to stay in New York City for a week before he relocated to Chicago to live with family and friends.
This commitment to their client and zealous representation make Molly, Noah, and Angela true Pro Bono Stars.
Systemic Injustice-U.S. Immigration Detention
AAP: Trump’s Immigration Executive Orders Are Harmful to Children
Yesterday, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a strong rebuke in the wake of the President’s Executive Orders on immigration and asylum seekers. “Immigrant families are our…
ABA and CMS Event Focuses on ABA Civil Immigration Detention Standards and Need to Reform U.S. Immigration Detention Policies
By Eleanor Acer The American Bar Association’s (ABA) new Civil Immigration Detention Standards were the topic of discussion at an event held yesterday in New York…
Addressing the Challenges of Immigrant Representation in Louisiana
By Eleanor Acer In yesterday’s Times-Picayune, Assistant Professor Ken Mayeaux of Louisiana State University’s Paul M. Herbert Law Center (LSU Law), discussed the gaps in legal representation…
Administration Continues to Exacerbate Challenges at the Southern Border
Washington, D.C.—In response to the Trump Administration’s announcements that it will cut hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance to Central America, and that the…
Administration Should Abandon Texas Family Detention Center Plan
New York City – Human Rights First today said that the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) decision to move forward with a new family immigration facility…
Administration Should Move Ahead with Measures to Strengthen Refugee and Asylum Systems
New York City – Human Rights First said today that, despite the president’s decision not to move forward with executive orders on immigration at this time,…
Administration Urged to Abandon Family Detention Policy Two Years After Announcement
Washington, D.C.—In honor of World Refugee Day, and ahead of the two-year anniversary of the Obama Administration’s family detention policy, Human Rights First today renewed…
After Biden’s Central America Trip, He Should Support Asylum Seekers’ Rights at Home
Last week Vice President Joe Biden travelled to Central America to meet with the presidents of Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras and the president of… | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12317 | {"url": "https://humanrightsfirst.org/library/pro-bono-stars-new-york-city-edition-2/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "humanrightsfirst.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:30:17Z", "digest": "sha1:IKP4GP3T567PI77HO6GWR6DL3VJSKHKQ"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 4776, 4776.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4776, 7607.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4776, 26.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4776, 121.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4776, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4776, 261.7]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4776, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4776, 0.30487805]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4776, null]], 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Living wage now in effect
Posted on November 28, 2014 February 10, 2015 by heathersthomson
Huu-ay-aht Executive Council has passed its motion to adopt a living wage for its employees.
They adopted the living wage motion at their most recent council meeting. This means the Nations will adopt a living wage that has been calculated for Port Alberni is $17.22 per hour, or $33,579 annually. Using the Canadian Living Wage Framework as its guide, Huu-ay-aht has agreed to adopt this as their minimum wage. By doing so, it becomes the second community in BC to adopt a living wage policy for its employees.
The new pay will take effect in the next pay period.
The idea came out of respect of all Huu-ay-aht employees and based on the belief that B.C.’s current minimum wage is not high enough to meet the needs of families to promote health and wellbeing.
Huu-ay-aht believes people should not have to decide between paying rent and feeding their family, and with today’s high cost of living, this is a reality many people face. According to the Living Wage for Families Campaign, in 2013, 1.8 million employed people in Canada do not make enough to pull themselves above the poverty level. Many are forced to rely on food banks in order to get by.
A living wage is different from minimum wage in that it takes into account the amount a family needs to cover basic expenses. These are the barebones costs with no extras, but it is calculated as a total compensation, including wage and benefits. Where the minimum wage focuses on the needs of a lone individual, the living wage focuses on the needs of families and includes medical and health needs, food security, transportation, and skills development.
Posted in Features, NewsTagged Canadian Living Wage Framework, family, Huu-ay-aht, living wage, minimum wage | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12318 | {"url": "https://huuayaht.org/tag/minimum-wage/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "huuayaht.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:26:57Z", "digest": "sha1:RKPY5QBQHOJWPD7R6F3V2D6KYTIG2V6P"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1809, 1809.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1809, 5168.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1809, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1809, 160.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1809, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1809, 177.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1809, 0.37066667]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1809, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1809, 0.05647383]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1809, 0.03168044]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1809, 0.07575758]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1809, 0.03030303]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1809, 0.03305785]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1809, 0.01066667]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1809, 0.16533333]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1809, 0.51623377]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1809, 4.71428571]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1809, 4.64837685]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1809, 308.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.0], [91, 184, 1.0], [184, 603, 1.0], [603, 656, 1.0], [656, 852, 1.0], [852, 1245, 1.0], [1245, 1701, 1.0], [1701, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.0], [91, 184, 0.0], [184, 603, 0.0], [603, 656, 0.0], [656, 852, 0.0], [852, 1245, 0.0], [1245, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 26, 5.0], [26, 91, 10.0], [91, 184, 15.0], [184, 603, 73.0], [603, 656, 11.0], [656, 852, 35.0], [852, 1245, 69.0], [1245, 1701, 76.0], [1701, 1809, 14.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.19354839], [91, 184, 0.0], [184, 603, 0.02222222], [603, 656, 0.0], [656, 852, 0.0], [852, 1245, 0.01570681], [1245, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 26, 0.0], [26, 91, 0.0], [91, 184, 0.0], [184, 603, 0.0], [603, 656, 0.0], [656, 852, 0.0], [852, 1245, 0.0], [1245, 1701, 0.0], [1701, 1809, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 26, 0.03846154], [26, 91, 0.04615385], [91, 184, 0.03225806], [184, 603, 0.03341289], [603, 656, 0.01886792], [656, 852, 0.02040816], [852, 1245, 0.02035623], [1245, 1701, 0.00657895], [1701, 1809, 0.08333333]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1809, 0.01784873]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1809, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1809, 0.00998104]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1809, -81.25370784]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1809, 6.83707342]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1809, -14.38022555]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1809, 18.0]]} |
Portable Power Makes Camping More Comfortable-A Must See for Camping Enthusiasts!
A camp where you can dive into nature and enjoy the richness of nature, where you can have a variety of experiences from everyday life to the extraordinary world. The excitement of opening a tent in the morning, the quiet time of reading alone, exercising in nature, and the satisfaction of cooking a delicious picnic all draw people deeply. When asked, "What's the biggest problem with camping?" many people will answer "no power." When camping, if you are troubled by the following reasons, you can use a mobile power supply to solve it.
1. Smartphone battery won't charge
You might have a problem with your phone or laptop, fully charged in the morning but last until evening, or run low on battery while camping. In this case, if there is a mobile power supply, it can be charged immediately, so there is no need to worry about running out of power. If you choose a power bank with a pass-through charging function, you can use your mobile phone or laptop while charging, so you don’t have to worry about when you need it urgently. In addition, a power bank with wireless charging function allows you to charge your phone without a data cable, just put it down.
2. It is difficult to sleep in a tent in both hot and cold seasons
Sleeping in a tent can be uncomfortable when the temperature rises in summer. It's too cold for winter camping sleeping in a tent, and you can have a hard time. In this case, if you have a power bank, you can connect a mini cooler or electric blanket to keep out the heat and cold. Portable power allows you to live comfortably without smells, exhaust fumes or generator noise.
3. I'm not good at ordinary camping, it feels troublesome
Setting up a tent, preparing firewood, and starting a fire make camping difficult. I usually enjoy playing games and watching movies indoors, and I give up on camping. Even those who are not good at camping can do what they could not do without a power supply. You can eat hot rice just by connecting a home hot plate or rice cooker and turning it on. You can bring your projector and screen to watch movies, YouTube, and play video games.If you do indoors in nature, it will give you a different atmosphere and is perfect for a change of pace.
4. Can't work while camping
I went through the trouble of going to work during the camp, but I couldn't work as I expected. Because you have to find a suitable campsite for telework in advance. A power supply is essential for telework without worrying about charging. If you have a portable power supply at the camp, you can work anytime, anywhere if you bring a computer or mobile WiFi. If you telework for a long time, you won't have to worry about running out of charge in the middle.
Camping can be enjoyed without a portable power supply, but with a portable power supply
You can charge your smartphone
Comfortable with a mini cooler in the summer and an electric blanket in the winter
It is convenient to use home appliances such as hot plates and entertainment equipment such as game consoles.
You can use a computer and work while traveling
And many other benefits.
It's always nice to have a portable power supply for camping.
5. If you prepare outdoor equipment, it will also be a disaster prevention measure.
If you prepare the environment in the outdoors, it will also lead to disaster prevention measures.
In the unlikely event of a sudden earthquake, etc., by preparing outdoor equipment,
Even if there is a power outage or lifeline supply is cut off, you can take measures against heat and cold by preparing an outdoor environment, and you can worry about electricity with a portable power supply and solar panel.
lose.
Fun hobbies can also be used as disaster prevention measures.
It might be good.
ALLPOWERS R4000: Energy Is Always With You
ALLPOWERS S2000 Pro Portable Power Station Review From Nerd Techy
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Goodbye Google Glass, we knew you well
Culture, Lifestyle
Here’s what we know for sure: The world still wasn’t ready for Glass, even after a product makeover and shift in focus. Google confirmed plans to once again end support for its misunderstood bit of AR tech, writing:
Thank you for over a decade of innovation and partnership. As of March 15, 2023, we will no longer sell Glass Enterprise Edition. We will continue supporting Glass Enterprise Edition until September 15, 2023.
Not an entirely interrupted decade, of course. Glass celebrated its 10th anniversary last month. The original developer version of the head-worn display launched in February 2013, beginning its Glass Explorers program two months later and finally opening things up to the public in May 2014. Parodies ensued. Less than a year later, it announced that former Apple designer and Nest co-founder Tony Fadell was working on a follow-up. Google Glass disappeared for a bit in 2015, thanking Explorers for playing along. Rumors of its death had apparently been a bit exaggerated — or at least premature. Specifically, Google Glass was shifting its focus to the enterprise. Really, that’s another way the product line was ahead of its time. HoloLens launched a year later from Microsoft, with business as its central thesis. And these days, folks like Meta, HTC and Magic Leap see the category as a saving grace on the way to mainstreaming AR/VR/MR. Makes sense. You stand to make a lot of money selling these products to businesses in bulk. And IT departments are often willing to shell out more for products than your average consumer. A second enterprise edition arrived in 2019 with some modest upgrades. The timing and the seeming finality of this announcement are interesting. Much of the industry is waiting to see what Apple delivers later this year with its rumored mixed reality headset. Of course, Google has been rumored to be working on a new AR product under the codename Project Iris. According to a report from early last year:
Early prototypes being developed at a facility in the San Francisco Bay Area resemble a pair of ski goggles and don’t require a tethered connection to an external power source.
The product would presumably be a more direct competitor to the current crop of XR products, including Apple. Google has also had its own checkered past with VR products, including Cardboard and Daydream. The latter was discontinued in 2019, the former finally end of lifing in 2021. Goodbye Google Glass, we knew you well by Brian Heater originally published on TechCrunch | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12320 | {"url": "https://ibeloreck.net/goodbye-google-glass-we-knew-you-well/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ibeloreck.net", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:24:49Z", "digest": "sha1:6IPMEFOMXT5NBZSNQI3DY7H4RPTMA2CO"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 2570, 2570.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 2570, 3996.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 2570, 7.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 2570, 70.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 2570, 0.97]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 2570, 280.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 2570, 0.39112903]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 2570, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 2570, 0.02969349]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 2570, 0.02969349]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 2570, 0.02969349]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 2570, 0.0210728]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 2570, 0.01724138]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 2570, 0.01915709]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 2570, 0.02016129]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 2570, 0.14112903]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 2570, 0.58878505]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 2570, 4.87850467]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 2570, 5.14483485]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 2570, 428.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 58, 0.0], [58, 274, 0.0], [274, 483, 1.0], [483, 2020, 0.0], [2020, 2197, 1.0], [2197, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 58, 0.0], [58, 274, 0.0], [274, 483, 0.0], [483, 2020, 0.0], [2020, 2197, 0.0], [2197, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 39, 7.0], [39, 58, 2.0], [58, 274, 38.0], [274, 483, 34.0], [483, 2020, 256.0], [2020, 2197, 30.0], [2197, 2570, 61.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 58, 0.0], [58, 274, 0.0], [274, 483, 0.05940594], [483, 2020, 0.01198402], [2020, 2197, 0.0], [2197, 2570, 0.02185792]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 39, 0.0], [39, 58, 0.0], [58, 274, 0.0], [274, 483, 0.0], [483, 2020, 0.0], [2020, 2197, 0.0], [2197, 2570, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 39, 0.07692308], [39, 58, 0.10526316], [58, 274, 0.02777778], [274, 483, 0.05263158], [483, 2020, 0.03448276], [2020, 2197, 0.02824859], [2197, 2570, 0.04557641]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 2570, 0.83194786]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 2570, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 2570, 0.71275252]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 2570, -99.18076325]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 2570, 42.80310994]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 2570, -54.79689528]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 2570, 27.0]]} |
--Today is the Holy Day of St. Clement--
Saint and Major Saints' Days
Their sound has gone out into all lands, and their message to the ends of the world. Psalm 19:4
(145) I call with all my heart; answer me, O LORD, and I will obey your decrees. (146) I call out to you; save me and I will keep your statutes. (147) I rise before dawn and cry for help; I have put my hope in your word. (148) My eyes stay open through the watches of the night, that I may meditate on your promises.
(149) Hear my voice in accordance with your love; preserve my life, O LORD, according to your laws. (150) Those who devise wicked schemes are near, but they are far from your law. (151) Yet you are near, O LORD, and all your commands are true. (152) Long ago I learned from your statutes that you established them to last forever.
(153) Look upon my suffering and deliver me, for I have not forgotten your law. (154) Defend my cause and redeem me; preserve my life according to your promise. (155) Salvation is far from the wicked, for they do not seek out your decrees. (156) Your compassion is great, O LORD; preserve my life according to your laws.
(157) Many are the foes who persecute me, but I have not turned from your statutes. (158) I look on the faithless with loathing, for they do not obey your word. (159) See how I love your precepts; preserve my life, O LORD, according to your love. (160) All your words are true; all your righteous laws are eternal.
(161) Rulers persecute me without cause, but my heart trembles at your word. (162) I rejoice in your promise like one who finds great spoil. (163) I hate and abhor falsehood but I love your law. (164) Seven times a day I praise you for your righteous laws.
(165) Great peace have they who love your law, and nothing can make them stumble. (166) I wait for your salvation, O LORD, and I follow your commands. (167) I obey your statutes, for I love them greatly. (168) I obey your precepts and your statutes, for all my ways are known to you.
(169) May my cry come before you, O LORD; give me understanding according to your word. (170) May my supplication come before you; deliver me according to your promise. (171) May my lips overflow with praise, for you teach me your decrees. (172) May my tongue sing of your word, for all your commands are righteous.
(173) May your hand be ready to help me, for I have chosen your precepts. (174) I long for your salvation, O LORD, and your law is my delight. (175) Let me live that I may praise you, and may your laws sustain me. (176) I have strayed like a lost sheep. Seek your servant, for I have not forgotten your commands.
(1) This is the word of the LORD concerning Israel. The LORD, who stretches out the heavens, who lays the foundation of the earth, and who forms the spirit of man within him, declares: (2) I am going to make Jerusalem a cup that sends all the surrounding peoples reeling. Judah will be besieged as well as Jerusalem. (3) On that day, when all the nations of the earth are gathered against her, I will make Jerusalem an immovable rock for all the nations. All who try to move it will injure themselves. (4) On that day I will strike every horse with panic and its rider with madness,' declares the LORD. 'I will keep a watchful eye over the house of Judah, but I will blind all the horses of the nations.
(5) Then the leaders of Judah will say in their hearts, 'The people of Jerusalem are strong, because the LORD Almighty is their God.' (6) On that day I will make the leaders of Judah like a firepot in a woodpile, like a flaming torch among sheaves. They will consume right and left all the surrounding peoples, but Jerusalem will remain intact in her place. (7) The LORD will save the dwellings of Judah first, so that the honor of the house of David and of Jerusalem's inhabitants may not be greater than that of Judah. (8) On that day the LORD will shield those who live in Jerusalem, so that the feeblest among them will be like David, and the house of David will be like God, like the Angel of the LORD going before them.
(9) On that day I will set out to destroy all the nations that attack Jerusalem. (10) And I will pour out on the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem a spirit of grace and supplication. They will look on me, the one they have pierced, and they will mourn for him as one mourns for an only child, and grieve bitterly for him as one grieves for a firstborn son.
Ephesians Chapter 1
(3) Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. (4) For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love (5) he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will-- (6) to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves.
(7) In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God's grace (8) that he lavished on us with all wisdom and understanding. (9) And he made known to us the mystery of his will according to his good pleasure, which he purposed in Christ, (10) to be put into effect when the times will have reached their fulfillment-- to bring all things in heaven and on earth together under one head, even Christ.
(11) In him we were also chosen, having been predestined according to the plan of him who works out everything in conformity with the purpose of his will, (12) in order that we, who were the first to hope in Christ, might be for the praise of his glory. (13) And you also were included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, (14) who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God's possession-- to the praise of his glory.
(1) Jesus entered Jericho and was passing through. (2) A man was there by the name of Zacchaeus; he was a chief tax collector and was wealthy. (3) He wanted to see who Jesus was, but being a short man he could not, because of the crowd. (4) So he ran ahead and climbed a sycamore-fig tree to see him, since Jesus was coming that way.
(5) When Jesus reached the spot, he looked up and said to him, 'Zacchaeus, come down immediately. I must stay at your house today.' (6) So he came down at once and welcomed him gladly. (7) All the people saw this and began to mutter, 'He has gone to be the guest of a 'sinner.'' (8) But Zacchaeus stood up and said to the Lord, 'Look, Lord! Here and now I give half of my possessions to the poor, and if I have cheated anybody out of anything, I will pay back four times the amount.'
(9) Jesus said to him, 'Today salvation has come to this house, because this man, too, is a son of Abraham. (10) For the Son of Man came to seek and to save what was lost.'
and peace to his people on earth.
Lord God, heavenly King,
almighty God and Father,
we worship you, we give you thanks,
we praise you for your glory.
Lord Jesus Christ, only Son of the Father,
Lord God, Lamb of God,
you take away the sin of the world:
have mercy on us;
you are seated at the right hand of the Father:
receive our prayer.
For you alone are the Holy One,
you alone are the Lord,
you alone are the Most High,
Jesus Christ,
with the Holy Spirit,
in the glory of God the Father. Amen.
The Collect of the Day: Lord God, almighty and everlasting Father, you have brought us in safety to this new day: Preserve us with your mighty power, that we may not fall into sin, nor be overcome by adversity; and in all we do, direct us to the fulfilling of your purpose; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
A Prayer for Mission: Lord Jesus Christ, you stretched out your arms of love on the hard wood of the cross that everyone might come within the reach of your saving embrace: So clothe us in your Spirit that we, reaching forth our hands in love, may bring those who do not know you to the knowledge and love of you; for the honor of your Name. Amen.
Glory to God whose power, working in us, can do infinitely more than we can ask or imagine: Glory to him from generation to generation in the Church, and in Christ Jesus for ever and ever. Amen. Ephesians 3:20,21
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Study to examine role of arts, humanities in improving mental health and well-being
May 21, 2013 /0 Comments/in News /by Island Community Mental Health
Published on May 8, 2013 at 12:50 AM
An innovative study led by The University of Nottingham is to investigate whether arts and humanities can help improve the mental health and well-being of patients and carers alike.
The five-year project will examine the role that music, storytelling, photography, sculpture and other activities might play in assisting mental health service users and those who look after them.
The initiative builds on the work of Nottingham Health Humanities and its International Health Humanities Network and will centre on the concept of ‘mutual recovery’ – promoting social, cultural and emotional connectivity between patients, professionals and informal carers to gain mental health benefits for all parties involved in health, social or adult education delivery.
The study comes as part of a quiet revolution to challenge the overreliance of pharmaceutical and psychotherapy solutions which critics argue have not delivered the step-change needed to support mental health patients.
Professor Paul Crawford, who is leading the research and holds the world’s first chair in health humanities, said: “The target-driven, production line culture of our healthcare system has done tremendous damage and we are seeing management by remote control, where managers often don’t have a clue what’s happening as demonstrated by the recent scandalous situation at Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust.
“This system is making it increasingly difficult for practitioners to be compassionate because they are under intense pressure to perform and many are suffering from burnout and struggling with their own mental health. When considering the attributes that modern-day healthcare is frequently accused of lacking, it is all too easy to overlook one of the most precious of all: humanity.” Click here to read more.
https://icmha.ca/wp-content/uploads/log-300x200.png 0 0 Island Community Mental Health https://icmha.ca/wp-content/uploads/log-300x200.png Island Community Mental Health2013-05-21 22:16:002015-01-17 21:55:24Study to examine role of arts, humanities in improving mental health and well-being
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declarative sentence
What are the three (3) Common types of English?
What are the three (3) Common types of English? if you know so read it. There are several classification schemes... | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12323 | {"url": "https://icmsedu.org/table_tags/declarative-sentence/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "icmsedu.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:28:37Z", "digest": "sha1:DYLI7FCAZ2WSJQDQ5XTREJTNUJYEPKDG"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 184, 184.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 184, 3169.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 184, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 184, 110.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 184, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 184, 242.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 184, 0.38461538]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 184, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 184, 0.5]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 184, 0.5]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 184, 0.5]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 184, 0.5]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 184, 0.5]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 184, 0.09722222]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 184, 0.13888889]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 184, 0.20833333]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 184, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 184, 0.33333333]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 184, 0.25641026]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 184, 0.67741935]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 184, 4.64516129]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 184, 0.02564103]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 184, 2.9699165]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 184, 31.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 69, 1.0], [69, 184, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 69, 0.0], [69, 184, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 21, 2.0], [21, 69, 9.0], [69, 184, 20.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 69, 0.02272727], [69, 184, 0.00925926]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 69, 0.0], [69, 184, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 21, 0.0], [21, 69, 0.0625], [69, 184, 0.03478261]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 184, 0.67314726]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 184, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 184, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 184, -19.01699881]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 184, -8.08614794]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 184, -15.9455112]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 184, 4.0]]} |
Familiarity breeds exempt: why staph vaccines don’t work in humans
The sometimes-pathogenic bacteria has a long and intimate relationship with people, one that helps it fend off our immune response
For the most part, the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus is common and harmless, posing no threat to humans with whom they coexist. Occasionally, though, it can become an opportunistic pathogen, causing skin and bloodstream infections or food poisoning.
For more than a century, scientists have searched for an effective vaccine, including at least 15 successful preclinical studies using animal models in the past 30 years. In all of the subsequent human trials, however, these vaccine candidates failed.
“It’s a longstanding and one of the most enigmatic issues of the staphylococcal field,” said George Liu, MD, PhD, professor of pediatrics at University of California San Diego School of Medicine and chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Rady Children’s Hospital-San Diego. “None of these human trials have worked and scientists have struggled to find a reason.”
The question has gained greater urgency with the spread of methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA), a type of staph bacteria that has become increasingly resistant to antibiotics commonly used to treat ordinary staph infections. MRSA is the primary source of infections acquired within hospitals and other health care settings, such as nursing homes. A study published in 2022 estimated that bacterial antimicrobial resistance resulted tens of millions of infections and 1.2 million deaths worldwide in 2019, with MRSA as the primary driver.
“Vaccines are the most effective way to cut down that health burden and reduce antibiotic resistance,” said Liu, pointing to successes with childhood inoculations and the more recent COVID-19 vaccines.
In a new paper, publishing July 7, 2022 in the journal Cell Host & Microbe, senior author Liu and colleagues say they may have found the answer to the conundrum of S. aureus, including the mechanism that explains why vaccine trials have so far failed and ways to overcome that.
Fundamentally, the difference lies in prior exposure to the pathogen, the authors write. Laboratory mice used in research are engineered (bred/raised/maintained) to be free of the specific target pathogen; they have had little or no exposure to S. aureus prior to vaccination.
Humans, by contrast, are very quickly exposed to S. aureus after birth. Within two months, half of babies host active colonies and abundant antibodies to fend off most infections.
With first author Chih-Ming Tsai, PhD, a project scientist in his lab, and others, Liu hypothesized that while laboratory mice with no previous exposure to S. aureus respond well to potential vaccines because they are entirely new, human versions do not work because S. aureus has evolved defenses to fend off therapeutic attack.
“Staph vaccines appear so easy to make in laboratory mice because they rarely see S. aureus, but humans are exposed to staph beginning in the first weeks of life and, in order to coexist, staph appears to have developed many strategies to render ineffective our immune response against them,” Tsai said.
“If mice had staph infections before vaccination, we think that the vaccine candidates might not work.”
To test their hypothesis, Liu, Tsai and co-authors conducted a series of experiments simulating one of the largest failed staph vaccine trials in humans, which targeted the IsdB protein used by S. aureus to acquire needed iron for functioning.
In mice unexposed to normal staph, the IsdB vaccine worked, generating antibodies that targeted the whole protein and disrupted bacterial functions. But in mice previously exposed to staph, the vaccine generated only antibodies against the unprotected portion of the IsdB protein, leaving bacterial functioning unimpaired. Subsequent boosters primarily amplified the ineffective antibody response and, compounding the problem, the ineffective antibodies competed with any existing, protective antibodies.
When researchers tried mixing human IsdB antibodies with protective antibodies made from the vaccine, the latter stopped working. “We surmised that if we could vaccinate only against the protective component of IsdB, we might be able to prevent suppression by bad immune response memory,” said Tsai.
And, in fact, that is what the scientists found: When they vaccinated mice solely against the protective component of the IsdB protein, the animals were effectively protected, even if previously exposed to S. aureus.
In combination with other experiments, Liu said the findings suggest that faulty memory of a pathogen and its corresponding immune response are likely explanations for the failed staph vaccine trials in humans.
“It is even possible that the same principle might also explain why many other hard-to-make vaccines have failed,” he said. “If we are proven correct, an effective staph vaccine may not be too far away.”
Co-authors include: J.R. Caldera, UC San Diego and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center; Irshad A. Hajam, Austin W.T. Chiang, Haining Li, Maria Lazaro Diez, Cesia Gonzalez, Desmond Trieu and Nathan E. Lewis, all at UC San Diego; Chih-Hsiung Tsai, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan; Gislaine A. Martins, David M. Underhill and Moshe Arditi, all at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
Funding for this research came, in part, from the National Institutes of Health (grants R01AI127406, R01AI144694 and NIGMS-R35 GM119850) and the Novo Nordisk Foundation through the Technical University of Denmark (grant NNF20SA0066621).
Source:University of California San Diego School of Medicine
antibiotics resistant IsdB Staphylococcus aureus vaccine trials
Study shows increase in COVID-19 vaccine acceptance around the world
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Six Key Facts About Idaho’s Revenue Shortage and Our Declining Economic Performance
{{FOR SEARCH ONLY}}
Six Key Facts About Idaho’s Revenue Shortage and Our Declining Economic Performance July 2014
1. Idaho collects less in taxes than all but two other states.
The Idaho State Tax Commission reports that Idaho ranks 49th among the 50 states and the District of Columbia for the amount of taxes collected, and is dead last among the 11 Western states, leaving us with fewer resources to invest in schools and other priorities. Our overall tax collections are 31% below the national average. When tax collections are examined relative to income level, Idaho is 41st in the nation, and still last in the West.
2. Support for Idaho’s schools has been steadily decreasing and is unequal across school districts.
Idaho’s investment per K-12 student has declined by 16% since 2008 (after taking account of infla- tion), according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. Struggling school districts are increasingly turning to property taxes to fund core operations. The percentage of school districts rely- ing on voter-approved levies has nearly doubled, from 36% to 70%. Districts with higher property values are at a distinct advantage in raising funds, leading to wide disparities in school resources across the state.
3. Idaho’s support for higher education has dropped sharply, leading to big in- creases in tuition and fees.
A generation ago, Idaho invested more in higher education, knowing that making college accessible would strengthen our economy. Then we began moving in the opposite direction. Just since 2008, Idaho has decreased state funding for colleges
and universities by 37% per student, adjusted for inflation. The costs are increasingly shifted onto students in the form of tuition hikes. In 1980, tuition was 7% of the cost of college. By 2014, it was 47%.
This appears to be making higher education unaf- fordable for a growing number of people. Recent years saw a decrease in the percentage of Idaho’s high school graduates enrolling in college, despite state- wide efforts to encourage postsecondary education.
Tuition Covers a Growing Share of Higher Education Costs in Idaho
50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0%
Idaho Center for Fiscal Policy
4. Idaho has steadily cut revenues since the late 1990s.
These cuts mean we have $500 million less to invest each year in education, health care, public safety and other priorities. While the Great Recession substan- tially reduced revenues, much of the long-term loss is due to policies that Idaho enacted over the past 15 years.
5. Idaho’s low- and moderate-income res- idents pay a larger share of their income in taxes than the highest earners do.
When sales, property, and state income taxes are all taken into account, the bottom 20% of families (those earning less than $18,000) pay the largest share of their income, at 8.2%. In contrast, the top 1% of earners (with incomes above $316,000) pay 6.4% of their income.
6. Idaho’s per capita income is lower than all but one state – Mississippi.
While Idaho has always been a lower-income state, we have plummeted in the rankings recent- ly, at the same time that we reduced revenue and investments. In 1999, Idaho’s personal income per capita exceeded that of 10 other states. It now only exceeds that of one state, Mississippi.
Number of States with Lower Income Levels than Idaho
Source: Per-capita personal income figures from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
Wealthier Idahoans pay the least in state and local taxes, as share of income
10% 8% 6% 4% 2% 0%
Lowest Second Middle 20% 20% 20%
Source: Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy,
Who Pays? A Distributional Analysis of the Tax Systems in All 50 States, 4th Edition (January 2013).
Fourth Next
Next Top 1%
1607 W. Je erson Street Boise, ID 83702 Phone: (208) 388-1014 Fax: (208) 336-0880
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The Hidden Cost of Fines and Fees in Idaho’s Criminal Justice System
Criminal Justice, Reports
Kendra Knighten
An arrest in Idaho can result in individuals facing court-ordered fines and fees that jeopardize the financial stability of the individual, their family, and their community. The problem is so systemic that the Idaho Supreme Court recently ruled unanimously against the use of arrest warrants for unpaid fines and fees without considering ability to pay. The collection of fines and fees in Idaho is a widely used practice intended to (1) serve as a deterrent or punishment for individuals found to be in violation of Idaho law and (2) provide revenue to offset the cost of administering the justice system. Fines and fees function like a regressive tax that inflicts undue burden on Idahoans with low incomes and Idahoans of color, trap Idahoans in the legal system, contribute to increased public spending, and fail to boost revenue.
Fines and fees are a form of regressive tax that inflict undue burden on Idahoans with low incomes and people of color.
Fines and fees that fail to consider a defendant’s ability to pay inflict much greater burdens on people with low incomes than people with higher incomes. When faced with fees or fines that exceed their already limited budgets, Idahoans with low incomes are more likely to struggle to afford other necessities, like rent or car payments.
These inequities are even greater for Idahoans of color. Due to a history of racist policies, discrimination, and current bias, households of color experience lower income compared with white households and, therefore, fees and fines weigh more heavily. At the same time, Idahoans of color are more likely to be under the custody of Idaho’s Department of Correction.1 Policy choices should not fall harder on Idahoans of color than others, and addressing the effects of fines and fees can help us get back on track to rolling back high incarceration rates, recidivism, and supporting communities all over the state.
Although fine and fee assessments are codified in Idaho Statute, judges often have the discretion to waive or lower fines and fees due to inability to pay. As a result of this discretion, waivers are not guaranteed, uniformly applied, or granted based on standardized guidelines.2 This lack of standardization or use of best practices results in a system that is inconsistent, unpredictable, and subject to bias.
Additionally, a justice system that relies upon fines and fees to fund important court services is unfair in nature. Due to limited local budgets and revenue collection restrictions, there is no incentive for judges to waive fines and fees when individuals are unable to pay.
Fines and fees trap Idahoans in the criminal justice system and increase public spending.
Even with unpaid court debt in the millions of dollars, Idaho does not have an administrative process in place for writing off or waiving unpaid fines and fees. When Idahoans are unable to pay an assessed fine or fee, they can face additional monetary penalties, have their debts sent to collections, or have the unpaid amount withheld from their state tax returns.3
When fines and fees exceed their ability to pay, people with low or limited incomes can find themselves trapped in the criminal justice system. For Idahoans on probation or parole, unpaid fines and fees can result in arrest warrants or be labeled supervision violations. These violations can result in arrest or incarceration, which can lead to other costly consequences that far exceed the cost of the unpaid debt. For the impacted Idahoan, time spent in custody can result in loss of employment, income, or housing – all of which are critical to successful community re-entry and financial stability. Idahoans with criminal records are also more likely to experience employment discrimination – an experience often felt more heavily by Idahoans of color who already face additional barriers to employment. In June, the Idaho Supreme Court unanimously ruled against this punitive cycle, an acknowledgement of its harms. In the case, an Idaho woman working and earning $12 per hour was arrested for a misdemeanor punishable with a fine of up to $300. After identifying the woman as indigent, the judge ordered the woman to pay a reduced fine of $150 for the offense – in addition to court costs and lab fees – for a total debt of $639. Unable to pay – as documented extensively in the case – the woman spent more than a week in jail on two occasions over the course of a year.4 Jail costs far outweigh the fees and fines levied in this case, make it difficult for the person to continue to sustain a job and household, and do not ensure that services are properly funded.
Everyone bears the substantial costs of arrest or incarceration when Idahoans are brought into custody for failure to pay court debts. Idaho’s prison spending increased by over 200 percent in the last 25 years – one of the highest increases in the nation – and incarcerates people at higher rates than previous generations.5 Ensuring individuals are not incarcerated for unpaid fees and fines is one way to begin reversing these concerning trends, and cost-savings could bolster public spending in schools, roads and bridges, and other critical policy priorities.
Over reliance on fines and fees can also harm the quality of government services and public safety outcomes. More spending by law enforcement on fine and fee collection compared with other functions is linked to decreased likelihood of solving violent and property crimes. This effect can play an outsized role in smaller communities where law enforcement staff have broader roles that come with more flexibility in daily activities.6
Fines and fees fail to boost revenue effectively or consistently.
Idaho’s state and local governments rely on filing fees from civil lawsuits as well as fines and fees from criminal cases to offset the costs of administering the justice system. The courts distribute collected funds to state and local accounts as determined by Idaho law.
Much of the state’s fines and fees revenue supplements criminal justice spending from the General Fund, such as the Idaho Department of Correction (IDOC). However, revenue collected through fines and fees fluctuates significantly from year to year. Fines and fees made up less than 4.1 percent of IDOC’s General Fund allocation for the past 10 years and dropped below 3 percent four times in that same timeframe. The contributions from fines and fees are incidental to the overall IDOC budget, which is $310 million for FY 2022.7 8
Idaho’s counties also rely on revenue collected through fines and fees to offset the costs of operating the justice system and other government services at the local level. Compared to the state, fines and fees make up a larger proportion of funding in county budgets, which incentivizes their assessment and collection. Fines and fees revenue at this level also fluctuates significantly, making long-term budgeting decisions difficult.
Policy and Budget Solutions
Idaho’s current policies and procedures for the assessment and collection of fines and fees have many harmful drawbacks. However, Idaho lawmakers can address these inequities in the following ways:
Re-examine statutes and practices related to the collection of fines within Idaho’s criminal justice system and standardize fair ability to pay guidelines.
Draw on more state revenue to fund court costs in Idaho instead of fees.
Enact equitable revenue solutions at the state and local level that ensure the tax load does not fall harder on working families, as it does now. Such tax policy choices include expanded grocery and child tax credits and a new credit that rewards earned income.
Enact a local option tax or other ways to equitably raise local revenue that do not fall harder on households shouldering heavy property tax loads, such as aging households.
Idaho Center for Fiscal Policy, “Reform Revisited: The Future of Criminal Justice in Idaho.” Winter 2020. Accessed at: https://idahofiscal.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/2020-01-14-ICFP-2019-Prisons-fact-sheet-FINAL2.pdf
Idaho Office of Performance Evaluations, “Court-Ordered Fines and fees.” March 2019. Accessed at: https://legislature.idaho.gov/ope/reports/r1903/
Idaho Supreme Court, “How are Delinquent Fines and Fees Collected?” Accessed at: https://courtdata.idaho.gov/stories/s/cti3-7ezq
Cristina Mendez, Jeffrey Selbin, and Gus Tupper, “Blood from a Turnip: Money as Punishment in Idaho.” Idaho Law Review, Vol. 56, No.1, 2021. Accessed at: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3841854 Ibid.
Rebecca Goldstein, Michael Sances, & Hye Young You, “Exploitative Revenues, Law Enforcement, and the Quality of Government Services.” Urban Affairs, 2018. Accessed at: https://hyeyoungyou.files.wordpress.com/2018/08/finesandpolicing.pdf
This analysis does not take dedicated and federal funding received by IDOC into account, meaning the impact to IDOC’s total budget is even less notable.
2021 Idaho State Legislative Session, “House Bill 262.” Approved March 19, 2021. Accessed at: https://legislature.idaho.gov/sessioninfo/2021/legislation/H0262/
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Constant training to keep abreast of technological progress
Librarians should update themselves and for that, they must participate in training, workshops and conferences, review and recommend best practices for digital skills training in librarianship, in order to avoid the obsolescence of the knowledge. In ... [read more]
Librarians should update themselves and for that, they must participate in training, workshops and conferences, review and recommend best practices for digital skills training in librarianship, in order to avoid the obsolescence of the knowledge. In the same way, it is important to adapt to changes in society, in order to respond to information needs; and in the same way, libraries must be modernizing, offering avant-garde services. Professional updating is also important for library staff members to keep up to date and understand the dissemination of their holdings and the use of shared results, new technologies, documentary terms and metadata as well as interface and equipment management. Librarians should promote that culture of professional development. | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12327 | {"url": "https://ideas.ifla.org/ideas/opportunities/opp2/country/nigeria/region/north-america/professionalunit/ifla-professional-unit/ideagroup/toolkits-and-materials/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ideas.ifla.org", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:06:14Z", "digest": "sha1:LIEUXCQGAILYCZURQAQWIERQMR6WRXAD"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1093, 1093.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1093, 5062.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1093, 3.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1093, 66.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1093, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1093, 173.0]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1093, 0.4516129]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1093, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1093, 0.46136865]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1093, 0.46136865]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1093, 0.46136865]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1093, 0.46136865]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1093, 0.46136865]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1093, 0.46136865]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1093, 0.05298013]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1093, 0.02980132]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1093, 0.07064018]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1093, 0.12903226]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1093, 0.49689441]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1093, 5.62732919]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1093, 0.00537634]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1093, 4.06045318]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1093, 161.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 326, 0.0], [326, 1093, 1.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 326, 0.0], [326, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 60, 8.0], [60, 326, 38.0], [326, 1093, 115.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 326, 0.0], [326, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 60, 0.0], [60, 326, 0.0], [326, 1093, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 60, 0.01666667], [60, 326, 0.0075188], [326, 1093, 0.00521512]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1093, 0.32831538]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1093, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1093, 0.00063664]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1093, -6.45250351]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1093, 7.49504344]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1093, 1.61926425]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1093, 6.0]]} |
Tsvetkova L. A.
All articles by Tsvetkova L. A.
Automated analytics in healthcare
2020 № 2 Artificial intelligence technologies in medicine and healthcare: Russia’s position on the global patent and publication landscape
An overview of public policy measures aimed at the development of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies in the world and in Russia is presented. In order to evaluate the competitiveness of domestic developments created for the use of AI technologies in medicine and healthcare, a scientometric and patent analysis of the direction for the period 2010–2019 was performed. Based on the analysis of research fronts using the Essential science indicators methodology, the most promising research strategies have been identified. It is shown that on the global publishing landscape, Russia occupies the 27th position in the world by the number of publications devoted to the use of AI in healthcare: Russian researchers account for less than 1% of publications indexed in the Web of science. To enter the top 5 countries in terms of publication activity in this thematic cluster, Russia needs to increase the number of publications by more than 6 times. Of the 16 companies in whose publications the participation of Russian authors are indicated, 13 are foreign. In General, only 14% of publications in the thematic category “Computer science, artificial intelligence” were made in collaboration with the industrial sector. In the landscape formed by patent documents that protect technical solutions in the field of AI in medicine, Russia takes positions that do not confirm its intention to fight for promising markets for goods and services created on the basis of these technologies. In the field of medical AI developments, the number of Russian patents issued to non-residents of the country significantly exceeds the number of holders of domestic patents. Only 12 patents of Russian developers оn AI technologies for healthcare issued by foreign patent offices were found.
Authors: Tsvetkova L. A. [4] Cherchenko. О. V. [2] Kurakova N. G. [5]
Tags: artificial intelligence10 healthcare8 medicine7 patent activity2 public policy measures1 publication activity1 research fronts1
Information support of medical research
2016 № 1 Evaluating the perspectives for development of scientific journals, published in RUSSIAN SCIENCE CITATION INDEX on the Web of Science platform.
«Physicians and informational technologies» journal was included in the 652 best Russian scientific-periodical journals, composing the collection of Russian Science Citation Index (RSCI). This collection was presented at the end of 2015 on the Web of Science (WoS) platform. This article describes the objectives, methodology for selecting journals and perspectives of the project’s development. Particular attention is attributed to such vectors of development as possible switching listing of journals recognised by the Higher Attestation Commission to RSCI, possible usage of collection as a central one (nuclear) in Russian Index of Scientific Citation (by analogy of Web of Science Core Collection), methods of scientometric indicators of scientists and organisations, calculated only according to the RSCI file, to create models for targeted and contest financing of research and inventions in the Russian Federation.
Authors: Tsvetkova L. A. [4] Kurakova N. G. [5]
Tags: methodology for selection1 nuclear collections1 project «golden thousand» russian index of scientific citation1 russian science citation index1 scientific journals1 web of science core collection1
2016 № 3 Big Data technology in medicine and healthcare in Russia and in the world
The article describes the path of scientific and technological development and commercial prospects of Big Data technologies in the field of healthcare in the world and Russia. The results of the patent-conjuncture analysis of trends in Big Data in medicine are represented. It showed a high potential for the formation of new markets and market niches and services in this area. The main trends of the evolution of technological solutions in the area of Big Data in the field of health were identified. An assessment of the global competitiveness of the Russian Big Data development in the field of medicine was given.
Authors: Tsvetkova L. A. [4] Cherchenko. О. V. [2]
Tags: . big the data1 competitiveness2 health care3 patent analysis2 promising areas of implementation1 technology trends1 the russian developments1
2015 № 3 Estimation of perspectives of t medical robotics developmenin Russia in the projection of the patent analysis.
There was analysed the publication and patent activity with regard to two actively developing areas in the field of medical robototronics: robots-exoskeletons for rehabilitation of people with muscoloskeletal disorders and robot-assisted surgery. There was identified discrepancy in the structure of global and national publication and patent flows. There were revealed disadvantages of foreign innovations on robot-assisted surgery, which create prerequisites for promoting import-substituting innovations of domestic engineers.
Authors: Tsvetkova L. A. [4] O. V. [1] Cherchenko [1] Sheptunov. S. A. [1]
Tags: ключевые слова роботоассистирующая хирургия1 конкурентоспособность1 наукометрический анализ1 патентный анализ1 технологические лидеры1 экзоскелеты для реабилитации людей с нарушениями опорно-двигательных функций1 | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12328 | {"url": "https://idmz.ru/journals/information-technologies-for-the-physician/authors/tsvetkova-l-a", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "idmz.ru", "date_download": "2023-03-20T09:05:14Z", "digest": "sha1:32WZZ7BKXOZVJ3MTF7V4TKMZDOHSZXES"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 5419, 5419.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 5419, 6217.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 5419, 20.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 5419, 36.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 5419, 0.87]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 5419, 330.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 5419, 0.29625668]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 5419, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 5419, 0.06879716]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 5419, 0.01420328]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 5419, 0.01420328]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 5419, 0.01420328]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 5419, 0.01420328]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 5419, 0.01997337]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 5419, 0.01464714]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 5419, 0.0159787]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 5419, 0.03957219]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 5419, 0.19786096]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 5419, 0.40880503]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 5419, 5.66792453]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 5419, 5.03987031]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 5419, 795.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 16, 1.0], [16, 48, 1.0], [48, 82, 0.0], [82, 221, 0.0], [221, 2001, 1.0], [2001, 2071, 0.0], [2071, 2205, 0.0], [2205, 2245, 0.0], [2245, 2398, 1.0], [2398, 3322, 1.0], [3322, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3573, 0.0], [3573, 3656, 0.0], [3656, 4276, 1.0], [4276, 4327, 0.0], [4327, 4476, 0.0], [4476, 4596, 1.0], [4596, 5126, 1.0], [5126, 5201, 0.0], [5201, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 48, 0.0], [48, 82, 0.0], [82, 221, 0.0], [221, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2071, 0.0], [2071, 2205, 0.0], [2205, 2245, 0.0], [2245, 2398, 0.0], [2398, 3322, 0.0], [3322, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3573, 0.0], [3573, 3656, 0.0], [3656, 4276, 0.0], [4276, 4327, 0.0], [4327, 4476, 0.0], [4476, 4596, 0.0], [4596, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5201, 0.0], [5201, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 16, 3.0], [16, 48, 6.0], [48, 82, 4.0], [82, 221, 19.0], [221, 2001, 278.0], [2001, 2071, 13.0], [2071, 2205, 14.0], [2205, 2245, 5.0], [2245, 2398, 23.0], [2398, 3322, 131.0], [3322, 3370, 9.0], [3370, 3573, 25.0], [3573, 3656, 16.0], [3656, 4276, 102.0], [4276, 4327, 9.0], [4327, 4476, 18.0], [4476, 4596, 19.0], [4596, 5126, 67.0], [5126, 5201, 14.0], [5201, 5419, 20.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 48, 0.0], [48, 82, 0.0], [82, 221, 0.03649635], [221, 2001, 0.01197263], [2001, 2071, 0.05454545], [2071, 2205, 0.06060606], [2205, 2245, 0.0], [2245, 2398, 0.03333333], [2398, 3322, 0.00774336], [3322, 3370, 0.05263158], [3370, 3573, 0.02985075], [3573, 3656, 0.06097561], [3656, 4276, 0.0], [4276, 4327, 0.05], [4327, 4476, 0.04827586], [4476, 4596, 0.04237288], [4596, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5201, 0.06896552], [5201, 5419, 0.02727273]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 16, 0.0], [16, 48, 0.0], [48, 82, 0.0], [82, 221, 0.0], [221, 2001, 0.0], [2001, 2071, 0.0], [2071, 2205, 0.0], [2205, 2245, 0.0], [2245, 2398, 0.0], [2398, 3322, 0.0], [3322, 3370, 0.0], [3370, 3573, 0.0], [3573, 3656, 0.0], [3656, 4276, 0.0], [4276, 4327, 0.0], [4327, 4476, 0.0], [4476, 4596, 0.0], [4596, 5126, 0.0], [5126, 5201, 0.0], [5201, 5419, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 16, 0.1875], [16, 48, 0.125], [48, 82, 0.02941176], [82, 221, 0.01438849], [221, 2001, 0.01910112], [2001, 2071, 0.14285714], [2071, 2205, 0.00746269], [2205, 2245, 0.025], [2245, 2398, 0.19607843], [2398, 3322, 0.04112554], [3322, 3370, 0.14583333], [3370, 3573, 0.00492611], [3573, 3656, 0.03614458], [3656, 4276, 0.02419355], [4276, 4327, 0.1372549], [4327, 4476, 0.00671141], [4476, 4596, 0.01666667], [4596, 5126, 0.00566038], [5126, 5201, 0.13333333], [5201, 5419, 0.00458716]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 5419, 0.02310407]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 5419, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 5419, 0.1640901]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 5419, -252.19416754]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 5419, 4.00695109]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 5419, 54.71485518]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 5419, 53.0]]} |
« McCain on NAFTA | Main | Obama on Ethanol Tariffs »
Obama on Chinese Steel Duties
From an Obama press release:
U.S. Senator Barack Obama today released the following statement after the International Trade Commission (ITC) concluded that Chinese pipe producers have injured U.S. manufacturers for several years by dumping circular welded steel pipe exports into our market - a practice which has been enabled through Chinese pipe producers receiving illegal government subsidies.
"I appreciate and support the ITC determination. This is the first case in the history of U.S. trade agreement enforcement involving subsidies in China that has resulted in the imposition of countervailing duties by the U.S. Department of Commerce.
"A month ago, the Department of Commerce determined that the actual rates of Chinese dumping range from 69 to 85 percent and that the actual illegal subsidies range from 29 to 615 percent. These are egregious and outrageous violations of fair trade, and the ITC's determination today was the only responsible response.
"The United States must always use the full range of multilateral and bilateral tools to insist that China and all other nations abide by the rules that govern the economic policies of nations. Our trade agreements must provide for fair competition and for fair treatment of American workers, and then they must be fully enforced as Congress intended them to operate."
I'm not too surprised that he supports this particular result. What I'd be more curious about is how he would react to a WTO ruling finding an ITC decision like this one in violation of WTO rules. Would he instinctively criticize it as undermining U.S. trade laws? Or would he praise the international rule of law? I'm guessing the former, but I'm not absolutely sure.
Posted by Simon Lester on June 25, 2008 at 09:15 AM in Obama vs. McCain '08, Trade Remedies | Permalink | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12329 | {"url": "https://ielp.worldtradelaw.net/2008/06/obama-on-china.html", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ielp.worldtradelaw.net", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:12:02Z", "digest": "sha1:JPUSFH5PMBQ2DM5NOGRAA6RF2GIHKJQN"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 1891, 1891.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 1891, 8782.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 1891, 9.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 1891, 241.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 1891, 0.96]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 1891, 304.6]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 1891, 0.35714286]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 1891, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 1891, 0.00912647]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 1891, 0.02607562]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 1891, 0.06593407]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 1891, 0.15659341]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 1891, 0.60586319]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 1891, 4.99674267]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 1891, 4.92358529]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 1891, 307.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 84, 0.0], [84, 113, 0.0], [113, 482, 1.0], [482, 731, 1.0], [731, 1050, 1.0], [1050, 1419, 0.0], [1419, 1788, 1.0], [1788, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 84, 0.0], [84, 113, 0.0], [113, 482, 0.0], [482, 731, 0.0], [731, 1050, 0.0], [1050, 1419, 0.0], [1419, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 54, 10.0], [54, 84, 5.0], [84, 113, 5.0], [113, 482, 51.0], [482, 731, 39.0], [731, 1050, 52.0], [1050, 1419, 61.0], [1419, 1788, 65.0], [1788, 1891, 19.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 84, 0.0], [84, 113, 0.0], [113, 482, 0.0], [482, 731, 0.0], [731, 1050, 0.02884615], [1050, 1419, 0.0], [1419, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 1891, 0.125]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 54, 0.0], [54, 84, 0.0], [84, 113, 0.0], [113, 482, 0.0], [482, 731, 0.0], [731, 1050, 0.0], [1050, 1419, 0.0], [1419, 1788, 0.0], [1788, 1891, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 54, 0.2037037], [54, 84, 0.13333333], [84, 113, 0.06896552], [113, 482, 0.04065041], [482, 731, 0.04819277], [731, 1050, 0.02507837], [1050, 1419, 0.01897019], [1419, 1788, 0.04878049], [1788, 1891, 0.11650485]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 1891, 0.02613747]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 1891, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 1891, 0.02614999]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 1891, -75.28313191]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 1891, 15.75690735]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 1891, -19.17620242]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 1891, 24.0]]} |
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Breakfast Club of Canada Sets Up an Emergency Fund to Reach Out to Children Across the Country
At least $5 million required to meet the needs of Canadian children quickly and efficiently
Montreal, March 20, 2020 – Backed by its network of corporate partners, Breakfast Club of Canada is setting up an emergency fund to support breakfast program enrollees and local community organizations that assist food-insecure families and children throughout Canada during the COVID-19 crisis.
Some 250,000 students usually depend on the Club and its partners for a healthy breakfast every school morning, but the total number of children and youth across the country affected by food insecurity is actually greater than 1 million. To help minimize the repercussions of this crisis on them, Breakfast Club of Canada is reallocating the funds normally earmarked for schools to high-risk regions and established partners that are already well equipped to serve them.
In order to be able to address the needs of children for as long as possible during the crisis, Breakfast Club of Canada is turning to its corporate partners and the general public for help.
A number of partners have already stepped forward and announced a contribution to the Club’s emergency fund: belairdirect and Intact insurance $500k, Danone $200k and Kellogg Canada $150k. Other partners such as Sodexo – Stop Hunger Foundation also have offered their support.
Anyone who wants to contribute to the emergency fund can do so through the Club’s website.
Breakfast Club of Canada invites community organizations that wish to apply for a special grant to fill out an online application.
The emergency fund will:
Focus on food-insecure households with children across Canada, including those in Indigenous communities
Target high-need neighbourhoods
Be administered in collaboration with respected community organizations that are familiar with and rigorously apply hygiene and sanitation measures associated with handling food as well as the requirements developed by public health authorities to control the spread of COVID-19.
“Right now, we need to do everything we can to honour the pledge we made to children 25 years ago and make sure they get the nutrition they need to grow up healthy. We have built a strong network over time and we will be putting it to work now for their benefit.” – Daniel Germain, President and Founder, Breakfast Club of Canada
“Our front-line staff members and our partners are a tremendous resource for Canadian families during these trying times. More than ever, we need to be able to count on one another so we can deliver on our mission and feed children who are experiencing food insecurity.” – Tommy Kulczyk, Managing Director, Breakfast Club of Canada
“For many Canadians, food insecurity is a daily concern but during a crisis, it’s even more so. We are supporting Breakfast Club of Canada and their new emergency fund to ensure that resources are available to those in need.” – Anne Fortin, Senior Vice President, Direct Distribution, and Chief Marketing Officer, belairdirect and Intact insurance
“We feel that in these challenging times, children in Canada need us more than ever. Together with our employees across Canada, Danone believes that we can use our business as a force for good to help feed hungry children and provide them with an access to healthy food. ” – Dan Magliocco, President of Danone Canada
“As always, through our global Kellogg’s Better Days purpose platform, we help deliver critical nourishment to families when they need it most. We are proud to support the efforts of our longstanding partners, Breakfast Club of Canada, to help ensure Canadian families and children continue to get access to the food they need during this unprecedented time.” – Tony Chow, President, Kellogg Canada Inc.
About Breakfast Club of Canada
Accredited by Imagine Canada for its effective governance, the Club provides much more than breakfast: its approach is based on commitment, self-esteem and capacity development using an optimal formula adapted to local needs. Breakfast Club of Canada helps feed more than 243,500 children and youth in 1,809 schools across the country. To learn more, visit breakfastclubcanada.org.
For more information and interview requests:
Nathalie Rochette
Breakfast Club of Canada
1-888-442-1217, ext. 3348
Justine Plourde
Communications Advisor, Public Relations | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12331 | {"url": "https://ihtoday.ca/breakfast-club-of-canada-sets-up-an-emergency-fund-to-reach-out-to-children-across-the-country/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ihtoday.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:22:07Z", "digest": "sha1:QZTSNL3COKDWEO34N5YVOCT4VAJCPRMI"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 4400, 4400.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 4400, 5156.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 4400, 25.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 4400, 63.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 4400, 0.95]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 4400, 315.1]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 4400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 4400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 4400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 4400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 4400, 0.39281289]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 4400, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 4400, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 4400, 0.03975704]], 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New measures to limit COVID-19 in Alberta
The government will declare a state of public health emergency later today, empowering authorities under the Public Health Act to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic
Alberta’s Provincial Operations Centre has also been elevated from a level 3 to a level 4, the highest level.
Effective immediately and until further notice, the Alberta government is implementing additional measures, including cancelling events that have more than 50 people.
“This is an unprecedented moment in our history and decisive action is needed. We recognize that these measures will have a profound impact on the lives of Albertans, but they are necessary in the face of this growing pandemic.”
Jason Kenney, Premier
“These measures are necessary if we are to limit the spread of COVID-19 in our province. Our intention is to limit opportunities for disease transmission by limiting the amount of time Albertans are spending in large crowds and crowded spaces. All Albertans should take immediate action and follow all recommended public health measures. Protecting the health of Albertans is, and always will be, our top priority.”
Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Chief Medical Officer of Health
The additional measures include:
Mass gatherings are now limited to no more than 50 attendees. This includes worship gatherings and family events such as weddings. Grocery stores, shopping centres, health-care facilities, airports, the legislature and other essential services are not included.
To limit the amount of time Albertans are spending in large crowds and crowded spaces, all Albertans are prohibited from attending public recreational facilities and private entertainment facilities, including gyms, swimming pools, arenas, science centres, museums, art galleries, community centres, children’s play centres, casinos, racing entertainment centres, and bingo halls.
Sit-down restaurants, cafés, coffee shops, food courts and other food-serving facilities, including those with a minors-allowed liquor license, are limited to 50 per cent capacity to a maximum of 50 people. Take-out, delivery or drive-through service is permitted. Licensed facilities will also be permitted to deliver liquor.
At this time, not-for-profit community kitchens, soup kitchens and religious kitchens are exempt, but sanitization practices are expected to be in place and support will be in place for this practice.
Until further notice, all Albertans are restricted from attending bars and nightclubs, where minors are prohibited by law.
Municipalities, charitable and non-profit organizations providing social services support will immediately see $60 million to support their COVID-19 response. The funding will be provided to adult homeless shelters, women’s emergency shelters and the Family and Community Support Services (FCSS) program, which supports municipalities and civil society organizations in providing services to vulnerable Albertans.
Albertans are encouraged to visit alberta.ca/COVID19 for the latest information, guidance and resources.
COVID-19 info for Albertans
Public Health Agency of Canada Travel Advice
Watch the news conference
Tom McMillan
Assistant Communications Director, Health | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12332 | {"url": "https://ihtoday.ca/new-measures-to-limit-covid-19-in-alberta/", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "ihtoday.ca", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:36:05Z", "digest": "sha1:LBLLKINLMR7WXWOYSSQENVARJSTE2XKV"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 3199, 3199.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 3199, 3792.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 3199, 21.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 3199, 55.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 3199, 0.94]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 3199, 256.8]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 3199, 0.31282953]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 3199, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 3199, 0.05722892]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 3199, 0.05722892]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 3199, 0.05722892]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 3199, 0.05722892]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 3199, 0.05722892]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 3199, 0.05722892]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 3199, 0.02259036]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 3199, 0.01355422]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 3199, 0.01129518]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 3199, 0.01230228]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 3199, 0.17398946]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 3199, 0.54427646]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 3199, 5.73650108]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 3199, 5.12139339]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 3199, 463.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 205, 0.0], [205, 315, 1.0], [315, 482, 1.0], [482, 711, 1.0], [711, 733, 0.0], [733, 1149, 1.0], [1149, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1233, 0.0], [1233, 1495, 1.0], [1495, 1876, 1.0], [1876, 2203, 1.0], [2203, 2404, 1.0], [2404, 2527, 1.0], [2527, 2941, 1.0], [2941, 3046, 1.0], [3046, 3074, 0.0], [3074, 3119, 0.0], [3119, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3158, 0.0], [3158, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 205, 0.0], [205, 315, 0.0], [315, 482, 0.0], [482, 711, 0.0], [711, 733, 0.0], [733, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1233, 0.0], [1233, 1495, 0.0], [1495, 1876, 0.0], [1876, 2203, 0.0], [2203, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2527, 0.0], [2527, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 3046, 0.0], [3046, 3074, 0.0], [3074, 3119, 0.0], [3119, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3158, 0.0], [3158, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 42, 7.0], [42, 205, 25.0], [205, 315, 19.0], [315, 482, 22.0], [482, 711, 39.0], [711, 733, 3.0], [733, 1149, 66.0], [1149, 1200, 8.0], [1200, 1233, 4.0], [1233, 1495, 37.0], [1495, 1876, 50.0], [1876, 2203, 47.0], [2203, 2404, 31.0], [2404, 2527, 18.0], [2527, 2941, 53.0], [2941, 3046, 13.0], [3046, 3074, 4.0], [3074, 3119, 7.0], [3119, 3145, 4.0], [3145, 3158, 2.0], [3158, 3199, 4.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.05], [42, 205, 0.0125], [205, 315, 0.01869159], [315, 482, 0.01226994], [482, 711, 0.0], [711, 733, 0.0], [733, 1149, 0.00490196], [1149, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1233, 0.0], [1233, 1495, 0.00790514], [1495, 1876, 0.0], [1876, 2203, 0.01277955], [2203, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2527, 0.0], [2527, 2941, 0.00992556], [2941, 3046, 0.02], [3046, 3074, 0.07692308], [3074, 3119, 0.0], [3119, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3158, 0.0], [3158, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 42, 0.0], [42, 205, 0.0], [205, 315, 0.0], [315, 482, 0.0], [482, 711, 0.0], [711, 733, 0.0], [733, 1149, 0.0], [1149, 1200, 0.0], [1200, 1233, 0.0], [1233, 1495, 0.0], [1495, 1876, 0.0], [1876, 2203, 0.0], [2203, 2404, 0.0], [2404, 2527, 0.0], [2527, 2941, 0.0], [2941, 3046, 0.0], [3046, 3074, 0.0], [3074, 3119, 0.0], [3119, 3145, 0.0], [3145, 3158, 0.0], [3158, 3199, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.16666667], [42, 205, 0.05521472], [205, 315, 0.03636364], [315, 482, 0.01197605], [482, 711, 0.01310044], [711, 733, 0.13636364], [733, 1149, 0.02884615], [1149, 1200, 0.1372549], [1200, 1233, 0.03030303], [1233, 1495, 0.01145038], [1495, 1876, 0.00787402], [1876, 2203, 0.00917431], [2203, 2404, 0.00497512], [2404, 2527, 0.01626016], [2527, 2941, 0.03864734], [2941, 3046, 0.05714286], [3046, 3074, 0.21428571], [3074, 3119, 0.13333333], [3119, 3145, 0.03846154], [3145, 3158, 0.23076923], [3158, 3199, 0.09756098]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 3199, 0.08842385]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 3199, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 3199, 0.46565735]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 3199, -157.93404323]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 3199, 12.27697319]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 3199, -43.64175582]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 3199, 23.0]]} |
Louise Lindh, member of Board of Directors | 2023-14/0037/en_head.json.gz/12333 | {"url": "https://imagebankpress.holmen.com/mediagallery/details/?take=124&orderby=Default&mediaid=194&downloadurl=https%3A%2F%2Fholmen.imagevault.media%2Fpublishedmedia%2F9cjhqiztnkjw0e0gwbm1%2FHenrik_Sj-lund.jpg%3Fdownload%3D1", "partition": "head_middle", "language": "en", "source_domain": "imagebankpress.holmen.com", "date_download": "2023-03-20T10:52:11Z", "digest": "sha1:6KYE53QHWPTCQOUM3XASYVRZCISWBKKO"} | {"ccnet_length": [[0, 42, 42.0]], "ccnet_original_length": [[0, 42, 559.0]], "ccnet_nlines": [[0, 42, 1.0]], "ccnet_original_nlines": [[0, 42, 10.0]], "ccnet_language_score": [[0, 42, 0.98]], "ccnet_perplexity": [[0, 42, 171.4]], "ccnet_bucket": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_curly_bracket": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_ldnoobw_words": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_lorem_ipsum": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_stop_word_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.25]], "rps_doc_ut1_blacklist": [[0, 42, null]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_10grams": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_5grams": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_6grams": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_7grams": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_8grams": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_dupe_9grams": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_2gram": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_3gram": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_chars_top_4gram": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_all_caps_words": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_lines_end_with_ellipsis": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_frac_no_alph_words": [[0, 42, 0.125]], "rps_doc_frac_unique_words": [[0, 42, 0.85714286]], "rps_doc_mean_word_length": [[0, 42, 5.0]], "rps_doc_symbol_to_word_ratio": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_doc_unigram_entropy": [[0, 42, 1.7478681]], "rps_doc_word_count": [[0, 42, 7.0]], "rps_lines_ending_with_terminal_punctution_mark": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_lines_javascript_counts": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_lines_num_words": [[0, 42, 7.0]], "rps_lines_numerical_chars_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_lines_start_with_bulletpoint": [[0, 42, 0.0]], "rps_lines_uppercase_letter_fraction": [[0, 42, 0.0952381]], "rps_doc_ml_palm_score": [[0, 42, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_ml_wikipedia_score": [[0, 42, null]], "rps_doc_ml_wikiref_score": [[0, 42, -1.001e-05]], "rps_doc_books_importance": [[0, 42, -1.63606997]], "rps_doc_openwebtext_importance": [[0, 42, 0.11535647]], "rps_doc_wikipedia_importance": [[0, 42, 0.83354611]], "rps_doc_num_sentences": [[0, 42, 1.0]]} |
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